I was rereading Sartre and one of his concepts in Bad Faith stuck out to me: we create social norms, moral and ethic codes, civil laws, and religion as a means to escape our responsibility to authentically exist. Our authenticity is hindered by our fear to take responsibility for our actions. I was relating that (ironically) to my own spiritual practices.
To understand it I wanted to break it down into our basic evolutionary design and then incorporate the inception of moral indoctrination into our basic primal self. Simply put our species exists by the three f's: feed, fight, and f***. These inherently create societal conflict due to competition of resources, which in turn created the basis of moral and ethic codes (and religion) to help regulate conflict. But does moral and ethic law inhibit authenticity? Social norms as well are fluid and ever changing, waxing and waning with public opinion.
So I thought does my religion hinder my true self? The Buddha taught that the true self, or awakened enlightened self, is within us all. It is free from craving, free from suffering, but our basic nature is to crave food, power, and procreate. Cessation of craving ends suffering, but is ending suffering just a way to escape our innate responsibilities? Are people even capable of taking responsibility for their actions without relying on religion, social norms, laws...etc? People are always stating that the world would be better without religion. If we removed it would things change for the better? That is highly suspect. "Better" I suppose could be subjective. In counter to Sartre, if our true self is to appeal to our basic fundamental needs and take responsibility for our actions, is that an enlightened person? They would by definition be authentic on a primal level as even our concept of Self is impermanent and fluid. To me they are both correct. Our primal self is our true self, whereas the enlightened self (in a Buddhist sense) is the evolved self.
To understand it I wanted to break it down into our basic evolutionary design and then incorporate the inception of moral indoctrination into our basic primal self. Simply put our species exists by the three f's: feed, fight, and f***. These inherently create societal conflict due to competition of resources, which in turn created the basis of moral and ethic codes (and religion) to help regulate conflict. But does moral and ethic law inhibit authenticity? Social norms as well are fluid and ever changing, waxing and waning with public opinion.
So I thought does my religion hinder my true self? The Buddha taught that the true self, or awakened enlightened self, is within us all. It is free from craving, free from suffering, but our basic nature is to crave food, power, and procreate. Cessation of craving ends suffering, but is ending suffering just a way to escape our innate responsibilities? Are people even capable of taking responsibility for their actions without relying on religion, social norms, laws...etc? People are always stating that the world would be better without religion. If we removed it would things change for the better? That is highly suspect. "Better" I suppose could be subjective. In counter to Sartre, if our true self is to appeal to our basic fundamental needs and take responsibility for our actions, is that an enlightened person? They would by definition be authentic on a primal level as even our concept of Self is impermanent and fluid. To me they are both correct. Our primal self is our true self, whereas the enlightened self (in a Buddhist sense) is the evolved self.