>>188579Buddhism believes in something akin to a spiritual self. This is a misconception created by the poor translations of the pali canon you've just described. Its the same misconception that leads some people to think that buddhism is an atheist religion/philosophy.
Let me ask you something, if there is no ture self, if there is an absolute nothingness, so why the hell do we practice the Dharma is it is nothing as well and bound to the chains of time and space? Why is there a "Great Vehicle" like Mahayana, if there is no passenger at all? Why bother with temples, images and rituals if there is nothing at the bottom of things? Why practice buddhism if everything is nothing? And what about the Pure Land buddhists who says that we can reborn on the Pure Land? What does reborn there? Nothing? And who the Budda reffers when he says thathagata? A nothing that goes on to eternity and blissful? You're just reading the texts without careful reflection or you are not reading them at all. Because you should know very well that buddhism talks about the "True Self."
Shunya, which is the backbone of the concept of Anatta, means non-substantiality, and not non-essensiality. If you know anything about basic philosophy you know very well the difference between the two. So I'm not talking about substance, I'm talking about essence. Buddhism says that there is nothing that exists on itself, it needs other stuff for it to exist.
> "of those who are mortal, there is no Self/Soul", (anatmahi martyah, [SB., II. 2. 2. 3]). [KN J-1441] “The Soul is the refuge
that I have gone unto”. For anatta is not said of the Self/Soul but
what it is not. There is never a ‘doctrine of no-Soul’, but a doctrine
of what the Soul is not (form is anatta, feelings are anatta, etc.).
"How can the Tathagata be one eternal and unchanging?" O Kasyapa! One who reproaches me thus commits slander, which is wrong. O Kasyapa! You must not entertain such
a notion and say that the nature of the Tathagata perishes. O Kasyapa! We do not place the
annihilation of illusion in the category of matter [rupa]. Why not? Because of the fact of the
ultimacy of Eternity. Hence, we say Eternal. [Nirvanic] quietude has nothing to supercede it.
All phenomenal existences are done away with, with nothing remaining. This indicates what is
fresh, clear, eternal, and unretrogressive. That is why we say that Nirvana is eternal. It is the
same with the Tathagata. He is eternal, with no change. "Stars sweep". This refers to illusion.
Once swept, all is gone and no trace remains of any existence. This indicates that all Tathagatas
are those who have done away with illusion and are no longer in the five realms. This means
that the Tathagata is one eternal and that there is no change [with him]. Also next, O Kasyapa!
It is the Dharma which is the teacher of all Buddhas. Hence, the Tathagata respectfully makes
offerings. As the Dharma is eternal, so too are all Buddhas eternal."
–
http://lirs.ru/do/Mahaparinirvana_Sutra,Yamamoto,Page,2007.pdfBodhisattva Kasyapa said to the Buddha: "O World-Honoured One! Really, there cannot
be any case in which there is Self. Why not? When a child is born, it knows nothing. If there is a
Self, the child would have to have knowledge when it is born into the world. Hence we can know
that there is no Self. If a Self definitely existed, there could not be any loss of knowing. If it
were true that all beings eternally possessed Buddha-Nature, there could be no breaking away.
If there is no destruction, how can there be the differences of Kshatriya, Brahmin, Vaishya,
Sudra, candala, and animals? Now, the effects of karma are various, and differences exist in life.
If there definitely is a Self, there cannot be any victory or defeat with beings. From this, we can
definitely know that the Buddha-Nature is eternal Dharma.
http://lirs.ru/do/Mahaparinirvana_Sutra,Yamamoto,Page,2007.pdf"“The True Self of the Buddha-Nature is like the diamond, which
cannot be crushed”
http://lirs.ru/do/Mahaparinirvana_Sutra,Yamamoto,Page,2007.pdfI suggest that you also search about the concepts of greater and lesser self in buddhism.
The same "true self" is also mentioned 14 times in that same text.