Be not misled: Zen Action/Zen Person is not merely another
introduction a survey of Zen Buddhism. Kasulis' philosophical project
and purview is far grander; he is seeking a new grounds for
understanding personhood through a Zen view of self and action. Even
scholars with no interest in Zen per se will find much of philosophical
interest and stimulation in this creative work. Kasulis' scope is vast
indeed: he begins with Socrates and ends with Morita psychotherapy, with
frequent references to Heidegger and other contemporary European
philosphers.Kasulis quotes Taoist Chinese sages, Indian dialecticians,
and German philosophers with equal ease, to illustrate and buttress his
arguments. Although he sometimes ignores historic schisms among
competing Zen schools, Kasulis is not writing a history of Zen,nor does
he intend to do so. In his preface, his goal is explicit
"Often the explanations (of Zen Masters) are not fully satisfying to
the critical Western reader. To fill in the gaps, we will resort in this
study to some philosophical reconstruction.In other words, by
extrapolating from the basic tenets of the Zen tradition, we can reason
through certain arguments that are only implicit or fragmented in the
Zen writings themselves...."(p.xi)
This is indeed a welcome volume for those of us who have fallen out
of love with the perpetual paradox of cocktail party koans, and the
smiling masters so unwilling to support or explain their deep-sounding
pronouncements.
Kasulis recognizes that Zen emerges from a Sino-Japanese world with
presuppositions very different from our own, He starts from two premises
taken for granted among Japanese but too rarely elucidated for
Westerners: that language is inadequate to describe reality, and that
personhood (like language) is inescapably contextual. Zen Action/Zen
Person opens with a discussion of context in Zen and in Japanese
language, While oversimplified,
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this unique approach has several merits. It acquaints the reader with
the Japanese viewpoint, simultaneously denying that Zen need be
inscrutable and impenetrable, while cautioning against wholesale
translation of Zen ideas into Western :terminology. This beginning
section is a good example of Kasulis' practicing what he preaches: all
communication is inextricably context-bound, so each context must be
understood before its language has any meaning. Kasulis takes the
argument a step further, holding that personhood is also defined in
terms of contexts in the Orient. While this is importantly true, Kasulis
never even alludes to the Vedic or Confucian origins of the
relationships and hierarchies which define persons in India and China.
Taoism and Buddhism are reactions against mainstream Hindu and Confucian
role-definitions of persons in society, which they never supplant. We
may well wonder how far the Japanese notion of personhood in terms of
context and action is Zen-inspired, and how much we should really trace
back to the Analects and the cultures it nourished.
At the same time that Kasulis challenges the high regard in which
Western thinkers have held propositional truths, he denies that Eastern
philosophers have seen no need for consistent arguments in defending
their own positions. To show that Zen's distrust of language is
logically defensible, Kasulis turns to the critiques of time and
causality in Nagajuna's Mulamadhyamikakarika. Time and causality are
notoriously messy concepts, so to treat them as typical of the
inadequacies of all language and conclude that "all utterances share the
quality (of being contradictory or paradoxical) if we push them far
enough," (p. 28) may be a little hasty. Most simple statements can be
unpacked and analysed quite unproblematically, with sufficiently
sophisticated definitions, syntax rules, and perhaps Montague grammar,
unknown to the Japanese. Nevertheless, for the sake of the western
reader, Kasulis' use of Nagajuna has the value of repudiating
common-sense notions of the simplicity and referentiality of language.
It would be a mistake to think of Nagarjuna's methods as father to the
Zen tradition, of which Kasulis says he is a "patriarch." Historical
links between Nagarjuna and Bodhidharma and the early Chinese patriarchs
are unknown, and logical analyses with the force and clarity of
Nagarjuna's dialectics are distinctly lacking in most of the Zen
tradition. But Kasulis is not claiming that Nagajuna is a Zen Buddhist.
Rather, he uses Nagarjuna to show how we may rationally criticize
ratiocination, to defend and explain the background and consistency of
Zen
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philosophy as a Zen master might, if one ever felt the need to defend and explain,and in this he does a fine job.
Kasulis is probably best known for his writings on Dogen, and it is
in his interpetations of Dogen that he really shines. He demonstrates a
meticulous and empathetic reading of Dogen's Shobogenzo, particularly
the difficult fascicles on genjokoan, bendowa, and uji. Here, Kasulis
has done a commendable job in "demythologysing" Zen Buddhism of the
metaphysicalisms which have encumbered it since D.T. Suzuki. By
reinterpreting such Suzuki-isms as "manifestation of reality" as the
more accessible "presence of things as they are," Kasulis indeed makes
Zen more consistent with its claim to repudiate metaphysics, or at least
to reject blanket statements about unexperienceable Ultimates. However,
this very translation, "presence of things as they are," tends towards a
naive realism so common in Sino-Japanese thought. The careful
phenomenologist wants to "bracket out" the question of the reality of
the objects of experience, and simply deal with experiences themselves.
Indian Buddhists like Nagarjuna would surely agree. But the Zen (Ch'an)
tradition often strays into a naive realism which asserts that not only
experience but its objects are externally real and objectively,
knowable. Reflecting the vacillation of his sources, Kasulis is
sometimes very clear that Dogen is a phenomenologist (p. 69); at other
times, he quotes with approbation the materialist version of Dumoulin,
that "This physical world, just as it is, is genuine, patent reality."
(p. 84). But such apparent inconsistencies are rare, and do not
significantly detract from the argument for the primacy of experience.
Zen Action/Zen Person is made the more readable by its inclusion of
examples taken from everyday experience. In drawing the essential
distinction between "not thinking" and 'without thinking," Kasulis
analogizes "not thinking" to the state of the insomniac worrier who
rolls over, takes a deep breath, and makes a conscious effort to blank
his mind and stop all thought (p. 74). He analogizes 'without thinking"
to thoughtlessly saying "ouch" upon stubbing a toe, or to the one who
gazes thoughtlessly over his lawn after mowing it. The insomniac example
is a good example of "not thinking"-the conscious rejection of further
conscious thought. The examples of "without thinking" are inadequate;let
us see why.
Clinical studies of Zen masters have shown that the Zen state is one
in which there is no judgment,categorization, nor habituation of
experience.
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Kasulis is aware of the earliest of these studies (Naranjo and
Ornstein, 1971), stating that "every click (experience) is a first click
(experience)" to someone in this state of mind (p. 163). We grant that
there is no self-conscious reflection in saying "ouch" or blankly gazing
over the lawn, as Kasulis says.But the Zen person would do neither. For
there is a component of emotional display in the "ouch" reaction, which
the non-judgmental, non-categorizing Zen attitude precludes. The Zen
master's stubbed toe is fully experienced, but it requires no further
verbalization. Nor is the dazed gaze of the weary lawn-mower,
unintentional and self-forgetful as it may be, analogous to the
undimming perceptual receptivity of the Zen master. These examples are
misleading if they leave the impression that surprised or dazed
unthinking moments (Jap.: bonyari/boketto shite) are ,phenomenologically
similar to the flood of unanalysed immediacy, "the presencing" by which
we should characterize Zen masters. Zen non-reflection is not the
un-selfconscious thoughtlessness of the animal, the child, the insane,
the exhausted laborer, or the fool caught off guard. They all lack the
unhabituating and continuous total awareness--the undimmed and
non-verbal at-one-ness with their experience-that the Zen master attains
through years of discipline.
Zen Action/Zen Person tends to slight the role of discipline and
dedication, so crucial to the Japanese and so rare in the modern West.
That most of Kasulis' examples fail to capture the fullness of the Zen
masters' experiences is very understandable, and Kasulis himself admits
the limitations of some of his examples.To equate mere thoughtless
reaction with the spontaneity of Zen
enlightenment,as he does (pp.88 ff.)answers the troublesome old
query, "In what sense are all beings already enlightened? " with, "They
all have pre-reflective experiences." But it fails to treat the
concomitant question, "Then what is the need for discipline, what the
need to do anything at all, much less sitting in meditation? " The
latter may be answered in the master's ability to put himself in a fully
selfless and fully aware, non-habituating state of mind at will, fully
feeling every moment as totally new and unique. But all this is a
question of emphasis rather than of error, and our own preferences may
be skewed in an opposite direction. Kasulis' more important theme is
importantly correct: that further examination of pre-reflective states
(enlightened or not) may give new dimensions to our understanding of
personhood in terms of act.
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It is to be regretted that Zen Action/Zen Person took so many years
to publish--but it is good to have it in hand at last! Kasulis'
discussion of important terms like mu, basho, jisetsu, is too rich to
encapsulate here, but deserves full reading by scholars and Zen
practitioners alike. Kasulis brings together seminal insights of Taoist,
Zen, and contemporary philosophy, reaching towards new understanding of
man's being-in-the-world, and of the non-being which is prior to and
makes possible that being. He finds points of compatibility between
Dogen and Hakuin, representing rival schools of Soto and Rinzai Zen. He
finds close kinship in Buddha's process philosophy, Basho's haiku,:and
Morita's psychotherapy, miles and millenia removed. In a study of
millenia, a decade is not long, and Kasulis' sources are not old, but
they are aging. 90% of his references are more than a decade old. none
are younger than five years. Much interesting scholarship has emgerged
since his Yale dissertation, and it would be interesting to have
Kasulis' responses to other comparative scholars. Cleary and Kodera have
brought out new translations of Dogen, while Leebrich and A.C. Graham
have improved on previous translations of the Lao-tzu and Chuang-tzu,
respectively. Bossert and Steffney have compared Zen and phenomenology,
while others like Akishige, Izutsu,Hirai, and Sekida have discussed the
Zen mind in ways particularly relevant to Kasulis' interest in
psychotherapy. But we have surely not heard the last from this
insightful interpreter of Zen.
Zen Action/Zen Person is a good book about Zen. It shows us that
there is more of philosophical significance in the Japanese tradition
than it is normally credited with having. It makes good sense of some
Buddhist thinkers, and explains what others would have wanted to say if
they had had both the interest and the linguistic abilities to be
philosophically consistent, as Kasulis does. But it is not only a book
about Zen; it is a major and creative philosophical reconstruction. It
demonstrates that Japanese Zen can be intelligible to a western
intellectual on his own terms-while clearly recognizing its deep roots
in a very foreign context of culture and language. It demystifies much
confusion created by the metaphysical language of his predecessors,
after Suzuki. It traces pregnant parallels between the Zen world-view
and western phenomenology, particularly of Heidegger and Husserl. In so
doing, Kasulis not only finds fruitful new directions for an
understanding of persorlhood, but opens a wide door to more creative
Japanese-American philosophical dialogue.