Response: Visions and Revisions in Buddhist Ethics
Christopher
Ives
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University of Puget Sound
Complementing his creation of the new electronic journal, Journal of
Buddhist Ethics, Charles Prebish has assembled on this panel prominent scholars
in the newly-emergent field of Buddhist ethics. In their papers they
investigate several strands of Theravaada and Mahaayaana ethical reflection. By
bringing philological tools to bear on key texts and analyzing modes of ethical
argumentation, they extend their inquiry beyond descriptive ethics to the level
of meta-ethics, and thereby provide fertile ground for the work of other
Buddhologists and ethicists in general.
Dan Cozort's paper, "Cutting the Roots of Virtue":
Tsongkhapa on the Results of Anger," examines Tsongkhapa's writings on
anger in relation to earlier Mahaayaana Buddhist texts. Cozort broaches the
possibility that Buddhist views of anger as a "root affliction"
(kle"sa) that "cuts the roots of virtue" force the conclusion
that angry people may be unable to achieve liberation. To Tsongkhapa, one of
the main problems with the emotion of anger is the ascription of autonomy to
the object of anger. This reification or hypostatisation of the object of anger
entangles the angry one in his or her own mental constructs and resultant
suffering. However, when the notion that a mere moment of anger can cause the
loss of aeons of virtue is juxtaposed with the doctrine of "suunyataa,
certain questions arise. For example, might Tsongkhapa's tradition itself be succumbing
to reification-- of an emotion, rather than the object thereof-- in its attempt
to critique anger?
One might also wonder whether the negative valuation of anger is only in
response to the unenlightened substantialization of the object of one's anger.
Cozort outlines how the consequences of anger are disastrous if the object of
the anger is a bodhisattva. Presumably, a bodhisattva is an individual who has
stayed in the realm of sa.msaara in order to take on the suffering of sentient
beings and kindly lead them to liberation. Though generally Tsongkhapa does not
concern himself with the effects of anger on its object, if there is any
individual who would not be expected to react to anger with further anger or
any other kind of emotional entanglement, one would expect this to be the
bodhisattva (all past kindnesses aside). In other words, if concerned
compassionately about the relative exacerbation of suffering in the world, a
Mahaayaana Buddhist could argue that along the spectrum of individuals with whom
one might be angry, the best person to be angry with would be a bodhisattva,
for the net effect in terms of increased entanglement and suffering presumably
would be less in that case.
Granted, given the status of bodhisattvas in Mahaayaana Buddhism, anger
toward them might be seen as contrary, for example, to precepts against
defaming the Three Jewels. However, even allowing for textual and philosophical
bases for this construal of anger toward a bodhisattva, data about the
institutional and historical contexts of the formulation of Mahaayaana
prohibitions against anger might prove illuminating. Perhaps the issue of anger
toward high-ranking Buddhist figures such as bodhisattvas says more about the
political organization of and conflict in the Sangha than about the religious
status of these figures.
Cozort also cites a contemporary Gelugpa scholar who maintains that
anger will indeed have a disastrous effect on the roots of virtue, as argued
600 years earlier by Tsongkhapa. Although this claim may make sense in terms of
a leading scholar remaining faithful to traditional, orthodox sources, one
might wonder whether Tibetan leaders of a less scholarly bent-- with a more
pastoral orientation, as it were-- might be expressing different stances in
response to possible anger harbored by their Tibetan lay followers.
Specifically, how have Tibetan lamas responded to the kind of anger one might
expect to have emerged from the Tibetan community? To what extent might there
be room in Tibetan Buddhist doctrine for an "upaayic" accommodation
of anger in a specific historical state of oppression? Though this line of
questioning may be based on a culturally biased ascription of emotions to this
Asian community (perhaps most Tibetans have not responded to events in 1949 and
1959 with anger), it is interesting to wonder how Tibetans are handling the
anger, if any, they might be experiencing in response to the Chinese
government. Here, too, a linkage between classical texts or scholastic exegesis
and concrete ethnographic data would shed important light on the formulation
and application of Tibetan ethical systems in actual communities, monastic or
lay.
In his examination of the issue of suicide in early Buddhism, Damien Keown
probes the multivalency of Pali terms in a canonical account of an (apparent)
arhat's suicide and formulates a provocative interpretation of the traditional
Buddhist approach to suicide. Keown concludes that the tradition "neatly
avoids" the dilemma of an arhat breaking precepts by arguing that the
individual in question achieved enlightenment only after cutting his throat,
and hence was not technically an arhat at the beginning of the suicidal act.
One might wonder how, exactly, the act of slitting one's throat causes an
enlightenment experience. Though the text mentions a recognition of
unenlightenment that somehow led to an arousal of insight concurrent with the
act of cutting the throat, and though it may be difficult to argue that, in
principle, the act of slitting the throat could never be accompanied by
enlightenment, without further explanation one is tempted to conclude that the
tradition has advanced an ad hoc resolution to a difficult religious (and
institutional?) problem.
The idea that suicide can somehow enlighten the person echoes certain articulations
of the connection between Zen and samurai, where Japanese thinkers have argued
that the sword is not for taking life but for "giving life,"
apparently in the sense of triggering some sort of realization in people who
cut with or are cut by the blade.
Further, the apparently ad hoc solution to the issue of an arhat's suicide
seems to parallel an issue that many in the Zen tradition are currently facing:
behavior by ostensibly enlightened rooshi ("Zen masters") that is
ethically problematical and hence unexpected from someone of purportedly
advanced realization. Similar to the response to an apparent arhat's suicide,
some have argued that the rooshi involved in unethical behavior are actually
not enlightened, but this resolution of the issue of the apparent lack of
connection between the rooshi and ethical behavior strikes at the heart of the
tradition's claim of a supposedly unbroken lineage of enlightened Zen teachers
stretching back to the Buddha himself. Others have argued that one should not
expect an enlightened person to demonstrate moral rectitude or perfection, but
this response to the issue of unethical rooshi undermines the Zen and broader
Mahaayaana Buddhist claim that enlightened individuals are equipped with wisdom
(praj~naa) and compassion (karu.naa).
Perhaps there are other Theravaadan texts that could provide a persuasive
response to question of whether the Theravaadan tradition is splitting hairs
with the arhat's razor. And perhaps some members of the audience listening to
this panel might wish that the Theravaadan tradition had been blessed with
Occam, for in this case his razor might prove useful.
In bringing "ethical particularism" to our attention,
Charles Hallisey provides an intriguing angle on Theravaada Buddhist ethics. A
first question that one might pose to his paper is that of the degree to which
"ethical particularism" characterizes not only the Ma"ngalasutta
but Buddhism in general. A second query is that of whether a community's lack
of agreement on a criterion or a single meta-ethical principle through which
one can determine whether specific things are instances of a duty or virtue
such as "auspiciousness" (ma"ngala) leads us only to the
conclusion that there is simply a particular consensus about which actions are
instances of that specific duty or virtue.
One possibility that must be entertained here is that there is something
common to the particular cases that individuals agree constitute
"auspiciousness," but people at that time in South Asia could not
agree on what it was or give the commonality an adequate articulation (through
an inductive process of reasoning). In his paper, Hallisey seems to allow for
the possibility of commonality (and perhaps principles or criteria), when he
states that in the context of ethical particularism "we develop a sense of
judgment" and "some general truths are evident." In short, what
we may be encountering here is not ethical particularism but a historical
situation in which other issues-- whether social, political, linguistic, or
semantic-- precluded explicit consensus or definitional statements about what
constitutes"auspiciousness." Perhaps further textual analysis would
indicate that in fact there are certain principles operative in such moral
categories as "auspiciousness."
But if in fact "auspiciousness" does simply refer to an
agreed-upon cluster of actions without any demonstrable commonality or
principles linking them, one must ask whether we are dealing with
"ethics" per se or simply with convention. In other words, at what
point does ethical particularism become something other than ethics? Or is a
definition of "ethics" that excludes convention overly narrow?
In his analysis of key Mahaayaana Buddhist texts, David Chappell
highlights for us the fact that the ways Buddhologists classify and group texts
do not necessarily correspond with how actual Buddhists and their religious
communities draw from those texts to meet various ethical and philosophical
needs. Chappell also highlights different notions of skillful means (upaaya) and
compassion (karu.naa). His discussion causes me to wonder about the basis, if
any, on which one might be compelled to see skillful means or compassion as
ethical. One might wonder whether upaaya and karu.naa are primarily religious
(in the more existential sense), not ethical, and may function in ways that
seem contrary to ordinary ethics. In Mahaayaana Buddhism, might there not be an
element of what Kierkegaard referred to as a "teleological suspension of
the ethical," especially when upaaya takes the form of actions that
violate certain precepts or Buddhist values. (One extreme example of this is
the Ch'an teacher Chu-ji (J. Gutei) supposedly inducing enlightenment by
cutting off the finger of an acolyte who had imitated him.)
Of course, enlightenment may be held up as the ultimate telos, and in this
sense could be regarded as a kind of "good" or summum bonum, which
would grant a certain ethical status to compassion and skillful means. But
though those who expound enlightenment in this way may still face questions
about the usage of the term "good" (both nominally and adjectivally)
in relation to the notion of enlightenment, i.e., about the degree to which we
can justifiably stretch ethical categories.
At one point in his paper Chappell writes that the Confucian system in Japan
prohibited social involvement on the part of Buddhists. Strictly speaking, this
was not the case, though Chappell may be thinking of social involvement in
terms of certain modern types of social action entered into voluntarily by Buddhist
institutions. During the Tokugawa period (1600-1868), Buddhists were highly
involved in the largely Confucian political system. At that time Buddhist
institutions served as an arm of the Tokugawa government, with priests serving
as de facto officials, disseminating Confucian learning in temple schools
(tera-koya), and performing rituals for the protection of the realm and its
rulers. Following an anti-Buddhist campaign in the early years of the Meiji
Period (1868-1912), Buddhists participated actively in the socio-political
arena in order to justify themselves as socially useful in a rapidly
industrializing and militarizing Japan, and this attempt to be of
social utility led to active involvement in the unfolding of Japanese
imperialism prior to and during the Pacific War. In short, Buddhist social
involvement is not necessarily a post-war phenomenon. Perhaps the issue to
consider here is the exact circumstances and motivations behind social
involvement by Buddhists, and the forms that involvement took, rather than the
issue of whether they were or were not involved. Simply put, Buddhists have
always been involved in Japanese society and politics, though this involvement
has taken different forms at different points in time, some of which may run
contrary to the modern and in large part western values operating in social
activist circles in postwar Japan.
These brief remarks are intended simply to highlight certain questions
that emerged out of my reading of these four excellent papers and do not do justice
to the scholarooship done by these scholars of Buddhism and ethics. It is clear
that Charles Prebish and Damien Keown, the two main editors of the Journal of
Buddhist Ethics, as well as the other three panelists, have made a major
contribution to the study of Buddhism and ethics. These Buddhologists offer
rich material for those whose interests gravitate toward descriptive ethics or
meta-ethics, and they highlight ways in which prominent Buddhists have engaged
in normative ethical reflection as part of their tradition.
Importantly for all scholars of Buddhism and ethics, the papers have
also highlighted a key set of questions: What are the central ethical values,
if any, in and across various strands of Buddhism? What are the main ethical
theories and modes of argumentation that characterize Buddhism? To what extent
are Buddhist thinkers and communities bound to earlier canonical sources? On
what bases can Buddhists provide ethical insight into contemporary issues? To
what extent might a Buddhological focus on texts obscure the actual ethical
reflection of Buddhist communities? By implicitly raising these questions and
offering some initial responses to them, these four papers constitute an
important milestone in the new field of Buddhist ethics and point to numerous
avenues of further inquiry.
Source :
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