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How Buddhism Acquired a Soul on the Way to China: Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies Monographs

Autor Jungnok Park
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 dec 2011
How Buddhism Acquired a Soul on the Way to China tells the story of the spread of Buddhist religious thinking and practice from India to China and how, along the way, a religion was changed. While Indian Buddhists had constructed their ideas of self by means of empiricism, anti-Brahmanism and analytic reasoning, Chinese Buddhists did so by means of non-analytic insights, utilising pre-established epistemology and cosmogony. Furthermore, many specific Buddhist ideas were transformed when exchanged from an Indian to a Chinese context, often through the work of translators concept-matching Buddhist and Daoist terms. One of the key changes was the Chinese reinterpretation of the concept of shen - originally an agent of thought which died with the body - into an eternal essence of human spirit, a soul. Though the notion of an imperishable soul was later disputed by Chinese Buddhist scholars the idea of a permanent agent of perception flourished in China. This historical analysis of the concept of self as it developed between Indian and Chinese Buddhism will be of interest to readers of Buddhist Philosophy as well as the History of Ideas.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781845539962
ISBN-10: 1845539966
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 158 x 241 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Equinox Publishing (Indonesia)
Seria Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies Monographs


Notă biografică

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.

Cuprins

INTRODUCTION Part I: Chinese Buddhist Translation in its Cultural Context Preamble Chapter 1: The characteristics of Chinese Buddhist translation Chapter 2: The verification of the traditional attributions of translatorship Part II: The Development of the Indian Buddhist Concept of Self Preamble Chapter 3: Self in early Buddhist soteriology Chapter 4: Development of Buddhist self Chapter 5: Nirvana and a permanent self Part III: The Development of the Chinese Buddhist Concept of Self Preamble Chapter 6: Chinese ideas about self before the arrival of Buddhism Chapter 7: Non-self but an imperishable soul in Chinese Buddhist translations Chapter 8: A survey of interpolations and adaptations of an agent in sansara Chapter 9: The characteristics of the Chinese Buddhist concept of self CONCLUSION