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Trigger Nowi Uttara Deepann
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<blockquote data-quote="greenthunder" data-source="post: 27198115" data-attributes="member: 297213"><p>Your question is rather confusing...</p><p></p><p>Are you asking how or why one should gain Saddhā or are you questioning the validity of Saddhā as a proper aid to reach Nibbāna?</p><p></p><p>Saddhā can be simplified in to trust based on experience. Buddha is the one who discovered Nibbāna. He is the formulator and expositor of the Noble Eightfold path. To discover Nibbāna on your own you would have to be a Pacceka Buddha or a Samyaksam Buddha. That's why savaka needs to place his or her trust on Buddhas word .</p><p></p><p>I guess above answer wouldn't make much sense to you since you might not have a proper understanding of concepts like Nibbāna, Samsāra, Papañca (Conceptual proliferation) and Nipañca. I might be able name some sources where you might read about those but that's all I am willing to do about it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="greenthunder, post: 27198115, member: 297213"] Your question is rather confusing... Are you asking how or why one should gain Saddhā or are you questioning the validity of Saddhā as a proper aid to reach Nibbāna? Saddhā can be simplified in to trust based on experience. Buddha is the one who discovered Nibbāna. He is the formulator and expositor of the Noble Eightfold path. To discover Nibbāna on your own you would have to be a Pacceka Buddha or a Samyaksam Buddha. That's why savaka needs to place his or her trust on Buddhas word . I guess above answer wouldn't make much sense to you since you might not have a proper understanding of concepts like Nibbāna, Samsāra, Papañca (Conceptual proliferation) and Nipañca. I might be able name some sources where you might read about those but that's all I am willing to do about it. [/QUOTE]
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