Tsung-mi and the Sinification of Buddhism

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Tsung-mi and the Sinification of Buddhism
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This study of Tsung-mi is part of the Studies in East Asian Buddhism series. Author Peter Gregory makes extensive use of Japanese secondary sources, which complements his work on the complex Chinese materials that form the basis of the study. (Source: University of Hawai'i Press)

Citation Gregory, Peter N. Tsung-mi and the Sinification of Buddhism. Kuroda Studies in East Asian Buddhism 16. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2002. First Published 1991 by Princeton University Press.


  • Acknowledgmentsxi
  • Abbreviationsxiii

  • CHAPTER ONE
  • Introduction3

PART ONE: Tsung-mi's Life
  • CHAPTER TWO
  • A Biography of Tsung-mi27
    • Classical Background (780–804)28
    • Ch'an Training and the Scripture of Perfect Enlightenment (804–810)33
    • Ch'eng-kuan and Hua-yen (810–816)58
    • Early Scholarship (816–828)68
    • Literati Connections (828–835)73
    • The Sweet Dew Incident (835)85
    • Later Years and Death (835–841)88

PART TWO: Doctrinal Classification
  • CHAPTER THREE
  • Doctrinal Classification93
    • The Hermeneutical Problem in Buddhism93
    • The Chinese Context104
  • CHAPTER FOUR
  • Doctrinal Classification in the Hua-yen Tradition115
    • Chih-yen's Classification Schemes117
    • Fa-tsang's Classification Scheme127
    • Tsung-mi's Classification Scheme134
  • CHAPTER FIVE
  • The Sudden Teaching136
    • The Sudden Teaching According to Fa-tsang137
    • The Problematical Nature of the Sudden Teaching142
    • The Sudden Teaching and Ch'an144
    • The Sudden Teaching in Tsung-mi's Thought146
  • CHAPTER SIX
  • The Perfect Teaching154
    • The Samādhi of Oceanic Reflection154
    • Two Paradigms157
    • The Shift from Shih-shih wu-ai to Li-shih wu-ai162
    • The Teaching that Reveals the Nature165
    • The Scripture of Perfect Enlightenment167

PART THREE: The Ground of Practice
  • CHAPTER SEVEN
  • A Cosmogonic Map for Buddhist Practice173
    • The Five Stages of Phenomenal Evolution173
    • Nature Origination and Conditioned Origination187
    • Sudden Enlightenment Followed by Gradual Cultivation192
    • Tsung-mi's Ten-Stage Model196
  • CHAPTER EIGHT
  • The Role of Emptiness206
    • A Cosmogony-Derived P'an-chiao206
    • Tsung-mi's Theory of Religious Language209
    • The Meaning of Awareness216
    • The Tathāgatagarbha Critique of Emptiness218
  • CHAPTER NINE
  • Tsung-mi's Critique of Ch'an224
    • Ch'an and the Teachings224
    • Critique of the Different Types of Ch'an230
    • Historical Context244

PART FOUR: The Broader Intellectual Tradition CHAPTER TEN Confucianism and Taoism in Tsung-mi's Thought 255 Tsung-mi's Extension of P'an-chiao to the Two Teachings 256 Tsung-mi's Critique of Confucianism and Taoism 261 The Teaching of Men and Gods 279 Tsung-mi's Synthesis of Confucianism and Taoism 285 Tsung-mi's Intellectual Personality 293

CHAPTER ELEVEN Tsung-mi and Neo-Confucianism 295 Chu Hsi's Critique of the Buddhist Understanding of Nature 297

A Common Problematic 304 The Problem of Predication 306 The Structural Parallels 309

APPENDIX I A Note on Biographical Sources 313 APPENDIX II A Note on Tsung-mi 's Writings 315 Glossary 327 Bibliography 335 Index 355