Jains and Their Immune Systems
Posted: Mon Apr 12, 2010 10:38 am
So, I just thought I'd defend myself since FNA was rather judgmental.
My question was serious, but wasn't an attack on Jain beliefs or an attempt to demonstrate that said beliefs are untenable. I genuinely wanted to know how they reconcile their goal of nonviolence with cases where violence literally can't be avoided. It's an intriguing moral dilemma and I wanted to know how they tackle it. So, it would've been more like a non-LDS asking how Mormons reconcile their observance of Word of Wisdom with the fact that tea has many health benefits.
I had a neo-hippy friend who tried to implement ahimsa in his life and when I asked him this question his only answer was "I guess I have to kill myself". (Aside: Westerners make horrible Jains/Buddhists/Hindus.) Other than that, I don't know any practitioners of ahimsa, so I asked the board.
The answer itself was very informative, to me, but the diatribe was, I felt, unwarranted and somewhat lacking in the very charity werf implored of me.
My question was serious, but wasn't an attack on Jain beliefs or an attempt to demonstrate that said beliefs are untenable. I genuinely wanted to know how they reconcile their goal of nonviolence with cases where violence literally can't be avoided. It's an intriguing moral dilemma and I wanted to know how they tackle it. So, it would've been more like a non-LDS asking how Mormons reconcile their observance of Word of Wisdom with the fact that tea has many health benefits.
I had a neo-hippy friend who tried to implement ahimsa in his life and when I asked him this question his only answer was "I guess I have to kill myself". (Aside: Westerners make horrible Jains/Buddhists/Hindus.) Other than that, I don't know any practitioners of ahimsa, so I asked the board.
The answer itself was very informative, to me, but the diatribe was, I felt, unwarranted and somewhat lacking in the very charity werf implored of me.