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Buddhism

Discover the life of Siddhartha Gautama, from his princely upbringing to becoming the Buddha and spreading the Four Noble Truths. Learn about Nirvana, the Eightfold Path, and how Buddhism spread to China, Korea, and Japan.

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Buddhism

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  1. Buddhism • Siddhartha Gautama and • the development of Buddhism

  2. 1. Who was the founder of Buddhism? • Siddhartha Gautama

  3. 2. Describe the early life of Siddhartha Gautama. • Born a prince in northern India he was isolated in the palace walls and destined for greatness.

  4. 3. What were the Four Passing Sights? • Old man • Sick man • Dead man • Holy Man

  5. 4. What understanding did Siddhartha take away from these sights? • Life of full of suffering but only the holy man seemed at peace.

  6. 5. What did Siddhartha go in search of? • Enlightenment! • Way to end suffering

  7. 6. What did Siddhartha become known as? • the Buddha • meaning the “Enlightened One”

  8. 7. In his first sermon, what were his four main ideas called? List them. • The Four Noble Truths • 1. All suffer and know sorrow. • 2. We suffer because of desires. • 3. To end suffering we must end desires. • 4. End desires by following the Eightfold Path

  9. 8. What is another term for the Eightfold Path? • Middle Way

  10. 9. List the steps in the Eightfold Path. Make an organizer. (web) • Right Views • Right Resolve • Right Speech • Right Conduct • Right Livelihood • Right Effort • Right Mindfulness • Right Concentration

  11. 10. What is the goal for Buddhists called? • Nirvana • Nirvana for Gautama is to live the life on earth as the result of the Enlightenment, it is not a place, but a state of mind in which one is released from desire, craving, fear... and, most specially, Nirvana brings a Buddhist out of the cycles of the curse of reincarnation for ever.

  12. 11. What main idea do Hinduism and Buddhism have in common? • reincarnation

  13. 12. What 2 main Hindu ideas did the Buddha reject? • the many Hindu gods • the caste system

  14. 13. As a result of the caste system rejection, what type of early converts did Buddhism receive? • Laborers, craftspeople and servants

  15. 14. How did Buddhism spread after the Buddha’s death? • Buddhist missionaries spread Buddhism to new areas

  16. 15. How did trade impact the spread of Buddhism AND what are some areas in east Asia to which Buddhism spread? • Traders carried Buddhism along trade routes such as the Silk Roads to places like China, Korea and Japan and southeast Asia.

  17. Indian Buddha Chinese Buddha

  18. 3 Theories for “Fat Buddha” Buddhism reached China around 100 CE, and was wide spread there by 600 CE. And we get three theories on Fat Buddha. First the physical image of a Noble was different as was the concept of the results of enlightenment, a Noble was not athletic or a warrior, but a well fed person of leisure. Enlightenment led to material success and wealth and a position at least close to nobility. And a belief that fat men were inherently benevolent, similar to the "jolly fat man", Jolly Ol' St. Nick for example. Then there is the story of a Chinese Buddhist monk in the 6th century who just happened to have a belly that shook like jelly. He was a benevolent fellow who dedicated himself to helping others, and was regarded as the incarnation of the Boddhisatva Metteya, who had reached nirvana but stayed around just to help people And finally, the theory held by most Buddhist scholars. A sagely Zen monk appeared in China around 850 CE and died in 916 CE. He said his name was "Knowing This" (ChiChe). No one knew where he came from, he carried a big fat bag and was famous for his fat belly. When asked how to obtain nirvana he would lay down the bag, not saying a word. When asked about what happened after reaching nirvana, he would pick up the bag and walk away, still not uttering a word. It is pretty much accepted that such a monk existed. He is probably the inspiration for Fat Buddha, as the statues began appearing in the late 9th century, 1200 years after the Gautama's death.

  19. Confucianism

  20. Qin Shi Huangdi

  21. Wudi

  22. Huns

  23. Civil service exam

  24. crossbow

  25. Great Wall

  26. Book burning

  27. Aryans

  28. Indo-European

  29. steppes

  30. Caste system

  31. brahmins

  32. Hinduism

  33. moksha

  34. reincarnation

  35. darma

  36. Siddhartha Gautama

  37. nirvana

  38. Eightfold path

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