Summary: Actuality, good and bad action ceases when ignorance disappears, leading to the ceasing of all action. The Buddha explains the four kinds of action, from evil to the cessation of action. The idea of rebirth and the concept of consciousness are explored, emphasizing the unity of force and matter. Buddhism challenges the limits of reason and conceptual thinking, urging original thinking and suspending the eternal pursuit of conceptual understanding. It distinguishes itself from other mental frameworks by questioning the nature of concepts and their relation to Actuality. Buddhism's unique approach to mental life focuses on the unity of internal growth with external processes, in contrast to the reliance on concepts in traditional mental frameworks like Science and Faith. This unconventional perspective offers a new way to approach and understand Actuality, emphasizing the living experience over conceptual understanding.