Key TermsThe Four Noble TruthsThe Noble Eightfold PathNirvana
Coach Smith
Coach Smith
Around 563 B.C.,a prince named
Siddhartha Gautama
was born inIndia.
Siddhartha was an Indian prince.
He lived in a luxurious household. However, he longed to see the world beyond the palace.
Upon leaving the palace, he saw a sick man, an old man, and a corpse.
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Coach Smith
Upon leaving thepalace, Siddhartha
discovered theexistence of
suffering. He discovered that
we are born onlyto age and die.
Upon learning of the existence of suffering, Siddhartha decided to leave the palace and find the cause and cessation of suffering.
Siddhartha lived among the Hindu ascetics and endured many hardships.
However, he did not discover the cause or cessation of suffering among the Hindus.
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Coach Smith
After leavingthe Hinduascetics,
Siddharthasat under the
Bodhi tree andmeditated until
he becameenlightened.
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When Siddharthaachieved
enlightenment,he became
the Buddha or the Enlightened
One.
Siddhartha’s answer to the cause and cessation of suffering can be found in his Four Noble Truths.
The Four Noble TruthsLife is suffering.
Desire and attachment cause suffering.
Suffering can end.Follow the Noble Eightfold Path
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Life is suffering but suffering can end.
The Buddha encouraged his followers to follow the middle path or to avoid extremes such as eating too much or eating too little.
The Noble Eightfold Path are eight actions designed to help followers achieve enlightenment. They are right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration.
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Coach Smith
Nirvana is the end of suffering.
By achieving nirvana, a person escapes samsara or the cycle of reincarnation.
Siddhartha achieved nirvana when he became enlightened.
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Coach Smith
Nirvana is the end of suffering.
Who was Siddhartha Gautama?Why did Siddhartha leave his
palace?Explain the Four Noble Truths and
the Noble Eightfold Path.What is samsara?Define nirvana.How does Buddhism differ from
Hinduism?Coach Smith