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Cambridge University Press

978-0-521-67008-1 - An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy


Stephen J. Laumakis
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An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy

In this clear and accessible book, Stephen Laumakis explains the origin and
development of Buddhist ideas and concepts, focusing on the philosophical
ideas and arguments presented and defended by selected thinkers and
sutras from various traditions. He starts with a sketch of the Buddha and
the Dharma, and highlights the origins of Buddhism in India. He then
considers specific details of the Dharma with special attention to Buddhist
metaphysics and epistemology, and examines the development of Buddhism
in China, Japan, and Tibet, concluding with the ideas of the Dalai Lama
and Thich Nhat Hanh. In each chapter he includes explanations of key terms
and teachings, excerpts from primary source materials, and presentations
of the arguments for each position. His book will be an invaluable guide for
all who are interested in this rich and vibrant philosophy.

STEPHEN J . LAUMAKIS is Associate Professor in the Philosophy


Department at the University of St. Thomas, St. Paul.

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Cambridge University Press
978-0-521-67008-1 - An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy
Stephen J. Laumakis
Frontmatter
More information

An Introduction to
Buddhist Philosophy

STEPHEN J. LAUMAKIS
University of St. Thomas, Minnesota

© Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org


Cambridge University Press
978-0-521-67008-1 - An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy
Stephen J. Laumakis
Frontmatter
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CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo

Cambridge University Press


The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK

Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York

www.cambridge.org
Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521670081

# Stephen J. Laumakis 2008

This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception


and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements,
no reproduction of any part may take place without
the written permission of Cambridge University Press.

First published 2008

Printed in the United Kingdom at the University Press, Cambridge

A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library

ISBN 978-0-521-85413-9 hardback


ISBN 978-0-521-67008-1 paperback

Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for


the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or
third-party internet websites referred to in this book,
and does not guarantee that any content on such
websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.

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Cambridge University Press
978-0-521-67008-1 - An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy
Stephen J. Laumakis
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For Mary, Maggie, Molly and Stephen

© Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org


Cambridge University Press
978-0-521-67008-1 - An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy
Stephen J. Laumakis
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Contents

Acknowledgments page ix
Epigraph x
Preface xiii

Part I A sketch of the Buddha and the Dhamma 1

1 The life of Siddhattha Gotama 3

2 The contexts for the emergence of Buddhism 19

3 The basic teachings of the Buddha 45

4 One Buddhism or many Buddhisms? 61

Part II Details of the Dhamma 81

5 Kamma, Samsara, and rebirth 83

6 Interdependent arising 105

7 Impermanence, no-enduring-self, and emptiness 125

8 Moksa and Nibbana 149

Part III Development of the Dhamma/Dharma 175

9 Bodhidharma’s and Huineng’s Buddhisms 177

10 Pure Land Buddhism 207

vii

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978-0-521-67008-1 - An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy
Stephen J. Laumakis
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viii Contents

11 Tibetan Buddhism 229

12 Two forms of contemporary Buddhism 247

Glossary 265
Bibliography 277
Index 282

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Stephen J. Laumakis
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Acknowledgments

This is a welcome opportunity to thank and publicly acknowledge those who


have helped bring this book into being. First, I must thank Hilary Gaskin of
Cambridge University Press for the invitation to write it, and Roger Ames of
the University of Hawaii for his confidence in recommending me to Hilary.
Second, I want to thank Peter Hershock of the East-West Center and the
anonymous reviewers of both the initial proposal and the draft chapter of
the book for their insightful comments and criticisms, as well as their helpful
suggestions. I know that this is a better book because of their recommenda-
tions. Third, I want to thank my ‘‘Indian and Buddhist’’ teachers, especially
those whose books I have read that appear in the bibliography, as well as John
Kronen, Ramdas Lamb, George Tanabe, and in particular, David West, who
first taught me that there might be something to Buddhist thought. Fourth, I
owe a great debt of gratitude to my colleagues at the University of St. Thomas
who have read drafts of its chapters, especially, Bernie Brady, David Landry,
Mark Neuzil, and Greg Robinson-Riegler. Fifth, I want to thank David
Wemhaner for his helpful comments and suggestions. Sixth, I want to
thank my former Dean, Tom Connery, my former department Chair, Sandy
Menssen, and the Faculty Development Committee for a grant and release
time to finish the manuscript. Seventh, I want to thank my former students
who have studied Buddhism with me, especially, Laurel Stack and Jake Tuttle,
for pushing me to better understand what I was teaching. Eighth, I am grate-
ful to my parents, Jack and Peg, my brothers and their wives, Pete, Paul and
Marlena, Mark and Christi, and John and Juliana, and my in-laws Dick and
Margaret Thomas, for their emotional support throughout the process.
Ninth, I want to thank my long-time friends Bernie DeLury and Tim
McTaggart for their continuing support and friendship. Tenth, and last, but
above all, I thank my wife Mary, and my daughters, Maggie and Molly, and
their unborn brother Stephen – without their love, support, and encourage-
ment I would not be who I am and could not have written this book. I dedicate
it to them as a small token of my love and affection.
ix

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‘‘We are what we think. All that we are arises with our thoughts. With
our thoughts we make the world.’’
– Dhammapada (translation by Thomas Byrom)

‘‘This is morality, this is concentration, this is wisdom. Concentration,


when imbued with morality, brings great fruit and profit. Wisdom,
when imbued with concentration, brings great fruit and profit. The
mind imbued with wisdom becomes completely free from the corrup-
tions, that is, from the corruption of sensuality, of becoming, of false
views and of ignorance.’’
– Digha Nikaya, Mahaparinibbana Sutta, 1.12 (translation by
Maurice Walshe)

‘‘The mind is that in the world by which one is a perceiver of the world,
a conceiver of the world.’’
– Samyutta Nikaya, IV, 95 (translation by Bhikkhu Bodhi)

‘‘Do not go by oral tradition, by lineage of teaching, by hearsay, by a


collection of scriptures, by logical reasoning, by inferential reasoning,
by reflection on reasons, by the acceptance of a view after pondering it,
by the seeming competence of a speaker, or because you think ‘The
ascetic is our teacher.’ But when you know for yourselves . . . then you
should do or do not.’’
– Anguttara Nikaya, III, 65 (translation by Nyanaponika Thera and
Bhikkhu Bodhi)

‘‘Both formerly and now what I teach is suffering and the cessation of
suffering.’’
– Majjhima Nikaya, Alagaddupama Sutta, 38 (translation by Bhikkhu
Nanamoli and Bhikkhu Bodhi)

‘‘No other thing do I know, O monks, that is so intractable as an


undeveloped mind. An undeveloped mind is truly intractable . . . No
other thing do I know, O monks, that brings so much suffering as an
undeveloped and uncultivated mind. An undeveloped and unculti-
vated mind truly brings suffering . . . No other thing do I know, O
monks, that brings so much harm as a mind that is untamed,
unguarded, unprotected and uncontrolled. Such a mind truly brings
much harm . . . No other thing do I know, O monks, that changes so

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Epigraph xi

quickly as the mind. It is not easy to give a simile for how quickly the
mind changes.’’
– Anguttara Nikaya, I, iii, iv, v (selections) (translation by
Nyanaponika Thera and Bhikkhu Bodhi)

‘‘Not to do any evil, to cultivate good, to purify one’s mind, this is the
Teaching of the Buddhas.’’
– Dhammapada, 183 (translation by Walpola Rahula)

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Stephen J. Laumakis
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Preface

These are interesting and exciting times to be studying Buddhism and non-
Western philosophy and religion. As we try to make sense of recent and
ongoing events in the world, it is evident that many actions are inspired by
ideas that are foreign to traditional Western beliefs and practices. Whether
these ideas are political, religious, or philosophical in origin and motiva-
tion, it is clear that understanding our global world requires more than
knowledge of one’s own philosophical and cultural heritage.
In response to these needs, universities throughout the world have been
working to broaden their curricula by emphasizing the value and necessity
of multiculturalism and diversity in all areas of study. In the field of philo-
sophy, for example, there is increasing interest, research, and teaching in
both comparative philosophy and ‘‘world’’ philosophy. This growing inter-
est and activity in the realm of comparative and ‘‘world’’ philosophy can be
observed in the ever-increasing number of books published on non-Western
thought. In fact, there has been a veritable explosion in the number of
introductory texts, translations of primary source materials, and even new
editions of classic publications. These same activities are happening in the
area of Buddhist philosophy and religion.
Nevertheless, it is easy for anyone who is new to the study of Buddhism to
feel somewhat overwhelmed by the size of the task at hand. The history of
Buddhism spans some 2500 years and its teachings, in one form or another,
are found on almost every continent in the world. From their beginnings in
India, the teachings of the Buddha spread north (to China, Korea, Japan, and
Tibet) and south (through most of South East Asia) and most recently to the
West as well. At the same time, there are ‘‘liberal’’ and ‘‘conservative’’ inter-
pretations of ‘‘his’’ teachings, and strict and less strict observers of ‘‘his’’ way –
and almost every position in between. In fact, there are some strands of
Buddhism that are, or at least appear to be, so far removed from what are
xiii

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xiv Preface

generally considered to be the earliest teachings and practices of the histor-


ical Buddha and his immediate followers, that one cannot help but wonder
both how the name ‘‘Buddhism’’ can be accurately applied across such a broad
spectrum of beliefs and practices, and whether the name itself refers to any
coherent and consistent set of ideas, propositions, beliefs, and practices.
Consider for a moment the quotations at the beginning of this book. Each
is supposed to be an accurate rendering of a teaching of the historical
Buddha, and each is only a few lines taken from traditional Buddhist
texts. Now stop and think about the breadth and complexity of the ideas
expressed in each quotation; consider their interrelationships, and realize
that there are literally thousands of sayings of the Buddha. One should, I
hope, begin to get a sense of the size of the problems involved in an
introductory text on Buddhism.
There are at least three possible responses to this situation. First, one
might espouse a kind of forlorn skepticism and claim that there is quite
literally no hope of getting a grip on ‘‘Buddhism.’’ One could simply decide
that ‘‘Buddhism’’ is just too complex and too culturally and historically
diverse to be clearly and unambiguously specified and studied. On the
other extreme, one might maintain a position of naive and blissful ignor-
ance with respect to these problems and either simply fail to recognize
them or uncritically accept everything that claims to be ‘‘Buddhist’’ as
authentically Buddhist. Yet neither of these positions seems to be intellec-
tually satisfying. There is, however, a third response, or a ‘‘middle way’’
between these extremes. One could simultaneously be critically aware of
the problems, limitations, and difficulties of one’s study, and also work to
avoid the charges of naiveté and oversimplification as well. That is the path
this book attempts to take. It is also, I think, something like the ‘‘Middle
Way’’ the historical Buddha himself is said to have taught.
As far as we know, the man who became ‘‘the Buddha’’ or ‘‘the Awakened
One’’ was neither a skeptic nor a fideist (i.e., a blind-faith believer) in
religious and philosophical matters. He is said to have urged his followers
not to believe something because of who said it or where they heard it or
where they read it, but because it accorded with their own experiences. It is
precisely this standard that I urge the reader to use when considering the
claims and arguments in this book.
It is also important to keep in mind that no single-volume introduction to
Buddhism can cover everything in the Buddhist tradition; the historical

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Preface xv

forms are simply too complex and diverse in time, language, culture, geo-
graphy, and even doctrinal matters to be covered in anything more than a
superficial way in one volume. As a result, one must make some difficult
and perhaps controversial decisions about what topics, ideas, and figures to
cover. And these decisions are further complicated by two important back-
ground questions: first, is Buddhism a philosophy, or a religion, or some kind
of combination of both, or neither? And second, assuming one could isolate
Buddhist philosophy from Buddhist religion, what divisions or branches of its
philosophy ought one to consider?
These are obviously large and complex questions that could be the sub-
jects of books of their own. The subject matter of this book is Buddhist
philosophy – with a particular focus on its epistemology and metaphysics. In
other words, unlike most introductions to Buddhism that focus on it as a
religion, this book is an introduction to Buddhist philosophy. Moreover, this
book will be concerned primarily with Buddhist theories of knowledge and
reality, and only secondarily or peripherally with its ethical claims.
Given these initial considerations and decisions, the plan of the book is
as follows. Part I presents a rough ‘‘Sketch of the Buddha and the Dhamma.’’
Its four chapters are concerned with ‘‘The life of Siddhattha Gotama,’’ ‘‘The
contexts for the emergence of Buddhism,’’ ‘‘The basic teachings of the
Buddha,’’ and the theoretical and practical question of whether there is
‘‘One Buddhism or many Buddhisms?’’ Part II fills in the ‘‘Details of the
Dhamma.’’ Its four chapters focus on the metaphysical and epistemological
aspects of ‘‘Kamma, Samsara, and rebirth,’’ ‘‘Interdependent arising,’’
‘‘Impermanence, no-enduring-self, and emptiness,’’ and ‘‘Moksa and
Nibbana.’’ Finally, Part III traces the ongoing ‘‘Development of the
Dhamma/Dharma’’ in ‘‘Bodhidharma’s and Huineng’s Buddhisms,’’ ‘‘Pure
Land Buddhism,’’ ‘‘Tibetan Buddhism,’’ and concludes with ‘‘Two contem-
porary forms of Buddhism’’ – the Buddhism of the Dalai Lama and the
‘‘engaged Buddhism’’ of Thich Nhat Hanh.
Following the advice of the Buddha himself, I encourage the reader to
consider the evidence for the Buddha’s teachings for yourself and to weigh
and test it against your own experience. No other effort is requested or
necessary – and none will be better repaid.

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