Wednesday, 6 May 2026

KS. B.

 Great—this is where the Kalama Sutta feels surprisingly modern.

🔬 Connection to science

At its core, the Kalama Sutta’s advice mirrors the scientific method:

  • Question claims → Don’t accept something just because it’s said
  • Test ideas → Look for evidence and repeatable results
  • Revise beliefs → Change your view if new evidence appears

For example, in science:

  • A hypothesis isn’t accepted just because a famous scientist proposes it
  • It must be tested, verified, and peer-reviewed

👉 That’s very similar to the Buddha’s advice: don’t rely on authority—rely on careful examination and results.


🧠 Connection to modern critical thinking

It also aligns with how we’re taught to think clearly today:

1. Watch out for cognitive biases
Humans tend to believe things that confirm what they already think (confirmation bias).
The Kalama Sutta warns against blindly trusting what “feels right.”

2. Evaluate sources
Just like fact-checking news:

  • Who is making the claim?
  • What evidence supports it?
  • Is it reliable?

3. Focus on outcomes
Modern ethics often asks: Does this action reduce harm and increase well-being?
That’s almost exactly what the Sutta emphasizes.


⚖️ A subtle but important difference

There is one difference from pure science:

  • Science focuses on objective truth about the world
  • The Kalama Sutta also focuses on ethical truth—what leads to suffering or happiness

So it’s not just “Is this true?” but also:

“Does this lead to harm or to well-being?”


🧩 Putting it all together

You can think of it as a simple 3-step filter:

  1. Pause → Don’t accept immediately
  2. Investigate → Look for evidence and test
  3. Evaluate impact → Does it help or harm?


That’s why many people see the Kalama Sutta as one of the most practical teachings—it works just as well for ancient philosophy as it does for navigating misinformation today.

If you want, I can  turn this into a daily “mental checklist” you can actually use in real time.


Kalama sutta. B.

 Kalama Sutta is a well-known teaching of the Buddha found in the Anguttara Nikaya (Numerical Discourses). It is often praised for its emphasis on critical thinking and personal verification rather than blind belief.

Context

The Buddha delivered this discourse to the Kalama people of a town called Kesaputta. They were confused because many teachers were giving contradictory teachings, each claiming to be right.

Key Teaching

Instead of telling them to simply follow him, the Buddha advised a careful, rational approach. He said not to accept something just because it is:

  • Passed down by tradition
  • Written in scriptures
  • Based on hearsay
  • Supported by logic alone
  • Taught by a respected teacher

What to rely on instead

He encouraged people to examine things for themselves:

  • When something is unwholesome, harmful, and leads to suffering → reject it
  • When something is wholesome, beneficial, and leads to well-being → accept and practice it

Core Idea

The Kalama Sutta promotes:

  • Independent inquiry
  • Ethical evaluation
  • Personal experience as a guide

Why it’s important

This teaching is often seen as one of the most open and practical aspects of Buddhism. It supports a mindset similar to modern critical thinking—questioning, testing, and verifying before accepting beliefs.

If you want, I can give you a simple modern-day example of how to apply the Kalama Sutta in everyday decisions.


JC

 That line comes from the Bible—specifically Gospel of John 15:5:

“I am the vine; you are the branches…”

In that passage, Jesus Christ is using a metaphor to explain connection and dependence. The idea is that just as branches draw life and nourishment from a vine, people draw spiritual life and purpose from staying connected to him.

If you’re exploring it from a spiritual angle, it’s about:

  • Connection (remaining “in” the vine)
  • Growth and fruitfulness
  • Dependence on a source beyond oneself

If you meant it in a different context—poetic, symbolic, or even something else—tell me, and I can take it in that direction too.


DMHC. Support. Own destiny