Revenant said:
According to Buddhist scriptures, Buddha told people to accept nothing he said unless it made sense to them. I would agree that Buddhism is left far more up to the practitioner than that of Christianity and Islam. But most religious scholars do recognize the common thread in all religions.
The only thing that makes Buddhism a religion is that it has temples (places of worship) and priests/monks. Mahayana Buddhism also has deities and supersititions.
I'm not quite certain exactly what you mean here. Buddhism is a religion in that it has beliefs in the afterlife.
I don't believe in god, nor in the existence of a soul, but I do believe in the afterlife. Yet I am not religious, nor even spiritual. How is that possible ? As for me life is just a chain of biochemical reactions, and our bodies are made of eternal matter/energy, nothing can be lost. The energy will change form, and will have as much time as it needs to recreate life, for an infinite number of times, and thus an infinite number of possibilities. I do not believe in ONE life after my current life, but an infinity.
I find it very narrow-minded and impossible to admit to have just one eternal life after death. This eternal life would be one of continuous perfectioning, or one where improvement is impossible. In the first case, humans would soon not be human anymore (too perfect after a few thousands years of learning). What's more, people who died, say a few thousand years earlier, would have a tremendous advantage over "new deads" in paradise/heaven/nirvana. In the second case, it is just too depressing to have an eternity of time with no possible improvement. It's basically the same as to be dead - perfect inert matter... Buddhism teaches the impermanence of things, with which I agree. The universe is in perpetual movement, perpetual change... Life comes and goes, evolves or disappear, reappear, dies, is decomposed, recomposed, planets die, others are created, galaxies expand, change, change and always change... We are part of this eternal momentum, cannot escape it, alive or dead.