Title: Religious Studies 232: Introduction to Buddhism
1Religious Studies 232 Introduction to
Buddhism
Week 3
- Instructor
- Justin Whitaker
-
2Announcements 9/11
- 5 Year anniversary of the terrorist attacks
- The Buddhist Response to 9/11?
- Think about how these responses reveal Buddhist
principles that we will study this week and next - See the course website for full statements
3Announcements 9/11
- Buddhist Responses to 9/11
- The Dalai Lama
- Human conflicts do not arise out of the blue.
They occur as a result of causes and conditions,
many of which are within the protagonists
control. Violence undoubtedly breeds more
violence.
4Announcements 9/11
- Buddhist Responses to 9/11
- Thich Nhat Hanh
- The root of terrorism is misunderstanding,
intolerance, hatred, revenge and hopelessness.
This root cannot be located by the military
Everyone has the seed of awakening and insight
within his or her heart. Let us help each other
touch these seeds in ourselves so that everyone
can have the courage to speak out.
5Announcements 9/11
- Buddhist Responses to 9/11
- Buddhist Peace Fellowship
- The Buddha taught that all beings are our
family - If we are all one familyvictims, perpetrators,
innocent, guiltythen each of us is potentially
capable of terrible and noble action. We must
first taste our fear and anger without rashly
retaliating and escalating the violence.
6Announcements 9/11
- Buddhist Responses to 9/11
- The Buddha on Violence
- Hatred is not overcome by hatred,
- By love alone is hatred overcome.
- This is an eternal law. Dhammapada v.5
- All tremble at the rod. All fear death.
- Comparing others with oneself, one should neither
strike nor cause to strike. Dhammapada v.129
7Announcements 9/11
- First EXAM Sept 22----next Week, Friday.
- Revised (only slightly) Study Guide available
on-line this weekend. - What to study? see the course website for a
full Study Guide (to be slightly revised this
weekend) -
- Dont forget the four blue-book exam booklets!!
- Bring in this week----no name written on cover
- Tonight - "China The Balance Sheet What the
World Needs to Know Now About the Emerging
Superpower." Urey Lecture Hall, 7pm
8Shakyamuni Buddha His Life and Times
- Cultural Context
- Classical Civilization of
- South Asia
- Shramanas vs. Brahmanas
- Character of the Buddha
- in
- His teachings (Dharma)
- Stories of his life
97 Radical Characteristics
- A Path available to all
inc. women outcastes - Not every circumstance is the result of karma
(ethical action) multiply conditioned - Upward mobility within this life-time
- All teachings must be verified in ones own
experience ( pragmatism)
107 Radical Characteristics
- Belief/Confidence in the Path is
- necessary but not sufficient
- Atman/Brahman is
- not the solution to the problem
- Human Predicament not sin------but
ignorance/craving - ignorance about the nature of reality
11Brahmins vs. Shramanas
Affirmation of the
Renunciation of the Prevailing Social Order
Prevailing Social Order
Collective / Locative
Individual / Transformative A
Continuum of Philosophical Religious Options
- Ritual Atman Yoga
Self-mortifying - Sacrifice Theory
Meditation Asceticism
12A Contrast of Purpose Place
- Brahmanic Ritualism, esp Sacrifice
- Sustain the Cosmic Order
- Obtain personal prosperity
- Attain rebirth in Heaven
- vs
- Buddhist Middle Path
- vs
Brahmins vs. Shramanas
- Shramanic Self-Mortification
- Separate the self from society
- Transform the self
- Free the self from all obstructions
13Atman Theory
- Brahmanic / Upanishadic View
- Brahman the Absolute the essence of all
existence - Atman the Eternal, Immutable Soul, essence of
the self - Tat tvam asi Brahman Atman
Brahmins vs. Shramanas
Buddhas Response Anatman (anatta) the
non-substantiality of the self no permanent,
unchanging essence Question How to account for
persistence of personal identity?
14Karma and Caste ( Gender)
- Brahmanic View
- Everything determined by karma
- Ethical action caste duty
- Upward mobility only in the next life
Brahmins vs. Shramanas
Buddhas Response Karma is only one type of
causality Ethical action compassion Upward
mobility on the Path, not a matter of caste
15Religious Studies 232 Introduction to
Buddhism
Week 3
- Instructor
- Justin Whitaker
-
16Announcements 9/13
- Exam, next Friday
- Study guide online (to be updated this weekend)
- Dont forget 4 blue books (this week!) if you
havent brought them in already - Study/Discussion group(s)
- Meet in my office after class today if you can
- Extra Credit opportunities email me with
suggestions (events/movies/lectures, etc. were
Buddhism is examined)
17Announcements 9/13
- Tonight Reverend Master Zensho from the Order
of Buddhist Contemplatives (a Westernized Soto
Zen school) will talk at Open Way Mindfulness
Center, 730pm (702 Brooks)-- a small building
how many plan to go? - Note make sure you note the distinction between
(this was not clear in many slides) - Brahmins (priests) and the
- Brahmanas (Ritual manuals)
18Carrithers on Buddhisms Success
- Tolerant
- no proprietary claim on Truth
- Cosmopolitan
- Portable
- Based on Universal Human Needs
- Abstract Formulation of those needs
- Focused practically on those needs
From Michael Caritthers The Buddha, pp.
80-81 (excerpted in your Course Pack)
19The Buddhas Advice to the Kalamans
- The Kalamans problem ethical pluralism
- How to find meaningfulness value in life when
confronted with a welter of competing ideologies
and view points? - Buddhas Response
- Yes, Kalamans, it is proper that you have
doubt, that you have perplexity, for doubt has
arisen in a matter that is indeed to be doubted.
20The Buddhas Advice to the Kalamans
- "Do not be misled by reports, or tradition, or
hearsay. Be not misled by the authority of
religious texts, nor by mere logic or inference,
nor by considering appearances, nor by the
delight in speculative opinions, nor by what
appears possible, nor by the idea 'this is (the
words of) our teacher.' - "But, O Kalamans, when you know for yourselves
that certain things are unskillful, and wrong,
and bad, then give them up. . . and when you know
for yourselves that certain things are skillful
and good, then accept them and follow them."
21The Buddhas Advice to the Kalamans
- Do not be misled by ----- do not rely solely on
- reports, or tradition, or hearsay
- authority of religious texts
- logic or inference alone
- how things appear
- delight in speculation
- what appears possible
- this is what I was told by my guru
- Ignore all of these sources???
- No, test them!
- (from heteronomy to autonomy)
22The Buddhas Advice to the Kalamans
- But How? Determine what is wholesome/skillful
- and what is not??
- Whatever gives rise to greed (lust), hatred and
delusion - That is unskillful, unwholesome, unprofitable.
- Whatever gives rise to the absence of the above
- That is skillful, wholesome, profitable.
- Whatever is condemned or commended by the wise
when verified in ones own experience
23Religious Studies 232 Introduction to
Buddhism
Week 3
- Instructor
- Justin Whitaker
-
24Announcements 9/15
- Exam, next Friday
- Study guide online (to be updated this weekend)
- Dont forget 4 blue books (pleaseeee on Monday if
you havent brought them in already) - Study/Discussion group(s) 2 potential schedules
- Before class M/W/F 11am-noon at Food For Thought
- Weekly 7pm - Monday (Sept 18) and then every
Friday at Bears Brew, 1221 Helen (a block from
campus) - Extra Credit opportunities email me with
suggestions (events/movies/lectures, etc. were
Buddhism is examined)
25The Buddhas Advice to the Kalamans
- The Practice
- Ethical precepts Strive to avoid
- Killing living things
- Taking the not given
- Sexual misconduct
- False Speech
- Clouding the mind with intoxicants greed,
hatred delusion
26The Buddhas Advice to the Kalamans
- The Practice
- Meditation abide with a heart imbued with
- Loving-kindness (metta)
- Compassion (karuna)
- Gladness or sympathetic joy (mudita)
- Equanimity (upekkha)
- The 4 Immeasurables or Abodes of
Brahma
27On the meaning of Do not be mislead by . .
. .
- NOT "Make up your own truth
- (not capricious individualism)
- Find the truth
- for yourself
- RATHER "Make truth your own
- (listen to the words of the wise
- discover their truth for yourself)
28Shakyamuni Buddha His Life Times
- Cultural Context
- Classical Civilization of
- South Asia
- Shramanas vs. Brahmins
- Character of the Buddha
- in
- His teachings (Dharma)
- Stories of his life
29The Life of the Buddha as a mixture of
- Historical Truth
- Biographical Facts time place, etc.
- Cultural Setting and Context Age of the
Wanderers - Dharma Teachings Advice to the Kalamans, etc.
- and
- Mythic Truth
- Universal Structure
- Birth, Renunciation, Enlightenment, Teaching
Career, Death - Archetypal Encounters
- Four Sights, Mara, Earth Goddess, Wise Old Man,
etc.
30Universal Structure
- Birth
- Renunciation
- Enlightenment
- Death still subject human physical limitations
- wheel-turning king or a buddha
- human, but extraordinary
- life of complete sensory gratification
- Four Sights (not sites)
- Studied Meditation/Yoga
- Practiced renounced Self-Mortification
- Importance of his second renunciation
- Conquest of Mara / other archetypal encounters
- At 80, after teaching for 45 years
31Myth
- Not in the sense of what is untrue,
- or contrary to specific facts documented in the
historical record. - but rather
- In the sense of what is more true
- in that its universality goes beyond any
specific factual situation - Thus myth has been said to be
- That which never was,
- but always is.
32Myth as Paradigm
- Some stories are origin myths, seeking to explain
how things came to be - whereas
- Others seek to provide a paradigm or template for
how things might be. - Historical facts of the Buddhas career were
increasingly mythologized - Structure and events of his life came to be seen
as the universal paradigm by which all beings can
develop towards enlightenment
33Truth
- Historical Truth
- Factual
- Specific / Particular
- Unique
- Mythic Truth
- Beyond Space Time
- Universal
- Paradigmatic