The Pale Blue Dot……..

<< Click to Display Table of Contents >>

Navigation:  Three Levels of Practice > Moral Living and Fundamentals > The Basics >

The Pale Blue Dot……..

Revised March 2, 2020; August 28, 2022

1. Even if some of us are not thinking about a “wider world view” or “what happens after death,” we all want a better world.

I thought of sharing this marvelous video from the late Dr. Carl Sagan:

WebLink: YOUTUBE: Carl Sagan - Pale Blue Dot

2. When I read the writings of all those past scientists like Sagan, Feynman, Einstein, Bohm, Heisenberg, etc., I wonder how much more they could have accomplished spiritually if they had been exposed to pure Buddha Dhamma.

Yet, I am still impressed by their pure reasoning and compassion for humanity; they were not just scientists with a narrow focus. They thought deeply about the “purpose of existence.”

3. Even though science has revealed the unimaginable vastness of space, scientists think our universe is only 15 billion years old. However, each of us has an uncountable number of lives in the past. See “Origin of Life – There is No Traceable Origin.” Not only is our place in the vast cosmos insignificantly small, but our existence of about 100 years (in this life) is also insignificantly small.

Yet, out of countless beings that live on this Earth, we are the only species capable of forging our destiny.

We must be mindful not only of the welfare of family and friends but of all other people and beings (seen and unseen).

4. Do you know why some actions are good and others bad? We may quote some ethical maxims or juggle with philosophical abstractions, but there is a simple explanation called nature. “Good is good because it leads to happiness and freedom of the heart. Bad is bad because it leads to suffering, and it feels bad.”

The Buddha said a moral deed (puñña kamma) is one that makes one’s heart “pulsating with joy”; an immoral deed leads to a burdened heart.

5. Nature encourages morality and punishes immorality via its built-in reward-punishment system, which is none other than the laws of kamma. But the punishment is not immediate, so it is hard for people to make the connection.

Even if the punishment in question comes a few lives later, this “time lag” is not that long since saṁsāra is “beginning-less” and “endless.”

6. Humans innately know what is right and what is wrong. Most bad actions are committed with a mind that is not calm but is agitated. Therefore, we need to learn how to calm our minds: “Key to Calming the Mind – The Five Hindrances.”

By the way, Dr. Sagan’s books like “Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space,” “The Varieties of Scientific Experience,” and “Billions & Billions: Thoughts on Life and Death at the Brink of the Millennium” are very informative. These are likely to be available in local public libraries.

Next, “The Law of Attraction, Habits, Character (Gati), and Cravings (Āsava)”, ………..