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* <nowiki>[[Criticism of Buddhism#Arguments of secular origin]]</nowiki> The anchor (#Arguments of secular origin) is no longer available because it was [[Special:Diff/1106418787|deleted by a user]] before. <!-- {"title":"Arguments of secular origin","appear":{"revid":524093161,"parentid":524090612,"timestamp":"2012-11-20T22:16:39Z","removed_section_titles":["Not true to Buddhist principles"],"added_section_titles":["Inconsistencies in Buddhism","Arguments of secular origin"]},"disappear":{"revid":1106418787,"parentid":1106414966,"timestamp":"2022-08-24T14:06:21Z","removed_section_titles":["Criticism of Buddhist practices","Women in Buddhism","Criticism of Buddhist doctrine","Accusations of nihilism","CITEREF1998","CITEREF2014","Confucian criticism","Arguments of secular origin","Criticism from Hinduism","Criticism from Gaudapada","Criticism from Adi Shankara","CITEREF2009","CITEREF2006","CITEREF2016"],"added_section_titles":["Nihilism"]}} --> |
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==Pragmatic Dharma movement deserves a section== |
==Pragmatic Dharma movement deserves a section== |
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Particularly how attainments are considered a worthy and achievable goal in contrast to downplaying their role in mainstream Secular Buddhism. |
Particularly how attainments are considered a worthy and achievable goal in contrast to downplaying their role in mainstream Secular Buddhism. |
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::[[User:Sarahjones49|Sarahjones49]] what you're saying is unacceptable behavior here. The only thing you're likely to get with what you are calling "an outside editor review" is booted from Wikipedia.[[User:Teishin|Teishin]] ([[User talk:Teishin|talk]]) 14:21, 10 June 2020 (UTC) |
::[[User:Sarahjones49|Sarahjones49]] what you're saying is unacceptable behavior here. The only thing you're likely to get with what you are calling "an outside editor review" is booted from Wikipedia.[[User:Teishin|Teishin]] ([[User talk:Teishin|talk]]) 14:21, 10 June 2020 (UTC) |
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== Proposal to replace existing article == |
== Proposal to replace existing article == |
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Thank you for your time and consideration. River-kind |
Thank you for your time and consideration. River-kind |
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Two articles published in volume 13 of the Journal of Global Buddhism |
Two articles published in volume 13 of the Journal of Global Buddhism (2012) represent some of the earliest sources on secular Buddhism. One by Winton Higgins, “The Coming of Secular Buddhism: A Synoptic View,” suggests it is time for Buddhism to contribute to the cultural shift towards modernity and secularity initially observed by Max Weber and later expanded upon by Charles Taylor in A Secular Age (The Coming 111). |
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According to Taylor, this new age “puts to an end the naive acknowledgment of the transcendent, or of goals and claims that go beyond human flourishing” (Secular Age 21). |
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According to Taylor, this new age “puts to an end the naive acknowledgment of the transcendent, or of goals and claims that go beyond human flourishing” (Secular Age 21). While Taylor holds to the prospect of a belief in a higher good bound to the natural processes, he does not articulate the belief (2). Accordingly, there is no competition for those like Martin Hägglund who suggest, “secularity foregrounds life experiences that unfold in our own time and place, and sidelines beliefs, theories and practices that give primacy to entities and processes that are supposedly timeless (SF 27). |
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As Higgins sees it, many who converted to Buddhism in the West from the 1960s have learned to discern and challenge the incongruities and regressions that lurked beneath the seamless, modernity-friendly façade of traditional Buddhism (TC 114). He suggests that ethnically western Buddhists interpret the early teachings anew and abandon later accretions and practices that pass for ‘traditional’ Buddhism. Secular Buddhism would thus distinguish itself from “Buddhist modernism” (an historical compromise whereby ‘traditional’ elements are laicized, expressed in a modern idiom, and mixed with transcendence (112). In accordance with Taylor’s forecast, he calls for the development of a Buddhist practice that promotes a full human flourishing, disavows superhuman agencies and supernatural processes, and thus dispenses with redemptive exits from the human condition (TC 111-12, 117). |
As Higgins sees it, many who converted to Buddhism in the West from the 1960s have learned to discern and challenge the incongruities and regressions that lurked beneath the seamless, modernity-friendly façade of traditional Buddhism (TC 114). He suggests that ethnically western Buddhists interpret the early teachings anew and abandon later accretions and practices that pass for ‘traditional’ Buddhism. Secular Buddhism would thus distinguish itself from “Buddhist modernism” (an historical compromise whereby ‘traditional’ elements are laicized, expressed in a modern idiom, and mixed with transcendence (112). In accordance with Taylor’s forecast, he calls for the development of a Buddhist practice that promotes a full human flourishing, disavows superhuman agencies and supernatural processes, and thus dispenses with redemptive exits from the human condition (TC 111-12, 117). |
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The other Journal of Global Buddhism |
The other ''Journal of Global Buddhism'' is “A Secular Buddhism” by Stephen Batchelor (SA 87-107). Batchelor trained for eight years with Tibetan monks associated with the Dalai Lama and, after three years in a Sŏn (Zen) monastery in South Korea, became a self-described secular Buddhist (ab 5,10, 17). |
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Batchelor sets out an interpretation of Buddhism that no longer depends on belief in rebirth, karma, and liberation from the cycle of birth and death (89). His seeks to broaden the appeal of Buddhism by accepting the insights of the natural sciences as opposed to the metaphysical tenets of ancient Indian culture (SA 89). In a careful reinterpretation of the early teachings, he outlines a new way to understand the most basic of Pali canon teachings, the Four Noble Truths (SA 92). According to Batchelor, suffering, arising, ceasing, and the eightfold path need no longer be considered “truths” (or indispensable steps leading to a metaphysical solution) but rather “tasks” on which to base a practice for living creatively in this world (SA 95-100). |
Batchelor sets out an interpretation of Buddhism that no longer depends on belief in rebirth, karma, and liberation from the cycle of birth and death (89). His seeks to broaden the appeal of Buddhism by accepting the insights of the natural sciences as opposed to the metaphysical tenets of ancient Indian culture (SA 89). In a careful reinterpretation of the early teachings, he outlines a new way to understand the most basic of Pali canon teachings, the Four Noble Truths (SA 92). According to Batchelor, suffering, arising, ceasing, and the eightfold path need no longer be considered “truths” (or indispensable steps leading to a metaphysical solution) but rather “tasks” on which to base a practice for living creatively in this world (SA 95-100). |
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In a later book, After Buddhism – rethinking the dharma for a secular age, Batchelor offers a similar reinterpretation of the Buddhist concept of emptiness. He suggests that emptiness is not a truth, let alone an ultimate truth to be directly cognized in a non-conceptual state of meditation, but rather a readily accessible state of mind in which to dwell: “to dwell in emptiness brings us firmly down to earth and back to our bodies. It is a way to open our eyes and see ordinary things as though for the first time” (ab 9-10). |
In a later book, ''After Buddhism – rethinking the dharma for a secular age'', Batchelor offers a similar reinterpretation of the Buddhist concept of emptiness. He suggests that emptiness is not a truth, let alone an ultimate truth to be directly cognized in a non-conceptual state of meditation, but rather a readily accessible state of mind in which to dwell: “to dwell in emptiness brings us firmly down to earth and back to our bodies. It is a way to open our eyes and see ordinary things as though for the first time” (ab 9-10). |
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Batchelor too distances secular Buddhism from Buddhist modernism. After recognizing that groups such as the assorted Vipassana communities, the Soka Gakkai, and Shambhala retain many of the artifacts of ancient Buddhism, he notes, “The secular Buddhism I anticipate would be more radical than any of these secularized Buddhist movements”. In contrast, we “seek to return to the roots of the tradition and rethink and re-articulate the dharma anew” (ab19). |
Batchelor too distances secular Buddhism from Buddhist modernism. After recognizing that groups such as the assorted Vipassana communities, the Soka Gakkai, and Shambhala retain many of the artifacts of ancient Buddhism, he notes, “The secular Buddhism I anticipate would be more radical than any of these secularized Buddhist movements”. In contrast, we “seek to return to the roots of the tradition and rethink and re-articulate the dharma anew” (ab19). |
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In addition to the Four Noble Truths and emptiness, his books (some of which are listed below) explain how to rethink other doctrinal staples handed down from Buddhist antiquity. There has also been a workbook published that outlines a practice to complement Batchelor’s innovations (wb). |
In addition to the Four Noble Truths and emptiness, his books (some of which are listed below) explain how to rethink other doctrinal staples handed down from Buddhist antiquity. There has also been a workbook published that outlines a practice to complement Batchelor’s innovations (wb). |
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⚫ | As it is today, Stephen Batchelor’s interpretations constitute the only form of secular Buddhism (published by an independent source) that is fully consistent with Taylor’s call for teachings that do not “acknowledge the transcendent.” You may, however, wish to review the external links below for potential future contributors. |
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Recently, his methods contribution has been criticized on three fronts. First, it has been alleged he resurrects a pure form of early Buddhism from canonical texts that are in themselves subject to questionable authenticity (Reimagining Zen 183-85). Second, he does not account for the Boddhisattva path (RZ 195-96). And that he limits secular Buddhism to a teaching exclusive to the immanent frame when the mainstream view appears to be a mix of secular and traditional Buddhist doctrine (RZ 238). |
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[This post references the following sources. The citations below will be adjusted to Wikipedia conventions.] |
[This post references the following sources. The citations below will be adjusted to Wikipedia conventions.] |
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Stephen Batchelor 2012. A Secular Age, Journal of Global Buddhism, Vol. 13, 87-107. |
Stephen Batchelor 2012. A Secular Age, Journal of Global Buddhism, Vol. 13, 87-107. |
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Andre van der Braak 2020. Reimagining Zen in a Secular Age – Charles Taylor and Zen Buddhism. Boston: Brill. (This book was just published and aggressively supports a less orthodox variation of secular Buddhism.) |
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Martin Hägglund, This Life: Secular Faith and Spiritual Freedom (New York: Anchor Books, 2020). |
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Winton Higgins 2012. The Coming of Secular Buddhism: A Synoptic View, Journal of Global Buddhism, Vol. 13, 109–26. |
Winton Higgins 2012. The Coming of Secular Buddhism: A Synoptic View, Journal of Global Buddhism, Vol. 13, 109–26. |
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[[User:River-kind|River-kind]] |
[[User:River-kind|River-kind]] |
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I've only read selections from Hägglund's book, but isn't he a critic of Buddhism? I'm not sure how he fits in here. [[User:Teishin|Teishin]] ([[User talk:Teishin|talk]]) 14:03, 6 December 2020 (UTC) |
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{{replyto|Teishin}} |
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Thanks for your knowledgeable response. This quote was recommended to me. I have ordered the book and should receive it next week to confirm. His definition of secularity (as it is represented in the quote above) would seem consistent with the concept of emptiness. It is also helpful to distinguish from Taylor's call for an affirmative belief and the need to come up with such. These two sentences can be removed for now. |
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The sentence "According to Taylor, this new age “puts to an end the naive acknowledgment of the transcendent, or of goals and claims that go beyond human flourishing” (Secular Age 21)." can remain and be merged with the paragraph above it. |
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[[User:River-kind|River-kind]]([[User talk:River-kind|talk]]) <!--Template:Undated--><small class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|undated]] comment added 14:18, 6 December 2020 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosign--~~~~ed by SineBot--> |
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My understanding of Hägglund's thesis about secularity is that all existing religious traditions and all existing philosophies of life (including secular Buddhism, albeit the most benign religious/philosophical tradition) are enemies of the spiritual secular mission of socialism. [[User:Teishin|Teishin]] ([[User talk:Teishin|talk]]) 15:38, 6 December 2020 (UTC) |
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{{replyto|Teishin}} |
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Yikes. Thanks for catching that. When I receive the book, I'll verify and make further suggestions if warranted. |
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I revised again the suggested replacement above to remove the reference to Hägglund. I also removed the criticisms because they are subject to further nuanced arguments that may tend to detract from the piece. |
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[[User:River-kind|River-kind]]([[User talk:River-kind|talk]] |
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==Wiki Education assignment: Asian Religions in America== |
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{{dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment | course = Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/Skidmore_College/Asian_Religions_in_America_(Fall_2022) | assignments = [[User:Wifi22|Wifi22]] | reviewers = [[User:User20232|User20232]] | start_date = 2022-09-07 | end_date = 2022-12-09 }} |
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<span class="wikied-assignment" style="font-size:85%;">— Assignment last updated by [[User:Ziegenbalg66|Ziegenbalg66]] ([[User talk:Ziegenbalg66|talk]]) 00:43, 16 November 2022 (UTC)</span> |
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Pragmatic Dharma movement deserves a section
[edit]Particularly how attainments are considered a worthy and achievable goal in contrast to downplaying their role in mainstream Secular Buddhism.
Fourth paragraph, about "Traditional Buddhist ethics", needs rewriting to be understandable
[edit]It's hard to tell if the words at the start of the fourth paragraph are the beginning of a sentence or a title of a section, at least partly because of the confusing use of dashes and commas there; and as a result the paragraph is very confusing.
original fourth paragraph:
Traditional Buddhist ethics—while some schools, especially Western Buddhist ones, take more progressive stances regarding social issues—such as conservative views regarding abortion, homosexuality and human sexuality, may or may not be called into question as well.
I could suggest the following as a possible rewrite, but I have no idea if it's factual, just that it may be more easily understandable:
Traditional Buddhist ethics: while some schools of Buddhism, especially Western Buddhist ones, take more progressive stances regarding social issues (in contrast to conservative views regarding abortion, homosexuality and human sexuality), these issues may or may not be called into question as well by Secular Buddhism.
I won't make the above rewrite myself because I don't know if what it says is true or not.
I suppose it's possible, from looking at the original writing style of the paragraphs preceding the fourth one, that the paragraph might rather mean as follows, rewritten:
While some schools of Buddhism, especially Western Buddhist ones, take more progressive stances regarding social issues, traditional Buddhist ethics (such as conservative views regarding abortion, homosexuality and human sexuality) may or may not be called into question by Secular Buddhism as well.
But I also don't know if that statement as I've rewritten it is actually true or not.
Need citations
[edit]The problem of not having good citations was clear as another editor became reluctant to make grammatical changes because they were concerned that they may be affirming the accuracy of the paragraph they wanted to clarify.
Use good citations to encourage future contributions. PeterEdits (talk) 00:58, 21 April 2015 (UTC)
"progressive"
[edit]"take more progressive stances regarding social issues"
Loaded term. Progressive is an Orwellian euphemism for values (or really, anti-values, since they define themselves mostly in negation of traditional Western values rather than positively) that in 50 years have destroyed civilization throughout the West. Hardly seems like progress in the sense the term implies. Linear progress, sure, or the progress of someone falling down a mountain. But not the kind of progress the term intends to imply. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:243:C102:BCB0:B40B:5F1A:3DFF:DCF8 (talk) 09:23, 8 August 2017 (UTC)
Who or what organizations are Secular Buddhist?
[edit]As the term Secular Buddhism is an artificial construction and hence its genesis story is likewise an artificial one (i.e. 'broad trend of secularization that has been developing in the West since the recovery of classical Greek culture in the Renaissance, rather than merely as a consequence of the supposed triumph of scientific rationalism over religion in the modern period.'), it should be mentioned in the article, that many self-described secular Buddhist organizations do not see each other or certain others as deserving of this description. The movement as described in this article seems to suggest it is an Theravadan-derived offshoot movement since the only practice it mentions is the model of the noble eight-fold path. The restrictive definition in this article seems to indicate only Western groups are part of the Secular Buddhist movement. Are there any non-Western groups that claim descent from secularization via classical Greek culture?
It should also be mentioned whether 'secular Buddhism' seeks to replace or invalidate the traditional forms of Buddhism; or is it just a sect of Buddhism; or it sees itself as Buddhism as originally taught by Gautama Buddha and the basis for such beliefs, etc., Hanbud (talk) 13:48, 20 September 2018 (UTC)
These are listed now under schools and sects section with more forthcoming Sarahjones49 (talk) 23:49, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
Please do not revert the topic I have done in the See also section....
[edit]I consider myself as a secular Buddhist (Buddhism 2.0). I treat the Wikipedia as a text book for everything. This See also section will lead me to understand Buddhism 1.0 and the out look of the religion.
I have deleted some of your entries. I will make a comment on your placement of Soka Gakkai as part of the secular buddhism movement. I believe with Soka Gakkai's emphasis on social welfare, it should fit better with Humanistic Buddhism rather than secular buddhism. Although secular buddhism is a lay-based movement, there are important differences between what it expouses and Soka Gakkai. Hanbud (talk) 11:14, 18 December 2018 (UTC)
Proposal for brief entry (two sentences) at end of history section about a Secular Buddhism evolved from the Lotus/Nichiren tradition
[edit]The proposed entry would read as follows:
start: There is also a variation of Secular Buddhism underway since 2012 that seeks to free the Lotus/Nichiren tradition from the trappings of supernaturalism, dogma and, as Stephen Batchelor notes in After Buddhism, the “unselfconscious rhetoric about its awakened teachers, pure lineages, and meditations.”[1] See "A Comprehensible Ultimate for a Common Good" end.
Please read the article before commenting. If you would comment before 3/24/20, so that I may address your concerns before posting, it would be appreciated.
(River-kind (talk) 16:55, 24 February 2020 (UTC))
Perhaps it would be useful to have a section on different manifestations of Secular Buddhism by Buddhist tradition.Teishin (talk) 15:04, 24 March 2020 (UTC)
I have responded to your comment on your Talk page. River-kind (talk) 14:04, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- River-kind, it seems to me that that conversation belongs here, not on my talk page. On the matter at hand, as I said before, it seems useful to me to have a section about this. What we lack at this point is proper references upon which to base what we have to say. Teishin (talk) 16:12, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- River-kind, it seems to me that that conversation belongs here, not on my talk page. On the matter at hand, as I said before, it seems useful to me to have a section about this. What we lack at this point is proper references upon which to base what we have to say. Teishin (talk) 16:12, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
- River-kind, your proposed entry cites "A Comprehensible Ultimate for a Common Good", a self-published (or unpublished) text. Per WP:SPS: "Anyone can create a personal web page, self-publish a book, or claim to be an expert. That is why self-published material such as books, patents, newsletters, personal websites, open wikis, personal or group blogs (as distinguished from newsblogs, above), content farms, Internet forum postings, and social media postings are largely not acceptable as sources." Your use of Batchelor, Stephen (2016), After Buddhism: Rethinking the Dharma for a Secular Age, New York: HarperCollins, p. 319, ISBN 978-93-5177-774-8 appears to be WP:SYNTHESIS, Batchelor does not write this in the context of Lotus/Nichiren tradition. The following quote from Batchelor (2016), p.319, reveals the context: "Buddhist centers turnout to be just as prone to power struggles, sexual scandals, and misuse of funds as any other human institution, and Buddhist “masters” are routinely exposed as possessing restless libidos and feet of clay. If we are shocked and disappointed by such revelations, we entertainedan idealistic view of Buddhism to begin with. In accepting Buddhism’s unselfconscious rhetoric about its awakened teachers, pure lineages, and meditations that guarantee enlightenment, we are in danger of setting ourselves up either for painful disillusionment or increasingly elaborate forms of justification and denial." Your proposed text is not verifiable with independent reliable sources and Wikipedia does not publish original research. JimRenge (talk) 16:44, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
I responded earlier today in this talk window, but someone must have deleted the entry. Stephen Batchelor does not use the cite in the context of the Lotus tradition, but to Buddhism generally. In the preceding section that you cite above, he is explaining the reasons why people should not be duped into Buddhism's "unselfconcious rhetoric about its awakened teachers, pure lineages, and meditations that guarantee enlightenment..." What I quoted was this criteria, which Stephen offered for secular Buddhist's to follow in assessing the merits of a secular Buddhist teaching. I then used it as an introduction for assessing the article regarding the Lotus/Nichiren tradition. If you read the article, you will see it is in conformance with Stephen's criteria. I understand your point of citing to unpublished sources, but I'm not sure why you then went on to suggest that I took Stephen out of context.
In my entry earlier today that someone deleted, it mentioned that the Secular Buddhism explanation here is heavily weighted in favor of secular a Buddhism limited to the Theravada/Zen tradition. I believe this is a misrepresentation of what is actually going on with Secular Buddhism and I felt my article would help balance it out. I had asked for some flexibility in regard to it being unpublished, but apparently you are not so inclined.
Also, do you have any objection to opening up a separate section for criticism on the page? Or am I the only one who has trouble with originalist claims such as (Unlike the various kinds of Buddhist modernism, which tend to be modifications of traditional schools of Buddhist thought and practice in the light of the discourses of modernity, secular Buddhism is founded on a reconfiguration of core elements of the dharma itself.[8] To this end it seeks to recover the original teachings of Siddhattha Guatama, the historical Buddha, yet without claiming to disclose "what the Buddha really meant".)
What Stephen actually said on p. 90 of the article cited is "The more I am seduced by the force of my own arguments, the more I am tempted to imagine that my secular version of Buddhism is what the Buddha originally taught, which the traditional schools have either lost sight of or distorted. This would be a mistake; for it is impossible to read the historical Buddha's mind to know what he "really" meant or intended." Stephen does not say "secular Buddhism is founded on a reconfiguration of core elements of the dharma itself." He suggests basing it on "canonical source texts" and "the right and duty of each generation to reinterpret the teachings ..." (90-92) River-kind (talk) 23:12, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
This is very related to my entries under the article secular Buddhism, and i highly suspect given jim RENGE name and Lotus flower on his page that he is biased and as a theist Nichiren Buddhist is intentionally preventing ANY reference to secular Nichiren Buddhism. Pure bias. Nothing more otherwise he would edit and correct entries instead of ALWAYS deleting them. Sarahjones49 (talk) 02:00, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
Jim Renge pls state your faith and that you are not a non secular Nichiren Buddhist. Sarahjones49 (talk) 02:11, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
- Jim Renge must do no such thing. This article is based on reliable sources and facts, not faith. Focus on the material and do not resort to attacking the person you disagree with with ad hominem accusations. The most effective way to have the content you're suggesting in the article is to state very clearly what material you're proposing, what third-party reliable sources there are that warrant the inclusion that are not self-published sources. If you are able to provide reliable sources that clearly support the material suggested, a consensus can be formed. If a clear consensus cannot be reached, there are ways to bring in outside editors that have no relation to the article in any way that can judge the material and sources on their merits, not on accusations of bias and name-calling. - Aoidh (talk) 04:12, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
There is orthodox Nichiren bias from JimRenge. I want an outside editor review. NOW. Sarahjones49 (talk) 11:22, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
I suspect Jim Renge is Soka Gakkai or Nichiren Shoshu Sarahjones49 (talk) 11:24, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
- Unfortunately nobody here is in a position to dictate to anyone what they do on the talk page, nor the timeline in which they do it. Because of this I will be unable to accommodate your demand for "NOW". You missed the point entirely, and behavior like that is not going to get anyone to see your side, nor are the baseless accusations. What edit are you proposing, and what sources support it? Right now there's nothing to review, because there's been no reliable third-party sources mentioned that back up any content being proposed or really any content being proposed with an explanation of why it fits into the article. - Aoidh (talk) 12:49, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
- Sarahjones49 what you're saying is unacceptable behavior here. The only thing you're likely to get with what you are calling "an outside editor review" is booted from Wikipedia.Teishin (talk) 14:21, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
References
- ^ a b Batchelor, Stephen (2016), After Buddhism: Rethinking the Dharma for a Secular Age, New York: HarperCollins, p. 319, ISBN 978-93-5177-774-8
Proposal to replace existing article
[edit]Dear Colleagues - I have two requests. First, that Sarahjones' vitriolic rant above be removed from this talk page, as it defiles our ongoing effort to improve this article.
Second, that we replace the description currently on the main page, including the Introduction, History, and Key Concepts and Practices sections, with the narrative below.
I would appreciate a response by 5 p.m. PT, Sunday 12/6/20, or I will post as is. Everything will be cited and the “need additional citations” template will finally come down.
Thank you for your time and consideration. River-kind
Two articles published in volume 13 of the Journal of Global Buddhism (2012) represent some of the earliest sources on secular Buddhism. One by Winton Higgins, “The Coming of Secular Buddhism: A Synoptic View,” suggests it is time for Buddhism to contribute to the cultural shift towards modernity and secularity initially observed by Max Weber and later expanded upon by Charles Taylor in A Secular Age (The Coming 111). According to Taylor, this new age “puts to an end the naive acknowledgment of the transcendent, or of goals and claims that go beyond human flourishing” (Secular Age 21).
As Higgins sees it, many who converted to Buddhism in the West from the 1960s have learned to discern and challenge the incongruities and regressions that lurked beneath the seamless, modernity-friendly façade of traditional Buddhism (TC 114). He suggests that ethnically western Buddhists interpret the early teachings anew and abandon later accretions and practices that pass for ‘traditional’ Buddhism. Secular Buddhism would thus distinguish itself from “Buddhist modernism” (an historical compromise whereby ‘traditional’ elements are laicized, expressed in a modern idiom, and mixed with transcendence (112). In accordance with Taylor’s forecast, he calls for the development of a Buddhist practice that promotes a full human flourishing, disavows superhuman agencies and supernatural processes, and thus dispenses with redemptive exits from the human condition (TC 111-12, 117).
The other Journal of Global Buddhism is “A Secular Buddhism” by Stephen Batchelor (SA 87-107). Batchelor trained for eight years with Tibetan monks associated with the Dalai Lama and, after three years in a Sŏn (Zen) monastery in South Korea, became a self-described secular Buddhist (ab 5,10, 17).
Batchelor sets out an interpretation of Buddhism that no longer depends on belief in rebirth, karma, and liberation from the cycle of birth and death (89). His seeks to broaden the appeal of Buddhism by accepting the insights of the natural sciences as opposed to the metaphysical tenets of ancient Indian culture (SA 89). In a careful reinterpretation of the early teachings, he outlines a new way to understand the most basic of Pali canon teachings, the Four Noble Truths (SA 92). According to Batchelor, suffering, arising, ceasing, and the eightfold path need no longer be considered “truths” (or indispensable steps leading to a metaphysical solution) but rather “tasks” on which to base a practice for living creatively in this world (SA 95-100).
In a later book, After Buddhism – rethinking the dharma for a secular age, Batchelor offers a similar reinterpretation of the Buddhist concept of emptiness. He suggests that emptiness is not a truth, let alone an ultimate truth to be directly cognized in a non-conceptual state of meditation, but rather a readily accessible state of mind in which to dwell: “to dwell in emptiness brings us firmly down to earth and back to our bodies. It is a way to open our eyes and see ordinary things as though for the first time” (ab 9-10).
Batchelor too distances secular Buddhism from Buddhist modernism. After recognizing that groups such as the assorted Vipassana communities, the Soka Gakkai, and Shambhala retain many of the artifacts of ancient Buddhism, he notes, “The secular Buddhism I anticipate would be more radical than any of these secularized Buddhist movements”. In contrast, we “seek to return to the roots of the tradition and rethink and re-articulate the dharma anew” (ab19).
In addition to the Four Noble Truths and emptiness, his books (some of which are listed below) explain how to rethink other doctrinal staples handed down from Buddhist antiquity. There has also been a workbook published that outlines a practice to complement Batchelor’s innovations (wb).
As it is today, Stephen Batchelor’s interpretations constitute the only form of secular Buddhism (published by an independent source) that is fully consistent with Taylor’s call for teachings that do not “acknowledge the transcendent.” You may, however, wish to review the external links below for potential future contributors.
[This post references the following sources. The citations below will be adjusted to Wikipedia conventions.]
Stephen Batchelor 2015. After Buddhism – rethinking the dharma for a secular age. New Haven CT: Yale University Press.
Stephen Batchelor 2012. A Secular Age, Journal of Global Buddhism, Vol. 13, 87-107.
Winton Higgins 2012. The Coming of Secular Buddhism: A Synoptic View, Journal of Global Buddhism, Vol. 13, 109–26.
Winton Higgins, Jim Champion, Ramsey Margolis 2018. After Buddhism: a workbook, Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand: The Tuwhiri Project.
Charles Taylor 2007. A Secular Age. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.)
River-kind — Preceding undated comment added 06:31, 2 December 2020 (UTC)
The existing article seems to me to be more informative than the proposed new article. I see content in the proposed new article which might be incorporated into the existing article. I note that the proposed article includes some criticism. Usually that is handled in a separate section on criticism. As for the comments made by ex-editor Sarahjones I suggest they be left here as a record in case similar issues arise in the future. Teishin (talk) 16:51, 3 December 2020 (UTC)
Thank you for responding. I have revised the replacement suggested above to include revisions received in the last two days from secular Buddhists in New Zealand and Australia. I'm OK with leaving the SarahJones comments and moving the criticism to a separate section. There are issues with the current version including citation. I don't mind including some of it, but thought it was hopeless to rewrite. Can you prepare something worthy of including and is not redundant with this revision? We can postpone posting for another week.
I've only read selections from Hägglund's book, but isn't he a critic of Buddhism? I'm not sure how he fits in here. Teishin (talk) 14:03, 6 December 2020 (UTC)
@Teishin: Thanks for your knowledgeable response. This quote was recommended to me. I have ordered the book and should receive it next week to confirm. His definition of secularity (as it is represented in the quote above) would seem consistent with the concept of emptiness. It is also helpful to distinguish from Taylor's call for an affirmative belief and the need to come up with such. These two sentences can be removed for now.
The sentence "According to Taylor, this new age “puts to an end the naive acknowledgment of the transcendent, or of goals and claims that go beyond human flourishing” (Secular Age 21)." can remain and be merged with the paragraph above it.
River-kind(talk) — Preceding undated comment added 14:18, 6 December 2020 (UTC)
My understanding of Hägglund's thesis about secularity is that all existing religious traditions and all existing philosophies of life (including secular Buddhism, albeit the most benign religious/philosophical tradition) are enemies of the spiritual secular mission of socialism. Teishin (talk) 15:38, 6 December 2020 (UTC)
@Teishin: Yikes. Thanks for catching that. When I receive the book, I'll verify and make further suggestions if warranted.
I revised again the suggested replacement above to remove the reference to Hägglund. I also removed the criticisms because they are subject to further nuanced arguments that may tend to detract from the piece.
Wiki Education assignment: Asian Religions in America
[edit]This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 7 September 2022 and 9 December 2022. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Wifi22 (article contribs). Peer reviewers: User20232.
— Assignment last updated by Ziegenbalg66 (talk) 00:43, 16 November 2022 (UTC)