Comparison about Jaina ethics and Buddhist ethics

Vol-4 | Issue-12 | December-2017 | Published Online: 05 December 2017    PDF ( 157 KB )
Author(s)
Purnima Ghosh 1

1Department of philosophy, Nabagram Hiralal Paul College, Nabagram, Hooghly, West Bengal, India (Affiliated to Calcutta University)

Abstract

The ethical standards of Buddhism are worried about the approach to beat enduring and the training to lead an ethically, profoundly and mentally amazing life. As per Buddhism, enduring applies to everybody in wherever in each age. From the antiquated to current, everyone, included rulers, sovereigns, presidents and executives everywhere on the world, endured previously; endures in the present and will endure in what's to come. This is the law of nature. Nobody is absolved from languishing. On the off chance that we think about profoundly, we need to concur that life is in reality one of everlasting torment. Each second we are languishing, either truly, genuinely or intellectually. Can we actually discover a single individual in this world who is liberated from physical, passionate or mental agony? Indeed, even the individuals who have accomplished sainthood are not free from actual torment inasmuch as their actual bodies exist. Life and enduring are indistinguishable.

Statistics
Article View: 326