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  1. Nov 22, 2024 · Buddhism is a religion and philosophy that developed from the doctrines of the Buddha, a teacher who lived in northern India between the mid-6th and mid-4th centuries bce. Buddhism has played a central role in the spiritual, cultural, and social life of Asia, and, beginning in the 20th century, it spread to the West.

  2. Author Rita Gross explains the importance of thinking clearly and compassionately about the relationship between Buddhism and religious diversity. Instead of desperately desiring answers to unanswerable questions, Buddhist practitioners should learn how to be helpful in a religiously diverse world.

  3. Dec 5, 2016 · Despite its importance, Buddhist studies, as a discipline, has largely ignored analyses of race as being fixed in the systemic and discursive arrangement of Eurocentrism and Euro-American centrism.

  4. Initiated as a universal and ethical religious path, Buddhism acquired significant popularity by proposing a middle way between extreme asceticism and the rigid household and social status-centred Hindu ritualism of the time.

  5. One way of answering ‘what is Buddhism?’ would be to say that Buddhism is one of largest and most influential religious traditions in the world, sharing with Christianity and Islam the vision of spreading to the whole of humanity rather than being limited to a particular ethnic or national group.

  6. Mar 7, 2018 · After mapping the landscape of key works on race, ethnicity, and American Buddhism, this chapter takes as a case study a collection of black Buddhist publications that reflect on race and ethnicity.

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  8. Despite the differences among these settings, Theravada Buddhism in each is shaped by state discourses on race and religion. The ways in which Theravada Buddhism and ethnicity. in both local and state forms mark each other merits more attention. religion and politics. Singapore.