Showing posts with label Mp3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mp3. Show all posts

Monday, February 6, 2012

"The Buddha's Teaching: AS IT IS" (audio)

Bhikkhu Bodhi; Wisdom Quarterly; UrbanDharma.org


American scholar-monk, author, translator, and the most prominent English-speaking interpreter of ancient Pali Buddhist texts Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi once created a mail order course.

He was being asked to speak so often while residing in California and at the Washington (DC) Buddhist Vihara.

The popular 10-lecture series serves as a remarkably-detailed "Introduction to Buddhism" distributed on cassette. The home study course contains detailed lectures on the core original teachings of the Buddha.



In 1981 while residing in DC, Bhante G (then president of the Buddhist Vihara Society) suggested the young Bhikkhu Bodhi record lectures so the Vihara could distribute them as a set. A Wisdom Quarterly editor once traveled to faraway Kandy, Sri Lanka -- where Bhikkhu Bodhi was living as editor of the Buddhist Publication Society -- to get permission to widely publish these teachings.

He gladly gave it with the injunction that it be not-for-profit but a gift of Dharma (dhamma-dana). The lectures are now considered "public domain," which means anyone may copy and freely distribute.

They are best listened to in the sequence Bhikkhu Bodhi lists them because they build on one another. Here they are as MP3 files for free download (thanks to the great work of Ven. Kusala at urbandharma.com) taken.

Our exemplary meditation teacher Kalyani recommends they be placed on an MP3 player and listened to throughout the day. It is a wonderful form of merit-making to immerse oneself in these modern-English words, stories, and sutras to benefit from Bhikkhu Bodhi's decades of remarkable scholarship bringing the Buddha's teachings to life for Americans.


AS IT IS (audio files)
  1. The Buddha - MP3 - 1:23 min - 19 MB
  2. The Four Noble Truths - MP3 - 1:21 min - 18.6 MB
  3. The True Nature of Existence - MP3 - 1:18 min - 18 MB
  4. Dependent Origination - MP3 - 1:15 min - 17.2 MB
  5. Rebirth and Kamma - MP3 - 1:23 min - 19.1 MB
  6. Nibbana - MP3 - 1:16 min - 17.5 MB
  7. The Noble Eightfold Path - MP3 - 1:19 min - 18.1 MB
  8. Meditation - MP3 - 1:23 min - 19 MB
  9. Social Teachings of the Buddha - MP3 - 1:17 min - 17.7 MB
  10. The Sangha - MP3 - 1:18 min - 17.9 MB

(Wisdom Quarterly review) The series begins by introducing who the Buddha was (and what a buddha is). Then it goes to the core teachings, Buddhism encapsulated in the four truths. Reality is explained in Lecture 3. Then the means of gaining liberating-insight by mindful contemplation of the 12 links of causality called Dependent Origination. This leads to a discussion of rebirth and karma because they are essential links that reveal the true nature of disappointment (dukkha, suffering) central to the Buddha's teaching on the end of suffering. Nirvana (Pali, nibbana) is the complete cessation of suffering. It is brought about by cultivating the Noble Eightfold Path. This path is one of meditation more than intellectual study. But self-cultivation in Buddhism always includes a social dimension that critics of the ancient Theravada (Teaching of the Buddhist Elders) school often cite as self-absorbed assuming the Buddha had neglected society when in fact so much of his teachings are concerned with the betterment of the world that does not meditate. Those who dedicate their lives to meditating, preserving the Dharma, and teaching are the Sangha, the monastic order, which we as Americans and socially engaged Buddhists tend to dismiss as an anachronism when the Order of Nuns and Order of Monks (and countless temporary ordainees) continue to be a vibrant part of Buddhism.

Bhikkhu Bodhi has continued promoting the systematic study of Buddhism in English at BAUS (Buddhist Association of the US, Chaung Yen Monastery) in Upstate New York and at Bodhi Temple in New Jersey. Those teachings from the BAUS library include commentaries on his translation of the Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha (Majjhima Nikaya).

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Supreme Court legalizes downloading music

Reuters, AFP, RT.com, Wisdom Quarterly
The United State Supreme Court has refused an appeal that would have made downloading music an infringement of Federal copyright law. Take that, Metallica (AFP/Andre Durao).

The American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, or ASCAP, had been attempting to appeal to the Supreme Court an earlier ruling by an appeals court in New York that said a downloaded song constituted a public performance of the song under federal copyright law.

Attorneys for ASCAP were fighting to reverse that decision in hopes that they’d be able to collect additional royalties off of songs downloaded from the Web.

ASCAP had insisted that digital downloads were on par with public performances, which would thus allow copyright owners to receive compensation for each download. A federal judge and an appeals court had rejected that argument, however, and now the Supreme Court is also refusing to hear it.

According to the appeals court, “Music is neither recited, rendered, nor played when a recording (electronic or otherwise) is simply delivered to a potential listener.”

US Solicitor General Donald Verrilli agreed with the appeals ruling and that just because a song was transferred over the Internet did not mean that it was being performed, reports Reuters. More

"Actually, Butthead, I'm not into Metallica anymore. They suck ever since that Napster thing!" "Huh huh huh, you said 'suck,' Beavis." "Oh yeah, huh huh huh, huh huh huh, huh huh huh."

Photo from http://www.wall-papers.ru/

Thursday, May 5, 2011

How to Know? (MP3)

Wisdom Quarterly, Wikipedia, Bhante G


There is a word most of us never hear but that occupies us almost every waking minute -- epistemology. It is the investigation of, in brief, "how we know what we know." How do we come to conclusions about what is true and what is not? We have implicit theories of knowledge whether we like it or not. By bringing them to the surface and making them explicit, we can see if it is a sensible process likely to lead us to truth.
Epistemology comes from the Greek epistēmē, meaning "knowledge or science," and logos or -logy, meaning "the study of").

Epistemology is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature and limitations of knowledge. It addresses the questions:

  • What is knowledge?
  • How is knowledge acquired?
  • How do we know what we know?

In short, it is the search for truth. Much of the debate in this field of study has focused on analyzing (taking apart, breaking down, or deconstruction) the nature of knowledge and how it relates to notions such as truth, belief, and justification. It also deals with the means of production of knowledge, as well as skepticism about different knowledge claims. How does the Buddha and Buddhism approach this search or quest. The highest good is finding truth, and the highest truth is nirvana. But nirvana is not a thing (noun) so much as a process (verb). It is not to be found by thought but to be experienced. How do we find the way to nirvana or a teacher?

The Canki Sutta
Bhante Gunaratana (BhavanaSociety.org)
In this discourse, the Buddha gives the student Canki (pronounced "chunky") instructions on investigating the truth and anyone who claims to be a teacher of the Dharma: looking for states such as greed, hatred, and delusion in them. This path of training is explained as leading from placing verifiable-confidence in a teacher -- by visiting and paying respect, to listening and hearing the Dharma, to memorizing it and examining its meaning -- which leads to gaining reflective acceptance of the teaching. Then comes the arising of zeal, the application of will, scrutinizing, striving, and finally, realizing and seeing the ultimate Truth by penetrating it with wisdom.

"I do not perceive even one other thing, O recluses, that when undeveloped and uncultivated entails as much suffering as the mind. The mind when undeveloped and uncultivated entails great suffering”
- The Buddha (AN 1:9).

File Size: 22 MB
Duration: 1:30:00
Recorded: 9-28-07

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Truth about Swine Flu exposed!


The Swine Flu Epidemic in Mexico and the Resort to Military Rule
RakingAimRadio.com (April 28, 2009)

Play show directly from the Internet by clicking "play" link. Or download (instructions) the show to your hard drive then listen. This allows you to rewind and forward, a feature not available directly from the Net, which requires starting the show again from the very beginning. Home>>

  • Startling revelations laying bare US operational plans
  • Uncompromising, fact-intensive exposés of the hidden workings of a system addicted to permanent war
  • Methodical examination of "terror" as rationale for taking away rights under the cover of false-flag operations

Taking Aim Audio Archives
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