Local and regional religions
Polytheism
Cross languages and cultures
Adopt and adapt beliefs
Spread to Ganges river valley, ca. 1000 to 500 BCE
Diverse language families
*Indo-European
Indo-Aryans
Dravidian
*Rig Veda
Compiled orally, 1500 to 1000 BCE
Written down, 600 BCE-1000 CE?
Polytheism
Indra, etc.
*Brahman (priest)
Ritual sacrifices
Brahman
Kshatriya (warrior)
Vaishya (farmers and merchants)
Shudra (laborers)
*Reincarnation
Atman (soul)
*Karma
Afterlife
Heavens and hells
Brahman (universal power/force)
Gods in human form
Siddhartha Gautama
Buddha, "The Enlightened One"
Tathagata, "He who arrived at the truth"
Sakyamuni “Sage of the Sakyas”
Early life
Kshatriya (Warrior) prince
Path to enlightenment
Leaves family
*Asceticism
*Meditation
1) Saw past lives
2) Saw realities of the cycles of existence
3) Saw life was suffering (samsara)
4) *Nirvana ("Extinction")
Enlightenment
Becomes the Buddha
1) Life is Samsara (suffering)
2) Desire is source of Samsara
3) Ending desire is solution
4) *Noble Eightfold Path
Karma
Reincarnation
“The Middle Path”
Nirvana
Social equality
1. What general characteristics od the universal religions of Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam have in common?
2. The remainder of lecture is the same as study questions for Hansen, et al., 52-61 below.
1. What are the Indo-European languages? Why is India divided between Indo-European languages in the north and Dravidian languages in the south?
2. What was the nature of Vedic religion's gods and religious rituals? What role did Varna (caste) play in the religion?
3. What new religious ideas did the Buddha develop? Why did many people in India find Buddha's religious ideas to be more appealing than the Vedic religion?
1. What is the Middle Path? Why does Buddha preach that it is the proper path to Enlightenment?
2. What are the *Four Noble Truths? Why did Buddha claim that all of life is suffering? How has the Buddha reached the point of escaping the cycle of rebirth?