BS and I
Buddhism Intro
Buddhism Philosophy
Buddhism all cats
Buddhism all cats
100

Example of a belief system

Buddhism

100

Define adherence

follower of belief system

100

What four things did Buddha see that made him realise life is suffering?

Dead, old, sick, holy man

100

What is the main text of Buddhism and why it important?

The Tripitaka is the main Buddhist text. It is important because it preserves Buddha’s teachings and rules for living and reaching enlightenment.

100

Who is the Dalai Lama what is he the leader of?

Gloabl spirtiual leader (Buddhas reincarnation) of Tibetan Buddhism.

200

Example of ideaology

Feminism, communism etc

200

How many people adhere to Buddhism

500 million

200

How does Buddhism say we can reduce suffering

follow eightfold path and middle way

200

What is the Bodh Gaya and why is it important?

Bodh Gaya is where the Buddha reached enlightenment. It is important because it is the holiest Buddhist pilgrimage site.

200

What is a monastery and how are they organised?

A monastery is where monks and nuns live and practise Buddhism.

It is organised in levels: senior monks lead, junior monks learn, and novices are beginners. Some monasteries are separate for women.

300

Define belief systems

A belief system is an organsied, structured set of ideas and values that guide how people understand life and behave.

300

Where do Buddhist live historcially and currently?

Historically: South East Asia

Currently: spread to rest of world


300

what is the middle way?

path that steers clear of both the extremes of intense indulgence and severe deprivation

300

What evidence is that Buddhism has become commercialised?

Evidence of commercialisation includes meditation apps, paid courses, books, retreats, and wellness products using Buddhist ideas like mindfulness to make money.

300

What evidence is that Buddhism has become westernised?

Buddhism has become Westernised through mindfulness for stress, secular practice without religion, and apps/books teaching meditation for wellbeing.

400

define ideaology

An ideology is a set of ideas and beliefs about how society should work and how people should behave. often political or economic

400

Where, when and who started Buddhism?

Siddhartha Gautama, Nepal 560BCE

400

what are 4 'right' things eightfold path says to have

right actions, speech, concentration, effort, mindfulness, intention,  Livelihood, view

400

What are 2 and why are there different forms of Buddhism?

Buddhism has different forms because it spread to different cultures and is changed over time to better fit the culture.

Theravada Buddhism is traditional mainly in Sri Lanka and Thailand.

Western (secular) Buddhism focuses on wellbeing, often without religious beliefs like rebirth.

400

What are 2 changes that have occured in Buddhism who resists these changes?

Increase in the ordination of women and increased secularistaion of Buddhism some conservative monks resist change as they fear loss of tradition

500

Distinguish between ideaologies and belief systems using examples. 

An ideology is a set of political or social ideas about how society should be organised and how power should work (e.g. capitalism, feminism).

A belief system is an orgainsed and structured set of religious or spiritual beliefs and values that explain life, meaning, and morality (e.g. Buddhism, Christianity).

500

Tell me Buddhas journey to enlightment and how he spread this

Siddhartha Gautama left his royal life after seeing suffering, known as the Four Sights. He practised meditation and the Middle Way, avoiding extremes. While meditating under the Bodhi tree, he reached enlightenment (Nirvana) and became the Buddha. He then taught the eightfold path, forming the Sangha, which spread his teachings.

500

what is difference between nirvana and enlightenment?

Enlightenment is the being awakened having wisdom and realisation of reality. Nirvana is the ultimate goal: the state of absolute peace and freedom from suffering

500

What does Buddhism believe about 3 ethical issues in society and provide reasoning

In Buddhism, war, abortion, and assisted suicide are generally opposed because they go against the First Precept: Do not harm or kill living beings. Buddhists believe harming life creates suffering and negative karma.

500

How has Buddhism being involved in conflict and peace?

In Tibet, conflict happened after China took control. Dalai Lama non-voilence.

Thích Nhất Hạnh promoted peace and non-violence during the Vietnam War.

In the Rohingya crisis, some Buddhists were involved in violence against Rohingya Muslims.