Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help!
  Advanced
Register  |  Log in  
   Ask    
 Answer  
  Help  

Ask QuestionsprogressAnswer QuestionsprogressBuild ReputationprogressBecome an Expert
 
Free Answers in 3 Easy Steps

Register Now
3 Steps

At Ask Me Help Desk you can ask questions in any topic and have them answered for free by our experts. To ask questions or participate in answering them you must register for a free account. By registering you will be able to:
  • Get free answers from experts in any of our 300+ topics.
  • Accept money for answers that you provide.
  • Communicate privately with other members (PM).
  • See fewer ads.

Home > Society & Culture > Religion > Buddhism   »   can buddists be ambitious

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Question
 
 
#1  
Old Jul 14, 2007, 01:46 PM
nicespringgirl's Avatar
nicespringgirl
Ultra Member
nicespringgirl is offline
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: USA
Posts: 1,252
nicespringgirl See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.nicespringgirl See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
can buddists be ambitious

Desire is the drive of our life, but it can be selfless.

Can buddhists be ambitious?

Reply With Quote
 
     

Answers
 
 
Old Jul 14, 2007, 02:24 PM   #2  
Ultra Member
jillianleab is offline
 
jillianleab's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 1,192
jillianleab See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.jillianleab See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.jillianleab See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Not being a Buddhist myself, but having some knowledge of the religion, I'd say you have quite an issue here!

Since the Four Noble Truths tell us about suffering, and desire is considered suffering, I suppose the argument could be made you are going against the Four Noble Truths and thus straying further from the intention of the Noble Eightfold Path. BUT part of the Noble Eightfold Path is "right actions", "right livelihood" and "right effort/exercise". By "right actions" you avoid action which causes harm and "right livelihood" tells you to have a way of life which does not harm others. So, if your profession does not cause harm to others, and you live your life in a way which does not harm others, you could be considered on the right path. "Right effort" says you are supposed to improve yourself; providing for your family would be an improvement to yourself.

In my strictly non-professional opinion, I would say the desire (read: want) of wealth is contrary to Buddhism, but taking reasonable steps to ensure your family is provided for is not. Perhaps you could eliminate the "desire" and turn it into actions of improving yourself, your life, and not harming others. So you can make money, as long as you do not WANT to be making MORE money. So you get offered a job which pays more; you take it not because you want the higher paycheck, but because it allows you to improve yourself and your family.

Hope I helped!

Comments on this post
Xrayman agrees: good answer! You sound more Buddhist than you think you are! All quite true-well said. only one thing, Buddhists don't go aainst any "doctrine" per se.
  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Jul 14, 2007, 02:32 PM   #3  
Ultra Member
nicespringgirl is offline
 
nicespringgirl's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: USA
Posts: 1,252
nicespringgirl See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.nicespringgirl See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jillianleab
Not being a Buddhist myself, but having some knowledge of the religion, I'd say you have quite an issue here!

Since the Four Noble Truths tell us about suffering, and desire is considered suffering, I suppose the argument could be made you are going against the Four Noble Truths and thus straying further from the intention of the Noble Eightfold Path. BUT part of the Noble Eightfold Path is "right actions", "right livelihood" and "right effort/exercise". By "right actions" you avoid action which causes harm and "right livelihood" tells you to have a way of life which does not harm others. So, if your profession does not cause harm to others, and you live your life in a way which does not harm others, you could be considered on the right path. "Right effort" says you are supposed to improve yourself; providing for your family would be an improvement to yourself.

In my strictly non-professional opinion, I would say the desire (read: want) of wealth is contrary to Buddhism, but taking reasonable steps to ensure your family is provided for is not. Perhaps you could eliminate the "desire" and turn it into actions of improving yourself, your life, and not harming others. So you can make money, as long as you do not WANT to be making MORE money. So you get offered a job which pays more; you take it not because you want the higher paycheck, but because it allows you to improve yourself and your family.

Hope I helped!
The drive for me to be successful is to help my family. I don't spend money on myself expect for school expense food and basic living expense. So yes, I think that's right to be ambitious so I can improve my parents and other family memeber's life. The button line is "it is not about money!"
that's what I considered-selfless type of ambition.
I'd never done harm to ppl, and I hope ppl don't do harm to me. Live in peace is my dream.
Thank you!
  Reply With Quote
 
     

Bookmarks


Thread Tools
Display Modes

 
Similar Sponsors




Copyright ©2003 - 2007, Ask Me Help Desk.
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 12:07 AM.