Buddhist temple in France will be Europe’s largest
Buddhist temple in France will be Europe’s largest |
- Buddhist temple in France will be Europe’s largest
- The rise of “Dubsutra”?
- Review: Meditation as Philosophy, by Mark Siderits
- Take Shape - Baby Buddha
- Powdery white substance found ahead of Dalai Lama’s Belgium visit
- Human rights group criticizes detention of Cambodian Buddhist monk
- Central Tibetan Administration’s Department of Religion and Culture approves geshema degrees for nuns
- From the May 2012 Shambhala Sun magazine: Relief from “A Complicated Burden”
Buddhist temple in France will be Europe’s largest Posted: 25 May 2012 09:00 AM PDT France will soon be home to Europe's largest Buddhist temple, financed largely by Taiwan's Fo Guang Shan and donors. The $ 20 million temple will be one in a complex of religious buildings that will include a church, synagogue and mosque, all set in an eco-friendly environment. The temple, which is set to open June 22, is located in Bussy-Saint-Georges near Paris. An architect, Polly Rolland, said that the purpose of this site is more cultural than religious. This website (in French) has more photos and artist renderings. Read More @ Source |
Posted: 25 May 2012 08:00 AM PDT How's this for a headline: "Music Group Fronted by Japanese Monks Bring Buddhist Sutra to the Dance Club, Wear Awesome Helmets." Yep, it's real, and this item from Japanese/Asian news source Rocket News 24 profiles the awesome-helmet- wearing act in question, Tariki Echo. Formed by two aspiring Jodo Shinshu priests, the group released their first album, Buddha Sound, on March 21. Check them out and hear them online here. Read More @ Source |
Review: Meditation as Philosophy, by Mark Siderits Posted: 25 May 2012 08:00 AM PDT Buddhism as Philosophy: An Introduction is an interesting book. Its author, Mark Siderits, is Professor of Philosophy at Seoul National University, and he has brought his professional philosophical skills to good use in this work. Taking the three main philosophical areas of philosophy, ethics, metaphysics and epistemology as his framework, he describes the major developments in Buddhist thought, covering those found in early Meditation and subsequent schools of Mahayana Meditation. The book is chock-a-block with quotations from source texts such as the Pali Canon and the works of Nagarjuna and Vasubandhu (two extremely important Mahayana Buddhist philosophers). And Siderits weaves his narrative around these texts with keen insight and admirable organization. The book begins by explaining the basic teachings ascribed to the Buddha and found in the Pali Canon, or Tipitika ('Threefold Collection'). Siderits elucidates the four noble truths of suffering, the cause of suffering, the ending of suffering, and the path leading to the ending of suffering clearly enough. Though somewhat dry, as one might expect a philosophical account to be, this section of the book is not too difficult to follow, unlike some of the later chapters that focus on Mahayana Buddhist ideas. An interesting sidetone here is that when describing the origin of suffering, Sid! erits fo cuses on ignorance rather than desire. Whilst the former is an important factor in arising of suffering, usually it is the latter that is the traditional focal point when exploring this central idea of Meditation. Perhaps it is because he is a philosopher that Siterits puts the emphasis of ignorance, but this is an issue worth reflecting on, nevertheless. This philosophical approach to the issues is systematically applied by the author, and he uses logic to examine Buddhist ideas that normally are less rigorously explored in most works on the subject. This is illustrated on the following extract where Siderits is investigating the relationship between suffering and the Buddhist teaching of not-self. The Sanskrit word skandhas refers to the five aggregates that the Buddha said comprised the person. The letter C stands for Conclusion. "1 Suppose that we are each obligated to prevent only our own suffering. 2 In the case of one's own future suffering, it is one set of skandhas that does the preventing for another set that has the suffering. 3 In the case of one's own present suffering, it is one part that does the preventing for another part that has the suffering. 4 The sense of 'I' that leads one to call future skandhas and distinct present parts 'me' is a conceptual fiction. 5 Hence it cannot be ultimately true that some suffering is one's own and some suffering is that of others. 6 Hence the claim that we are obligated to prevent only our own suffering lacks ultimate ground. 7 Hence either there is an obligation to prevent suffering regardless of where it occurs, or else there is no obligation to prevent any suffering. 8 But everyone agrees that at least some suffering should be prevented (namely one's own). C Therefore there os an obligation to prevent suffering regardless of where it occurs." (Buddhism as Philosophy, p.82) Whatever the validity of the above assertion, it serves as an example of much of the author's approach to the philosophical questions that come out of a rational contemplation of Buddhist teachings. Of course, to many a Buddhist practitioner this whole endeavor may smack of intellectual folly, for they will feel that it is in the walking of the Buddhist path that it is to be evaluated rather than in arguments formulated for and against its central doctrines. However, even for such Buddhists there is still much to be gained from a disciplined analysis of the teachings, which Siderits attempts to do throughout this work. He makes this point early in the book: "Doing philosophy is said to help us acquire the conceptual tools we need to make sense of what we encounter in meditation. So, for instance, mastery of the philosophical arguments for the non-existence of a self will make it easier to appreciate the significance of the complex causal connections we find when we closely observe our mental processes. That there are these causal connections will then be seen to confirm that there is no self standing behind the the s! cenes di recting our mental lives." (Ibid. p.25) Talking of non-self, Siderits discusses this essential Buddhist teaching throughout the book, as one would expect. In the chapter entitled Non-Self: Empty Persons, he utilizes to great effect both Pali texts and the non-canonical work 'The Questions of King Milinda' to demonstrate the idea of non-self to the reader. From the latter work, Siderits uses the dialogue between King Milinda and the Buddhist monk Nagasena to elucidate the concept of non-self in a clear manner that both experienced Buddhists and those new to this idea can appreciate. A famous section from this dialogue is the analogy of a chariot for that of a person, and the author explains the parallels between them with clarity. That he does this without merely promoting the argument of Nagasena is to his professional merit as a philosopher, and it also gives the reader the opportunity to do so, as well, which most Buddhist books do not do, for obvious reasons. Not all of Buddhism as Philosophy is not as easy to follow as the aforementioned sections, however. Much cerebral effort is required in subsequent chapters to master the arguments employed with regards to the Buddhist luminaries Vasubandhu and Nagarjuna, along with the related Mahayana philosophies of Yogacara and Madhyamaka. The ideas of Vasubhandu are utilized in the chapters Abhidharma: The Metaphysics of Empty Persons and Yogacara: Impressions-Only and the Denial of Physical Objects. As the titles suggest, there are some pretty philosophically dense passages to be found in these parts of the book, as can be seen in the following extract! : < div style="font:14.0px Helvetica;margin:0px 0px 0px 0px;min-height:17.0px">"[Objection:] Why does that which has been most forcefully cultivated not perpetually bear fruit? [Reply:] Because the mark of the conditioned is that what persists becomes otherwise. And the being otherwise of that conforms to the fruition of other cultivations. But this is merely an indication concerning the forms of all cognitions. For the buddhas [fully enlightened beings], though, there is abundance in the cognition of immediate causes, as is said: The cause, in all its aspects, of a single eye of a peacock's feather Is not knowable by one who is not omniscient, for the cognition of that is the power of omniscience." (Ibid. p.127) One use of this book other than to unravel dialogues like the one above is as a history of Meditation. This is because much of Meditation's history is tied up in its doctrines, the teachings of liberation that have been used for well over two thousand years to help people loosen the bonds of desire and ignorance. To understand these teachings is understand how Meditation has changed through time, developed and adapted to different times and places whilst retaining its essential purpose of being a path that leads to the ending of suffering. Siderits' work helps the reader to glimpse important philosophical innovations in this process, which includes the Yogacara and Madhyamaka forms of Meditation, the origins of which he succinctly describes below. "Yogacara is one of the two chief schools of Mahayana Meditation. It is not, however, the earlier of the two. The ideas that became the basis of Madhyamaka, the other major school, began appearing in sutras perhaps as early as late in the first century BCE. And these ideas received their first philosophical formulation, in the work of Madhyamaka's founder Nagarjuna, in about the mid-second century CE. By contrast, the sutras that first express distinctively Yogacara ideas seem to have appeared no earlier than the second century CE. And the founders of the school, Asanga and Vasubandhu, are generally dated around the middle of the fourth century CE." (Ibid. p.146) Whilst the above extract may appear to be more history lesson than philosophy, it is an important example of the background information that Siderits supplies throughout the book, and which give the reader important insights into the contexts of Buddhist philosophy. Both Yogacara and Madhyamaka are given plenty of page space in Buddhism as Philosophy, allowing the author to broaden the scope of his philosophical explorations. Indeed, much of the last quarter of the work is devoted to these two important philosophies, upon which so much of subsequent Mahayana Meditation is built upon. The final chatter centers on the school of Dinnaga as a way to examine buddhist epistemology. Buddhism as Philosophy is not an easy book; but it is worth the effort required to fully appreciate it. It isn't for people with a passing interest in Meditation (unless they happen to be highly-philosoph! ical typ es.) It is, however, a valuable addition to any serious Buddhist's bookshelf, where it can enable them to deepen their understanding of important Buddhist doctrines. Alongside this, Meditation as Philosophy is a work that will give philosophers not familiar with Meditation a chance to explore its rich and intricate teachings in a systematic & vigorous manner that they would be accustomed to. Would reading this book enlighten you? Probably not, but it can certainly give its readership the information with which they could awaken themselves. It is, therefore, a work that this reviewer has no qualms in recommending. Title & Author : Buddhism as Philosophy: An Introduction, by Mark Siderits Publishers : Hackett Publishing Company (US); Asgate Publishing (UK) Page Count : 304 (US); 242 (UK) Price : $ 16.95 (US); £16.99 (UK) ISBN : 978-0-87220-873-5 (US); 978-0-7546-5369-1 (UK) Web Links : Hackett Publishing Company Website (US); Ashgate Publishing Website (UK) Read More @ Source |
Posted: 25 May 2012 02:00 AM PDT So quickly a fold crease forms. Soon to take shape around a baby Buddha As with fabric and clothes so too with our bodies. Creases form over time! In addition how we habitually fold ourselves, and unfold, conditions how our form moves. I guess this follows on from the Buddha pears.... Unknowingly we cast ourselves in a mold, adopt a shape. This too is subject to change. Read More @ Source |
Powdery white substance found ahead of Dalai Lama’s Belgium visit Posted: 24 May 2012 02:00 PM PDT An envelope containing a powdery white substance was discovered this week at the Yeuntenling Institute in Huy, Belgium, just days before the Dalai Lama was scheduled to address followers at the Buddhist center. An official for the temple spoke to reporters, confirming reports that an envelope with white powder had been discovered and that police are looking in to it. The temple had no further comment. Read More @ Source |
Human rights group criticizes detention of Cambodian Buddhist monk Posted: 24 May 2012 01:00 PM PDT Photo via dannyfisher.org An official speaking for Cambodian human rights group Licadho has called the arrest of Ven. Loun Savath, a human rights activist and Cambodian Buddhist monk, "unjustified." Savath was detained for taking photographs of protesters being forced into a Land Cruiser by other monks, police and plainclothes officers outside a Phnom Penh courthouse. More than 60 protesters were gathered outside the court, calling for the release of 13 Boeung Kak women inside. Savath was banned last year from all pagodas in Phnom Penh by the Supreme Patriarch Nun Nget. "All of us believe that there's absolutely no basis for them to hold venerable Loun Savath, he did nothing he was just standing there," said the Licadho official. Read More @ SourceAngels and Demons: True Life Encounters Part 1 of 13A 1994 documentary with interviews from people who have had real life encounters with angels and demons. Produced by Jack and Rexella Van Impe Ministries, jvim.org ***I understand that the quality of this video is not real good but what you see was taken from a worn VHS tape. If you would like to see a better quality copy then you are welcome to contact Jack Van Impe Ministries at jvim.org to see if they are still producing this same program today for purchase.*** Part 2 www.youtube.com Video Rating: 0 / 5This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Posted: 24 May 2012 12:00 PM PDT Phayul, the web portal for the exile Tibetan community, reports that, at a recent meeting of the Central Tibetan Administration's Department of Religion and Culture, it was unanimously decided that Tibetan Buddhist nuns will finally be able to receive geshema degrees (akin to a doctorate in Buddhist philosophy for monastics). Though nuns have participated in the same curriculum as monks, the decision will now allow them to "appear for the very stringent doctorate examinations," and thus receive degrees. Ngawang Choedak, the secretary of Department of Religion and Culture , is quoted in the piece as saying, Creating Happiness for 2011Ajahn Brahm's 2011 new year's eve Dhamma talk Video Rating: 5 / 5This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
From the May 2012 Shambhala Sun magazine: Relief from “A Complicated Burden” Posted: 24 May 2012 11:00 AM PDT Illustration: Vivienne Flesher For decades, Sandy Boucher struggled with the guilt she felt from her brother's suicide, even though she couldn't have prevented it. In "A Complicated Burden," published in the May 2012 Shambhala Sun magazine and now online in its entirety, she describes how an encounter with another suffering young man helped her feel some relief. "I thought about all the brothers who have died throughout all time and all the siblings who have felt guilty or helpless at their brothers' death," she writes. "And I found myself breathing in regret and sorrow, not just for my own situation, but also in solidarity with everyone in the world who has lost a brother. I breathed in all our pain as I'd been taught to do in the ancient Tibetan Buddhist practice of tonglen, and breathed out compassion for all of us." Click here to read all of "A Complicated Burden." Read More @ Source |
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