John, List,

John Sowa wrote:
​
Gary Richmond wrote:

> I think that [Peirce] was a non-traditional Christian--he once

referred to his views as buddheo-Christian


Those two traditions are not necessarily in conflict.

​

I agree that there are indeed points where Buddhism and Christianity  can
be seen to intersect, places where one finds correspondences. It is my
sense that this is more likely so in consideration of zen buddhism and
mystical christianity than in more traditional forms of either religion
(although it is not altogether lacking there either, as in , for example,
the *humanity* expressed in both religions). Merton shows some of these
correspondences very clearly (I read all I could find by both him and
Suzuki in my 20's). I would add, however, that I personally find radical
differences as well, but this is not the place to get into those.

John also wrote:

​
Note,
for example, the writings of Thomas Merton.  For an overview, see
http://www.americamagazine.org/content/all-things/thomas-mer
ton-and-dialogue-buddhism

An interesting point in that article:
In Ihis correspondence with Suzuk [. . .] Merton refers to the doctrine of
analogy in Aquinas by
which it was just as legitimate, in one sense, to say of God that
he is non-being as to affirm God is being, since God so transcends
being as we know it that any attribution of being as we know it
would mislead.


This is an interesting point indeed. We've discussed in at least one of the
cosmological threads of late the way in which Peirce does ascribe one sort
of being to God, namely, Reality. On the other hand, Peirce held that to
refer to God as Existing was clearly wrong, perhaps fetishistic, since
existence concerns matter: action/reaction. The question which all of this
raises for Peirce's conception of the being of Jesus (that is, Christ seen
as both the very incarnation of God* and* truly man) is one I'm wholly
unprepared to consider at this time.

Best,

Gary R
​

[image: Gary Richmond]

*Gary Richmond*
*Philosophy and Critical Thinking*
*Communication Studies*
*LaGuardia College of the City University of New York*
*C 745*
*718 482-5690 <718%20482-5690>*

On Mon, Oct 31, 2016 at 5:26 PM, John F Sowa <s...@bestweb.net> wrote:

> On 10/29/2016 11:55 PM,
> ​​
> Gary Richmond wrote:
>
>> I think that [Peirce] was a non-traditional Christian--he once
>> referred to his views as buddheo-Christian
>>
>
> Those two traditions are not necessarily in conflict.  Note,
> for example, the writings of Thomas Merton.  For an overview, see
> http://www.americamagazine.org/content/all-things/thomas-mer
> ton-and-dialogue-buddhism
>
> An interesting point in that article:
>
>> In his correspondence with Suzuki (the two finally met in New York
>> in 1964), Merton refers to the doctrine of analogy in Aquinas by
>> which it was just as legitimate, in one sense, to say of God that
>> he is non-being as to affirm God is being, since God so transcends
>> being as we know it that any attribution of being as we know it
>> would mislead.
>>
>
> John
>
>
>
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