
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Why the Buddha Did Not Preach to a Hungry Man
What makes one man poor and another rich is not only a question of material possessions, how much they consume or the extent to which they are able to satisfy their cravings. This is determined largely by the manner in which they subjectively experience and psychologically evaluate a feeling of well-being in the context of the environment in which they happen to be situated. Indeed, “poverty” and “affluence” are largely relative terms: quantitatively, a well-to-do member of a primitive Bushman society is still desperately poor compared with an urbanised African who may well own a radio, a guitar, a good suit and some cattle at his homeland kraal. He, however, is appallingly destitute when his lifestyle is contrasted with that of a white artisan who, in turn, envies the earning capacity—and everything that goes with it—of a Johannesburg business executive who, however, may well earn— and be able to afford only as much as a New York dockworker.
Narrated by Judy Swift
Listen to Streaming Audio
Download Audio (25 MB)
Audiobook copyright, 2021 Pariyatti
Download a free eBook of this title at Buddhist Publication Society.
View more books and audio resources available in the Pariyatti bookstore.
By [email protected]4.9
4545 ratings
Why the Buddha Did Not Preach to a Hungry Man
What makes one man poor and another rich is not only a question of material possessions, how much they consume or the extent to which they are able to satisfy their cravings. This is determined largely by the manner in which they subjectively experience and psychologically evaluate a feeling of well-being in the context of the environment in which they happen to be situated. Indeed, “poverty” and “affluence” are largely relative terms: quantitatively, a well-to-do member of a primitive Bushman society is still desperately poor compared with an urbanised African who may well own a radio, a guitar, a good suit and some cattle at his homeland kraal. He, however, is appallingly destitute when his lifestyle is contrasted with that of a white artisan who, in turn, envies the earning capacity—and everything that goes with it—of a Johannesburg business executive who, however, may well earn— and be able to afford only as much as a New York dockworker.
Narrated by Judy Swift
Listen to Streaming Audio
Download Audio (25 MB)
Audiobook copyright, 2021 Pariyatti
Download a free eBook of this title at Buddhist Publication Society.
View more books and audio resources available in the Pariyatti bookstore.

372 Listeners

323 Listeners

273 Listeners

2,680 Listeners

26,380 Listeners

1,486 Listeners

967 Listeners

12,730 Listeners

379 Listeners

14,969 Listeners

238 Listeners

16,525 Listeners

801 Listeners

1,391 Listeners

60 Listeners