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Difference between revisions of "Huayan school"

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[[File:Flower Garland Sutra.jpg|300px|thumb|Page from the Tangut translation of the Flower Garland Sutra]]The Huayan school (Chinese: 華嚴宗; pinyin: Huáyán Zōng; Japanese: Kegon; Korean: 화엄종 (Hwaeom jong); [[Sanskrit]]: Avataṃsaka) or Flower Garland is a tradition of [[Mahayana]] [[Buddhist Philosophy]] that flourished in China during the Tang period. It is based on the [[Sanskrit]] Flower Garland [[Sutra]] (S. Avataṃsaka [[Sūtra]], C. Huayan Jing) and on a lengthy Chinese interpretation of it, the Huayan Lun. The name Flower Garland is meant to suggest the crowning glory of profound understanding.
 
[[File:Flower Garland Sutra.jpg|300px|thumb|Page from the Tangut translation of the Flower Garland Sutra]]The Huayan school (Chinese: 華嚴宗; pinyin: Huáyán Zōng; Japanese: Kegon; Korean: 화엄종 (Hwaeom jong); [[Sanskrit]]: Avataṃsaka) or Flower Garland is a tradition of [[Mahayana]] [[Buddhist Philosophy]] that flourished in China during the Tang period. It is based on the [[Sanskrit]] Flower Garland [[Sutra]] (S. Avataṃsaka [[Sūtra]], C. Huayan Jing) and on a lengthy Chinese interpretation of it, the Huayan Lun. The name Flower Garland is meant to suggest the crowning glory of profound understanding.
  
Origins and development
+
== Origins and development ==
 +
===Origins===
  
 
The [[Hua-yen school]] was established during the period of the end of the Sui and beginning of Tang Dynasty (c. 600-700 C.E.). The [[Tiantai]]-school, which was favoured by the Sui Dynasty, fell in digrace. The Tang rulers favoured Taoism, but under Emperor Taizong (627–650) [[Interest]] in [[Buddhism]], especially [[Yogacara]], relived at the court. Empress Wu Zetian (684–705) supported the [[Hua-yen school]] of Fazang.  
 
The [[Hua-yen school]] was established during the period of the end of the Sui and beginning of Tang Dynasty (c. 600-700 C.E.). The [[Tiantai]]-school, which was favoured by the Sui Dynasty, fell in digrace. The Tang rulers favoured Taoism, but under Emperor Taizong (627–650) [[Interest]] in [[Buddhism]], especially [[Yogacara]], relived at the court. Empress Wu Zetian (684–705) supported the [[Hua-yen school]] of Fazang.  
 
The Hua-yen school derived its name from the title of the Chinese translation of Avatamsaka-sutra. Avatamsaka literally means "Flower Garland". (Fig.1 Hua-Yen Temple)
 
 
The first complete translation of the Avatamsaka Sutra in Chinese was done by Buddhabhadra (359-429) between 418-421. This translation is in sixty fascicles and has thirty-four chapters. It is also referred to as "Sixty Hua-yen" or "Old sutra".
 
 
A latter translation of the Sutra under the same title was completed by Siksananda(652-710) in Tang dynasty. This translation is in eighty fascicles and has thirty-nine chapters. It is also referred to as "Eighty Hua-yen" or "New sutra".
 
 
The third translation of the Sutra was done by Prajna not too long after the second translation. The origin of this Sanskrit source was from different part of India and the content was similar to the last forty fascicles of the Avatamsaka-sutra therefore it is called "Forty Hua-yen" or "Last Hua-yen".
 
 
The first two translations are quite similar, the second being perhaps more literal and somewhat longer because it contains new material not found in the earlier version. And the last one is a re-translation of the second part of the sutra with minor regional differences.
 
 
As one of the longest texts in the Buddhist canon, the Avatamsaka is one of the most comprehensive compendiums of the Buddhist teaching. It was held in the highest esteem by the followers ever since its presence in Chinese Buddhist society.
 
 
The main subject of this sutra is the description of the Buddha's enlightenment. It provides a detail guide for practitioners to pursuit the Bodhisattva's Path, from the awakening of Bodhicitta to the accomplishment of perfect Buddhahood. The Bodhisattva Path is presented in four sets of ten stages, culminating with the two levels of enlightenment, the final goal of Mahayana Buddhism.
 
 
The school was officially founded by Fa-tsang (or Shan-shiang 643-712) based on his scholarly contribution to the Hua-yen theory. His religious work attracted a lot of attention and eventually produced significant influence on the emperor. With strong political support from the emperor, Fa-tsand was able to create a new school system that outspread quickly during the time. Even this school was started from Fa-tsand, its earliest theory and structure go back to the masters Tu-shun(or Fa-shun, 557-640) and Chih-yen (602-668), who are considered the first two patriarchs of the Hua-yen school. Tu-shun's "Five levels of teaching" and "Ten profound gates" formed the root of the school system. And he was regarded by his successors as an incarnation of Manjushri.
 
 
Further important representatives were Cheng-kuan (or Ching-liang 738-839), under whom the school gained great influence. Cheng-kuan was the master of several emperors. With his special relationship to the political leaders, Cheng-kuan earned the title "the Hua-yen Bodhisattva" and was regarded as the fourth patriarch. The fifth patriarch of the school was Tsung-mi (780-841), who initiated the concept of merging Zen and Hua-yen in one school. After the death of Tsung-mi, Hua-yen declined during the general suppression of Buddhism in China.
 
 
The Hua-yen school distinguishes itself from the other Chinese Buddhist schools in an important viewpoint. The practice in this school concentrates on the relationship between phenomena and not on that between phenomena and the absolute. This notion is called the "universal causality of the Dharma-dhatu (universal principle)," i.e., everything in the universe arises out of itself and the principles of all activities (phenomena) are essentially one, and that unity is essentially plural. Since all things participate in a unity and this unity divides into the many, therefore the manifold is unified in this one. Based on the theory, there are an infinite number of Buddhas and Buddha realms in the universe and they all share the same true Buddha body and live with the same principle in the similar Buddha realm, they are just like individual waves of the same sea and these waves cannot exist independently. Because the equality of all things and the dependence of all things upon one another are so essential in this school, this teaching is known as the "teaching of totality".
 
 
From this point of view everything in the world, whether animate or inanimate, is an expression of the highest principle (Dharma-dhatu) and is thus one with Buddhamind. This view is explained in the division of the universe into four realms and in the thesis of the six characteristics of things. They are in either a state of "true suchness" (tathata): (I). The static aspect of which is the realm of "principle" ("li"). (II). The dynamic aspect of which is the realm of phenomena ("Shih"). These two realms are so interwoven and dependent on each other that the entire universe arises as an interdependent conditioning. The four realms of the universe are as follows:
 
 
    The realm of phenomena: The Small teaching and Begin teaching define this realm as the world of Dharma.
 
 
    The realm of the principle (absolute): The Begin and Sudden teachings define this realm as the world of Dharma.
 
 
    The realm in which phenomena and principle mutually interpenetrate: The End teaching defines this realm as the world of Dharma. It touches the basis of Middle Way and provides the integrated system for the phenomena and principle realms.
 
 
    The realm in which all phenomena exist in perfect harmony: This is the teaching of totality. Based on the theory, the Round teaching is able to resolve the different viewpoints from results of different phenomenal experiences.
 
 
To explain these many-to-one, one-to-many, and many-to-many relationships of phenomena, Hua-yen's teaching defines that the dharma possesses the six characteristics:
 
 
        Universality: The view of corresponding object as a whole.
 
 
        Specificity: The parts of the object only fulfill the specific function and are distinct from each other.
 
 
        Similarity: All the parts consist in the fact that they are part of the object.
 
 
        Distinctness: All the parts express the distinct functions in the object.
 
 
        Composition: The characteristic of integration that all parts together make up the object.
 
 
        Decomposition: Every part takes its own particular place and the object can be completed only if each part show the nature of their differentiation.
 
 
Like the Tien-tai school, Hua-yen undertakes a division of the Buddha's teaching into different categories. Unlike Tien-tai's intention of integrating different Indian Buddhism theories, Hua-yen's focus was more on synthesizing different viewpoints of Chinese schools during early Tang Dynasty. This school classified Buddhist scriptures and doctrines on five levels. With its own teaching as the highest and most complete teaching of all. These five levels are:
 
 
    Small teaching: The Hinayana teaching. It is considered the "small vehicle" teaching because it only focuses on individual liberation and it appears in the Agamas period.
 
 
    Begin teaching: The beginning teachings of the Mahayana, which sees all dharmas are emptiness because they arise in a conditioned fashion. And because it denies all beings possess Buddha-nature (with the potential of being an enlightenment one) therefore it is considered an elementary (or begin) teaching. As advocated by the Fa-hsiang and San-lun schools.
 
 
    End teaching: The end teaching of the Mahayana. On this level all things are considered to arise with causality by emptiness nature, and their individual independent existence is admitted. As presented by the Tien-tai school.
 
 
    Sudden teaching: Unlike the previous two teachings that require gradual practice, enlightenment can be attained suddenly through special techniques taught in the teaching. This is the stage of Zen.
 
 
    Complete (Round) teaching: The ultimate and complete teaching of the Buddha's teaching, the teaching of the Hua-yen school. Where all beings and activities (phenomena) exist in perfect harmony.
 
  
 
===Patriarchs===
 
===Patriarchs===
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==Influence==
 
==Influence==
 
The doctrines of the Huayan school ended up having profound impact on the philosophical attitudes of all of East Asian [[Buddhism]]. Chinese [[Chán]] was profoundly influenced by it, though [[Chán]] also defined itself by profilating itself from Huayan. Tsung-mi, the Fifth [[Patriarch]] of the [[Hua-yen school]], also occupies a prominent position in the history of [[Chán]]. During the Song, the Hua-yen metaphysics were completely assimilated by the [[Chán]]-school.  
 
The doctrines of the Huayan school ended up having profound impact on the philosophical attitudes of all of East Asian [[Buddhism]]. Chinese [[Chán]] was profoundly influenced by it, though [[Chán]] also defined itself by profilating itself from Huayan. Tsung-mi, the Fifth [[Patriarch]] of the [[Hua-yen school]], also occupies a prominent position in the history of [[Chán]]. During the Song, the Hua-yen metaphysics were completely assimilated by the [[Chán]]-school.  
</poem>
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==References==
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{{W}}
[[Wikipedia:Huayan school]]
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 +
 
 
[[Category:Hua-yen school]]
 
[[Category:Hua-yen school]]
 
[[Category:Chinese Buddhist History]]
 
[[Category:Chinese Buddhist History]]
 
[[Category:Buddhist Terms]]
 
[[Category:Buddhist Terms]]
 
[[Category:History of Buddhism]]
 
[[Category:History of Buddhism]]

Revision as of 13:09, 2 June 2013

Page from the Tangut translation of the Flower Garland Sutra

The Huayan school (Chinese: 華嚴宗; pinyin: Huáyán Zōng; Japanese: Kegon; Korean: 화엄종 (Hwaeom jong); Sanskrit: Avataṃsaka) or Flower Garland is a tradition of Mahayana Buddhist Philosophy that flourished in China during the Tang period. It is based on the Sanskrit Flower Garland Sutra (S. Avataṃsaka Sūtra, C. Huayan Jing) and on a lengthy Chinese interpretation of it, the Huayan Lun. The name Flower Garland is meant to suggest the crowning glory of profound understanding.

Origins and development

Origins

The Hua-yen school was established during the period of the end of the Sui and beginning of Tang Dynasty (c. 600-700 C.E.). The Tiantai-school, which was favoured by the Sui Dynasty, fell in digrace. The Tang rulers favoured Taoism, but under Emperor Taizong (627–650) Interest in Buddhism, especially Yogacara, relived at the court. Empress Wu Zetian (684–705) supported the Hua-yen school of Fazang.

Patriarchs

The founding of the school is traditionally attributed to a series of five "patriarchs" who were instrumental in developing the schools' doctrines. These five are (Wade-Giles in brackets):

  1. Dushun (Tu-Shun), 杜順, responsible for the establishment of Huayan studies as a distinct field;
  2. Zhiyan (Chih-yen), 智儼, considered to have established the basic doctrines of the sect;
  3. Fazang (Fa-tsang), 法藏, considered to have rationalized the Doctrine for greater acceptance by society;
  4. Chengguan (Ch'eng-kuan), 澄觀, together with Zongmi are understood to have further developed and transformed the teachings
  5. Zongmi (Tsung-mi), 宗密, who is simultaneous a Patriarch of the Chan tradition.

These men each played a significant and distinct role in the development of the school, although there are certain aspects of this patriarchal scheme which are clearly contrived. For example, Chengguan was born 26 years after Fazang's Death. Another important figure in the development and popularization of Huayan Thought was the lay scholar Li Tongxuan (李通玄). Some accounts of the school also like to extend its patriarchship earlier to Aśvaghoṣa and Nāgārjuna.

Sagnation

After the time of Zongmi and Li Tongxuan the Chinese school of Huayan generally stagnated in terms of new development, and then eventually began to decline. The school, which had been dependent upon the support it received from the government, suffered severely during the Buddhist purge of 841-845, initiated by Emperor Wuzong, never to recover its former strength. Nonetheless, its profound metaphysics, such as that of the Four Dharmadhātu (四法界) of interpenetration, had a deep impact on surviving East Asian schools.

Texts

The Hua-yen school centered on the philosophy of interpenetration and mutual containment which its founders perceived in the Avatamsaka Sutra.

Avatamsaka Sutra

Avatamsaka Sutra, vol. 12, (화엄경 華嚴經 12권) frontispiece in gold and silver text on indigo blue paper W: 12 3/8 in. x H: 4 5/8 in. (each fold) Ho-Am Art Museum

The Avatamsaka Sutra is a compilation of sutras of various length. The earliest of these texts, the Daśabhūmika Sūtra, maybe dates from the first century CE.[3] The Daśabhūmika Sūtra describes the ten stages on the Bodhisattva-path. The various sutras were probably joined together shortly before its translation into Chinese, at the beginning of the 5th century CE.

The Avatamsaka ("garland", string of Flowers) Sutra integrates the teachings on Sunyata and vijnaptimatra (Mind-only). The basic idea of the Avatamsaka Sutra is the unity of the absolute and the relative:

All in One, One in All. The All melts into a single whole. There are no divisions in the totality of reality [...] [I]t views the cosmos as holy, as "one bright pearl," the universal reality of The Buddha. The universal Buddhahood of all reality is the religious message of the Avatamsaka-Sutra.[4] Each part of the World reflects the totality of the cosmos:

National Treasure of South Korea 196, a scroll of the Avatamsaka sutra in ink on white paper.

In each dust-mote of these worlds

Are countless worlds and Buddhas...
From the tip of each Hair of Buddha's Body
Are revealed the indescribable Pure Lands...
The indescribable infinite Lands

All ensemble in a Hair's tip [of Buddha].

All levels of reality are related and interpenetrated. This is depicted in the image of Indra's net. This "unity in totality allows every individual entity of the phenomenal World its uniqueness without attributing an inherent nature to anything".

Commentaries

Yet despite basic reliance on this Sutra, much of the technical terminology that the school became famous for is not found in the Sutra itself, but in the commentaries written by its early founders. The most important of these commentaries is Tu-shun's Fa Chieh Kuan, "On the Meditation of the Dharmadhatu".

Awakening of Faith

Fa-zang also relied on the Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana, which was a condensation of Chinese Thought on Awakening and ultimate reality.

Philosophy

Interpenetration

The most important philosophical contributions of the Huayan school were in the area of its metaphysics. It taught the Doctrine of the mutual containment and interpenetration of all Phenomena, as expressed in Indra's net. One thing contains all other existing things, and all existing things contain that one thing. Distinctive features of this approach to Buddhist Philosophy include:

  • Truth (or reality) is understood as encompassing and interpenetrating falsehood (or Illusion), and vice versa
  • Good is understood as encompassing and interpenetrating Evil
  • Similarly, all Mind-made distinctions are understood as "collapsing" in the Enlightened understanding of Emptiness (a tradition traced back to the Buddhist Philosopher Nagarjuna)

Four Dharmadhatu

Huayan teaches the Four Dharmadhatu, four ways to view reality:

  1. All dharmas are seen as particular separate events;
  2. All events are an expression of the absolute;
  3. Events and essence interpenetrate;
  4. All events interpenetrate.

Paradox

Huayan makes extensive use of paradox in argument and literary imagery. All three types of paradox originate in the tension between conventional Truth and absolute Truth. Huayan uses three types of paradox:

1.Emphasizing the concept of Sunyata, first is asserted that a Phenomenon X is empty, which implies that X is not X. An example from Fa-tsang is the assertion that

When one understands that origination is without self-nature, then there is no origination.

2. Reversing the first paradox by asserting that any empty Phenomenon is an expression of the absolute Non-duality between Emptiness and Form, or the identity between conditioned, relative reality and the ultimate Truth of suchness (chen-ju(j). This paradox is derived from two doctrinal sources:

  • The Hua-yen concept of "true Emptiness" (chen-k'ung(g)), and
  • The Hua-yen interpretation of the dialectic of the One Mind (i-hsin(h)) in the Awakening of Faith.

Fa-tsang's paradoxical assertion illustrates this second type:

When the great Wisdom of perfect clarity gazes upon a minute Hair,the universal sea of nature, the true source, is clearly manifest.

3. The third variation of paradox is grounded in the Hua-yen Doctrine of the "nonobstruction of all Phenomena" (shih shih wu-ai(k)). Each Phenomenon is perceived as interpenetrating with and containing all others. This paradoxical violation of the conventional order of time and space is exemplified by Fa-tsang's famous "Essay on the Golden Lion":

In each and every Hair [of the lion] there is the golden lion. All of the lions contained in each and every Hair simultaneously and suddenly penetrate into one Hair. [Therefore], within each and every Hair there are unlimited lions.

Classification of Buddhist teachings

Buddhism was introduced into China in bits and pieces. When the Knowledge of Buddhism grew larger, various schools attempted to get a grip on the Buddhist tradition by developing classifications of teachings, such as the Five Periods and Eight Teachings of the Tiantai-school.

The Hua-yen school developed a fivefold classification:

  1. The Hinayana-teachings, especially the Sarvastivadins
  2. The Mahayana-teachings, including Yogacara, Madhyamaka
  3. The "Final Teachings", based on the Tathagatagarbha-teachings, especially the Awakening of Faith
  4. The Sudden Teaching, "which 'revealed' (hsien) rather than verbalised the teaching"
  5. The Complete, or Perfect, Teachings of the Avatamsaka-Sutra and the Hua-yen school.

Since Chán emphasised sudden Awakening, the teachings of the Chán-school were regarded as inferior to the Hua-yen teachings. The Chán-school polemitized against this classification, by devising its own rhetorics in defense.

Influence

The doctrines of the Huayan school ended up having profound impact on the philosophical attitudes of all of East Asian Buddhism. Chinese Chán was profoundly influenced by it, though Chán also defined itself by profilating itself from Huayan. Tsung-mi, the Fifth Patriarch of the Hua-yen school, also occupies a prominent position in the history of Chán. During the Song, the Hua-yen metaphysics were completely assimilated by the Chán-school.

Source

Wikipedia:Huayan school