Lajos Brons
On Secular and Radical Buddhism
on secular
and radical
Buddhism
Lajos Brons
F=ma
Tokyo, 2019
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on secular and radical Buddhism
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contents
4
introduction
6
secular Buddhism
9
the cult of the authentic
10
purification beyond the authentic
16
useful and fashionable
18
the secular and the religious
22
unfashionable and uncomfortable
28
reality and compassion
35
the conventional and the real
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the Lotus SĆ«tra
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social reality
48
the Bodhisattva ideal
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radical Buddhism
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57
Seno'o GirĆ and the Youth League
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transcending the Lotus SĆ«tra
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concluding remarks
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references
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introduction
In a number of influential books and articles, Stephen Batchelor has
proposed, developed, and defended something he has called (among
others) âsecular Buddhismâ and âBuddhism 2.0â. 1 The idea of such a
secular or scientific or naturalistic or otherwise not traditionally
religious kind of Buddhism isnât new â it has been especially popular
among 20th and 21st Western converts to Buddhism, but there have
been Asian precursors as well.2 Nevertheless, the idea is also somewhat
controversial. Adherents of âsecular Buddhismâ like Batchelor typically
consider it a return to the roots of Buddhism and to the original
teachings of the Buddha, but others â such as Donald Lopez â have
argued that a secularized or âscientificâ Buddhism would (have to)
discard too much doctrine to still be recognizably âBuddhistâ. 3
1
Books: Stephen Batchelor (1997), Buddhism without Beliefs: A Contemporary
Guide to Awakening (Riverhead); (2011), Confessions of a Buddhist Atheist
(Spiegel & Grau); and especially (2015), After Buddhism: Rethinking the
Dharma for a Secular Age (Yale University Press). Relevant papers are
collected in (2018), Secular Buddhism: Imagining the Dharma in an Uncertain
World (Yale University Press).
2
In the first half of the 20th century there were movements to modernize
Buddhism in almost all Asian countries in which Buddhism is an important
religion.
3
Donald Lopez jr. (2012). The Scientific Buddha: His Short and Happy Life (Yale
University Press).
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Iâm not sure whether it is really that interesting to debate whether
secular, scientific, etcetera Buddhisms are really âBuddhistâ. Iâm inclined
â like many others, by the way â to think of the rather large family of
varieties of âBuddhismâ as something like a tree with many branches
coming from the same stem and roots. Any branch or leaf on that tree is
Buddhist in at least some sense. The history of Buddhism is littered with
attempts to prune away larger or smaller branches (by denouncing
them as heretic or ânon-Buddhistâ), but the tree metaphor illustrates
the futility thereof. If one succeeds in pruning away a branch of an oak
tree, then that separated branch doesnât cease to be oak. Perhaps, this is
an overly liberal view of what it means to be âBuddhistâ â even a leaf
that drops of an oak tree in autumn remains an oak leaf â but I donât
think there is a useful alternative. There is no single essence of
Buddhism that any set of ideas must include to be considered
âBuddhistâ, for example. In fact, most varieties of Buddhism reject
essentialism, and therefore â rather paradoxically â the rejection of
essences would probably be part of a hypothetical essence of Buddhism,
making that very notion incoherent.
In any case, many secular, scientific, etcetera Buddhisms are
unambiguously branches (or leaves) of the Buddhist tree. (Exceptions
would be philosophies that grew from different trees and merely
borrowed some elements from Buddhism.) Many other branches or
leaves might want to cut them off, but that â again â is futile. They grew
from the tree of Buddhism and remain very much part of it, even if they
differ significantly from many other branches. (And anyway, all
branches and leaves differ significantly from the stem and roots.)
Iâm not part of that tree myself, by the way â Iâm a mere curious
observer. Some parts of the tree intrigue me, others I find quite
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attractive, and yet others I find just strange or even repulsive. For
various reasons, I find the idea of a more or less secularized or
naturalistic and more philosophical than religious Buddhism
particularly interesting, but Iâm not some kind of âsecular Buddhistâ
either (obviously, because that would put me on the tree, and I just
wrote that Iâm not part of the tree). I have little affinity with recent
Western secularized Buddhisms like Batchelorâs, however, and much
more with some varieties of âradical Buddhismâ developed in the 20th
century in Japan and elsewhere in (East) Asia. It seems to me that
âradical Buddhistsâ like Seno'o GirĆ have much more to offer than
âsecular Buddhistsâ like Stephen Batchelor. This article is an attempt to
explain why I think this is the case.
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secular Buddhism
As far as I know, the term âsecular Buddhismâ was coined in the first
decade of the 21st century. I do not know who coined the term, but it
gained prominence when Stephen Batchelor published an article titled
âA Secular Buddhismâ in 2012.4 (He also used the term âBuddhism 2.0â
in that paper to refer to his version of secular Buddhism.) The opening
paragraph of that article explains how Batchelor interprets the term
âsecularâ and thus what is âsecularâ about his âsecular Buddhismâ, and
much of the rest of the paper is an attempt to explain what is
âBuddhistâ about his approach. What would make âBuddhism 2.0â
Buddhist rather than something else â in Batchelorâs view â is that âit
would . . . be founded upon canonical source texts, be able to offer a
coherent interpretation of key practices, doctrines and ethical precepts,
and provide a sufficiently rich and integrated theoretical model of the
dharma [i.e. Buddhist doctrine] to serve as the basis for a flourishing
human existenceâ.5 This raises lots of questions about which texts
deserve canonical status and why, and which practices, doctrines, and
ethical precepts should be considered essentially Buddhist and which
not, and it seems that there is little agreement among (historical and
4
Stephen Batchelor (2012). âA Secular Buddhismâ, Journal of Global Buddhism
13: 87-107. This paper is reprinted in the aforementioned collection (2018).
5
Idem, p. 90.
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current) schools of Buddhism about what the answers to those
questions could be.
The term âsecularâ is used by Batchelor in three overlapping senses:
(1) to denote a contrast or opposition to what is religious; (2) to refer to
âthis ageâ, âthis generationâ, and âthis worldâ; (3) to refer to the
transfer of authority away from the church(es) and to the declining role
of religion (and religious authority) in peopleâs lives. The third sense
doesnât appear to play a major role, but the other two do, and not just in
Batchelorâs âBuddhism 2.0â. Secular, scientific, etcetera Buddhisms are
non-religious (i.e. sense 1), and purport to be relevant to this age and
this world (i.e. sense 2). A more cynical reading of the second sense of
âsecularâ is âuseful and fashionableâ, and there certainly is much to say
for that cynical reading.
the cult of the authentic
One particular way in which secular Buddhisms are fashionable is in
their uncritical acceptance of the modern Western normative ideal of
authenticity. This ideal is rooted in 19th century Romantic thought, but
has more recently become incorporated by capitalism in various ways.
One fashion of authenticity is the misguided (and rather un-Buddhist)
ideal of being authentic,6 but at least equally important is the fashion of
authentic consumption â that is, the attempt by consumers to acquire
and/or experience authentic âthingsâ (in the broadest possible
6
10
For an excellent critique of this notion of authenticity and an explanation of
why one should not (usually) strive to be authentic in this sense, see: Simon
Feldman (2015), Against Authenticity: Why You Shouldnât Be Yourself
(London: Lexington).
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interpretation of âthingâ).7 Thus, a Western tourist under the influence
of this cult of authentic consumption will only want to see and
experience authentic buildings (including authentic ruins), authentic
landscapes, authentic cultures, authentic foods, and so forth, and will
reject hybrids and modern and Western influences on (or âcorruptionsâ
of) the âpureâ, traditional, original, authentic ideal. And similarly, a
Western Buddhist under the same influence will want to find â or
construct (!) â the most âauthenticâ Buddhism possible and will reject
what she sees as corruptions, deviations, and non-purely-Buddhist (i.e.
âinauthenticâ) influences. Much Western Buddhism is fashionable in
exactly this sense â i.e. it aims to consume some kind of âauthenticâ
Buddhism â and most secular Buddhisms appear to be especially heavily
influenced by the cult of the authentic. Typically, they aim to
reconstruct the original teachings of the Buddha, purified from later,
inauthentic corruptions and other âinauthenticâ influences.
Authenticity is a misguided ideal, however, and Stephen Batchelor
appears to realize this. He writes that:
The more I am seduced by the force of my own arguments, the
more I am tempted to imagine that my secular version of
Buddhism is what the Buddha originally taught, which the
traditional schools have either lost sight of or distorted. This
would be a mistake; for it is impossible to read the historical
7
11
For an useful review of the sociology of such authentic consumption, see:
Amanda Koontz (2009), âConstructing Authenticity: A Review of Trends and
Influences in the Process of Authentication in Consumptionâ, Sociology
Compass 4.11: 977-988.
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Buddhaâs mind in order to know what he âreallyâ meant or
intended.8
However, it also seems that the seductive force of the ideal of
authenticity is strong, as much of Batchelorâs work is an attempt to
reconstruct the life and original (i.e. authentic) teachings of the
Buddha.9 And arguably, that is also the most interesting part of his
work.10 Nevertheless, Batchelor is right that authenticity is
unachievable â we cannot âread the historical Buddhaâs mindâ. It is,
perhaps, worth noting here that in the pre-twentieth century Buddhist
tradition no one ever tried either. The whole idea of reconstructing the
historical Buddha and his ârealâ historical message is alien to Buddhism
and even clashes with widely held Buddhist beliefs about (historical)
factuality.11 So, in a sense, the reconstructionist project appears to be a
very âun-Buddhistâ project.12
A more important question than whether reconstruction is possible
or properly âBuddhistâ is whether authenticity is â or should be â an
ideal at all. Authentic ruins may be more interesting to visit than fake
8
Batchelor (2012). âA Secular Buddhismâ, p. 90.
9
Or in his own words, he seeks âto return to the roots of the tradition and
rethink and rearticulate the dharma anewâ. (2015, After Buddhism, p. 19)
10
Scattered throughout his (2011) and (2015) books is a biography of the
Buddha that is considerably more plausible and better researched than
anything else Iâve read about the topic, for example, and Iâd love to see a
book that integrates those parts into an annotated, critical biography of the
Buddha.
11
See: Jan Westerhoff (2018), The Golden Age of Buddhist Philosophy (Oxford
University Press): pp. 24-34.
12
See also the section titled âreality and compassionâ below.
12
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ruins, but Buddhism is not like a ruined building â rather, it is a
collection of values, beliefs, and ideas that serves certain purposes and
there is no a priori reason to assume that a more âauthenticâ version of
those values, beliefs, and ideas serve those purposes any better than
less authentic versions. Actually, the contrary is considerably more
plausible. Thales is arguably the father of Western science and
philosophy. If authentic beliefs would be more valuable than later
âcorruptionsâ, then we should reject Newton, Einstein, and everything
modern science (and philosophy) has taught and return to Thalesâs
original teachings. For example, weâd have to reject plate tectonics and
explain earthquakes by claiming that land floats on water.
As mentioned, one of the most interesting parts of Batchelorâs work is
his attempt to reconstruct the life and teachings of the historical
Buddha. The story he tells is convincing, but the more human the
Buddha becomes, the more he becomes like Thales. That is, he becomes
the father of a certain tradition, but nothing more than that. 13 Being
just human, the Buddha no longer has any special authority and there
is, therefore, no special reason to believe his teachings. 14 In other
13
To me personally, the historical Buddha indeed is not much more than that:
like Thales, he founded a tradition, but he is mainly of historical interest and
not much more essential or important to the tradition he founded than
Thales is to modern science and philosophy. (It is also partially for this
reason that I'm not quoting any of the alleged sayings of the âhistoricalâ
Buddha.)
14
Destroying the last bit of authority the Buddha has after humanizing him,
Stephen Batchelor remarks that the Buddha âdid not stand out among his
peers because his knowledge of reality was somehow more accurate or
superior to theirsâ (2015, After Buddhism, p. 129). Oddly, Batchelor doesnât
seem to realize how devastating this remark is, but if there was nothing
special about the Buddha, then there is no reason whatsoever to accept his
13
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words, the more authentic the reconstruction of the Buddhaâs teachings
and their origins, the less reason there is to accept them. The only
reason there would be to accept the teachings of a fully humanized
Buddha is that (there is sufficient evidence that) they are true or that
they âworkâ. Batchelor himself adopts a kind of vulgar Pragmatism that
confuses the notion of truth with the criteria to assign truth status (i.e.
justification â see: Some Remarks on Truth and Justification @) and thus
more or less fuses the two notions, 15 but that matters little here. What
does matter is that acceptance of some theory or idea (regardless of
whether it is supposed to be true or that it âworksâ) should depend on
nothing but evidence â the source or author of that theory or idea is
utterly irrelevant. Consequently, the ideal of authenticity is selfundermining: the authentic Buddha has no authority.
There is, furthermore, something unpleasantly arrogant and
condescending about the search for the âtrueâ teaching of the âtrueâ
Buddha because that search always involves an implicit devaluation and
rejection of everything that doesnât satisfy the implied standard of
purity. I already mentioned above that there is a long tradition of
accusations of corruption of the âtrueâ teaching within Buddhism. In
terms of the tree metaphor adopted above, this is like one branch or
leaf of the same tree accusing another branch or leaf of being an
aberration and not really belonging to the same tree. This is somewhat
absurd, of course, but it becomes especially absurd â and, as mentioned,
teachings, unless they would satisfy scientific standards. But they cannot
possibly satisfy criteria for good scientific theory, as they arenât rooted in
(and possibly are not even coherent with) a scientific world view.
@
http://www.lajosbrons.net/blog/some-remarks-on-truth-and-justification/
15
Batchelor (2011), Confessions of a Buddhist Atheist, p. 199.
14
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unpleasantly arrogant and condescending â in case of secular
Buddhism, even if the rejection of the âuntrueâ or âinauthenticâ
branches is often left unmentioned. Western, secular Buddhisms
typically do not originate from within the Buddhist tradition, so in a
sense, they are more like something â a fungus, perhaps â growing on
the tree than like a part of the tree itself. The cult of authenticity then,
is like a fungus that grows on or near the roots of the tree and that
considers itself to be a more authentic part of the tree than the
branches and leaves, just because it is closer to the roots.16
This latter point is relatively superficial in comparison to the much
more fundamental issue mentioned before. An attempt to go back to the
authentic teachings of the Buddha makes sense only if one accepts that
the Buddha had some special, supernatural access to truth and wisdom,
much like Mohamedâs direct line of communication with Allah, but a
secular Buddhist cannot possibly accept that. For a genuinely secular
Buddhist, the Buddha is merely of historical interest, and authenticity is
not a normative ideal. If anything, a secular Buddhist should appreciate
the results of centuries of open debate on doctrine much more than the
sketchy ideas that started that debate (although it must be admitted
immediately that open debate about doctrine has only occurred
16
15
I wonder whether the cult of the authentic is reinforced by the fact that
Western, secular Buddhists come from the outside. Perhaps, the fanatical
search for authenticity or purity is compensation for the outsider status
(which appears to be a rather common phenomena â outsiders are often the
fiercest purists). Perhaps, it is an elaborate attempt to suppress some kind of
inferiority complex by reinventing and elevating oneâs own âBuddhistâ
credentials and simultaneously undermining the credentials of two and half
millennia of Buddhists and Buddhism in Asia.
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sporadically and has mostly been overshadowed by sectarian or
scholastic dogma).
purification beyond the authentic
Some secular Buddhists aim to go further even than reconstructing
something as close as possible to the Buddhaâs original teachings â they
want to purify those teachings from non-Buddhist influences as well.
Hence, they aim for something that is explicitly unauthentic, for
something more âpureâ than (historical) reality. Stephen Batchelor
adopts a variant of this attitude, for example. He writes that âmy
starting point in dealing with dogmatic statements is to bracket off
anything attributed to Gotama that could just as well have been said by
another wanderer, Jain monk, or brahmin priest of the same periodâ.17
In his Buddhism as Philosophy, Mark Siderits suggests something like
this as a possibility as well, but more as a theoretical exercise than as a
normative ideal.18 A charitable reading of Batchelor suggests that his
approach should be understood much in the same way â his point in
âbracketing offâ is not so much hyper-purification, but arriving at a
more interesting theory. And many other secular (and radical)
Buddhisms âbracket offâ ideas on similar grounds.
There is a long list of candidate ideas that could be âbracketed offâ on
these grounds (i.e. on the grounds that they were part of the shared
cultural background rather than particular to the Buddhaâs thought).
An obvious example is reincarnation or rebirth (suggested by Siderits).
17
Batchelor (2015), After Buddhism, p. 26.
18
Mark Siderits (2007). Buddhism as Philosophy: An Introduction (Ashgate).
16
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Mind/body dualism (and other varieties of substance dualism) is
another example. The belief in gods and spirits; the theory of karma
(which is, of course, closely related to the idea of rebirth); and so forth.
One may wonder, however, how many of such background ideas can be
discarded without changing Buddhism into something else entirely. 19 In
any case, much of Buddhist doctrine would have to be radically
rethought. Batchelor, of course, realizes this very well and much of his
project is aimed at doing exactly that.
A potential problem, however, is that this âbracketing offâ of
problematic ideas may clash more violently with the attempt to
reconstruct the historical Buddha than Batchelor and fellow travelers
seem to realize. Again, the idea is to discard anything that clashes with
the secular worldview and that was part of the common or shared
intellectual background, but there may not be much in that category.
Problematic ideas such as the theories of karma and rebirth (or
reincarnation) where not universally accepted in the time of the
Buddha.20 They were widely shared, but also debated, and they were
rejected by the CÄrvÄka school, for example. Furthermore, they were
explicitly endorsed by the Buddha. Hence, the ideas that some secular
Buddhists want to âbracket offâ were more or less controversial ideas
that were explicitly part of the Buddhaâs teachings. One can still choose
to bracket off those ideas, of course, but one cannot honestly pretend
that the result is still the authentic teaching of the historical Buddha.
19
Lopez (2012). The Scientific Buddha.
20
They may not even have been part of the pre-Brahmanic (and pre-Buddhist)
worldview of the historical Buddhaâs people.
17
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useful and fashionable
The ideal of authenticity is not the only thing that is fashionable about
secular Buddhism. Stephen Batchelorâs second sense of âsecularâ
focuses on âsaeculumâ as referring to this age, this world, and this
generation.21 His point is that secular Buddhism should be relevant or
useful in this world and to this generation. This is, of course, an
extremely fashionable idea â in modern, capitalist consumer society
what is useless is worthless â although the extent of fashionability
depends on how exactly secular Buddhism is supposed to be useful.
There are two features of modern culture that are especially relevant
here. Firstly, modern culture is extremely individualistic or even
narcissistic.22 And secondly, since the 19th century âusefulâ has become
inseparable from the originally utilitarian concept of âutilityâ, which
itself â under the influence of the hegemony of liberalism and
mainstream economics â has effectively turned into a synonym of
âprofitabilityâ. Hence, something is useful to the extent that it is
profitable. There are many ways in which something can be profitable,
however. It might help you make more money directly. Or it might help
you cope with the conditions of life more effectively. Or it may help in
creating acceptance of the status quo (i.e. hegemony) and thereby make
your employees less likely to dissent or revolt. And so forth.
Stephen Batchelor states explicitly that he does ânot envision a
Buddhism that seeks to discard all trace of religiosity, that seeks to
21
Batchelor (2012), âA Secular Buddhismâ, p. 87. (2015), After Buddhism, p. 16.
22
Jean M. Twenge and W. Keith Campbell (2009). The Narcissism Epidemic:
Living in the Age of Entitlement (New York: Atria).
18
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arrive at a dharma that is little more than a set of self-help techniques
that enable us to operate more calmly and effectively as agents or
clients, or both, of capitalist consumerismâ.23 However, one may
wonder how successful he is. His re-interpretation of the dharma (i.e.
Buddhism) is thoroughly individualist (and thus, very fashionable in
that sense, at least). For example, item 7 of his Ten theses of secular
dharma is that âthe community of practitioners is formed of
autonomous persons who mutually support each other in the
cultivation of their paths. In this network of like-minded individuals,
members respect the equality of all members while honoring the
specific knowledge and expertise each person bringsâ.24 The same
individualism permeates his rethinking of the doctrine of âno-selfâ, 25
emphasis on self-reliance,26 and response to social ills.27 The âsecular
dharmaâ may be âgrounded in a deeply felt concern and compassion for
the suffering of all those with whom we share this earthâ, 28 but it
remains focused on the practice of autonomous individuals. As in
liberalism and mainstream economics, the individual takes center stage
and is the only actor worth considering. This is, of course, very
fashionable, but it also denies the âsecular dharmaâ a social or political
role, which makes it rather useful for those who profit from the status
quo as well. Individualistic concern with suffering without social,
23
Batchelor (2015), After Buddhism, p. 17.
24
Idem, p. 321.
25
Idem, pp. 201-3.
26
E.g. idem, p. 275.
27
E.g. idem, p. 305.
28
Idem, p. 16.
19
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communal, and political action to alleviate that suffering is impotent
and harmless to those who profit from the continuation of suffering. 29
In the end, what most secular Buddhisms achieve is a kind of
acceptance of suffering, rather than a desire to end it. Individualist
Buddhism is aimed at changing oneself rather than changing the world.
Almost as an afterthought, Batchelorâs 8th Thesis of secular dharma
preaches âempathy, compassion, and love for all creatures who have
evolved on this earthâ,30 but just sharing in othersâ suffering (that is
what âcompassionâ means) is insufficient â without a serious
commitment to change the world (rather than just oneself) this socalled âempathyâ or âcompassionâ is nothing but a pornographic
indulging in pity.31
Buddhism has always been made useful, of course, and being useful is
not objectionable in itself. The issue here is not whether secular
Buddhism is useful, however, but whether it is fashionable, which
includes a certain kind of usefulness. As mentioned, Batchelor rejects a
reduction of secular Buddhism to âa set of self-help techniques that
enable us to operate more calmly and effectively as agents or clients, or
both, of capitalist consumerismâ,32 but he is also rather apologetic of
âBuddhistâ practices that are exactly that. Furthermore, he points out
that it has always been like this: to a large extent Buddhism has always
29
The failure of secular Buddhism to be (much) more than self-help is also
illustrated by its most common defense by adherents when facing criticism:
âit works for meâ. Thatâs apparently all that matters: that it âworksâ for âmeâ
in better coping with the stresses caused by this world.
30
Idem, p. 321.
31
Iâll return to this issue in the âconcluding remarksâ at the end of this article.
32
Batchelor (2015), After Buddhism, p. 17.
20
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been âdumbed downâ to a kind of self-help techniques that enable the
adherent âto operate more calmly and effectivelyâ in the world she
happens to be born in.
An oft-heard complaint among traditional Buddhists is that the
mindfulness movement is a âdumbing downâ of the dharma. This
elitist objection fails to recognize that Buddhism has been
dumbing itself down ever since it began. It is doubtful that those
who condemn the mindfulness movement on such grounds would
likewise condemn the practice of millions of Buddhists that
consists in repeating over and over again the name of the
mythical Buddha Amitabha or the title of the Lotus SĆ«tra.
Mindfulness is becoming the Om Mani Padme Hum of secular
Buddhism. Instead of mumbling a mantra while spinning a prayer
wheel and once a week going to the monastery to light butter
lamps, modern practitioners may sit on a cushion for twenty
minutes a day observing their breathing and once a week attend a
âsitting groupâ in a friendâs living room. In both cases, those
involved may have little understanding of Buddhist philosophy or
doctrine but find these simple exercises rewarding in helping
them live balanced and meaningful lives. 33
In a sense, Buddhism has always been âsecularâ. It has always been
adapted to the circumstances of the time and place where it was
practiced. Lay Buddhism has always been a âdumbed downâ tool to help
people cope with their situation and the suffering around them. (And
monastic or institutional Buddhism has almost always functioned
primarily to serve that lay application and/or the state.) However,
33
21
Batchelor (2015), After Buddhism, p. 258.
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while adopting and incorporating cultural practices and fashions may
be an effective way to make a body of ideas more acceptable and
âusefulâ in some age and context, this doesnât automatically make it
âbetterâ in any sense of that term. Being âsecularâ (or fashionable) in
this sense is not a normative ideal. In the contrary, Iâm inclined to say
that by implicitly adopting the narcissistic individualism of our age,
secular Buddhism only diminishes Buddhism. Adopting bad fashions
makes something worse, not better.
the secular and the religious
The secular contrasts with the religious, and consequently, to
understand what it means to be secular (in this contrastive sense)
requires an understanding of what it means to be religious.
Unfortunately, there is no single uncontroversial definition of religion.
Religions consist of a wold view and a life view. (Or Weltanschauung
and Lebensanschauung in German. Unfortunately, English doesnât have a
good translation of the second term. âLife viewâ is a literal translation
and is consistent with the translation of the first term as âworld viewâ.)
A world view is a collection of ideas about how the world works, about
what exists and what doesnât, and so forth. A life view is a collection of
ideas about the meaning of life, about right and wrong, and so forth.
Obviously, defining religion as world view plus life view is
insufficient, because (some of) the sciences and part of philosophy 34 are
also collections of ideas about how the world works and about what
exists. Those, however, are usually considered to constitute a secular,
34
22
Metaphysics and other branches of theoretical philosophy particularly.
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rather than religious world view (although there is a lot of religiously
based philosophy, of course). And ideas about the meaning of life and
about right and wrong also belong to philosophy. 35 So, the question is,
What exactly distinguishes a religious world+life view from a secular
world+life view? It seems to me that the answer to that question
consists of two parts â one metaphysical and one epistemological.
Firstly, religious world+life views appeal to the supernatural, while
secular world+life views do not. Or in other words, religion is
supernaturalist and secularity is naturalist. This is a metaphysical
difference between religion and secular world+life views. Religious
views contend that supernatural agents, forces, causes, and so forth
exist, and thus that there are supernatural explanations.
Secular/naturalist views reject that idea â there is nothing beyond
physical nature/reality.
Secondly, it is often claimed that religion is dogmatic while secularity
is not, but that is not exactly true. Religious âdogmasâ also change over
time, and more or less dogmatic thought also occurs in science and
philosophy. The real difference between the two kinds of views is
epistemological: it concerns the status of revelation and certain kinds of
testimony as sources of knowledge. Revelation is knowledge with a
supernatural origin (like the knowledge Mohamed and other prophets
received from God directly). Testimony is âsecond-hand knowledgeâ â
things you read in books or heard from others. Religions recognize a
special class of texts or stories (i.e. oral transmissions) that qualify as
sources of knowledge. Examples include the Bible, the Quran, and
various SĆ«tras. Hence, what distinguishes religion from secularity (in
35
23
Ethics and other branches of practical philosophy particularly.
on secular and radical Buddhism
23
addition to the previous point) is that the former recognizes revelation
and/or specific testimony as sources of knowledge, while the latter does
not.
It is often claimed that Buddhism is compatible with secularity in the
metaphysical sense. That is, supposedly Buddhism is atheist and does
not depend on supernatural explanations. This is not exactly right,
however. Most varieties of Buddhism â along with all other religious
world+life views â adopt substance dualism (or sometimes a variety of
idealism). Substance dualism holds that there are minds and bodies and
those two are different kinds of substances. This kind of dualism
contrasts with monism that holds that either only the
material/physical exists, and thus the mind is a material/physical
process (in the brain), or that only the mental exists, and thus that
apparent physical/material reality is just in the mind. (The latter view
is called idealism and appears to be adopted by some varieties of
Buddhism such as YogÄcÄra.) Substance dualism is an untenable
position, however. It conflicts with the laws of physics (the
preservation laws of matter/energy, particularly) and it makes the
supposed interaction between the material and the mental
incomprehensible.36 The only way to make sense of the notion of
mental substances is by making the mind a supernatural category, and
consequently, world+life views that hold that minds are not (reducible
to, emergent from, or identical with) physical/material things/
processes are supernaturalist, and therefore, religious.
36
24
See any good introduction to the philosophy of mind for further details on
the problems of substance dualism (or Cartesian dualism), and why it is
rejected by virtually every philosopher nowadays.
on secular and radical Buddhism
24
However, giving up on substance dualism (and/or idealism) would
lead to some other big changes as well. Without mental substances and
related supernaturalities, it is impossible to make sense of karma and
rebirth or reincarnation, for example. 37 As mentioned above, some
secular Buddhists donât find this objectionable, because those ideas
were â supposedly â part of the shared background in which Buddhism
developed and are, therefore, not an âauthenticâ part of Buddhism. But
many other core ideas of Buddhism â its understanding of suffering (i.e.
dukkha), the twelve-linked chain of causes, and so forth â are deeply
influenced by, or even dependent on, these notions. There are, of
course, many other Buddhist ideas that do not depend on supernatural
assumptions, but one may wonder whether cutting away everything
that doesnât satisfy the criterion of secularity â if possible at all â would
leave enough to recognize that remainder as âBuddhistâ.38
Furthermore, it is also debatable whether most secular Buddhisms
are really secular in the epistemological sense mentioned above. Of
course, they donât recognize revelation as a source of knowledge, but
they invariable give special status to certain kinds of testimony â
namely, the parts of the Pali canon or other texts that they believe to
most accurately capture the Buddhaâs original teaching. That teaching
is more or less accepted as true and exempt from rejection. (That is, it
may be reinterpreted, but it can never be rejected.)
37
Furthermore, the theory of karma also depends on a notion of free will
similar (or identical) to metaphysical libertarianism, and that notion can be
made sense of only by means of supernatural explanations as well.
38
As mentioned above, Donald Lopez, for example, argues that it wouldnât.
(Lopez (2012). The Scientific Buddha.) And Jan Westerhoff made a similar
point. (Westerhoff (2018), The Golden Age of Buddhist Philosophy.)
25
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25
In science and philosophy (and thus in âsecularityâ) views are
adopted provisionally â at least in theory. Thus a philosopher may
consider herself a Quinean, for example, meaning that she largely
agrees with the philosophy of W.V.O. Quine. But if she would find solid
evidence and/or valid arguments against most of Quineâs theories that
she considers important, then she might still continue studying Quine,
but she wouldnât consider herself a Quinean anymore. By analogy, a
(real) secular Buddhist accepts a significant portion of Buddhist
teachings provisionally, recognizing that counter-argument and counterevidence may lead her to the rejection of those theories.
This, however, is contrary to the very purpose of religion. Religious
world+life views are not supposed to change fundamentally or to be
open to refutation and rejection, because â as Ernest Becker has argued
in The Denial of Death â people need these world+life views to provide a
more or less fixed ground for stable self-identities and to
(unconsciously) manage their fear of death. 39 Secularity can provide
such a fixed ground, as the secular world view (i.e. the rejection of
supernatural forces and explanations, and the rejection of revelation
and a special class of testimony â see above) itself may effectively be
(more or less) exempt from scrutiny and rejection. But the same cannot
be true for something that is combined with secularity â a consistent
secular view trumps anything else. Consequently, a (real) secular
Buddhism is essentially secular, and merely provisionally Buddhist.
However, religious terms of identification are almost never
understood as being provisional, and this makes the term âsecular
Buddhistâ somewhat misleading. That is, âsecular Buddhistâ is most
39
Ernest Becker (1973). The Denial of Death (New York: Simon & Schuster).
26
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26
likely to be understood as essentially Buddhist and provisionally
secular, but that is an impossible position because provisional secularity
is incoherent. For this reason it is debatable whether there is something
that can be appropriately called âsecular Buddhismâ. There may be
secular world+life views that take inspiration from Buddhism or that
(provisionally) borrow Buddhist ideas and hypotheses, but thatâs
(almost certainly) not enough to classify as âBuddhistâ.
Now, it can be argued, of course, that the term âBuddhistâ shouldnât
be interpreted religiously â parallel to Hindu, Muslim, or Christian, for
example â because Buddhism is as much a philosophy as a religion.
âSecular Buddhistâ would then be more similar to âsecular Hegelianâ
(i.e. a secular world+life view combined with a provisional acceptance of
key parts of Hegelâs philosophy) than to âsecular Christianâ. This is
sophistry, however, for two reasons. Firstly, outside philosophy
departments almost no one thinks of Buddhism as a philosophy.
âBuddhistâ is a religious label; not a philosophical one. And secondly,
the (usually reverent) attitude secular Buddhists take towards the
Buddha and his teachings (or their interpretation thereof) is religious
more than secular (by the standards explained above), and the same is
true of the reasons and motivations for secular Buddhism to accept
some kind of Buddhism in the first place. Ultimately, âsecular
Buddhismâ is an attempt to construct some purified (âauthenticâ) form
of Buddhism, and not a kind of secularity with (provisional) Buddhist
influences.
27
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27
unfashionable and uncomfortable
The preceding sections may have given the impression that I somehow
oppose secular Buddhism, but thatâs not exactly the case. 40 There are
many currents of Buddhism that I find interesting because of the role
they played in the intellectual history of Asia, for example, or for
sociological reasons, or because they advocated philosophical ideas that
I find intriguing or wise, or for other â generally somewhat academic â
reasons. Japanese Pure Land Buddhism, for example, is interesting for
the way it âdemocratizedâ Buddhism (i.e. making Buddhism less elitist),
but at the same time I see no merit in Pure Land Buddhism as a belief
system or philosophy. Something similar applies to secular Buddhism â
I find the phenomenon interesting mostly for sociological and other
reasons, but I see no merit in secular Buddhism as a belief system. What
I find most interesting about secular Buddhism is its uncritical (i.e.
unconscious) adoption of currently fashionable narcissistic
individualism. I see secular Buddhism as an attempt to soften what I
called âcultural psychopathyâ elsewhere,41 but without giving it up
completely because it is firmly in the clutches of the hegemony of
psychopathy. But this is more or less what secularity in the second
sense distinguished by Batchelor means: acceptance of the cultural (and
40
But see the âconcluding remarksâ at the end of this article.
41
Lajos Brons (2017). The Hegemony of Psychopathy (Santa Barbara:
Brainstorm).
28
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28
thus hegemonic) status quo. While I find this interesting from a
sociological point of view, it is far removed from what attracts me
personally in Buddhism, and even further from my attitude towards
narcissistic individualism or cultural psychopathy. If secularity implies
implicit acceptance of the cultural status quo, Iâd prefer some kind of
anti-secular and unfashionable Buddhism.
As mentioned above, Stephen Batchelor writes that he does ânot
envision a Buddhism that seeks to discard all trace of religiosity, that
seeks to arrive at a dharma that is little more than a set of self-help
techniques that enable us to operate more calmly and effectively as
agents or clients, or both, of capitalist consumerismâ. 42 However, I have
a hard time seeing secular Buddhisms as anything else than just that.
Effectively, they are nothing but collections of practices centered on
(mindfulness) meditation allowing individuals to better cope with the
stresses of everyday life in modern capitalist society. From a historical
perspective this is simultaneously somewhat appropriate and peculiar.
It is appropriate for the reason already mentioned by Batchelor in the
long block quote above: Buddhism (as well as other religions) has
always been simplified to offer comfort to lay believers. It is peculiar,
however, because mediation never played that role. Meditation does
not play a central role in all branches of Buddhism, and in those in
which it is important, it is usually just monks (and nuns) who meditate.
And most importantly, as Donald Lopez has also pointed out, 43
meditation in Buddhism is more often intended to evoke stress than to
relief stress.
42
Batchelor (2015), After Buddhism, p. 17.
43
Lopez (2012). The Scientific Buddha.
29
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29
In the Visuddhimagga,44 one of the most influential texts in TheravÄda
Buddhism, Buddhaghosa writes that two kinds of meditation are
essential. Those two kinds are meditation on loving-kindness (mettÄ)
and on death. In the section on death as a meditation subject, 45 he
writes that meditation on death is successful only if it leads to a state of
shock called âsaáčvegaâ.46 The point of this kind of â supposedly
essential â meditation is shock and stress (which should in turn lead to
moral and religious motivation47) rather than to tranquility or stress
relief.
Buddhaghossaâs second kind of essential meditation isnât much more
fashionable either. The point of meditation on loving-kindness is to
come to identify with others needs and interests as strongly as one
would normally identify with oneâs own. It is the very antithesis of the
narcissistic individualism and pathological selfishness (i.e. cultural
psychopathy) that permeates modern society. Mindfulness and other
kinds of meditation in secular Buddhism are primarily aimed at
improving oneâs own happiness or strengthening oneâs own coping
mechanism. (And compassion is a mere afterthought â see above.) But
this gets things completely the wrong way around.
The chapter on meditation in ĆÄntidevaâs BodhicaryÄvatÄra, which is
at least as influential in MahÄyÄna Buddhism as Buddhaghossaâs text in
44
Buddhaghosa. The Path of Purification (Visuddhimagga). Translated by
Bhikkhu Nyanamoli (Onalaska: bps Pariyatti, 1999).
45
Buddhaghosa, Visuddhimagga, VIII.1â41.
46
See also: Lajos Brons (2016). âFacing Death from a Safe Distance: Saáčvega
and Moral Psychologyâ, Journal of Buddhist Ethics 23: 83â128.
47
See: Brons (2016), âFacing Death from a Safe Distanceâ, for an explanation of
how and why this could work.
30
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30
the other main current, also suggests that the main purpose of
meditation is to identify with otherâs needs and interest. ĆÄntideva calls
this âthe exchange of self and otherâ. 48 But ĆÄntideva also makes a key
point that secular Buddhism and the mindfulness movement
conveniently ignore: âWhen happiness is liked by me and others
equally, what is so special about me that I strive after happiness only
for myself?â49 The narcissistic (and culturally dominant) answer to
ĆÄntidevaâs (rhetorical) question is to just simply assume that I am
special, but the fact is that Iâm not special, and neither are you. You and
me are just some random ignorant fools who have no greater title to
happiness than anyone else. And someone who calls themselves a
âBuddhistâ, but consistently prioritizes their own happiness,
completely misses the point.50
So, while Iâm sympathetic to the general idea of a âsecular
Buddhismâ, there are facets of the concept of the âsecularâ (in this
context, but perhaps also in other contexts) that I find problematic at
best. I have no gripes with âsecularâ as far as that concept contrasts
with âreligiousâ or âsupernaturalâ (i.e. âsecularâ as some king of
shorthand for ânaturalist in metaphysics and epistemologyâ), although
this aspect of secularity would override anything that is combined with
it, making the very notion of âsecular Buddhismâ unstable or even
incoherent (see above). Neither do I object to the idea that Buddhism
should somehow be made relevant or useful to this age or saeculum,
48
ĆÄntideva. BodhicaryÄvatÄra. Translated by Kate Crosby & Andrew Skilton
(Oxford University Press, 1995). 8:120.
49
Idem, 8:95.
50
Or at least, it misses what I consider to be a central point (if not the central
point) of Buddhism.
31
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31
although I think it should be ârelevantâ or âusefulâ by its own standards
rather than by current cultural-political fashions.
What I most object to â but that should be clear already â is secularity
as (implicit) fashionability: particularly the cult of authenticity and the
uncritical (or unconscious) acceptance of hegemonic narcissistic
individualism. Again, authenticity is not a normative ideal. Bodies of
thought develop and evolve and the root of a tree is not in any way
âbetterâ, âtruerâ, or more real than the leaves. Knowledge builds up
over time, but the cult of authenticity assumes it is the other way
around: since the mythical starting point there just has been
deterioration. That is a nonsensical idea, however. Like any other
philosophy or theory, Buddhism developed in response to criticism,
opposition, new ideas, and new inventions. The Buddha knew much less
than some of his later followers, and certainly much less about the
modern world. And consequently, rather than trying to dig down to the
roots, it may be more useful to take more than two millennia of
Buddhist philosophy in India, Sri Lanka, Tibet, China, Japan, and
elsewhere seriously.
Most philosophical development took place in the MahÄyÄna branch
of Buddhism, and consequently, giving up the mistaken ideal of
authenticity corrects another flaw of âsecular Buddhismâ â that is,
while in Western secular Buddhisms compassion is a mere afterthought
and the focus is always oneâs own individual well-being, compassion
takes center stage in MahÄyÄna. And because of that, MahÄyÄna may be
the right antidote against the fashionable narcissistic individualism that
has been (unconsciously?) adopted by secular Buddhists (and most
other Western Buddhisms).
32
on secular and radical Buddhism
32
Furthermore, secularized or modernized versions of MahÄyÄna
Buddhism have been proposed (and to greater or lesser extent
developed) in Asia for well over a century. Interesting examples include
Taixu in China,51 Gendun Chopel in Tibet,52 Han Yongun in Korea,53, and
Uchiyama GudĆ and Seno'o GirĆ in Japan.54 The last two of these â as
well as several unmentioned others â have been grouped under the
header of âradical Buddhismâ by James Mark Shields and Patrice
Ladwig.55 They define the notion of âradicalâ in âradical Buddhismâ as a
51
Don Pittman (2001). Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism: Taixuâs Reforms
(Honolulu: University of Hawaiâi Press). Justin Ritzinger (2914). âThe
Awakening of Faith in Anarchism: A Forgotten Chapter in the Chinese
Buddhist Encounter with Modernityâ, Politics, Religion & Ideology 15.2: 224243.
52
Donald Lopez (2005). The Madmanâs Middle Way: Reflections on Reality of
the Tibetan Monk Gendun Chopel (University of Chicago Press).
53
Han Yongun (2008). Selected Writings of Han Yongun: From Social
Darwinism to âSocialism with a Buddhist Faceâ (Global Oriental).
54
Fabio Rambelli (2013). Zen Anarchism: The Egalitarian Dharma of Uchiyama
GudĆ (Institute of Buddhist Studies & BDK America). Whalen Lai (1984).
âSeno'o GirĆ and the Dilemma of Modern Buddhism â Leftist Prophet of the
Lotus SĆ«traâ, Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 11.1: 7-42. Stephen Large
(1987). âBuddhism, Socialism, and Protest in Prewar Japan: The Career of
Seno'o GirĆâ, Modern Asian Studies 21.1: 153-171. James Mark Shields (2012). âA
Blueprint for Buddhist Revolution: The Radical Buddhism of Seno'o GirĆ
(1889-1961) and the Youth League for Revitalizing Buddhismâ, Japanese
Journal of Religious Studies 39.2: 333-351. James Mark Shields (2014). âSeno'o
Giro: The Life and Thought of a Radical Buddhistâ, in: Todd Lewis (ed.),
Buddhists: Understanding Buddhism through the Lives of Practicioners
(Wiley), pp. 280-288.
55
Patrice Ladwig & James Mark Shields (2014). âIntroductionâ, Politics, Religion
& Ideology 15.2: 187-204. James Mark Shields (2017). Against Harmony:
Progressive and Radical Buddhism in Modern Japan (Oxford University
33
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33
âposition that is (1) politically engaged; and (2) in opposition to the
hegemonic socio-political and/or economic ideology (or ideologies) of a
given periodâ and a âradical Buddhistâ as âanyone engaged in the
explicit or implicit use of Buddhist doctrines or principles to forment
resistance to the state and/or the socio-political and/or economic
status quoâ.56 Obviously, this notion of âradical Buddhismâ is something
very different from Batchelorâs and other Western âsecular
Buddhismsâ, but many radical Buddhists â perhaps, Seno'o GirĆ most
notably â aspired to secularize Buddhism in important respects as well,
and consequently, there are interesting similarities, but even more
interesting differences. But before we can have a closer look at those I
need to make a few remarks about the roots of Buddhist radicalism. 57
Press).
56
Ladwig & Shields (2014), âIntroductionâ, p. 16.
57
On this topic, see also: James Mark Shields (2016) âOpium Eaters: Buddhism
as Revolutionary Politicsâ, in: Hiroko Kawanami (ed.), Buddhism and the
Political Process (Springer), pp. 213-234.
34
on secular and radical Buddhism
34
reality and compassion
There are two aspects of MahÄyÄna thought that are particularly
important in the present context. One is the apparently rather esoteric
metaphysical distinction between ultimate and conventional reality
and some of its extensions and interpretations. The other is the
Bodhisattva ideal, which is a defining characteristic of MahÄyÄna
thought.
the conventional and the real
When you see a table, you see that thing as a table and, unless you have
never encountered a table before and have no concept of âtableâ, you
cannot really do otherwise. We experience things as belonging to
certain conceptual categories â we see trees as trees, houses as houses,
and so forth. Thus, in looking at a landscape like the following picture
[see next page], I do not just see the landscape as it is given by
independent, external reality.
35
on secular and radical Buddhism
35
Rather, I see hills as hills, a village as village, clusters of farms as
farms, fields as fields, and so forth. In other words, the things in the
scene come pre-classified and I cannot consciously see the scene
independently from or prior to that classification.
36
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Our minds place a kind of conceptual overlay over reality â
something like the following drawing â and that conceptual overlay
determines how we experience reality (and how we remember it) as
much as the scene it tries to capture, categorize, and tame.
The original scene or the first picture can be thought off as being
roughly analogous to the Buddhist concept of ultimate reality; the
conceptual overlay depicted in the drawing is then analogous to
conventional reality â the world as we experience it, mediated by our
conceptual categories. A related distinction has been made in Western
philosophy by Kant, for example â the first picture is then analogous to
âthe things in themselvesâ or noumenal reality and the third to
phenomenal reality. There are important differences, however, and there
are very different interpretations of what exactly ultimate reality is and
how it relates to conventional reality within Buddhism as well.
Furthermore, different schools of Buddhism would probably object to
the analogy on different grounds, and consequently, the analogy should
37
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37
not be taken too far â itâs a tool for explanation, but nothing more than
that.
The main point of contention between philosophers and schools of
thought concerns the relation between ultimate or noumenal reality
and conventional or phenomenal reality. Essentialists hold that the
boundaries drawn by our conceptual overlay correspond with given
boundaries in nature or external reality. Or in other words,
classification of some things as trees, or shrubs, or houses, or hills, and
so forth are not arbitrary but are â more or less â given by the way
things are. Noumenal (or external or independent â there is no lack of
terms to choose from) reality comes pre-classified into many different
kinds and our conceptual apparatuses track these naturally given
classifications. Consequently, noumenal reality and phenomenal reality
are really pretty much the same. Such essentialism has been the default
position of much of Western philosophy (especially in the Middle Ages),
but it also has been attacked by many.58
Anti-essentialists reject this picture. According to anti-essentialists
conceptual boundaries are â at least to some extent â arbitrary. In some
cases this is kind of obvious â where we draw the boundary between
hills and mountains, for example, is not plausibly determined by nature,
but is just a matter of definition â but in other cases it may be less
obvious. Anti-essentialists typically hold that things in the same
category have no shared essences and that there are gray areas between
categories â we draw the boundaries between those categories by
arbitrary convention. Thus, while essentialists believe that reality as we
consciously experience it â that is phenomenal or conventional reality â
58
38
Under the influence of Saul Kripkeâs Naming and Necessity a version of such
essentialism remains the default in contemporary analytic philosophy.
on secular and radical Buddhism
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is directly given by nature or the world itself (i.e. noumenal or ultimate
reality), anti-essentialists belief that reality as we experience it isnât
given, but is constructed by us. Phenomenal or conventional reality is a
social construction. And consequently, while for the essentialist our
conceptual distinctions correspond with ârealâ distinctions (in
noumenal or ultimate reality), for the anti-essentialist they donât.
Nevertheless, an anti-essentialist can take very different attitudes
towards conventional or phenomenal reality and the conceptual
categorizations it is based on. She can take a more negative attitude and
stress the fact that conceptual boundaries do not track ârealâ
boundaries, and therefore, that conceptual categories are effectively
mistaken and that any apparent reality based on it is illusory. Or she
can take a more positive attitude and stress that the conceptual
boundaries are partially caused by external reality (for example,
because they are drawn in gray zones and are thus not completely
randomly), and therefore, that conceptual categories only show a
partial view or perspective â and are thus incomplete rather than
mistaken. (On a side note, I have argued for something like the latter in
a number of papers,59 and this metaphysical issue was really what got
me interested in Buddhism in the first place.)
Buddhism is anti-essentialist, which has a number of interesting and
important implications, but different schools, currents, and thinkers
59
39
Lajos Brons (2013). âMeaning and Reality: A Cross-Traditional Encounterâ, in:
Bo Mou & R. Tieszen (eds.), Constructive Engagement of Analytic and
Continental Approaches in Philosophy (Leiden: Brill), pp. 199-220. Lajos Brons
(2012). âDharmakÄ«rti, Davidson, and Knowing Realityâ, Comparative
Philosophy 3.1: 30-57. Lajos Brons (2011). âApplied Relativism and Davidsonâs
Arguments against Conceptual Schemesâ, The Science of Mind 49: 221-240.
on secular and radical Buddhism
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have taken different attitudes towards conventional reality and have
differently conceptualized various aspects and details of the
ultimate/conventional reality distinction. One particular implication of
Buddhist anti-essentialism is worth mentioning here because it bears
directly on a fundamental tendency of âsecular Buddhismâ. Because
conventional reality is only a partial view at best and completely
mistaken at worst and any description is necessarily in language and
thus a description of conceptualized conventional reality, any
description is only partial and incomplete at best (and illusory at
worst). Or in other words, anti-essentialists reject the idea that there is
one and only one true description of something. This also applies to
history â any description of historical facts is just one particular
perspective thereon (if one takes the positive attitude â it is utterly
mistaken if one takes the negative attitude). And consequently, from a
Buddhist anti-essentialist point of view, the project of reconstructing a
single, authoritative account of the historical Buddha and his teachings
makes about as much sense as declaring that the only right way to see a
cup is from the side and with its ear on the right.60
Due to historical circumstances, the epicenter of philosophical
activity and innovation in Buddhism gradually moved in a roughly
northeasterly direction. From India (and Sri Lanka) to Tibet, China,
Korea, and Japan. Perhaps, for cultural reasons this move more or less
corresponds with a shift in attitude from more ânegativeâ to more
âpositiveâ.61 (One reason to believe that culture played a role in this is
60
Jan Westerhoff makes a similar point in his (2018) The Golden Age of
Buddhist Philosophy.
61
See, for example: Brons (2013), âMeaning and Realityâ; Fung Yu-Lan (1948), A
Short History of Chinese Philosophy, translated and edited by Derk Bodde
40
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that â aside from Daoism, perhaps â classical Chinese philosophy was
more âdown to earthâ, and therefore, closer to the positive attitude.)
Because the negative attitude never allows one to (truthfully!) say
what something is, and only what something is not (because all
conceptual classifications are mistaken), the negative attitude is
characterized by negative language or apophasis (or apophatic discourse).
In contrast, while the positive attitude recognizes that any
conceptualization is only partial, one-sided, provisional, and
incomplete, this does not imply that conceptualizations are inherently
wrong. In other words, despite these caveats, the positive attitude
allows one to say what something is â at least provisionally, partially,
etcetera. In contrast to apophatic discourse, such positive discourse is
called kataphatic discourse.62 Robert Gimello argues that much
MahÄyÄna philosophy (especially in China) developed out of âprofound
dissatisfaction with the seemingly relentless apophasis of NÄgÄrjunaâ.
Alternatives to the view of NÄgÄrjuna and the MÄdhyamika school
based on his thought stressed âthe spiritual utility of positive and
affirmative languageâ â âthey chose ⊠eloquence over silenceâ.63
For NÄgÄrjuna (2-3rd century), ultimate reality was âemptinessâ, and
emptiness was itself empty (i.e. beyond conceptual description, and thus
(New York: MacMillan); Robert Sharf (2002), Coming to Terms with Chinese
Buddhism: a Reading of the Treasure Store Treatise (Honolulu: Kuroda
Institute / University Of Hawaiâi Press). Robert Gimello (1976), âApophatic and
Kataphatic Discourse in MahÄyÄna: A Chinese Viewâ, Philosophy East and
West 26.2: 117-136.
62
The terminology comes from Western theology. In that context apophasis
refers to the impossibility to use positive language in describing God.
63
Gimello (1976), âApophatic and Kataphatic Discourse in MahÄyÄnaâ, p. 119.
41
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apophatic). While later Indian thinkers often took a somewhat less
negative/apohatic attitude, NÄgÄrjunaâs shadow was long. A few
centuries after NÄgÄrjuna, DignÄga (5-6th century) and DharmakÄ«rti
(7th century) emphasized that conceptual categories are social
conventions with roots in the ultimately real, but even this was
couched in apophatic terms. Conceptual construction was supposed to
take place through a process called apoha that avoids positive or
affirmative statements. That is, we learn a concept of âcowâ not by
classifying things as cows but as not non-cows.
NÄgÄrjunaâs theory of the emptiness of emptiness entails that even
ultimate reality is only conventionally real. Chinese Buddhism,
however, turned this on its head â from NÄgÄrjunaâs conventionality of
the ultimately real it developed into the ultimate reality of the
conventional; that is, a kataphatic affirmation of conventional reality. 64
In Fung Yu-lanâs Short History of Chinese Philosophy the result of this
transformation is summarized as follows:
The reality of the Buddha-nature [noumenal reality] is itself the
phenomenal world, (. . .). There is no other reality outside the
phenomenal world, (. . .). Some people in their Ignorance, see only
the phenomenal world, but not the reality of the Buddha-nature.
Other people, in their Enlightenment, see the Buddha-nature, but
this Buddha-nature is still the phenomenal world. What these two
kinds of people see is the same, but what one person sees in his
Enlightenment has a significance quite different from what the
other person sees in his Ignorance.65
64
See: Brons (2013), âMeaning and Realityâ.
65
pp. 252-3.
42
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the Lotus SĆ«tra
One of the most important texts for Chinese Buddhism (and its Japanese
and Korean offspring) is the Lotus SĆ«tra. The Lotus SĆ«tra is a very strange
text. It is supposed to be the Buddhaâs final teaching, but it appears to
be mostly about itself and it is filled with exaggerated exotic imagery of
flying jeweled stƫpas, gigantic audiences, and supernatural feats. The
Lotus SĆ«tra represents pretty much everything many Western secular
Buddhist dislike about Buddhism as a living religion in East Asia, which
is probably most neatly illustrated by an anecdote in Donald Lopezâs
book about the SĆ«tra.66 In his university course âIntroduction of
Buddhismâ he starts with a series of lectures on more or less
philosophical topics addressed by Buddhism â the kind of topics
Western Buddhist and Westerners with an interest in Buddhism are
typically interested in, ranging from more metaphysical questions to
meditation and the Four Noble Truths. Much of the second half of the
course is dedicated to the Lotus SĆ«tra, however, which tends to provoke
disappointment and even outrage in students. The Lotus SĆ«tra is too
fantastic, too supernatural, too inauthentic (its earliest parts date to the
first century), too religious (and not enough philosophical), and so forth
for secular Western preferences. He quotes a student as asking: âHow
can people accept the words of one monk who decided to write a text to
completely change Buddhism?â To some extent, the outrage and
rejection is understandable. It is indeed extremely unlikely that the
Lotus SĆ«tra was taught by the Buddha, and the text is indeed overly selfreferential and overly ornate, but there it is not true that it represents a
66
43
Donald Lopez (2016). The Lotus SĆ«tra: A Biography (Princeton University
Press).
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43
radical deviation from other/earlier teachings and there is more
lurking below the ornate surface than a casual glance might suggest.
Like many religious texts, the Lotus SĆ«tra requires patience and study.
Iâm not sure how and why the Lotus SĆ«tra became as important and
influential as it is, but one of the reasons may be related to the
foregoing. The ârealityâ described in the SĆ«tra â the one with the flying
stĆ«pas, shaking earth, and various other supernatural fables â is the
reality seen through the eyes of enlightened beings and thus,
supposedly, ultimate reality. But that fantastic ultimate reality is not a
different world â it is the world we live in and are familiar with, it is
merely seen with (or through) different eyes. As Gene Reeves has
pointed out, the Lotus SĆ«tra â despite its fantastic imagery â is radically
world-affirming.67 Conventional reality and ultimate reality are not
different worlds. Rather, there is just one world, which can be perceived
or thought about in different ways.
The Lotus SĆ«tra was the principal text of the Tiantai ć€©ć° school of
Buddhism, the first Buddhist school that developed entirely in China.
Tiantai spread to neighboring countries and became especially
influential in Japan as Tendai (the Japanese pronunciation of 怩 ć° ).
12th century Japan saw a series of important developments and
innovations in Buddhist doctrine leading to the establishment of new
schools and sects, but their (intellectual) founders â HĆnen æłç¶ (Pure
Land Buddhism), Nichiren æ„èź, and DĆgen éć
(SĆtĆ Zen) â were all
originally Tendai monks. Before discussing some of those (Nichiren
67
44
Gene Reeves (2002). âThe Lotus Sutra as Radically World-Affirmingâ, in: Gene
Reeves (ed.), A Buddhist Kaleidoscope: Essays on the Lotus Sutra (Tokyo:
Kosei), pp. 177-199.
on secular and radical Buddhism
44
particularly), we need to pay some attention to Tiantaiâs founder, Zhiyi
(Chih-i) æșéĄ (6th century), however.
Above, I tried to explain that one can take different attitudes towards
the relation between ultimate and conventional reality. A more
negative or apophatic attitude rejects language as a reliable tool to
understand or represent ultimate reality, while a more positive,
affirmative, or kataphatic attitude considers language an imperfect, but
still useful tool that can at least produce a partial view of ultimate
reality. And while Indian Buddhism was more apophatic, Chinese
Buddhism took a much more positive approach. Zhiyi very clearly
exemplifies this shift from apophatic (negative) to kataphatic
(positive/affirmative) discourse. Thus, Paul Swanson writes that:
affirmation of the use of language tempered by the awareness of
its limitations is exactly the position taken by Chih-i [Zhiyi], who
is constantly re-affirming the inadequacy of language to describe
reality, yet immediately affirms the necessity to use language in
the attempt to describe the indescribable and conceptualize that
which is beyond conceptualization.68
The latter point is important to keep in mind when reading Buddhist
writings from China and Japan: language is necessary but inadequate to
describe ultimate reality (which by definition is beyond â or before â
language), and consequently Buddhist monks and philosophers often
had to resort to dense metaphors. A reader who fails to look beyond
those metaphors would completely miss the point, however.
68
45
Paul Swanson (1989). Foundations of Tâien-Tâai Philosophy: The Flowering of
the Two Truths Theory in Chinese Buddhism (Asian Humanities Press), p. 23.
on secular and radical Buddhism
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In his Profound Meaning of the Lotus SĆ«tra ćŠæłèźèŻç¶ç矩 , Zhiyi
argued that the Lotus SĆ«tra teaches the non-duality of reality:
The (ultimately) real is identical with the conventional, and the
conventional is identical with the (ultimately) real. True nature is
like a pearl: the pearl is analogous to the (ultimately) real and its
function is analogous to the conventional [-ly real]. The pearl is
identical with the function and the function is identical with the
jewel; they are non-dual, but two; it is merely a [conceptual]
division between [what we call] the (ultimately) ârealâ and [what
we call] the âconventionalâ.69
Hence, for Zhiyi, Tiantai, and pretty much all the thinkers, sects, and
schools that were influenced by Zhiyi, reality is non-dual. Ultimate
reality and conventional reality are not two different realities, but two
different perspectives on one and the same reality. (Although it can be
debated whether âperspectiveâ is the best term.) Consequently, the
apocryphal Chinese Treasure Store Treatise 毶 è è« asserts that this
implies that upon reaching enlightenment and learning to see ultimate
reality âthere is nothing to be realized, nothing to be attained, and yet if
there is no realization or attainment, the mind will forever be
confusedâ.70 And the Japanese Zen philosopher DĆgen wrote that
âopening flowers and falling leaves [the phenomenal world] is nature
(such) as it is. However, fools think that there are no opening flowers
69
My translation. ăçćłæŻäżïŒäżćłæŻçăćŠćŠæç ïŒç 仄èŹçïŒçšä»„èŹäż ă
ćŠćŠæç ïŒç 仄èŹçïŒçšä»„èŹäżăćłç æŻçšïŒćłçšæŻç ïŒäžäșèäșïŒć
çäżèłăă ćŠæłèźèŻç¶ç矩, T33n1716, 703b21.
70
Translated by Robert Sharf. See: Sharf (2002), Coming to Terms with
Chinese Buddhism, p. 159.
46
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46
and falling leaves in the world of Dharma-nature [ultimate reality]â. 71 In
other words, the conventional is not ultimately unreal. However, DĆgen
emphasized that this realization should not lead to the opposite kind of
foolishness: âAlthough people now have a deep understanding of the
contents (heart) of seas and rivers, we still do not know how dragons
and fish understand and use water. Do not foolishly assume that all
kinds of beings use as water that what we understand as waterâ. 72 So,
while the conventional is not ultimately unreal, it doesnât represent the
whole of ultimate reality either, but merely one particular
perspective.73
Nichiren â like DĆgen a former Tendai monk â considered himself the
only real follower of SaichĆ ææŸ (8-9th century) who brought Tiantai
to Japan and established Tendai. Japanese Tendai had become corrupted
(in Nichirenâs view) with esoteric influences and had deviated from the
one and only true teachings of the Lotus SĆ«tra. Thus, Nichirenâs
philosophical roots were growing in Tiantai soil, and consequently, he
emphatically rejected metaphysical dualism. Lucia Dolce, for example,
71
My translation. ăăăăăă°ăéè±èèœăăăćŠæŻæ§ăȘăăăăăăă« ă
æäșșăăăŻăăŻăæłæ§çă«ăŻéè±èèœăăăčăăăăă æŁæłçŒè , æł
æ§.
72
My translation. ăăăŸäșșéă«ăŻăæ”·ăźăăăăæ±ăźăăăăăă”ăăæ°Ž
ăšç„èŠăăăšăăžă©ăăéŸéçăăăăȘăăăźăăăŠæ°Žăšç„èŠăăæ°Ž
ăšäœżçšăăšăăŸă ăăăăăăăă«ăăæ°Žăšç„èŠăăăăăă„ăăźă
ăăČăæ°Žă«ăăĄăăăăăšèȘăăăăšăȘăăăă æŁæłçŒè, ć±±æ°Žç¶.
73
47
For more about DĆgenâs perspectivism, see: Hee-Jin Kim (2007), DĆgen on
Meditation and Thinking: a Reflection on His View of Zen (Albany: SUNY
Press); Bret Davis (2011), âThe Philosophy of Zen Master DĆgen: Egoless
Perspectivismâ, in: Garfield & Edelglass (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of
World Philosophy Oxford University Press), pp. 348â360; and Brons (2013),
âMeaning and Realityâ.
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47
writes that: âFor Nichiren ⊠there is only one ⊠world. Vulture Peak,
the place where the Lotus Sutra is taught represents both this world of
ours and the most perfect world, the only possible âparadiseâ. There is
no other reality, neither for humanity, nor for the Buddhaâ. 74
social reality
If you are wondering what all these metaphysical ideas about different
kinds of or perspectives on reality have to do with radical Buddhism,
this last quote about Nichiren might give you a clue about the answer.
Again, a bit of unpacking is necessary, so bear with me a little longer.
Supposedly, only enlightened beings like Buddhas can see ultimate
reality. Because of this, the notion of ultimate reality has sometimes
been associated with less metaphysical and more mythical notions and
the same is true for the ultimate/conventional distinction.
Conventional reality, then, is not just the world as we experience it, but
the world we live in â the world of endless suffering (caused by
ignorance and the cycle of death and rebirth) â and ultimate reality is
the world of the Buddha(s). Thus, notions like âBuddha landsâ and
paradises came to be associated with the notion of ultimate reality. The
goal of enlightenment, then, was not just to see ultimate reality, but to
go there â to go to this paradise-like or Utopian other world.
74
48
Lucia Dolce (2002). âBetween Duration and Eternity: Hermeneutics of the
âAncient Buddhaâ of the Lotus Sutra in Chih-i and Nichirenâ, in: Gene Reeves
(ed.), A Buddhist Kaleidoscope: Essays on the Lotus Sutra (Tokyo: Kosei), pp.
223-239.
on secular and radical Buddhism
48
But if one gives up on dualism â if there is just one world â then this
radically changes. Then, there is no other world. There is just this one
world. But that doesnât mean that this world is already a Buddha land or
a paradise. What it implies is that such a Buddha land, paradise, or
Utopia can only be realized in this world. Furthermore, the Buddhaâs
teachings do not just imply that it can be realized in this world, but that
it must be realized in this world. Recall that ultimate reality is not
something one âseesâ already, but something one needs to learn to
âseeâ. Analogously, if there is just one world and ultimate reality is a
perspective or aspect of that one world, then that perspective or aspect
isnât there (i.e. seen) already, but waiting to be realized. Or in other
words, aiming for enlightenment (i.e. âlearning to seeâ) is aiming for the
realization of a Buddha Land (or something like it) in this world. This
was for Nichiren the logical conclusion of the Lotus SĆ«tra and
Tiantai/Tendai thought. And thereby, Buddhism suddenly became
political â and radical.75
This last statement requires some qualification. To some extent,
Buddhism has always been political,76 but as Patrice Ladwig and James
Mark Shields point out, Buddhism almost always allied itself with
hegemonic rule, and usually those rulers didnât behave much like ideal
Buddhist kings. âIndeed, this alliance [between Buddhism and states]
has on occasion taken on violent and militaristic forms that sustain the
75
See also: James Mark Shields (2013). âPolitical Interpretations of the Lotus
SĆ«traâ, in: Steven Emmanuel (ed.), A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy
(Wiley): 512-523.
76
Especially in Japan where its main initial role was to carry out rituals that
were supposed to protect the state.
49
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49
rule of regimes that are in power in Buddhist countriesâ. 77 And Michael
Jerryson and Mark Juergensmeyer note that there has been a
âwidespread propensity among states to adopt Buddhism as official
religion and for Buddhism to provide the rationalization for the stateâs
sanctioned use of violenceâ.78 In other words, Buddhism has always
been political, but its political role has (almost) always been in support
of the powers that be. With Nichiren that changed â traditionally, the
role of Buddhism was to serve the state, but Nichiren turned that
around and required the state to serve Buddhism. Consequently, he and
his followers routinely âadmonishedâ the state for not following the
right path (i.e. that of Nichirenâs interpretation of the Lotus SĆ«tra).
Many Buddhist modernizers and radical Buddhist of the early 20th
century were heavily influenced by Nichiren. The predominant reading
of Nichiren â especially by proponents of so-called âNichirenismâ â was
nationalist, or even fascist, and indeed provided âthe rationalization for
the stateâs sanctioned use of violenceâ. The cornerstone of the
nationalist reading of Nichiren was a quote from his Establishing the
Peace of the Country ç«æŁćźćè« : âFirst we should pray for the nation,
and after that we should establish the Buddhist lawâ. The quote has
usually been interpreted as signifying that for Nichiren the state has
priority over the Buddhist law, but that interpretation is absurd for a
number of reasons.79
77
Ladwig & Shields (2014), âIntroductionâ, p. 4.
78
Quoted in: Ladwig & Shields (2014), âIntroductionâ, p. 4.
79
See also ïŒ SatĆ Hiroo (1999), âNichirenâs View of Nation and Religionâ,
Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 26.3/4: 307-323.
50
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50
Firstly, the word âstateâ ć柶 (or ćœćź¶ in modern Japanese) occurs
only twice in the text. In all other cases Nichiren used the word kuni ć,
which means something like land, country, district, or area including its
inhabitants, but which has no nationalistic connotation.80 This should
be kind of obvious, as the notion of the nation was only invented in
Europe much later and imported in Japan in the 19th century. In the
two cases were Nichiren used ć 柶 he was clearly referring to the
state or government. Kuni ć , on the other hand, was a neutral term â
the topic of the text was creating peace and harmony in some area
(kuni), and not the creation of some harmonious state.
Secondly, the idea that Nichiren prioritized the state is obviously
incorrect if the quote isnât lifted out of its context.
The country is prosperous because it relies on the Dharma. The
Dharma is valuable because of the people. If the country would be
destroyed and the people exterminated, who can [still] revere the
Buddha? How can one [still] have faith in the Dharma? [Therefore]
One must pray for the state first, and then establish the Dharma.81
Hence, what Nichiren is saying here is that to establish something
like a Buddhist paradise, we must first ensure peace, harmony, and
prosperity. In other words, a functioning (and benevolent!) state is a
prerequisite for establishing the Dharma, but that doesnât make the
80
On Nichirenâs use of the word kuni ć (and the lack on nationalistic or ethnic
connotations in that use), see also: Jacqueline Stone (1999), âPlacing Nichiren
in the âBig Pictureâ: Some Ongoing Issues in Scholarshipâ, Japanese Journal
of Religious Studies 26.3-4: 382-421, p. 412.
81
My translation. ă怫ćäŸæłèæăæłć äșșèèČŽăćäșĄäșșæ»
ăäœèȘ°ćŻćŽăæł
éŁćŻäżĄćăć
ç„ć柶é ç«äœæłăă ç«æŁćźćè«, T84n2688.
51
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51
state a priority. That would be confusing means and ends. (And once
again, for Nichiren, the role of the state is to serve Buddhism, not the
other way around.)
Thirdly, Nichiren repeatedly states throughout his writings that he
âvowed to summon up a powerful and unconquerable desire for the
salvation of all beings, and never falter in [his] effortsâ. 82 He didnât just
aim for the elevation of Japan or the Japanese people, but he considered
himself a Bodhisattva aiming for the liberation of all of mankind.
Nevertheless, he did believe that Japan had a special role to play in
saving and spreading Buddhism, and in saving/liberating people
elsewhere.83
While early 20th century âNichirenismâ was on the extreme right of
the political spectrum, Nichiren himself cannot really be located on the
same spectrum. The reason for this is that Nichirenâs political diagnosis
and solution is fundamentally at odds with the modernist assumptions
that ground contemporary political ideologies and the left/right
spectrum. âFamine and disease rage more fiercely than ever, beggars
are everywhere in sight, and scenes of death fill out eyesâ writes
82
The Opening of the Eyes é çź æ . Translation in: Philip Yampolsky (ed.)
(1990), Selected Writings of Nichiren (Columbia University Press), p. 79.
Emphasis added.
83
Nichiren observed that Buddhism has spread from India to China and from
China to Japan, but had since disappeared in India and was on the decline in
China. This geographical direction had to be turned around. Only Japan
could bring Buddhism back to China, India, and then the rest of the world.
For âNichirenistsâ this was an attractive way to legitimize Japanese
conquests and hegemony in East Asia in the early 20th century. See also:
Stone (1999), âPlacing Nichiren in the âBig Pictureââ.
52
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52
Nichiren in Establishing the Peace of the Country.84 These are the
symptoms. Nichirenâs diagnosis of the underlying âdiseaseâ (not his
term) causing these symptoms is insufficient reverence of the Lotus
SĆ«tra by the people (and state). And consequently, his recommendation
for a cure aims to rectify that. But chanting the title of the Lotus SĆ«tra
(Nichirenâs remedy) is â obviously â not a policy that fits on the
left/right spectrum (or any other political spectrum, for that matter).
the Bodhisattva ideal
While the extension of metaphysical ideas gave Buddhism a (potential!)
political role, the Bodhisattva ideal gave it a (potential!) goal. A
Bodhisattva (in MahÄyÄna) is someone who has vowed or
spontaneously committed himself85 to liberate every sentient being
(humans, animals, and so forth) from the suffering associated with the
cycle of death and rebirth. A Bodhisattva is an enlightened being like a
Buddha and destined to become a Buddha, but not before
saving/liberating everyone (and everything) else.
The foremost quality of a Bodhisattva is compassion â it is his
compassion that drives him to commit himself to liberating/saving
everyone else (before entering NirvÄáča himself). The Buddhist
literature is littered with stories of acts of extreme generosity and
84
Translation in: Yampolsky (1990), Selected Writings of Nichiren, p. 14.
85
Buddhism is rather sexist, Iâm afraid. Bodhisattvas are typically assumed to
be male, and in many traditions women cannot possibly reach
enlightenment at all. The best a woman can hope for is rebirth as a man.
There are exceptions, of course. The aforementioned Nichiren, for example,
had a considerably less sexist view â at least in this respect.
53
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53
altruism by Bodhisattvas. One of the most famous such stories is that of
Prince Sattva offering himself as food to a hungry tiger and her cubs.
Parts of chapter 8 of ĆÄntidevaâs BodhicaryÄvatÄra give a glimpse of the
mindset of a Bodhisattva: âThose who have developed the continuum of
their mind in this way [i.e. Bodhisattvas], to whom the suffering of
others is as important as the things they themselves hold dear, plunge
down into the AvÄ«ci hell as geese into a cluster of lotus blossomsâ. 86
Somewhat less flowery, he writes about what it takes to achieve the
Bodhisattvaâs mindset (i.e. bodhicitta). The key â as mentioned before â is
what ĆÄntideva calls the âexchange of self and otherâ â that is,
identifying with the needs, concerns, and suffering of others as if they
were oneâs own: âin order to allay my own suffering and to allay the
suffering of others, I devote myself to others and accept them as
myselfâ.87 This doesnât necessarily imply a life of suffering for the
Bodhisattva himself, however, because âAll those who suffer in the
world do so because of their desire for their own happiness. All those
happy in the world are so because of their desire for the happiness of
othersâ.88 This is not what motivates a Bodhisattva, however. A
Bodhisattva finds happiness in alleviating the suffering of others
because that is the kind of person a Bodhisattva is â that is what it is to
be a Bodhisattva.
A second key characteristic of a Bodhisattva is that he is something
like a teacher, and that he selects (teaching) methods that are most
appropriate (i.e. most helpful) for a particular audience. This is called
86
ĆÄntideva. BodhicaryÄvatÄra. Translated by Kate Crosby & Andrew Skilton.
8:107.
87
Idem, 8:136.
88
Idem, 8:129.
54
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54
âskillful meansâ (or âskill in meansâ, upÄya-kauĆalya), and is one of the
main topics of the Lotus SĆ«tra. Gene Reeves explains that what it means
to be a Bodhisattva in the Lotus SĆ«tra is âusing appropriate means to
help othersâ.89 One of the most famous stories illustrating skillful
means in the Lotus SĆ«tra is the âParable of the Burning Houseâ in which
a father lies about magnificent carriages waiting outside to lure his
children out of a burning house. (Apparently, they are too engrossed in
their play to notice the fire.) The point of this story and other stories
like it is that a Bodhisattva can (and should) use any means to save
people (and other sentient beings) from suffering if that is the only way
to do so. For a truly compassionate Bodhisattva, the end (of alleviating
suffering) justifies the means.
In MahÄyÄna everyone is encouraged to try to become a Bodhisattva
and to take a vow or vows towards that end. The most famous
Bodhisattva vows were formulated by Zhiyi, the aforementioned
founder of Tiantai, in his Exposition on the Dharma Gateway to the
Perfection of Meditation éçŠȘæłąçŸ
èæŹĄçŹŹæłé:
These are the four Bodhisattva vows. ⊠Even though sentient
beings are unlimited [in number], I vow to liberate/save [them
all]. ⊠Even though the kleĆas90 are innumerable, I vow to stop
[them all]. ⊠Even though the Buddhist teachings are
89
Gene Reeves (2002). âAppropriate Means as the Ethics of the Lotus Sutraâ, in:
Gene Reeves (ed.), A Buddhist Kaleidoscope: Essays on the Lotus Sutra
(Tokyo: Kosei): 379-392, p. 386.
90
KleĆas are afflictions ore negative emotions such as ignorance, attachment
(or craving), and aversion (or hatred).
55
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inexhaustible, I vow to know [them all]. ⊠Even though
Buddhahood is unsurpassable, I vow to attain [it].91
It should be fairly obvious that realizing these vows would require
much more than what is humanly possible, but making a vow doesnât
commit one to succeeding, merely to trying, and itâs the intention (i.e.
the trying) that matters. In the BodhicaryÄvatÄra ĆÄntideva wrote:
If the perfection of generosity consists in making the universe free
from poverty how can previous Protectors [i.e. Buddhas and
Bodhisattvas] have acquired it, when the world is still poor, even
today?
The perfection of generosity is said to result from the mental
attitude to relinquishing all that one has to all people, together
with the fruit of that act. Therefore, the perfection is the mental
attitude itself.92
Of course, if one has a genuine intention to save everyone, one will
try to get closer to that goal, even if it is just a little bit. And if one has a
genuine intention to learn everything that matters (here limited to
Buddhist teachings, but weâll encounter different views below), then
there is a fairly good chance that there will be at least some success. But
still, what ultimately matters is not (just) the success, but the genuine
commitment to save all sentient beings. That compassion is what
defines a Bodhisattva.
91
My translation. ăććŒèȘéĄè
ă... äșŠäșçŸççĄéèȘéĄćșŠă... äșŠäșç
©æ±çĄæžèȘ
éĄæ·ă ... äșŠäșæłéçĄçĄèȘéĄç„ă ... äșŠäșçĄäžäœéèȘéĄæăă éçŠȘæłąçŸ
è
æŹĄçŹŹæłé, T46n1916, 476b.
92
ĆÄntideva. BodhicaryÄvatÄra. Translated by Kate Crosby & Andrew Skilton,
5:9-10.
56
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radical Buddhism
The definition of âradical Buddhismâ proposed by Patrice Ladwig and
James Mark Shields is explicitly politically neutral. As mentioned above,
they define âradicalâ in âradical Buddhismâ as a âposition that is (1)
politically engaged; and (2) in opposition to the hegemonic sociopolitical and/or economic ideology (or ideologies) of a given periodâ
and a âradical Buddhistâ as âanyone engaged in the explicit or implicit
use of Buddhist doctrines or principles to foment resistance to the state
and/or the socio-political and/or economic status quoâ. 93
Consequently, they include many of the âNichirenistsâ and other fascist
Buddhist âradicalsâ of the early 20th century in the âradical Buddhistâ
category. While this is understandable and probably also defensible
from a historical point of view, there is something awkward and
apparently contradictory about this classification. That is, the supposed
âradicalsâ on the far right were not really âin opposition to the
hegemonic socio-political and/or economic ideologyâ â in the contrary,
they wanted to strengthen it. One could, of course, say that they wanted
to radicalize hegemonic rule, but thatâs not the notion of âradicalâ as
Ladwig and Shields define it, and under their definition, it is very
debatable whether these right-wing movements and ideologues where
âradical Buddhistâ.
93
57
Ladwig & Shields (2014), p. 16.
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57
Furthermore, including âBuddhistsâ on the extreme right under the
âradical Buddhismâ header is also dubious for other reasons. Even if
those right-wing extremists were radicals in some sense, the âradical
Buddhistâ label suggests some kind of radicalized Buddhism, and it is
hard to see anything like that. They certainly didnât radicalize the
Bodhisattva ideal, or the compassion and loving-kindness associated
therewith. They used a cherry-picked selection of Buddhist sources and
(misinterpreted) quotes to defend their ideology,94 of course, but that
doesnât really seem sufficient for the qualification either. âFascist
crypto-Buddhistsâ seems more appropriate. Regardless of what one
would one to call those right-wing extremists, I will ignore them in the
following, as they have nothing interesting to teach.
If fascists and other right-wing extremists are excluded, there arenât
many âradical Buddhistsâ left â certainly not in Japan, were Buddhism
often was (and still is) allied with the far right. 95 There have been some
leftist modernizers of Buddhism outside Japan, such as Han Yongun in
Korea,96 but most of those were hardly radical. Hence, this leaves us
with just three: Uchiyama GudĆ ć
ć±± æ ç«„ (1874-1911) and Seno'o
GirĆ ćŠčć°ŸçŸ©é (1890-1961) in Japan, and Taixu ć€Șè (1890-1947) in
China. Uchiyama was arrested for treason and executed in 1911 and is
certainly interesting as a historical figure, but he wrote little and what
he wrote has very little to offer in terms of a theory for or of radical
94
See above on the âNichirenistâ misinterpretation of Nichiren.
95
The head of the Tendai sect is an adviser of the very powerful extremeright-wing organization Nippon Kaigi, for example. On the other hand, by
Japanese standards, Nippon Kaigi is only moderately right ring and the
entire current government consists of members of the organization.
96
Han Yongun (2008). Selected Writings of Han Yongun.
58
on secular and radical Buddhism
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Buddhism.97 Taixu is best known (and very influential) as a reformer,
but was a radical anarchist during at least part of his life. He wrote a lot,
but only a few of his writings can be considered âradicalâ and those are
characterized by Justin Ritzinger as âthe work of a young activist, not a
mature thinkerâ and as âmore than a bit of a messâ. 98 Furthermore,
Taixuâs more radical writing are extremely Utopian and impractical. 99
This, then, leaves us with just Seno'o, but that might very well be
enough.
Seno'o GirĆ and the Youth League
Seno'o GirĆ joined the right-wing Nichirenist movement in 1918, but
slowly drifted to the left. In 1931 he founded the Youth League for New
Buddhism æ° è ä» æ é ćčŽ ć ç .100 In 1936 he was arrested and
imprisoned for treason. After five months of interrogation he confessed
his âcrimesâ and pledged his loyalty to the emperor, for which he never
97
See Rambelli (2013), Zen Anarchism, for translations of most of Uchiyamaâs
writings as well as a biography and introduction to his ideas.
98
Ritzinger (2014), âThe Awakening of Faith in Anarchismâ, p. 230.
99
Idem, p. 240.
100 The term ShinkĆ BukkyĆ æ°èä»æ which is part of the name of the Youth
League is also part of the title of Seno'oâs two most important writings.
ShinkĆ æ°è means something like âemergingâ, âdevelopingâ, or sometimes
ânewâ. Although Seno'o certainly thought about Buddhism as a developing
body of thought â more about this below â âNew Buddhismâ appears to be
the most appropriate translation. Alternatively, one might want to split up the
compound and translate shinkĆ æ° è as ânewly flourishingâ. Although this
does seem to capture what Seno'o intended to express with the term, it
sounds a bit contrived.
59
on secular and radical Buddhism
59
forgave himself. In 1942 he was released from prison, but he stayed in
the shadows after that.101
Seno'o and his Youth League were âradical Buddhistâ in a sense of
âradicalâ only mentioned in passing in the previous section. Contrary to
right-wing âcrypto-Buddhistsâ, they radicalized certain key ideas and
tendencies within Buddhist thought, particularly those explained in
previous sections. Someone who is âradicalâ in the sense intended here
accepts and advocates some (often philosophical or political) idea(s) in
a more unwavering, uncompromising, and consistent fashion than what
is considered the norm. To âradicalizeâ some idea(s) in this sense is to
emphasize implications or conclusions that were previously overlooked
or downplayed, but that in a rational, consistent reading really follow
from that idea or those ideas. (Jonathan Israel uses the term ârational
Enlightenmentâ in more or less this sense of âradicalâ, for example, 102
and the âradicalismâ of radical environmentalism and radical feminism
â at the very least â overlaps with it.) âRadical Buddhismâ in this sense
means a (rational!) thinking through of the theories, trends, and
tendencies of Buddhism or some large and important part thereof with
an emphasis on consistency and concrete implications. To some extent,
the kind of Buddhism advocated by Seno'o and the Youth League was
something like a radicalization of ideas by/in Nichiren, Tiantai/Tendai,
101
Lai (1984). âSeno'o GirĆ and the Dilemma of Modern Buddhismâ. Large (1987).
âBuddhism, Socialism, and Protest in Prewar Japanâ. Shields (2012). âA
Blueprint for Buddhist Revolution. Shields (2014). âSeno'o Giroâ. There are also
several publications about Seno'o in Japanese. I wonât list those here, but will
refer to some of them below.
102 Jonathan Israel (2001). Radical Enlightenment: Philosophy and the Making of
Modernity 1650-1750 (Oxford University Press).
60
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60
the Lotus SĆ«tra, and related thinkers and texts â it was, however, also a
transcendence thereof.
In his History of Japanese Buddhism: The Modern Era, Kashiwahara YĆ«sen
reports that:
In the founding ceremony [of the Youth League for New
Buddhism], the following three-point mission statement was
adopted:
1) Looking up with great respect to the ĆÄkyamuni Buddha, 103 the
greatest person that mankind has been endowed with, we vow to
realize the establishment of a Buddha land in accordance with the
principle of brotherly love.
2) Recognizing and denouncing the wrecked existence of all the
established sects that have desecrated the spirit of Buddhism, we
vow to promote a Buddhism appropriate to the new age.
3) Recognizing that the capitalist economic system goes against
the spirit of Buddhism and obstructs the livelihood and welfare of
the general public, we vow to reform this and realize the society
of the future.104
103 ĆÄkyamuni Buddha is the most common name for the historical Buddha
within MahÄyÄna Buddhism
104 My translation. ăç”æćŒă§ćŻæ±șăăăäžç¶±é ăŻăäžăæçăŻäșșéĄăźæă
ăæé«äșșæ Œ ă»éèżŠçć°Œä»ăéä»°ăăćèçæăźæ綱ă«ćăŁăŠä»ćœćć»ș
èšăźćźçŸăæăăäșăæçăŻć
šæąæćźćŁăŻä»æçČŸç„ăćçăăăæźéȘž
çććšăȘăăšèȘăăäčăææăăŠä»æăźæ°æ代ç柣æăæăăäžăæ
çăŻçŸèłæŹäž»çŸ©ç”æžç”çčăŻä»æçČŸç„ă«èćăăŠć€§èĄç掻ăźçŠć©ăé»ćźł
ăăăăźăšèȘăăäčăæčé©ăăŠćœæ„瀟äŒăźćźçŸăæăăă æćç„æł
(1990), ăæ„æŹä»æćČ çŸä»Łă (ć€ć·ćŒæ通), p. 214.
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on secular and radical Buddhism
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In short, the mission of the Youth League was to (1) to realize a
Buddha Land (i.e. a more or less Utopian society) in this world, 105 (2) to
reform Buddhism and reject sectarian Buddhism, and (3) to reject and
reform capitalism. The last point (and to some extent the first two as
well) is also evident in a proclamation read in the first meeting of the
Youth League in 1931. âRecognizing that the suffering in present society
is mainly caused by the capitalist economic system, and cooperating
[with others] to fundamentally correct that, New Buddhism pledges to
[focus on] the welfare of the general public.â106
The first stated goal in the Youth Leagueâs mission statement â
realizing a Buddha Land in this world â is just straight up Nichirenâs
interpretation of the Lotus SĆ«tra and Tiantai/Tendai philosophy (see
above), but there is an obvious difference between the Youth League
and Nichiren with regards to their ideas about how to realize that
Buddha Land â that is, the third stated goal. The second stated goal also
reminds of Nichirenâs critique of the established Buddhist sects at his
time (about 6 centuries earlier). Nichiren also believed that he was
formulating a Buddhism appropriate to his age and also repeatedly
claimed that the established sects had desecrated Buddhism. So, two
out three goals in the Youth Leagueâs mission statement align closely
with Nichirenâs ideas. Translate those two into Late Middle Japanese
and they could have been written or spoken by Nichiren.
105 This was also an explicit goal of Taixu. See note 111 below.
106 My translation. ăæ°èä»æăŻăçŸç€ŸäŒăźèŠæ©ăŻăäž»ăšăăŠèłæŹäž»çŸ©ç”æž
ç”çčă«ćșć ăăăèȘăăŠăăăăæ čæŹçé©æŁă«ććăăŠć€§èĄăźçŠć©ă
äżéăăăšăăăă æ°èä»æéćčŽćç (New Buddhist Youth League)
(1931), ă柣èšă (Proclamation), reprinted in: çšČćŁççŸ (1974), ăä»éăè
èČ ăăŠèĄé ăžâćŠčć°ŸçŸ©éăšæ°èä»æéćčŽćçă (ćČ©æłąæ°æž): 3-6, p. 4.
62
on secular and radical Buddhism
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In the year of the Youth Leagueâs founding, Seno'o Giro published a
pamphlet or book titled Turning towards a New Buddhism æ°èäœæăž
ăźè»ąèș« . It is in dialogue form and opens with an answer to a question
about his aims in writing it:
Firstly, rejecting the corrupted established religious
organizations, I want to show the true value of Buddhism to the
current era. Secondly, I want to unify divided Buddhism and
suppress the ugly rivalry between the sects. Thirdly, I want to
realize an ideal society of love and equality by participating in a
movement to reform the capitalist economic system, which
conflicts with the spirit of the Buddha.107
Seno'oâs aims are very similar to those of the Youth League he
founded, and that is no coincidence, of course. The first and second of
Seno'oâs aims are combined into the second goal in the Youth Leagueâs
mission statement, while Seno'oâs third aim is split up into the first and
third goals in the mission statement.
Two years later, Seno'o published another book or pamphlet with the
title New Buddhism on the Way to Social Transformation 瀟äŒć€é©éäžăź
æ°èäœæ in which he listed six âdemands of modern/contemporary
societyâ çŸä»Łç€ŸäŒăźèŠæ±:
107 My translation. ă珏äžăŻć èœăăæąææćŁăææăăŠäœæăźçäŸĄăçŸä»Ł
ă«çșæźăăăăźă ă珏äșăŻćèŁăăäœæăç”±äžăăŠéăćźæŽŸäșăČă甶
ăĄăăăźă ă珏äžăŻäœéăźçČŸç„ă«ćăăèłæŹäž»çŸ©ç”æžç”çčăźæčé éć
ă«ćć ăăŠăæăšćčłçăźçæłç€ŸäŒăćźçŸăăăăźă ăă ćŠčć°ŸçŸ©é
(1931), ăæ°èäœæăžăźè»ąèș«ă, reprinted in: çšČćŁççŸ (ed.) (1975), ăćŠčć°ŸçŸ©
éćźæè«éă (性è”ćșç): 260-301, p. 260.
63
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63
Firstly, contemporary science advocates atheism, denying the
reality of superhuman gods or Buddhas.
Secondly, contemporary science advocates âaspiritualismâ, 108
denying the doctrine of nirvÄáča that recognizes a life after death.
Thirdly, people nowadays are not satisfied with fairytale-like
happiness, but desire the enjoyment of complete happiness in
actual daily life.
Fourthly, desiring stability in economic life, the general public
nowadays demands a reform of capitalism.
Fifthly, awakened mankind sublates109 nationalism and is elated
by internationalism.
Sixthly, adherents of progressive Buddhism break with sectarian
Buddhism and desire its unification.110
108 Seno'o coins a neologism here that mirrors the Japanese term for âatheismâ,
which occurs in the first âdemandâ. âAtheismâ is mu-shin-ron çĄ ç„ è« , ânoGod-theoryâ. âAspiritualismâ (my translation of Seno'oâs neologism) is mureikon-ron çĄééè«, âno -spirit/soul-theoryâ.
109 â Sublatesâ translates the Japanese term for Hegelâs notion of â Aufhebenâ,
which shows a clear Marxist influence on Seno'oâs thought.
110
64
My translation. ăäž
çŸä»Łç§ćŠăŻè¶
äșșéçăȘç„äœăźćźćšăćŠćźăăŠçĄç„
è«ăèȘŹăă äș çŸä»Łç§ćŠăŻæ»ćŸăźç掻ăèȘăăćœŒćČžäž»çŸ©ăćŠèȘăăŠ
çĄééè«ăèȘŹăă äž çŸä»ŁäșșăŻćč»æłçćčžçŠă«æșè¶łăăȘăă§ćźéç掻
ăźäžă«ć
šćčžçŠăźäș«ćăæŹČăăă ć çŸä»Łć€§èĄăŻç”æžç掻ăźćźćźăæŹČ
ăăŠèłæŹäž»çŸ©ăźæčé ăèŠæ±ăăă äș çźèŠăăäșșéĄăŻćœćź¶äž»çŸ©ăæą
æăăŠćœé䞻矩ăé«èȘżăăă ć
éČæ©çäœæ俥è
ăŻćźæŽŸçäœæăæž
çźăăŠăăźç”±äžăç±æăăăă ćŠčć°ŸçŸ©é (1933), ă瀟äŒć€é©éäžăźæ°è
äœæă , reprinted in: çšČćŁççŸ (ed.) (1975), ăćŠčć°ŸçŸ©éćźæè«éă ( 性è”
ćșç): 325-388, p. 330.
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These âdemandsâ make very clear how Seno'o and the Youth League
approached Buddhism. Their âNew Buddhismâ æ° è ä» æ was an
atheist Buddhism without gods, spirits, or souls, and without an
afterlife or nirvÄáča. It was a â more or less â naturalistic Buddhism with
as deep a respect for modern science as for the teachings of the Buddha.
(But note that the rejection of an afterlife follows from the adoption of
Nichirenâs anti-dualistic worldview as well as from the scientific
worldview.) Furthermore, the third to fifth demands reveal that âNew
Buddhismâ was also a very humanistic and ethical Buddhism, focusing
on worldly happiness and worldly suffering, on well-being and misery
(rather than on the much more abstract notion of dukkha). This is not
really new, of course. The same relatively practical focus can be found
in the writings of many other (left-leaning) Buddhist modernizers and
engaged Buddhists.111 However, the âNew Buddhistâ focus on worldly
suffering also reminds of how Nichiren described the main problems of
his time: âFamine and disease rage more fiercely than ever, beggars are
everywhere in sight, and scenes of death fill out eyesâ.112
111
The Chinese Anarchist (and later reformist) Buddhist Taixu also proposed a
this-worldly Buddhism, which he alternatively called âBuddhism for this
worldâ (or âfor the human worldâ) äșșéäœæ or âBuddhism for human lifeâ äșș
ç äœ æ . His aim â like Seno'o and the Youth League â was to establish a
âpure land in this worldâ (or âin the human worldâ; note that âpure landâ is
effectively synonymous with âBuddha landâ here) äșș é ć ć . Taixuâs
âBuddhism for this worldâ was Utopian and reformist more than radical or
revolutionary, however. And since the early 1980s the term has been used to
refer to âBuddhismâ in support of the state and party in China. See: Ji Zhe
(2013), âZhao Puchu and his Renjian Buddhismâ, The Eastern Buddhist 44.2:
35-58.
112
Nichiren, Establishing the Peace of the Country. Translation in: Yampolsky
(1990), Selected Writings of Nichiren, p. 14.
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transcending the Lotus SĆ«tra
Above, I claimed that Seno'o and his Youth League radicalized and
transcended Nichiren (and related thinkers and texts), but while I
mentioned similarities with Nichiren in the foregoing, I have not really
substantiated this claim yet. For that, I first need to say something
about an important passage in a famous letter written by Nichiren:
The true path lies in the realities of the world. The ... [SĆ«tra of the
golden light] states, âIf one profoundly discerns secular dharmas,
that is precisely the Buddha-Dharma.â And the NirvÄáča SĆ«tra
states, âAll secular and external scriptures and writings are in
each case the Buddhaâs teaching. They are not heterodox
teachings.â When the Great Teacher Miao-lo ... cited the passage
from ... the Lotus SĆ«tra, âAll worldly affairs of livelihood and
property in no case differ from the true aspect,â comparing it with
the other [passages cited here] and elucidating its meaning, [he
explained that,] although the first two sƫtras have a profound
intent, [in comparison] they are still shallow and cannot approach
the Lotus SĆ«tra. Where they explain secular dharmas in terms of
the Buddha-Dharma, this is not so of the Lotus SĆ«tra. It interprets
secular dharmas as immediately comprising the whole of the
Buddha-Dharma.113
Background of the passage is, of course, Nichirenâs anti-dualism:
there is just one world. But if there is just one world, there is also just
113
66
Nichiren, âOfferings in Principle and Actualityâ (also known as âThe Gift of
Riceâ). Translation: Jacqueline Stone (1990), Some Disputed Writings in the
Nichiren Corpus: Textual, Hermeneutical and Historical Problems , PhD thesis
(University of California), p. 485-486.
on secular and radical Buddhism
66
one epistemology and just one science. Then, there is no fundamental
difference between Buddhist insights and scientific insights â insight is
just insight, and truth is just truth. Thus, secular dharmas (theories,
teachings, doctrines) are Buddhist teachings â or in other words,
Buddhism ought to incorporate (and adjust to) scientific knowledge.
(Note that the Dalai Lama, for example, has expressed a similar
sentiment on numerous occasions, and that, by implication, if scientific
insights change, Buddhism must change with it.114)
There being just one world â this one â Nichirenâs aim was to
establish a âBuddha Landâ (i.e. a more less Utopian society along
Buddhist lines) in this world. He observed, however, that the world he
lived in was very far removed from the ideal. The world he lived in was
one of poverty and disaster. To the best of his knowledge the cause of all
this misery was a corruption of Buddhism, insufficient reverence of the
Lotus SĆ«tra by the people and state, particularly. So that needed to be
rectified. Science and philosophy have progressed considerably since
Nichirenâs time, however, and to the best of our knowledge (or Seno'oâs
knowledge) the causes of misery are very different, and consequently,
the remedy must be different as well. Nevertheless, the starting point â
there is one world and a Buddha Land must be realized in that one
world â and the general line of reasoning leading to the suggestion of a
remedy are the same.
Recall that the âProclamationâ of the Youth League stated that âthe
suffering in present society is mainly caused by the capitalist economic
systemâ (see above). Seno'o repeatedly made similar claims. As an
114
67
To what extent he really means this can be doubted, however, as he doesnât
seem willing to give up on reincarnation, substance dualism, and other
supernatural beliefs.
on secular and radical Buddhism
67
explanation of the cause of misery, this seems considerably more
plausible than Nichirenâs â given all we know, itâs rather hard to believe
that a lack of reverence of the Lotus SĆ«tra is the cause of poverty in the
âdevelopingâ world or of the destruction of our planetâs climate system,
which is already causing massive suffering in most parts of the world,
and which is even threatening mankindâs survival. That neoliberal
capitalism is to blame for these is undeniable, on the other hand. Erik
Reinert, Ha-Joon Chang, and others have documented how capitalist
ideology has ruined the âdevelopingâ world, preventing it from really
developing.115 Mike Davis. John Rapley, and Naomi Klein have written
about the misery and suffering resulting from capitalismâs quest to
enrich the few.116 Naomi Klein, Bill McKibben, and many others have
shown that climate change is driven by capitalism and that the same
ideology is to blame for the lack of willingness to prevent climate
change from becoming catastrophic.117 And so on. And so forth. So,
contrary to Nichirenâs diagnosis, Seno'oâs isnât far-fetched. In the
contrary, it seems to be spot on: capitalism is the main cause and origin
115
Erik Reinert (2007). How Rich Countries Got RichâŠand Why Poor Countries
Stay Poor (London: Constable). Ha-Joon Chang (2002). Kicking away the
Ladder (London: Anthem). Ha-Joon Chang (2007). Bad Samaritans: Rich
Nations, Poor Policies, and the Threat to the Developing World (London:
Random House).
116
Mike Davis (2000). Late Victorian Holocausts: El Niño Famines and the
Making of the Third World (London: Verso). John Rapley (2017). Twilight of
the Money Gods: Economics as Religion and How it All Went Wrong (London:
Simon & Schuster). Naomi Klein (2007). The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of
Disaster Capitalism (New York: Henry Holt).
117
Naomi Klein (2014). This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate
(Knopf). Bill McKibben (2019). Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play
Itself Out? (Wildfire).
68
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of suffering in the world.118 And therefore, to realize a âBuddha Landâ in
this world, capitalism needs to be reformed or replaced.
Seno'oâs anti-capitalist conclusion follows from premises that he
mostly shared with Nichiren and followed a line of reasoning that is
also identical to Nichirenâs. It is in this sense that Seno'o and the Youth
League radicalized Nichiren and the Lotus SĆ«tra: they took those to their
logical conclusion. But in doing so, they also transcended Nichiren and
the Lotus SĆ«tra. While for Nichiren the Lotus SĆ«tra was both the starting
point and end point of his argument (it provided the anti-dualist
premise and the solution/conclusion), in case of Seno'o the Lotus SĆ«tra
and associated ideas were more like a ladder that, once used to climb
up, can be discarded.119 That is, the Lotus SĆ«tra and the philosophy based
on it lead to the anti-dualist premises that there is just one world and
just one epistemology, but plays no further role beyond that. In other
words, Seno'o has left the Lotus SĆ«tra behind (or transcended it).
Furthermore, contrary to Nichiren who believed that the Lotus SĆ«tra
was the Buddhaâs final and ultimate teaching, Seno'o was well aware of
the key findings of academic research on Buddhism of his time and
argued that the Lotus SĆ«tra and other MahÄyÄna SĆ«tras did not literally
record the Buddhaâs sermons at all. In his Turning towards a New
Buddhism, Seno'o wrote that:
When the times change and social conditions and culture advance,
Buddhism develops as well, and the MahÄyÄna SĆ«tras are the
118
See also: Brons (2017), The Hegemony of Psychopathy.
119
This Wittgensteinian metaphor (Tractatus 6.54) is rather popular in recent
Buddhist writings (or writings about Buddhism), so it seemed especially
appropriate to borrow it here.
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many new SĆ«tras that were produced by later followers of the
Buddha in order to adapt to the age [they lived in]; therefore,
because the MahÄyÄna SĆ«tras are no direct recordings of the
sermons of the Buddha, I say that âMahÄyÄna is not the
view/doctrine of the Buddhaâ.120
Consequently, Seno'oâs âtranscendenceâ of the Lotus SĆ«tra is not just
accident of the line of reasoning he radicalized, but also a necessity. The
Lotus SĆ«tra did not represent the words of the Buddha but was a later
production that was appropriate to that later time. It was still
appropriate to Nichirenâs time according to Seno'o,121 but has mostly
lost its relevance since. Hence, the need for a âNew Buddhismâ, a
Buddhism based equally on modern science, on the conditions of this
world, and on an interpretation of the teachings of the Buddha.
One of the most common definitions of what it means to be a
Buddhist is âone who has taken refuge in the three jewels of Buddha,
dharma, and saáčghaâ. Perhaps, unsurprisingly, Seno'o reinterprets the
three jewels as well, thereby giving us an account of what it means to be
a âNew Buddhistâ æ°èä»æćŸ . The term âsaáčghaâ usually refers to
the Buddhist (monastic) community (i.e. monks and nuns primarily, but
sometimes also including lay followers), and âdharmaâ refers to the
Buddhaâs teachings (or to Buddhist teachings more broadly). Seno'o
reinterprets both terms in a way consistent with his philosophy, but
120 My translation. ăäœæăăæ代ăéČ移ăäžæ
æćăéČæ©ăăă«ă€ăăŠçș
ć±ăăŠăæ代ă«é©ćżăăčăćčŸć€ăźæ°ăăç”ć
žăćŸæ„ăźäœćŒćă«ăăŁăŠ
ć”äœăăăăźă性äčç”ć
žă§ăćŸăŁăŠă性äčç”ć
žăŻçŽæ„äœéăźèȘŹæłèšéČ
ă§ăȘăăăă性äčéäœèȘŹăăšăă”ăźă ăă ćŠčć°ŸçŸ©é (1931), ăæ°èäœæ
ăžăźè»ąèș«ă, p. 265-6.
121
70
Idem, pp. 266-268.
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also changes the order of the three jewels, albeit mostly for an
expository purpose.
The third jewel, the vow to take refuge in the saáčgha, âis the
creed/principle of the realization of a cooperative society without
exploitationâ.122 Seno'o defends his interpretation of âsaáčghaâ by
arguing that the original community of the Buddhaâs followers was â
more or less â this kind of society. Hence, he interpreted the term not
so much as referring to the religious or monastic aspect of the original
saáčgha, but as referring to its social aspect.
The second, the refuge in the dharma, âis the fundamental philosophy
of the realization of a cooperative societyâ. Seno'o adds that ââDharmaâ
does not so much refer to contemplations on emptiness or [the doctrine
of] dependent origination as to the denial of private property and the
practical âmuga-ismâ (selflessness) of mutual dependenceâ.123 This
reinterpretation of dharma as incorporating all relevant knowledge or
doctrine is in line with the rejection of a dualism of worlds and
epistemologies already explained above: the secular dharma is part of
the Buddhist dharma (and the other way around). A new term here is
âmuga-ismâ (although this is by no means the first occurrence of the
term or variant terms in Seno'oâs writings). âMugaâ means something
like âselflessnessâ, but is also the Japanese translation of the Buddhist
term âanÄtmanâ or âno-selfâ, referring to the key Buddhist teaching that
the self is an illusion or that there is no (essential, stable, unchanging)
122 My translation. ă 珏äžăźăèȘćž°äŸć§ăăŻæŸćăȘăć
±ć瀟äŒćźçŸăźäżĄæĄă§
ăăăă ćŠčć°ŸçŸ©é (1933), ă瀟äŒć€é©éäžăźæ°èäœæă, p. 387.
123 My translation. ă珏äșăźăèȘćž°äŸæłăăŻăć
±ć瀟äŒćźçŸăźćșç€ćČćŠă§ă
ăăæłăšăŻăăăŸă§ăăȘăç©șèŠł ă»çžè”·ăźăăă§ăç§æćŠćźăçžäŸçžéą
ăźćźè·”ççĄæă€ășă ă ăă Idem.
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71
self. Seno'o used the term âmuga-ismâ mainly as an apparent antonym
to selfishness or egoism.
The first jewel, the refuge in the Buddha, âis the reverence of
ĆÄkyamuni Buddha as the ideal experiencer and guide of the second and
third [refuges]â, recognizing that âthere is no need for abstract, ideal
Buddhas like Amida Buddha, Dainichi Buddha, or the eternal Buddha as
idealizations of ĆÄkyamuni Buddhaâ.124 While the other two refuges as
well as the first five of the six âdemands of modern/contemporary
societyâ may suggest that Seno'o had transcended (or left behind)
Buddhism altogether, his interpretation of the refuge in the Buddha
shows that this is not the case. Seno'oâs âNew Buddhismâ may have
been unconventional in several ways â it was atheist, humanist,
socialist, ethical, and perhaps even secular or naturalist â but he was
still very much a Buddhist. The Buddha remained his first refuge.
Furthermore, while it can be argued that Seno'o attempted to
secularize Buddhism, he simultaneously âBuddhifiedâ secularity. The
term âmuga-ismâ is a good example hereof. Superficially, it may seem to
be just a secular term denoting an antonym to selfishness or egoism,
but it is very unlikely that it is a mere coincidence that muga çĄæ also
means no-self (anÄtman).125 According to MahÄyÄna texts about
bodhicitta (becoming a Bodhisattva) such as ĆÄntidevaâs
124 My translation. ă珏äžăźăèȘćž°äŸäœăăŻçŹŹäș珏äžăźçæłçäœéšè
ă»ć±ć°
è
ăšăăŠăźäœééć°ăžăźæžä»°ă§ăăă ...ăäœééć°ăźçæłć
ćźčăšăăŠăź
éżćŒ„éäœă性æ„ćŠæ„ăăŠăŻäč
é æŹäœçă
ăźæœè±ĄăŠăçæłäœăćż
èŠăšă
ăȘăăă Idem.
125 And the reference to mutual dependence, which is another important
Buddhist notion (albeit mainly a metaphysical one), in the same phrase is
probably no coincidence either.
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BodhicaryÄvatÄra, the selfless compassion (or muga-ism?) that more or
less defines Bodhisattvas is inseparable from a deep understanding of
no-self (muga, anÄtman) â that is, one cannot have one without the
other: the wisdom of no-self requires genuine compassion and lovingkindness and the other way around. And this strongly suggest that
Seno'oâs normative ideal (on the individual rather than the social
level126) of muga-ism is a variant of the Bodhisattva ideal â a genuine
muga-ist is a Bodhisattva.
126 On the social level, the ideal is a âBuddha Landâ in this world.
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concluding remarks
One may wonder whether Seno'oâs transcendence of Nichiren and the
Lotus SĆ«tra, taken to its logical conclusion, doesnât lead to a
transcendence of Buddhism as well â that is, to some kind of postBuddhist socialism that has sprouted from the Buddhist tree, but is no
longer a part of it. As mentioned, Seno'o remained committed to
Buddhism â he believed that socialism by itself is too cold and
materialistic and that Buddhism is needed to add what socialism is
missing. However, the secularized âNew Buddhismâ he advocated is
subject to the very same friction between secularity and Buddhism
mentioned above in the context of Batchelorâs âsecular Buddhismâ and
related secularized Western Buddhisms. A consistent secularity trumps
Buddhism, meaning that if secular science proves (some aspect of)
Buddhism wrong, it is (that aspect of) Buddhism that has to go. Perhaps,
this is less of a problem for Seno'o than for Batchelor and fellow
travelers, however. Seno'o was quite explicit that Buddhism needs to
change with the time, that it needs to adapt and evolve into whatever is
appropriate for the age. And if one doesnât cling to some kind of fixed
core or essence of Buddhism (which would be very un-Buddhist
anyway), then Buddhism may be almost infinitely adaptable. A secular
challenge to Buddhism, then, wouldnât necessary result in a rejection of
Buddhism (if one would be consistently secular), but would merely
force a rethinking and adaptation.
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on secular and radical Buddhism
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A much more fundamental difference between Batchelorâs and other
Western Buddhistsâ secular Buddhism(s) and Seno'oâs âNew Buddhismâ
concerns aims and purpose. To some extent, both confront the distress
and suffering caused by modern capitalist society, but while Batchelorâs
secular Buddhism (even though he explicitly denies it) merely aims at
helping people to cope with that distress, Seno'oâs goal is too abolish
the underlying cause of all that misery â that is, capitalism â and
establish a âBuddha Landâ (i.e. a more or less ideal society with
significantly less suffering) in this world.
In the end, all that that âsecular Buddhismâ (and other Western
Buddhisms127) has to offer is peace of mind. But what good is (my) peace
of mind while billions suffer? While millions of children die of hunger,
thirst, and preventable diseases? While climate change slowly makes
ever larger swaths of our planet uninhabitable for humans and other
animals? While even in rich countries a very large proportion of the
population suffers from insecurity, stress, and/or depression?
The proclamation read in the first meeting (1931) of Seno'oâs New
Buddhist Youth League starts with the following rather pertinent
observations:
This is an era of suffering. Fellow men desire love and trust, but
are forced to engage in conflict, while the general public wishes
for bread, but is only fed oppression. Either if one [tries to] escape
or [engages in] conflict, the present world is fluctuating between
chaos and distress.
127 And probably also many other popular Buddhisms.
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In such an age, what are Buddhists aware of, and what are they
contributing to society? Intoxicated by [their own] cheap peace of
mind, most Buddhists do not see a problem.128
The term âintoxicationâ é¶é
is appropriate here. Peace of mind is
like a drug suppressing pain, stress, and/or anxiety. But while, on the
one hand, it is understandable that many people desire such a âdrugâ,
on the other hand, there is something rather disturbing about the
pursuit of a âdrugâ that ultimately aims at closing oneâs eyes for the
suffering of the world. I can understand why people would desire peace
of mind, but if youâre able to actually achieve peace of mind in this world
â and thus, in a sense, to make peace with this world â then there is
something seriously wrong with you, even if what is wrong with you
has gradually come to be seen as normal. This is an age of narcissism or
cultural psychopathy â being self-centered and callous has become the
norm.129 While this makes the selfish pursuit of peace of mind very
fashionable (and thus, in some sense âsecularâ), I also find it more than
a little repulsive. Furthermore, it conflicts with my â admittedly
somewhat idiosyncratic â views of what Buddhism is about.
Perhaps, like all other religions, lay Buddhism has rarely been much
more than a tool to repress fear and anxiety (the fear of death,
128 My translation. ăçŸä»ŁăŻèŠæ©ăăăćèăŻäżĄæăæŹČăăŠéäșăäœćăȘă
ăăă性èĄăŻăăłăæ±ăăŠćŒŸć§ăéŁăčăăăăăăééżăéäșăăä»
ăäžăŻăăăŠæ··æČăšçȘźèż«ăšă«ćœ·ćŸšăăă ăăăçŸä»Łăä»æćŸăŻäœă
èȘèăăäœă瀟äŒă«ćŻäžăă€ă€ăăăăćźäŸĄăȘćźćżă«é¶é
ăăŠăăć€
æ°ä»æćŸăŻćéĄăšăăŸăăă æ°èä»æéćčŽćç (New Buddhist Youth
League) (1931), ă柣èšă (Proclamation), p. 3.
129 See: Twenge & Campbell (2009), The Narcissism Epidemic, and: Brons (2017),
The Hegemony of Psychopathy.
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76
particularly130), but this doesnât mean that this use and role of a religion
determines its nature. One could use a book to balance a wobbly table,
but that doesnât mean itâs no longer a book. To understand the book as
book, one has to look beyond its role and use as table-stabilizer, and
open it and look inside. Similarly, to understand any body of thought,
one has to look beyond its practical roles and uses and look âinsideâ.
And when one looks âinsideâ, then the idea of Buddhism as a tool to
provide peace of mind quickly becomes ludicrous.131
Take Buddhaghosa as an example. In his extremely influential
Visuddhimagga he argues (among others) that everyone should meditate
on death and loving-kindness (or compassion132). The purpose of the
meditation of death is to experience a state of shock helping one to
understand the real nature of suffering. 133 (ĆÄntideva makes a closely
related point in BodhicaryÄvatÄra 6:21.) The purpose of the meditation
on loving-kindness or compassion is to (come to) care about othersâ
suffering and well-being like it is oneâs own. This is not some fringe idea
of a single, isolated Buddhist monk â rather, this is part of the shared
core of almost all schools and currents of Buddhism. The point of
Buddhism is not to make peace with the suffering in this world, but to
dissolve the selfish focus on oneâs own suffering and happiness and to
make all suffering oneâs own. (Or thatâs part of the point, at least.)
130 See: Becker (1973). The Denial of Death.
131
Nevertheless, peace of mind and other advantages have always been part
of the sales pitch of Buddhism, but it is never a good idea to confuse a sales
pitch with the real thing.
132 The term mettÄ is usually translated as âloving-kindessâ, but is very close to
the modern understanding of âcompassionâ.
133 See: Brons (2016). âFacing Death from a Safe Distanceâ.
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77
There is an important distinction with regards to human responses to
the suffering of others between empathic distress and empathic concern.134
The former is characterized by a sense of distress when witnessing the
suffering others and leads to a desire to no longer witness that suffering
â that is, to closing oneâs eyes (and heart), to escape (or escapism), and
so forth. The second is also associated with a kind of distress but leads
to genuine (altruistic) concern for the other and a desire for the otherâs
suffering to end or be alleviated instead â âempathic concernâ is a
synonym of âcompassionâ. Buddhism aims at strengthening and
promoting empathic concern, not at escaping empathic distress. Aiming
for oneâs own peace of mind in this world does the exact opposite.
Consequently, I cannot see so-called âBuddhismsâ that are little more
than tools to achieve peace of mind as anything but perversions or
corruptions. (And one of the reasons why it is unlikely that I'd ever call
myself a Buddhist is â paradoxically, perhaps â that I donât want to be
associated with such fashionable perversions.135)
All that secular Buddhism has to offer is peace of mind, 136 but I donât
want peace of mind â I want a revolution.
134 C. Daniel Batson (2009). âThe Things Called Empathy: Eight Related but
Distinct Phenomenaâ, in: Jean Decety & William John Ickes (eds.), The Social
Neuroscience of Empathy (Cambridge MA: MIT Press): 3â15.
135 This in addition to the fact that I only provisionally accept some aspects of
Buddhist thought, which conflicts with the common essentialist
understanding of religious identification. See the section titled âthe secular
and the religiousâ.
136 Probably the same is true for most other Western Buddhisms and even for
most non-Western (lay) Buddhisms. However, by emptying out Buddhism of
almost all other âcontentâ, secular Buddhism has made peace of mind the
prime (or even sole) purpose of âBuddhismâ.
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