Yes. Dissatisfaction is the source of productivity, and that's all our bodies care about. If someone were 100% satisfied with everything around them, there would be no reason for them to move or change anything. The ideal state for survival is just above depression. Happiness and pleasure are directional guides, "purposely" ephemeral so that we can get back to work distancing ourselves from death. Max Buddha would mean sitting until death, with no dissatisfaction for lack of nutrients or air or self actualization. Still the pursuit of this peace is extremely worthwhile because left unchecked, our dissatisfaction grows out of control, over-optimizing ruthless survival in place of contentment. Don't feel guilty for not being in a constant state of euphoria (looking at you west-coasters :-D), this is our lot as humans.
> Max Buddha would mean sitting until death, with no dissatisfaction for lack of nutrients or air or self actualization.
If "Max Buddha" is meant to be "non-reactivity taken it's logical extreme," then that's not a fair representation of what the Buddha taught :) You probably just meant it as a turn-of-phrase of course, but I thought it would useful to comment since this is actually a pretty common view given the popularity of mindfulness based stress reduction (MBSR; as described by Jon Kabat-Zinn referenced in the article) which promotes a non-reactive and non-judging awareness of the present as its core principle.
But how is the goal and its effects described in the earliest Buddhist texts? In the religious frame of an orthodox Buddhist cosmology, the Pali Canon [1] offers the best insight on this question in my opinion. Thanissaro Bhikku describes it [2]:
> Thus the image underlying nibbana is one of freedom. The Pali commentaries support this point by tracing the word nibbana to its verbal root, which means "unbinding." What kind of unbinding? The texts describe two levels. One is the unbinding in this lifetime, symbolized by a fire that has gone out but whose embers are still warm. This stands for the enlightened arahant, who is conscious of sights and sounds, sensitive to pleasure and pain, but freed from passion, aversion, and delusion. The second level of unbinding, symbolized by a fire so totally out that its embers have grown cold, is what the arahant experiences after this life. All input from the senses cools away and he/she is totally freed from even the subtlest stresses and limitations of existence in space and time.
> The Buddha insists that this level is indescribable, even in terms of existence or nonexistence, because words work only for things that have limits. All he really says about it — apart from images and metaphors — is that one can have foretastes of the experience in this lifetime, and that it's the ultimate happiness, something truly worth knowing.
Just to add yet another balancing point of view: not everyone accepts mainstream Western translations of the Buddhist canon to be faithful. For instance Stephen Batchelor (see his most recent book After Buddhism) would rather strongly disagree with attributing the "two levels" of The Two Truths to the Buddha, or the orthodox interpretation of The Four Noble Truths as being about truth statements on the nature of reality. Batchelor argues, and I would agree, that such exalted and "indescribable" depictions of nibanna are later editions to the canon for the purposes of normalising Buddhism amongst the milieu of competing spiritual worldviews. What was distinctive about what the Buddha taught, was not how he described nature, but how he advocated a practice - his legacy is verbs, not nouns.
There's a quote in the Dhammapada that I think is more clear than the "four noble truths" (which get too much emphasis):
Avoid all evil, cultivate the good, purify your mind: this sums up the teaching of the Buddhas. (183)
Matching what you said, many religions (and non-religious people) emphasize avoiding evil and cultivating good, but the practice of purifying your mind is quite good.
That's quite a work and protestant oriented point of view.
> Yes. Dissatisfaction is the source of productivity, and that's all our bodies care about. If someone were 100% satisfied with everything around them, there would be no reason for them to move or change anything.
No, because you could be 90% satisfied with everything around you and decide it's enough. Of course it doesn't hold for a definition of 'satisfied' that aligns with 'I consider it done/enough'.
Or you could be 100% satisfied with what's around you and still see a need for maintenance. Or you could be satisfied with the constant state of change things tend to be in and continue to contribute to that change. Or could see tendencies and desires in yourself as indications to continue to live as a human, to do human things, without attaching yourself to any specific outcome. Sitting still is one reaction to satisfaction, but far from the only one.
I think the very idea of dukkha, the dissatisfaction that every non-enlightened being is bound to experience, has a direct and fundamental counterpart in cybernetics. It's the feedback loop, the discrepancy signal.
A control device tries to bring the target parameter of a system it controls to some optimal value. Unless the system under control is very stable, the target value will most of the time be off, and the discrepancy signal, non-zero, so the controlling device will have something to "worry about" and "toil on".
(So, at least for simple robots, the first noble truth is obviously correct.)
. As a
Zenrin poem says:
You cannot get it by taking thought;
You cannot seek it by not taking thought.e
But this absurdly complex and frustrating predicament arises from a
simple and elementary mistake in the use of the mind. When this is
understood, there is no paradox and no di@culty. Obviously, the mistake arises in the attempt to split the mind against itself, but to
understand this clearly we have to enter more deeply into the
“cybernetics” of the mind, the basic pattern of its self-correcting
action.
It is, of course, part of the very genius of the human mind that it
can, as it were, stand aside from life and reAect upon it, that it can
be aware of its own existence, and that it can criticize its own
processes. For the mind has something resembling a “feed-back”
system. This is a term used in communications engineering for one
of the basic principles of “automation,” of enabling machines to
control themselves. Feed-back enables a machine to be informed of
the effects of its own action in such a way as to be able to correct its
action. Perhaps the most familiar example is the electrical
thermostat which regulates the heating of a house. By setting an
upper and a lower limit of desired temperature, a thermometer is
so connected that it will switch the furnace on when the lower limit
is reached, and o? when the upper limit is reached. The
temperature of the house is thus kept within the desired limits. The
thermostat provides the furnace with a kind of sensitive organ–an
extremely rudimentary analogy of hurnan self-consciousness.2
The proper adjustment of a feed-back system is always a complex mechanical problem. For the original machine, say, the furnace, is
adjusted by the feed-back system, but this system in turn needs
adjustment.Therefore to make a mechanical system more and more
automatic will require the use of a series of feed-back systems–a
automatic will require the use of a series of feed-back systems–a
second to correct the >rst, a third to correct the second, and so on.
But there are obvious limits to such a series, for beyond a certain
point the mechanism will be “frustrated” by its own complexity.
For example, it might take so long for the information to pass
through the series of control systems that it would arrive at the
original machine too late to be useful. Similarly, when human
beings think too carefully and minutely about an action to be taken,
they cannot make up their minds in time to act. In other words, one
cannot correct one’s means of self-correction inde>nitely. There must soon be a source of information at the end of the line which is
the >nal authority. Failure to trust its authority will make it
impossible to act, and the system will be paralyzed.
The system can be paralyzed in yet another way. Every feedback
system needs a margin of “lag” or error. If we try to make a
thermostat absolutely accurate–that is, if we bring the upper and
lower limits of temperature very close together in an attempt to
hold the temperature at a constant 70 degrees–the whole system
will break down. For to the extent that the upper and lower limits
coincide, the signals for switching o? and switching on will
coincide! If 70 degrees is both the lower and upper limit the “go”
sign will also be the “stop” sign; “yes” will imply “no” and “no” will imply “yes.” Whereupon the mechanism will start “trembling,”
going on and o?, on and o?, until it shakes itself to pieces. The
system is too sensitive and shows symptoms which are startlingly
like human anxiety. For when a human being is so self-conscious,
so self-controlled that he cannot let go of himself, he dithers or wobbles between opposites. This is precisely what is meant in Zen
by going round and round on “the wheel of birth-and-death,” for
the Buddhist samsara is the prototype of all vicious circles.
Actually, as the story goes, Buddha did plan to sit without consideration of food or other worldly comforts/needs to be enlightened. It was thought that serving the flesh robbed you of the spiritual life and thus enlightenment.
It was when, after much suffering and malnutrition, Buddha realized his enlightenment. He realized if he continued he would die and not realize enlightenment. It's when he let go of this idea that he was attached to and take the middle path that he became liberated.
He let go of all of it. No eyes, no ears, no nose...
Programmers, writers, and other artists do their best work when they are a notch above pure depression, wracking their brain for desperate means of survival, not when they're in a joyous flow state.
It seems for creative work there must be a mix of free-flowing generative processes, where you come up with ideas (in a euphoric? manic? state), followed by pragmatic (depressive?) critique of the generated ideas. This back and forth of idea creation and critique is what results in a refined final result. It also might explain why, anecdotally, bipolar individuals tend toward creative careers. Similarly helps explain "write drunk, edit sober."
I also contend that few programmers/programming positions require this sort of creative process. Perhaps "hacker" is the better term for a technical+creative identity.
I recently worked my way up to make chores my own, I embed my senses into every move. It feels a lot like meditation. I felt less tension, less fatigue, even pleasure. After all, anything can be a pleasure if you find a balance between your self, own desires, own capabilities.
Not actually happy, but some kind of a deeper happiness (?) in the suffering of progress towards something worthwhile.
The goal being independent wealthly was that for me until I attained it and didn't like it. The pursuit was much more fun! Despite (or because of?) the suffering. But without that nirvana held out, the motivation for its pursuit is gone...
That's how I see it.