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A Little Liberation Can Go a Long Way—The Four Noble Truths in Daily Life: Part Three
Sister Ocean explains the Third Noble Truth
Uploaded 4 Sep 2015
Is Life Suffering? The Four Noble Truths in Daily Life: Part One
Part one of a reflection about the First Noble Truth
Uploaded 3 Jul 2015
Spiritual fulfilment requires doctrinal commitment and ecclesiastical continuity
What is a Buddhism that denies rebirth and karma, the metaphysical and moral motivations for the Buddhist path? And what is a Buddhism that hesitates to affirm the paramount institution of the sangha,
Uploaded 10 May 2013
Ecological Crisis: A Buddhist Analysis and its Resolution
Editor's note: This article was first published in the now-retired Bodhi Journal, Issue 10, December 2008.   Email:bdsaddhananda@yahoo.com ‘The earliest doctrinal elemen
Uploaded 26 Apr 2013
The Problem with Buddhism
Having sampled religious life across Asia, a Westerner is compelled to seek compromise This provocatively titled book seems intended to ride the coattails of the recent fad for memoirs and books on at
Uploaded 9 May 2011
Reflections on Confession of a Buddhist Atheist (Stephen Batchelor)
Batchelor’s 2010 work is an autobiographical work composed of two parts which recounted his Buddhist experience as a monk and a layman. In this work, as with his previous work Buddhism Without Beliefs
Uploaded 17 Jan 2011
“No Chicken Soup for the Soul”: Terrorism, Social Issues, Manila, and Buddhism
Based in Hong Kong, Leung Man Tao is a respected commentator on a vast spectrum of social issues in China. After converting to Theravada Buddhism, he remarked: “Buddhism is not Chicken Soup for the So
Uploaded 1 Jun 2010
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