Difference between revisions of "Anarchisme et religion"

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Les communautés bouddhiste effraient souvent les rois et les faiseurs de loi par cause de leur notion de propriété. En rejetant volontairement toutes possessions matérielles et en n'ayant peur devant la douleur et la mort, les Bouddhistes "échappe" naturellement aux systèmes de pouvoir planètaire car ils ne peuvent alors être manipulés.
 
Les communautés bouddhiste effraient souvent les rois et les faiseurs de loi par cause de leur notion de propriété. En rejetant volontairement toutes possessions matérielles et en n'ayant peur devant la douleur et la mort, les Bouddhistes "échappe" naturellement aux systèmes de pouvoir planètaire car ils ne peuvent alors être manipulés.
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==== Conclusions des trois Vérités universelles(bouddhistes) ====
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Buddhists believe in three fundamental truths of the universe, the [[dharma seals]], viz.:
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# Everything is in a constant state of change. ([[anicca]])
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# That "suffering" exists and is unavoidable. ([[dukkha]])
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# That everything is devoid of a "self." ([[anatta]])
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Thus, there can be no "perfect State"; we can only attempt to approach an ideal community for all. Any man-made institution is impermanent as well as imperfect, as people and the world change constantly. Further, no material wealth or political power will grant us permanent happiness—unenlightened satisfaction is an illusion that only perpetuates [[samsara]]. Individual liberty, while a worthy goal for anarchists, is nevertheless incomplete, to the extent that it precludes our common humanity, since there is, ultimately, no "self" that is inherently distinct from the rest of the universe.
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That being said, the aim of a ''[[bodhisattva]]'' is to try to minimize the amount of suffering that goes on during the lives of conscious beings. The socialist anarchist argues that the [[state]] and [[capitalism]]  both generate [[oppression]] and, therefore, suffering. The former, the state, is an institution that frames the desire for power, and the latter, capitalism, the desire for material wealth. Trying to control other human beings, in the view of Buddhist anarchists, will only cause them to suffer, and ultimately causes suffering for those who try to control. Trying to hold on to and accumulate material wealth, likewise, increases suffering for the capitalist and those they do business with.
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Compassion, for a Buddhist, springs from a fundamental selflessness. Compassion for humanity as a whole is what inspires the Buddhist towards activism; however, most, if not all, political groups tend to go against the [[Eightfold Path]] that steers Buddhist thought and action. Thus, anarchism, lacking a rigid ideological structure and dogmas, is seen as easily applicable for Buddhists.<ref>See also [[Kalama Sutta]]</ref>
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Those who have seen the conjunction of anarchism and Buddhism (in various ways) arguably include [[Edward Carpenter]], [[Ananda Coomaraswamy]], [[Lala Hardayal]] [[Liu Shipei]], [[John Cage]], [[Kenneth Rexroth]], [[Allen Ginsberg]], [[Diane di Prima]], [[Gary Snyder]], [[Jackson MacLow]], [[Peter Lamborn Wilson]], [[John Moore]], [[Kerry Thornley]], [[Max Cafard]], [[William Batchelder Greene]], as well as the pro-Situationist [[Ken Knabb]] and others.  The foremost anarchist thinker [[Peter Kropotkin]] saw primitive Buddhist communities as embodying the principle of [[mutual aid]],<ref>[[Peter Kropotkin]] ''[[Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution|Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution (1902)]]'', "Conclusion".</ref> and Matthew Turner noted that some Buddhist priests were involved in the anarchist movement in Japan in the early  part of the 20th century.
  
 
=== Anarchisme et Christianisme ===
 
=== Anarchisme et Christianisme ===

Revision as of 02:03, 28 August 2006

  1. See also Kalama Sutta
  2. Peter Kropotkin Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution (1902), "Conclusion".