Taking this a little further, anyone could have saved the cat but they were all convinced that the task was beyond them, so Kitty died because noone intervened in even the tiniest way, even though the tiniest intervention was all that was needed. [http://riverdaughter.wordpress.com/2009/08/02/a-fascinating-intersection-of-true-crime-psychology-and-media-misinformation/]Jedamethis said:I know.
"You shouldn't kill the cat, because I have put my shoes on my head."
Because the head monk didn't want to kill that cat anyway, so any reason would do.
The other monks were probably looking for a deep, meaningful reason. Any one would have done.
Amen to that, this makes no sense. If they use that to achieve a clear mind, what do they do to confuse people?Funkiest Monkey said:What is this? What? No, seriously, what?
It has no meaning,but it did get me thinking,interesting,got any more?Duskwaith said:Hey Escapists.
Me and my uncle where haveing a chat over philosphoical ideas etc. when he told me this storey.
There is a cat that is fed and tended two but two Buddhist temples, the cat makeing trips between each one for food and the like. One day the head monk of one of the temples grabs the cat and says "Give me one reason not to kill this cat" no one answers and he kills the cat.
Later on the head monks' top student arrives home and is angered to hear that the cat has been killed so he confronts the head monk. The head monk asks him "what reason should have stopped me killing?" The student then removes his shoes and places them on his head causing the head monk to exclaim "If only you were hear the cat would still be alive"
They are designed to make you think so Escapians tell me what do you think. Buddhist monks use these types of storys to achieve a clear mind and accept there is no clear answer
Enjoy ,its been on my mind for 2 days now.
It's the most practical reason I can think of, I don't buy the "Shoes on head has no point, so killing the cat has no point" because the story made a point of saying the cat traveled between the temples, why bother specifying that if the reason is: "Don't kill shit, killing shit is bad"?dathwampeer said:Loldanpascooch said:I corrected your original entry for spelling and grammar, I'd edit the OP
Duskwaith said:There is a cat that is fed and tended to by two Buddhist temples, the cat making trips between each one for food and the like. One day the head monk of one of the temples grabs the cat and says "Give me one reason not to kill this cat" no one answers and he kills the cat.
Later in the day the head monks' top student arrives home and is angered to hear that the cat has been killed so he confronts the head monk. The head monk asks him "what reason was there to not kill the cat?" The student then removes his shoes and places them on his head causing the head monk to exclaim "If only you were here the cat would still be alive"Actually, I think I found a bit of a funny answer that makes some sense.dathwampeer said:These stories are just designed to make you think for no good reason. There isn't an answer that wouldn't just be pulled out of our ass' because it's a nonsense story. You could come up with ton's of metaphors like 'we're as lowly as the cat is' or maybe 'do you need a reason not ware shoes on your head?' or any kind of tripe.
But the truth is there isn't an answer because there isn't a question. It's just a nonsense statement. He could have put his pants on his head or wiped his arse with nettles. It doesn't matter because it has no real bearing on the story. It's just a forced ending trying to force the listener to search for an answer that doesn't exist.
Hardly a way to achieve mental clarity unless monks think that just ignoring every problem because you can't solve all of them is a good philosophy.
With the cat traveling between the temples, they could have used him to transport small items (such as shoes) back and forth by attaching them to the cat's back, that's the reason not to kill him, he could have been used as a small beast of burden, and now they have to transport the stuff themselves! By putting his shoes on his head, he was saying "Hey dumb ass! We could have had the cat carry shit like this"
That's a bit of a strech even by wild metaphoric terms.... but I like it XD
Don't get me wrong, I think the story is stupid and pointless, but I'm saying that I think my explanation is the best so far because it uses more of the provided information than any of the others.dathwampeer said:It never makes a point of telling you that any one other than the cat know this though. Like I said there is no point to the story other than to make you think. There is no correct answer and I think that's the answer you're supposed to draw from it. Any answer we could give is 100% made up because the story hasen't given us enough proof to draw a rational conclusion. Your story, although funny, is just 100% assumption on your part. If the cat had taken small items from temple to temple. (which I can see no reason for in the first place) Then it would have been mentioned.danpascooch said:It's the most practical reason I can think of, I don't buy the "Shoes on head has no point, so killing the cat has no point" because the story made a point of saying the cat traveled between the temples, why bother specifying that if the reason is: "Don't kill shit, killing shit is bad"?
It's just a nonsense story and not a very good one really.
The answer is simple.Duskwaith said:Hey Escapists.
Me and my uncle where haveing a chat over philosphoical ideas etc. when he told me this storey.
There is a cat that is fed and tended two but two Buddhist temples, the cat making trips between each one for food and the like. One day the head monk of one of the temples grabs the cat and says "Give me one reason not to kill this cat" no one answers him and he kills the cat.
Later on the head monks' top student arrives home and is angered to hear that the cat has been killed. He confronts the head monk. The head monk asks him "what reason should have stopped me killing?" The student then removes his shoes and places them on his head causing the head monk to exclaim "If only you were hear the cat would still be alive"
They are designed to make you think so Escapians tell me what do you think. Buddhist monks use these types of storys to achieve a clear mind and accept there is no clear answer
Enjoy ,its been on my mind for 2 days now.
Thank you. Your the only one who seems to understand this.Ph33onix said:But really there is no logic in Buddhist stories, it's more of a self-interpretation and thought wave-length matching game.