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Nic Newton, ‘Description, Visualisation, and Concatenation in the Larger Sukhāvatīvyūhasūtra’

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
Embed
Reading Mahāyāna Scriptures Conference, Sept 25-26, 2021
Nic Newton
PhD candidate in Sanskrit, Asian Studies Department, University of Edinburgh

‘Description, Visualisation, and Concatenation in the Larger Sukhāvatīvyūhasūtra’

Do syntactic patterns signify an intended transition from external recitation to a more motivated memorisation and mental recitation, and thence to full visualisation of a meditation object, or are they the ornamentation of a text for rhetorical or other communicative ends? Could they be both? In this paper I argue that the identification of concatenation and other poetic means found in the larger Sukhāvatīvyūhasūtra’s highly repetitious description (varṇaka) of the jewel-trees of Amitābha’s paradise problematises understandings of this passage as a cognitive stencil for visualisation. I apply Yelle’s method for the semiotic analysis of a discourse event to this example and view it as a ritual and mode of rhetorical performance. The use of this method of parsing allows the diagramming of patterns, and evidences the use of escalation, exhaustion, concatenation, and the rigorous integration and manipulation of two lists (mātṛkā): the seven precious materials and tree parts. The identification of concatenation (śṛṅkhalika) in particular allows a comparison with incidences of anadiplosis found outside Mahāyāna literature in the Mahāsudassanasutta and Dīpaṃkaravastu. It also points us to examples such as the Indriyeśvara chapter of the Gaṇḍavyūhasūtra that have no semantic link to the larger Sukhāvtīvyūhasūtra’s description. Furthermore, concatenation brings to mind methods of recitation and memorisation such as the kramapāṭha, and is noted as an established feature of poetic technique appearing in several genres of Indian literature from the Vedas to Māhārāṣṭrī Jaina and Prakrit literature. The use of concatenation in Buddhist literature across examples that are seen as mere descriptions, and in those that are understood as visualisations, calls into question the purposes of the passage from the larger Sukhāvatīvyūhasūtra. Whilst the perspectives of the Guan wuliangshoufo jiang (*Amitāyurdhyānasūtra) and Wuliangshou jing youbotishe yuanshengjie (*Sukhāvatīvyūhopadeśa), make it hard to vitiate the views of scholars such as Harrison and Gethin that this passage is a template for visualisation, it seems our understanding needs to be augmented. It may be that concatenation here is simply a legacy of memorisation. It may also be that this manipulation was intended to heighten the impact of the metaphor of Amitābha as spiritual sovereign, and the deployment of literary ornament serves to further increase the praise quotient of the passage. However, it may also be that such a patterning announces a distinctive purpose for this passage, and that its images were singled out for memorisation and adornment by virtue of their established use in pragmatic contexts.

Episode Information

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
People
Nic Newton
Keywords
sukhāvatīvyūha
Mahāyāna
description
visualisation
concatenation
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 30/03/2022
Duration: 00:30:38

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Dr. Mikael Bauer, ‘Tracing the exoteric-esoteric in pre-modern Japanese Dharma Assemblies’

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
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Reading Mahāyāna Scriptures Conference, Sept 25-26, 2021
Dr. Mikael Bauer
Assistant Professor of Japanese Religions (Buddhism), School of Religious Studies, McGill University

‘Tracing the exoteric-esoteric in pre-modern Japanese Dharma Assemblies’

Historians of pre-modern Japan have often described the relation between Buddhism and state by referring to the Gates of Power (kenmon) theory. Developed by the Japanese historian Kuroda Toshio, this concept implies that the state was divided in three power blocs of which the temples and shrines formed one component. The conceptual framework that supported this ‘kenmon’ state was a synthesis of exoteric and esoteric Buddhism or ‘Kenmitsu Taisei.’ Although a conflation of exoteric and esoteric lineages can certainly be observed on the institutional level, just what this exo-esoteric identity encompassed on the textual, ritual and doctrinal level is much less clear. This presentation explores whether this exoteric Buddhism can be discerned in debates (rongi) at the Dharma Assemblies (hō’e) of one of pre-modern Japan’s main monastic centers, Kōfukuji. Founded at the beginning of the 8th century, this grand temple was regarded as the center of the Japanese Mind Only School (Hossō) and became the site of major state rituals such as the Vimalakīrti Assembly or the Yuima’e.

I will approach these debates in two ways. First, I will analyze the preparation period monks had to go through prior to their participation. By doing so, I will not only focus on the texts used throughout this training period, but also reflect on the way these texts are being used as part of the monk’s daily ritual. In my analysis I will go through detailed manuals and commentaries used throughout the Heian period (794-1185). Second, I will turn to actual debates and analyze sessions from the Heian and Kamakura periods as preserved in the writings of the monk Sōshō (1202-1292). A detailed reading of his writings in comparison with an analysis of existing ritual manuals will allow me to assess the presence or absence of exoteric-esoteric Buddhism in the doctrinal debates the monks engaged in.

Episode Information

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
People
Mikael Bauer
Keywords
japanese buddhism
esoteric
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 30/03/2022
Duration: 00:34:05

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Dr. Gregory Adam Scott, ‘Reading Mahāyāna Scriptures in Modern China: The Role of Scriptural Presses, Distributors, and Buddhist Bookstores’

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
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Reading Mahāyāna Scriptures Conference, Sept 25-26, 2021
Dr. Gregory Adam Scott
Senior Lecturer in Chinese Culture and History, Chinese Studies, University of Manchester

‘Reading Mahāyāna Scriptures in Modern China: The Role of Scriptural Presses, Distributors, and Buddhist Bookstores’

Buddhist scriptures have been at the centre of Chinese Mahāyāna traditions since they were first brought into China and translated into Classical Chinese in the early Common Era. Since then, they have had a lively existence, being re-copied, re-translated, inscribed, reprinted, collected, commented upon, indexed, and further transmitted throughout East Asia. From the late nineteenth century and into the early twentieth century, however, the task of getting people to actually read the Buddhist scriptures gained a new urgency. The Taiping War of the 1850s and 60s had destroyed untold numbers of Buddhist texts, and as part of the post-war reconstruction, a new generation of monastic and lay printers worked to produce new editions of Mahāyāna texts and put them into the hands of as many people as possible. The textual production and distribution networks they established were joined in the 1920s and 1930s by specialist Buddhist publishers and bookstores that used cutting-edge technology to produce, distribute, and sell their texts. Without abandoning the scriptural corpus that had helped define Mahāyāna traditions for centuries, they imagined new ways of connecting readers with texts so that both critical understanding and numinous inspiration could result.

My presentation will examine how scriptural presses, scripture distributors, and Buddhist bookstores worked to promote reading and understanding Mahāyāna scriptures in modern China. These institutions and the people who managed them operated during an era of rapid technological and cultural transformation, during which various state authorities were attacking religious culture but promoting education and literacy. The textual world of these printers and publishers drew upon the centuries-old patrimony of Chinese Buddhist textual culture, but also attempted to embrace the promises and opportunities of the modern era in order to address the challenges they faced. As such it provides a window not only into how Chinese Buddhist leaders creatively adapted to changing circumstances, but also more generally how religious culture throughout modernizing East Asia introduced innovation into scriptural reading practices.

Episode Information

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
People
Gregory Adam Scott
Keywords
Mahāyāna
reading
china
presses
distributors
bookstores
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 30/03/2022
Duration: 00:32:04

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Dr. David Drewes, ‘How Many Mahāyānas Were There?’

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
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Reading Mahāyāna Scriptures Conference, Sept 25-26, 2021
Dr. David Drewes
Associate Professor of Religion, Department of Religion, University of Manitoba

‘How Many Mahāyānas Were There?’

This paper examines Mahāyāna sūtra passages that advocate or attempt to legitimate the use of other Mahāyāna sūtras, exploring ways of reading and interpreting them. It attempts to show that the authors and users of these texts regarded themselves as participants in a single movement. Arguing against the old idea that Mahāyāna emerged in different forms based in multiple, separate communities, it suggests that Mahāyāna rather emerged as a single, cohesive, primarily textual movement without any specific community basis.

Episode Information

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
People
David Drewes
Keywords
Mahāyāna
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 30/03/2022
Duration: 00:30:43

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D. E. Osto

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Charles DiSimone

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Berthe Jansen

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Ailsa Butler

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Helen Lackner

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Dr. D.E. Osto, ‘Virtual Realities: A Mahāyāna Interpretation based on The Supreme Array Scripture’

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
Embed
Reading Mahāyāna Scriptures Conference, Sept 25-26, 2021
Dr. D. E. Osto
Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, Department of Philosophy, Massey University

‘Virtual Realities: A Mahāyāna Interpretation based on The Supreme Array Scripture’

The Supreme Array Scripture (gaṇḍavyūha-sūtra) is an important Mahāyāna sūtra that recounts the story of Sudhana, a young man who sets out on a quest for omniscient buddhahood during the lifetime of the historical Buddha. This expansive narrative depicts a cosmic vision of reality wherein all physical and mental phenomena within spacetime interpenetrate and inter-reflect each other. This nonduality of intentionality and things Rupert Gethin (1998: 119) aptly calls the Buddhist “principle of the equivalence of cosmology and psychology.” According to this principle, the various cosmological realms are understood to be the result of the intentional activities of the beings who inhabited those realms. Simply put this is the Buddhist understanding of karma: one’s intentional activities over countless lifetimes definite the parameters of one’s lifeworld. Thus, there are no free-standing objective places apart from the collective karmic conditioning of their inhabitants; in truth, all conventional reality is virtual. This principle is dramatically depicted in the opening scene of The Supreme Array, when Vairocana Buddha enters a meditative trance (samādhi) that transforms Jeta Grove into an infinitely vast jewelled space. Following an elaborate description of this vision, the narrator informs us that the disciples of the Buddha who are not bodhisattvas do not see this transformation because they lack the necessary “roots of merit” (kuśulamūla). This assertion is then illustrated with a number of analogies highlighting the virtual and karmic nature of conventional reality. In this paper, I argue that The Supreme Array’s view that all conventional experience is virtual may be applied to our current ethical thinking around the technological creation of virtual realities (VR technology), and the current “Simulation Hypnosis” that the universe we are living in is in fact an artificial simulation.

Episode Information

Series
Buddhist Studies at Oxford
People
D. E. Osto
Keywords
gaṇḍavyūha
Mahāyāna
virtual reality
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 29/03/2022
Duration: 00:23:41

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