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Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism: Taixu's Reforms

ebooks Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism: Taixu's Reforms by Don A. Pittman in History

Description

Leading East Asian Buddhist thinkers of the seventh century compared; analyzed; and finalized seminal epistemological and soteriological issues that had been under discussion in India and East Asia for centuries. Among the many doctrinal issues that came to the fore was the relationship between the Tathagatagarbha (or “Buddha-nature”) understanding of the human psyche and the view of basic karmic indeterminacy articulated by the new stream of Indian Yogacara introduced through the translations and writings of Xuanzang and his disciples. The great Silla scholiast Wonhyo (617–686); although geographically located on the periphery in the Korean peninsula; was very much at the center of the intense discussion and debate that occurred on these topics. Through the force of his writings; he became one of the most influential figures in resolving doctrinal discrepancies for East Asian Buddhism.Although many of Wonhyo’s writings are lost; through his extant work we are able to get a solid glimpse of his profound and learned insights on the nature and function of the human mind. We can also clearly see his hermeneutical approaches and methods of argumentation; which are derived from apophatic Madhyamika analysis; the newly introduced Buddhist logic; as well as various indigenous East Asian approaches. This volume includes four of Wonhyo’s works that are especially revelatory of his treatment of the complex flow of ideas in his generation: System of the Two Hindrances (Yijang ui); Treatise on the Ten Ways of Resolving Controversies (Simmun hwajaeng non); Commentary on the Discrimination between the Middle and the Extremes (Chungbyon punbyollon so); and the Critical Discussion on Inference (P’an piryang non).


#3910451 in Books 2001-02Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 1.25 x 6.30 x 9.25l; 1.58 #File Name: 0824822315389 pages


Review
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful. "The Buddhist teaching regarding the nature of the universe has nothing of the mystical or mysterious in it..."By Crazy FoxThe oncoming of modernity during the nineteenth century proved every bit as extremely jarring for Buddhism as it did for most religious traditions. This fact is easy to overlook nowadays though as many of the innovative solutions advanced by Buddhist reformers in response have insinuated themselves into common sense notions of what Buddhism is; thus managing to pass unquestioned as timeless characteristics of this ancient religious tradition. Understanding this understudied process is slippery and tricky at best and yet fundamentally important for getting a handle on Buddhism's historical development; and so a reliable in-depth study like Don Pittman's "Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism: Taixu's Reforms" cannot but be a welcome contribution.The early twentieth-century Buddhist reformer Taixu (1890-1947) makes for an interesting focus. For one; as Pittman convincingly argues; he's an exemplary representative of a certain kind of religious figure especially prominent in the modern period; one who prioritizes socially responsible ethical action in the present world. At the same time he's hard to pigeonhole and is a somewhat ambivalent personality--too moderate in the eyes of more fiery proponents of extreme change and yet far too sweeping a reformist for the more settled conservative monastic leaders of his era. Still; a fully ordained monk qualified to discuss the issues with religious authority like Taixu is better placed to give us insight into the inner workings of Chinese Buddhism's modern vicissitudes than; say; some voices in modern Buddhism who tend to be marginally affiliated with the tradition in question.The book is nicely organized. An initial chapter sets the stage; as it were; sketching the circumstances faced by Buddhism during late-nineteenth and early twentieth century China (the end of the Qing Dynasty and the tumultuous Republican period) and perceptions of the tradition by important Chinese intellectuals. The next few chapters deal directly with Taixu's life in roughly chronological order; detailing his many attempts to organize Buddhism into a viable force in modern society as well as his evolving attempts to redefine the Buddhist tradition as rational and scientific and thus uniquely qualified to be spiritually relevant and vitally beneficial in the modern world. The last few chapters then step back and explore more carefully his formulation (or reformulation) of what Buddhism is all about and the complex balance of tradition and reform found therein. Finally; despite Taixu's own self-perception of overall failure; the final chapter outlines his far-reaching influence on more recent Buddhist leaders in the People's Republic of China; Hong Kong; and most especially Taiwan. If the book has one weakness; it's that Pittman sometimes seems to rely too much on previously published secondary sources in English (especially those by Holmes Welch) and; less problematically but still overabundantly; observations and characterizations of Taixu by American and British Christian missionaries stationed in China at that time. Not that Chinese sources and reactions are totally neglected by any means; but on balance more would have perhaps been appropriate. Still; this is a minor quibble in what is on the whole an imminently readable and significant monograph on a fascinating Buddhist monk and his key role in developing the East Asian forms of Buddhist religiosity we see very much active today. Highly recommended.

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