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The lie of modern Buddhism
Comments
What material do you suggest for those ten items?
I fully get that someone else is messing it up...
so just to move things along....what are you
bringing to the table? Materials? Books? Video's?
Transmission?
If someone were to have the need to combat Stephen,
what would you suggest?
Please be specific.
Thank-you
I am eager to hear how my OP is "predicated on calumny." The ball is in your court.
There is no " ball" .There is no " court" and I guarantee that you will not involve me in your gameplay now or at anytime in the future.
Following the western pilgrim Batchelor as he makes his way through Tibetan Buddhism and Korean Zen is interesting. I don't read him as having an open mind. He is a westerner through and through. His observation about the koan given to him by Kusan Sunim, shows his western side. This is from his book, Confession of a Buddhist Atheist on page 68. Well, now you've got me interested. What is your answer to the koan of "What was your face before you were born?" I know Batchelor got frustrated and eventually quit working on his koan. I don't fault him for that because many people don't get very far in the koans, Eastern or Western. So what's your answer? Show me you can do better with your way of approaching Buddhism.
Why would we single out Batchelor for "combat", anyway? What about all the syncretism that's been going on in Buddhism worldwide for centuries, if not millenia? If you want to get all fundamentalist about it, Batchelor was far from the first to introduce modifications to Buddhism. Is this what we want--Buddhist fundamentalism? Actually, Batchelor considers himself a bit of a fundie himself. He talks about bringing Buddhism back to what the Buddha actually taught. His definition of that (after studying the Pali canon in Pali) just happens to differ with other peoples' definition. So...now what? A battle of the fundies?
As for a nonconceptual component of the mind ruling my body, that sounds logical enough to me, as I can't remember the last time an army of antibodies required some conceptual or linguistic participation on my end to do their job.
My ego was being sarcastic.
I felt my intent change because of my dis-agreement with
some of Songhill's assertions on this topic ..therefore leading to sarcasm.
I think the question about fundamentalism, and conflicting views of what is fundamental, is still a good one. Do we want to get hung up on "view", and purity of the tradition? If so, there's a lot of cleaning up to do before we get to Batchelor. The debate about what the Buddha really taught is a never-ending one.
At the same time though, I do take issue with not at least keeping an open mind about things we can't know or see. It is possible to doubt something unkown without shutting it out completely.
If there is a debate regarding the metaphysics of mind or matter and the implications I can engage in a discussion. But when it comes to practice and transforming ones mind metaphysics doesn't play much of a role IMO. I mean really, are any of us anywhere near a place in our practice where the question of the nature of nirvana really matters. If not its just mental masturbation, not that I don't find that pleasurable at times too.
Attacking Mr Bachelor as representing 'Modern Buddhism' seems a little ... silly, when he is only one man, and not even the most popular Buddhist author.
In contrast, the highest-selling Buddhist authors in the English-speaking world today (people such as the Dalai Lama, Thich Nhat Hanh, Pema Lodron, Shunryu Suzuki) are deeply trained, authentic teachers with a full appreciation of Buddhist dharma and the ability to communicate it to a modern audience.
There will always be a range of views in Buddhism, but on the evidence, the heart of the teaching is alive and well.
The sangha brotherhood now includes nuns, despite the Buddhas reticence. It might have been too modern for him.
The far shore beckons. The means of travel have been logged.
Engage.
pliant, malleable, steady, and attained to imperturbability,
he directs & inclines it to knowledge of the recollection of past lives.
He recollects his manifold past lives, i.e., one birth, two births, three births,
four, five, ten, twenty, thirty, forty, fifty, one hundred, one thousand, one hundred thousand,
many aeons of cosmic contraction, many aeons of cosmic expansion,
many aeons of cosmic contraction & expansion, [recollecting],
'There I had such a name, belonged to such a clan, had such an appearance. Such was my food, such my experience of pleasure & pain, such the end of my life. Passing away from that state, I re-arose there. There too I had such a name, belonged to such a clan, had such an appearance. Such was my food, such my experience of pleasure & pain, such the end of my life. Passing away from that state, I re-arose here.'
Thus he recollects his manifold past lives in their modes & details.
Just as if a man were to go from his home village to another village, and then from that village to yet another village, and then from that village back to his home village. The thought would occur to him, 'I went from my home village to that village over there. There I stood in such a way, sat in such a way, talked in such a way, and remained silent in such a way. From that village I went to that village over there, and there I stood in such a way, sat in such a way, talked in such a way, and remained silent in such a way. From that village I came back home."
DN 12, Lohicca Sutta
Old Buddhism is nonsense and new Buddhism is nonsense.
When Buddha awoke in Sid, it was modern.
Splitting the Sangha over petty differences is nonsense.
It's a bit like watching a dog chase its tail.
"Stephen and Martine Batchelor are Buddhist teachers and authors, who live in South West France and conduct meditation retreats and seminars worldwide. They both trained as monastics for ten years in traditional Buddhist centers in Asia, and now present a lay and secular approach to Buddhist practice, largely based on the early teachings of the Buddha as found in the Pali Canon." (from him website)
It's funny that you say "cherry pick" because throughout this entire thread you have cherry-picked Steven Batchelor as somehow representative of all modern Buddhists, when clearly, he is not.
But the important question is not Batchelor's particular view of Buddhism. The question is why do you CARE so much? It seems like he's personally offended you because he doesn't have exactly the same take on Buddhism as you. How do you cope with people who are (shock, horror!) Christian or Muslim?
Sometimes you need opposing hands to make a clap. Sometimes (more often than not) we ascribe our own qualities on others. Buddhism all welcome? Yes.
I think there is a lot of Buddhism in Jesus’ simile of the Good Samaritan. An opposite example – in my mind - is Yasutani Roshi: a man with perfect understanding of Zen; but who in spite of that supported the brutal Japanese military regime and who apparantly hated Jews. This raises a question about what enlightenment is: How far am I off topic now?
Not so far. The point is I don’t really care what Batchelor or @Songhill believe or not. Our religious ideas are in our monkey-minds and the Dharma is in our hearts. The way we express it can be hugely different on an intellectual level.
But gold is tested in fire.
Humph, I wish dolpins were mindful, then they might stop barging into me...
Peeved Porpoise
I don't know how much can be said of Batchelor's beliefs, because it seems to me he is more focused on anti-beliefs. He's not saying, "It's okay to not believe in rebirth," but "You shouldn't believe in rebirth."
And he's not just saying it straightforwardly, which would be troubling on its own, but with the further suggestion that those who believe in rebirth are backwards and unmodern.
In this interview, for example, he says:
"In other words, there appears, in the Buddhist community, to be a fault line that demarcates two quite different camps. One, of what one might call the conservatives or the traditionalists who can’t quite imagine how you could have Buddhism without the doctrine of rebirth. And another camp, which would include, obviously, people like myself, who I would maybe portray as more liberal, more secular in orientation, who have exactly the opposite problem—mainly, they cannot conceive of a Buddhist practice or at least an intelligible Buddhist practice, having to incorporate what looks to them, but looks to me, like an antiquated, pre-modern belief."
There's no question - he's implying that if you believe in rebirth, you are non-liberal, antiquated, and pre-modern.
How about implying instead that those of us who accept rebirth have come to that belief after liberal-minded, very modern and dedicated study? How does Batchelor know I'm merely a traditionalist caveman, as opposed to the reality that I've studied the issue and come to my own conclusions, just as he has studied the issue and come to his?
Worse, he's divided us into 'camps' - I didn't know people at various points in their Buddhist study were in opposing 'camps' depending on what they've studied and what conclusions we've drawn. I didn't realize I was in the 'traditionalist camp' merely for taking the Buddha's detailed descriptions of rebirth seriously, then studying various Tibetan elaborations on that theme, and coming to the conclusion that rebirth, to me personally, makes sense.
What about a camp for those of us who believe in rebirth but don't mind at all if others don't?
I find this paragraph such an interesting example of what I see as Batchelor's pretzel-like pathos - whether he intends that pathos to alter my opinion, or whether he really is just revealing his inner thoughts.
How can meditating on the suffering of beings lead one to dispassion? In fact it's that very suffering which is so poignant that I am compelled without reservation to want (albeit ineptly) to achieve liberation and be infinitely more able to relieve suffering. Nowhere in my Buddhist studies have I been told to be dispassionate; equanimity is not dispassion.
I get the feeling I'm being told I am cold and uncaring if I don't just drop the future plans and appreciate life's poignant beauty right now. But I don't deny the beauty of living beings at all, I just feel it would be incredibly beautiful to end their suffering.
The main difference between myself and Batchelor it seems is that while I want (failing all the time) to be passionately caring towards beings in this life, I also want to be that way in future lives. Why does this mean I don't have compassion now? If I didn't have compassion now, I couldn't possibly give a hoot about having it in the future.
I realize he may just simply believe I'm dumb to work for a personal future he believes doesn't exist. I just don't get why he wants so badly to project onto me the thought that I, the pre-Batchelor Buddhist, by virtue of my archaic belief in a future life, don't care about beings in this life.
I think it is like "dispassion for the flesh" and maybe some other things.
It's ok to have a hard time accepting certain concepts -- when it comes to religion, I wrestle with things constantly. However, I think it's a mistake to dismiss people and ideas out of hand. It's possible to question and not go into a religious/philosophical practice blindly and yet still keep an open mind. The Us vs Them mindset is baggage no one needs foisted on them.
Don't read Stephen Batchelor or The Zennist
Padmasambhavaa said of this Mind that it has existed from the very beginning, but we have not recognized it. Even though "mind" is esteemed and discussed it is either not understood or wrongly understood. In fine, few directly perceive the Clear Light.
But the sky doesn't go anywhere because we don't look at it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological_projection
Maybe I can develop a 'strong' opinion about something or somone . . . or maybe not . . .