A Refuge in Skillful Action (extract)
"Instead of arguing from abstract science, the Bodhisatta focused
directly on the level of immediate experience and explored the
implications of truths that both sides overlooked. Instead of fixing on
the content of the views expressed, he considered the actions of those
who were expressing the views. If views of determinism and total chaos
were followed to their logical end, there would be no point in
purposeful action, and yet the proponents of both theories continued to
act in purposeful ways. If only physical acts bore consequences, there
would be no point in teaching a proper understanding of the nature of
action — for the mental act of understanding, right or wrong, would have
no consequences — and yet all sides agreed that it was important to
understand reality in the right way. The fact that each side insisted
that the other used unskillful forms of observation and argumentation to
advance its views implied that mental skills were crucial in
determining the truth. Thus the Bodhisatta looked directly at skillful
mental action in and of itself, followed its implications in developing
knowledge itself as a skill — rather than as a body of facts — and found
that those implications carried him all the way to release."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "A Refuge in Skillful Action"
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