Evidence item · v0.74

Buddhism — dukkha (suffering), craving, and the Eightfold Path

E-BUD-DUKKHA-FIT

Visual overview: Buddhism Mapping Dukkha And Liberation visual overview

Buddhism Mapping Dukkha And Liberation visual overview for Buddhism — dukkha (suffering), craving, and the Eightfold Path. AI-generated comparative / apologetic visualization - illustrates a pressure, rival reading, or comparative claim inside a Christian evidence map. Not a statement of final endorsement.
AI-generated comparative / apologetic visualization - illustrates a pressure, rival reading, or comparative claim inside a Christian evidence map. Not a statement of final endorsement.

Classification

Evidence ID
E-BUD-DUKKHA-FIT
Corpus/version
v0.74
Stage
stage3
Category
Buddhism
Major category
World Religions
Sub-category
Buddhist Doctrine / Practice
BF status
ready
Scoring label
Scored row with active Bayes factors

Primary Datum

Datum: Buddhism gives a detailed account of suffering as shaped by craving, aversion, and ignorance, with the Eightfold Path as disciplined therapy.

Scoring / Hypothesis Pressure

Hypothesislog10BFMinMaxRationale
H-BUDDHISM0.080.030.13Dukkha/craving diagnosis and the Eightfold Path fit Buddhism directly, but suffering diagnoses are not unique to Buddhism.

Dependency / Cap Metadata

dependency_cluster_id
buddhism_rival_case
dependency_cluster_role
defeater
dependency_cluster
buddhism_rival_case
dependency_role
defeater
cap_profile
rival_pressure
evidence_function
defeater
directness
supporting

Counter-Pressure

title
Buddhism names suffering seriously; Christianity asks what heals the sufferer.
text
Buddhism — dukkha (suffering), craving, and the Eightfold Path: Buddhism has real force when it talks about craving, suffering, discipline, and compassion. A Christian should not laugh that off. The question is whether the final answer is the loss of self, or the redemption of persons in communion with God.
path
Start with respect: Buddhism sees a real wound. Then compare cures. Is our deepest problem attachment, or sin and death? Is hope escape from personhood, or resurrection and healed love? Do not caricature Buddhism as nihilism. The Christian answer should be respectful and clear: Christ saves the person; He does not erase the person.

Apologetic Note

label
Comparative rival signal
title
Buddhism names suffering seriously; Christianity asks what heals the sufferer.
key point
Buddhism — dukkha (suffering), craving, and the Eightfold Path: Buddhism has real force when it talks about craving, suffering, discipline, and compassion. A Christian should not laugh that off. The question is whether the final answer is the loss of self, or the redemption of persons in communion with God.
conversation move
Start with respect: Buddhism sees a real wound. Then compare cures. Is our deepest problem attachment, or sin and death? Is hope escape from personhood, or resurrection and healed love?
caveat
Do not caricature Buddhism as nihilism. The Christian answer should be respectful and clear: Christ saves the person; He does not erase the person.

Caveats / Notes

Cap notes
This row preserves rival-worldview pressure for fair comparison. Future cap diagnostics may govern overlap with sibling rival rows, but should not hide the challenge.
Cap profile note
Rival and defeater pressure is capped within its own family and kept visible.
Cluster note
Buddhism fair-seat cap: supports Buddhist-family coherence only within this doctrine/practice; repeated no-self/dukkha/practice rows are dependent and should not stack freely against other traditions.

Citations

Recommended Citation

The Signal Evidence Dataset, "Buddhism — dukkha (suffering), craving, and the Eightfold Path," Evidence ID: E-BUD-DUKKHA-FIT, Version 0.74. Accessed [access date]. https://logos-signal.org/evidence/E-BUD-DUKKHA-FIT/

Machine-Readable Source

This page is generated from the public evidence mirror without recalculating or changing scores.