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Moral precepts of Buddhism:-The Five Precepts
Buddhists hold that moral way of life, which is the Middle Way (majjihima magga), is the gateway to the highest and ultimate goal of all Buddhist aspiration (nibbdna).Emphasis is sometimes laid on the need for a ‘middle way’ in keeping the precepts, avoiding the extremes of laxity and rigid adherence.
Buddhism emphasizes a future-directed morality in which one always seeks to do better in the future, taking the precepts as ideals that one is seeking to live up to in an increasingly complete way. While each precept is expressed in negative wording, as an abstention, one who keeps them increasingly comes to express positive virtues as the roots of unwholesome action are weakened.
Each precept thus has a positive counterpart:-
Closely related to keeping the precepts is the concept of ‘right livelihood’, a factor of the Eightfold Path .This refers to making one’s living in a way that does not involve one in habitually breaking the precepts by bringing harm to other beings, but that is, it is hoped, helpful to others and an aid to the development of one’s faculties and abilities.
By: Arpit Gupta ProfileResourcesReport error
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