Topics Include: 1) The relationship between Buddhism and quantum physics: understanding the scientific truth of the Dharma; 2) The evolution of the teaching of non-self to the teaching of emptiness; 3) The relationship between the teaching of emptiness and modern quantum physics; 4) Albert Einstein on the relationship between science and Buddhism; 5) Understanding emptiness or sunyatta: the law of interdependence ; 6) How ignorance creates suffering in our lives; 7) Quantum physics: wave/particle duality, the observer effect, and the collapse of the wave function; 8) The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, quantum entanglement, and quantum field theory; 9) What is the nature of illusion? 10) The remarkable connection between Buddhism and science: bringing a sense of morality and ethics into our understanding of reality.
31, May 2025
EMPTINESS AND QUANTUM PHYSICS (Part 2)
Topics Include: 1) Evolution of the series on non-self to the series on Emptiness or Sunyatta and Quantum Physics; 2) The importance in spirituality of truth: the truth of how things actually are, not beliefs or faith; 3) The definition of Emptiness or Sunyatta; 4) The truth of interdependence; 5) Quantum physics as opposed to classical physics: wave particle duality; the observer effect; the uncertainty principle; quantum entanglement; quantum field theory; and the observer effect; 6) In Buddhism, why we don’t see the world as it truly is; 7) The central importance of interdependence; 8) The importance of the observer effect; 9) Learning how to see our experience as it really is: the role of mindfulness.
14 June, 2025
EMPTINESS AND QUANTUM PHYSICS (Part 3)
Topics Include: 1) The relationship between Buddhism and science; 2) Review of emptiness or sunyatta in Buddhism; 3) Review of quantum physics: wave/particle duality; the observer effect; quantum entanglement; and quantum field theory; 4) Understanding interdependence; 5) The observer effect; 6) Practical implications of the convergence of Buddhism and quantum physics; 7) How we don’t see reality as it truly is; 8) What is consciousness? The two kinds of consciousness in Buddhism; 9) Finding absolute reality in meditation; 10) Finding the final link between Buddhism and quantum physics.
1) Introduction to the idea of suffering; 2) Suffering as the basis for the spiritual search; 3) Three criteria for a path leading out of suffering; 4) The range of suffering; 5) Dukkha, or the definition of suffering in this life and lives to come; 6) The suffering of unresolved expectations in life: emotional suffering; 7) The unresolved tension between self and others in our lives; 8) The balance between self interest and the benefit to others: the Middle Way; 9) Bringing mindfulness or moral clarity to our actions. 10) Finding the balance between conventional reality and absolute reality in our lives.
The Causes of Suffering
1) Introduction to the work of Bhikku Bodhi; 2) The basic roots of suffering: greed, hatred, and delusion; 3) The fundamental root of ignorance; 4) The development of wisdom; 5) The difference between wisdom and intelligence; 6) Finding happiness in the wrong places; 7) How the Darwinistic impulse drives suffering in the world; 8) How wisdom can be cultivated; 9) The Noble Eightfold Path as an expression of the Middle Way; 10) The two extremes of sensual pleasure and self mortification; 11) The great gift of being born a human being. 10 February, 2024
Right Understanding: Karma and Free Will
1) Introduction to the eight path factors: right understanding, right thought, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration. 2) Discussion about the sequence of the path factors: morality and ethics, meditative concentration, and wisdom. 3) the importance of values and aspirations in determining our life choices; 4) the difference between right view and wrong view; 5) the two levels of right view: mundane right view and supra-mundane right view; 6) right view: understanding the Law of Karma: right view of the ownership of action; 7) karma as volitional or intentional action; 8) the relationship between karma and free will; the work of Robert Sapolsky; 8) the impact of conditioning and our false sense of agency; 9) the balance between the larger conditioning factors in our life and our ability to make morally appropriate decisions; 10) the reality of our “self” as being a reflection of our conditioning and therefore representing a “false sense of agency”. 11) Understanding the moral implications of karma.
17 February, 2023
Right Understanding: Karma and Moral Wisdom
1) The fundamental role of karma in organizing our lives; 2) The work of Robert Sapolsky and definition of free will in the face of karma; 3) The definition of karma as volition or intention; 4) The distinction between morally wholesome and unwholesome behavior; 5) The roots of volition: greed, hatred, and delusion or their opposites; 6) Consequences or the ripening or fruits of our actions; 7) Contrasts of morally subjective or morally deterministic approaches to life; 8) The Buddha’s standard of a morally objective code of ethics; 9) The contrast between the western principle of moral absolutes and the Buddhist idea of moral relativism. 10) Understanding how our conditioning can lead to destructive moral self judgement.
24 February, 2023
Right Understanding: Supramundane Right View
Topics Include: 1) The central importance of karma as part of right understanding; 2) Parallels with the work of evolutionary biologist Robert Sapolsky; 3) Defining our degrees of freedom where we can exercise free will; 4) The idea of moral agency and the defining characteristic of ahimsa or nonharming in the Buddhist canon. 5) How the Dharma allows increasing degrees of freedom from our conditioning; 6) the limitations of mundane right understanding and the goal of supramundane right understanding: complete freedom from karma or conditioning; 7) the power of karma in conditioning our lives; 8) The significance of the Four Noble Truths; 9) The two ways of understanding the Four Noble Truths, conceptually and through revelation; 10) The first Noble Truth: the inherent unsatisfactoriness of existence; 11) The Second Noble Truth: desire as the cause of suffering; 12) The third Noble Truth: the elimination of craving; 13) The difference between conceptual understanding and realization; 14) Attaining realization through meditation; 15) Right understanding as the beginning and the end of the spiritual journey. 16) Awakening as a release from the rounds of samsara as well as an expansion of awakening and freedom in our current lives.
March 9, 2024
Right Thought: Mind and Body
Topics Include: 1) The difference between right thought and right intention: the second path factor; 2) the transformative power of knowledge in terms of changing how we behave in the world; 3) the three forms of right intention: renunciation, good will, and harmlessness; 4) the corresponding wrong intentions: greed, ill-will, and harmfulness; 5) The role of intention as a link between thoughts and actions; 6) The consequences of wrong intentions and right intentions; 7) How understanding the Four Noble Truths inclines the mind toward renunciation, good will and harmlessness; 8) Seeing our common humanity with others; 9) Confronting greed, hatred, and delusion by cultivating their opposite qualities; 10) Learning how overcome greed and craving in our lives.
March 16, 2024
Right Thought: Pleasure and Suffering
Topics Include: 1) The difference between right thought and right intention: the second path factor; 2) the transformative power of knowledge in terms of changing how we behave in the world; 3) the three forms of right intention: renunciation, good will, and harmlessness; 4) the corresponding wrong intentions: greed, ill-will, and harmfulness; 5) The role of intention as a link between thoughts and actions; 6) The consequences of wrong intentions and right intentions; 7) How understanding the Four Noble Truths inclines the mind toward renunciation, good will and harmlessness; 8) Seeing our common humanity with others; 9) Confronting greed, hatred, and delusion by cultivating their opposite qualities; 10) Learning how overcome greed and craving in our lives.
March 23, 2024
Right Thought: Dependent Origination
Topics Include: 1) Review of the eight path factors: the importance of the intention of renunciation; 2) overcoming desire through understanding; 3) understanding Dependent Origination as the basis for understanding suffering: why the Buddha felt that no one would understand it; 4) Dependent Origination: the evolution of our psycho-physical response to the world; 5) Contact: that point where our senses contact our experience; 6) Feeling: pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral; 7) Craving, or the point at which clinging and attachment begin to arise: the beginning of suffering; 8) Clinging turns into becoming, or creating actions to get what we want; 8) Becoming leads to birth, old age and death. 9) Transcendent Dependent Origination: the road to awakening: the first step: consciousness of suffering in our lives; 10) Faith, or the arising of spiritual urgency; 11) the stages of joy, rapture, equanimity and bliss: the jhanic practices in meditation; 12) The attainment of insight into phenomena and disenchantment leads to dispassion, or the letting go of desire and craving; 13) Some tips to manage tanha or craving.
March 31, 2024
Right Thought: Dependent Origination Part 2
Topics Include: 1) Review of the eight path factors: right understanding, thought, speech, action, livelihood, effort, mindfulness, and concentration; 2) Right thought as right intention; 3) the three forms of intention: renunciation, good will, and non-harming; 4) Understanding renunciation in terms of the overcoming of craving: dependent origination; 5) ignorance: not seeing the reality of things as they are; 6) volitional impulses to get what we want; 7) understanding how we are embodiments of karmic or sankharic formations; 8) Consciousness: the awareness of the sensations that enter through the sense doors; 9) Mind and body: the constant ongoing interaction between consciousness and our material actions; 10) The six sense doors: the means by which we experience the world; 11) Contact: the moment our sense doors meet our experience: how we create our own realities by how we perceive our experience; 12) Feeling: our pleasant, unpleasant or neutral responses to our experience; 13) Craving: when pleasant or unpleasant feelings turn into craving or aversion: the beginning of suffering; 14) Clinging: what follows after craving; 15) Becoming: the acts we perpetuate to get what we want; 16) Aging and death: the inevitable result of all births: all things pass away. 17) How dependent origination is playing out in the world today.
April 13, 2024
Right Thought: Transcendental Dependent Origination
Topics Include: 1) The relationship of dependent origination to right intention or the second path factor of the Noble Eightfold Path; 2) How transcendental dependent origination, continues from the knowledge of suffering all the way to final enlightenment; 3) the twelve steps: suffering, faith, joy, rapture, tranquillity, bliss, concentration, knowledge and vision of things as they truly are; disenchantment; dispassion; liberation from suffering; and knowledge of the destruction of the cankers or defilements; 4) coming to an awareness of suffering as a basis for faith; 5) faith leads to joy or gladness: the first beginnings of the meditative path: the training in morality and ethics; 6) training in the four jhanic states; 7) Coming to knowledge of things as they truly are: the stage of insight or wisdom; 8) Examining the five aggregates: form, feeling, perceptions, mental formations, and consciousness; 9) The three characteristics of impermanence, suffering, and non-self; 10) Disenchantment: the process of disengaging from phenomena; 11) Dispassion: a growing detachment and renunciation; 12) the seeing of the Four Noble Truths; 13) Emancipation: the stage of spiritual fruition; 14) the behavior of an arahant: the attainment of the deathless; 15) Knowledge of Destruction of the Cankers: the final acknowledgment.
April 20, 2024
Right Thought: Good Will and Harmlessness
Topics Include: 1) Review of the Noble Eightfold Path; 2) Understanding right thought as right intention: 3) the intentions of renunciation, good will, and harmlessness; 4) renunciation, or the overcoming of craving: the teaching of dependent origination and transcendent dependent arising; 5) achieving personal enlightenment through renunciation and transforming one’s relationship with others through good will and harmlessness: the wisdom path; 6) The basis of love and kindness: the idea of no-self; 7) How the renunciation of craving leads to good will and harmlessness; 8) The intention of good will: metta or lovingkindness; 9) The intention of harmlessness or compassion; 10) Seeing renunciation, good will and harmlessness as the conceptual framework for spiritual development.
April 27, 2024
Speech, Action and Livelihood: The Meaning of Sila
Topics Include: 1) Introduction to the Noble Eightfold Path; 2) the importance of morality and ethics as a foundation for the spiritual life; 3) the difference between Buddhism and other theistic traditions in terms of the redemption from suffering; 4) Morality not only as a set of behavioral constraints, but as the foundation for liberation: how it purifies the mind; 5) Contrasting with western ethics: the Ten Commandments; 6) The fundamental meaning of Sila as Harmony or Coordination; 7) the four meanings of Sila: social cohesion, psychological, karmic, and contemplative.
May 25, 2024
Right Speech: Our Inner and Outer Manifestation
Topics Include: 1) Introduction to the Noble Eightfold Path; 2) Review of the importance of morality and ethics in Buddhism and its difference from Judeo Christianic tradition; 3) Abstaining from false speech; 4) Intention as the determinitive karmic factor behind any transgression; 5) The personal consequences of lying; 6) Truthful speech as an external expression of our internal understanding of reality as it truly is: the importance of congruity.
June 8, 2024
Right Speech: The Primacy of Speech as a Reflection of Our Mind
Topics Include: 1) Introduction to the Noble Eightfold Path; 2) The primary importance of right speech compared to actions and livelihood; 3) The relationship of right speech to wisdom: the inner and outer modalities of what is real; 4) the definition of an arahant: a person whose words reflect the nature of reality as it truly is in the Dharmic context; 5) how our understanding of the nature of things as they really would inform the words we use; 6) slanderous speech: speech that causes division and hatred; 7) Harsh speech: speech uttered in anger, intended to cause pain: the story of Sariputra; 8) Idle chatter: idle talk that lacks purpose or depth: the impact of modern social media and disinformation; 9) the karmic consequences of skillful or unskillful speech.
15 June, 2024
Right Action and Right Livelihood: From Individual to Society
Topics Include: 1) Comparison of Speech, Action, and Livelihood to the Five Precepts: Not killing, lying, stealing, sexual misconduct and the taking of substances; 2) Understanding morality and ethics as a framework for living the spiritual life; 3) Seeing the relationship between our individual selves and our relationship to everyone else in the world; 4) Right Action: abstaining from the taking of life; 5) Abstaining from what is not given or stealing; 6) Abstaining from sexual misconduct; 7) Right livelihood: earning a living in a righteous way. 8) The Buddha’s prescription of right behavior as a model for a new and different social order; 9) Moral and ethical behavior as the alignment and consistency between what we know, what we think, what we say, and what we do: the moral integrity of a spiritually evolved being.
June 22, 2024
Right Effort: Overcoming Sensual Desire and Ill-Will
Topics Include: 1) Review of the Noble Eightfold Path; 2) Why do we meditate? The signification of meditation in out spiritual journey. 3) The primacy of concentration as the means to wisdom; 4) The supporting factors of right effort and right mindfulness; 5) The factor of energy; 6) Taking responsibility for our own spiritual development; 7) Preventing the arising of unarisen unwholesome states; 8) The five hindrances: sensual desire, ill-will, dullness and drowsiness, reslessness and worry, and doubt; 9) the various forms of sensual desire and ill-will; 10) dullness and drowsiness; 11) restlessness and worry; 12) doubt; 13) the karmic source of our suffering; 14) how we process sense experience; 15) how we restrain the defilements from arising; 16) how greed and hatred are triggered through the apprehension of objects; 17) the fundamental importance of meditation: the true meaning of power.
29 June, 2024
Right Effort: Overcoming Unwholesome Mental States
Topics Include: 1) Review of the Noble Eightfold Path; 2) Right effort: how to work with negative emotions and encourage positive emotions; 3) How to prevent unwholesome states that have not yet arisen; 4) How perception occurs and how it can trigger the hindrances; 5) How to observe the object and restrain the hindrance: the role of mindfulness; 6) How to abandon unwholesome states that have already arisen; 7) Seeing impermanence when desire arises; 8) Lovingkindness as an antidote to anger; 9) Overcoming sloth and torpor; 10) Breathing to calm an agitated mind; 11) Overcoming doubt about the practice; 12) Five ways of overcoming unwholesome mental states; 13) Why noting can cause hindrances to disappear. 14) Mindfulness as a form of mental training.
13 July, 2024
Right Effort: Encouraging Wholesome Mental States
Topics Include: 1) The four different kinds of right effort; 2) How to arouse wholesome emotions that have not yet arisen; the Seven Factors of Enlightenment; 3) Coming inro mindfulness; 4) The penetrative power of investigation; 5) How energy arises; 6) Rapture: a sense of pleasure in seeing; 7) Tranquillity, a settled sense of quietness then follows; 8) Insight: the analogy of discovering and processing a diamond; 9) Concentration: a sense of one-pointed unification of mind; 10) Equanimity: inward poise and balance; 11) How insight is an instanteous process; 12) Drinking orange juice. 13) Maintaining wholesome states that have already arisen. 14) How our moments of epiphany build our path to awakening.
July 20, 2024
Right Mindfulness: Understanding Mindfulness
Topics Include: 1) The basis of right Mindfulness: the fathom long body; 2) Understanding the Dharma as the fundamental structure of the universe; 3) The quality of “bare attention” 4) How we bring a subjective filter to our experience and don’t see the world as it actually is; 5) The ways our mind interferes with our experience; 6) The two paths of mindfulness: deep serenity or wisdom; 7) How the Buddha used mindfulness to understand suffering; 8) The difference between concentration practice and mindfulness practice; 9) The transformative power of mindfulness.
27 July, 2024
Right Mindfulness: Living Efficiently and Productively with Clear Comprehension
Topics Include: 1) The original teaching of mindfulness: the Maha Satipattana Sutta; 2) The definition of right mindfulness; 3) Mindfulness of breathing; 4) the various forms of breath awareness; 5) Why how we breathe is a direct reflection of what is happening in our body and in our mind; 6) Seeing impermanence in the rising and falling of the breath; 7) Seeing the feeling of the breath rather than the form or shape of the abdomen; 8) Clearly perceiving the entire breath body; 9) Calming the bodily functions as the concentration deepens; 10) Extending the mindfulness to other postures: seeing the interaction of intentions and actions in our activities: nama and rupa; 11) Mindfulness and clear comprehension: Understanding the purpose of an action; the suitability of an action; the range of meditation; and understanding without delusion; 12) Learning how to live more productively and efficiently through clear comprehension. 13) How we bring ourselves as gifts to ourselves and to our community.
August 10, 2024
Right Mindfulness: True Mindfulness of the Body
Topics Include: 1) Structure of the Maha Satipattana Sutta: The Great Discourse on the Four Foundations of Mindfulness; 2) Mindfulness of the body; 3) What is true mindfulness? 4) Meditation on the unattractiveness of the body: meditation on the 32 parts of the body; 5) Seeing the body as an object and not a process; 6) Seeing the body as composed of four primary elements: earth, water, fire, and air; 7) Seeing our bodies as composed of various energy fields; 8) How we suffer based on our ignorance of what our body really is; 9) The cemetery meditations; 10) Clinging to the idea of permanence because we cling to our lives; 11) Feeling gratitude for being in this body. August 17, 2024
Right Mindfulness: Mindfulness of Feelings
Topics Include: 1) The fundamental importance to feelings as the foundation of our experience and human beings: Freud’s Pleasure Principle; 2) The relationship of the Pleasure Principle with the Darwinian Theory of Natural Selection; 3) The simultaneous arising of feeling with consciousness; 4) Contact: the process of how feeling arises; 5) How pleasure and pain can trigger suffering; 6) How our experience is conditioned by our karma; 7) The basis of the teaching of feelings on the teaching of Dependent Origination; 8) Separating the experience of pleasure from the arising of craving; 9) Not identifying with our feelings: creating a sense of self; 10) Seeing impermanence in our feelings; 11) Knowing when pleasure turns into addiction of greed; 12) Understanding how karma affects our likes and dislikes; 13) learning to find freedom within our karmic selves. 14) understanding non-self or anatta within the context of our karmic conditioning. 15) Realizing true wisdom and freedom in our lives.
August 24, 2024
Mental Formations and Consciousness: The Basic Structures of Consciousness
Topics Include: 1) The Four Foundations of Mindfulness; 2) Review of Feelings; 3) The basic concept of mind: a permanent enduring faculty or an ever changing process; 4) Citta: the basic act of consciousness; 5) Cetasika: the coloring of our basic consciousness that creates our mind states; 6) What is the purpose of mindfulness meditation? 7) Seeing the relationship between cittas and cetasikas: the process of mindfulness; 8) The fourth factor: Consciousness or dhamma. 9) understanding our alienation from the Dharma or the Law of Nature and rediscovering a sense of alignment; 10) Working with the Five Hindrances and the Seven Factors of Enlightenment: holding back the hindrances and developing the enlightenment factors; 11) How to understand the process of insight; 12) the development of intelligence; 13) Bringing the innocence of a child into our consciousness.
August 31, 2024
Right Concentration: The Power of a Concentrated Mind
Topics Include: 1) Concentration as the foundation for the meditation process; 2) Concentration as an intensified form of consciousness: one-pointedness of mind; 3) Citta (bare awareness) and Cetasika (awareness colored by emotion); 4) The process of perception: citta to cetasika: how we create a “self” out of how we see our experience; 5) Defining mindfulness as a “spiritual” practice: What is the purpose of mindfulness? 6) RAIN: recognition, acceptance, non-attachment and non-attachment; 7) Experiencing our experience with pure awareness and karmic understanding; 8) Sustained concentration and a sense of “centeredness”; 9) The two forms of concentration: Samatha, or jhanic concentration, and Vipassana. or insight concentration; 10) The Buddha’s journey from Samatha to Vipassana meditation; 11) Setting the conditions for meditative practice; 12) Bringing a true sense of intentionality to our meditation practice.
September 14, 2024
Right Concentration: Understanding the Meditation Process
Topics Include: 1) The logic linking the wisdom, morality and ethics, and meditation groups together of the eight Noble Path factors; 2) the definition of concentration or Samadhi; 3) the difference between pure concentration practice and insight or mindfulness practice; 4) Setting the right conditions for meditation; 5) the 40 different objects used in the meditation practice; 6) the ten kasinas: the four primary elements; the four colors of the spectrum; light and space; 7) the ten unattractive objects: dead corpses in varying degrees of decay; 8) the ten recollections: the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha; the meditation on morality and generosity; the potential for divine-like qualities in ones self; mindfulness of death; meditation on the unattractive nature of the body; mindfulness of breathing; 10) a meditation on peace; a meditation on Nibbana; 11) the four Brahmaviharas: lovingkindness, compassion, sympathetic joy and equanimity; 12) the four immaterial states: infinite space, infinite consciousness, nothingness, and neither perception nor non-perception; 13) reflection on the repulsiveness of food; 14) reflection on the body as comprised of the four elements: earth, water, fire, and air; 15) Uses of different objects in the meditation process; 16) Developing a sense of spaciousness and flexibility in our practice; 17) What does it take to be a “spiritual” person?
September 21, 2014
Right Concentration: Concentration Practice and Mindfulness Practice
Topics Include: 1) The two legs of the meditation process: Concentration practice and mindfulness practice; 2) How our thoughts subjectively color our experience; 3) The importance of quieting our minds before attaining mindfulness; 4) Description of the basic meditation process; 5) The five hindrances: sensual desire, ill-will, sloth and torpor, restlessness and agitation, guilt; 6) The five absorption factors: initial application of mind, sustained application of mind, rapture, happiness, one-pointedness of mind; 7) Evolution of the object from preliminary object to the learning sign to the counterpart sign due to deepening concentration; 8) How mindfulness amplifies our experience of our experience; 9) The eight mundane and supra-mundane jhanas; 10) The definition of mindfulness; 11) The difference between mindfulness that is content oriented and process oriented. 12) What is the state of Nothingness?
September 28, 2024
The Four Stages of Awakening
Topics Include: 1) The difference between conceptual wisdom and “realized” wisdom; 2) Understanding the process of awakening: the four stages of awakening: 3) What is the historical meaning of “spirituality” in the Buddhist context: escaping the round of birth and rebirth; realizing the “sacred”; 4) the four stages of awakening defined in terms of the number of rebirths and the refinement of our character; 5) the ten “fetters” : doubt, avariciousness, belief in rites and rituals; envy and jealousy; false view: the first five fetters overcome in the first stage of awakening (sottapanna or “stream enterer”); 6) sensual desire and ill-will are reduced in the second stage (sagadagami or “once returner”) and eliminated in the third stage (anagami or “non returner”); conceit, ignorance, and desire for rebirth are eliminated in the fourth and final stage (arahant); 7) How do you know where you are on the spiritual path?
November 23, 2024
The Four Stages of Awakening (Part 2)
Topics Include: 1) The beginning of awakening: the three characteristics of existence: impermanence, suffering, and non-self; 2) The culmintion of insight: attaining awakening; 3) Understanding the deathless and the unconditioned; 4) Overcoming the ten defilements or “fetters”; 5) The four stages of awakening: the first stage, Stream Entry or Sotapanna; 6) The second stage: Once Returner or Sagatagami; 7) The third stage: Non-returner or Anagami; 8) The fourth stage: the Arahant; 9) Achievement of the final deliverance: full comprehension of the Four Noble Truths; 10) The final epilogue.
1) A Theravadin response to the crisis of the world. 2) The first lesson: understanding phenomena at their deepest levels. The problem of egotism and selfishness. 3) A comprehensive view of problems as resulting from multiple levels of causality. 4) The primal importance of the Mind as the primary causal factor in our experience. The illusion of self as the basis for greed, hatred, and delusion. 5) The triumph of science and technology for the control of the external world vs. our inability to understand ourselves. 6) The power of the three defilements: greed, hatred, and delusion and their integration into the institutional structure of society. 7) The impact of the modern global economic order in the development of materialist consumer culture. 8) The underlying assumption: consumption is the key to happiness. 12) Applying Buddhist principles: Ignorance: the assumption that material consumption is the basis for happiness.
March 11, 2023
Episode 2
1) Our failure to meet the basic needs of the people of the earth 2) The defilements: greed, hatred, and delusion: the roots of suffering 3) The social and institutional embodiment of the defilements in our lives. The role of national and international corporations in an unregulated free market system. The role of marketing and advertising in creating desire and greed 4) The underlying message: consumption is the key to happiness 5) The four distorting assumptions: that the impermanent is permanent, that the painful is pleasant, that the insubstantial is a self, that the ugly is beautiful 6) The Buddhist response: the Four Noble Truths. 7) The effect of capitalism on the fragmentation and polarization of society 8) The role of the Dharma in offsetting the impact of greed 9) Finding a path to reform for all the religious traditions.
18 March, 2023
Episode 3
1) The delusion that consumption brings happiness. 2) The role of Buddhist wisdom in counteracting ignorance: the law of karma, the benefits of generosity and ethical conduct. 3) The role of good desire: desire for the good and desire for truth. 4) Reinterpreting the idea of Nibbana as a means of defining an alternative social ethic in consonance with other religious traditions. 5) The Buddhist concepts of happiness, peace, freedom and security. 6) How we misconceive these attributes. We see sensual pleasure as a source of happiness; we see peace as the absence of conflict by subduing our opponents; we mistake freedom for license; we think of security from external harm through external defenses. 7) Acting in ways that counteract greed, hatred, and delusion. 8) Following the Noble Eightfold Path through virtue, concentration, and wisdom. 9) The inherently social nature of our personal spiritual evolution. 10) The two choices ahead of us: untrammeled development guided by science and technology or the use of technology for the betterment of humankind. We need a shift from external development to internal development. 11) The world today as a projection of our collective minds and the need for a transformation of consciousness. The need to heal ourselves. 12) the fundamental unity of all religions in the recognition of human dignity.
The monthly half-day retreats allow both experienced practitioners, as well as new students, the opportunity for extended sitting and walking meditation, as well as an opportunity to give more detailed instructions.
It begins with detailed meditation instructions and is followed by four 45-minute sessions of alternating sitting and walking meditation beginning at 1:00pm. The first sitting focuses on concentration practice and the second sitting focuses on mindfulness practice.
For those unable to come to the temple or who are out-of-state, we are also offering the retreat on a hybrid basis. So, please feel free to join us on Zoom.