honorentheos wrote:Yet in matters of exaltation, the outcomes for the Mormon vs. the Buddhist are strikingly different. For the Mormon, the result seems to be a heightened individuality and separateness. God/esses are men and women of holiness, separated from common or natural things. In Buddhism, the result is the opposite - the breaking of the karmic cycle leads to the dissolution of the (false?) boundaries that appear to separate all things back into their true nature. In a sense, it appears to be the opposite of godhood, because it is singularity rather than exaltation. Or so it seems. Yet the Gospel of John also speaks of "becoming one" and coming to know God in some way that appears to transcend knowing of Him. Maybe there is a similarity there after all?
I'm not sure I'd agree with the idea of exaltation as heightened individuality. The way that Mormons read the intecessory prayer in John tends to privilege it in terms of an increased unity with the godhead. That is the goal is a kind of unity of the sort Jesus and the Father have.
It's true that for a period in the 20th century a more nominalistic take on the unity of the godhead tended to get emphasized (characterized by say Bruce R. McConkie). That is what the unity of the godhead is consists just of goals and knowledge that were identical in content. However even that is still a very heightened sense of unity even if perhaps not what either the Buddhists in the east or the neoPlatonists in the west held to.
Even in the 20th century though there were significant other strains of Mormon thought like Orson Pratt's with a far more extensive sense of unity. While Pratt's theology is still nominalistic (reality consists of individual intelligent atoms in space) he has an expansive spiritual fluid pervading the universe. Divine unity is a kind of significant unity with this fluid. It becomes a kind of materialist take on the Trinity with the ouisa being this unity. Really his views basically were Stoicism but with the persistence of the individual eternally. (The Stoics were closer to the Buddhists in terms of the immortality of the self)
The comparison I'd make with Buddhism is that we can recognize all is one in some strong sense yet simultaneously keep some kind of personal identity. Now it's true that many strains of Mormon thought including all the dominant ones in the 20th century have eternal persistence of the individual backwards in time. But not all do. Brigham Young for instance held that intelligence was the raw stuff out of which spirits were made but that these principles were themselves not identical to persons or consciousness. Roughly a position akin to contemporary physicalism. He also allowed individuals to be absolutely destroyed as an individual (although he thought this only for sons of perdition) So there's certainly major traditions in LDS movement that are more reconcilable to Buddhism here.
Once we leave that question of individual existence though I think much more of Buddhist thought is conducive to Mormonism.