Understanding Buddhism: The Four Noble Truths

970 Words2 Pages

Sunshine Thao
Mary Burmaster
English 1711 100 Research Paper
08 December 2014 Buddhism: The Four Noble Truths Buddhism is one of the most renowned religions and philosophies in the world. Over 6% of the world’s population are Buddhist. Buddhism was born about 2500 years ago through a man named Siddhartha Gotama, he belonged to a royal family that live in Lumbini. When Siddhartha Gotama turned 29 he had a realization that money and royalty were what everyone in the world wanted but he felt that even though he had them he was not happy. After his epiphany Siddhartha Gotama decided he would go forth on a long journey to discover the true meaning to being happy. Siddhartha Gotama traveled the world and learned things about many different religions around the world. After six years he finally reached “the middle path” in other words, enlightening. He earned the name Buddha and continued his life teaching others the way to enlightenment using The Four Noble Truths. The Four Noble Truths encompass the principles of Buddha 's teachings. …show more content…

The Four Noble truths include: The Noble Truth of Dukkha,The Noble Truth of the Cause of Dukkha,The Noble Truth of the End of Dukkha, and The Noble Truth of the Path leading to the end of Dukkha. The Pali word 'Dukkha ' is generally translates to 'suffering ', but this word as used in the Four Noble Truths has a deeper meaning. Dukkha includes deeper ideas such as pain, temporariness, disharmony, irritation, incompleteness and insufficiency. Dukkha certainly includes physical and mental suffering as

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