The Great Monk: There are "four laws" in Buddhism: according to the law, not people, not words, according to the meaning, not the meaning, and not the meaning, and not the wisdom, not the knowledge. This question is about "according to the law, not the person."

  Question: Master, does Buddhism talk about human feelings?

  Master:

  There is " Four Laws " in Buddhism: According to the law, not according to people, not according to the meaning, not according to the words, not according to the ultimate meaning, not according to the wisdom, not according to the knowledge.

 This question is about "according to law, not people." This means that if people do things in accordance with the law, they will be favored; if they do things in accordance with the law, they will not be close to their parents. If your parents do not do it correctly, you cannot follow them. Buddhism does not talk about human feelings, and the emotions in worldly Dharma also depend on what emotions it is. Therefore, Buddhism is an equal Dharma, without human feelings, and without attachment to emotions.

 Worldly law is actually equal, for example: If your father is a murderer, after killing this and that, will you sympathize with him? You cannot sympathize with him, this is called following the law but not others.

  "This Dharma is equal and has no high or low, and it is called Anuttara Samyaksambodhi." (" Diamond Sutra ")

  Dharma is a kind of path. If it is the right path, you can walk; if it is the evil path, you cannot walk. If you walk on the evil path, you will fall into the abyss and fall into the ditch.

Source: Wutai Mountain Dasheng Zhulin Temple