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Two Buddhas

Podcast de MarkWhiteLotus

inglés

Historia y religión

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Two Buddhas is a fresh take on Nichiren Buddhism for the 21st century—warm, curious, and free of dogma. Hosted by author and teacher Mark Herrick, this podcast explores Ren Buddhism, a contemporary path rooted in the chanting of Namu Myoho Renge Kyo, the wisdom of the Lotus Sutra, and the power of personal awakening. Two Buddhas blends deep Buddhist insight with everyday relevance, spiritual questioning, and the courage to let go of rigid systems. Real stories, real practice, real life—this is the Lotus without the walls

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66 episodios

episode Eightfold Path - Threefold Training: Nichiren's Three Great Secret Dharmas artwork

Eightfold Path - Threefold Training: Nichiren's Three Great Secret Dharmas

This podcast explores how the traditional Eightfold Path and the Threefold Trainingof Buddhism are synthesized into a streamlined practice within the Nichiren tradition. Rather than viewing spiritual development as a series of separate steps, the source argues that these ancient principles are concentrated into the Three Great Secret Dharmas. These three components—the Kaidan, the Honzon, and the Daimoku—serve as modern vessels for ethical conduct, deep concentration, and transcendent wisdom. By focusing on these core elements, practitioners can engage with the entirety of Buddhist teachings through a singular, integrated movement of faith. The author emphasizes that this transition represents a compression of the path, making profound enlightenment both accessible and practical for the individual. Ultimately, the text illustrates that the diverse factors of the Lotus Sutra are harmonized into a single act of devotion.

30 de mar de 2026 - 1 min
episode The Reducing Valve and the Mind at Large artwork

The Reducing Valve and the Mind at Large

This podcast explores the intersection between Western consciousness studies and Buddhist philosophy, using Aldous Huxley’s "reducing valve" metaphor to explain how the brain filters a vast "Mind at Large" into a narrow trickle of survival-based perception. The author argues that modern scientific frameworks, like Integrated Information Theory, accurately describe the mechanics of this filtered awareness but remain trapped by the "hard problem" of subjective experience because they observe the mind from the outside. In contrast, Tiantai Buddhism offers a first-person methodology that dissolves the boundary between the observer and the observed, recognizing that the "fish" of consciousness is inseparable from the "water" of reality. By reframing biological "priors" as the Three Poisons—desire, aversion, and ignorance—the essay positions Western science as a form of upaya, or skillful means, that leads the modern mind to the threshold of ancient contemplative truths. Ultimately, the text suggests that while science provides a rigorous scaffold for understanding the mind's limitations, only direct practice can bridge the gap between theoretical knowledge and the liberated experience of reality.

18 de mar de 2026 - 23 min
episode We Agree on the Symptoms - How the Three Poisons Drive Politics artwork

We Agree on the Symptoms - How the Three Poisons Drive Politics

This podcast evaluates the current American political crisis by arguing that while various factions accurately identify societal symptoms, they fail to grasp the underlying psychological causes. The author uses the Buddhist framework of the Three Poisons—greed, anger, and ignorance—to explain why political reforms consistently fail and cycle back into corruption. A significant portion of the analysis critiques the theocratic leanings of figures like Pete Hegseth, comparing their apocalyptic rhetoric to the radicalism they claim to oppose. By highlighting this ideological convergence, the source suggests that modern nationalism and globalism are both driven by the same unexamined cravings. Ultimately, the text asserts that no legislative fix can succeed without an internal transformation of the human mind. It concludes that shifting focus from political programs to ethical and mental clarity is the only way to break the cycle of systemic suffering.

6 de mar de 2026 - 20 min
episode Oligarchy and Executive Overreach artwork

Oligarchy and Executive Overreach

This podcast critiques a 2026 speech by Palantir CEO Alex Karp, arguing that he used a selective history of presidential power to intimidate independent AI companies into military compliance. The author contends that Karp intentionally omitted the landmark Youngstown Supreme Court case, which limits the government's ability to seize private property without congressional approval. According to the source, this rhetorical shift serves the financial interests of a tech oligarchy that has embedded itself within the defense establishment and the Trump administration. By framing nationalization as inevitable, these billionaire "vendors" seek to eliminate competitors like Anthropic who resist building unconstrained surveillance or autonomous weapons. Ultimately, the article warns that this movement replaces constitutional protections with a system of tribal political warfare and state-sanctioned data monopolies.

4 de mar de 2026 - 21 min
episode The War That Can’t Explain Itself artwork

The War That Can’t Explain Itself

This critical report examines the shifting and contradictory justifications provided by the U.S. government for its 2026 military campaign against Iran. The author argues that the administration has cycled through ten inconsistent rationales while privately acknowledging that no imminent threat actually existed. Beyond the strategic confusion, the text highlights a domestic security crisis caused by the purging of FBI counterintelligence units and the influence of extremist religious ideologies on military leadership. Most tragically, the source documents the mass casualty event at an Iranian girls' school, using it as a symbol of the war's human cost. Ultimately, the piece serves as a constitutional call to action, urging Congress to utilize impeachment or the Twenty-Fifth Amendment to restrain unchecked executive power.

4 de mar de 2026 - 19 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
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