What is the relationship between absolute reality and the relative world we inhabit? Mahayana Buddhism has an answer called the two truths.
1. Relative Truth
Relative truth includes all the dualistic phenomena — ourselves, other beings, material objects, thoughts, emotions, concepts — that make up our lives in this world. These are sometimes called maya or illusions because we mistakenly believe they are solid, separate, and independent realities. However, the problem is not relative truth itself, which is basically good, but our misunderstanding of its nature. That is revealed when we understand….
2. Absolute Truth
Absolute truth is the reality beyond dualism of any kind. It’s also the true nature of relative phenomena. In Mahayana Buddhism, it can be called emptiness or interdependence. Thich Nhat Hanh uses the term “interbeing.” In Vajrayana Buddhism, absolute reality is also referred to as space, complete openness, or primordial purity.
The two truths are what’s called a provisional teaching in Buddhism — helpful for where we are on our path but not the final truth. The final truth is that there is only one reality, and it unites the relative and absolute. Absolute truth is the true nature of the relative. Relative truth is the manifestation of the absolute.
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Two Truths—Indivisible
When we enter the path, we are working at the level of relative truth, and with practice we may gain insight into the absolute. But we don’t enter the final stage of practice, says Tsoknyi Rinpoche, until we realize these truths were never separate.
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