Anonymous ID: 5519df Aug. 4, 2022, 6:36 a.m. No.17008837   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>17008342

>Buddism isn't a religion - not that I lay claim to being buddhist but I make a point that your arguments are simply fucking SHIT thru and thru.

Though Buddhism is not often thought of as a religion that practices magic, in such communities as those found in Thailand and Cambodia, there can be no doubt that Buddhism shares common ground with belief systems that are primarily associated with the use of magic.

Both countries have a long history of engagement in spiritualist and animistic magical practices. When Buddhism first arrived in these areas it came into contact with pre-existent traditions that believed in spirits, both benevolent and malevolent, and a developed system of magic which was to be feared or revered, depending on whether or not it was used for good or ill.

For Buddhism to flourish under such conditions in Thailand, it was necessary to develop a complex system of interaction between Buddhism and what has been called the Spirit religions.

https://www.newdawnmagazine.com/articles/monks-magic-buddhism-and-the-supernatural-in-thailand

 

War Magic: The Wizarding World of Tibetan Sorcery

Monk-rulers also rose to power, conflating the interests of religion and the state. For the imperial courts of Asia, one of the great appeals of Esoteric Buddhism was its claim of efficacy in dealing with worldly goals and the military application of its rituals that reflected a zeitgeist of subjugation, coercion, and control—in a word, power. Rulers and imperial courts were less interested in meditation or enlightenment and more concerned with what religion could do for the state: protecting the nation; extending the life, wealth, and power of its rulers; curing epidemics; controlling the weather; and pacifying or killing its enemies

https://rubinmuseum.org/spiral/war-magic-the-wizarding-world-of-tibetan-sorcery