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How Buddhism Acquired a Soul on the Way to China

English

By (author): Jungnok Park

Why did some Buddhist translators in China interpolate terms designating an agent which did not appear in the original texts? The Chinese made use of raw material imported from India; however, they added some seasoningsA peculiar to China and developed their own recipesA about how to construct the ideas of Buddhism. While Indian Buddhists constructed their ideas of self by means of empiricism, anti-Brahmanism and analytic reasoning, the Chinese Buddhists constructed their ideas of self by means of non-analytic insights, utilising pre-established epistemology and cosmogony. Furthermore, many of the basic renderings had specific implications that were peculiar to China. For example, while shen in philosophical Daoism originally signified an agent of thought, which disintegrates after bodily death, Buddhists added to it the property of permanent existence. Since many Buddhists in China read the reinterpreted term shen with the implications of the established epistemology and cosmogony, they came to develop their own ideas of self. After the late 6C, highly educated Buddhist theorists came to avoid including the idea of an imperishable soul in their doctrinal system. However, the idea of a permanent agent of perception remained vividly alive even during the development of Chinese Buddhism after the 7C. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Mar 2012
  • Publisher: Equinox Publishing Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781845539979

About Jungnok Park

Jungnok Park (1971-2008) was a Korean student of outstanding intelligence and originality. He began his university education only after spending 10 years (1989-1999) as a Buddhist monk. He had a brilliant career in the Dept. of Philosophy at Seoul National University; his MA thesis was on Nirvana and Buddhist Ethics. In 2003 he came to Wolfson College Oxford on a scholarship from the Korea Foundation. Already proficient in Classical Chinese and fluent in reading Japanese he soon learnt enough Sanskrit and Pali to use them for his research. This book is based on his Oxford D.Phil. thesis which he completed early in 2008.

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