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| |ArticleLayout=Academic Layout | | |ArticleLayout=Academic Layout |
| |ArticleTitle=On the rDzogs chen Distinction between Mind (sems) Primordial Knowing (ye shes): Clarifications and Transcendental Arguments | | |ArticleTitle=On the rDzogs chen Distinction between Mind (sems) Primordial Knowing (ye shes): Clarifications and Transcendental Arguments |
| |AuthorPage=Higgins, D. | | |AuthorPage=People/Higgins, D. |
| |PubDate=2016 | | |PubDate=2016 |
| |ArticleSummary=The idea that Buddhist teachings ought to be applied to one's life situation in order to discover their true validity and efficacy has been a salient feature of Buddhism since its inception. It is in light of this normative constraint that Buddhism has traditionally called itself a path (''mārga'')<ref>The Tibetan ''lam'' renders a variety of Sanskrit terms including ''mārga'' (Pali: ''magga''), ''patha'', ''advan'', ''paddhati, ''pratipat/pratipad''(a), and ''vartanī, terms that all mean way, path, road, course, or journey depending on context. ''Patha'' is actually an old Indo-European term, cognate to the English "path," that is found also in the Zoroastrian ''Avesta''. These are all given in the Mahāvyutpatti'' s.v. ''lam''. According to the ''sGra sbyor bam po gnyis'' no. 223 (Ishikawa: 77–78), | | |ArticleSummary=The idea that Buddhist teachings ought to be applied to one's life situation in order to discover their true validity and efficacy has been a salient feature of Buddhism since its inception. It is in light of this normative constraint that Buddhism has traditionally called itself a path (''mārga'')<ref>The Tibetan ''lam'' renders a variety of Sanskrit terms including ''mārga'' (Pali: ''magga''), ''patha'', ''advan'', ''paddhati, ''pratipat/pratipad''(a), and ''vartanī, terms that all mean way, path, road, course, or journey depending on context. ''Patha'' is actually an old Indo-European term, cognate to the English "path," that is found also in the Zoroastrian ''Avesta''. These are all given in the Mahāvyutpatti'' s.v. ''lam''. According to the ''sGra sbyor bam po gnyis'' no. 223 (Ishikawa: 77–78), |
| '"path' is so-named because by this path one seeks or is shown or perceives or attains cessation." ''lam des 'gog pa tshol ba'am mtshon pa'am dmigs pa 'am 'thob par 'gyur ba la bya ste lam zhes bya''.</ref> or, more accurately, a series of paths formulated to lead individuals of varying needs, abilities, and aspirations toward spiritual awakening (''bodhi''). The complex diversity of views and practices that developed from the time of the historical Buddha were based on two presuppositions: (1) that the Buddha's awakening was of the utmost soteriological significance and therefore to be regarded as the ultimate aim of all religio-philosophical inquiry and activity, and (2) that it was to be seen neither as fortuitous nor inexplicable but as a repeatable soteriological process, one that could be personally realized through particular modes of inquiry and praxis available to most (if not all) humans.<br> | | '"path' is so-named because by this path one seeks or is shown or perceives or attains cessation." ''lam des 'gog pa tshol ba'am mtshon pa'am dmigs pa 'am 'thob par 'gyur ba la bya ste lam zhes bya''.</ref> or, more accurately, a series of paths formulated to lead individuals of varying needs, abilities, and aspirations toward spiritual awakening (''bodhi''). The complex diversity of views and practices that developed from the time of the historical Buddha were based on two presuppositions: (1) that the Buddha's awakening was of the utmost soteriological significance and therefore to be regarded as the ultimate aim of all religio-philosophical inquiry and activity, and (2) that it was to be seen neither as fortuitous nor inexplicable but as a repeatable soteriological process, one that could be personally realized through particular modes of inquiry and praxis available to most (if not all) humans.<br> From this second assumption stemmed the idea that humans are predisposed to spiritual awakening, that they, in other words, have within them some germinal capacity (''bīja''), spiritual affiliation (''gotra''), element (''dhātu''), or quintessence (''garbha'') that is a condition of possibility of this awakening.<ref>The most exhaustive survey of ''tathāgatagarbha'' theories remains Seyfort Ruegg |
| From this second assumption stemmed the idea that humans are predisposed to spiritual awakening, that they, in other words, have within them some germinal capacity (''bīja''), spiritual affiliation (''gotra''), element (''dhātu''), or quintessence (''garbha'') that is a condition of possibility of this awakening.<ref>The most exhaustive survey of ''tathāgatagarbha'' theories remains Seyfort Ruegg | |
| 1969. For a comparative survey of Tibetan interpretations of ''tathāgatagarbha'' doctrine, see Klaus-Dieter Mathes, ''A Direct Path to the Buddha Within: Go Lotsawa's Mahāmudrā Interpretation of the Ratnagotravibhāga'' (Boston: Wisdom Publications, 2008), 25–129.</ref> Alongside these "buddha-nature" concepts developed a family of systematically related gnoseological ideas referring to an abiding, unconditioned (''asaṃskṛta'') mode of consciousness—variously termed the Mind of awakening (''bodhicitta''), naturally luminous Mind (''prakṛtiprabhāsvaracitta''), the nature of mind (''citta-dharmatā'')—that was identified with the condition of awakening itself, but also viewed as the tacit background whence dualistic mind, that is, the source of all error and obscuration, emerges. Central to this cluster of related ideas was the view that conditions of awakening and delusion are both located within the complex and heterogeneous structure of lived experience itself. In Indian Buddhism, this paradigm found its most detailed and influential expression in the hybridized Yogācāra-Tathāgatagarbha works of Maitreya, the Indian Buddhist Siddha literature and the Buddhist tantras.<br> | | 1969. For a comparative survey of Tibetan interpretations of ''tathāgatagarbha'' doctrine, see Klaus-Dieter Mathes, ''A Direct Path to the Buddha Within: Go Lotsawa's Mahāmudrā Interpretation of the Ratnagotravibhāga'' (Boston: Wisdom Publications, 2008), 25–129.</ref> Alongside these "buddha-nature" concepts developed a family of systematically related gnoseological ideas referring to an abiding, unconditioned (''asaṃskṛta'') mode of consciousness—variously termed the Mind of awakening (''bodhicitta''), naturally luminous Mind (''prakṛtiprabhāsvaracitta''), the nature of mind (''citta-dharmatā'')—that was identified with the condition of awakening itself, but also viewed as the tacit background whence dualistic mind, that is, the source of all error and obscuration, emerges. Central to this cluster of related ideas was the view that conditions of awakening and delusion are both located within the complex and heterogeneous structure of lived experience itself. In Indian Buddhism, this paradigm found its most detailed and influential expression in the hybridized Yogācāra-Tathāgatagarbha works of Maitreya, the Indian Buddhist Siddha literature and the Buddhist tantras.<br> |
| In light of the foregoing considerations, the doctrinal history of Buddhism may be regarded as an ongoing attempt to work out precisely what it was that made its founder a ''buddha'' or "awakened one" so that such knowledge could be systematically pursued by his followers. That this soteriological imperative has been central to Buddhist philosophical and psychological investigations from early on is discernible in the long history of attempts to clarify the defining features of consciousness that can be traced back to the systematic analyses of mind and mental factors (''citta-caitta'') presented in the ''Abhidhammapiṭaka'' of the Pali Canon. For, in investigating the nature and structure of consciousness, Buddhist scholars were above all concerned with articulating the conditions necessary for a sentient being (''sems can'') to become an awakened one, a being in whom (if we follow the Tibetan rendering of "buddha" as ''sangs rgyas'') all cognitive and affective obscurations have dissipated (''sangs'') so that inherent capacities for knowing and caring (''mkhyen brtse nus ldan'') can unfold (''rgyas'').<br> | | In light of the foregoing considerations, the doctrinal history of Buddhism may be regarded as an ongoing attempt to work out precisely what it was that made its founder a ''buddha'' or "awakened one" so that such knowledge could be systematically pursued by his followers. That this soteriological imperative has been central to Buddhist philosophical and psychological investigations from early on is discernible in the long history of attempts to clarify the defining features of consciousness that can be traced back to the systematic analyses of mind and mental factors (''citta-caitta'') presented in the ''Abhidhammapiṭaka'' of the Pali Canon. For, in investigating the nature and structure of consciousness, Buddhist scholars were above all concerned with articulating the conditions necessary for a sentient being (''sems can'') to become an awakened one, a being in whom (if we follow the Tibetan rendering of "buddha" as ''sangs rgyas'') all cognitive and affective obscurations have dissipated (''sangs'') so that inherent capacities for knowing and caring (''mkhyen brtse nus ldan'') can unfold (''rgyas'').<br> |
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| to abandon subject/object epistemologies, realist as well as antirealist, in a | | to abandon subject/object epistemologies, realist as well as antirealist, in a |
| manner comparable to attempts by Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, and Wittgenstein to overcome mediational epistemologies in Western philosophy.</ref> A noteworthy case in point is the absence of any systematic appraisal of rNying ma ("Ancient Ones") views on the nature of mind that traces their evolution and complex relationships with Indian Cittamātra, Madhyamaka, Pramāṇvāda, and Vajrayāna views. As a step toward at least defining the parameters of this crucial but neglected field of inquiry, this paper will consider some key arguments in support of the "mind/primordial knowing" (''sems/ye shes'') distinction adumbrated by rNying ma scholars in the classical period. Of particular interest are arguments that were used to justify and defend this distinction by the renowned fourteenth-century rNying ma thinker Klong chen rab 'byams pa in a number of his treatises, commentaries, and poetic works. In a wide range of doctrinal contexts, Klong chen pa will argue that the entire edifice of Buddhist doctrine becomes incoherent in theory and amiss in practice when one fails to recognize the primacy of a primordial mode of awareness and to unequivocally distinguish it from dualistic mind. This paper first examines in detail some of the arguments he employed to convince his audience of the acceptability of such a distinction in light of theoretical and practical drawbacks of not recognizing it. It then focuses on two types of transcendental argument (of the general form "for ''y'' to be possible ''x'' must be the case") that Klong chen pa repeatedly invokes to show that the mind/primordial knowing distinction was not only tacitly presupposed in Indian Buddhist soteriology but was, in fact, indispensable for making sense of the Buddhist path and goal-realization according to Buddhist doxastic norms. (Higgins, "On the rDzogs chen Distinction between Mind (''sems'') and Primordial Knowing (''ye shes''), 23–26) | | manner comparable to attempts by Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, and Wittgenstein to overcome mediational epistemologies in Western philosophy.</ref> A noteworthy case in point is the absence of any systematic appraisal of rNying ma ("Ancient Ones") views on the nature of mind that traces their evolution and complex relationships with Indian Cittamātra, Madhyamaka, Pramāṇvāda, and Vajrayāna views. As a step toward at least defining the parameters of this crucial but neglected field of inquiry, this paper will consider some key arguments in support of the "mind/primordial knowing" (''sems/ye shes'') distinction adumbrated by rNying ma scholars in the classical period. Of particular interest are arguments that were used to justify and defend this distinction by the renowned fourteenth-century rNying ma thinker Klong chen rab 'byams pa in a number of his treatises, commentaries, and poetic works. In a wide range of doctrinal contexts, Klong chen pa will argue that the entire edifice of Buddhist doctrine becomes incoherent in theory and amiss in practice when one fails to recognize the primacy of a primordial mode of awareness and to unequivocally distinguish it from dualistic mind. This paper first examines in detail some of the arguments he employed to convince his audience of the acceptability of such a distinction in light of theoretical and practical drawbacks of not recognizing it. It then focuses on two types of transcendental argument (of the general form "for ''y'' to be possible ''x'' must be the case") that Klong chen pa repeatedly invokes to show that the mind/primordial knowing distinction was not only tacitly presupposed in Indian Buddhist soteriology but was, in fact, indispensable for making sense of the Buddhist path and goal-realization according to Buddhist doxastic norms. (Higgins, "On the rDzogs chen Distinction between Mind (''sems'') and Primordial Knowing (''ye shes''), 23–26) |
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