The main difference is time. Buddha shows the way in simple instructions, so that you don't have to discover the path to enlightenment by yourself.
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The main difference is time. Buddha shows the way in simple instructions, so that you don't have to discover the path to enlightenment by yourself.
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manpreet
Best Answer
3 years ago
What is different about being a Buddhist than an atheist?
As far as I can tell, "western" thought is a mix of different philosophical approaches that can be applied to life with a dose of common sense: ethics, rationalization, self, society, abstraction, belief, existence, nature... there's place for everything in "western" thought, one just needs to look in the right places.
I've heard good things about Buddhism, but everything I've read about until now is just a different way of saying something that I've heard elsewhere. Different words, a different language.
Does Buddhism recommend itself as the best approach to reach enlightenment, or can this fulfillment be achieved outside of Buddhist schooling?
Or more subjectively: Why should a person follow Buddhism instead of something else?