Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chinese Buddhism 中国佛教 温海明 Prof. WEN Haiming Associate Professor, School of Philosophy Renmin University of China 中国人民大学哲学院副教授 Ph.D. University of Hawaii.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chinese Buddhism 中国佛教 温海明 Prof. WEN Haiming Associate Professor, School of Philosophy Renmin University of China 中国人民大学哲学院副教授 Ph.D. University of Hawaii."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Chinese Buddhism 中国佛教 温海明 Prof. WEN Haiming Associate Professor, School of Philosophy Renmin University of China 中国人民大学哲学院副教授 Ph.D. University of Hawaii 夏威夷大学哲学博士  2016-5-26  Prof. Haiming Wen, School of Philosophy, Renmin University of China 11

3 History of Chinese Buddhism  Took place in first half of the 1 st Century CE  1 st, 2 nd Centuries: considered occultism  Daoist story of Buddha as Laozi’s disciple  Designed to imply sutras were foreign variant of the Daodejing  Originally interpreted by analogy  5 th Century: analogy abandoned, terminological similarity used  synthesized Buddhism and Daoism

4 General Buddhist Concepts  Several schools (Hinayana, Mahayana, etc) but agree on basics  The theory of karma  Thoughts and deeds have effects on the Samsara, or Wheel of Birth and Death  Sufferings are rooted in ignorance of true nature of things (Avidya, Wu-ming)  Hope lies with Enlightenment, or Bodhi, and emancipation from rebirth cycle, Nirvana

5 Mahayana School on Universal Mind  Mahayana school believed in ‘universal mind’  Nirvana means individuals’ identification with the universal mind  AKA the ‘Buddha-nature’  School of the Middle Path described Nirvana differently

6 School of the Middle Path on Theory of ‘Double Truth’  “Double truth” means common sense and higher sense truth  Three levels of double truth (you=being, wu=non-being)  Saying things are you is common sense, saying they are wu is higher truth  Saying things are both is common sense, saying they are neither is higher  Saying they are neither is common sense, saying they are neither you nor wu, neither not-you nor not- wu, and the middle path is neither one-sided nor not one-sided is higher

7 End Results - Zhuangzi  School of the Middle Path, all things must be denied, for they are unreal  When all is denied, including the denial of the denial of all, one is enlightened  Similar like Zhuangzi’s “Sitting in forgetfulness”  A state of nirvana ?

8 Seng Zhao  Great Middle Path thinker  Kumārajīva - Indian, born in what is now Chinese Turkistan  Seng Zhao: Things are in constant flux  A thing of one moment is an entirely new thing  The story of Fan Zhi

9 Dao-sheng  A monk so learned rocks nodded in agreement  “A good deed entails no retribution”  Following wu-wei=having no cravings,  Karma is due to cravings, therefore no retribution  Buddhahood by Sudden Enlightenment  Everyone has the Buddha-nature  Realizing this through learning, practice frees you  There is no ‘Pure Land’ – Buddha is here already  Icchantika can achieve Buddhahood

10 Chan or Zen Buddhism  Dao-sheng and Seng Zhao had laid philosophical groundwork for Chan Buddhism  Northern-Southern school split  Hui-neng succeeded Hong-ren as patriarch  Writing the best poem summarizing Chan Buddhism

11 Teaching of the First Principle  “First Principle” (same as ‘double truth-3 rd level’)  Unspeakable and unnamable  Asking about the First Principle elicited no response, hitting, irrelevant answers  No scriptures or sutras have real connection to the First Principle

12 Cultivation  Best way to cultivate is to not cultivate  To cultivate oneself is to have effort, or you-wei  Do things without effort or purposefulness  Act without effects and Karma will be exhausted  Don’t worry about institutionalized religion  Original ignorance and naturalness are gifts of nature  knowledge of un-knowledge and cultivation through non-cultivation are products of spirit  Sudden Enlightenment is result of non-cultivation

13 Attainment of Non-Attainment  Nothing further than Enlightenment  The mountain is the mountain, the river is the river  The story of riding the ass

14  13  2016-5-26  Prof. Haiming Wen, School of Philosophy, Renmin University of China


Download ppt "Chinese Buddhism 中国佛教 温海明 Prof. WEN Haiming Associate Professor, School of Philosophy Renmin University of China 中国人民大学哲学院副教授 Ph.D. University of Hawaii."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google