  Siddharta Gautama  A prince born in north-eastern India in approximately 560 B.C.  He became disenchanted with his flawed and selfish way of living,

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  Siddharta Gautama  A prince born in north-eastern India in approximately 560 B.C.  He became disenchanted with his flawed and selfish way of living, and became a homeless holy man.  After years of traveling in which he trained himself in meditation, he came to the understanding that humans are trapped in an endless cycle of birth, death and re-birth. Who was the Buddha

  Gautama reached this enlightenment while meditating under a fig tree, which came to be known as the tree of enlightenment or the bodhi tree.  He became the Buddha, which means ‘the Enlightened One’.  Here, he realised the Four Noble Truths, and achieved the state of nirvana (the state of perfect happiness that comes to those who have ended the cycle of birth, death and re-birth- known as samsara) Enlightenment

 1. The Truth of Suffering  All life is unsatisfactory ( dukkha)  Everything is impermanent, which leads to a sense of dissatisfaction. The Four Noble Truths

 2. The Truth of the Cause of Suffering ( Tunha )  It is our own cravings which produces dukkha.  We are attached to so many things in this world that we are held prisoner.  Suffering is inevitable because of these attachments.

 3. The Truth of the Removal of Suffering ( Nirvana)  When craving stops, suffering will be removed and the cycle will be broken. Then true happiness, or nirvana, will be reached.

 4. The Path Leading to the End of Suffering ( Marga)  The way to overcome the craving is by following the Noble Eightfold Path.  This leads to satori, the state of enlightenment

 “All of this has happened before…”  All non-enlightened beings are reincarnated after death  Morally inappropriate acts build up karma  When people die, there karma carries on to another life and influences the nature of their rebirths  Yet the cultivation of wisdom, compassion and meditation can eventually eliminate karma Karma and Rebirth

  As we move into the 21st century, we see the effects of Buddhism’s influence spread beyond fringe communities and immigrant settlement, into mainstream culture. The Matrix

  Buddhists believe that suffering originates from our ever- present disillusionment, and our constant desire for something new.  The idea of a sorrowful existence is addressed many times in the film The Matrix. Morpheus speaks of the world of the Matrix, as a “prison.” A place where people are “born into bondage.”  The fundamental illusion of the Matrix leads to the suffering of beings.  The Matrix is designed as a world in which people suffer just as the Buddhists fundamentally believe in the existence of suffering. The Four Noble Truths

  Buddhists believe that all things in the realm of samsara are mutable and inconstant.  This belief is echoed in The Matrix. The Matrix is described as “empty,” as an illusion, or “dream world.”  This can directly related to the emptiness of samsara.

  Each individual acquires a “record” of karma, which affects future happiness or suffering.  Buddhist believe that “we are karmically conditioned, both individually and collectively, by our past choices and behaviour.”  Direct reference in the movie is made to the Karma of the past affecting the present: Humans now live in a world controlled by an artificial intelligence they created. In effect, Humans bear direct responsibility for their enslaved state. Karma and Re-Birth

  References to individual Karma are seen perhaps best in the Oracle’s statements to Neo:  “Sorry kid. You got the gift. But it looks like you’re waiting for something. What? Your next life, maybe. Who knows, that’s the way these things go.”

  The cycle of birth, death and re-birth (Samsara) is characterised in The Matrix.  Morpheus: “I watched them [the machines] liquefy the dead [humans] so they could be fed intravenously to the living.”  This feeding of the dead to the living may represent the birth-death cycle present in Buddhism.

  Another Buddhist belief to address is the idea that “liberation is only achievable through extermination of greed, hatred and delusion and by gaining enlightenment.”  Buddhists as a whole believe that liberation from Samsara is only achieved through the extermination of these feelings.  Cypher is discontented outside of the Matrix, and is still tempted by greed and delusion, represented well by his conversation with Agent Smith  Cypher is one who is enlightened to a partial understanding of the Matrix, however he still retains attachment, and thus is prevented from attaining true bliss. Marga – The Path Leading to the End of Suffering

  In comparison, Neo rejects attachment to all things within the Matrix, and in the end rejects even the attachment to his own existence.  Through this rejection, Neo attains enlightenment.

  During Neo’s training, Morpheus continually instructs him to “free his mind.”  As such, “freeing Neo’s mind” would be him understanding his own ‘Buddhaness’ and realising his own self-liberation. Nirvana

  All Buddhist schools believe in the Buddha, or “awakened one” and seek guidance from such a being.  Buddhists believe in the existence and return of Buddha’s who act as guides to enlightenment.  The Matrix presents Buddha figures. Quoting Morpheus: “When the Matrix was first built, there was a man born inside that had the ability to change what he wanted, to remake the Matrix as he saw fit. It was this man that freed the first of us…. When he died, the Oracle prophesied his return…. That is why there are those of us that have spent our entire lives searching the Matrix, looking for him.” The Buddha

  In this passage, Morpheus expresses 3 key beliefs intrinsic in Buddhist doctrine.  The first is the existence of a Buddha, as the first enlightened or awakened one.  The second is the compassion of Buddhas (“the one”), and their continued return to free those from samsara (“the matrix”).  Finally he expresses complete faith in the Buddha and his teachings

  Morpheus refers to “the minds of the people we are trying to save,” and warns that many of them are “so inert, so hopelessly dependant on the system.”  It is this dependence that is the root of their suffering. The acceptance of the illusion is the basis behind suffering for these people.  Morpheus repeatedly reminds Neo, “You have to let it all go Neo, fear, doubt, disbelief. Free your mind, Neo.” To let go of one’s attachments, to let go of one’s ignorance for attainment of enlightenment is directly in line with Buddhist ideas. Truth, Illusion and Suffering

  Buddhist thinkers begin from the pretense that the world, which we are currently in, samsara, is one of suffering, death, and decay. Samsara is inescapable, even through death, and each individual, as part of a greater karmic stream, is transmigrated from one existence to the next.  Buddhists explain their understanding with the four noble truths: The existence of suffering, the origin of suffering, the cessation of suffering, and the path to enlightenment. Summary

  Samsara is all that encompasses us, just so “The Matrix is everywhere, it is all around us. Even now in this very room.”  More over, the Matrix is a place of suffering. When asked what the Matrix is, Morpheus replies: “It is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth … that you are a slave, Neo.  It is exactly this world of suffering which Buddhists wish to free themselves from.