in the most extreme case, something that, by its very nature, would never leave any evidence of its truth or falsity.
In Buddhism this comes from fundamental ignorance. Bundling together incoherent concepts due to not perceiving their actual structure. The parable of the coins is used to illustrate that the child and the normal person both have different types of ignorance about coins (currency) and only the money changer has a correct causal view.
In Buddhism this comes from fundamental ignorance. Bundling together incoherent concepts due to not perceiving their actual structure. The parable of the coins is used to illustrate that the child and the normal person both have different types of ignorance about coins (currency) and only the money changer has a correct causal view.