Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


Difference between revisions of "Rational Buddhism"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Text replacement - "{{Wiki|related}}" to "related")
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{DisplayImages|2251|3358|1177|3612|555|1650|1719|2366|1751|2836|2539|158}}
 
{{DisplayImages|2251|3358|1177|3612|555|1650|1719|2366|1751|2836|2539|158}}
 
<poem>
 
<poem>
  The purpose of this blog is to explore how far [[Buddhism]] can be supported by [[rational]] arguments, both from the [[philosophical]] point of [[view]], and also in terms of the observed effects of [[Buddhist practices]].
+
  The {{Wiki|purpose}} of this blog is to explore how far [[Buddhism]] can be supported by [[rational]] arguments, both from the [[philosophical]] point of [[view]], and also in terms of the observed effects of [[Buddhist practices]].
  
In other words, if we regard [[Buddhism]] as a combination of a [[philosophy]], {{Wiki|psychology}} and [[religion]], then how much mileage can we get from the first two aspects before we have to start invoking [[religious]] [[faith]]? This is not to say that the [[religious]] aspect should be abandoned or disparaged in any way, and I am certainly not advocating the mechanistic reductionism known as 'Secular [[Buddhism]]'.
+
In other words, if we regard [[Buddhism]] as a combination of a [[philosophy]], {{Wiki|psychology}} and [[religion]], then how much mileage can we get from the first two aspects before we have to start invoking [[religious]] [[faith]]? This is not to say that the [[religious]] aspect should be abandoned or disparaged in any way, and I am certainly not advocating the mechanistic {{Wiki|reductionism}} known as 'Secular [[Buddhism]]'.
  
 
The advantage of  pursuing the [[philosophical]] and [[psychological]] approaches is that of maintaining a common basis for [[discussion]] with [[science]], [[medicine]] and {{Wiki|Western philosophy}} for as far as possible, until the [[paths]] diverge.
 
The advantage of  pursuing the [[philosophical]] and [[psychological]] approaches is that of maintaining a common basis for [[discussion]] with [[science]], [[medicine]] and {{Wiki|Western philosophy}} for as far as possible, until the [[paths]] diverge.
Line 11: Line 11:
 
Of course most [[religions]] don't like having their basic {{Wiki|tenets}} subjected to searching analysis, and one {{Wiki|cult}} has abandoned [[reason]] altogether, to the extent that you're likely to get your head chopped off for being too [[rational]].  
 
Of course most [[religions]] don't like having their basic {{Wiki|tenets}} subjected to searching analysis, and one {{Wiki|cult}} has abandoned [[reason]] altogether, to the extent that you're likely to get your head chopped off for being too [[rational]].  
  
But [[Buddhism]] is different. In the  [[Kalama Sutra]], [[Buddha]] said that all [[religious]] teachings, including his own should...
+
But [[Buddhism]] is different. In the  [[Kalama Sutra]], [[Buddha]] said that all [[religious]] teachings, including his [[own]] should...
  
 
(1) Not be believed on the basis of [[religious]] authority, or '{{Wiki|holy}}' [[books]], or family/tribal [[tradition]], or even [[coercion]] and intimidation by the mob.
 
(1) Not be believed on the basis of [[religious]] authority, or '{{Wiki|holy}}' [[books]], or family/tribal [[tradition]], or even [[coercion]] and intimidation by the mob.
Line 21: Line 21:
 
(3) Is the [[philosophy]] [[rational]]? Or does it require you to believe six impossible things before breakfast?
 
(3) Is the [[philosophy]] [[rational]]? Or does it require you to believe six impossible things before breakfast?
  
(4) Judge the [[tree]] by its {{Wiki|fruits}}. Is it beneficial, or does it tell you to act against your {{Wiki|conscience}} and 'The [[Golden Rule]]'.
+
(4) [[Judge]] the [[tree]] by its {{Wiki|fruits}}. Is it beneficial, or does it tell you to act against your {{Wiki|conscience}} and 'The [[Golden Rule]]'.
  
 
According to [[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]], [[Buddha]] told his [[disciples]] [[time]] and [[time]] again not to accept his teachings out of [[blind faith]], but to test them as thoroughly as they would assay {{Wiki|gold}}. It is only on the basis of valid [[reasons]] and personal [[experience]] that we should accept the teachings of anyone, including [[Buddha]] himself.
 
According to [[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]], [[Buddha]] told his [[disciples]] [[time]] and [[time]] again not to accept his teachings out of [[blind faith]], but to test them as thoroughly as they would assay {{Wiki|gold}}. It is only on the basis of valid [[reasons]] and personal [[experience]] that we should accept the teachings of anyone, including [[Buddha]] himself.
Line 27: Line 27:
 
The advantages of [[rationalism]]
 
The advantages of [[rationalism]]
  
One advantage of establishing a [[rational]] basis for [[Buddhism]] is that it gives  [[Buddhism]] an '[[intellectual]] respectability' at a [[time]] when the [[intellectual]] prestige of other [[religions]] is in steep {{Wiki|decline}}, due to increasing obscurantism, which takes variety of [[forms]] varying from creationist anti-science to outright terrorism.
+
One advantage of establishing a [[rational]] basis for [[Buddhism]] is that it gives  [[Buddhism]] an '[[intellectual]] respectability' at a [[time]] when the [[intellectual]] prestige of other [[religions]] is in steep {{Wiki|decline}}, due to increasing obscurantism, which takes variety of [[forms]] varying from creationist anti-science to outright {{Wiki|terrorism}}.
  
 
This '[[intellectual]] respectability' also may help to prevent [[Buddhism]] being hit by collateral damage from increasing prejudice against all [[religions]] resulting from jihadist [[aggression]].
 
This '[[intellectual]] respectability' also may help to prevent [[Buddhism]] being hit by collateral damage from increasing prejudice against all [[religions]] resulting from jihadist [[aggression]].
Line 54: Line 54:
 
No [[phenomenon]] is a ‘thing in itself’.  The more you look for it, the less you find it. Things disappear under analysis.  A car [[exists]] as a [[conventional truth]], convenient for our everyday [[lives]] - a kind of working approximation.  But on dissection, [[logical]] analysis can find no ‘[[essential]]’ car, just a heap of parts that at a certain arbitrary stage of assembly is designated ‘car’, and at a certain arbitrary stage of disassembly is designated 'pile of junk'.
 
No [[phenomenon]] is a ‘thing in itself’.  The more you look for it, the less you find it. Things disappear under analysis.  A car [[exists]] as a [[conventional truth]], convenient for our everyday [[lives]] - a kind of working approximation.  But on dissection, [[logical]] analysis can find no ‘[[essential]]’ car, just a heap of parts that at a certain arbitrary stage of assembly is designated ‘car’, and at a certain arbitrary stage of disassembly is designated 'pile of junk'.
  
Outside our [[mind]] there is no defining ‘carness’ .  Similarly,  if you gradually {{Wiki|decrease}} the height of the sides of a box until it becomes a tray, there is no point at which 'boxiness' leaves and 'trayfullness' jumps into the structure, with the box being automatically [[transformed]] into a tray. It’s all arbitrary [[mental]] designation.  This arbitrariness is [[the ultimate truth]] of how things [[exist]] to our [[minds]]. And it goes all the way down to the fundamental {{Wiki|particles}} of {{Wiki|matter}}.  
+
Outside our [[mind]] there is no defining ‘carness’ .  Similarly,  if you gradually {{Wiki|decrease}} the height of the sides of a box until it becomes a tray, there is no point at which 'boxiness' leaves and 'trayfullness' jumps into the {{Wiki|structure}}, with the box being automatically [[transformed]] into a tray. It’s all arbitrary [[mental]] designation.  This arbitrariness is [[the ultimate truth]] of how things [[exist]] to our [[minds]]. And it goes all the way down to the fundamental {{Wiki|particles}} of {{Wiki|matter}}.  
  
 
So how do things [[exist]]?
 
So how do things [[exist]]?
Line 64: Line 64:
 
(b) Structure: [[Phenomena]] depend upon the relationship of whole to parts.
 
(b) Structure: [[Phenomena]] depend upon the relationship of whole to parts.
  
(c) Most profoundly, [[phenomena]] depend upon imputation, attribution, or designation by the [[mind]]. It's the [[mind]] that designates what's a tray and what's a box.
+
(c) Most profoundly, [[phenomena]] depend upon [[imputation]], attribution, or designation by the [[mind]]. It's the [[mind]] that designates what's a tray and what's a box.
  
 
More on Lack of [[Inherent]] [[Existence]]:     
 
More on Lack of [[Inherent]] [[Existence]]:     
 
[[Sunyata]]   
 
[[Sunyata]]   
 
[[Inherent]] [[existence]]   
 
[[Inherent]] [[existence]]   
Reification   
+
[[Reification]]    
 
[[Existence]] and [[Impermanence]]     
 
[[Existence]] and [[Impermanence]]     
 
{{Wiki|Ideal}} [[forms]] and [[essentialism]]   
 
{{Wiki|Ideal}} [[forms]] and [[essentialism]]   
Line 101: Line 101:
 
All [[emotions]] based on the three [[mental]] [[poisons]] of [[attachment]], [[aversion]] and [[ignorance]] are ultimately [[painful]]. You can never have enough [[worldly]] possessions, and even if you did you'd {{Wiki|worry}} about losing them since - as stated in the paragraph above - they are all [[impermanent]].  And you've got to lose the lot eventually when you [[die]].
 
All [[emotions]] based on the three [[mental]] [[poisons]] of [[attachment]], [[aversion]] and [[ignorance]] are ultimately [[painful]]. You can never have enough [[worldly]] possessions, and even if you did you'd {{Wiki|worry}} about losing them since - as stated in the paragraph above - they are all [[impermanent]].  And you've got to lose the lot eventually when you [[die]].
  
This [[sense]] of unsatisfactoriness can range from the severe [[physical]] and [[mental]] [[sufferings]] of [[people]] being bombed, burned and raped in war-zones, to the [[feeling]] of {{Wiki|humiliation}} [[suffered]] by a billionaire who discovers that his business rival has a slightly larger and more luxurious yacht. An [[object]] that appeared to be a source of [[pride]] and [[happiness]] when he bought it, has now turned into a source of [[shame]] and [[aversion]].
+
This [[sense]] of {{Wiki|unsatisfactoriness}} can range from the severe [[physical]] and [[mental]] [[sufferings]] of [[people]] being bombed, burned and raped in war-zones, to the [[feeling]] of {{Wiki|humiliation}} [[suffered]] by a billionaire who discovers that his business rival has a slightly larger and more luxurious yacht. An [[object]] that appeared to be a source of [[pride]] and [[happiness]] when he bought it, has now turned into a source of [[shame]] and [[aversion]].
  
All {{Wiki|materialistic}} [[cravings]] eventually and inevitably lead to disappointment and worse. They cannot provide any [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[satisfaction]].  See  [[Dukkha]], Dawkins, Darwinism and the [[Selfish]] Gene  and Symbiotic [[Mind]].
+
All {{Wiki|materialistic}} [[cravings]] eventually and inevitably lead to disappointment and worse. They cannot provide any [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[satisfaction]].  See  [[Dukkha]], Dawkins, {{Wiki|Darwinism}} and the [[Selfish]] Gene  and Symbiotic [[Mind]].
  
 
Fourth Seal -  The [[Ultimate]] [[Liberation]] of the [[Mind]]
 
Fourth Seal -  The [[Ultimate]] [[Liberation]] of the [[Mind]]
  
The first [[three seals]] of [[dharma]] analysed the factors that imprison our [[minds]] in a ceaseless and futile  process of chasing after the mirages of [[impermanent]] [[phenomena]],  in the {{Wiki|hope}} of achieving [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[satisfaction]]. The fourth seal provides an escape route from this labyrinth of {{Wiki|confusion}}.
+
The first [[three seals]] of [[dharma]] analysed the factors that imprison our [[minds]] in a ceaseless and futile  process of chasing after the mirages of [[impermanent]] [[phenomena]],  in the {{Wiki|hope}} of achieving [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[satisfaction]]. The fourth {{Wiki|seal}} provides an escape route from this labyrinth of {{Wiki|confusion}}.
  
 
The method for liberating the [[mind]] from its [[delusions]] consists of [[meditational]] techniques.  These techniques have been [[empirically]] tested and shown to provide [[psychological]] benefits in the here and now, though of course [[Buddhists]] would also claim that they provide benefits in the hereafter (of which more later).
 
The method for liberating the [[mind]] from its [[delusions]] consists of [[meditational]] techniques.  These techniques have been [[empirically]] tested and shown to provide [[psychological]] benefits in the here and now, though of course [[Buddhists]] would also claim that they provide benefits in the hereafter (of which more later).
Line 115: Line 115:
 
"It is not long since just mentioning [[meditation]] tagged you as a gullible new-ager or self-indulgent hippie. [[Buddhism]], if considered at all, had a reputation for promoting withdrawal from this pain-filled [[world]]. But in the [[space]] of a few short years, core [[dharma]] has permeated {{Wiki|western}} society's most influential {{Wiki|institutions}}.
 
"It is not long since just mentioning [[meditation]] tagged you as a gullible new-ager or self-indulgent hippie. [[Buddhism]], if considered at all, had a reputation for promoting withdrawal from this pain-filled [[world]]. But in the [[space]] of a few short years, core [[dharma]] has permeated {{Wiki|western}} society's most influential {{Wiki|institutions}}.
  
Madeleine Bunting charts the cracks in our once-cherished [[Wikipedia:concept|concepts]] of {{Wiki|individual}} [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]], and notes how the [[Buddhist teaching]] of [[egolessness]] resonates with corresponding [[insights]] from {{Wiki|neuroscience}} and {{Wiki|evolutionary psychology}}. [[Ideas]] that [[chime]] with [[Buddhism]] are being championed by the {{Wiki|Royal}} {{Wiki|Society}} of [[Arts]] and the New {{Wiki|Economics}} Foundation, and reported in mainstream media. Before cif [[belief]], I never dreamed I would synchronise my journalistic career and [[meditation]] practice, finding national newspaper [[space]] to write from a [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|perspective}}.
+
Madeleine Bunting charts the cracks in our once-cherished [[Wikipedia:concept|concepts]] of {{Wiki|individual}} [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]], and notes how the [[Buddhist teaching]] of [[egolessness]] resonates with corresponding [[insights]] from {{Wiki|neuroscience}} and {{Wiki|evolutionary psychology}}. [[Ideas]] that [[chime]] with [[Buddhism]] are being championed by the {{Wiki|Royal}} {{Wiki|Society}} of [[Arts]] and the New {{Wiki|Economics}} Foundation, and reported in {{Wiki|mainstream}} media. Before cif [[belief]], I never dreamed I would synchronise my journalistic career and [[meditation]] [[practice]], finding national newspaper [[space]] to write from a [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|perspective}}.
  
[[Buddhism]] is reaching beyond {{Wiki|academia}}, think tanks and the media. Most GPs are {{Wiki|aware}} of mindfulness-based [[stress]] reduction (MBSR) and [[Wikipedia:cognition|cognitive]] therapy (MBCT), well-researched approaches to health problems which feature [[meditation]] as their core component. MBCT is endorsed by the National Institute For Clinical [[Excellence]], and thousands of [[people]] are being referred to [[mindfulness]] training on the NHS. In {{Wiki|Scotland}}, the government has funded more than 200 healthcare professionals to teach MBCT."
+
[[Buddhism]] is reaching beyond {{Wiki|academia}}, think tanks and the media. Most GPs are {{Wiki|aware}} of mindfulness-based [[stress]] reduction (MBSR) and [[Wikipedia:cognition|cognitive]] therapy (MBCT), well-researched approaches to [[health]] problems which feature [[meditation]] as their core component. MBCT is endorsed by the National Institute For Clinical [[Excellence]], and thousands of [[people]] are being referred to [[mindfulness]] {{Wiki|training}} on the NHS. In {{Wiki|Scotland}}, the government has funded more than 200 healthcare professionals to teach MBCT."
  
 
So does [[acceptance]] of the [[Four Seals]] of [[Dharma]] make you a [[Buddhist]]?
 
So does [[acceptance]] of the [[Four Seals]] of [[Dharma]] make you a [[Buddhist]]?
Line 127: Line 127:
 
The [[mind]] survives the [[physical]] [[death of the body]]. It is a fundamental aspect of [[reality]] that cannot be reduced to [[physical]] or {{Wiki|biological}} structures, and is not [[dependent upon]] them
 
The [[mind]] survives the [[physical]] [[death of the body]]. It is a fundamental aspect of [[reality]] that cannot be reduced to [[physical]] or {{Wiki|biological}} structures, and is not [[dependent upon]] them
  
The fourth seal of [[dharma]] aims to clarify the [[mind]] from [[delusions]] on a [[permanent]] basis, from this [[life]] onwards.
+
The fourth {{Wiki|seal}} of [[dharma]] aims to clarify the [[mind]] from [[delusions]] on a [[permanent]] basis, from this [[life]] onwards.
  
 
[[Buddhist philosophy]] rejects {{Wiki|materialist}} explanations for the [[mind]].
 
[[Buddhist philosophy]] rejects {{Wiki|materialist}} explanations for the [[mind]].
Line 144: Line 144:
 
- [[Buddhism]] offers the only coherent critique of {{Wiki|materialism}}
 
- [[Buddhism]] offers the only coherent critique of {{Wiki|materialism}}
  
Whitehead said "[[Christianity]] ... has always been a [[religion]] seeking a metaphysic, in contrast to [[Buddhism]] which is a metaphysic generating a [[religion]]." In other words, [[Christianity]] does not have the [[metaphysical]] foundation needed to withstand {{Wiki|materialism}}.
+
Whitehead said "[[Christianity]] ... has always been a [[religion]] seeking a {{Wiki|metaphysic}}, in contrast to [[Buddhism]] which is a {{Wiki|metaphysic}} generating a [[religion]]." In other words, [[Christianity]] does not have the [[metaphysical]] foundation needed to withstand {{Wiki|materialism}}.
  
 
So nowadays it's left to [[Buddhism]] to defend the [[spiritual]] aspect of [[humanity]] from mechanistic {{Wiki|materialism}}, and show that not everything about the [[human]] [[mind]] can be explained in mechanistic terms.
 
So nowadays it's left to [[Buddhism]] to defend the [[spiritual]] aspect of [[humanity]] from mechanistic {{Wiki|materialism}}, and show that not everything about the [[human]] [[mind]] can be explained in mechanistic terms.
Line 150: Line 150:
 
The [[Buddhist]] argument against {{Wiki|materialism}} is to demonstrate that [[mind]] is an aspect of [[reality]] that is not reducible to material [[causes]] and structures.
 
The [[Buddhist]] argument against {{Wiki|materialism}} is to demonstrate that [[mind]] is an aspect of [[reality]] that is not reducible to material [[causes]] and structures.
  
Note that in [[Buddhist]] [[metaphysics]], [[mind]] is not a kind of 'thing' or '[[substance]]' because 'things' and '{{Wiki|substances}}' are [[dependent upon]] structure for their [[existence]]. The [[mind]] can apprehend structure, but does not itself have any vestige of structure, nor can it be reduced to structure ([[mind]] is said to be '[[formless]]').
+
Note that in [[Buddhist]] [[metaphysics]], [[mind]] is not a kind of 'thing' or '[[substance]]' because 'things' and '{{Wiki|substances}}' are [[dependent upon]] {{Wiki|structure}} for their [[existence]]. The [[mind]] can apprehend {{Wiki|structure}}, but does not itself have any vestige of {{Wiki|structure}}, nor can it be reduced to {{Wiki|structure}} ([[mind]] is said to be '[[formless]]').
  
 
So how does the {{Wiki|materialist}} worldview map on to the [[Buddhist]] worldview, and what are the discrepancies?
 
So how does the {{Wiki|materialist}} worldview map on to the [[Buddhist]] worldview, and what are the discrepancies?
Line 160: Line 160:
 
{{Wiki|Physicalism}} is a more precise formulation of the rather vague term '{{Wiki|materialism}}'. It states that all [[phenomena]], including the [[mind]], are reducible to the laws of [[physics]].
 
{{Wiki|Physicalism}} is a more precise formulation of the rather vague term '{{Wiki|materialism}}'. It states that all [[phenomena]], including the [[mind]], are reducible to the laws of [[physics]].
  
Computationalism is {{Wiki|physicalism}} specifically applied to explaining the [[function]] of the [[human]] [[mind]]. Since all [[physical]] systems can be modelled, simulated and explained in terms of datastructures and algorithms, (see Church-Turing {{Wiki|Thesis}}), it follows that if {{Wiki|physicalism}} is true, then the [[human]] [[mind]] can be modelled, simulated and explained by a computer. This is a more precise statement than the [[traditional]] {{Wiki|materialist}} [[view]] that the [[mind]] is a machine.
+
Computationalism is {{Wiki|physicalism}} specifically applied to explaining the [[function]] of the [[human]] [[mind]]. Since all [[physical]] systems can be modelled, simulated and explained in terms of datastructures and algorithms, (see Church-Turing {{Wiki|Thesis}}), it follows that if {{Wiki|physicalism}} is true, then the [[human]] [[mind]] can be modelled, simulated and explained by a {{Wiki|computer}}. This is a more precise statement than the [[traditional]] {{Wiki|materialist}} [[view]] that the [[mind]] is a machine.
  
 
[[Buddhism]] versus Computationalism
 
[[Buddhism]] versus Computationalism
Line 176: Line 176:
 
- [[Causality]]
 
- [[Causality]]
 
- Structure
 
- Structure
...with the [[mind]] being reducible to the operations of [[causality]] on structure in the same way that the [[activities]] of a computer are reducible to the operation of algorithms on datastructures.
+
...with the [[mind]] being reducible to the operations of [[causality]] on {{Wiki|structure}} in the same way that the [[activities]] of a {{Wiki|computer}} are reducible to the operation of algorithms on datastructures.
  
 
To the [[Buddhist]], in contrast, the [[mind]] is an irreducible foundation of [[reality]].
 
To the [[Buddhist]], in contrast, the [[mind]] is an irreducible foundation of [[reality]].
Line 188: Line 188:
 
Metarationality versus irrationality in [[religion]]
 
Metarationality versus irrationality in [[religion]]
  
Metarationality deals with valid [[phenomena]] which lie beyond the limits of discursive [[thought]].  {{Wiki|Qualia}} are prime examples, and much [[meditational]] practice deals with the deliberate {{Wiki|invocation}} of {{Wiki|qualia}}.  
+
Metarationality deals with valid [[phenomena]] which lie beyond the limits of discursive [[thought]].  {{Wiki|Qualia}} are prime examples, and much [[meditational]] [[practice]] deals with the deliberate {{Wiki|invocation}} of {{Wiki|qualia}}.  
  
 
Also, some types of [[meditation]] deliberately seek to go beyond {{Wiki|conceptual}} [[thought]] in order to reach [[nonconceptual]] [[awareness]].
 
Also, some types of [[meditation]] deliberately seek to go beyond {{Wiki|conceptual}} [[thought]] in order to reach [[nonconceptual]] [[awareness]].
  
Other metarational [[phenomena]] are those paradoxes that lie at, or just beyond, the limits of [[logical]] [[thought]], and which have been investigated by [[Buddhist]] [[philosophers]] such a [[Nagarjuna]].
+
Other metarational [[phenomena]] are those [[Wikipedia:paradox|paradoxes]] that lie at, or just beyond, the limits of [[logical]] [[thought]], and which have been investigated by [[Buddhist]] [[philosophers]] such a [[Nagarjuna]].
  
 
According to [[Hume]], the entire field of [[ethics]] may be metarational, since reasoned and [[logical]] arguments are incapable of going from an 'is' to an 'ought'.  [[Ethics]] cannot be {{Wiki|rationally}} derived  either from  [[knowledge]] based on [[logic]] and definitions, or from observation.
 
According to [[Hume]], the entire field of [[ethics]] may be metarational, since reasoned and [[logical]] arguments are incapable of going from an 'is' to an 'ought'.  [[Ethics]] cannot be {{Wiki|rationally}} derived  either from  [[knowledge]] based on [[logic]] and definitions, or from observation.
Line 200: Line 200:
 
[[Buddhist philosophy]] is [[rational]] until it reaches the limits of [[logic]], wherupon it goes metarational, whereas some [[religions]] are just plain irrational from the very start of the journey.
 
[[Buddhist philosophy]] is [[rational]] until it reaches the limits of [[logic]], wherupon it goes metarational, whereas some [[religions]] are just plain irrational from the very start of the journey.
  
For rationalists such as {{Wiki|Richard Dawkins}}, '[[Faith]]' is very much an F-word .
+
For [[Wikipedia:rationalism|rationalists]] such as {{Wiki|Richard Dawkins}}, '[[Faith]]' is very much an F-word .
  
[[Faith]] makes a [[virtue]] out of believing unprovable and often improbable propositions.  Dawkins contrasts this with the [[scientific method]], which he describes as a system whereby working assumptions may be falsified by recourse to [[reason]] and {{Wiki|evidence}}.
+
[[Faith]] makes a [[virtue]] out of believing unprovable and often improbable propositions.  Dawkins contrasts this with the [[scientific method]], which he describes as a system whereby working {{Wiki|assumptions}} may be falsified by recourse to [[reason]] and {{Wiki|evidence}}.
  
 
The Place of [[Faith]] in [[Buddhism]]
 
The Place of [[Faith]] in [[Buddhism]]
  
So is '[[Faith]]' in [[Buddhism]] the same kind of unquestioning [[belief]] in bizarre and often mutually contradictory assertions as found in other [[religions]], or is it more in the [[nature]] of '[[Trust]]'.
+
So is '[[Faith]]' in [[Buddhism]] the same kind of unquestioning [[belief]] in bizarre and often mutually [[contradictory]] assertions as found in other [[religions]], or is it more in the [[nature]] of '[[Trust]]'.
  
[[Buddha]], in his rejection of [[essentialism]] and [[affirmation]] of the importance of [[impermanence]], displayed an [[insight]] into the way that things [[exist]] that has only recently been confirmed by [[science]].  [[Buddhist]] [[meditational]] techniques have also recently been [[empirically]] verified to have measurable beneficial effects.  But how far should we [[trust]] [[Buddhist doctrine]] when it deals with topics that are metarational?
+
[[Buddha]], in his rejection of [[essentialism]] and [[affirmation]] of the importance of [[impermanence]], displayed an [[insight]] into the way that things [[exist]] that has only recently been confirmed by [[science]].  [[Buddhist]] [[meditational]] techniques have also recently been [[empirically]] verified to have measurable [[beneficial effects]].  But how far should we [[trust]] [[Buddhist doctrine]] when it deals with topics that are metarational?
  
 
Trusting the Guide to the [[Path]]
 
Trusting the Guide to the [[Path]]
Line 219: Line 219:
 
So how do we decide whether to follow the route on the map? How do we know it won't lead us over a cliff or into a bog?  Are we prepared to stake our safety and maybe our [[life]] on this map?
 
So how do we decide whether to follow the route on the map? How do we know it won't lead us over a cliff or into a bog?  Are we prepared to stake our safety and maybe our [[life]] on this map?
  
One way to weigh the risks would be to judge the reliability of the map by what it has shown so far. Has it accurately described the route we've taken?
+
One way to weigh the risks would be to [[judge]] the reliability of the map by what it has shown so far. Has it accurately described the route we've taken?
 
Or has it shown things that aren't there, and missed out major features that are?   
 
Or has it shown things that aren't there, and missed out major features that are?   
  

Latest revision as of 06:29, 13 March 2015

Cutting the hair.jpg
Shaman555.jpg
Am14ooni.jpg
Buddha Vietnamese.jpg
Magical.jpg
419B Wer.jpg
Nment 4.jpg
Kri0020.JPG
Baldahhiin-a0.jpg
Beautxzrynunj1.jpg
1441hh555 n.jpg
O45akini.jpg

 The purpose of this blog is to explore how far Buddhism can be supported by rational arguments, both from the philosophical point of view, and also in terms of the observed effects of Buddhist practices.

In other words, if we regard Buddhism as a combination of a philosophy, psychology and religion, then how much mileage can we get from the first two aspects before we have to start invoking religious faith? This is not to say that the religious aspect should be abandoned or disparaged in any way, and I am certainly not advocating the mechanistic reductionism known as 'Secular Buddhism'.

The advantage of pursuing the philosophical and psychological approaches is that of maintaining a common basis for discussion with science, medicine and Western philosophy for as far as possible, until the paths diverge.

Buddha told us to analyse his teachings.

Of course most religions don't like having their basic tenets subjected to searching analysis, and one cult has abandoned reason altogether, to the extent that you're likely to get your head chopped off for being too rational.

But Buddhism is different. In the Kalama Sutra, Buddha said that all religious teachings, including his own should...

(1) Not be believed on the basis of religious authority, or 'holy' books, or family/tribal tradition, or even coercion and intimidation by the mob.

BUT INSTEAD ONE SHOULD

(2) Test the methodology by personal experience. Does it do what it says on the box?

(3) Is the philosophy rational? Or does it require you to believe six impossible things before breakfast?

(4) Judge the tree by its fruits. Is it beneficial, or does it tell you to act against your conscience and 'The Golden Rule'.

According to Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, Buddha told his disciples time and time again not to accept his teachings out of blind faith, but to test them as thoroughly as they would assay gold. It is only on the basis of valid reasons and personal experience that we should accept the teachings of anyone, including Buddha himself.

The advantages of rationalism

One advantage of establishing a rational basis for Buddhism is that it gives Buddhism an 'intellectual respectability' at a time when the intellectual prestige of other religions is in steep decline, due to increasing obscurantism, which takes variety of forms varying from creationist anti-science to outright terrorism.

This 'intellectual respectability' also may help to prevent Buddhism being hit by collateral damage from increasing prejudice against all religions resulting from jihadist aggression.

Reason versus Revelation
Most religions contain some 'revealed doctrines' or 'dogmas', which were revealed long ago to one person or a few people, and then not to any others.

In all religions other than Buddhism, these ancient, unprovable, unrepeatable revelations are fundamental articles of faith on which the rest of the belief-system is constructed.

In contrast, Buddhism's fundamental doctrines are accessible to reason and investigation in terms of shared, repeatable experience.

The Four Foundations of Buddhism

There are many different schools of Buddhism, but all are built upon the foundations of the Four Seals of Dharma. These Four Seals can be derived from rational analysis.

The four seals are
(i) Lack of inherent existence
(ii) Impermanence
(iii) Unsatisfactoriness
(iv) Liberation of the mind

The most fundamental of these seals is the first, Lack of Inherent Existence, from which the other three follow logically*.

First Seal - Lack of inherent existence (emptiness)

No phenomenon is a ‘thing in itself’. The more you look for it, the less you find it. Things disappear under analysis. A car exists as a conventional truth, convenient for our everyday lives - a kind of working approximation. But on dissection, logical analysis can find no ‘essential’ car, just a heap of parts that at a certain arbitrary stage of assembly is designated ‘car’, and at a certain arbitrary stage of disassembly is designated 'pile of junk'.

Outside our mind there is no defining ‘carness’ . Similarly, if you gradually decrease the height of the sides of a box until it becomes a tray, there is no point at which 'boxiness' leaves and 'trayfullness' jumps into the structure, with the box being automatically transformed into a tray. It’s all arbitrary mental designation. This arbitrariness is the ultimate truth of how things exist to our minds. And it goes all the way down to the fundamental particles of matter.

So how do things exist?

According to Buddhist philosophy, all functioning phenomena are dependently related to other phenomena and their existence arises from three relationships:

(a) Causality: Phenomena exist dependent upon causes and conditions.

(b) Structure: Phenomena depend upon the relationship of whole to parts.

(c) Most profoundly, phenomena depend upon imputation, attribution, or designation by the mind. It's the mind that designates what's a tray and what's a box.

More on Lack of Inherent Existence:
Sunyata
Inherent existence
Reification
Existence and Impermanence
Ideal forms and essentialism
Partless particles

Second Seal - Impermanence

The impermanence of all functioning phenomena is an inevitable logical consequence of their emptiness of inherent existence.

No functioning phenomenon can be static, because to function it must change and be changed, it must give something of itself or receive something into itself. A truly unchanging phenomenon would reside in splendid isolation and could never even be known to exist. All functioning phenomena are composite and impermanent. What we term ‘existence’ is really just impermanence in slow-motion.

From Impermanence, Interdependence & Emptiness
“The ideas of impermanence, interdependence and emptiness are central to Buddhist teaching - and to the whole Buddhist worldview actually.

What these ideas boil down to really is that there is no permanent essence to anything. No part of anything lasts forever or is eternal. Everything (and everyone) that exists does so because of the interrelatedness of various parts - not because it has a permanent essence or "soul" around which all the parts are organized..."

This is true of all things and all people. All things exist interdependently - not as permanent essences. Thus, all things are ultimately "empty" - which is the Buddhist teaching of emptiness.

Because things are empty, they are impermanent. We forget this, says the Buddha, and act as if things are permanent. We desire them to be permanent and when they turn out not to be, we suffer. We suffer especially when we desire permanent happiness from impermanent things or people. It is not possible for impermanent things or people to provide permanent happiness because they themselves are not permanent..."

More on Impermanence:
   
Process Philosophy

Existence and impermanence

Subtle impermanence, the quantum vacuum, radioactive decay and causality

Third Seal - The Unsatisfactoriness of Material Existence

All emotions based on the three mental poisons of attachment, aversion and ignorance are ultimately painful. You can never have enough worldly possessions, and even if you did you'd worry about losing them since - as stated in the paragraph above - they are all impermanent. And you've got to lose the lot eventually when you die.

This sense of unsatisfactoriness can range from the severe physical and mental sufferings of people being bombed, burned and raped in war-zones, to the feeling of humiliation suffered by a billionaire who discovers that his business rival has a slightly larger and more luxurious yacht. An object that appeared to be a source of pride and happiness when he bought it, has now turned into a source of shame and aversion.

All materialistic cravings eventually and inevitably lead to disappointment and worse. They cannot provide any ultimate satisfaction. See Dukkha, Dawkins, Darwinism and the Selfish Gene and Symbiotic Mind.

Fourth Seal - The Ultimate Liberation of the Mind

The first three seals of dharma analysed the factors that imprison our minds in a ceaseless and futile process of chasing after the mirages of impermanent phenomena, in the hope of achieving ultimate satisfaction. The fourth seal provides an escape route from this labyrinth of confusion.

The method for liberating the mind from its delusions consists of meditational techniques. These techniques have been empirically tested and shown to provide psychological benefits in the here and now, though of course Buddhists would also claim that they provide benefits in the hereafter (of which more later).

So as far as clinical assessment is concerned, Buddhist meditation does do what it says on the box. As Ed Halliwell writes:

"It is not long since just mentioning meditation tagged you as a gullible new-ager or self-indulgent hippie. Buddhism, if considered at all, had a reputation for promoting withdrawal from this pain-filled world. But in the space of a few short years, core dharma has permeated western society's most influential institutions.

Madeleine Bunting charts the cracks in our once-cherished concepts of individual identity, and notes how the Buddhist teaching of egolessness resonates with corresponding insights from neuroscience and evolutionary psychology. Ideas that chime with Buddhism are being championed by the Royal Society of Arts and the New Economics Foundation, and reported in mainstream media. Before cif belief, I never dreamed I would synchronise my journalistic career and meditation practice, finding national newspaper space to write from a Buddhist perspective.

Buddhism is reaching beyond academia, think tanks and the media. Most GPs are aware of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) and cognitive therapy (MBCT), well-researched approaches to health problems which feature meditation as their core component. MBCT is endorsed by the National Institute For Clinical Excellence, and thousands of people are being referred to mindfulness training on the NHS. In Scotland, the government has funded more than 200 healthcare professionals to teach MBCT."

So does acceptance of the Four Seals of Dharma make you a Buddhist?

 "Anyone who accepts these four seals, even independently of Buddha’s teachings, even never having heard the name Shakyamuni Buddha, can be considered to be on the same path as he." - Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche
-
However, 'the path' in Buddhism is considered to extend beyond the present lifetime, which brings us on to the next topic - the nature of the mind. According to Buddhist philosophy, the mind is non-physical and formless. The mind 'knows' its object, in the sense of designating meaning to it.

The mind survives the physical death of the body. It is a fundamental aspect of reality that cannot be reduced to physical or biological structures, and is not dependent upon them

The fourth seal of dharma aims to clarify the mind from delusions on a permanent basis, from this life onwards.

Buddhist philosophy rejects materialist explanations for the mind.
Materialism is the belief that all phenomena in the universe, in particular the human mind, are explainable in terms of matter.

In other words, such mental experiences as beauty, love, spirituality, pleasure and pain are reducible to nothing but physical and chemical interactions. According to the materialist view, the mind does not actually exist, but is an emergent property or epiphenomenon of matter.

Although there are not many people who enthusiastically promote the materialist worldview, it has become the default belief of many scientifically educated people that all phenomena are reducible to the activities of matter.

- The Malaise of Materialism

Materialism leads to a rejection of spirituality, both in terms of declining religious belief, and also in the arts where the cult of ugliness, with its obsessions with the sordid and brutalistic, seeks to reduce humans to biological automata.

Of course all religions reject materialism as an article of faith, but none apart from Buddhism attempts to provide any rational philosophical refutation of the materialist worldview.

- Buddhism offers the only coherent critique of materialism

Whitehead said "Christianity ... has always been a religion seeking a metaphysic, in contrast to Buddhism which is a metaphysic generating a religion." In other words, Christianity does not have the metaphysical foundation needed to withstand materialism.

So nowadays it's left to Buddhism to defend the spiritual aspect of humanity from mechanistic materialism, and show that not everything about the human mind can be explained in mechanistic terms.

The Buddhist argument against materialism is to demonstrate that mind is an aspect of reality that is not reducible to material causes and structures.

Note that in Buddhist metaphysics, mind is not a kind of 'thing' or 'substance' because 'things' and 'substances' are dependent upon structure for their existence. The mind can apprehend structure, but does not itself have any vestige of structure, nor can it be reduced to structure (mind is said to be 'formless').

So how does the materialist worldview map on to the Buddhist worldview, and what are the discrepancies?

- Materialism, physicalism and computationalism.

In discussing the differences between Buddhist metaphysics and materialism, we need a more precise definition of the materialist philosophical position, which introduces two rather more modern terms - physicalism and computationalism.

Physicalism is a more precise formulation of the rather vague term 'materialism'. It states that all phenomena, including the mind, are reducible to the laws of physics.

Computationalism is physicalism specifically applied to explaining the function of the human mind. Since all physical systems can be modelled, simulated and explained in terms of datastructures and algorithms, (see Church-Turing Thesis), it follows that if physicalism is true, then the human mind can be modelled, simulated and explained by a computer. This is a more precise statement than the traditional materialist view that the mind is a machine.

Buddhism versus Computationalism

The difference between the Buddhist and the Computationalist view of reality can be stated quite simply:

The Buddhist believes that all functioning phenomena are dependent upon

- Causality
- Structure
- Designation by mind

The Computationalist believes that all functioning phenomena are dependent upon

- Causality
- Structure
...with the mind being reducible to the operations of causality on structure in the same way that the activities of a computer are reducible to the operation of algorithms on datastructures.

To the Buddhist, in contrast, the mind is an irreducible foundation of reality.

Arguments against computationalism.

If computationalism is false, then it seems very likely that mind must be an axiomatic aspect of reality, which is not dependent upon the mechanism of the brain or body, and so may continue to exist after death.

See here for arguments against materialism in general, and here for arguments against the computational theory of mind.

Metarationality versus irrationality in religion

Metarationality deals with valid phenomena which lie beyond the limits of discursive thought. Qualia are prime examples, and much meditational practice deals with the deliberate invocation of qualia.

Also, some types of meditation deliberately seek to go beyond conceptual thought in order to reach nonconceptual awareness.

Other metarational phenomena are those paradoxes that lie at, or just beyond, the limits of logical thought, and which have been investigated by Buddhist philosophers such a Nagarjuna.

According to Hume, the entire field of ethics may be metarational, since reasoned and logical arguments are incapable of going from an 'is' to an 'ought'. Ethics cannot be rationally derived either from knowledge based on logic and definitions, or from observation.

The difference between metarationality and irrationality, is that with metarationality you attempt to explore the landscape beyond the end of the tracks of logical thought, whereas with irrationality you come off the rails long before you reach the end of the line.

Buddhist philosophy is rational until it reaches the limits of logic, wherupon it goes metarational, whereas some religions are just plain irrational from the very start of the journey.

For rationalists such as Richard Dawkins, 'Faith' is very much an F-word .

Faith makes a virtue out of believing unprovable and often improbable propositions. Dawkins contrasts this with the scientific method, which he describes as a system whereby working assumptions may be falsified by recourse to reason and evidence.

The Place of Faith in Buddhism

So is 'Faith' in Buddhism the same kind of unquestioning belief in bizarre and often mutually contradictory assertions as found in other religions, or is it more in the nature of 'Trust'.

Buddha, in his rejection of essentialism and affirmation of the importance of impermanence, displayed an insight into the way that things exist that has only recently been confirmed by science. Buddhist meditational techniques have also recently been empirically verified to have measurable beneficial effects. But how far should we trust Buddhist doctrine when it deals with topics that are metarational?

Trusting the Guide to the Path
Consider the situation where we are hiking on a mountain in the Scottish Highlands.

We are following a map, when suddenly a fog closes in and we can only see a few feet ahead. We decide to get off the mountain as quickly as possible and wait for better weather. The map shows a quick way down which appears to be shorter than the route we took to get here. But do we trust the map?

Well, there are good maps and not so good maps. There are maps originating from the observations of competent mountaineers using suitable equipment and accurate record keeping, and there are maps originating on the back of beer mats drawn from hazy memories in Highland bars at 11 o'clock at night after traversing the malt whisky shelf.

So how do we decide whether to follow the route on the map? How do we know it won't lead us over a cliff or into a bog? Are we prepared to stake our safety and maybe our life on this map?

One way to weigh the risks would be to judge the reliability of the map by what it has shown so far. Has it accurately described the route we've taken?
Or has it shown things that aren't there, and missed out major features that are?

If Buddha's map to the path has proved accurate up to where we are now, then maybe we should have sufficient faith in it to take us a bit further along the path.

TIP - If some aspects of Buddhist beliefs seem unfamiliar, obscure, or confusing, then bear in mind that Buddhism is a process philosophy. Difficult aspects of Buddhism often become much clearer when viewed from a process perspective.

Source

rational-buddhism.blogspot.com.au