Meeting The Buddhist Monks After Saving Them | Cyberpunk 2077 Game



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In Cyberpunk 2077 RPG Game we speak with Johnny Silverhand and Bhikku who is a Buddhist Monk . V meets with Bhikkhu who has united with his brother . They Talk about Nirvana , Temples , Buddhism and constructs . This is part of the Main Quest called Losing My Religion in Cyberpunk 2077 RPG Game .
Cyberpunk 2077 is a 2020 action role-playing video game developed and published by CD Projekt. It was released for Pc , PlayStation 5 and Xbox One .
Timestamps :
00:00 Non – Lethal Outcome
03:56 Violent Outcome

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24 thoughts on “Meeting The Buddhist Monks After Saving Them | Cyberpunk 2077 Game”

  1. I rescued both of them, by butchering their oppressors. They didn't thank me. Instead they condemned me. I wanted to butcher them both too afterwards, but the game didn't let me. A shame.
    The devs either have to fix this problem…or I'll have to work on my virtual anger management.

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  2. Ups… there are some HUGE problems with that conversation.
    Just one example… "if it is a copy, does it still have a soul" one of the most key teachings of Buddhism is Anātman, there is no soul. Nothing that could be called a self. The question he would be asking would be more pointing to the way it experiences. Rebirth in a form that is not a body like an animal is no problem tho. Discussions of rebirths in formless realms are nothing hidden.
    Next. Human and Person… those are not the same in Buddhism. Suffering is a central point of existence, but at least Tibetan Buddhism is extremely clear on it that the suffering and experiences of non-Human rebirths are not understandable for a human.

    This and other stuff makes it kinda like listening to a person who read a book once… i understand that they could not hire an actual researcher or monk ore something… but that was a bit weak. Maybe they wanted it to be better understandable for the western audience… idk. it is super weird but i guess to understand actual Buddhist discourse on that subject, you would need like at least two hours of explanation for someone that is totally new to it.

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  3. I'm by no means an expert, but i'm not sure it's true that an immortal couldn't achieve nirvana. from my understanding of buddhism, humans are the only living things capable of achieving nirvana, and reincarnation is largely an obstacle towards this end, as time spent being reincarnated as a dog or a slug is time not spent stretching towards this goal. Reincarnation as a human presents a limited window to achieve this state before you go back in the rumbler again.
    So theoretically, an immortal would have all the time in the world to maximize their enlightenment

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  4. I think these monks might be jain monks and not Buddhist monks. The names are bhikku and if I'm not wrong bhikku might be a Prakrit form (a commoner's language in ancient India unlike Sanskrit which was a tongue used by the elite more often) of the word bhikshu which in Sanskrit meant a person who was a beggar but in Jain Dharma it meant something more akin to a monk who gave up all his worldly privileges to lead a spiritual life where he begged for alms in order to break from the cycle of rebirth and attain Moksha (enlightenment after deatth)

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  5. Wow I would like to say those sentences are really true and able to tell most of things about Buddhist within just few sentences

    "who cannot die cannot be born into a better life and will never achieve nirvana." and Nirvana mean "never been rebirth to suffer again" or "Freedom from suffering"

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  6. I remember one of the meditation braindances the zen master offers you at some points throughout night city. In one of them, V asks to the master “what’s the sound of a clapping hand?”. Apparently this sounds nonsense and nothing particular, but for those who are akin to Chan/zen Buddhism or have studied it academically can recognized it being a “kōan” (公安), a kind of “anti-speech” which the Rinzai Zen school used to deconstruct the language using the language itself, thus demonstrating the unreliability of language and speech, being one of the many artificial construct of humanity which are nothing but obstacles to the illumination. This shows how much effort and attention CD Projekt Red put into even the slightest detail

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  7. I disagree with this monk. Reincarnation is just one of the many ways of attaining Buddhahood. The construct may not be trapped in Samsara in the conventional sense, but it doesn't have to interfere with its pursue. A particularly lucky person could attain enlightenment in just only one life. The same happens with immortality. We die because our flesh is weak. A digitalized being can still meditate on the principle of impermanence, even if they are apart from it. They can still achieve Nirvana inside the computer.

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  8. It breaks my heart what Maelstrom did to this monk. There they are, peaceful and praying and they get tortured and modified against their will.

    I took them down non-lethally but when the mission ended, I went back and killed them all.

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