Title: An Introduction to Buddhist Thought YBI01
1An Introduction to Buddhist Thought (YBI01)
- Prof Jay L Garfield
- Department of Philosophy, Smith College
- Department of Philosophy
- University of Melbourne
- Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies
(Sarnath, India) - Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies,
University of Canterbury (visiting)
2Introduction to Buddhist Thought
- Buddhist Fundamentals
- The Pali tradition
- Madhyamaka in India and Tibet
- Yogåcåra
- Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Buddhism in the West
3Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Taoist and Confucian background
- Tathågatagårbha
- Tien Tai
- Hua Yen
- Chan into Zen
- Zen into the recent past and present
4Taoist Ideas Into Buddhism
- A Tao is a way, or a guiding discourse.
- Questions one can ask about a Tao
- Taos and spontanaiety
- The Great Tao
- Tao and Development
- Tao and emptiness multiplicity and convention
5A Few Remarks from Taoist Literature
- No Tao that can be spoken is a constant Tao.
- No name that can be used is a constant name.
- The nameless is the origin of heaven and earth.
- The named is the mother of all things.
- There is always being, and always non-being, and
we see their result. - (Tao Te Ching I)
6A Few Remarks from Taoist Literature
- When ordinary people know beauty as beauty, they
recognise ugliness. - When they know the good as good, they recognise
evil.... - Therefore, the sage manages without action
- And spreads doctrines without words.
- All things arise and he does not turn away from
them. - He produces them but does not take possession of
them. - (Tao Te Ching II)
7A Few Remarks from Taoist Literature
- Thirty spokes are united around the hub to make a
wheel. But it is on its non-being that the
function of the carriage depends. - Clay is molded to form a pot. But it is on its
non-being that the function of the pot depends. - Doors and windows are cut out to make a room.
But it is on its non-being that the function of
the room depends. - Therefore, turn being to advantage and turn
non-being into function. (Tao te ching 11)
8A Few Remarks from Taoist Literature
- The five colours cause ones eyes to be blind.
- The five tones cause ones ears to be deaf.
- The five flavours cause ones palate to be
spoiled. - Racing and hunting cause ones mind to be mad.
- Goods that are hard to get impede ones
activities. - Therefore the sage is concerned with the belly
and not the eyes he rejects one but accepts the
other. (Tao te ching 12)
9A Few Remarks from Taoist Literature
- The pursuit of learning is to increase day by
day. - The pursuit of the Tao is to decrease day by day.
(Tao te ching 48) - He who knows does not speak.
- He who speaks does not know. (Tao te ching 56)
10A Few Remarks from Taoist Literature
- Do not be famous. Do not be full of plans. Do
not take things over. Do not be a master of
knowledge. Personally realise the infinite
perfectly and travel in the signless realm.
Exercise everything you have received from nature
without taking any subjective viewpoint. In
short, be empty. - The mind of a perfect man is a mirror. It does
not lean forward or back in response to things.
It responds to things, but conceals nothing.
Therefore, it can deal with things without being
injured. (Chuang Tzu 7)
11A Few Remarks from Taoist Literature
- When she died, how could I help being affected?
But as I think the matter over, I realize that
originally she had no life and not only no life,
she has no form not only no form, she had no
spirit.... Form was transformed to become life,
and now birth has transformed to become death.
This is like the rotation of the four seasons.
Now she sleeps in the universe. For me to weep
and wail would be to show my ignorance of
destiny. Therefore, I do not. (Chuang Tzu 9)
12Confucian Ideas into Buddhism
- Social dimension of personhood
- Cardinal virtue of humaneness
- Cardinal virtue of ritual propriety
- Together represent a model of self-cultivation
- But that self-cultivation is a self-cultivation
of an essentially relational and not
self-subsistent self
13Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Taoist and Confucian background
- Tathågatagårbha
- Tien Tai
- Hua Yen
- Chan into Zen
- Zen into the recent past and present
14Tathågatagårbha Doctrine
- When Buddhism enters China, Madhyamaka and
Yogåcåra enter together not as rivals but as
compatible. - Taoist ideas made the alåya-vijñåna look real
interesting, as well as emptiness as an origin - The idea that the emptiness and primordial purity
of the alåya-vijñåna is the potential for
Buddhahood and the primal nature of mind led to
the doctrine that our fundamental nature is this
Buddha-nature and that the project of
enlightenment is a return or a recovery, not an
achievement.
15Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Taoist and Confucian background
- Tathågatagårbha
- Tien Tai
- Hua Yen
- Chan into Zen
- Zen into the recent past and present
16The Tien Tai School (Chiih, 6th c)
- The mind is primordially pure, is reality, is
Buddha-nature, is the storehouse of all
potentials. - There are three truths
- the provisional truth in which phenomena are
discriminated - The truth of emptiness in which there are no
phenomena and no discrimination - The truth of the middle, in which the first two
truths are one. All of these are mind.
17Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Taoist and Confucian background
- Tathågatagårbha
- Tien Tai
- Hua Yen
- Chan into Zen
- Zen into the recent past and present
18The Hua Yen School (Fa-tsang (7-8th C)
- Four truths
- Realm of phenomena
- Realm of emptiness
- Realm of the harmony of phenomena and emptiness
- Realm of interpenetration of all things
- Interpenetration is the key idea on Hua Yen all
phenomena are found in one another.
19The Golden Lion
- Gold has no lion in it craftsmen cause the lion
to exist - The gold is all that is real not the lion
- The lion exists based on imputation the gold
does not - The gold is identical to the lion
- The fact that there is only gold does not mean
that there is no lion - The fact that the lion is imputed does not mean
that it is not real - The fact that the gold and lion are identical
does not mean that they are the same. - The fact that they are different does not mean
that they are not identical!
20The interpenetration of Being and Non-Being
21Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Taoist and Confucian background
- Tathågatagårbha
- Tien Tai
- Hua Yen
- Chan into Zen
- Zen into the recent past and present
22Chan/Zen Buddhism
- Chan is Chinese adaptation of Sanskrit dhyana,
or meditation. - Arises as a back-to-practice movement, but with
an emphasis on practice as realisation. - Brings into foreground Taoist anti-nomianism and
emphasis on spontaneity. - Two schools divide over gradual vs sudden
enlightenment.
23Chan Texts The Platform Stra of Hui Neng
- In response to the fifth patriarchs challenge to
write the verses that would earn the robe of the
patriarch, the head monk Shen hsiu composed this
verse - Shen-hsiu
- The body is the bodhi tree.
- The mind is the stand of a bright mirror.
- At all times diligently wipe it.
- Do not allow it to become dusty.
24Chan Texts The Platform Stra of Hui Neng
- Hui Nengs reply
- Bodhi has no tree.
- Nor has the mirror any stgand.
- Buddha nature is forever clear and pure.
- Where is there any dust?
- The mind is the bodhi tree.
- The body is the stand of a bright mirror.
- The bright mirror is originally clear and pure.
- Where has it been defiled by any dust?
25Chan Texts The Platform Stra of Hui Neng
- What is meant by emptiness of characteristics?
Emptiness of characteristics means to be free
from characteristics while in the midst of them.
Emptiness of thought means not to be carried away
by thought in the process of thought.
Nonattachment is mans original nature. Thought
after thought occurs without remaining. Past,
present and future thoughts continue without
end... At no time should a single instant of
thought be attached to any phenomenon. If one
single instant of thought is attached to
anything, then every thought will be attached.
That is bondage. But if... no thought is
attached to anything, that is freedom.
26Chan Texts The Platform Stra of Hui Neng
- Lao Tzu No speakable Tao is a constant Tao.
- Hui Neng All truth is uncontainable and
inexpressible. - Lao Tzu Five colors make one blind five tones
deaf. - The pursuit of the Tao is to decrease day by
day. - Hui Neng Bodhisattvas should leave behind all
phenomenal distinctions and awaken... by not
allowing the mind to depend on notions evoked
by sounds, odors, flavors, touch or any
qualities...
27Joshus KØan The KØan
- A monk once asked Joshu, Does a dog have
Buddha-nature? - Joshu said, Mu.
- (Mu, not K, is important here. It translates
wu, the Taoist non-being, or ßunyatå (emptiness),
and rejects both yes and no, rejecting the very
question and its presuppositions.)
28Joshus KØan Mumons Commentary
- The dog! The Buddha-nature!
- The truth is manifested in full.
- A moment of yes-and-no.
- Lost are your body and soul!
- In studying Zen, one must pass the barriers set
up by the ancient Zen Masters... Now tell me,
what is the barrier of the Zen masters? Just
this Mu. ... Day and night work intently at it.
Do not attempt nihilistic or dualistic
interpretations... With all your might work at
this Mu and be Mu...
29Joshus KØan Yasutani RØshis commentary
- The opinions you hold and your worldly knowledge
are your delusions. Included also are
philosophical and moral concepts, no matter how
lofty, as well as religious beliefs and dogmas,
not to mention innocent, commonplace thoughts.
In short, all conceivable ideas are embraced
within the term delusions and as such are a
hindrance to the realization of your
essential-nature. So dissolve them with the
fireball of Mu.
30Joshus KØan Shibayama Roshis Commentary
- The experience of the Buddha-nature itself is
creatively expressed here by Mu. Although
literally, Mu means no, hin this case it points
to the incomparable enlightenment which
transcends both yes and no, to the religious
experience of truth one can attain when he casts
away his discriminating mind. It has nothing to
do with the dualisti interpretation of yes or no,
being or nonbeing. It is truth itself, the
absolute itself.
31Joshus KØan Sasaki Roshi again
- The human being, believing he belongs to the
subjective side and standing in the small mind,
observes absolute being as an object. Actually,
that absolute being cannot be an object....
Absolute being works as complete, perfect
emptiness and embraces subject and object. If
you want to see God or Buddha, you must manifest
yourself as emptiness. Zen is the practice of
manifesting yourself as emptiness.
32A Zen poem from BashØ
- Whenever something is said,
- The lips are cold.
- The autumn wind.
33DØgen (1200-1253) Principal Themes
- Oneness of practice and attainment
- Primordial enlightenment
- Impermanence is Buddha-nature
- Being-time is reality.
- The great death as realisation
- Human being is relational being/authentication by
all things - Thinking, not-thinking, without-thinking
34DØgen Impermanence is Buddha-Nature
- Whole-being is Buddha-nature
- Whence do you come?
- I come from Tung-shan.
- What is it that comes?
- Nan-yüeh did not know what to answer. For eight
long years he pondered the question then one day
it dawned on him and he exclaimed - Even to say it is something does not hit the
mark!
35DØgen Impermanence is Buddha-Nature
- The sixth patriarch taught his disciple
Hsing-chang, Impermanence is itself
Buddha-nature. Permanence is the dualistic mind
that discriminates phenomena.
36DØgen Impermanence is Buddha-Nature
- Therefore, the very impermanence of grass and
tree, thicket and forest, is Buddha-nature. The
very impermanence of humans and things, body and
mind, is Buddha-nature. Nations and lands,
mountains and rivers are impermanent because they
are Buddha-nature. Supreme and complete
enlightenment, because it is Buddha-nature is
impermanent. Great nirvåna, because it is
impermanent, is the Buddha-nature.
37DØgen Being-Time
- Mountains are time and seas are time. If they
were not, there would not be mountains and seas.
SO you must not say that there is no time in the
immediate now of mountains and seas. If time is
destroyed, mountains and seas are destroyed. If
time is indestructible, mountains and seas are
indestructible.
38DØgen Being-Time
- You should not think that flying past is the
inherent nature of time. If time were to give
itself merely to flying past, it would have gaps.
You fail to experience the passageless passage
of being-time and hear the utterances of its
truth, because you think that time is something
that goes past. The essential point is every
entire being in the entire word is, each time, a
time, even while making a continuous series.
Inasmuch as they are being-time, they are my
being-time.
39DØgen Being-Time
- Once wood turns to ash, the ash cannot turn back
to being wood. Still, one should not take the
view that it is ashes afterward, wood before.
You should realize that although wood is at the
dharma-stage of wood, and that this is possessed
before and after, wood is beyond before and
after. Just as wood does not revert to wood once
it has burned to ashes, man does not revert to
life after his death. ... Life is a stage of time
and death is a stage of time, like, for example
winter and spring. We do not suppose that winter
becomes spring, or say that spring becomes
summer.
40DØgen on Being-Time
- When a man goes off in a boat and looks back to
see the shoreline, he mistakenly thinks the shore
is moving. If he keeps his eyes closely on the
boat, he realizes that it is the boat that is
advancing. In liker manner, when a person tries
to discern and affirm the myriad phenomena with a
confused conception of his own body and mind, he
mistakenly thinks his own body and mind are
permanent. If he makes all his daily deeds
intimately his own and returns within himself,
the reason that the myriad phenomena are empty
will become clear to him.
41DØgens Question
- As I study both the exoteric and esoteric schools
of Buddhism, they maintain that man is endowed
with the Dharma-nature at birth. In this is the
case, why had the Buddhas of all
ages--undoubtedly in possession of
enlightenment--to seek enlightenment and engage
in spiritual practice?
42Practice and Attainment/Nonduality Sasaki Roshi
- It is not Zen to have studied and to say, I am
empty. I am nothing. That is not Zen at all.
You manifest yourself as emptiness or nothingness
and you also have to manifest yourself as a man
or a woman at the same time. At that moment you
can say you have mastered Zen.
43Practice and Attainment/Reducing Day by Day
- Once a monk made a request of Joshu. I have just
entered the monastery. Please give me
instructions, master. - Joshu said, have you had your breakfast?
- Yes I have, replied the monk,
- Joshu said, Then wash the bowls.
- The monk had an insight.
44DØgen on Thinking, Not-thinking, and
Without-Thinking
- Without-thinking is emptiness. Not-thinking is
the denial of thinking. In that Mu transcends
the distinction between subject an object and
being and nothingness, to say that
without-thinking is crystal clear is justified.
45Relational Existence and Self-Authentication
- To model yourself on the Buddhas is to model
yourself after yourself. To model yourself after
yourself is to forget yourself. To forget
yourself is to be authenticated by all things.
To be authenticated by all things is to
accomplish the molting of body-mind, your own and
others. The signs of enlightenment dissolve and
this causes the signs of enlightenment to emerge
continuously. - At first, when you seek the truth, you have
distanced yourself from its domain. Finally,
when the truth is transmitted to you, you are
immediately the primordial person.
46DØgen on Being-in-the-world
- Being-in-the-world
- To what might it be compared?
- Dwelling in the dewdrop
- Fallen from a waterfowls beak,
- The image of the moon.
47Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Taoist and Confucian background
- Tathågatagårbha
- Tien Tai
- Hua Yen
- Chan into Zen
- Zen into the recent past and present
48A bit more about Zen
- Zen and the Tokagawa Shogunate
- Suppression of Zen in early Meiji
- Zen and the rise of Japanese nationalism/militaris
m - Zen as an intellectual export to the West
- The Kyoto School
49Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Taoist and Confucian background
- Tathågatagårbha
- Tien Tai
- Hua Yen
- Chan into Zen
- Zen into the recent past and present
50Introduction to Buddhist Thought
- Buddhist Fundamentals
- The Pali tradition
- Madhyamaka in India and Tibet
- Yogåcåra
- Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Buddhism in the West
51Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
52Buddhist Missionary Activity in the West
- Buddhism has always been a missionary religion,
and transmission to the West must be seen in that
context. - First missionaries were English converts from
colonial Ceylon. - World Parliament of Religions in 1896 brought
Buddhist missionaries to USA. - Japanese Zen teachings spread soon after.
- Tibetan exile in 1959 sent hundreds of teachers
to the West. - Popularity of Vipassana has brought Theravada
teachers around the world.
53Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
54Colonialism and Orientalism
- Much of the first contact with Buddhism arose
through British colonial administration and the
rise of Oriental Studies. - Much of the understanding in the West came from
philologists and orientalist anthropologists. - Because Sri Lanka was the first point of contact,
Theravada Buddhism and a rhetoric or originality
came to dominate much Buddhist Studies. - Much orientalist Western understanding of
Buddhism was also heavily influenced by
comparative methodology and colonial objectives.
55Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
56The Parliament of World Religions
- The Parliament was held in the context of the
Chicago worlds fair in 1893. - Its agenda was complex, but displaying the exotic
and demonstrating the superiority of Christianity
were pretty high on the organisers minds. - But the context from the Japanese side was
different--a desire to get out from under
imperialist treaties and to be treated as equals. - Their mission came to demonstrate the superior
rationality of Buddhism, and was very effective.
57Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
58The Legacy of DT Suzuki
- Arrived in the USA during the Parliament of World
Religions - Encountered Paul Carus of Open Court.
- Influenced Carus views, but also used Carus as a
vehicle for propagating Zen. - His translations and books on Zen as well as his
teachings created the first mass non-immigrant
Buddhist movement in the West. - Zen has continued, in terms of practitioners and
impact on popular culture to be a leading Western
sect.
59Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
60Multiple Traditions All at Once
- Previous intra-Asian transmissions of Buddhism
involved the movement of a single tradition from
place to place. - Current transmission to the West involves
side-by-side practice in Theravada, Zen, Chinese,
Japanese and Tibetan traditions. - These traditions are now influencing each other
through the West, and are melding into a hybrid
Western Buddhist culture.
61Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
62Academics and Practitioners
- Buddhism has come to the West both as a practice
tradition--as a religion, via missionary activity
and immigration, AND through the academic study
of Buddhism. - There has been from time to time tension between
these communities, and confusion about roles, but
now there is a great deal of cooperation and
overlap.
63Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
64Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Pretty early to say, but
- A Buddhism that is less ritualised, and more
allied with science - Less Sangha-centered than Asian Buddhism
- More academic than most Asian traditions
- Hybridised from many Asian traditions.
65Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
66Buddhism and Popular Culture
- Major impact in literature and poetry
- Major impact in visual arts
- Major impact in music
- Major impact in advertising and taste.
- So Buddhism seems to be insinuating not only
images but ideas into non-Buddhist cultures. - People even show up for evening courses on
Buddhism at universities!
67Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
68Buddhism and Science
- Buddhisms emphasis on rational inquiry, on the
metaphysics of causation, and on psychology has
natural affinities to science. - Buddhism has contributed ideas to microphysics
- Cognitive Science
- Medicine and psychiatry.
- Regular conferences between Buddhist scholars and
scientists are now commonplace.
69Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
70Engaged Buddhism
- Anagarika Dharmapala and the Mahabodhi Society
(and Col Olcott) and the model of social service - Bhimrao Ambedkar and the attack on
untouchability. - Reinterpretation of the 4NT and 8fold path in
terms of social action - Budhhadasa Bhikkhu and the politicisation of
Dharma - Sulak Sivaraksa and Buddhism as social action
- Dalai Lama XIV and Buddhism as ecumenical social
and intellectual force - Western engaged Buddhism and social ministry
- Buddhism and the peace movement (Thich Nhat Hahn
and Nipponzan Nyohoji)
71Engaged Buddhism Mahabodhi
- Anagarika Dharmapala and the Mahabodhi Society
(and Col Olcott) and the model of social service - Col Olcott (from USA) brings YMCA model of
religious social service to Sri Lanka - Anagarika Dharmapala joins with him to create a
Buddhist social service agency - Restoration of Indian pilgrimage sites
- Pan-Buddhist vision and missions to Japan
- Buddhist lay education
72Engaged Buddhism Indian Independence
- Bhimrao Ambedkar and the attack on
untouchability. - Amedkar born untouchable, emigrated to USA for
medical school - Returned to work in Indian independence movement
- Broke with Gandhi over Hindutva and
untouchability - Left Hinduism and brought first ever mass
conversion to Buddhism - Left millions of Ambdekar Buddhists
- Reinterpreted 4NT with a socio-political face and
8fold path as a recipe for social action
73Engaged Buddhism Thailand I
- Budhhadasa Bhikkhu and the politicisation of
Dharma - Thai monk influenced by Ambedkar and by Western
political philosophy - Reinvigorated lay Buddhism and Buddhist education
in Thailand - Saw Buddhism as political force and force for
development - Introduced socialism and environmentalism into
Buddhism - Introduced collective model of development and
integration of practice and social action
(Buffalo and rice banks, tree ordination, etc)
74Engaged Buddhism Thailand II
- Sulak Sivaraksa and Buddhism as social action
- Continuation of Buddhadasas programme
- Buddhism and the NGO global engaged Buddhism
- Integration of Theravada and Mahåyåna ideals
- Buddhism and human rights
- Critique of Capitalism
- Reinterpretation of three poisons, and especially
pancßila - Buddhism and the modernist critique of modernity
75Engaged Buddhism HHDL XIV
- Dalai Lama XIV and Buddhism as ecumenical social
and intellectual force - Buddhism and human rights
- Buddhism and the engagement with Western politics
and science and a modernist vision - The Bodhisattva path as a path of social service
- Religious ecumenism and practice as upåya
76Engaged Buddhism Specifically Western movements
- Western engaged Buddhism and social ministry
- Bernie Glassman roshi and street Zen
- Prison Dharma
- Buddhist Peace fellowship
- Karuna Institute for Peacebuilding
77Engaged Buddhism Asian Religious Orders
- Buddhism and the peace movement (Thich Nhat Han
and Nipponzan Nyohoji) - Both specifically Asian and indeed conservative
Asian Buddhist movements - Both reject most modernist ideas common to other
engaged Buddhist movements - But both see the primary point of religious
practice as global peacebuilding - One through personal and public religious
practice - The other through a publicly representational
sangha
78Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
79Transformation and the Trope of Authenticity
- Is contemporary Buddhism authentic?
- The trope of authenticity has been essential to
Buddhism from the beginning. - But it cant mean immunity from change, for
doctrinal and for historical reasons. - What is essential to Buddhism? Does that make
any sense? - When does a movement or a change become
non-Buddhist? - How can Buddhism continue as a force and enter
modernity and post-modernity?
80Buddhism goes West
- Missionary history
- Colonialism and Orientalism
- The parliament of world religions and Japan
- DT Suzuki
- Multiple Traditions
- Academics and Practitioners
- Characteristics of Western Buddhism
- Buddhism and popular culture
- Buddhism and science
- Engaged Buddhism
- Transformation and the trope of authenticity
81Introduction to Buddhist Thought
- Buddhist Fundamentals
- The Pali tradition
- Madhyamaka in India and Tibet
- Yogåcåra
- Chinese and Japanese Buddhism
- Buddhism in the West
82An Introduction to Buddhist Thought (YBI01)
- Prof Jay L Garfield
- Department of Philosophy, Smith College
- Department of Philosophy
- University of Melbourne
- Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies
(Sarnath, India) - Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, U
of Canterbury (visiting)