Luminous Heart

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<blockquote>It should be made clear from the outset then that the Yogācāra school is far more complex in its understanding of the nature of experience than is usually acknowledged.<ref>King 1994, 663.</ref></blockquote>
 
<blockquote>It should be made clear from the outset then that the Yogācāra school is far more complex in its understanding of the nature of experience than is usually acknowledged.<ref>King 1994, 663.</ref></blockquote>
 
Lusthaus elaborates:
 
Lusthaus elaborates:
<blockquote>Buddhism is not a psychologism. Even Yogācāra, which does propose to reduce karma and the entirety of the triple world to cognitive factors, is not a psychologism. This is because the point of Buddhist analysis is not the reification of a mental structure or theory of mind, but its erasure. Vasubandhu highlights the closure of cognitive horizons not because such a closure is either desirable or unalterable, but because the closure can only be opened once its all-encompassing complexity and ubiquity is understood and recognized. Yogācāra uses psychological arguments to overcome psychological closure, not to enhance it. </blockquote>
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<blockquote>Buddhism is not a psychologism. Even Yogācāra, which does propose to reduce karma and the entirety of the triple world to cognitive factors, is not a psychologism. This is because the point of Buddhist analysis is not the reification of a mental structure or theory of mind, but its erasure. Vasubandhu highlights the closure of cognitive horizons not because such a closure is either desirable or unalterable, but because the closure can only be opened once its all-encompassing complexity and ubiquity is understood and recognized. Yogācāra uses psychological arguments to overcome psychological closure, not to enhance it.<ref>Lusthaus 2002, 178.</ref> </blockquote>
 
The Yogācāras were also not immune or oblivious to notions such as "emptiness," "lack of nature," and "identitylessness" (which are often wrongly considered to belong solely and uniquely to Madhyamaka), but included and greatly used them as parts of their own explanations too. Specifically, hermeneutic frameworks such as the three natures, the threefold lack of nature, and the three emptinesses (see below) are not at all presented in order to contradict the prajñāpāramitā sūtras or Nāgārjuna, but equally serve to explain emptiness, just within a further developed hermeneutical system. As King says:
 
The Yogācāras were also not immune or oblivious to notions such as "emptiness," "lack of nature," and "identitylessness" (which are often wrongly considered to belong solely and uniquely to Madhyamaka), but included and greatly used them as parts of their own explanations too. Specifically, hermeneutic frameworks such as the three natures, the threefold lack of nature, and the three emptinesses (see below) are not at all presented in order to contradict the prajñāpāramitā sūtras or Nāgārjuna, but equally serve to explain emptiness, just within a further developed hermeneutical system. As King says:
<blockquote>As a Mahāyāna school, the Yogācāra developed as a response to the insights of those same [prajñāpāramitā] sūtras. Under such circumstances, it would have been difficult indeed to have ignored the centrality of the notion of ''śūnyatā'' to these texts. In fact, the idea that the early classical Yogācāra of Asaṅga and Vasubandhu found any difficulty whatsoever in embracing the basic insights of the Madhyamaka school disregards both the historical and textual evidence, which, on the contrary, displays a spirit of underlying continuity and acceptance.</blockquote>
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<blockquote>As a Mahāyāna school, the Yogācāra developed as a response to the insights of those same [prajñāpāramitā] sūtras. Under such circumstances, it would have been difficult indeed to have ignored the centrality of the notion of ''śūnyatā'' to these texts. In fact, the idea that the early classical Yogācāra of Asaṅga and Vasubandhu found any difficulty whatsoever in embracing the basic insights of the Madhyamaka school disregards both the historical and textual evidence, which, on the contrary, displays a spirit of underlying continuity and acceptance.<ref>King 1994, 662.</ref></blockquote>
However, in contrast to the Mādhyamikas' reluctance to speak about the specifics of seeming reality and the Buddhist path of purifying the deluded mind (or mind at all), the Yogācāra system, besides presenting sophisticated analyses of ultimate reality, also elaborates on how the deluded mind operates, how it can make the transition to the unmistaken wisdom that sees this mind's own ultimate nature, and what the characteristics and the fruition of this wisdom are. Thus, Yogācāra not only investigates the definitive meaning of the scriptures in a nonreifying manner, but also what happens experientially in the minds of those who study and practice this meaning. At the same time, it provides broader contextualizing comments on the sūtras and addresses typical misconceptions about emptiness and Madhyamaka, such as it being pure nihilism (which was a very common concern even among Buddhists since the time of Nāgārjuna). Consequently, one could even argue that the Yogācāra system is not only not inferior to the Madhyamaka approach, but exhibits a much more encompassing outlook on human experience and the soteriologicalD D issues of the Buddhist path than the almost exclusively one-way deconstructive approach of the Mādhyamikas. This seems to have occurred already to some people in India, as the following verse attributed to the audience of the seven-year debate between Candragomī and Candrakīrti illustrates.
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However, in contrast to the Mādhyamikas' reluctance to speak about the specifics of seeming reality and the Buddhist path of purifying the deluded mind (or mind at all), the Yogācāra system, besides presenting sophisticated analyses of ultimate reality, also elaborates on how the deluded mind operates, how it can make the transition to the unmistaken wisdom that sees this mind's own ultimate nature, and what the characteristics and the fruition of this wisdom are. Thus, Yogācāra not only investigates the definitive meaning of the scriptures in a nonreifying manner, but also what happens experientially in the minds of those who study and practice this meaning. At the same time, it provides broader contextualizing comments on the sūtras and addresses typical misconceptions about emptiness and Madhyamaka, such as it being pure nihilism (which was a very common concern even among Buddhists since the time of Nāgārjuna). Consequently, one could even argue that the Yogācāra system is not only not inferior to the Madhyamaka approach, but exhibits a much more encompassing outlook on human experience and the soteriological<ref>Note that, in pre-Christian Greek etymology, ''soter'' means "healer"―which matches well with the frequent description of the Buddha as the great physician for mental afflictions.</ref> issues of the Buddhist path than the almost exclusively one-way deconstructive approach of the Mādhyamikas. This seems to have occurred already to some people in India, as the following verse attributed to the audience of the seven-year debate between Candragomī and Candrakīrti illustrates.
<blockquote>Ah, the treatises of noble Nāgārjuna<br>Are medicine for some and poison for others.<br>The treatises of Ajita and noble Asaṅga<br>Are nectar for all people. </blockquote>
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<blockquote>Ah, the treatises of noble Nāgārjuna<br>Are medicine for some and poison for others.<br>The treatises of Ajita<ref>"The invincible" (an epithet of Maitreya).</ref> and noble Asaṅga<br>Are nectar for all people.<ref>Tāranātha 1980, 203.</ref> </blockquote>
 
King elaborates:
 
King elaborates:
<blockquote>Thus, we find in the Yogācāra, as in the Madhyamaka school, a pointed refusal to become involved in an ontological debate. It is interesting that this type of analysis is something of a bridge-building exercise between what might be seen as an undue emphasis upon negative language (via negativa) in the exposition of emptiness by (some?) Mādhyamikas on the one hand, and the overarching realism (via positiva) of the Abhidharma schools on the other hand. As such, the Yogācāra movement can be seen as a "re-forming" of the Middle Path. This is not to say that such a reformation is necessarily out of step with the understanding of ''śūnyatā'' as systematized in the ''śāstras'' of Nāgārjuna (who is clearly neither a nihilist nor a realist in the accepted senses of the terms), but merely that, in its emphasis upon the "given" of meditative and so-called "normative" perception, the Yogācāra aim is to establish the appropriate parameters of linguistic usage and a rigorous logic for the establishment of the Mahāyāna position on experientially verifiable grounds.</blockquote>
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<blockquote>Thus, we find in the Yogācāra, as in the Madhyamaka school, a pointed refusal to become involved in an ontological debate. It is interesting that this type of analysis is something of a bridge-building exercise between what might be seen as an undue emphasis upon negative language (via negativa) in the exposition of emptiness by (some?) Mādhyamikas on the one hand, and the overarching realism (via positiva) of the Abhidharma schools on the other hand. As such, the Yogācāra movement can be seen as a "re-forming" of the Middle Path. This is not to say that such a reformation is necessarily out of step with the understanding of ''śūnyatā'' as systematized in the ''śāstras'' of Nāgārjuna (who is clearly neither a nihilist nor a realist in the accepted senses of the terms), but merely that, in its emphasis upon the "given" of meditative and so-called "normative" perception, the Yogācāra aim is to establish the appropriate parameters of linguistic usage and a rigorous logic for the establishment of the Mahāyāna position on experientially verifiable grounds.<ref>King 1994, 670.</ref></blockquote>
 
In addition, quite a number of Tibetan masters emphasize that Yogācāra (whether it is called that way or ''shentong'') is more in harmony with the vajrayāna. For example, Śākya Chogden (1428–1507) says:
 
In addition, quite a number of Tibetan masters emphasize that Yogācāra (whether it is called that way or ''shentong'') is more in harmony with the vajrayāna. For example, Śākya Chogden (1428–1507) says:
<blockquote>As for the reasonings that ascertain all phenomena as lacking a nature, the other one [that is, Niḥsvabhāvavāda] is vaster, while the [description of] the definitive meaning of what is to be experienced through meditation is more profound in this system. Because its explanation of nothing but nondual wisdom as what is to be experienced as a result of meditation very greatly accords with the vajrayāna [systems], this [latter] system is more profound.</blockquote>
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<blockquote>As for the reasonings that ascertain all phenomena as lacking a nature, the other one [that is, Niḥsvabhāvavāda] is vaster, while the [description of] the definitive meaning of what is to be experienced through meditation is more profound in this system. Because its explanation of nothing but nondual wisdom as what is to be experienced as a result of meditation very greatly accords with the vajrayāna [systems], this [latter] system is more profound.<ref>''Tshad ma'i bstan bcos kyi shing rta'i srol rnams ji ltar 'byung ba'i tshul gtam du bya ba nyin mor byed pa'i snang bas dpyod ldan mtha' dag dga' bar byed pa'' (Śākya mchog ldan 1988a, vol. dza, p. 95).</ref></blockquote>
 
and
 
and
<blockquote>In the uncommon texts of mantra,<br>There is no explanation whatsoever<br>About what is to be experienced through the view<br>That is not in accord with the texts of Maitreya.<br>. . .<br>The Maitreya dharmas accord with the mantra[yāna],<br>Because they assert solely nondual wisdom<br>As what is to be realized after [all] phenomena<br>In terms of apprehender and apprehended have been realized to be empty.</blockquote>
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<blockquote>In the uncommon texts of mantra,<br>There is no explanation whatsoever<br>About what is to be experienced through the view<br>That is not in accord with the texts of Maitreya.<ref>''Sngags la ’jug pa’i mun pa sel bar byed pa’i chos kyi sgron me gzhung tshan bcu bdun pa'' (ibid., vol. pa, p. 230).</ref><br>. . .<br>The Maitreya dharmas accord with the mantra[yāna],<br>Because they assert solely nondual wisdom<br>As what is to be realized after [all] phenomena<br>In terms of apprehender and apprehended have been realized to be empty.</blockquote>
 
For all these reasons, let alone the Buddhist perspective proper, Yogācāra presentations of mental processes also have great potential to significantly contribute to the modern cognitive sciences. Nguyen suggests:
 
For all these reasons, let alone the Buddhist perspective proper, Yogācāra presentations of mental processes also have great potential to significantly contribute to the modern cognitive sciences. Nguyen suggests:
<blockquote>In modern studies of comparative philosophy and religion, Yogācāra thought, once adequately understood, should provoke major interest, given its startling parallels with the most modern developments in Western thought about cognition and epistemology. Just as the modern researchers now acknowledge that the modern world has much to learn from the medical lore of traditional cultures, the same could be said of classical Buddhist philosophical pyschology.</blockquote>
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<blockquote>In modern studies of comparative philosophy and religion, Yogācāra thought, once adequately understood, should provoke major interest, given its startling parallels with the most modern developments in Western thought about cognition and epistemology. Just as the modern researchers now acknowledge that the modern world has much to learn from the medical lore of traditional cultures, the same could be said of classical Buddhist philosophical pyschology.<ref>Nguyen 1990, 320.</ref></blockquote>
 
In sum, the Yogācāra tradition considered itself as a continuation of all the preceding developments in Buddhism and not as a radical departure from them or even as a distinct new school per se. To retain what was regarded as useful in other schools of Buddhism did not mean to be ignorant of the pervasive Madhyamaka cautions against reifications of any kind. Thus, the vast range of Yogācāra writings represents a digest of virtually everything that previous Buddhist masters had developed, including intricate abhidharma analyses, charting the grounds of the many levels of the paths in the three yānas, subtle descriptions of meditative processes, presentations of epistemology and reasoning, explorations of mind and its functions in both its ignorant and enlightened modes, and commentaries on major mahāyāna sūtras. Thus, any linear or one-dimensional presentation of this Buddhist school seems not only misguided, but highly inconsiderate, due to the rich variety of this school’s sources and explanatory models (in itself, this variety and its development are nice examples of key Yogācāra notions, which usually describe processes rather than states or things). Nevertheless, a brief overview, in the Yogācāra School's own terms, of the main topics addressed in the following texts by the Third Karmapa is indispensable to demonstrate how firmly he is steeped in the view and explanations of this school.
 
In sum, the Yogācāra tradition considered itself as a continuation of all the preceding developments in Buddhism and not as a radical departure from them or even as a distinct new school per se. To retain what was regarded as useful in other schools of Buddhism did not mean to be ignorant of the pervasive Madhyamaka cautions against reifications of any kind. Thus, the vast range of Yogācāra writings represents a digest of virtually everything that previous Buddhist masters had developed, including intricate abhidharma analyses, charting the grounds of the many levels of the paths in the three yānas, subtle descriptions of meditative processes, presentations of epistemology and reasoning, explorations of mind and its functions in both its ignorant and enlightened modes, and commentaries on major mahāyāna sūtras. Thus, any linear or one-dimensional presentation of this Buddhist school seems not only misguided, but highly inconsiderate, due to the rich variety of this school’s sources and explanatory models (in itself, this variety and its development are nice examples of key Yogācāra notions, which usually describe processes rather than states or things). Nevertheless, a brief overview, in the Yogācāra School's own terms, of the main topics addressed in the following texts by the Third Karmapa is indispensable to demonstrate how firmly he is steeped in the view and explanations of this school.
  
  
====The major Yogācāra masters and their works====
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====The Major Yogācāra Masters and Their Works====
  
Let's begin with the Indian masters (in roughly chronological order) and their major texts that are at the core of the Yogācāra tradition. First and foremost, we have Maitreya and his five seminal works, which are the foundations for all subsequent Yogācāra scriptures:
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Let's begin with the Indian masters (in roughly chronological order) and their major texts<ref>In the following, I will not deal with all the many questions of whether the authors listed here were actual historical persons, whether they actually authored these texts, and when exactly they lived. Also, the texts listed include only the typical Yogācāra works by these authors, though many of them also wrote on other Buddhist topics or composed commentaries on several sūtras (such as the prajñāpāramitā sūtras). The main point here is to roughly identify the basic scriptural corpus of Yogācāra treatises, no matter by whom they were composed or when.</ref> that are at the core of the Yogācāra tradition. First and foremost, we have Maitreya and his five seminal works, which are the foundations for all subsequent Yogācāra scriptures:
*''Abhisamayālaṃkāra''  
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*''Abhisamayālaṃkāra''<ref>Though this text is primarily a summary of the prajñāpāramitā sūtras, as has been pointed out repeatedly by modern scholars, it does so by mapping a number of classical Yogācāra templates onto these sūtras (see my forthcoming translation of the ''Abhisamayālaṃkāra'' and several of its Tibetan commentaries).</ref>
*''Mahāyānasūtrālaṃkāra''
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*''Mahāyānasūtrālaṃkāra''<ref>Note that the structure (though not always the contents) of the ''Mahāyānasūtrālaṃkāra'' corresponds to the  ''Bodhisattvabhūmi'' in the ''Yogācārabhūmi'' and that its ninth chapter on buddhahood is largely based on the ''Buddhabhūmisūtra''  (verses IX.56–59 and 82–85 are directly from this sūtra). Both Sthiramati's and Asvabhāva's commentaries on the  ''Mahāyānasūtrālaṃkāra'' extensively quote and refer to the ''Buddhabhūmisūtra'' (also Pawo Rinpoché's discussion of buddhahood  in appendix 1 relies primarily on these two texts).</ref>
 
*''Madhyāntavibhāga''
 
*''Madhyāntavibhāga''
 
*''Dharmadharmatāvibhāga''
 
*''Dharmadharmatāvibhāga''
*''Ratnagotravibhāga'' (''Uttaratantra'')
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*''Ratnagotravibhāga'' (''Uttaratantra'')<ref>Certain Western and Japanese scholars attempt to draw a sharp distinction between the Yogācāra tradition and any  scriptures on buddha nature, such as the ''Uttaratantra'', even speaking of different schools. Indeed, the ''Uttaratantra''  is exclusively devoted to, and gives the most detailed presentation of, buddha nature, while not mentioning typical  Yogācāra notions such as the three natures or the eight consciousnesses. On the other hand, there is only one verse  in the other four works attributed to Maitreya (''Mahāyānasūtrālaṃkāra'' IX.37) that mentions ''tathāgatagarbha'', and  it is absent in most of the works of Asaṅga (except for the ''Ratnagotravibhāgavyākhyā''), Vasubandhu, and other major  Yogācāras (for the consistent comments of Vasubandhu, Sthiramati, and Asvabhāva on ''tathāgatagarbha'' as suchness or  identitylessness being the same in all phenomena/beings, see below). However, the equivalent notions such as mind's  natural luminosity being obscured only by adventitious stains are rather common themes in Yogācāra texts (for the  related topic of ''agotraka''―"those who lack the disposition"―see below). As Keenan (1982, 15) remarks, "This does not mean  that ''tathāgatagarbha'' is to be reckoned as a defined academic school in contrast to Mādhyamika and Yogācāra. As Takasaki  has pointed out, such an evaluation was a peculiarity of Chinese Buddhism and is not found in either India or Tibet.  This is further borne out by the complete lack of polemic against ''tathāgatagarbha'' teachings in Yogācāra works. . . .  The foregoing textual data seem to suggest that the initial pre-Asaṅgan Yogācāra thinkers represent a theoretical  development from within the same circles that produced the ''tathāgatagarbha'' teachings. They appear to have taken their  initial insights from the notion of the pure mind, as in the ''Mahāyānasūtrālaṃkāra''" (see its verses IX.37 and  XIII.18–19 below).</ref>
 
Nāgamitra (third/fourth century?) composed a ''Kāyatrayāvatāramukha'', which discusses dharmakāya, sambhogakāya, and nirmāṇakāya in terms of the three natures.
 
Nāgamitra (third/fourth century?) composed a ''Kāyatrayāvatāramukha'', which discusses dharmakāya, sambhogakāya, and nirmāṇakāya in terms of the three natures.
  
 
Asaṅga and Vasubandhu (both fourth century CE) were the two earliest commentators on the five texts by Maitreya and also composed many texts of their own. The following main Yogācāra texts are attributed to Asaṅga:
 
Asaṅga and Vasubandhu (both fourth century CE) were the two earliest commentators on the five texts by Maitreya and also composed many texts of their own. The following main Yogācāra texts are attributed to Asaṅga:
 
*''Saṃdhinirmocanasūtravyākhyāna'' (commentary)
 
*''Saṃdhinirmocanasūtravyākhyāna'' (commentary)
*''Ratnagotravibhāgavyākhyā'' (commentary)
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*''Ratnagotravibhāgavyākhyā'' (commentary)<ref>Besides this text, the only other two known Indian "commentaries" on the ''Uttaratantra'' are Vairocanarakṣita's (eleventh century) very brief ''Mahāyānottaratantraṭippaṇī'' (eight folios) and Sajjana's (eleventh/twelfth century) ''Mahāyānottaratantraśāstropadeśa'' (a summary in thirty-seven verses).</ref>
 
*''Yogācārabhūmi'' (consisting of the ''Bahubhūmivastu'', ''Viniścayasaṃgrahaṇī'', ''Vivaraṇasaṃgrahaṇī'', ''Paryāyasaṃgrahaṇī'', and ''Vastusaṃgrahaṇī'')
 
*''Yogācārabhūmi'' (consisting of the ''Bahubhūmivastu'', ''Viniścayasaṃgrahaṇī'', ''Vivaraṇasaṃgrahaṇī'', ''Paryāyasaṃgrahaṇī'', and ''Vastusaṃgrahaṇī'')
 
*''Abhidharmasamucchaya''
 
*''Abhidharmasamucchaya''
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*''Madhyāntavibhāgabhāṣya''
 
*''Madhyāntavibhāgabhāṣya''
 
*''Dharmadharmatāvibhāgavṛtti''
 
*''Dharmadharmatāvibhāgavṛtti''
*''Mahāyānasaṃgrahabhāṣya''
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*''Mahāyānasaṃgrahabhāṣya''<ref>The ''Tengyur'' also contains an anonymous commentary on the first chapter of the ''Mahāyānasaṃgraha'', called ''Vivṛtagūḍhārthapiṇḍavyākhyā'' (attributed by some to Vasubandhu).</ref>
 
*''Viṃśatikākārikā''
 
*''Viṃśatikākārikā''
 
*''Triṃśikākārikā''
 
*''Triṃśikākārikā''

Revision as of 13:28, 27 October 2020

Book
Book

This superb collection of writings on buddha nature by the Third Karmapa Rangjung Dorje (1284–1339) focuses on the transition from ordinary deluded consciousness to enlightened wisdom, the characteristics of buddhahood, and a buddha’s enlightened activity. Most of these materials have never been translated comprehensively. The Third Karmapa’s unique and well-balanced view synthesizes Yogācāra, Madhyamaka, and the classical teachings on buddha nature. Rangjung Dorje not only shows that these teachings do not contradict each other but also that they supplement each other and share the same essential points in terms of the ultimate nature of mind and all phenomena. His fusion is remarkable because it clearly builds on Indian predecessors and precedes the later often highly charged debates in Tibet about the views of Rangtong ("self-empty") and Shentong ("other-empty"). Although Rangjung Dorje is widely regarded as one of the major proponents of the Tibetan Shentong tradition (some even consider him its founder), this book shows how his views differ from the Shentong tradition as understood by Dölpopa, Tāranātha, and the First Jamgön Kongtrul. The Third Karmapa’s view is more accurately described as one in which the two categories of rangtong and shentong are not regarded as mutually exclusive but are combined in a creative synthesis. For those practicing the sūtrayāna and the vajrayāna in the Kagyü tradition, what these texts describe can be transformed into living experience. (Source: Shambhala Publications)

Citation Brunnhölzl, Karl, trans. Luminous Heart: The Third Karmapa on Consciousness, Wisdom, and Buddha Nature. Nitartha Institute Series. Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications, 2009.