RE: What is pride? - Discussion
RE: What is pride?
Dark Knight, modified 5 Months ago at 12/3/22 8:00 PM
Created 5 Months ago at 12/3/22 8:00 PM
What is pride?
Posts: 4 Join Date: 12/2/22 Recent Posts
A state of being characterized by persistent delusions re: being relative to other beings. (See also, conceit. Compare, avidya.)
-pratyekabuddha
-pratyekabuddha
George S, modified 5 Months ago at 12/6/22 12:49 PM
Created 5 Months ago at 12/6/22 12:49 PM
RE: What is pride?
Posts: 2752 Join Date: 2/26/19 Recent PostsChris M, modified 5 Months ago at 12/6/22 5:50 PM
Created 5 Months ago at 12/6/22 5:50 PM
RE: What is pride?
Posts: 4686 Join Date: 1/26/13 Recent Postsshargrol, modified 5 Months ago at 12/6/22 11:46 PM
Created 5 Months ago at 12/6/22 7:32 PM
RE: What is pride?
Posts: 1965 Join Date: 2/8/16 Recent Postsเอียน พิชฟอร์ด, modified 5 Months ago at 12/6/22 8:37 PM
Created 5 Months ago at 12/6/22 8:31 PM
RE: What is pride?
Posts: 39 Join Date: 2/10/20 Recent Posts
Pride is a manifestation of craving and clinging to fabricated concepts, i.e., the fundamental causes of dukkha. Pride arises when we become attached to our own perceived qualities, accomplishments, or possessions and believe that they make us superior to others. This attachment creates a false sense of self, through the process of dependent origination (paticcasammupāda), and leads to a desire to maintain or enhance this false sense of self through comparing ourselves to others, boasting, or seeking recognition and validation. Ultimately, the things we believe we own and control, including treasured components of our self-view, are fleeting, contingent, void, and serve as obstacles to seeing things as they truly are (yathā-bhūta-ñāṇa-dassana) and thus limit our capacity for further detachment from our delusions (virāga) and achieving freedom (vimutti).
This response was auto-generated.
This response was auto-generated.