"Great writer" does not imply even basic human decency.
Conversation
Replying to
Pet peeves aside, his key point that modern Buddhism (except Zen) has very little in common with the original texts is not well-understood.
1
Replying to
He thinks Zen is the true inheritor? Interesting. The chan guys saw themselves as very distinct from the "lesser vehicle".
2
Replying to
He goes into a long rant about how it supposedly stemmed from spiritual transmission from Gautama to some prince or another, as I recall it.
2
Replying to
Buddhism's pretty minor till Asoka makes it the state religion of all of India.
1
Replying to
The interesting part the text is the analysis of the techniques & ascesis, not his pseudointellectual ramblings on Aryans, class and so on.
1
Replying to
his picture in Wikipedia is screams "straight up fucking evil", even before I read the bio. Buddhism can offer a lot to such folks.
1
1
Replying to
Then you see he was a personal friend of Heinrich Himmler...
That's what makes the analysis interesting. It is amoral; stripped bare.
1
It becomes apparent that Buddhism doesn't need a moral or religious dimension. The teachings are completely compatible with any value system
5
Replying to
that's one take, but it's very easy to argue against it. Buddha's key insight of compassion/loving kindness sets him on the right path.
1
Replying to
Evola's analysis includes that. But you can easily fit those points into even a Nazi worldview. He takes a lot of effort to do just that.

