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English Pages 455 [484]
AO
ABE
a
ZEN
LIFE of
DIALOGUE
Edited by Donald
W.
Mitchell
CMCCEHTER.
k*
JVlasao Ave
A TjCU Life of
philosophy
Hisamatsu for the is
no
tea ceremony. In
fully manifested. Those
who
can-
not see the philosophy of Awakening in that flower will fail to see it
in his philosophical works as well.
The same can he
said of an
ordinary word of greeting spoken by Hisamatsu. Containing the
philosophy of Awakening, his greeting of directly into the
foundation of the
"How
are you?" inquires
other's existence,
and turns him
towards the Awakening of himself. Only someone able to the
last
3 .
statement applies to Masao Abe and his philosophy as well.
Whether speaking
slowly in his careful English, laughing, knitting his
brow, asking an unanswerable question that unquestionable
patiently his debt.
respond
question contained in such a greeting can comprehend
Hisamatsu's philosophy of Awakening
This
to
answer
and calmly doing
—
—and then
waiting, waiting for
or simply chatting with students,
his religious philosophy.
We
Abe
is
are forever in
chapter Two
THE FIRE IN THE LOTUS Steven Antinoff
Walking through the grounds
of the Shokoku-ji, the monastic
compound where I lived in a three-mat room five minutes from his home, Masao Abe let out one of the occasional pieces of autobiography he would divulge when he thought it might help me advance. "In my late thirties
and
early forties,
near collapse, and
was pressed
I
me
impelled
it
practice immediately after the
during the sesshin
midday meal and
going supper, until the meditations concluded
problems with there
was an
my
knees."
With
this last
infinity of difference in
was a
to the wall. It
to sit
1
to
resume zazen
without respite, Later
at nine.
we both
sentence
situation of
I
for-
had some
laughed, but
our laughter: his nonchalant in
relaxed recollection of a hardship borne and long since cast
off,
mine
its
ner-
vous, apprehensive at the abysmal difficulty before me.
This was one of those fascinating glimpses of the Abe of a previous incarnation,
when
age had not yet blended with compassion to give him
the tinge of the grandfatherly friend (and
my
It
was rather the Abe of the
teacher) Richard DeMartino,
American who appeared
in the circle
who
him outside the
Lion's
ripped from his
mouth and thrown back
It is
at
fire
as
he stood opposite
Columbia University only
to
have the pipe
in his face.
said that the lotus born in water
the lotus bloomed. in
told the story of an
surrounding Suzuki in the 1950s and
who, "thinking he had something," challenged Abe
Den
tales of his
can be destroyed by
cannot be burned.
Abe
told
how
fire,
but
during a talk
~'
chapter Two
1 1
on the Pure Land the words "Amida Buddha
him clawing
to the ground and had
him
nition that
how
it
is
not far from here" pressed
at the tatami in anguished recog-
was he who would not permit Amida conversion that he
in the after years of a
embrace the whole world, the nihilism
felt
to enter.
He
recalled
had empowered him
to
that at the depths of his religious
experience had been dissolved through Amida's grace had broke forth
anew
second,
in a
now
God-resistant strain; how, in the midst of a
ditch effort during a winter sesshin to achieve the
which he sought
to
undercut the force of
the meditation hall and, tearing the
'
this disclosure,
kimono from
last-
no-mind" through he had run from
his shoulders,
doused
himself repeatedly with the freezing water of the temple well, only to hear the words "Everything
from
his
Above
a
is
there
all,
who had
Abes all-encompassing
word had rejected Abe's simply,
"No
posture,
is
a lie!"
pour unexpectedly
the nembutsu into their nihilating caress.
was Hisamatsu, the great
the one being in the world elusive to
Everything
lie!
mouth and draw even
lay
Zen master and
faith
and who
in existence as well as in
realization as not thoroughgoing,
noise in the zendo,"
was so absorbed
when Abe, though
in the
his teacher,
remained, of course without intent,
reprimanding
formally in the zazen
nembutsu that he unwittingly blurted,
"Namu Amida Butsu" Hisamatsu himself had been reared see his faith give
way
to the
demands
in a
of a
Pure Land milieu, only
human
reason that at length
likewise proved powerless against the crisis of being
ing double impotency, of
human
human. The
"I,"
atheistic in that this
any divine agency. Short of avail.
result-
existence and of God, stood at the root
of his insistence on a "religious atheism," religious in that
the
to
breakthrough was obtained this radical position,
"Whether walking, standing,
it
broke through
in the
absence of
nothing could be of any
sitting, or lying,
whatever you do
will
not do. Then, what do you do? Absolute negation; death. But this at the
same time
is
absolute affirmation." This, a few seconds of talk once thrust
before a student,
is
the core of Hisamatsu's existence as well as his
reli-
gious teaching; and a chronicle exists, in the writings of fellow disciple
Ryutaro Kitahara, of an episode to
in Abe's
attempt during the postwar years
contend with both:
Following Hisamatsu's lecture [during a sesshin at Reiun-in
Temple in
195/],
when
the chanting of the sutras had also been
—
"
1
Z
Steven Antinoff
completed and the group in
san, seated in one of the spots
gate
entirety
its
was
on the row
sitting together,
to the left
Abe-
of the front
and diagonally opposite Hisamatsu, suddenly shouted, "Sennot do, what do you do?"
sei! If sitting will
was the very koan
/
I
was astounded. This
had been struggling with day and night for the
past seven days, in fact, for the last three years. Hisamatsu engaged
him
in
an
aggressive exchange:
"That's "I
am
your problem."
asking you.
"You're the
one with the problem."
"Deceiver!
I
am
asking you. If sitting
will not do, "In
your doing
it,
what do you do?" I
do
it."
Without warning Abe burst from
and was about
floor in the center of the room,
Hisamatsu.
I
was
how
the situation
when
second slow in reacting. But
seized hold of Asano 2
no suke. The
oldest
man who
as he slashed Kira
in danger, trampling the fallen
temple. Reiun-in
Abe just
evil spirits in the
Kozuke
sitting in the
saw him
furthest corner, dashed towards Hisamatsu as soon as he
vana stomping out
was a
what was happening
Tokuho Nishitani,
us,
in the
unfold,
his arms, like the
Takumi no kami
among
pounce on
would
I realized
grabbed Abe from behind, pinning
to
and caught up
sitting next to Sensei,
bystander's curiosity as to
I
his seat onto the area of wooden
like the statue
ofVaisura-
Sangatsu Hall of the Todaiji
was now unexpectedly transformed
to
a scene of
sheer chaos.
Abe, trying grip
to
writhe free, at the same time maintained his
on Hisamatsu and could not be made
Finally Hisamatsu shook an
arm free, and
against Abe's forehead, watched Self?"
Abe shouted
replied solemnly.
him
at him. "This
Abe bowed, and
is
to relinquish his hold.
pressing his
hand
intently. "Is this the
the True Self,"
said,
True
Hisamatsu
"Thank you very much,"
then darted off somewhere.
That evening, as we were drinking reappeared, staring fixedly at
tokonoma
tea in the shoin,
Hisamatsu —who had
with a strange look. Suddenly with
his
his
Abe
back
to the
open palm he
slapped Hisamatsu's balding skull. Sekuin Koretsune, sitting next
3
ckcipter Two
to
Hisamatsu,
Abe then
Hisamatsu
said, "Is that all?"
him with
struck
1
all his
replied, "More, more."
power, hut Sensei was just smil-
ing calmly. Later,
cannot
when
came
I
across the
Z^n
phrase: "An angry fist
strike a smiling face," I thought, "So that's it!"
and remem-
bered that scene, strange even for this world. i
Close
to three
decades
same room, this same Koretsune, now we drank tea during a sesshin break, for the action. Abe simply laughed. "You don't under-
later, in
the
over seventy, criticized Abe, as
inappropriateness of his stand.
I
had no choice.
The Masao Abe
I
was completely cornered."
I
first
met
in 1972 seemed kalpas removed from
Two monks brought me to his home the day of my entry into Shokoku-ji. He explained the monastery routine to me in English. There was about him an intimation of ripened virtue, very much the man who when asked how he was doing would respond, as he appeared at the gate in his kimono, "Always very busy; always very free.'' One remark from these struggles.
—
that first occasion especially intrigued
me
the goal of the Shokoku-ji
roshi's life.
This was a man,
would not
a
yield
to
I
was
thought,
also
who
Zen master, an impression subsequently
when Abe confirmed an account
strengthened no:
even
that enlightenment
I'd
heard from DeMarti-
He'd been barred from the monastery where he trained
for accusing
the roshi in a sanzen interview of acting.
My own
first
tenure at the monastery turned out to be a failed one.
Within three months
I
was down
to 107
pounds. Life hitherto had been
too devoid of suffering, of persistence, to be readied for the physical and
psychic shock that was abruptly to ensue.
me
out.
I
could not
kimono were
it
Only you can Later tery but
destroy
I
bow
them
If so,
Abe
"It is
one cannot
plants but not animals
Abe noted
simply,
I
could not fold a
"The forms are dead.
life."
learned that for
by compassion. life.
visited frequently to bail
properly or even dress myself.
to cost the world.
give
Abe
is
this "life"
was engendered not by mas-
the law of the Buddha," he said, "not to eat.
The notion
that
it
is
justifiable to
an illusion of anthropocentricism. But
if
kill
we do
Steven Ant inoff
14-
not eat,
we
destroy ourselves,
violating the Buddhist law. This
still
is
the
significance of the gassho, the pressing together of the palms, before par-
taking of a meal.
One
destroys
so as not to destroy
life
life,
but one does
so only at the ultimate heartfelt limit."
What to create
my
beauty of man, what ferocity of inner struggle was requisite
such simple beauty of phrase! And thus the gassho, formed by
hands before each
sitting,
each bow, each meal and
from an ultimate heartfelt
itably far
limit
I
after,
dead, illim-
had not the humanity
achieve, became, as with every other form of this universe, a wall. that,
soon became
it
clear,
would have
somewhat distanced from those
to
even as
when
I
succumbed
me
to
if
know
to persist in zazen alone.
it
in its
spare piece of advice: "You must
He seemed
to
later,
a
And he
be testing
kill
few days
in his insistence that
failure
I
own undertaking with
I
had arranged
arrangement. Abe, too, seemed
—
to
must
I
a cliff that at once
my return, met him
monks and moving
the phrase kendo jural o kisuru
me
set before
the week-long sesshins several times per year. to this
my
a
yourself at every instant."
after
my resolve.
the nightly hours with the
ed
instilled
in
depths turned the breath to
gave partial illumination to the austerity of his
Three years
regrouped
presence of others as his friend,
champagne. He had been uncompromising be able
He had
I
my downward spiral. He had been able, at a time thwarted me in my most critical aspiration, to con-
beauty, as
its
in the
as
Still,
to
the pain of zazen
vey to
me
One
be scaled from an encampment
of the monastery.
America, something of Abe seemed to abide. with dignity, always referring to
to
a
new
satisfied.
for
had already acced-
roshi
emerge from
strategy, sitting
monastery only
into the
The
in his study.
He
described
me
with
a setback with redou-
bled effort.
But the Zen path has
its
own
inevitable logic, "inevitable" in Abe's
sense of the word meaning an existential necessity that one might not
come
to,
edge of
yet
life
must come
to if
one
is
to prevail.
and death?" he demanded, patrol
"What
will
you do
at the
stick poised over his shoul-
der amid what Hisamatsu called "the murderous tension of the meditation hall" at a sesshin of the F.A.S, Society, in
participant.
But
how does one
which an answer
which
achieve the edge of
to the challenge
sition of the "right aspiration" of
is
I,
life
too,
had become
a
and death, without
impossible? DeMartino, in an expo-
Gautama's Eightfold Path, had
said, "It's
The
disparity
not enough to want Enlightenment. You've got to need
it."
chapter Two between the two
tore at
my
1
5
heart and legs with dramatic force, and the
thought of dying without Awakening generated an anguish matched only
by the bewilderment that the force of
this
anguish could not be convert-
ed into anything more than a hopscotch between sporadic
One may
sion.
the
volunteer for the Zen quest, but one
is
and eva-
effort
conscripted into
Zen wars. I
was, then, as
I
suppose must always be the case, pulled into the
vacuum
in spite of myself.
became
for
me
The abandonment
of the half for the
full lotus
the personal symbol in the struggle against the impulse to
shrink back from the edge, resulting in an unintended asceticism that
me
bared
to the grid of
my
ambivalence. As
clasped hands, the realization that the
maintain
my
thought that the
last
was
to
last
thing
thing
I
could do was to waver.
the struggle with pain and the doubting of
wanted
I
onto
in this
its
Abe observed
validity
was
a
my
world
only that
problem that
Zen must confront. He assured me
that the
my mind as long as had the luxury to raise He would say, "Ordinary education is to add on. Zen education is to away" And he knew well the paradox that an ever increasing honing
question would remain in
power of the
of the
itself to
will
exhaustion. At
sified effort
could bear
my
it.
I
fruit
only
when
this
power expended
explanation in the back of a trolley that inten-
had merely brought greater awareness of
he was almost incredulous: "You is
sat tears fell
posture even one more period clawing against the
every serious practitioner of
take
I
still
my
powerlessness,
think you have power! Self-negation
the only ultimate power."
Presenting
he inscribed seeking
in
me
with an English translation of the Record of Rinzai,
Chinese characters the phrase "Seeking Buddha and
Dharma is only making hell karma." He remarked that at the life when he came upon this sentence, it had brought him to
point of his
the verge of collapse. Intrigued, of that encounter. But letting
barren where
it
really counts,
I
asked what had transpired
me know once and
he responded
coolly,
for
all
in the
wake
that curiosity
is
"Find out for yourself."
^^ During my at the
initial stint in Kyoto, when
monastery,
which was
Abe met my
far less transient,
dejection and,
I
would not persevere
more important, my
with ajuzu, or Buddhist "rosary,"
fear,
made from
1
6
Steven Ant in off
Bodh Gaya, where Gautama, unable
dried fruit of the Bodhi tree in
marshal a further step, was brought
symbol of
a
gift,
mation so
in the
my
capacity to carry
absence of any warranting
worn around
arm, to
my
his faith in
my
bicep. Eventually
a
now
see that
is
planted where a person
around which human existence
on
was
it
quest to
to slip
consum-
its
my
wrist
my
without form and does not planted, the contradiction
is
it
recoils.
juzu that with each addition shrank the circumference of
choking off the possibility of escape. Inexhaustible until
I
was
satisfied
how
its circle,
in his unwillingness to
next to proceed, that he
held finally that one was to be deprived of every way of proceeding to
and
of Abe's offerings were the fruit of this tree, beads
all
renounce discussion
to
a precious
unnoticed from
and from which
coiled
is
my
was
sign, too large for
great regret. But the Bodhi tree
slip off so easily. It is
I
to the final impasse. It
is
not
be doubted. This, regarding what might be called "method" in Zen, was
the jewel of his inheritance from Hisamatsu.
change; where there
would
later
is
a change, there
encounter with frequency
is
"When
cornered, there
a passing through"
is
—words —
in Hisamatsu's writings
I
a I
first
And though of course it was not his style to press me knew that and anyone else who sought to win out in the battle for Awakening would have to come that way, just as Hisamatsu knew Abe would have to. It was only in response to my overt indicaheard from Abe.
with this method, he
tion that
I
I
might no longer have the option not
to bear
up
to its
much
mandate
that he held out "You
must
When showed
could not, there was not the slightest trace of
I
that
I
try to
appointment or disapproval. To
been reduced
corner yourself as
my
to the duality of confronting the
he merely remarked, "You need not
need only I
that tial
to get to the
mean
to
life
dis-
had
Zen quest and evading
some
third position.
it,
You
that the attempt to achieve a "pure effort"
would eliminate the impulse by contrast was
try to find
my whole
bottom of that opposition."
understood him to
oscillation
confession that
as possible."
to
evade was vain, that what was essen-
be deadlocked
between the two
in the
depths of the inescapable
poles. This deadlock, the final cornering,
was
the "great-doubt-mass" in Hisamatsu's meaning of the term, which he
describes in the autobiographical account of the situation immediately prior to his
open
own Awakening
as "black,
and with no means of escape
in the entirety of his existence, not
even one the
left
size of a hole in a
--
chapter Two
1
7
needle ... as though one were to climb to the
and then find oneself unable one's position."
own
still
I
tip of a
pole 300 feet
the napkin on which
Abe scrawled
wherein he argued that zazen alone, while approaching achieve the crown of that pole, that cut
could never
it,
would have
sitting, too,
the diagram
to
be under-
"doubt," in Hisamatsu's sense of absolute contradiction, absolute
if
and absolute dilemma,
agony,
home ed
tall,
advance, to descend again, or to maintain
to
most emphatically.
this point
me
to
in his study. "I said to
be achieved. Hisamatsu had driven
to
is
"I
was
at
an extremity," Abe recount-
many
Hisamatsu, Tor
years
I
have strug-
gled for a place to stand but have not been able to find one.' His reply, as usual,
was without
hesitation: 'You
must stand where there
is
no place
to stand.'"
This was in thorough consonance with Hisamatsu's strong advocacy of a cherished phrase from The Gateless Barrier: "In order to attain the
wondrous Awakening, to
be brought
way
to bring
is
it
necessary for
to the extremity
my
all
routes of
and extinguished."
I,
mind [and body]
who
could find no
paths to an end, ran forward but could not get free of
the starting blocks, ran away but could not get free of the need to run forward.
Abe made
a gift of a calligraphy
he had
in his turn
been given
by Hisamatsu, "Extinguish-in-sitting the dusty world," and a year copy of the painting, attributed
hidharma
his severed arm.
later a
to Sesshu, of Hui-k'o presenting to
But these affirmations of
my
Bod-
exertions were
invariably countered by the insistence that they be brought to a standstill
cusp of
at the
ma
maximum
deadlocked
at the
said, adding, before
I
effort
Bodhi
and the impossibility of advance. "Gauta-
tree
is
the negation of Buddhist practice," he
could respond, "Gautama
at the
Bodhi tree
is
the
fulfillment of Buddhist practice." I
found myself increasingly pulled
ry forces thrusting the
apart: a tautening of contradicto-
mouth open and
the eyes dangerously shut as
I
bicycled from English lessons to the interview with the roshi; an inexorably expanded balloon
ward
in
Still,
I
God,
whose
anguish in zazen; neck lashing back-
hundreds of paroxysms during
a
three-month season of
remained what characterizes, contrary
a tangle of
to Exodus,
sesshin.
man and
not
branches that burns and burns but cannot burn out. Lay-
ing this "intensity" before in,
air is
he dismissed
it
Abe
mid-sesshin outside the gate of the Reiun-
with singular indifference: "Psychological, not onto-
l
logical."
my
part to exhibit a resolution I
—
had none. Rather,
I
took to be the Zen path,
attempt to express even the problem
no recourse, tly,
Steven AntinofJ
This was disturbing, not because he was rejecting any attempt on
heartache on what
my
8
after so
had been confiscated
I
at the first
move. Feeling
enough between the shoulder and heart
for
me
I
me
challenged his characterization. To this he pressed
I
just firmly
much in
had gen-
to fall back-
ward, and said, as he turned to other business, "What are you going to do
with that?"
Thus does one touch
render impossible an entire world, though
And when ask myself why was worth his bother on so many occasions over so many years, know it is because he honors a man in what he calls his "burning problem." My inability to one touch
sure to
is
redeem
it.
I
I
I
up
as yet face
be a concern. I
believe he
He responded
knew
I
to
whatever was brought before him.
the mondo:
The
"What
first
And yet
was thoroughly aware of the nature of those implica-
kind of reverse Indian rope trick whose
tions: a is
burning seemed never to
to the final implications of that
is
Zen?" "Boiling
time Abe visited
me
oil
moment
over a blazing
in the
of final descent
fire."
monastery he had said that
zazen must be without either bodily or mental tension, though a "spiritual"
tension was imperative. But these are not so readily separated.
remember ed
to the
set
me
da.
The
that
once when the
bell
marking the transition from the
walking form of meditation rang, the release from the
into uncontrollable laughter as
next afternoon as
lient.
"Last night
sion.
.
.
.
I
we
we were both
sign!" Later, inquiring
ment made concentration on the koan
Yet
but it
would have
it:
if
"You
may
if
difficult
Abe was
it
come
to
when
ebul-
the physical tor-
was better
become one with
to
abandon
the pain, he
not be able to achieve this oneness before the
you throw yourself into the koan,
was without words to
full lotus
and recircled the veran-
rinsing our hands,
the koan and try until the periods end to
bell rings,
seat-
heard you laughing during the walking. That's the ten-
Oh, very good
advised against
circled
I
that
mean. The
Abe gave initial
it is
sure to be intense."
portent of what intensity
block of the evening sitting
chapter Two
3
1
periods had terminated, and the bell rang for the walking meditation.
Abe
fronted the queue, and
line.
I,
on the cushions next
As we stepped barefoot along the inner thick line of icy slush along
from a recent snow.
It
side of the veranda,
ing the path a foot to the inside. Since
my mind
cold,
noticed a
I
we turned
directly in our course as
Abe could have
third leg of the circle, but
him, was second in
outer edge parallel to the garden, remnants
its
was
to
I
easily avoided
it
into the
by establish-
was highly susceptible
to the
urged him on to the dry wood. Instead, he accelerated,
trampling right into the slush, and there was no choice but to follow.
Coming back from Palms pressed
the bathroom,
in the gassho,
I
the veranda, for as soon as he
knew then he had
I
blowtorched
prepared to resume
watched him
was
past,
I
steadily as
was obliged
Two seconds from me
step in behind him. visage.
I
my
bow
quickly and
full
force of his
not simply stomped into that snow; he had
it.
As an episode
it
is
inconsequential, but
some decisions Abe had obviously made
it
me
gave
a long time ago.
a glimpse of
Such things can-
not be settled by another. Nonetheless, in response to a letter ten
him
retreat.
at Princeton,
he made
it
had
I
quite clear that in the end there
writis
no
reads, in part, as follows:
It
It is
line.
he stormed round
to
caught the
I
place in
true that
Gautama
undergoing pain for itself
its
rejected asceticism.
own
sake, or
But asceticism means
enduring the pain as
were the means of attaining Awakening. This
is
if that
simply a
form of morbidity. The unintended pain which may accompany hard zazen practice in the quest for the True
Self,
on the other
hand, was never rejected by Gautama.
Enclosed with the Ta-hui, I
marked
was locked
letter
in red.
was
When
a photocopy, I
read
it, I
one passage, a reference
knew
that
I
was boxed
out.
The postmark
dates from
more than
a
decade ago. Though other
discussions ensued, mostly toward the preparation of lish,
me
I
consider
it
makes
Abes work
in
Eng-
our last critical exchange. Perhaps there will be from
a response, but
the letter
to
in, just as
none could be made now
clear, to
be valid
my
that
I
would accept. For
as
rejoinder will have to be spawned,
ZO
Steven Antinoff
from where "one returns home and
as in the verse of Tung-shan,
among
prefer not to repeat what
I
day Abe took in I
what Zen
believe
I
me
to
have elsewhere written about the
I
meet Hisamatsu, who, having
and universe
slain self
Great Death, stood where there
no place
to stand.
learned that afternoon what Rilke must have meant
when he
calls the
wrote that beauty deigns
me
is
though not his design, the
to destroy us; for
encounter with Hisamatsu tore ic
sits
the ashes."
me
reducing
to shreds,
to a
spasmod-
wailing of unprecedented intensity and duration. At the time,
meaning
of
my
coming face
with Hisamatsu's Great Peace and the terrifying
to face
dread of the path that loomed before
But subsequently
attained.
I
came
always maintained as
its
if
it.
he
were
that peace
know
in fact to
be
that those tears possess an
certitude
to
reality."
is
Those
Jesus says to lose yourself
accusers that
if
brought me of what Abe had the —They "Compassion That the supreme inner
embodiment but
does not diminish
me
to
additional meaning.
was not
saw the
I
reaction in the cross formed through the intersection of
is
as
tears
is
its
negation that
I
found
it
this certainty
remain the rare "ocular proof that when
to find yourself,
when
Socrates replies to his
put to death, "you will hurt yourselves more than you
hurt me," they spoke truth. It
silence.
where to
me
interests
Neither
at
that Abe's direct
comment on
Hisamatsu's house nor in the
my sobbing perdured
unabated, nor
at
talk, as if
those tears was
back
I
Gifu station, train
we
rode
to a
we both
question as
resided did he finally
unwilling to intrude on what had transpired for
he said only that
to
any point on the return
Kyoto did he offer a word. Only in response
the bus toward the neighborhood where
taxi
me
alone.
Then
confessed fright of being plunged into the abyss, "Today you met a
who
leapt into that abyss.
Look
at the result!"
But though he made no mention of them,
knew
those tears even before
parable of doves ardently
I
is
I
am
convinced that he
had wept them. Abe once
told the sutra
in love with a forest that they discover desper-
ately ablaze. Their sole remedy, soaking their
by lake,
my man
had experienced a "great encounter," and in reply to
wings
in the
water of a near-
hopeless, the water evaporating in the air en route.
The doves
~'
repeat the process
— again
chapter Two
Zl
without effect
—and
droplet douses a flame, no more. But love
repeat
own
again.
it
A
rare
destiny,
and the
doves are impelled to the perpetual recapitulation of virtually
doomed
passion. This, without
sentiment,
its
the
is
Sixteen years have evaporated since
members
vow
of the bodhisattva.
Abe voiced those words
to the
of the lay group (of the retired, absent Hisamatsu) circled on
the tatami of the Reiun-in stillness of zazen.
I
am now
hidden
hisattva's tears,
Temple on of the
or "lofty dryness," It is
and
that the lake consists of the bod-
hidden even from the bodhisattva
in the flames,
this that
I
explains to
it
first
evening infused with the
a lovely
mind
himself. This, in Hisamatsu's explication of
silence.
its
is
me
Zen
art, is
meaning
the
of tears
beheld in the passage "As we go
bamboo
stands by the gate;
farewell"
and sensed the pierced heart of the master,
who would
'austere sublimity"
its
leaves
stir
met with
to part, a tall
the clear breeze for you in his task completed,
never see again his greatest disciple; this that
I
was honored
to witness in the
unshaven countenance of DeMartino the afternoon he
made
mondo
his farewell
in the
a small so
to his
departed friend Bernard Phillips, comrade
pioneering American quest for Zen, as he sat cross-legged in
well,
room
of students
common
though from an
to
them both;
distance,
infinite
in
response to his long-struggling disciple Fu-kuo
this that
I
have loved
Wu-tsu Fa-yens at the
moment
sole
of his
Enlightenment, and in which can be traced the imprint of Abe's utter-
most
"The great
aspiration:
and patriarchs
to
inferior vessels.
I
affair of life that
appear among us
am
glad to have
is
has caused the Buddhas
not meant for small characters and
been a help
to
your delight."
chapter Three
MY ENCOUNTERS WITH MASAO ABE IN JAPAN
AND
THE WEST VaLdo H. vlgUelrno
I
am both honored and delighted
memorate Masao Abe's achievements But
at the outset
fer considerably
tributors,
I
am
should state that
I
from the others
to
have been asked
in his life of dialogue in the
my essay will, am I
in that, unlike
com-
to
West.
fairly certain, dif-
most of the other con-
not a specialist in the area of comparative religion, com-
parative East-West philosophy, or the philosophy of religion. Rather, field of specialization is
(post- 1 868) period,
and
Japanese
my
literature, especially that of the
involvement
in the study of
my
modern
modern Japanese
philosophy, particularly that of the Kyoto School, has been peripheral to that specialization. Nevertheless,
tremendous personal small measure from the Kyoto School,
Indeed, although marily upon
in
a source of
me, a satisfaction deriving
in
no
my encounter with many of the prominent figures of among whom Masao Abe must surely be counted.
my
teaching and research continue to be focused
modern Japanese
philosophy has
such involvement has been
satisfaction to
literature,
my
interest in
no way waned over the past
profoundly grateful for
my
pri-
modern Japanese
thirty-five years,
and
I
am
association with those figures of the Kyoto
School and for the influence of their writings on me.
Z3
chapter Three To
trace the stages of
my
encounter with Masao Abe,
appropriate to give a brief account of
my
I
think
it
encounter with the aforemen-
tioned Kyoto School prior to actually meeting him. For one year beginning
summer
in the
literature at
Fellowship,
happened
of 1954, as a Harvard graduate student studying Japanese
Tokyo University and the Gakushuin University under a Ford
was boarding
I
home
at the
be a professor of philosophy
to
Kyoto School, Yasumasa Oshima. through him that
I
later
We
struck up a friendship, and
became acquainted with
own
ures of the Kyoto School, especially his abe.
woman whose son-in-law and younger member of the
of a
Tanabe had succeeded
to the
was
it
the major surviving
fig-
revered sensei, Hajime Tan-
mantle of Kitaro Nishida, by consen-
sus of both Japanese and Western authorities the acknowledged founder
and principal exponent of the Kyoto School. in
the area of
obtained
my
modern Japanese
I
did not then intend to
philosophy, because
Ph.D. from Harvard in Japanese
was piqued and
I
literature,
work
had not yet
I
but
was gradually persuaded by Oshima of the
my
curiosity
intrinsic sig-
members of that school. It summer of 1957 after a two-year
nificance of the philosophy produced by the
was during
my
absence, that
I
next
visit to
bought the complete works of Nishida and actually began
which
to explore his philosophy,
And
Japan, in the
at the
time
I
found extremely
difficult.
summer as well as during my subsequent trip to Japan, resumed my friendship with summer and fall of 1958,
during that
in the
late
I
Oshima, discussing with him various aspects of modern Japanese philosophy.
Thus
it
was
that
Oshima,
as a
Commission, became instrumental
in
member
my
of the Japan
being nominated to translate
Nishida's Zen no kenkyu, the second major
work
in a series of
philosophical works to be translated into English.
with considerable trepidation since the fact that
my own
I
UNESCO
I
Japanese
accepted the task
did not feel truly competent, given
formal academic background in philosophy was
tually nil. Nevertheless,
I
vir-
persevered and in the process developed a deep
admiration for Nishida's philosophy as well as a determination to intro-
duce
it,
through translation, to the Western world, although
tinued to specialize in Japanese literature.
my own
inadequacies, but
no other Western scholar
I
vowed in
to
I
German
still
con-
recognized only too keenly
continue
my work
because almost
Japanese studies appeared interested
studying the philosophy of the Kyoto School Schinzinger, a
I
at
that
time.
in
(Robert
scholar and philosopher teaching in Japan, with
vaido H.vicjliclmo
Z4-
whom
also
I
already published a
German
This discussion it is
may appear
ble for
my
A
title
and was already being used
was
it
my encounter with Abe,
my
translation of Nishida's
Study of Good, that was largely responsi-
meeting with Abe.
first
from
to digress
actually quite relevant in that
maiden work, under the
sity
in a
My
translation
was published
seminar conducted
at
in i960
Columbia Univer-
during the 1961-62 academic year by another philosopher of the
Kyoto School, the renowned Yoshinori Takeuchi.
and since
I
was teaching Japanese language and
University at the time,
it
was
learned of this fact,
I
literature at Princeton
Columbia and meet
a simple matter to go to
down
Takeuchi. Thus began a close relationship extending day.
and
translation of several of Nishida's essays
published an English translation of those same essays.)
later
but
He had
developed a friendship, was a notable exception.
We
later
embarked on an ambitious
to the present
project of helping each other in
our respective tasks of translating Tanabe's immensely difficult major
postwar work Philosophy as Metanoetics (Takeuchi had been asked undertake
it
by the same Japan
UNESCO
to
Commission) and Nishida's
equally difficult second major work, Intuition and Reflection in Self-Consciousness,
which
I
own. Takeuchi and ly
over
mer still
had somewhat foolhardily decided I
worked together on these
many years, and
of 1966, to
it
was during one of
work with him on them
sum-
to Japan, in the
home
Kyoto
(he was then
teaching philosophy of religion at Kyoto University, continuing in the
direct tradition of Nishida
and Tanabe) that he informed
me
that a Kyoto
School colleague, Masao Abe, had just returned from teaching bia University, I
my
on
translations intermittent-
my trips
at his
to translate
recall,
where
he, too,
had used
Takeuchi kindly arranged
A
my first
Study of Good
at
Colum-
in a seminar.
meeting with Abe
As
at the latter's
home. I
vividly recall that first
becoming acquainted with who,
like
I
my
asked him
in general
translation in doing so.
many
to translate
of Abe's
A
felt in
—
to Nishida's
—and
philosophy and
The time passed extremely
the
who
rapidly as
questions about his particular philosophical interests
while he in turn inquired about
come
I
yet another scholar of the Kyoto School, one
Takeuchi, sought to introduce American students
American academic world had used
meeting because of the exhilaration
my own academic work and how
Study of Good. Already
deep involvement
in
at that first
meeting,
I
I
had
learned
— indeed, commitment —Zen Buddhism, to
Z5
chapter Three
D. T. Suzuki and Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, both of
in the line of
considered to be his teachers.
dhism
(in
which
too,
I,
was happy
I
had developed
and practitioner because Takeuchi,
somewhat
urally tion.
Moreover,
I
less
be able
the two had delivered lectures there, so
had presented
the process
it
carefully with
it
I
symposium
at a
very kindly agreed to read
went over
nat-
meet both Suzuki and Hisamat-
to
my memory does not fail me, at that first meeting of my lengthy biographical article "Nishida Kitaro: The I
was
knowledgeable about Zen, despite his vast erudi-
If
copy
Zen Bud-
to discuss
was happy
I
experiences with Abe.
to share those
which
he
a strong interest) with a specialist
as a priest of the Shin sect,
had been fortunate
when
su at Harvard
to
whom
and
at a
life
gave
Abe
a
Early Years,"
Puerto Rico that January.
He
subsequent meeting that summer
me, making several valuable suggestions. In
was impressed with
cern that Nishida's
in
I
his
meticulousness and with his con-
and work be presented
Western world as
to the
accurately and fairly as possible. (Such concern was undoubtedly responsible for his later retranslation,
under the tion
title
more
or,
An
with Christopher Ives, of Zen no kenkyu
Inquiry into the Good.) In this
aptly, dialogue,
ing
Abe an
him
I
culture.
And
warmth and understanding
many
of
my
—
so
in philoso-
in addition to find-
extraordinarily stimulating person intellectually,
could share with him that
broad range of topics
to a
and comparative East-West
great personal
associa-
focusing primarily on Nishida's philosophy
and Zen Buddhism but extending phy, religion,
way began our
much
I
sensed in
so that
I
felt
personal and family concerns in a
have done with very few of
my
I
way
academic associates, even fellow
Americans. Yet another important aspect of my first meeting with Abe that warm summer day (only those who have experienced Kyoto summers can know how hot and humid they can be!) was his mentioning to me the work of one of his American graduate students who had participated in his Nishida seminar, David Dilworth. He lent me a copy of one of Dil-
worth's papers in the seminar, a study of the religious thought of Nishida as expressed in
A
Study of Good.
Little did
I
realize at the time that
I
was
then being introduced to the American scholar of the Kyoto School with
whom
I
would
also have a long
and
fruitful association.
only in January 1968, during yet another the bitter cold of a Kyoto winter!), that
visit to I
Kyoto
actually
However, (this
it
was
time during
met him. Abe accom-
Z6 VdLdo H.vigllelmo
me
panied
to Dilworth's
temporary
home where he was
on Nishida's philosophy.
ing his Ph.D. dissertation
(I
living
while writ-
cannot but reflect
on the strange chain of "coincidences" mediated by the philosophy of the Kyoto School
my
1954 by
— Oshima
happening
shima.
Is it frivolous
link in
all
of
to
Takeuchi
to
board
me
to
Abe
at the
to say that
I
Dilworth
to
home
—which began
in
of the mother-in-law of
seem
to
O
have discerned a karmic
of this?)
My friendship with Abe
deepened during the next
correspondence and in several meetings with him
six
years through
both Japan and the
in
United States. The spring and early summer of 1972, however, clearly rep-
my
resent the period of that time not only roshi
vide tice.
closest association with him, for
my sensei
in the area of
Nishida studies but actually
during intense sessions of zazen. But here, too,
some background I
had arrived
in
why I came
as to
Japan with
and daughter, Emily)
I
think
summer
Japanese literature and philosophy during
I
at
my
should pro-
such zazen prac-
to participate in
my family (my wife,
in the late
he became
Frances; son, Marc;
of 1971 to do research in both
my
sabbatical year.
(I
was then
teaching at the University of Hawai'i.) But our living arrangements in
Tokyo were so unsatisfactory that
would be best
that she
finally
continue on alone in Japan to pursue
February 1972, translation
my
I
that
home
made another
was able
I
to
wife and
make
to
I
decision: to
move
to
The major reason
they
Kyoto
had not
I
agreed that
Honolulu and that
my research. After
work with Takeuchi even though
literature project in Tokyo.
was
my
and the children return
to
for this
my
completed
change of plans
the excellent arrangement of boarding at the
of Presbyterian missionary friends, very near Kyoto University.
was happy
to
be able
to
I
left in early
continue
really
it
I
continue working with Takeuchi in pleasant sur-
roundings and also to enjoy the more relaxed atmosphere of Kyoto, with its
many Buddhist temples and
theless, I
I
had not
was
my
missed fully
my wife
gardens, for an extended period. Never-
and children, and
my
health was not good since
recovered from a major operation the previous year. Such
mental and physical state when
I
learned,
Takeuchi, that Abe was then conducting zazen sessions ji,
a
famous Buddhist temple
in
again at the
through
Myoshin-
western Kyoto, the very place where
Nishida had himself done zazen precisely three-quarters of a century earlier,
during the
summer
of 1897.
chapter Three
I
made
rather quickly
Z7
the important decision to ask Abe's permis-
sion to participate in those sessions at Myoshin-ji because
was
me, unencumbered
a splendid opportunity for
family responsibilities, actually to practice it.
I
also
deepen
was
my
in the
frame of mind that
Zen
Christianity
and Buddhism primarily from an active
in
broader sense
many
was then an
member
it
moment by
rather than merely to study
in the
religious experience after so
that
felt
I
for the
of the well-known
wished
I
to
years of considering both intellectual standpoint.
Church
I
of the Crossroads
Honolulu, a church of the mainstream Protestant denomination the
United Church of Christ. Of course, Abe kindly acceded
and
I
that
I
began
go once a
to
week
to the sessions
was not the only Westerner
a dozen people, mostly I
tion. (Philip
but
many
he conducted.
in the group,
women
a detailed
Kapleau's The Three Pillars of Zen
and moving account of
Buddhism.)
wish merely
I
tions
on which
I
had
On
ses-
Zen medita-
mind
to
as a par-
a Westerner's experience in
I
when
built
comes
me and how appreciative was for me to participate. found them
those weekly sessions were to
ered zazen to be easy.
account of those
Zen
emphasize how extraordinarily important
to
conducting them and for allowing a spiritual oasis at a time
request,
discovered
which consisted of about
excellent accounts of the practice of
ticularly vivid
I
also.
burden the reader with
shall not
sions; there are
men
my
to
my
I
I
Abe's to
be
was questioning many of the assump-
life.
This in no way means that
the contrary,
consid-
I
found even the half-lotus
I
sitting
posture extremely painful and could not begin to achieve the full-lotus position. Also,
months was
because of
my
poor health the
damp
cold in the early
especially hard to bear. Moreover, as Kapleau
and others
have described, a thousand extraneous thoughts obtrude as one concentrate on counting breaths; often
But while clearly sion.
I
I
felt
myself to be a
was under Abe's expert guidance, something
happening
to
me, and
I
tries to
total failure.
significant
was
never considered canceling a single ses-
(The only major interruption
in
my
attendance came
when
I
had
to
go to the city of Kamakura in the Tokyo area to attend the funeral of Yasunari Kawabata, Japan's
recipient, in 1968, of the
Nobel
Prize for
who committed suicide in mid-April. His death saddened me because had come to know him very well during his lengthy stay Honolulu in the spring of 1969. But his self-inflicted death also made
literature,
greatly in
first
I
—
ZS Valdo H. vialiclmo .
me more
determined than ever
grapple, as best I
I
been lacking
in
my
me my
to
experience toward the end of
glimpse of the Zen goal of satori.
—
to
it
because somehow now, as
it
I
and may even wish
was
I
I
to
at the time,
felt
my I
a brief
nor have
I
mentioned
hesitant to do so, but
I
should
it
like
almost three decades of association
may
think he
comment on
find this episode to be of
it.
sitting in the prescribed half-lotus position (as
I
have indicat-
could not possibly manage the full lotus) and looking out through
I
roshi,
was
as
sitting facing
me
—and the
rest of us
my
was concentrating on counting
I
Honolulu home, looking out the closed glass lanai doors. at least
my conscious minds
was removing
a faint
But as soon
As
And
it
—
I
felt that
my
was aware
I
was back
my
on the
glass doors
in
my
it
—
or
unseen hand
from being
and was
removed. This process continued without interruption, as
me were
willing
that an
that prevented the glass
else
right.
backyard through
one smudge was removed, another yet
smudge appeared somewhere within
my
gradually lost con-
I
then, utterly without
willing
Abe, as
recall,
I
diagonally to
at the green lawn of
smudge
as that
—
breaths,
sciousness of being there in Kyoto and instead
ble.
me
more appropriate
is
half-closed eyes at the beautiful Myoshin-ji garden.
But
did have one
I
stay in Kyoto that gave
Abe
on
reflect
with him. As he reads this essay, interest
during those sessions,
or perhaps simply "state"
did not mention
I
since,
to describe
ed,
be
truly startling or dramatic (or at least observable
such by others) happened
him
after the long meditation sessions to
life.
Although nothing
to
existence.)
although, of course, intellectual discussion about Zen had not
fruitful,
as
human
could, with the deepest problems of
found the discussion period
also
continue with the zazen sessions and
to
if
invisi-
fainter
similarly
some power
absolutely intent on removing every single smudge, how-
ever faint, so that the glass in the doors would be perfectly invisible and
could see the lawn without the slightest impediment. long this trancelike state continued four minutes
—but
it
was
—
joy,
Kyoto
in
to
me anywhere
at
any time,
it
and gave
me
a feeling of
memory
of
which has
the
remained with me. And, of course, although
happened
do not know how
probably not more than three or
extraordinarily vivid
heightened awareness, and intense
I
I
this
experience could have
actually
happened
to
me
in
1972 under the direct guidance of Abe.
One
might very well think that with such an experience, however
I
Z9
chapter Three behind me,
brief,
would have been impelled
I
my
even greater fervor and that
my
pursue
to
association with
Abe
zazen with
even
thereafter,
though we might be separated geographically, would have deepened precisely in this area of "discipleship" to
do so
him
as a
no reflection whatsoever upon
is
Zen master. That
his skill or
wisdom
teacher but almost wholly because of the particular course after
my
return to Honolulu in August 1972. For
the interior religious
life
zen and as a thinking, feeling
community. By
this
I
my
mean, quite
early
as a
Zen
life
took
my
interest in
summer
of that year
even as
I
in
my
throughout the 1970s, ments.
I
I
Vietnam, causing immense
in political develop-
Vietnam War from
to the
many
role in the
inception, but
I
ral-
opposition was largely limited
to writing in the "Letters to the Editor" section of the ironically,
its
antiwar demonstrations and
My
of the late 1960s and early 1970s.
newspapers. But
itself.
United States, and increasingly
the
to
found myself caught up
had been opposed
had not taken an active lies
return
to
fact that
suffering there as well as intense social turmoil in the United States
Thus, after
citi-
was going
was keenly aware of the
United States-initiated war was raging
Zen and
late-twentieth-century world
specifically, that I
did not
consciousness as a U.S.
member of the
the weekly sessions at the Myoshin-ji, a
and
in the spring
occurred within the broader context of
my
it
two Honolulu daily
with Watergate, Ford's pardon of Nixon, and
the events leading up to the final debacle in Vietnam in the spring of 1975
—
in fact, just as the
became much more
broad antiwar movement was subsiding
U.S. government and in opposing imperialism throughout the world.
was
as
if
I
wanted
to
compensate
for not
more
height of the Vietnam War.) This
came
to affect
my
—
active in expressing myself against the actions of the
academic
life
having been active enough
at
(It
the
active political stance inevitably
as well,
which included my continuing
involvement in the study and translation of the works of the Kyoto School. (In 1973 David Dilworth and tion of an important
My
I
published a joint English transla-
work of Nishida's middle
and Morality.)
years, Art
made me look at modern Japanese history in a different light, and gradually became more critical of the political activity and philosophical writings of the members of the Kyoto heightened
political
consciousness I
School
—even of Nishida—
in the
This important change in in
my
relationship with
Japan of the 1930s and early 1940s.
my
Abe during
thinking had manifested several conversations
I
itself
already
had with him
30 Valdo U.vialielmo mid- and
in the
engaged
in free-ranging discussion
One meeting
tioned.
doing research
at
on the various topics
with him that
Princeton University in
we
both in Japan and the United States, as
late 1970s,
November
I
have men-
especially vivid took place at
is
1978, while
I
was on the East Coast
Columbia University during my second sabbatical from
the University of Hawai'i. William LaFleur,
who was
teaching
Prince-
at
ton at the time, was with us during the early part of the meeting. But
was when Abe and
some all its
I
my political
of
were alone together that concerns, especially
my
forms, as well as
I
felt
thetically, as
recall,
I
conviction that religion,
even commenting on his
man
thought as a young
could share with him
I
my opposition
involve itself with important political problems.
in the 1930s.
He,
may have been
it
later,
to
if
imperialism in
genuine, should
He listened most sympaown interest in left-wing
too, felt that religion
should
was
at that
address pressing contemporary political issues, and
time (but
it
when he was
think
I
it
teaching at the University
of Hawai'i) that he told me, with a touch of justifiable pride, that his
Zen
study group (which was the same group that had met at the Myoshin-ji six
years earlier) had sent a telegram to the French government protest-
ing nuclear testing in Tahiti. Nevertheless, existed
between
his
summer
suikin, the
I
still
sensed that a large gap
emphasis on the more formal aspects of
my own pressing need to participate ing that
I
had gone
to
actively in the
religion
peace movement (dur-
Hiroshima and Nagasaki with the Gen-
Japanese antinuclear group loosely
affiliated
with the then-
bomb-
Socialist Party, to observe the thirty-third anniversary of the atomic
ing of both cities)
and
work
to
the Third World. In sum,
where, while cially of his
I
was
still
in solidarity
my own
life
with the liberation struggles of
trajectory
had moved
greatly appreciative of his
life
me
to a point
— espe-
and work
pioneering in the area of the Buddhist-Christian dialogue
and, of course, of his personal guidance in Zen
my religious
express
and
—
I
felt
that
I
had
to
convictions primarily by working for peace and social
justice.
With our life, it is
down
differing
emphasis on the
role of politics in the religious
perhaps not surprising that our relationship
to the
in
subsequent years,
time of this writing (September 1993), should have become
primarily one of friendship and mutual respect on a horizontal basis,
although
still
retaining
many
aspects of the uniquely Japanese sensei-deshi
(teacher-disciple) relationship. For example, in the spring of 1983
I
was
1
^
chapter Three
3
he was coming to teach
utterly delighted to learn that
Hawai'i and was happy to try to be of assistance to
and
in finding a place for
which housing
One admired
and
life
in
Abe, for
my mind
him
workaday world merged.
a particularly
And
that
muggy day (Honolulu,
thanks to the tradewinds)
house
I
where
I
when he comment on it,
certain that
I
am
their
Abe and
trying to
make.
On
his wife to the ware-
many boxes
their inspection
major construction in the area
have
unlike Kyoto, has few of them,
offered to drive
in the airport district
had arrived and required
I
must seem the most natural
precisely the point
is
Honolulu,
his personal religious
am
I
should bother to
I
his behavior at that time
thing in the world.
arrival in
as epitomizing everything
showed me how thoroughly
it
reads this he will be surprised that for
in getting settled
Honolulu, a city in
notoriously difficult to obtain.
his life in the
because
him
to stay in
episode that took place shortly after their
1983, stands out in
June
in
is
him and Mrs. Abe
at the University of
had great
of personal effects
and clearance. Because of
difficulty in finding the correct
warehouse, and there were further complications in finding someone let
a
us enter the warehouse and to supervise the clearance process.
most
trying time,
sion in the
had
to
too,
was
and Mrs. Abe was
justifiably distressed at the confu-
numbering of the boxes and
be conducted
in
what was
feeling the heat
it
for her a foreign language, English.
I,
hoped every-
I
gave no indication whatsoever of doing).
But Abe, about a dozen years older than exertion of the trip to Hawaii, as
I
and surely
still
tired
from the
was Mrs. Abe, showed not the
composure
until everything
slightest
behaved with
sign of impatience or irritation at the situation. In fact, he
perfect equanimity and
process
at the fact that the entire
and undoubtedly showed that
thing would end soon (which
to
was
It
was completed
satis-
factorily.
The above episode may seem it)
an extremely minor and
tive of the spirit of
Zen
— and indeed
erudite lectures and treatises I
have come
I
be (and actually
one, but for of
all
me
it
is,
on the face of
was more
genuine religion
instruc-
— than
all
the
on the subject. Thus, even though Abe and
to differ in the area of politics
undoubtedly strayed from the realm,
to
mundane
and even though
I
have
role of his faithful deshi in the religious
must acknowledge how deeply
I
admire those personal qualities
he manifested so elegantly and so eloquently that muggy June day ten years ago.
3Z During
many more
Vdido U.Vlallclmo
his two-year stay at the University of Hawai'i,
I
naturally
occasions to meet him, but because of the factors
had
have
I
already mentioned and also because departmental lines are ridiculously
sharp here
teach in the Department of East Asian Languages and Lit-
(I
eratures, not in either Religion or Philosophy),
we had
not have as close an association as
But
earlier.
do remember that he showed
I
in the course of those
two
years,
when my
in
me
sympathy
great
wife and
were undergoing. Indeed, there
ter
area of
modern Japanese philosophy
easier for
ume,
I
I
must touch upon another
me
to avoid. In fact,
me
feel
upon being asked
cannot avoid
it,
it is
and how
because
easily
so
it is
bond
strong
concerns
in the
it
years.
would be so much
it
to contribute to this vol-
pondered precisely the question, Should
sensitive a topic I
a
and daugh-
many
over
which
topic,
mention what
I
has become a burning issue, especially in the past
how
at a time,
or even that of the Buddhist-Chris-
tian dialogue, a topic of the greatest interest to
But
been
clearly has
common academic
that far transcends our
did
were experiencing
I
great distress at the severe personal difficulties both our son
between us
we
regret to say that
I
Kyoto more than a decade
five years,
for
me
knowing
can arouse controversy? Yet
germane
to
my
I
entire almost-four-
decade-long involvement in the study of the writings of the Kyoto School,
and thereby germane to the
to
"My Encounters
as "the
now
in the
as well.
Emperor
refer
Showa Emperor) renunciation
tution before the
members
even other conone, especial-
Hirohito's (since his death
of his "divinity" on Janu-
no way cancels out
1946. But, of course, Hirohito's renunciation in
the views of the
of the Kyoto School toward the imperial insti-
end of the
Pacific War, particularly during the fourteen-
year period beginning with the Japanese invasion of Manchuria
Moreover,
this topic
is
its
new
postwar, "symbolic" guise. Indeed, as
emperor and empress are
in Italy,
emperor
is
I
is
thriv-
write, the present
performing various "symbolic" duties,
including having an audience with Pope John Paul say that the prese-nt
in 1931.
not unimportant even now, in the 1990s, for a
glance at the daily newspaper shows that the imperial institution ing in
I
referred to in English
in the field,
may seem an unimportant
postwar period after
referred to as the i,
more commonly
emperor system." For many scholars
tributors to this book, this topic
ary
Masao Abe"
vexed question of the stance of the Kyoto School members toward
the Japanese imperial institution,
ly
with
no longer merely
a
II.
(One might even
symbol but rather has
33
chapter Three
become
"divine" by cohabiting with the spirit of the
ceremony of November
erasu, during the Daijosai
During the Kyoto School,
Sun Goddess, Amat-
1990.)
my
approximately twenty years of
first
was of minimal
too thought the imperial institution
I
study of the
importance to an understanding of the writings of the school's members.
But since the
and increasingly throughout the 1980s,
late 1970s,
convinced that
it
was not only important but its
during the
life
I
last fifteen
years of his
important to an
most prominent member, Nishida,
understanding of the writings of
raphy,
critically
became
I
As
(1930-45).
I
worked on
his biog-
perceived that what at the turn of the century was a relatively
benign interpretation of the role of the imperial institution became by the 1930s total acceptance of
its
Even more
divine role.
Nishida
to the point,
articulated in sophisticated philosophical terms a justification for the
unique mission of the imperial institution
much
world
in
untouched by
of Nishidas philosophical legacy remains
modern
ticular interpretation of
and by
history,
history.
Although this par-
his obvious espousal of
nationalism through such absolutizing of the imperial institution in his later years,
stand
it.
it
That
would be wrong not is
what
alluded
I
address
to
to, in
it
and
to
attempt to under-
a very cursory way, toward the
end
of a review article on David Dilworth's translation of Nishidas last major
philosophical work, "Nishidas Final Statement"
Autumn
1988).
Although
from Michiko Yusa
—
phy
—
in a later issue,
my
(Monumenta Nipponica,
statements prompted a vigorous rebuttal
herself a distinguished scholar of Nishidas philosoI
continue to believe that the question of Nishidas
nationalism and exaltation of the imperial institution requires much,
much more
How
study and cannot be dismissed so
this
problem
relates to
Abe
is,
easily.
of course, a matter of
how
he
assesses Nishida s writings on the imperial institution and other aspects of the "national polity" (kokutai, in Japanese) and
how he
himself view
s
the Japanese imperial institution, both in the prewar period and in the present.
As
I
continue
my
ask him these questions.
because
I
him through
dialogue with I
especially
hope he
will
this essay,
respond
to
I
must
them
find his statement in the introduction to his and Christopher
Ives's translation of
Nishidas
first
work,
An
Inquiry into the Good, to be
quite enigmatic: "Nishida was, however, neither anti-nationalistic nor nationalistic" (xxv).
I
am
perplexed also that he does not mention Nishi-
das views on the imperial institution
at
all,
despite extensive references to
L
34-
it
is
by Nishida in his
somehow
Abe
later writings.
Thus,
I
cannot but think that the topic
taboo; and in keeping with everything
to
break
all
taboos. For surely,
seek the truth and overcome I
all
if
religion has
have learned from
I
himself, both from his writings and in person,
finally to is
VaLdo H. Viaiicimo
I
think
it
any function
obstacles on the road to
realize, in conclusion, that this essay is a
is
proper
at
all, it
it.
most curious melange of
personal anecdotes, impressionistic descriptions, and polemical state-
ments. But
which I
can
it
somehow
was
I
am
confident that
written, as both a tribute to
truly affirm to
be one of the most
Abe
will
him and fruitful
read
it
in the spirit in
as an extension of
encounters of
my
what
life.
ckcipter Four
THE IN
F.A.S.
ACRONYM
MASAO
ABE'S LIFE
TRAJECTORY Felix E. Vricto
M a sao
This essay, offered to in
American
which
universities,
Abe
as
an appreciation of his work
structured according to the three stages in
is
Hisamatsu (1889-1980) encapsulated
his teacher Shin'ichi
his
human existence in his use of the acronym F.A.S. show how Abe's life trajectory represents an outstanding
basic understanding of I
shall try to
embodiment
of the development of the selfless Self,
which
foundation of Hisamatsus philosophy of Awakening, of which
most
brilliant
Let
me
example
in the
lies at
the
Abe
the
is
academic arena.
begin with a brief description of what F.A.S. means.
F
stands for an Awakening to the Formless Self, which refers to the dimen-
human existence, i.e., the True Self as the fundamental ground of human existence. A stands for this Formless Self as the standpoint of all-humankind and refers to the width of human existence, which sion of depth in
also includes
all
beings in their entirety.
The dimension
for the activity of creating history supra-historically
chronological length of
human
existence as
Masao Abes main academic
efforts
of the S stands
and
refers to the
awakened human
were
first
directed at a provi-
sional synthesis of Christianity as a religion of faith or grace
dhism
as
a
religion
of
self-awakening
or
history.
and Bud-
self-realization.
Both
36 religious trends coexist in
expression in Pure
Felix E. Vricto
Japanese Buddhism as well, where they find
Land Buddhism and Zen Buddhism. As
a devoted fol-
lower of Pure Land Buddhism in his younger days, Abe was directly confronted with the tension represented by the two contrasting ways of realization: the
efforts at
one based on the other power
human emancipation
(tariki),
the seeker relies exclusively on his or her
human
which
one's
prove totally ineffective without the help-
ing grace of Amida, and the other based on self
from the
in
self-
own
power
(jiriki),
efforts to obtain
condition. This dialectical tension took for
which
in
freedom
Abe
at that
time the shape of an existential impasse leading to a genuine philosophical aporia that his
remarkable dialectical power was not able to overcome.
Abe
In a conversation with John Cobb,
painful one,
which he was able
refers to this transition as a very
to solve only
under the guidance of
his
teacher Hisamatsu.
Upon
the resolution of the contradictory tension inherent in the
tariki-jiriki existential conflict,
Abe undertook
to apply consistently
an
analogous methodology regarding the Buddhist-Christian contrast:
Through
that experience I was, in a sense, forced to
Land Buddhism and Zen — not
intellectually,
compare Pure
hut existentially.
This problem overlaps comparative studies of Buddhism and Christianity.
Thus my personal
these two religions,
interest
Buddhism and
is
not merely
to
compare
Christianity, hut rather to find
the deeper root for the two types of religion the}' embody. To realize
such a deeper truth
main motif of my
The
is
a very urgent task for us today. This
failure of reason to solve the vital
intellect points to the reason's inherent
damental contradiction
between
a relative
is
the
interest in the Buddhist-Christian dialogued
in
human
antinomy
in the
problems created by the
weakness
to solve
any truly fun-
existence. Hisamatsu distinguishes
process of rational activity and an
ultimate or absolute one that points to a fatal limitation in the structure of reason in which there appears the extremity of reason
itself.
This
absolute antinomy characterizes the unavoidable limitations of the per-
son as a rational being.
Humans
and continue to rely on
this
are not aware of this fact themselves
antinomic standpoint. But without the
chapter Four
„.
and solution of
realization
this
37
problem, one cannot help falling into
anxiety and desperation.
When who
become one with
the fundamental antinomy has
wrestles with
it,
the person
there appears the great-doubt-mass (dai-gi-dan), an
ultimate negation of the thinking
itself.
However, a great-doubt-mass that
remains a particular doubt mass can yield only a particular form of satori,
one that
greater tering
still
has form, and as such cannot really be called Great Awak-
The great-doubt-mass
ening.
effects.
The
and more thoroughgoing the doubt, the more exhaustive and
shat-
its
results.
its
worth emphasizing, however, that a theoretical description of
It is
the process does not at of self-discover\'.
only
stands in proportion to
when
I
It is
all
provide the real problematic to start the quest
not that in doubting myself
have become a
I
am
truly doubting, but
doubt myself. The overcoming of the
total
great-doubt-mass cannot be undertaken only by reading a literary description of
it,
become
unless one has previously
the very doubt mass
itself.
This existential problem, as Abe says, overlaps the comparative study of
Buddhism and
Christianity.
Upon
resolving the initial antinomy
eventually transformed into the great-doubt-mass,
Abe would
not start
digging up relics and bones of the Buddhist tradition as a heritage for the future.
On
the basis of his awakening to the Formless Self, and working
in the present historical situation,
he would now undertake the task of
finding and working out the deeper roots of the two types of religious realization
embodied
in his initial problematic.
A religious
experience should,
be grasped in terms of reflective thought. Philosophy and
in his view,
reli-
gion ought to build a strict and inseparable unity, inasmuch as a religion
without philosophy out religion
West both
is
is
blind to
its
own
articulation,
and philosophy with-
an abstract endeavor with no transforming power. In the
are strictly separated departments,
which explains why
at pre-
sent there are so many religious movements based on simply emotional reasons, blind to any philosophical articulation, and philosophies that are
powerless because they are limited to a positivistic approach. ing
is
between philosophy and tural
Abes
think-
not only concerned with establishing the necessary demarcations
and
religious
religion either in the East or the West. If the cul-
meeting of both hemispheres
creatively developing their religious
is
now
taking place and
and philosophical standpoints,
it
is
38 because of people of Abe's
come
another have
Felix E. Vricto
who by one way
those of us
The meeting
ers are greatly indebted to him.
overcoming of the
And
stature.
or
within his personal world as friends or devoted read-
historical preconceptions
of East
and West,
an
as
between the Buddhist and
Christian antagonism hitherto firmly entrenched,
one of
is
a processual
character meant to be accomplished in time, as mutual love and under-
standing develop.
in this sense that Abe's dialogue has
It is
been
a
model
coming generation.
for the
Throughout
thinkers,
through his remarkable books and
his teaching career,
Buddhist thought with the West's most outstanding
articles confronting
and through
book on Japans foremost
his interpretative
gious philosopher-priest, Dogen,
Abe has
reli-
offered us a truly penetrating
view of the so-called Kyoto School of philosophy, of which he has been its
living representative in the
do
qualified can
Nor
that.
West. The nature of
Masao Abe's
for a critical evaluation of is
this essay
output. Others
how
here the place to assess
does not
who
are
call
more
far his possible
development of the Kyoto School's conception of Nothingness has succeeded
to
advance
tion. In the
case of
its
articulation after Kitaro Nishida's initial formula-
Masao Abe, we
dhist thought that in
my view had
are offered an interpretation of
already attained
its full
Bud-
development
in
the foregoing generation. Abe's task has been the formulation in straight-
forward language of a process of Buddhist speculation far from easy to assimilate
and
been voiced of his use of Western
follow. Criticism has
minology when submitting Western thinkers
to a
paramita dialectic, espe-
regarding the process thinking of Whitehead or the onto-theology
cially
of Heidegger. But since this criticism
is
only external,
aim
mon way
is
to establish a
to East
for a
But
of thinking that
is
in
no way
understanding of their
inval-
as his ini-
truly universal
and com-
and West. To note the separations and differences
to a better
ments
way
it
inasmuch
idates or calls for a radical revision of Abe's position tial
ter-
common and
is
but a
fundamental agree-
world philosophy.
this philosophical task
important to him
is
not Abe's ultimate concern.
the discovery of our
focus on F.A.S., this stressed here.
is
is
common
More
humanity. Given our
the aspect of Abe's thought that needs to be
Humankind
is
today a scattering of individuals, an aggre-
gate or conglomeration of single entities, windowless
monads wandering
„
chapter Four
39
aimlessly in a world without meaning. This a whole" does not exist at
nation-states with
all.
that
"all
humankind
The world today should aim
which people
upon us the urgency of
means
to abolish the
Abe
identify themselves.
as
is
pressing
investigating the religious reasons to take as our
destiny the state of being persons belonging to a single and united world. It is
because there
world
history.
is
When
no true humankind that there
is
at
present no true
the individual transcends the ego-centered structure
of the nation-states and thereby creates the universal sovereignty of
humankind, true history may begin
we need most
mate, what cosmology.
Human
at
existence
in a
present is
now
is
postmodern world.
in great
need of
a
threatening the world in a blind alley of ing a self-awakened
Formless
nihility,
cosmos based on the
and
new
clarifying authentic
with the aim of overcoming the antireligious ideologies
religiosity
in
now
need of establish-
realization of Emptiness, the
Self.
Now Masao Abe
returns to Japan and concludes his teaching career
Western academic world, thus entering
in the
In Abe's esti-
new humanism but
not a
into the length
of his trajectory, the dimension of the extension of
life in
dimension
which the awak-
ened individual embarks on the creation of history supra-historically For the creation of true history, a third dimension of called
nent
for,
in
created ated.
human
(S).
existence
is
because true history cannot be created by any means imma-
conventional history. History
anew
When
is
something that should always be
rather than being the record of
what has already been
own
becomes mere
fettered by our
creation, history
cre-
scholar-
ship. Living without continuously creating the future belongs already to
the past and, as such,
is
historically worthless. Therefore, after
awaken-
ing to the Formless Self (F) and having helped to form the world on the
standpoint of All-Humankind (A), Abe's concluding stage of supra-historically creating history at all
liant actualization of its
times (S)
now opening
is
up. After the bril-
previous stages, without being fettered by the
already created history, the last stage for the completion of the F.A.S.
acronym now looms
large in Abe's trajectory as the actualization of the
ultimate postmodern
Mahayana
I
sory
career.
have ventured, perhaps somewhat
way Abe's
trajectory with the
by Hisamatsu's notion of F.A.S.
scheme
If
arbitrarily, to establish in a cur-
of spiritual development traced
Abe's work
is
read under this
light,
we
4~0
Felix E. Vricto
can find implicit an evaluation, both
ment
as well as in terms of
qualifications, the F.A.S. al
in
terms of
acronym thus exemplified
challenge to every one of us to be worthy of the
ously poured with sphere.
its
potential develop-
what has already been achieved. With some also throws a person-
Dharma
rain so gener-
wisdom and compassion upon our parched hemi-
ckciptcr Five
THE ZEN ROOTS OF
MASAO ABE'S THOUGHT nichard
In his
foreword
ern Thought,
1
to
J.
T)eJ\dartino
Masao Abes award-winning book, Zen and
John Hick, with much
ures, Nishida,
Abe (who
justification, described
"belongs to the vigorous Kyoto School and
is
a successor of
its
West-
greater
fig-
2
Hisamatsu, and Nishitani") as "the leading philosophical
exponent of Zen 4
to the
since 1958, Abe's
many
West since the death
of D. T. Suzuki.
M
Indeed,
years of translating, lecturing, and publishing in
English concerning Zen carry on a long-standing interaction of Zen w
Western thought and Western expression that goes back
in fact
Suzuki to Suzukis teacher Shaku Soen (1859-1919). For the
first
ith
through serious,
probing engagement between Zen and Western thought began, from the side of Zen, possibly as early as 1885. ly
having received his
final
Kosen (1816-92), decided
—
It
was then
Zen approval from in a startling
lished about
patently
in
Tokyo. This was
two decades
discernible
earlier
influences
his
Shaku Soen, recent-
Zen
teacher, Imagita
departure for a Zen
time (and over the objections of his teacher)
Keio University)
that
s
—
monk
of his
to enter Keio-Gijuku (later
an upper-level school formally estab-
by Yukichi Fukuzawa (1835— 1901) under of
Western thought.
expressly "in order to study Western science."
6
Soen entered
Hickard
4-Z
J.
'DeJttartino
Perhaps as an offshoot of his experience
Shaku Soen States. ji
in
Having
1893
became
in 1892
to
first
Kita-Kamakura, south of Tokyo), Soen
(in
America
Religions, held the following
by D. ly
T. Suzuki.
as a delegate to the
month
in
An
in
World Parliament of
Chicago. At that conference his
a result of friendships
stemming
from that conference, Soen was once again
ing 1905-06. in
As
United
to visit the
paper was read in an English translation prepared back 7
same
at that school, this
Zen master
succeeded Imagita Kosen as head of the Engaku-
monastery compound
August of 1893 went
the
in
Japan
initially
directly or indirect-
in the
United States dur-
assemblage of some of the verbal presentations he made
America, translated into English and edited by Suzuki (who, through
was published
Soen's contacts, had been in America since 1897),
The
topics dealt with in this collection
cial interest for
what
shall
is
8
were wide-ranging. Of spe-
be a major focus here (since
of Abe's primary concerns)
in 1906.
it
came
be one
to
that in explaining the central or pivotal
dhist notion oiSunyata, or "Emptiness," great care
was taken
to
Bud-
prevent a
dualistic or exclusively one-sided negative or nihilistic misunderstanding.
That
is,
not only was Sunyata presented and discussed along with the
companion Buddhist notion
oitathata,
equivalent 'philosophical terms for tence,"
10
and bhutatathata, 9
Dharmakaya
or "suchness," as
or the "totality of exis-
but further spelled out were the implications of
Awakened the brim,"
Self (or "Mind"): that 11
and, because of
finds itself located"
of-no-place."
12
—
i.e.,
"it is
perfectly
this, that "it
that
it
this for the
empty when
it is
Zen
filled to
has no abode whatever where
occupies what
it
could be called a "place-
13
This same theme of the non-nihilistic, nondualistic nature of
Emptiness
(particularly in
treated by Suzuki in his
its
relation to suchness)
own way
in
some
was taken up and
of his early works in English,
Acvaghosha's Discourse on the Awakening of Faith in the
and Outlines of Mahayana Buddhism
15
(1907).
Mahayana
Although the emphasis
the Acvaghosha treatise, supposedly one of the earliest dhist texts,
(1900)
14
in
Mahayana Bud-
was not on Emptiness, but on suchness, Suzuki,
in the intro-
duction to his translation of this work, commented: "Whatever the origin of the idea of suchness might have been,
its
'absolute aspect' evidently
foreshadows the Qunyata philosophy of the Madhyamika school." glossary he supplied at the
of "emptiness
[or]
cunyata
end of [as]
his translation,
1
"
In the
Suzuki explicitly spoke
an aspect of suchness."
1
chapter Five
4-3
This position was disclosed more fully
Suzukis footnote
in
to a por-
which the position was apparently
tion of Agvaghosha's Discourse (on
based), which stated that
there as
.
a twofold aspect in suchness.
is
.
.
(cunyata) in the sense that
.
it is
.
completely
the attributes of all things unreal, that
second
is
trueness as
.
.
.
The first
.
it is
is
trueness
from
set apart
the real
The
reality.
(acunyata) in the sense that
.
.
it is
.
self-existent.^
The
footnote Suzuki gave to this was "Acvaghosha here states that
bhutatathata all
is
at
once cunya and acunya.
acunya because
all
Thus,
particulars)."
all
." 20
an ontological term.
.
.
privation."
22
is
is,
emptiness
"Emptiness ... is
is
is
Emptiness.
"Emptiness
is
His rationale
24
synonymous with suchness
is
for this
2 "
Hence,
2
It is is
ness, Siinyata
is
"Emptiness is
for Suzuki, "Sunyata,
another
name
emptiness."
(tathata)
," 26
2
for Tatha-
Inasmuch
'
because
had
perfect emptiness. is
as
"in reality
Suzuki maintained, "Buddhist
its
being spoken of as an aspect of such-
a basis in all
—
or even equated
—with such-
Acvaghoshas Discourse, which reports:
things in the world
w ithout exception
tathata or
gunya
"'
Actually, the text goes
beyond
suchness empty, but "the truth
in its
nature."
30
A
similar
is
this,
"It
are per-
emptiness [ctyantacwiyata), that even Nirvana or suchness
also void
in fact
the philosophy of Suchness, or philosophy of
also used interchangeably
said in the Sutras that
alone
it
-
ness. This, too,
fect
21
not sheer nothingness."
suchness and suchness
With Suzuki, then, besides
is
it (i.e., it is
not a negative idea, nor does
is
Tathata, and Tathata Sunyata,"
philosophy, therefore,
is
it
Suchness or Bhutatathata
Being perse."
the reservoir {alaya) of infinite possibilities."
Sunyata
emanate from
conceptually liable to be mistaken for sheer nothingness
is
that
transcends
Yet in one of his last published books, Suzuki
properly speaking, has no negative connotation. ta,
it
nonparticular);
is
19
was, as he wTote elsewhere, "Emptiness
mean mere
it
for Suzuki, "philosophically speaking,
announced: "Ontologically, Emptiness
which
cunya because
(i.e.,
possible things in the world
the font or source of
is
It is
forms of separation and individuation
is
also
holding that not
that
pronouncement
Prajnapdramita tomes. Rendered by Suzuki, "Emptiness
.
.
is
.
cuinatd
found
itsell
is
in
is
the
empty'
ULckard
4-4-
(sunyatasunyata) ." "
quoted by Abe,
31
It
T>eJ\dartcno
J.
Madhyamika
likewise appears in the
'Emptiness too
empty
is
.
.
sunyata-sunyata.'"
.
further amplified by Abe, "In other words, true emptiness
of emptying
Since
which empties everything including
avowed
it is
that suchness
is
literature.
is
32
And,
33
itself."
empty, that Emptiness
itself is
prevail solely
if
suchness
Suzuki's .
.
.
assertion
emptiness
"sunyata-sunyata."
"Buddhism
that
itself (fiinyata)'";
than the concreteness of reality
35
and
'nothing' nasti,
being and non-being
which
is
and
am
that
dhist parallel,
it
This would account
[would
that
alike.'
transcended."
is
to his translation of Agvaghosha 'I
36
a self-
This
say,]
"it is
is
for
universe
in truth
no
less
only possible in Empti-
'Something' here
is
Buddhist
and true Prajna obtains only when the dualism of 3
In addition,
Hinduism
explain his including a reference to
ter IX, p. 84:
34
that "Emptiness
itself';
ness to see 'something and nothing asti,
—which
each bespeaks equally a self-emptying emptying, or
emptying-self-emptying:
is
a self-
is
emptying suchness, and Emptiness a self-emptying Emptiness if
all
"sunyata-sunyata." For the contended relation
this, clearly, is precisely
between suchness and Emptiness can
solely
as
pure activity
empty, and that suchness and Emptiness are synonymous, the key in
means
As
in
is
not.'"
may be noted
would serve
Discourse: "Cf. the Bhagavadgita,
s
immortality and also death; and
which
it
38
In
to
another of the footnotes
I,
Chap-
O Arjuna! am
what might be considered
a
that
Bud-
that in his characterizing a bodhisattva
what could be called the Self-awakened-Self-
of "the eighth stage" (or
actualization of this "ontology" of the self-emptying-self-emptying or
nondualistic-duality of suchness and Emptiness), Suzuki exclaimed, is
nature herself,"
personified."
This
is
39
or,
he was
as
ter
put
it,
"The Buddha
is
Nature
40
the reason Suzuki started to emphasize, as early as he did,
that "bhutatathata (suchness) [dualistic]
later to
"He
.
being and non-being.
.
.
XV):
To think
'it
is,' is
To think
'it
is
eternal ism.
not,'
is
nihilism:
Being and non-being.
The wise
cling not to either.
does not
.
.
.
fall
under the category
of
Says iNagarjuna in his Qastra (Chap-
chapter Five
•»•
4-5
Again,
The dualism of
be and 'not to
'to
be,'
The dualism of pure and not-pure: Such dualism having abandoned, The wise stand not even
in the middle."
41
"So the Mahayanists generally designate absolute Suchness as Qunyata or void."
42
Hence, "absolute Suchness
[also
designated as Qunyata]
and not empty, cunya and agunya, being and non-being, Expressed otherwise:
"When
sat
empty nor not-empty, neither cunya nor agunyd, neither
it
defines
43
asti
nor nasH."**
Thus did Suzuki,
neither void
as
back
(cunya)
nihilistic
nor not-void
decade of
this cen-
elucidate "the nature of Suchness [and Emptiness] or the
'Dharma
(agunyd)}"^ tury,
absolute
the
empty asat."
considered absolutely [they] can neither be
This prompted Suzuki to query, "Could a doctrine be called
when
is
and
of Non-duality,' as
it is
as far
termed
as the first
in the [Vimalaklrti] Sutra."
46
Shortly thereafter (in 191 1), there was published in Japan, in Japanese,
the
first
really
sustained religio-philosophical treatment of Zen
thought under the perceptible influence of Western thought. This was the intellectually groundbreaking Inquiry into the Good, by Kitaro Nishi-
Suzukis lifelong intimate friend. In the view of Masao Abe, as
da,
forth in his introduction to his joint translation of this work: into the
Good stands upon
losophy.
As both
Zen
[the]
a philosopher
set
"An Inquiry
mutual transformation of Zen and phi-
and
a
Zen Buddhist, Nishida transformed
into philosophy for the first time in the history of this religious tradi-
tion and, also for the first time, transformed
Zen-oriented philosophy."
47
Western philosophy into
As Abe went on
Nishida clearly [took what he] regarded
[to
be Zen's] pure experience as
the sole reality and wanted to develop his philosophy on this basis."
At the outset, then, Nishida's
own
a
to explain, "At this time,
48
distinctive use of "pure experi-
ence" was the vehicle through which he sought to explicate what the Vimalakirti Sutra epitomized as the
"Dharma
spoke of "the state of pure experience
in
of Non-duality" Nishida
which there
is
no separation of
subject and object and no distinction between the self and other things." In
Abes
explanation, "Pure experience
is
44
realized prior to the distinction
Richard
4-6
between subject and rience
.
.
"De^Marttno
object. ... In Nishida's understanding of pure expe-
knower and the known
the
.
J.
are not two."
50
Though
and changed somewhat over the
explication developed
Nishida's
Abe, after
years,
examining the complete corpus of Nishida's writings, concluded, "Given Nishida's philosophical
work
that his entire philosophy
notion of pure experience.
after
is
Inquiry into the Good,
we can
development and deepening of
a
An
Aw
Inquiry into the
argue
his initial
Good provided not only
point of departure but also the foundation of his philosophy."
the
51
Unquestionably, there can be found in Nishida's overall maiden
such rudimentary statements that were germinal
effort
philosophy
as,
"When we
assert that 'there are
no
things'
for his future
—from the
per-
spective of intuition that transcends the distinction between subject and object
—
ingness
a consciousness of nothingness lies
is
not merely a word:
certain qualities
and
behind our assertion. Noth-
concrete meaning indicates the lack of
its
also the possession of certain positive qualities.""
This means "absolute nothingness ...
"Non-being separate from being
is
is
not
.
.
.
mere nothingness." 53
not true non-being."
2
So,
54
Concerning Nishida's ensuing developed thought, Abe has observed, "Realizing the uniqueness of the Eastern
way
of thinking,
Nishida [eventually] took absolute nothingness as ultimate tried to give
it
a logical foundation
ern philosophy." culture less
.
.
.
and
through his confrontation with West-
As Nishida himself professed, "At the
basis of Asian
something that can be called seeing the form of the form-
lies
and hearing the sound of the soundless. Our minds are compelled
seek for
this.
demand." 56 losophy ical
55
reality
I
I
would
"[In this undertaking,] through the mediation of
developed
my
base for
.
.
.
ideas."
the idea of place.' In this 57
Working out
idea of place," Nishida evolved
which, as Abe saw
it,
I
began
this "logical base" in
what he came
was linked
way
to
foundation to this
like to give a philosophical
Greek
phi-
to lay a log-
terms of "the
to call "the logic of place,"
to Sunyata. "[Nishida's] logical founda-
tion for ultimate reality [was] formulated in terms of the logic of place or
the logic of absolute nothingness. ... (sunyata)
and
is
essentially different
It is
a logic of Oriental nothingness
from Western
logic.
"' s
While Nishida evidently did not make too much use term Sunyata in
—
or, for
that matter, of the term suchness
ol
—Abe
the specific is
not alone
associating Nishida's use of nothingness with Emptiness oiSunyata. For
"
"
~-
this
chapter Five
•
coupling of Nishida 's Eastern
yata or
—
4-7
or absolute
Emptiness can be discerned as well
in the writings of Keiji Nishi-
tani, one of the
more well known of Nishida's
ern
intuitive as well as active. This
spirit is
.
.
.
—nothingness with Sun-
direct disciples.
"The East-
the standpoint of noth-
is
ingness or emptiness. Nishida's philosophy was also based on the standpoint of an absolute nothingness, but here nothingness and emptiness do
not al
mean
that there
form of
all
a 'nothing'
is
which
On
nothing.
dharmas.'"
59
the contrary, nothingness
Similarly,
absolute 'nothingness.'"
is
the 'actu-
is
Suzuki once stated: "Sunyata. ...
is
60
This commingling the notions of a non-nihilistic Emptiness and nothingness apparently goes back, in the Zen tradition, at least to the Fifth
Chinese Zen Patriarch, Hung-jen. As Abe has brought
to light in
another connection, "With Hung-jen, Dogen emphasizes: 'Since the Buddha-nature relation
empty
is
it
is
mu
called
(no-thing).'
61
Actually,
between these two notions going back much
Abe
sees the
further. For
him,
already "in the doctrine of dependent co-origination expounded by the
Buddha, the notion of absolute Nothingness was Nagarjuna
who
explicitly
2
of Sunyata"*' That or
Emptiness by
enunciated
is, "It is
who
It
Nothingness
this absolute
Nagarjuna
implicit.
in
was
terms
established the idea of Sunyata
clearly realizing the implication of the basic ideas trans-
mitted by the earlier Buddhist tradition."
63
Again,
Abe
presses the crucial
point:
It
must be emphasized
nihilistic.
.
.
.
.
.
.
which
.
.
.
denounced the
insisted that true reality
Therefore, his idea of Emptiness
ness as opposed to fullness. is is
Nagarjuna s idea of Emptiness
In fact, Nagarjuna
"nihilistic" view,
existent.
that
.
Fullness and Fullness as
.
.
is
is
not
so-called
empty and non-
not a mere empti-
Thus, in Sunyata, Emptiness as
it is is
Emptiness.'"
it
4
Suzuki has been equally emphatic: "Absolute fullness absolute emptiness.
is
is
the
same
as
6S
Although Nishida did allude
to "the sunyata logic of the Prajna-
paramita Sutra tradition," 66 instead of Sunyata or Emptiness, he rather accentuated, besides "absolute nothingness," the notion of "absolute negation,"
which he alternately formulated
self-
as an absolute "self-contra-
Hickard
4-S
diction.''
Thus, for example, in his
there can be nothing at
absolute must relate to
negation."
69
he argued, "Since
essay,
that objectively opposes the absolute, the
all
itself."
absolute self-negation within 68
complete
last
form of self-contradiction.
itself as a
express itself by negating
absolutely nothing."
J. T)cJ\da.rtino
67
"The absolute must
.
.
possess
must be
In this respect the absolute
itself.
"A true absolute must possess
must
It
.
through
itself
self-
"The true absolute must be an identity of absolute contradic-
tion in this sense."
Because
.
.
.
Furthermore,
°
the absolute stands to itself in the
dictory identity
—namely
as
its
own
possessing self-negation within itself
through being. It
itself.
Because
because of
is
and absolute being
it is
this
that
form of a contra-
absolute self-negation, or as
—
and
exists
it
absolute nothingness,
expresses itself
it is
absolute
coincidence of absolute nothingness
we can speak
of
.
.
.
divine omniscience
and omnipotence.^
So
it is
itself. It is
ing."
2
that "the true absolute possesses absolute negation within
by negating
For Nishida, then,
through
its
own
With respect is
it is
4
Given
7
'
"the
not true nothingness."
is
infinitely self-affirm-
it is
is
quoted often
has no abiding place!"
I
—
to
what
it
may be
—
He
"logic of nothingness,"
7"
absolute nothingness,"
8
Nishida,
in his
"the logic of the place of nothingness,"
said to be at in
identity,
6
the
"the logic of absolute nothingness," "the place of
ply "the place of nothingness."
and yet everywhere,
or a logical
did so in what he denominat-
ed variously "the logic of place," the "logic of contradictor)'
may be
said that
could be called this self-negating or self-emptying
place-less-place, or place of no-abode.
a place
Sutra,
Zen: "Give rise to
in
believe
Diamond
Nishida sought in effect to give a logical formulation
grounding
"nothingness
73
to Nishida's "logic of place," in the
[or Self] that
own
affirmation
absolute's
this sort of delineation,
a celebrated injunction that
Mind
that
consistently a matter of "the Absolute's
self-negation,"
negation."
separated from being
the
own nothingness
through
self-affirmation
there
its
80
Regardless of
how
it
is
or,
sim-
designated, such
once no-place and yet every-place
an "absolutely contradictory
9
— nowhere
self-identity.''
usage of the term God, could make reference
to
Hence, what he
"
chapter Five
--
God God
characterized as "the old phrase that in this world.'"
where God
81
That
not."
is
"because
is,
4-3
nowhere and
is
yet everywhere
no-thing, there
is
no place
is
82
Addressing his understanding explicitly
to
notion of kenosis (self-emptying), Nishida held that
empty
Saint Paul's words,
himself. ... If
it
"God must
said that
is
and
Christianity
God
its
always, in
creates the
world out of love, then God's absolute love must be essential to the creative act as God's
empty himself, negation,
is
a
own absolute self-negation." 83 For "a God who does not God who does not express himself through his own self-
not the true absolute."
own
paradox of God, of God's
On
84
To Nishida,
this constituted "the
self-affirmation through self-negation."
8'
the other hand, this paradox, for Nishida, was not limited, restricted,
or exclusive. Anything that "stands in relation to itself
But by negating
itself
Nishida meant by
it
is
paradoxically one with
—and gave voice
to as
—an
must negate
itself."
86
This
itself.
what
is
"absolutely contradictory
self-identity."
As Nishida learned from Suzuki paradox through the dialectic of Daisetsu Suzuki for showing
'is'
me
and
that
'is
"Buddhism expresses
not' (soku hi).
I
am
this
indebted to
Diamond
the following passage in the
Sutra:
Because
dharmas are not
all
Therefore they are called
Because there
all
all
dharmas,
dharmas.
no Buddha, there
is
is
Buddha:
Because there are no sentient beings, there are sentient beings." 8.
when Suzuki
In fact,
first
heard from Nishida of the
latter's
now famous
phrase "zettai-mujun-teki-jiko-doitsu" (herein translated as "absolutely contradictory self-identity"), to
88
Suzuki informed Nishida that this was akin
what Suzuki, under the influence of the aforementioned Diamond
tra,
was
u
calling
soku-hi-no-ronrf
H9
("the logic of soku-hi,"
Sil
which could,
accordingly, be translated as "the logic of even-as-it-is-it-is-not").
Suzuki's
own
English articulations: "A
not-A, therefore
meant, "To be God";
93
is
it
God
In his
just as "Being
is
is
A
because
employment
not to be God";
is
Suzuki, "To be itself
A."
91
is
92
that
"God
Being because Being not to be
—
itself
this
is is
it is
not A";
90
or,
In
"A
is
of the term God, this is
God when God
Not-Being."
94
is
not
In brief, for
the logic of Zen.
9S
—
SO
TLichard
J.
DeJttartino
(
In this understanding then, these contradictory dualities are neither
simply contradictory nor simply dualities. As each component of the duality is a
component
of a self-emptying or self-negating duality
—
or perhaps
—
better, a self-emptying-self-emptying or a self-negating-self-negating is
once
at
dualistic
itself
and
not-itself,
and so
itself
and the other
in a
it
non-
exact-
It is
what may comparably be deemed
of Zen," logic of soku-hi, or
of the nondualistic paradox that undergirds Suzuki's seemingly
logic
quizzical statements: "Emptiness
same time
ness."
9
it
is
not."
"Perfect poverty
fect fullness."
98
96
perfect emptiness 99
be everything." 100 In sum, "Emptiness
no other than
A world
is
of rupa
this rupaloka,
and
It is
the emptiness of
Sunyata, and Sunyata
Emptiness.
for Nature."
.
is
ness and Suchness
is
.
.
to
"Tathata
is
is
when
recovered only
is
is
and sunyata
not sheer emptiness. ...
is
"Zen emptiness
be absolutely nothing
ta,
once
and therefore noncontradictory-contradictory-duality
ly this "logic
the
at
Tathata."
is
is
at
full-
per-
Hence, "To Such-
is
no other than sunya-
which
Buddhist term
a
is
101
Consequently, with Suzuki, a truly thorough self-emptying, kenosis, self-negation, "dying," or "being killed"
Son emptying himself of
ter of the
a
human
servant.
On
the contrary,
is
his divinity
it
there
is
no
half-killing.
The
killing
ourselves to affirm ourselves."
This
prominent
call for
what
in
human
matter of the
a
resuscitated."
102
will
be
"We must negate
103
Zen
is
known
as the Great
Death was equally
in Nishida:
The method through which we can know self-attainment of the
acquire this power after dying
again"]
is
the true self
.
.
power of the union of subject and to kill
once [and for
our false
all] to
gain
.
is
our
object.
To
self [or "ego completely"] and,
new
life
[by being "born
l04 .
This makes intelligible Nishidas exclamation: "Those without those
total
person Jesus. "[In Zen]
be so complete that there
to
is
The half-dead can never be
mat-
and taking on the form of
would rather be
spiritual coincident death-rebirth of the
a rebirth.
not, in Christian terms, a
who have Tendering
—
extinguished the self his
are the greatest."
own comprehension
a self
105
of this self-emptying, kenosis, or
^
chapter Five
51
"making oneself empty," Nishitani has proposed that
"making oneself empty,"
[as for]
[in] the case of Christ,
man and becoming
taking the form of
with the will of God,
who
may
himself.
.
.
the Father
What
.
a servant, in accordance
the origin of the ekkenosis or
is
"making himself empty" of Christ. of self-emptying
.
.
.
meaning
Accordingly, the
God
he said to he contained within
ekkenosis for the Son
is
is
kenosis for
W6
God where God
For Nishitani as well then, there "must be a point within is
not God."
107
more
In Nishitani's
When
strictly
Buddhist
the standpoint of emptiness
corresponding orientation
emptied
—
this
.
.
true emptiness
is
Zen) perspective,
radicalized
is
—and
one in which emptiness
point at which emptiness
.
the very point at
is
(or
is
possession of
to
become
U) *
of the very Emptiness
a self-emptying of the self-emptying), this
own suchness"
its
itself is also
which each and every thing
Convng about through an emptying other words, through
the
emptied
becomes manifest in possession of its own suchness.
in
meant
it
terms of "being so of
itself,"
(or, in
being "in
has been further elaborated by Nishitani
or of being "what
it is
of
its
own
accord"
both of which are revealed to be characteristics of "nature."
word "nature"
In [Japanese], the meaning of the is
said to be
being so of itself, being what of] it
something
to
be what
.
.
.
is
it is.
accord. This "of
its
of-itself
Or we can own
.
it is
.
.
.
of itself that
shizen [or
ji
Moreover, "this
— [means that the being
no power from outside forced
say that
it is
what
ji
'
own
o/jiko ("self), or the shi of
of jinen] ("nature"). This character "of itself
of its
it is
accord" (hitorideni) corresponds to the
meaning of the Chinese character
meaning of
(jinen, shizen)
being so of itself Nature (jinen),
onozukara shikari
(onozukara) and
latter [being "of itself
fjij
has both the
"for itself (mizukara).
and
"for itself]
is
109
the great stand-
SZ point of the true verse.
""°
That
JLLchard
the standpoint of no-ego, of the Life of the uni-
self,
the standpoint of no-ego
one stands
Life of the universe, of nature.
reality that they are
as the
same
to these
human
self- consciousness
dilemma and break through
the truth of their
.
.
the
.
.
.
human
dilemma which
Awakening
to
is
This viewpoint
is
is
declared:
[its
ego-self falls into
that
one face
this
in order to realize Emptiness or
it,
is
existentially rooted in
Emptiness, which
the liberation
human
from
that
consciousness.
disclosed through the death of
is
the ego, you realize your "suchness.
of suchness
through
It is essential
.
Abe
interrelated themes,
suchness. This realization of Emptiness
"
This
is
because the realization
the positive aspect of the realization of Emptiness.
u2
the basis of Abes claim that "'Emptiness' and 'suchness'
are simply different verbal expressions of
Alternately conveyed, "'Emptiness' is
—
self tries to grasp itself
an ever-deepening dilemma.
Emptiness
become the
there, all things, just as they are,
and actual
Turning attention
ordinary]
one that smashes that pattern we
" U]
suchness.
As long
is
become one with the
actual form "
no
is,
call [ego] to
When
J. VeJVlcirtL
is
one and the same
Reality."
also called as-it-is-ness or suchness.
not a mere emptiness, but rather fullness.""
4
In another
statement, "Buddhism advocates Sunyata (Emptiness), which
Zen (and
Nothingness' or 'Emptiness,' which drous Being' or 'Fullness.'"
ness.""
7
is
8
116
is
Always
in
Buddhism)
ty"
is
.
.
.
'absolute
dynamically identical with won-
to
be remembered
"in true
and "precisely because
Emptiness the it is
is
that "the real
.
.
This, for him, is/'the
.
'emptying'
is
Emptiness which 'empties'
Emptiness, true Emptiness (Absolute Nothingness) 9
indi-
and without mutual
not the nothingness as distinguished from something-
Quite the reverse,
'emptied,'""
not
3
So, for Abe, "the ultimate in
Nothingness
is
and
a nihilistic emptiness but rather a fullness of particular things
vidual persons functioning in their full capacity
impediment.""
113
is
also c\
en
absolute Reali-
dynamism of 'Emptiness' which
is
simultane-
— ously Fullness." is,
—
Reformulating
this
self-emptying-Emptiness
—
or
what
also a self-emptying-fullness, or a self-full-filling-Empti-
in effect,
ness
120
53
chapter Five
•
-
Abe has
in yet other terms,
absolute negation
we may
ventured, 'Thus
say that
absolute affirmation and absolute affirmation
is
is
absolute negation. This paradoxical statement well expresses the dialectical
and dynamic structure of Sunyatd
and Fullness
What
which Emptiness
in
especially notable in Abe's explication
is
is
Fullness
Emptiness." 121
is
his interpretive
is
application of this view of Emptiness to the Christian notion of kenosis. In his provocative
and challenging essay "Kenotic God and Dynamic Sun-
which became the centerpiece of two volumes of responses by
yata,"
Western
we
religious thinkers,
122
Abe proposed
that
should understand the doctrine of Christ's kenosis to
that Christ as the
Son of God
is
essentially
—because of Christ—
self-emptying or self-negating nature, the that the
Son of God
is
that
Son of God became
is,
at
one and the same time in
of self emptying.
From
this, in
Abe s
and fundamentally
this
fundamental
the Messiah.
It is
not
a person through the process of his
self-emptying hut that fundamentally he
God
mean
his
is
true person
and
dynamic work and
true
activity
]2i
view,
it
follows that
the problem of the kenosis of Christ inevitably leads us to face the
problem of the kenosis of God. In other words,
God God
Is it
the
empties himself, shoidd
—
that
is,
the kenosis of the very
Son of God — has
God? Without
the self-emptying of the
—
origin in
its
of the
The God who does Son of God,
that
is,
Christ the Son of
God? ]2A
that
God
is,
the self-emptying of
—
"the Father"
the self-emptying of
Son of God
therefore insists, "This kenotic
Christ.
if
not consider the self-emptying of
not that the kenosis of Christ
kenosis of
Abe
we
is
God
inconceivable.
God
not cease to be
is
that
is,
the
"the Father," I2S
the ground of the kenotic
God even
the kenosis of Christ,
is
in the self-emptying
not the true God."
12 ' 1
nichard
54-
By
Abe
this
J.
"contending that through the kenosis of God, 'God
is
is
127
truly God.'"
Relating his interpretation to
Only when the understand
Buddhism
who
the kenotic
God
is
is
and what God's
God
truly
is
it is
.
.
.
—Abe has argued: come
it
not, self
is
truly self."
to
total self-
statement,
"God
not a self-affirmative
God," can he properly grasped [only]
parallel existential realization that "self
because
Zen
or to
to the self. Accordingly, the
not God, and precisely because
God, God
—
ego-self negates itself completely does
emptying means is
"DeJViartino
not
is
self,
h)'
and
the
precisely
i2S
Or, once more:
God as ly
.
not God; precisely because of
is
.
emphasized
.
understood without our
"Self
not
is
self,
and
However, recapitulating
Abe
is
God
this,
before, this statement of
own
God. And,
truly
be proper-
parallel existential realization that
precisely because
in
is
God cannot
it is
not, Self
is
truly Self."
n-
question
whether
is
position he represents.
this sort of dialogue
Is
between irreducibly
or dialogue as an encounter
thought
itself a typically
is
appropriate to the
not the model of comparative philosophy different systems of
Western, rather than Asian, model for under-
standing interreligious encounter? While such a model might be appro-
coming from
priate
dering a bit too to
Western philosopher of dialogue,
a
much
Western modes of thought
to
adopt such a model?
On
in the East
is it
model of
traditional
Asian experience
—
interreligious
example, in the inter-
for
weaving of Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, or Shintoism Japan. By adopting
it
is
in
China
or
Western rather than an Eastern model of dialogue,
a
Abe's Zen "dialogue" with Western thought
and
not surren-
an Asian thinker
the surface, at least, this model of dialogue
seems quite different from the encounter found
for
not clear that
Abe
or
may be
over before
it
starts
—
Zen comes out the "winner." Perhaps the
tentative conclusion of Heidegger's conversation with the Japanese pro-
fessor
more
approach
closely approximates the spirit
in
not the substance of a Zen
to dialogue.
My question, phy
if
therefore,
is
whether, in formulating his Zen philoso-
Western metaphysical concepts and
structured system of thought,
Western form of a
in the
Abe has compromised
the possibility "of
saying what the dialogue was about," of "saying the essential nature" of the
Zen experience.
philosophy However,
agree with
I
it is
Abe
that
Zen experience needs
only by keeping close to
its
a
Zen
"root-source" in
Zen
experience that Zen philosophy will find language that enables that experience.
It is
this root-source, rather
concepts and structures, on which Zen philosophy must draw logue with the West. Remaining close to this root-source
importance since, as Abe himself contends,
it
to "say"
than Western philosophical
it is
Zen
is
in its dia-
of particular
as religion that
is
the
source of the fundamental differences between Zen as philosophy and
Western thought. As Abe lectual traditions
human and
life
states,
and Buddhism
"The difference between Western in their
intel-
understanding of negativity
in
involves not only an ontological issue but also an existential Mt
soteriological one.'
Therefore, the dialogue between Zen philosophy and Western
Z8Z Thomas
"Dean
thought must not proceed simply on the level of comparative ontology but requires a step back to the fundamental "experiences of Being" (and
Nothingness) that underlie their respective ontologies. this task,
to Abe's
I
in
in service of
have suggested, that Heidegger offers an important corrective
approach
to dialogue.
By taking
a fresh
hermeneutical, even "deconstructive" look
ways
It is
which they have been
at
phenomenological and
those experiences and the
traditionally expressed,
perhaps Zen think-
ing on Nothingness and Western thinking on Being will discover guistic terms
and structures
for bringing to language
remains an "indefinable" source or mystery.
new
lin-
what ultimately
chapter Twenty -Seven
MASAO ABE ON NEGATIVITY IN THE EAST AND THE WEST Joel &.
In 1984 losophy
participated
I
at the University of
in the
Smith
N.E.H.
Institute for
Comparative Phi-
my formal
Hawai'i at iManoa. This was
intro-
duction to comparative philosophy, and the faculty in the institute stimulated
me
to
philosophy.
encounter
my
my
teaching and research toward doing comparative
Masao Abe was one
the institute. al
change
What I
I
remember
had with him
whom
of the teachers is
not so
much
in the hallway
one
day.
was
I
and asked, "What does Nietzsche mean by the Will
Abe asked
comparing Western
effect.
to
Abe turned
to
I
writings
Abe almost always
me
to
I
deeply indebted to him for unsettling
my
continued
my
research
and this
previous interpretations of
can see them
me
my
begin thinking
and lectures have often had
unsettles
Western and Buddhist ideas so that
me
Power?" In the con-
existential philosophers (especially Nietzsche)
Mahayana Buddhism, Abe's same
but a person-
just beginning
the question unsettled
previous interpretation of Nietzsche and provoked
about Nietzsche from a very different angle. As
at
Abe something about
study of Keiji Nishitani then and had asked
our conversation, the way
encountered
his lectures
Nishitanis criticism of Nietzsche. At a certain point
text of
I
in a
new
light.
I
am
so often!
Abe's depth and breadth of knowledge about both Western and
Z84-
Joel
7L.
Smith,
Asian philosophy allow him to make insightful comparisons of a general
some
nature that avoid
One
strokes. titled
of
of the pitfalls involved
Abes most
"Non-Being and
East and the West."
1
I
paints in broad
stimulating comparisons occurs in an article
Mu — the
Metaphysical Nature of Negativity
think this
is
ous discussion by philosophers.
Abe
by arguing that while
when one
I
an important
Abes
will offer a brief analysis of
correctly
in the
article that deserves seriarticle
shows that Buddhism helps us see a
dogmatic ontological bias in Western thought in favor of positivity over negativity,
he
fails to
show
that
Buddhism
avoids a complementary onto-
logical bias in favor of negativity over positivity.
clarifying the respective ontological
Abe has succeeded
commitments and
dhism and Western thought, but he has not succeeded
in
biases of Bud-
showing that
in
the former resolves the antinomy between negativity and positivity any better than the latter does.
Using ancient Greek and Christian thought ples,
2
Abe claims
as his primary
the following about Western thought:
That being has
priority over,
is
somehow
superior
to,
and more
fundamental than, non-being, had been assumed, perhaps cally
.
The Wests
.
.
uncriti-
for quite some time by the West in general.*
assertion of the ontological priority of being over non-being
dogmatic because
in reality there ty
is
no ontological ground on which being has
over non-being.
It is
assumed that being embraces both
and non-being. But the very
being nor non-being."
priority of
justifiable lar.
7 his
is
priori-
itself
basis on which both being and non-
being are embraced must not be "Being" but "that which
The
exam-
is
neither
4
u (being) over
with regard
mu
to things in
the position held by
(non-being)
is
general and
humans
not ontologically
Buddhism. Herein, we
in particu-
see the
essential difference in understanding the negativity of beings,
including
human
existence,
between the West and the East,
especially as exemplified in Buddhism.''
is
"*"
While certain Christian mystics such
as
Eckhart and
Bohme and West-
Nietzsche and Heidegger begin to overcome
ern philosophers such as this ontological bias,
Z8S
chapter Twenty- Seven
6
only Taoism and
it is
Buddhism
that truly provide
an alternative ontology.
Abe holds
Buddhist ontologies
whether or not ly
among to
mu
relative
life is felt
(non-heing)
to relative
more
seriously
is
understood as complete-
u (being). The negativity of
and deeply
in
Buddhism than
the followers of Western intellectual traditions. This
such an extent that
positivity.
Abe
lies in
equal and reciprocal
human
between the Western and
that the crucial difference
it is
true
is
not considered inferior hut equal to
7
elaborates:
Only when the
and negative
positive
and are mutually negating possible.
.
.
relation to
mu
mu
is
.
.
relative, complementary',
one being impossible without the
other. In other
not one-sidedly derived through negation of u.
the negation of u
and vice
priority to the other. is
.
[non-being] are of completely equal force in
one another. TJtey are entirely
reciprocal,
words,
the dialectical structure of Sunyata
Unlike Western ideas of being and non-being
.
u [being] and
and
is
principles have equal force
versa.
One
Mu
is
has no logical or ontological
Being the complete counter-concept
to u,
mu
more than a privation of u, a stronger form of negativity than
"non-being" as understood in the West. Further, u and
mu
are
completely antagonistic principles and therefore inseparable from
one another, and thus constitute an antinomy}
Negativity in the
West
is
mere
a
privation, while in
Buddhism
it
is
logically equal to positivity:
Negativity in this [Western] view
overcome by tivity (or
u)
positivity
and
On
negativity
is
no more than something
the contrary, [in
to
Buddhism] when
(mu) are equal and reciprocal
it
be
posi-
is
the
onto-
Z8e
iloaUC: A HeSpoUsc
CHAPTER
38S
15:
Heinrich Ott, "The Experience of Neighborhood" Quoting Heidegger's concept of neighborhood, which especially sugneighborhood of poetry and thinking, Heinrich Ott under-
gests the
stands "this image of neighborhood as a powerful language-symbol for the essential relation of religions to one another."
He means
experience of neighborhood an experience in which each other, reaching out to the other,
ther states,
"I
believe
and
different worlds of partners
same
hardly ever with the to I
which
am
this
by
open
self to the other.
this
to the
He
fur-
experience again and again with
in differing
degrees of intensity, yet
intensity as with the Buddhist Kyoto School
and Masao Abe belong." Reading these words,
Keiji Nishitani
clearly
and entrusting
have had
I
is
reminded of the refreshing openness of Heinrich Ott, the
whom
successor to Karl Barth, with
I
had an enriching theological
dis-
cussion in 1978.
There are a number of theological and in Ott's essay.
topic of a
However,
ing. It
Zen,
I
is
my comments
Zen discourse by Ch'ing-yuan Wei-hsin
a favorite of
mine
that
I
to the
of the
I
began the study of
'Mountains are mountains, waters are waters.' After
'Mountains
Zen through the
are not mountains, waters are not waters.'
really
mountains, waters are
is,
these aspects, entire depth."
He
sin.
.
.
'forgets'
we could Here we
.
And
it,
as
this discourse
yet he does annihilate if it
I
But now,
Zen Awakening],
I
say,
when
dis-
sin:
"God
in the
event
cussing the Christian problem of faith in the forgiveness of
of forgiveness.
got an
really waters.'"
Heinrich Ott says that he also often cites
does not annihilate
I
instruction of a good master,
having attained the abode of final rest [that
'Mountains are
Tang
often cite to elucidate Zen Awaken-
goes as follows: "Thirty years ago, before said,
insight into the truth of said,
religious issues to discuss
like to restrict
Chinese Zen master's discourse and the Christian notion of
forgiveness. This
dynasty
would
I
it
had never been. Without both of
not understand the event of forgiveness in
its
see a kind of "neighborhood" between Zen
Awakening and Christian forgiveness whereby we can better understand the depth of each other's experience.
386 JA&sao Abe m
CHAPTER Langdon It
was
me
a great joy for
Roshi. "'
'Prophetic
16:
Gilkey, "A Tribute to a 'Prophetic Roshi'"
to read
Langdon
"A Tribute
Gilkey's essay
As an eminent Christian theologian, he
describes his encounter with
me
in the
touched the core of F.A.S. in
I
still
remember
Nara when we, together with Mrs.
of Japan.
hope
I
and the United
He
United States and Japan.
ticipated vigorously in the F.A.S. Society meeting in Kyoto
to a
vividly
par-
and seriously
we
the enjoyable time
spent
Gilkey, toured that ancient capital
continue our Buddhist-Christian dialogue in Japan
to
States.
CHAPTERS Eugene
B. Borowitz,
Modern Jewish
&
17
18:
"Masao Abe's Challenge
Theology,"
and Richard
to
L. Rubenstein,
"Emptiness, Holy Nothingness, and the Holocaust"
Since the essays by Eugene B. Borowitz and Richard L. Rubenstein
somewhat overlap respond
to
them
in
terms of the issues discussed therein,
let
me
together.
my
Borowitz takes
articles, especially
"Non-Being and Mu: The
Metaphysical Nature of Negativity in the East and the West," as a challenge to the basis of the Western philosophical tradition. In particular,
Borowitz confesses, 'Abe's challenge forced
two major aspects of about them. The
my
first
religious heritage
of these
and
to think
to ask just
God
seems
sefirot,
Sof, the
is
I
now
God
as
En
Bounds. Jewish mysticism also asserts that these two under-
God
nial point of
contact between Judaism and Buddhism.
—
are, in fact, inextricably one.
work and
ate Borowitzs in his essay
as,
both the
the energy centers of the divine self-manifestation, and the
No
felt
One." Yet Borowitz recognizes that
standings of
relation
how
at least
utterly incompatible with the
Jewish mysticism, especially the kabbalah, understands ten
through
was the Jewish understanding of God
so to speak, Nothing. Offhand, that
central Jewish affirmation that
me
I
in
my
Here
dialogues with him
have profoundly deepened
I
find a I
most conge-
greatly appreci-
—which he discusses
my own
understanding ot the
between Judaism and Buddhism.
Turning now
to
Rubenstein, he
tells us,
"My
theological position
-
—
had developed as ogy.
.
.
EpilocjUe-.
387
A Response
a result of a progressive liberation
Having turned away from theism,
.
Nothingness
the
is
Ground and Source
of
came
I
from rabbinic theol-
comprehend
to
that
that exists, a view not unlike
all
the Buddhist teaching about Sunyata." Rubenstein sees a close resem-
blance between his Holy Nothingness and Buddhist Sunyata. However,
Rubenstein also raises a very crucial problem logue
when he
Buddhist-Jewish dia-
for
have some reservations concerning the tendency
says, "I
of Buddhist thinkers to diminish the significance of the sociohistorical
dimension of
human
Reading
this,
existence." got the impression that Rubenstein deals with the
I
dimension and the
sociohistorical
dimension of human
religious
tence on the same plane, just with a quantitative difference. But that these
two dimensions of human existence belong
The
ferent planes.
and thus
relations
sociohistorical
dimension
and thus
and space, whereas the
latter is the
to qualitatively dif-
human-human human existence;
divine-human relationship
a
The former
refers to the vertical plane.
exis-
think
refers to
refers to the horizontal plane of
whereas the religious dimension indicates
I
is
conditioned by time
place of the trans-spatial and trans-
temporal. These two dimensions are essentially and qualitatively different
from each other, yet they are inseparably connected with each other the living reality of
working
and the
human
existence.
We
are dialectical existences always
at the intersection of the horizontal sociohistorical
vertical religious
dimension
dimension. Without the religious dimension as
the ground, the sociohistorical dimension
the religious dimension does not manifest
groundless and rootless;
is
whereas without the sociohistorical dimension
I
in
as a condition or occasion,
itself.
Rubenstein says that
ascribe a lesser significance to the sociohistorical dimension than to
Sunyata.
If this is
the case,
it is
because the sociohistorical dimension
neither the "Ground" nor "Source" of
human
existence.
Rubenstein also expresses surprise about caust:
"The Holocaust
is
is
my
not a religious problem for
interest in the Holo-
Buddhism
Judaism and Christianity. For Jews and Christians
alike,
as
it is
for
the decisive
events of Jewish history are part of Heilsgeschichte. As such, they have a religio-mythic significance." Since geschichte,
my
it
is
of
HetU-
quite understandable that Rubenstein was surprised by
in the Holocaust. But my interest stems from my human being as such, particularly from my interest in karma of human being. The Holocaust is a diabolical event
Buddhist interest
concern with the the collective
Buddhism has no notion
38$ JAasao Abe that
simply cannot deal with objectively. So instead,
I
my own
depth of tive is
karma
that
is
being, where
innate in
I
look into the
painfully realize the universal or collec-
I
human
existence and in which the Holocaust
also ultimately rooted.
my
Referring to
avowal of responsibility for the Holocaust
of this collective karma, Rubenstein states,
in
terms
find Abe's explanation of
"I
the 'responsibility for the Holocaust in terms of karma and avidya ahistorical.
.
.
That idea
and the
trators
remarks
karma
.
it
as
the distinction between the actual perpe-
trivializes
mention the victims." From these
rest of the world, not to
seems that Rubenstein distinguishes individual and
He
two separate categories.
and
tains to specific historical events,
human
karma pertains
collective
inseparably united in the depths of avidya
rance of our
karma per-
believes that individual
versal trans-historical reality. In fact, individual
collective
and
to uni-
karma
collective
—the innate fundamental
condition. Therefore, both types of
are
igno-
karma
are
involved in specific historical events such as the Holocaust.
To address the Holocaust roots ... in the collective that responsibility
is
properly,
karma innate
shared by
all
does this realization of collective ultimate level of
human
such a realization
historical level?
problem basis
—
as
I
hope
people, not just the perpetrators. But
karma and shared
responsibility at the
existence reduce the uniqueness of the Holo-
caust and obscure the particular reject
we must also look at its deepest human existence. This means
in
at
evil
of the Nazis?
I
think not. Should
we
the ultimate level and stay only at the socio-
not,
because
if
we
do,
how can we
solve the root
of the Holocaust? Is not religious realization the only legitimate
opposed
to condition
the Holocaust and
—on which we can
work cooperatively
solve the
to build a better
problem of
world in the
future?
CHAPTER
19:
S.J., and Wolfhart Pannenberg, "The Abe-Pannenberg Encounter"
Joseph A. Bracken,
Joseph A. Bracken beautifully summarizes Pannenberg, which appears
in the
my
dialogue with Wolfhart
book Divine Emptiness and
Historical
"'Epiloaue-.
Fullness: this
of
A
Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation with Masao Abe. In
response
my
I
shall go right to
am
kenosis of
God
in the
God
New Testament I
no
is
and that
Son of God became
be God. Nevertheless,
himself.
aware that there
certainly well
ology states that the to
an examination of Pannenberg's criticism
understanding of the kenosis of I
383
A Hcsponse
a
literal
traditional Christian the-
human
have argued for the kenosis
est spirituality
even
arbitrary but should
"God
is
being challenged
urgently required to elucidate
its
deep-
by reinterpreting traditional formulations of doctrine and
practice. Second,
question.
is
God ceasing of God himself for
without
the following two reasons. First, in our society religion
by antireligious ideologies and
evidence for the
is
if
reinterpretation
be rooted
Love" (John
is
necessary,
it
should not be
in the authentic spirit of the religion in
1:4, 8, 16) is
a basic tenet of
all
Christiani-
God is really love, God does not remain God while having the Son of God empty himself. A God who fully empties himself to become comty.
If
pletely identical with
humanity
emptying, or kenosis,
is
the truly all-loving God. Therefore, self-
nature of God. While the kenosis of the of God, in the case of
God but the fundamental Son of God is based on the will
not an attribute of
is
God
the Father, kenosis
is
implied in his original
nature.
The Buddhist
common
essence of the three persons does not have any separate
them but
prior to
highly appreciates that, as Pannenberg says, "the
exists only in their interrelationship." In
this notion of perichoresis, the
common
connection
Buddhist may ask the Christian,
essence of the three persons does not have any separate
prior to them, then are
we
reality
If
to
the
reality
not here speaking about Absolute Nothing-
ness? Absolute Nothingness indicates the deepest ground or the creative
source in which
which
all
all
things, positive
things, positive
and negative, are rooted and from
and negative, are generated. The
realization of
Absolute Nothingness makes the interrelationship clearly possible. Without the clear realization of Absolute Nothingness (Sunyata) there realization of true interrelationship,
interrelationship, there
On
is
and without the
is
no
realization of true
no clear realization of Absolute Nothingness.
the other hand, Buddhists
must appreciate the Christian notion
of perichoresis and the divine dynamics of love realized therein.
By so
we Buddhists can
better
doing,
I
think that, as Pannenberg suggests,
explore the manifestations of Sunyata in interpersonal relationships.
390
JAclsao Abe
CHAPTER Ruben
L. F. Habito,
On Through
"Hans Kilng Questions Masao Abe:
Emptiness and a Global Ethic"
and accurately
carefully
Ruben Habito
mind
"reacting the
commitment
a
Habito raises two reasons for answering
sumes
all
history in an Eternal
engagement because overcomes
distinctions
all
First, in
following
global ethic?
me
is
one that sub-
Now. This removes the need Emptiness as presented by
between good and
for violence, injustice, exploitation,
continually
a
to
for social
come up is
my
it is
is
one
This makes an
evil.
and oppression
—
realities that
we
against."
Buddhist response
above criticisms.
to the
the Buddhist view of time and history, time
entirely without beginning
ningless and endless,
me
and blunts one's moral "sense of abhorrence
objective ethic impossible
The
Kiing,"
social transformation necessarily seeks for a "better
future." Second, the standpoint of
humans
Hans
question in the negative.
this
the standpoint of Emptiness as presented by
First,
of
elucidates the crucial points of Kiing's question to me:
Can Buddhist Emptiness ground
that
20:
understood
is
and without end. Inasmuch
as time
is
be
to
begin-
not considered to be linear, as in Christianity,
or circular, as in non-Buddhist Vedantic philosophy. Being neither linear
nor circular, time
is
understood to move from
moment embracing
each
and
—
moment, with
and death
as
two different
we
is
and death. Buddhism
life
one
entities but
grasp our
indivi-
life
not objec-
from the outside, but subjectively from within, we are
fully living
sible reality tively
life
to
the whole process of time. This view of time
inseparably linked with the Buddhist view of
does not regard
moment
fully
that
is,
"living-dying." For
if
dying in each moment. According to Buddhism,
moving from
life to
clearly realize the beginninglessness
living-dying at this trated in this
we
are not
death but are in the process of living-dying.
If
we
and endlessness of the process of
moment, the whole process of living-dying
is
concen-
moment.
Buddhism can develop
its
view of history
if
we
take seriously the
compassionate aspect of Sunyata. In the wisdom aspect, one realizes that the beginningless and endless process of time
each moment. This
is
why
in
is
totally
concentrated
Buddhism each "now" moment
as the Eternal Nov\T in the sense of the absolute present.
is
in
realized
However,
in the
391
Epilogue-. A He Sponse
compassion aspect, also realized still
one beholds many beings
in Sunyata,
considering themselves unenlightened and deluded. Such persons
are innumerable
at
awakened one
task for an
is
we can
ment
persons "awaken" to their
to help these
suchness and interpenetration with history toward the future
dhism, and
comes
all
other things. Here the progress of
have a positive significance
to
Bud-
see that Buddhist Emptiness can ground a commit-
in their
good should conquer
view of ethics, Buddhists clearly realize that
However, based on the experience of their
evil.
inner struggle, Buddhists cannot say that good
overcome
evil.
Good and
evil as
is
strong enough always
completely antagonistic principles
each other with equal force. However imperative
resist
the ethical point of view, in Buddhist experience
overcome
is
it
may be from
impossible to
are always mutually negating principles with equal
evil
power, the pure ethical effort to overcome ceeds.
it
with good and to attain thereby the highest good. Since
evil
good and
evil
with good never suc-
only results in a serious existential dilemma. Realizing this
It
existential
dilemma
as innate to
human
terms of the doctrine of original
in
in
to a global ethics.
Second,
to
The
present and will appear endlessly in the future.
through faith
in
God
that
humanity
is
existence and characterizing
Christians believe that
sin,
it
it
is
freed from sin by God's redemp-
tive activity.
On
the other hand, in
Buddhism what
is
essential for salvation
be emancipated from the very existential antinomy of good and to
awaken
tial
by,
to
Emptiness, which
awakening good and
for true
to
evil.
is
of,
In this way, the realization of true
the true ethical
rather than enslaved
Emptiness
is
the basis
life.
This Buddhist realization of Emptiness does not indicate a state of
Emptiness but rather
including Emptiness
itself.
a
to
and
prior to this opposition. In the existen-
Emptiness, one can be master
human freedom and
is
evil
dynamic
activity of
Self-emptying
activity
is
static
emptying everything, a
Grand Affirmation
realized through the negation of negation. In the realization of the negation of Emptiness, the distinction
substantial
and empty. But
distinction of good
and
in the
between good and
Grand Affirmation
evil is reestablished
can see that the standpoint of Emptiness
ment
to a global ethics.
and is
evil is
made non-
of Emptiness, the
reaffirmed. Here, too,
able to ground a
we
commit-
332,
.J^iciscio
Abe
CHAPTER Harold H.
21:
Oliver, "Fritz Buri's Assessment of
Masao Abe's
Religious Thought"
As one of the outstanding Christian theologians of our time,
Fritz Buri
is
deeply interested in Buddhism and the philosophy of the Kyoto School.
Der Buddha-Christus
In 1982 he published
als
(The Buddha-Christ as the Lord of the True
on the Kyoto School and sonally acquainted with
Christianity.
him
in
I
der Herr des wahren Selbst
Self),
am
which
is
a classic
work
fortunate to have been per-
Germany, Japan, and the United States
since 1957.
Harold Oliver,
who
has been acquainted equally with Buri and me,
elucidates vividly and insightfully the Buri-Abe encounter in terms of
both appreciation and sincere criticism. For example, Buri states that
compare East-West responses following way. sublates al
what
The West "responded is
I
world" in the
to the "insufficiency of the
... by the erection of a Being that
lacking in beings" in a
way
that
makes use of conceptu-
thinking "whether by appealing to natural reason or to a supernatural
revelation."
The
on the other hand, responded "by an extinction of
East,
this thinking that
is
directed toward [objective] Being."
In response, let
does not establish
me
itself
discuss the
on the basis of either thinking
but rather non-thinking, which
When
not-thinking
becomes rampant.
is
meaning of Zen's non-thinking. Zen
is
or not-thinking,
beyond both thinking and not-thinking.
taken as the basis of Zen, anti-intellectualism
When
thinking
is
taken as the basis, Zen loses
its
authentic ground and degenerates into mere conceptualism and abstract verbiage.
Genuine Zen, however, takes non-thinking
ground, and thus can express
itself freely
as
its
ultimate
through both thinking and not-
thinking as the situation requires. However, precisely because of
standpoint of non-thinking, Zen
its
has in fact not fully realized the positive
and creative aspects of thinking and
their significance,
especially developed in the West. Logical and scientific
which have been
modes
of thought
based on objective thinking, and moral principles and ethical theory based on subjective thinking, have been very conspicuous
Because Zen has thus aspects of
human
thought,
in the
far not fully realized the positive
its
West.
and creative
position of non-thinking always harbors the
danger of degenerating into mere not-thinking. That Zen today lacks the
— 3 33
-Epilogue: A Response
method
to
cope with the problem of modern science, as well as with
vidual, social, this fact. In
the
and international ethical problems, may be based
Buddhism
order for
modern world,
it
to
become
indi-
partly
on
a formative historical force in
must place objective and subjective
which
thinking,
have been so refined and firmly established in the Western world, within its
own world
internally
of non-thinking. However, to carry out this task,
Zen must
embrace the standpoint of Western "Being" and "ought"
order to concretize and actualize
its
non-thinking in the present
in
moment
of historical time.
CHAPTER A
atic
two propositions
The
ontic plight of the person, that
self-estrangement and anxiety.
found commonality
characterized as love. like to
s
Accordingly to is
Therefore, the existential
God
that
answer
is
and power
and
my
analy-
problem that can be
God; yet
it is
is,
to the
the nature of love.
problem of personal
itself." Tillich
is
resolution
by God's love is
explains that
the being and
movement toward
initiated
that "for Tillich the Christian resolution
participation with
Buddhist view of the
that Tillich's
is
the second, that
defined as "Being
love so that God's Being
love toward
great
accept both propositions as adequate and would
I
is
my
analysis of the problem-
my
in resolutions to this
Alldritt, Tillich's
God who
to explain
the problem of duality as realized in
is,
The second
make some remarks about
existence is
that Tillich
first is
nature of personal existence resonates with
ses have
Tillich:
Dialogue Toward Love"
Leslie Alldritt offers the following interest in Paul Tillich.
22:
"Masao Abe and Paul
Leslie D. Alldritt,
is
power of a
love.
movement
itself. Alldritt
one that
God oi
concludes
results in a personal
not a complete identification with
God
there remains always an 'otherness' in the love relationship."
But the Buddhist resolution of the human predicament sonal participation with
God
but nirvana, which
ing the realm of transmigration and
samsara. However, throughout
its
is
is
not a per-
realized by transcend-
impermanence,
that
long history, Mahayana
is,
the realm of
Buddhism has
always emphasized "Do not abide in nirvana," as well as "Do not abide in samsara."
If
one abides
in so-called nirvana
by transcending samsara,
it
3 94must be nirvana
—and
samsara. one's
On
one
said that
own
is
Abe
not yet free from attachment
—an attachment
to
thus confined by the discrimination between nirvana and
must
It
is
JVIclsclo
be said that one
also
selfishly
still
is
concerned with
salvation, while forgetting the suffering of others in samsara.
Mahayana Buddhism thus
the basis of the idea of the bodhisattva,
teaches true nirvana to be the returning to samsara. Therefore, nirvana in the
Mahayana
ization of
sense, while transcending samsara,
samsara as samsara, no more no
returning to samsara
itself.
In the returning
is
we
nothing but the
real-
through the complete
less,
see that true nirvana
is,
according to Mahayana Buddhism, the real source of both vrajna (wis-
dom) and karuna (compassion). returning to the world one
ment.
It is
is
It
all
sion), in
is
also unselfishly
others in samsara through one's
to samsara. In true nirvana, prajna
called
any sense of attach-
entirely free without
the source of karuna because one
with the salvation of
is
the source of prajila because by
is
concerned
own
returning
and karuna are dynamically one.
It
Mahaprajna (Great Wisdom) and Mahakaruna (Great Compas-
which
justice
is
and love
realized through love
is
supported by
justice.
CHAPTER James
L. Fredericks,
On
Traces of
"Masao Abe and Karl Rahner:
Dualism and Monism"
At the suggestion of James Fredericks,
Rahner and came
was
also
read
I
to appreciate Rahner's
dualism and his deep understanding of I
23:
many
of the writings of Karl
deep concern
God
for the
problem of
as "unobjectifiable mystery."
impressed with his theological position concerning kenosis,
namely, that the self-emptying of the Son has
its
origins in
God
the
Father.
But Rahner's notion of kenosis, as applied damentally different from
Rahner maintains and
infinite
in so doing,
One God
my own
to the Incarnation,
fun-
understanding of kenosis because
"traces of dualism." For Rahner,
can, by dispossessing himself,
God
as the absolute
"become the
other."
But
"always preserves" his infinite unrelatedness. (See Karl
Rahner, The Foundation of Christian Faith:
An
Introduction to the Idea of
Christianity [New- York: Seabury Press, 1978], 220-22.) for
is
Here we see
that
Rahner, God's infinite Being has priority over God's self-emptying, so
335
tjpiloaue: A Hesponse
traces of dualism are maintained. For
understood as
total.
This
tional love. For this love to
be realized
me, God's self-emptying must be
especially the case
is
God
if
is
really
uncondi-
be truly complete and unconditional,
in the total self-emptying of
it
must
any "unrelatedness" into the com-
plete fullness of loving relatedness.
As
for traces of
monism
in
my own
ing of Emptiness
And
have always tried to pre-
I
affirming the self-empty-
This complete self-emptying
itself.
Grand Affirmation
view,
monism by
sent a "nondualism" that avoids any
that reaffirms
dualism
all
since this nondualism of Emptiness
is
its
broader nondual horizon. (For an analysis of
my
me
even more
to think
32.)
about
On
P.
my
intrafaith
dualistic factors in this intrafaith dialogue with
the other hand, Fredericks has given
in this regard.
CHAPTER Thomas
expressed as the
fundamental,
dialogue with Jodo Shin-shu always places
Jodo Shin-shu, see Chapter
is
boundless openness.
in its
Kasulis,
24:
"Masao Abe as D.
T.
Suzukis
Philosophical Successor"
Reading Thomas understands
P.
Kasulis's essay,
my work,
ideas,
my work On
is
had the impression that he deeply
my work
elucidates well the significance on of
I
and intentions through in the
his
keen insight and
West. His evaluation
very encouraging to me. For example, he states:
one hand, [Abe] carried on the tradition of Suzuki and
brought other.
to
it
a new, distinctively philosophical, element on the
Furthermore, by drawing inspiration from the writings of
Dogen, he has brought a
less
sectarian perspective to the West's
understanding of Zen Buddhism. the intellectual worlds of Japan
pher in
his
own
right,
.
and
.
By bridging
the West
.
.
.
the
he
gap between
is
and through the stance he takes,
nicative lines between Japan
Toward the end of
.
and the West have been
his essay, Kasulis sets
groups of the Japanese thinkers
in question:
up
a philoso-
commu-
established.
a contrast
between two
Suzuki/Hisamatsu/Abe and
Nishida/NishitaniAVatsujiAanabe. According to Kasulis, "the
first
group
advocates [the experience of Emptiness] as beneficial to the resolution of
JAasao Abe
3 9jo
philosophical problems." However, for the second group, "the experience
needs
to
be explained and located in relation to more mundane, more
more everyday types of experiences."
secular,
find Kasulis's classification
I
of these Japanese thinkers to be very significant
and extremely suggestive
our future studies.
for
CHAPTER
25:
John E. Smith, "Kitaro Nishida, William James, and Masao Abe: Some Comments on Philosophy East and West" John Smith carefully examines the philosophies of Kitaro Nishida and William James with regard to the notion of pure experience and discusses
my
Smith
role in their encounter. In the first half of his essay,
clearly
expresses his agreement with Nishida and myself concerning the following:
J
believe that Nishida
that there
comes
to
confined
is "first"
know
and Abe are
right in attacking the idea
an individual who
objects in
some
to that individual
.
incorrigible
way
that
is
.
.
and
as a subject experiences
ultimately
alone so that the problem becomes that
of "transcending" this individual to reach an intersubjective truth.
In the second half of his essay, however, to
Smith declares,
conclude that Nishida and Abe are mistaken
assumes pure experience to be individual
we must
at
"It is
reasonable
in the claim that
the outset." This
James
a question
is
consider carefully.
According
to
Smith, for William James "pure experience"
is
prior to
any distinction, including the distinction between subject and object: pure experience for James includes relations, conjunctions, transitions, tendencies,
etc.,
because he did not
start
with the individual, but with
the "stream of thought." For James, therefore, any distinction between subject and object
is
always consequent and not primordial.
pure experience has such a special feature, rect in saying
da and
I
however,
it
cannot be said
to
strictly
be individual
at the outset.
assumed James's pure experience to be individual
we took pure
If for
speaking, Smith
When at
James is
cor-
Nishi-
the outset,
experience to be fundamental to the individual
without the slightest attention to
its
features.
~£j>LlocjiLe:
A Hesponsc
3 37
Therefore, to return to the transindividual features of James's fun-
damental idea of pure experience ject
and object are merely
vidual difference this
— Nishida
order "direct experience."
When
rience exists not because there
because there is
an experience,
is
more fundamental than the Experience
vidual a
is
—
self
is
I
an individual, but an individual too, arrived at the idea that
I,
is
A
indirect.
realized only
is
exists
experience
also the self or the indi-
whereas experience that
him
is
experienced by
is
direct experience goes
the notion of pure experience enabled true directness
indi-
read where Nishida says that expe-
fundamentally transindividual. This
it is
and the
individual.
direct,
is
between sub-
called a primordial experience of
which not only things but
experienced
presupposed
vidual
in
distinction
ancillary to primordial experience,
not basic
is
—where the
beyond the
why Nishida
indi-
says that
to avoid solipsism. In the end,
from within the actual
living reality of
experience prior to the separation of subject and object. To grasp pure
experience in rience that
its strict
we must
sense,
return to the root source of expe-
and yet transindividual and
individual
is
horizon of pure experience a
new metaphysics
CHAPTER
is
universal.
On
this
possible.
26:
Thomas Dean, "Masao Abe's Zen Philosophy of Dialogue:
Thomas Dean concerning
on
my
A
Western Response"
generates a
number
approach
Asian-Western dialogue
his penetrating
to
myself to one of his questions. is
dard: "[In
my
Dean
response must be short, asks whether
my
I
limit
comparative
judgmental of other philosophical positions from a Zen stan-
Abes
effort] there
between maintaining that one
would seem is
to
be a logical inconsistency
not engaged in judging which system
superior while noting that one's judgments are being
standpoint of one's rion of
based
in philosophy
understanding of cross-cultural encounter in the realm
of philosophical thinking. Because
method
of incisive and important questions
how
own
made from
is
the
tradition, particularly with reference to the crite-
closely that other tradition approximates one's
own presum-
ably normative answers.'' In
my
comparative approach,
I
seek to clarify the differences
between various philosophical ways of thinking without compromise.
398 However,
this
emphasis on
clarifying differences does
exclude or reject the other systems.
beyond the
It is
not intend to
rather an invitation to dialogue
essential differences. Critical questioning of the other tradi-
tions will not destroy but rather
welcome open
The
Abe
JW.&SCLO
criticism
deepen those
from other
basic standpoint of
my
traditions. Likewise,
I
also
traditions.
comparative work
is
but Sunyata, or
Emptiness, which indicates the complete interdependent co-arising and co-ceasing of everything in the universe. Being stantial,
Sunyata
lets
empty and nonsub-
every other position stand and work just as
Zen Buddhism does not exclude other
urally,
itself
faiths as false
starts to
work critically and
relative truths
life.
Nat-
but recognizes
the relative truths they contain. This recognition, however, point, not the end, for Buddhist
it is.
is
Properly speaking, Zen
a starting
Buddhism
creatively through this basic recognition of the
contained in other positions, hoping for productive dia-
logue and cooperation with other faiths.
CHAPTER Joel R. Smith,
"Masao Abe on Negativity in
the East
Joel R.
27:
Smith sharply analyzes
and West"
my essay "Non-Being and Mu
—The Meta-
physical Nature of Negativity in the East and the West" and criticizes
understanding of the issue discussed therein. In that essay, ify
what
I
I
my
tried to clar-
think to be the most fundamental difference between the East-
ern (particularly Buddhist) and Western ways of thinking and to propose a basic standpoint
To show
my
that while in the
common
to
them
both.
basic position, Smith quotes
West
my
statement to the effect
positive principles (such as being,
life,
and the
good) have ontological priority over negative principles (such as nonbeing, death,
and
evil), in
the East the negative principles are coequal to
the positive principles and "even
then
may
he said to he primary and central.
states:
The
crucial point here
is
that in the passage just cited,
cedes, perhaps unintentionally, a point he
whole thrust/)/ his argument has been
had denied
Abe con-
earlier.
The
to assert that the positive
"
He
399
"'EpiloaUC: A TLcSjsonsc
and negative
Buddhism
principles are coequal so that
logically biased
toward either positivity or
preceding passage,
Ahe acknowledges
But in the
negativity.
that in
not onto-
is
Buddhism negative
principles are not only coequal to positive principles hut "even
may
He
he said to he primary and central."
ultimate
is
West in terms of positivity." Ahe seems
Buddhism does not
ing both that that
it
explicitly says that the
and
"realized in the East in terms of negativity
in the
to contradict himself, claim-
give priority to negativity
What
does give priority to negativity.
are
we
to
and
make
of
this?
me with a serious challenge that touches the central When emphasized that in Buddhism the positive and
Smith presents point of the issue.
I
negative principles are coequal, that or negative, tion.
On
I
was
Buddhism
is
not ontologically positive
clarifying the ontological structure of the
the other hand,
when
I
said that the ultimate
is
Buddhist posi"realized in the
East in terms of negativity and in the West in terms of positivity,"
concerned more with the practical and That
is
to say, in
Buddhism
I
was
existential aspects of the issue.
the deep realization of negativity
crucial to the revelation of ultimate reality.
Herein
is
practically
the "primacy" of
lies
negation.
For example, the ultimate reality in Buddhism
beyond any tivity.
To
distinction, including subject
existentially realize Sunyatd,
and
it is
Silnyata,
is
which
is
and nega-
object, positivity
crucial to realize not only the
negation of positivity but also the negation of negativity. This latter double negation, that
is,
the negation of negation,
is
not a logical negation but
an existential negation through which one can return of both positivity and negativity.
ultimate reality
world and tian
is
history,
mysticism
God. God
is
and therefore
God
Buddhism, only the
is
On
to the root-source
the other hand, in Christianity
creator and redeemer, the ruler of the a "positive principle."
However,
in Chris-
undefinable and unnameable. Therefore, as
via negativa provides a
way
to
in
reach this ineffable
God. Smith
offers
two other important criticisms of
my
discussion. First,
he points out, "Abe has not given an adequate account of the ontological nature of relative
mu
to
show how
it
can be more than
a privation of u.
Until he provides this ontological account of relative mu,
his entire
—
J^Aasdo Abe
4-OQ
position
is
weak."
My response to this criticism is that mu is the complete u; therefore, mu is more than just a privation of u —
counter-concept to is
it
form of negativity than "non-being"
a stronger
West. Further, u and fore inseparable tradiction.
The Buddhist notion
relative
Mu
of Sunyata presents a standpoint that
point of Smith's criticism
is
bears "traces of negativity" in that
u that
is
is
overcoming of that antinomy, of the self-contradic-
u and mu.
The second Absolute
mu are completely antagonistic principles and there-
from each other; they constitute an antinomy, a self-con-
realized through the tory oneness of
understood in the
as
absolutized in Sunyata. To this
I
that
my
it is
relative
would
presentation of
mu
like to
and not
respond by
arguing that in his understanding Smith somewhat objectifies Absolute
Mu. Here, Absolute Absolute ity
Mu in its
Mu
is
understood as a
authentic sense
is
static state of
not a static state but dynamic activ-
of endless self-negation in which any negativity
into positivity tion
Only through the
Emptiness. But
constantly turned
is
realization of this absolute double nega-
Emptiness realized as Fullness.
is
CHAPTER
28:
Joan Stambaugh, "Masao Abe and Martin Heidegger" Referring to
A
my essay "The Problem
of
Time
in
Heidegger and Dogen,"
in
Study of Dogen: His Philosophy and Religion, Joan Stambaugh discuss-
es three issues: (1) the degree of transanthropomorphism, involving a dis-
cussion of thinking; (2) the ontological difference; and (3) the priority of
time over being. Since these three issues are closely linked,
respond
to
them not
let
me
separately, but together.
For Heidegger, "Being
is
determined as presence by time." This
is
a
key point to his thinking concerning the problem of being/time. Even in his notion of Ereignis, in er,
which being and time
are said to belong togeth-
—and not time
time has priority over being. For example, only being
disappears in Ereignis. This Heideggerian priority of time over being
maintains an implicit anthropocentrism because whereas being can be
thought of without beings, time cannot be thought of apart from the
human
self.
Therefore,
identity of being
we
and time
see that Heidegger's understanding of the is
not universally applied to
all
beings. In
Dogen's thought, on the contrary,
all
beings are time, and
moments
all
time are being. This can be seen in his notion that "impermanence
is,
of as
such, Buddha-nature" (mujo-bussho). For Dogen, the notion of Buddha-
nature does not indicate a special supernatural
nature of everything, the Thusness (tathata) of
Also for Heidegger, real thinking
is
beings.
all
.
generated because in
is
Heidegger's attempt to discover this origin, he finds
Unandenkliche). Thus, Heidegger's thinking It is
another origin"
a "recollection of
(Andenhen an den anderen Anfang) This thinking
beyond "metaphysical" thinking.
but the original
reality,
a
is
it
"unthinkable" (das
new way
of thinking
a thinking of this other origin (den
anderen Anfang) as the ground of metaphysics. For Dogen, on the other hand, true thinking
is
a "non-thinking" that
is
them
ing and not-thinking and yet includes
their resemblance, Heidegger's thinking
is
beyond the duality of thinkboth. Consequently, despite
different
from Dogen's notion
of non-thinking because the former does not reach the unthinkable as the true origin of thinking. For Heidegger, the unthinkable
is
always encoun-
tered from the side of thinking. But for Dogen, true non-thinking
is
realization of the unthinkable origin of thinking itself. Further, for this
unthinkable origin of thinking
is
the True Self that
is
a self-
Dogen
realized by
breaking through life-and-death.
CHAPTER
29:
Robert E. Carter, "Diagramming the Ultimate: Conversations with Masao Abe"
Robert Carter's essay
is
an impressive record of a Western
struggle with the Buddhist notion of Emptiness.
was the Buddhist notion of ultimate God, but Sunyata, which
is
which
first is
barrier he faced
neither Being nor
entirely unobjectifiable, unconceptualizable,
and unattainable by reason or ly
reality,
The
intellectual's
will.
Buddhism, especially Zen,
is
certain-
practice and immediate experience rather than intellectual thinking.
Zen
koans,
strive to
ever,
Zen meditation, and the ordinary
life
of the
Zen Buddhist
break the iron grip of conceptualizing and intellectualizing.
Zen
is
not mere anti-intellectualism.
thinking and not-thinking.
It
is
It
is
all
How
-
beyond the duality of
non-thinking that, being free from the
opposition between thinking and not-thinking, makes them alive and able
4-OZ
J^iCLsao
to
work
al
understanding cannot be a substitute
freely according to
each given
Abe
situation. for Zen's
true that intellectu-
It is
Awakening. But practice
without a proper and legitimate form of intellectual understanding often misleading, and intellectual understanding without practice
is
is
cer-
tainly powerless.
Buddhism, especially Zen, instance: "True Emptiness
full
is
of paradoxical expressions. For
Wondrous
is
Emptiness, Emptiness must empty
Being." In order to attain true
Emptiness must become non-
itself;
Emptiness. In true Emptiness, being becomes empty and emptiness
become
being;
this reciprocal
and
and yet being emptying
is
is
being and emptiness
also emptied.
self-contradictorily identical.
that Carter
take
him
mate
is
to
True Emptiness
Glancing
as close as the language
at the
paradoxically feel
I
and thinking of paradoxicality can
moon
of
ulti-
reality.
30:
William Theodore de Bary, "Buddhism and Referring to
my talk on "Buddhism
versity in 1955, in
which
I
human
and
Human
Human
Rights" at
Rights"
Columbia Uni-
proposed that Buddhism could make important
contributions to building a rights are respected,
more unified and peaceful world where de Bary raises the question
compatible with Buddhist tradition and history?"
T
is
above summary,
an expression of the finger pointing toward the
CHAPTER
D.
emptiness. Even
is
De
"Is
Abe's claim
Bary then mentions
Suzukis emphasis on prajnd, wisdom, as freedom from
illusion
and
the importance of upaya, liberative technique, which the Virnalakirti Sutra insists
upon
as the necessary
Bary understands that
to higher
wisdom. De
through upaya, Mahayana Buddhism "accepts
and stages of consciousness
states
complement
as relatively true
and none
all
as irreme-
diably false or totally unredeemable." This attitude of acceptance offers a basis for Buddhist religious tolerance. However, de Bary culties involved in rendering this implicit belief in the
science into an explicit doctrine of I
human
Buddhism and appreciate
tion of the issue in question.
diffi-
freedom of con-
rights.
human
rights in the
his insightful analysis
and elucida-
generally agree with de Bary's discussion of
history of
shows the
To me, however, the most fundamental
standpoint for a Buddhist view of
human
rights
is still
not clear enough.
my
In
Response
Epilogue-. A
--
4-03
understanding, insofar as the theme "Buddhism and
be discussed, the fundamental standpoint of the Buddhist
Rights"
is
view of
human
to
must
rights
be
first
clarified.
This
especially important
is
because an exact equivalent of the Western phrase "human not be found anywhere in Buddhist literature.
human In
West has an anthropocentric view of human
Buddhism
the
human
person
homocentric and cosmological
basis.
is
rights" can-
The Western notion
humans, excluding other
rights pertains only to
fore, the
Human
of
creatures. There-
rights.
understood on a broader trans-
Buddhism views human beings
as
all beings, sentient and nonsentient, because both human and nonhuman beings are equally subject to impermanency. The problem of human rights in Buddhism is to be grasped in the context of this transper-
part of
sonal, cosmological ly,
Dharma
the
it is
dimension
or the
common
Suchness
also true that only
human
humankind and
to
beings,
who
alone in the universe have
CHAPTER niscences from a
in
31:
spirituality,
Buddhism but
restrict
Remi-
warmth
strongly sense a special
that
dialogue at
its
and delicate thoughtfulness! Deeply rooted
in
Sharma
for other
is
It
is
an excellent dialogue partner not only for
world religions.
number
of issues in his essay to be discussed. But let
my comments
to the question of the "indistinguishability" of
There are
me
I
Stalk:
Perspective"
communicating with Buddhism.
best, full of sensitivity
Hindu
essay,
Hindu
self-
beings.
all
Arvind Sharma, "A Chrysanthemum with a Lotus
Hinduism holds
name-
(tathata) of everything in the universe. Yet
consciousness, can define and defend these rights of
Reading Arvind Sharma's
nature,
a
Hinduism and Buddhism. Sharma confesses
"What do Hindus think
of Buddhists?" that
"it
when
that
took
me
I
asked him,
[Sharma] some
time even to comprehend the question, for modern Hindus barely differentiate
between the two."
Hinduism and Buddhism.
It is
quite easy to point out the affinity between
In the
phenomenal and
dimension,
historical
these two religions have developed through a long intermingling with
each ty
other.
However, a question must be raised as
comprises
to
whether
this affini-
real identity or not.
Emphasis on the
similarities
between two
religions
is
certainly
^Mdsao Abe
4-04t
important, but
it
On
does not necessarily create something new.
hand, an attempt to disclose the differences,
if
the other
properly and relevantly
done, not only promotes and stimulates mutual understanding but also inspires both religions to seek further developments. In the case of Hin-
duism and Buddhism,
duism
isn't
there a fundamental difference beyond their
on the phenomenal and
affinity
historical
dimension? That
is,
while Hin-
based on the notion of atman, Buddhism clearly denies
is
based on anatman.
How can
Hinduism and Buddhism overcome
it
and
is
this fun-
damental difference and attain deeper developments within themselves?
And
developments create an even deeper unity between them?
will these
Therefore, for the sake of the future of both religions,
between the present views of each
tant to differentiate
Mahayana Buddhism as a false sameness.
tradition. In fact,
severely criticizes equating without discrimination
is
possible because
it is
nonsubstan-
through a negation of negation. To use the above example, the Bud-
dhist notion of
anatman
is
not a mere negation of atman, but being com-
pletely nonsubstantial, true
same
time.
With the
dhism and Hinduism will
impor-
True interfaith unity dynamically includes sameness
and difference. This dynamic unity tial
it is
atman and true anatman are
realization of in
mind,
at
one and the
an even deeper unity between Bud-
hope, Arvind Sharma, that our dialogue
I
develop further in the future.
CHAPTER
32:
Steven Heine, "Between Zen and the West, Zen and Zen, and
Zen and Pure Land:
On Masao Abe's
Sense of Inter- and
Intrafaith Dialogue"
With deep and thoroughgoing understanding clarifies
my
dialogue in the
deeply.
ciate
makes
West
in a quite
of
my
work, Steven Heine
unique manner that
I
Referring widely to Christianity and Buddhism,
a clear distinction
interfaith dialogue
and
between two dimensions of dialogue,
intrafaith dialogue.
plement, reinforce, and enhance each In this regard,
Heine indicates
appre-
Heine that
is,
These two dimensions com-
other.
that
my
involvement with intrafaith
dialogue divides into two main levels, both intertwined with interfaith
concerns. To him, the the Pure
first level
deals with the dialogue
Land Buddhism; the second
level
is
between Zen and
between the two main
•*
Epiloalie: A Hesj>onsc
4-OS
branches of Japanese Zen, namely, Rinzai and Soto. Heine's discussion of
my work on
both of these intrafaith levels
is
insightful
have no particular disagreement with, nor criticism Rather,
I
and
of, his
correct, so
I
presentation.
appreciate his analysis and hope to continue to promote these
important dialogues within Buddhism.
CHAPTER Christopher
my most
Christopher Ives points out that one of to interfaith
of
and cross-cultural dialogue
Zen Buddhism. However,
Zen Buddhism and by the is
is
warning
the clarification of the nature
Ives then questions
whether
my
portrayal of
will take
to myself.
I
work. Ives warns that
my
"Zen"
heed of these remarks with appreciation and
believe, however, that
I
cal construct created
my
"Zen"
is
my own
in
as a
not a philosophi-
through dialogue with Western thinkers.
an existential outcome of
Buddhism and my
which
from the actual Zen of the average Zen Buddhist
in fact different I
is
important contributions
a rather abstract philosophical "composite," created for
dialogical context in
Japan today.
33:
"Masao Ahe and His Dialogical Mission"
Ives,
It is
rather
long-term research of the history of
actual concrete practice of
Zen Buddhism
in Japan.
At the very end of his essay Ives expresses his strong desire that
produce
own
"a systematic
statement of [my] religious philosophy."
It is
long-cherished desire to produce a systematic presentation of
religious philosophy
developed through East-West dialogue. As
be a systematic work on the basis of Sunyata,
it
it
I
my my
would
could be called, as Ives
suggests, "Sunyatology."
CHAPTER
34:
Stephen C. Rowe, "A Zen Presence in America: Dialogue as Religious Practice"
I
am most
who
favorably impressed by the words of Stephen Rowe's student
"proclaimed that reading Abe's Zen and Western Thought and then
seeing Abe at Notre
Dame had changed
situation wherein religion antireligious ideologies,
I
is
do
his life."
Given the contemporary
being challenged by secular materialism and in fact value, as
Rowe
points out, interfaith
J^idSdo Abe
4-Oe-
dialogue as a
way toward meeting
this challenge
and changing peoples
lives.
must go beyond the goal of better
In this regard, interfaith dialogue
mutual understanding
mutual transformation of people's
to achieve the
Because the criticisms by antireligious ideologies are today so deep
lives.
and so
fatal,
to
assumptions of
achieve mutual transformation, the prevailing basic
all
religions
must be
drastically
changed and new para-
digms created. Thus, Rowe suggests mutual radicalization. In Buddhist terms this means the radicalization of Emptiness and compassion. In
such
a radicalization,
Emptiness manifests
itself.
itself.
compassion. At
Emptiness negates not only everything else but also
When
Emptiness
itself is
emptied, Wondrous Being
Radicalization oiSunyata also entails the radicalization of this point,
John Cobb's criticism that
Buddhism com-
in
passion has not generally been applied to ethics and history must be kept clearly in
mind.
Rowe
correctly perceives that this kind of radicalization
He
form of religious practice.
then raises a crucial issue: "And yet
where he addresses
tice to
directly
Certainly dialogue
is
The
F.A.S.
movement
a
I
is
a form of religious practice."
know
and on
which he has contributed
of
its
nowhere
He
in his [Abes] writ-
own terms
form of prac-
this
to so greatly."
form of religious practice
my
ried out in the context of
a
states that since this radicalization takes
place through dialogue, "dialogue itself
ings
is itself
for
me, but
religious practice in the F.A.S.
it is
car-
movement.
originated as a student group in 1943 under the
guidance of Shin'ichi Hisamatsu (1889— 1980), the foremost Zen personality
of contemporary Japan. This group sought the ultimate
Way for human
existence through the motto "unity of practice and learning."
What
is
F.A.S.?
F
stands for "Awakening to the Formless Self,"
referring to the depth of
ground of of All
human
human
human
existence.
Humankind,"
A
existence,
i.e.,
the True Self as the
stands for "Standing within the standpoint
referring to the breadth of
beings in their entirety
And
human
existence,
S stands for "Creating history
Suprahistorically," referring to the chronological length of
Awakened human
i.e.,
F.A.S.
indicate a threefold structure of
self,
world, and
his'tory.
human
exis-
history. Accordingly, the three aspects of
tence,
breadth, and length of
i.e.,
human
human
existence: the depth,
existence, or speaking
more
In the notion of F.A.S., these three
concretely,
dimensions of
EpiloaUC: A Response
-"
human
4-07
existence are grasped dynamically and, though different from one
another, are inseparably united.
Hisamatsu once stated that al
if,
been the case with
as has
tradition-
Zen, the so-called wondrous activity starts and ends only with the so-
compassion involved
called practice of
in helping others to reach
Awak-
ening, then such activity remains unrelated to the formation of the world
Thus
or the creation of history.
end
in the
turns into a forest
isolated
from the world and
history,
Zen
Buddhism, temple Buddhism,
at best a
becomes "Zen within
a ghostly
monastery Buddhism. Ultimately,
this
cave."
In the F.A.S.
world is
movement, the questions of what the
and what history
is,
cannot be resolved
—
is
in
are
its
all
related.
true sense
The problem
—
if it is
self
of
is,
what the
what the
self
investigated indepen-
dently of the problems of the nature of the world and the meaning of history.
On
lished
—
clarifies
the other hand, world peace, for example, cannot be estabin the true sense
— nor can
history be truly created unless
what the True Self is. These three problems
ed and united
at the root of
one
are inseparably relat-
our very existence.
CHAPTER
35:
Stephen Morris, "The Roar of a Lion: Reflections on a Life Dedicated to
What
Is
Ultimately Real"
my interfaith dialogical work in the West. Particularly referring to one of my key notions, "the Absolute Present," he states that the Absolute Present both defines my "existential stance" and provides "the pivot and the focus" for my philosophical position. He suggests that from within the Zen perspective, my Stephen Morris elucidates the form and content of
scholarship
from
"is itself
an expression of the Absolute Present."
this stance in the
Absolute Present, or Emptiness, that
interfaith dialogue seeks, as Morris says, to crystallize
and
It is
indeed
my work
in
clarify the real
spiritual project of religion.
Regarding the depth of
spirituality in religion,
with Meister Eckhart and Emerson, but
such
a
I
am
afraid
comparison. However, Morris argues that
are united in our "stance," that
is,
we
rely
Morris compares
we
on our
I
am
me
not worthy of
are similar in that
we
spiritual experience.
JVl&s&o Abe
4-OS
While
may be
we must
and
dif-
ferences between these experiences. As for himself, Morris argues as
fol-
ity
so,
"Committed myself
lows: tive,
this
I
am,
carefully scrutinize the affinities
to neither the
Buddhist or Christian perspec-
frankly, less interested in religions per se
than in the
spiritual-
they hope to foster."
Morris makes here a distinction between religion and spirituality
and takes
than religion (which
spirituality rather
is
often identified as
an institution) as his own stance. Here we are facing the following question: How can we individually and socially foster spirituality? Can we truly foster spirituality without religion? What is the role of religion? What form of practice is appropriate for people today individually and
—
socially?
To answer these questions, Morris introduces "education." argues that gion, then
if
transformed. ity in
a
fundamental
we no
We
spirituality
can be developed outside of
He reli-
longer have to wait for religion to be radicalized and
do not have
to wait for religion to "catch up." Spiritual-
education can "develop people intellectually and socially in the
soundest way."
temporary
I
myself well realize the importance of education in con-
But however important education may be,
society.
not sufficient to cope with the current
human
to
me
it is
predicament. In the mod-
ern world, because of the remarkable advancement of science and tech-
nology and the complexity of social and political systems, spirituality has
been
largely neglected.
Why and how has
this neglect of spirituality
place in religions?
Why and how have religious
foster spirituality?
These are important questions. Without
institutions failed today to
sideration of these questions, education will not be
painful condition of In the end,
he
a serious con-
enough
to heal the
modern humanity.
we cannot
can religion be revitalized
humankind?
help but face a most serious problem:
to
meet the contemporary
In this connection
I
al
seriously
change will
torn up.
own
wonder
trickle
And what
is
if,
completely agree with Morris
in the long run, widespread spiritu-
from the top down, or sprout from the advanced here
vision of supplying a spiritual
is
all in
How
spiritual crisis of
says,
One must
taken
hot-
keeping with Abe's
ground for the modern world;
his very participation in the philosophical religious process
is
an
when
„.
attempt
to
Epilogue-. A
Hesponsc
4-09
push the highest good within reach of the greatest num-
ber of people. Everyone deserves to he provided the wherewithal to retrieve the pearl.
i
NOTES CHAPTER ONE 1.
Masao Abe, "Toward tian Pilgrimage:
the Creative Encounter Between Zen and Christianity," in
The
Fruits of the
Annual Colloquia
A
Zen-Chris-
in Japan, ig6y—igy6 (privately print-
ed, 1981), 43. 2. Ibid. 3.
Masao Abe, "Hisamatsu's Philosophy
of Awakening,"
The Eastern Buddhist
14,
no.
1
(spring 1981): 27.
CHAPTER TWO 1.
2.
A
week-long period designated for intensive Zen meditation.
Kira
Kozuke no suke (1641-1703) was an forty-seven samurai of the
Ako
official of the
Tokugawa shogunate, assassinated by
clan in the celebrated episode of the Forty-Seven Ronin.
On
the occasion of a reception for imperial messengers at Edo castle in 1701, Kira, commonly disliked for his arrogance, received a slight wound in the forehead at the hands of Asano Takumi no kami (1667-1701), daimyo of Ako, who believed that Kira had intentionally withheld from him the fine points of court etiquette needed to avoid error in matters of protocol. In consequence for drawing his sword, Asano was immediately deprived of his domain and ordered to commit suicide. Kira escaped even reprimand, though he was later foi zed to leave office. Asano's retainers vowed vengeance, which they achieved in 1703, executing Kira in his own home. 3.
Ryutaro Kitahara, "Makujikiko [Straight Ahead!]," Zen Bunka 97 (June 1980): 35-36.
CHAPTER FOUR 1.
Masao Abe and John Cobb interviewed by Bruce Long, "Buddhist-Christian Present and Future," Buddhist-Christian Studies
CHAPTER 1.
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought (Honolulu:
1
Dialogue: Past,
(1981): 20.
FIVE University of Hawai'i Press, 1985).
2. Ibid., ix. 3. Ibid.
from Kitaro Nishida, "The Problem of Japanese Culture," in Ryusaku Tsunoda, W. Theodore de Bary, and Donald Keene, eds., Sources oj the Japanese Tradition, vol. 2 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1958), 350-365.
4.
See
5.
See Shokin Furuta, "Shaku Soen: The Footsteps of a Modern Japanese /en Master." Philo-
his translation of excerpts
sophical Studies of Japan 8 (1967): 70. 6. Ibid., 69.
Notes to chapter Five
4-1 Z.
See also Soen Shaku, "The Law of Cause and Effect as Taught by Buddha," transT Suzuki in The Eastern Buddhist 26, no. 2 (autumn 1993): 134—37; and the Rev. John Henry Barrows, ed., The World's Parliament of Religions, vol. 2 (Chicago: Par-
7. Ibid., 77;
lated by D.
liament Publishing Co., 1893), 829-31. 8.
Soen Shaku, Sermons of a Buddhist Ahhot (Chicago: Open Court Publishing Co., 1906).
9. Ibid., 33.
10. Ibid., 47. 1
1.
Ibid., 144.
12. Ibid.
13.
See the discussion below of Nishidas
logic of place.
on the Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana Co., 1900). Hereafter referred to as Aqvaghosha s
14. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, Aqvaghosha's Discourse
(Chicago:
The Open Court Publishing
Discourse. 15. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, Outlines of
16.
Aqvaghosha
s
Mahayana Buddhism (London: Luzac and Co.,
1907).
Discourse, 43.
17. Ibid., 152. 18. Ibid., 58-59. 19. Ibid., 58.
20. Daisetz T. Suzuki, Outlines of Mahayana All further quotations
21. Daisetz
T
from
this
work
Buddhism (New York: Schocken Books, are
from
1963), 295.
this edition.
Suzuki, Sengai the Zen Master (Greenwich, Conn.:
New
York Graphic Society,
1971), 186.
22. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki,
The Zen Doctrine of No-Mind (London: Rider and Co.,
1949), 59.
T Suzuki, Zen and Japanese Buddhism (Tokyo: Japan Travel Bureau, 1958), 60. Daisetz T Suzuki, Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1959), 298. Daisetz T Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism (Third Series) (Kyoto: The Eastern Buddhist Soci-
23. Daisetz 24.
25.
ety. 1934),
296.
26. Ibid., 228. 27. Ibid., 250. 28. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, Mysticism: Christian
and Buddhist (New York: Harper
&
Brothers,
1957)' 69.
29. Aqvaghosha's Discourse, 107-108.
30. Ibid., 60. 31. Suzuki, Essays in
Zen Buddhism (Third
Series), 250.
"Double Negation as an Essential for Attaining the Ultimate Reality: Comparing Tillich and Buddhism" (unpublished paper), 8. Hereafter cited as "Double Negation."
32. iYIasao Abe,
33. Alasao
34.
May
Abe, "Substance, Process, and Emptiness," Japanese Religions
11
(September
not such a nondualistic self-negating-negation, self-negating-negating,
or,
1980): 32.
therefore,
self-negating-self-negating be detected as well in Hinduism's neti-neti ("not-this-[very-] not-this,"or"not-[even-]this-not-this"),
and
in the
Chinese Taoist Chuang-tzu's wu-wu
("self-
naughting-self-naughting")? 35. Suzuki, Outlines of 36. Suzuki,
Mahayana Buddhism,
115.
Zen and Japanese Culture, 300.
37. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, Essays in
Zen Buddhism (Second
Society, 1933), 298.
38. Aqvaghosha's Discourse, 61.
39. Suzuki, Outlines of Mahayana Buddhism, 322-324.
Series) (Kyoto:
The Eastern Buddhist
""Notes to chapter Five 40. Bernard Phillips, ed.,
The
Essentials of Zen
Suzuki (London: Rider
T.
&
Buddhism,
4-13
An Anthology of the
Writings of Daisetz
Co., 1963), 25.
41. Suzuki, Outlines of Mahayana Buddhism, 100-101. 42. Ibid., 102. 43. Ibid., 105. 44. Ibid., 96. 45. Ibid., 22.
46. Ibid., 106.
An Inquiry into the Good, Haven: Yale University Press, 1990), xii.
48. Ibid.,
Masao Abe and Christopher
Ives
(New
Hisamatsu, one of Nishida's leading direct disciples, has spoken of
this in
47. Kitaro Nishida,
trans.
xiv.
49. Ibid., 164. 50. Ibid., xvii. 51. Ibid., xxv. 52. Ibid., 46.
53. Ibid., 82. 54. Ibid., 168. 55. Ibid., xxv. 56. Ibid., x. Shin'ichi
terms of "the paradox of sound negating sound." See Jerome S. Bruner, "The Art of Ambiguity: A Conversation with Zen Master Hisamatsu," Psychologia 2 (1959): 104. 57. Nishida, 58. Ibid.,
An
Inquiry into the Good,
xxii.
xxiii.
59. Keiji Nishitani, Nishida Kitaro, trans. Seisaku
Yamamoto and James W. Heisig
(Berkeley.
University of California Press, 1991), 49-50. 60. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki,
The
Field of
Zen (New
York:
Harper
&
Row, 1970),
93. In
Hisamat-
sus view as well, the "Self-Awakening" of the Self "where mind and body have fallen away" has been "conveyed by such expressions as Emptiness, Nothingness, Suchness, the Dharmakaya, not-a-single thing" (Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, "The 3,"
61. Abe,
translated by Christopher Ives in
Zew and Western Thought,
FAS
Society Journal
Vow
[autumn
of
Humankind,
Part
1987]: 2).
45.
62. Ibid., 158. 63. Ibid., 126.
64. Ibid., 126-127. 65. Suzuki,
The
Field of Zen, 100.
66. Kitaro Nishida, Last Writings: Nothingness
and the Religious Worldview,
trans.
David A. Dil-
worth (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1987), 89. 67. Ibid., 68.
68. Ibid., 69. 69. Ibid. 70. Ibid. 71. Ibid. 72. Ibid., 71. 73. Ibid., no.
74. Ibid., 117.
J
4-1475.
Notes to chapter
Quoted from Hans Waldenfels, Absolute Nothingness,
Ft ve
trans.
J.
W. Heisig (New
York: Paulist
Press, 1980), 41.
76. Nishida, Last Writings, 125. 77. See ibid., "Introduction"
by David A. Dilworth,
20.
78. See Nishitani, Nishida Kitaro, 162.
79. See Nishida, Last Writings, "Introduction,"
5.
80. See ibid., "Postscript" by David A. Dilworth, 127. 81. Ibid., 70.
An
82. Nishida,
Inquiry into the Good, 82.
83. Nishida, Last Writings, 70. 84. Ibid., 118.
85. Ibid. 86. Ibid., 68. 87. Ibid., 70. 88.
That
is,
Nishida's notions of absolute nothingness, absolute self-negation, absolute self-con-
tradiction, the logic of the place of nothingness, etc., could also, in language already sug-
gested, be understood
emptying or
—and
so expressed
—
a self-negating-self-negation.
neously negating
its
own
self-negation
is
in
terms of a nondualistic self-emptying-self-
For only through negating
itself
and simulta-
there self-negation-affirmation that veritably
constitutes an "absolute contradictory self-identity"
—
or, in this
sense, a "self-identity of
absolute contradictories." 89.
See a conversation between Dr. Suzuki and the writer {Ibyoshisoto Seiyo), Asahi Journal
90. Suzuki,
The
no.
7,
n (March
in "Oriental
Thought and the West"
14, 1965): 122.
Field of Zen, 39.
91. Ibid., 68. 92. Ibid.,
15.
93. Daisetz T. Suzuki, Living by
Zen (Tokyo: Sanseido,
1949),
2.
94. Ibid.
95. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki,
An Introduction
to
Zen Buddhism (Kyoto: The Eastern Buddhist Soci-
ety, 1934), 48.
96. Daisetz
T
Suzuki, "Knowledge and Innocence," in
(New York: New
Appetite
Thomas Merton, Zen and
the Birds of
Directions, 1968), 107.
97. Ibid., 133-134.
98. Ibid., in.
99. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki,
Zen Buddhism and
Its
Influence on Japanese Culture (Kyoto:
The
Eastern Buddhist Society, 1938), 28. 100. Suzuki,
"Knowledge and Innocence,"
101. Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, Studies in
109.
Zen (London: Rider and Co.,
1955), 204.
102. Suzuki, Sengai, 91.
103. Suzuki, 104.
The
Field of Zen,
An
15.
145, and Nishitani, Nishida Kitaro, 91. Shin'ichi Hisamatsu has likewise commented: "We awaken to our Self, and this awakened Self then functions. This amounts to dying absolutely and being reborn, to being reborn through death." ("The Vow of Humankind, Part 3," 4). See also the discussion below and
Nishida,
Inquiry into the Good,
.
.
.
note 147. 105. Nishida,
An
Inquin into the Good,
77.
Notes to ckcipter Five and Nothingness,
106. Keiji Nishitani, Religion
trans,
4-15
by Jan van Bragt (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1982), 58-59. 107. Ibid., 67.
108. Ibid., 105-106. 109.
1
Quoted from David A. Dilworth, "Nishida's Final Essay: The Logic of Place and World-View," Philosophy East and West 20, no. 4 (October 1970): 364.
10. Nishitani,
Nishida Kitaro,
a Religious
50.
111. Ibid. 1
12.
Abe, Zen and Western Thought, 226.
113. Ibid., 247.
114. Ibid. 115. Ibid., 211. 1
16. Ibid., xxi-xxii.
1
17. Ibid., 165. In the
1
18.
words of Abe's Zen teacher, Shin'ichi Hisamatsu: "In Zen, negation is not mere negation. 'Not something' does not mean the negation of something" ("The Art of
Ambiguity," 104).
Abe, Zen and Western Thought,
129.
119. Ibid., 94. 120. Ibid., 131. 121. Ibid., 127.
122. John B. Cobb,
Jr.,
and Christopher
Ives, eds..
The Emptying God:
A
Buddhist-jewish-Chris-
Orbis Books, 1990), and Christopher Ives, ed., Divine Emptiness and Historical Fullness: A Buddhist-Jexvish-Christian Conversation with Masao tian Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y.:
Ahe 123.
(Valley Forge, Pa.: Trinity Press International, 1995).
Cobb and
124. Ibid.,
Ives,
The Emptying God,
10.
13.
125. Ibid.,
14.
126. Ibid.,
16.
127. Ibid.,
18.
128. Ibid.,
17.
129. Ibid., 26. 130. Ibid., 27.
131. See Abe, "Substance, Process, 132. Ibid., 133.
and Emptiness,"
22.
31.
where Ives, The Emptying God, 28. In Hisamatsu's explanation, "The point form becomes emptiness, where one dies as form and lives in emptiness, is the place What is involved in Form just as it is, where we say, 'Form just as it is, is Emptiness.' is Emptiness' [is that] form is transformed into emptiness, changes into emptiness"
Cobb and
.
.
(Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, 27). So, "this is in the
"Vow of Humankind,
Heart Sutra
136. Abe,
FAS
Society Journal [winter 1986-87]: is
.
.
.
expressed
'emptiness in form'" (Hisamatsu, "Vow of Humankind, Part 3." 3). no mere emptiness or nothingness: it is functioning emptiness and
is
134. Abe, "Double Negation," Ives,
Part 2,"
[as]
functioning nothingness, and this
Cobb and
.
emptiness, and, moreover, existence. In other words, this
Accordingly, 'this
135.
.
.
is
what the true nature of emptiness must be
5.
The Emptying God,
Zen and Western Thought,
257.
31.
(ibid., 4).
Notes to chapter Five
4-16 137. Ibid., 251. 138. Ibid., 107.
As Hisamatsu has pointed out, "the Pure Land Buddhist expression, 'the body that and void, the self that is boundless' (jine kyomu-no-shin, mugoku-no-tai) expresses the body that is spontaneity, nothingness, complete emptiness. Self-effected spontaneity (jinen) indicates our original way of being" ("Vow of Humankind, Part 2," 28).
139. Ibid., 150. is
self-effected
140. Suzuki, Living by Zen, 86-87.
thing separate from
all
^
n another expression, the "Self
other things.
.
.
.
We
can
call that Self
we awaken
to
not some-
is
the absolute Self
.
.
.
beyond
the distinction of self and other" (D. T. Suzuki, "Kiyozawa's Living Presence," trans. Taira
Sato and W. 141. Suzuki,
S.
Yokoyama, The Eastern Buddhist
The Zen Doctrine of No- Mind,
142. Suzuki, Essays in
Zen Buddhism (Third
26, no. 2
[autumn
1993]: 7).
40. Series), 237.
and Buddhist, 153. Clarified further by Hisamatsu: "In the Tof Zen there is no opposition externally and no discrimination internally, thus it is called 'nothing' " (Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, "Zen as the Negation of Holiness," trans. Sally Merrill, The Eastern Buddhist 10, no. [May 1977]: 12). Put another way, " 'becoming nothing' is the change from the limited I to the unlimited I" (Hisamatsu, "The Vow of Humankind," FAS Society Journal [spring 1986], 4). That is, "this nothingness is the True I" (Hisamatsu, "Vow of Humankind, Part 2," 25); "the T that is reborn after death" (Hisamatsu, "Vow of Humankind," 5). So it is a "Nothingness that is Self, or Self that is Nothingness" (Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, "Talks on the Vimalaklrti Sutra, Part 1," trans. Nobumichi Takahashi, FAS Society Journal [summer 1992]: 2). As a consequence, "this Nothingness is no mere logical negation but the way of being of the Self that comes breaking out through the bottom of [what is an] ultimate antinomy" (Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, "Ultimate Crisis and Resurrection, Part I," trans. Gishin Tokiwa, The Eastern Buddhist 8, no. 1 [May 1975]: 29).
143. Suzuki, Mysticism: Christian
1
144. Suzuki, 145.
Zen and Japanese Culture,
176.
Masao Abe, "God, Emptiness, and
the True Self," The Eastern Buddhist
2,
no. 2
(Novem-
ber 1969): 28. 146. Abe,
Zen and Western Thought,
252.
147. See, for example, Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, "Teaching-Faith-Practice-Awakening," translated by Jeff
Shore in collaboration with Fusako Nagasawa and Gishin Tokiwa, FAS Society Journal 1985). In this talk, given in April i960, Hisamatsu emphasized the Zen exhorta-
(summer
—
One Great Death! Then there is Rebirth' that is Awakening to the FormSelf (p. 38). For this Awakening in which "the original self Awakens itself only "comes through the complete death of the ordinary self," "where the ordinary self dies completely," " dying the One Great Death' " (p. 36). See also Shin'ichi (p. 37), or, again, through Hisamatsu, "Ultimate Crisis and Resurrection, Part II," trans. Gishin Tokiwa, The Eastern Buddhist 8, no. 2 (October 1975): 61, and Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, "Ordinary Mind," trans. tion: '"Die the
less
Gishin Tokiwa and Howard Curtis, The Eastern Buddhist 148.
12,
no.
1
(May
1979): 27.
Masao Abe, "Man and Nature in Christianity and Buddhism," in Frederik Franck, Buddha Eye (New York: Crossroads Publishing Co., 1982), 152.
149. Abe,
Zen and Western Thought,
ed.,
The
166.
150. Ibid., 145.
151. Abe,
"Man and Nature
in Christianity
and Buddhism,"
153.
152. Ibid., 156. 153. See also Abe,
Zen and Western Thought,
220, 222-223.
154. Considered as referring to the function of Nature, pratitya-samutpdda could therefore be
interpreted as: this he-ing, that
is,
this arising, thai arises;
this not-hewing, that
is
not,
Notes to chapters Etaht
and Nine
4-17
this ceasing, that ceases;
their he-ing, a being-less be-ing, their not-be-ing, a being-full not-be-ing.
Or, stated otherwise: in the simultaneity
of their be-ing and not-be-ing, this be-ing, every-thing is, this not-be-ing,
no-thing
is.
been expressed by Suzuki as "the self-presentation of the great doubt" ("Zen in America and the Necessity of the Great Doubt: A Discussion Between D. T. Suzuki and Shin'ichi Hisamatsu," trans. Jeff Shore, FAS Society Journal [spring 1986]: 22), and by Hisamatsu as "the ultimate antinomy realizing itself ("Ultimate Crisis and Resurrection, Part II," 49).
155. In alternate terminology, this has
156.
As
articulated by Hisamatsu, "It does assume one particular form, .... Rather ... it [is] the root source of all particularity ... a source" ("True Sitting: A Discussion with Shin'ichi Hisamatsu," in collaboration with Fusako Nagasawa and Gishin Tokiwa, FAS
but
it is
not a particular
freely functioning root-
translated by Jeff Shore
[autumn
Society Journal
1984]: 27).
CHAPTER EIGHT 1.
Donald Keene,
trans., Essays in Idleness:
University Press, 1967), 2.
This
is,
of course,
what
The Tsurezuregusa of Kenko (New
gives special distinction to Abe's
Religion, ed. Steven
Columbia
A
Study ofDogen: His Philosophy and New York Press, 1992).
Heine (Albany: State University of
3.
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought,
4.
Probably the best-known demonstration of Class?
York:
12.
William R. LaFleur (London: Macmillan,
ed.
this theory
is
Stanley Fish,
Is
1985).
There a Text in This
The Authority of Interpretive Communities (Cambridge: Harvard University
Press,
1980). 5.
As used,
for instance, in Kitaro Nishida,
Christopher Ives 6.
(New Haven:
Naoki Sakai, Voices of the
Past:
An
Inquiry into the Good, trans.
Masao Abe and
Yale University Press, 1990), 145.
The
Status of Language in Eighteenth-Century Japanese Dis-
course (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991), 299. 7.
I
my Karma of Words: Buddhism and the Literature Arts in Medieval Japan (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1983), 100. My writing about this owed much to essays by Jin'ichi Konishi
discuss this as problematized within medieval Japanese aesthetic theory in
and conversations with Masamichi Kitayama.
CHAPTER NINE 1.
Masao Abe, "The End
2.
Masao
3.
Masao Abe, "God's
of
World Religion," The Eastern Buddhist
13,
no.
1
(spring 1980): 31-45
Abe, Zen and Western Thought, ed. William R. LaFleur (Honolulu: University of
Hawai'i Press, 1985), 178. Total Kenosis
and Truly Redemptive Love,"
Divine Emptiness and Historical Fullness:
Masao Abe
A
in
Christopher
Ives, ed..
Buddhist-Jexvish-Christian Conversation with
(Valley Forge, Pa.: Trinity Press International, 1995), 253.
4.
See Neil Donner, "Chih-i's Meditation on Evil* in David W. Chappell, ed., Buddhist and Taoist Practice in Medieval Chinese Society (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. [987), 49-64.
5.
Abe's claim that the experience is
perceptively analyzed by
is
a privileged first-order viewpoint that undercuts
Thomas Dean
Thought," The Eastern Buddhist
22, no. 2
in his article
'autumn
all
others
"Masao Abe on Zen and Western
1989): 48-77.
4-18 6.
John
Cobb,
B.
Jr..
Notes to chapters Nine
and Christopher
Ives, eds.,
and Ten
The Emptying God:
ian Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Press, 1990),
A
Buddhist-Jewish-Christ-
11.
7. Ibid., 17.
8. Ibid., 15-16.
9.
See
this helpful
and revealing description
in ibid., 188.
10. Ibid. 11. Ibid.,
11.
12. Ibid., 27.
13. Ibid., 29-32. 14.
Leonard Swidler, Toward a Universal Theology of Religion (Marvknoll,
N.Y.: Orbis Books,
1987), 98. 15. Ibid., 16.
no.
Lawrence Kohlberg, The Philosophy of Moral Development: Moral Stages and tice (San Francisco: Harper 8c Row, 1981), 344-45.
the Idea of Jus-
17. Ibid., 345. 18.
See especially Carol Gilligan, In a Different Voice (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1982).
19.
Abe, The Emptying God,
20.
SeeTanabe Hajime, Philosophy of Metanoetics
21. This issue of
Zen
ethics
123.
is
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986).
being discussed in Zen
circles,
however, and was formulated as
the topic for group study at the Fourth International Buddhist-Christian Conference
summer of 1992 by the Zen Symposium of Hanazono University. See also Bernard Faure, "The Kyoto School and Reverse Orientalism," in Charles W. Fu and Steven Heine, eds., Japan in Traditional and Postmodern Perspectives (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1995). held in Boston in the
22. See Shioiri's complete bibliography in his Shioiri
Ryodo
memorial volume edited by Muranaka Yusho, bunka no kenkyu (Tokyo:
sensei tsuito ronhunshu: Tendai shiso to To Ajia
Sankibo, 1991), 1-6. 23. In addition to the "formless repentance" advocated by Chih-i in his
Mo-ho chih-kwan,
the
Lotus Samadhi repentance ritual has confession of individual sins requiring tearful remorse. See a translation by Daniel Stevenson, "The Tien t'ai Four Forms of Samadhi and Late North-South Dynasties, Sui, and Early Tang Buddhist Devotionalism" (Ph.D. diss.,
24. For a
Yale University, 1987), 500-511.
sweeping consideration of the tensions between Zen ideology and Buddhist
morality,
see Bernard Faure 's recent book The Rhetoric of Immediacy: A Cultural Critique of Chan/Zen Buddhism (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991), 231-57. 25. See the superb article by Luis
Gomez
that places the issues of this debate in a larger histor-
The Metaphor of Effort and Intuition in Buddhist Thought and Practice," in Peter Gregory, ed., Sudden and Gradual: Approaches to Enlightenment in Chinese Thought (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1987), 67-165. ical perspective:
"Purifying Gold:
and Wealth in Theravada Buddhism: A Study in Comparative F. Sizemore and Donald K. Swearer, eds., Ethics, Wealth, and Salvation: A Study in Buddhist Social Ethics (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1990), 59-76. I am indebted to Donald Swearer for pointing out this reference.
26. Frank E. Reynolds, "Ethics
Religious Ethics," in Russell
CHAPTER TEN 1.
Kitaro Nishida, Last Writings: Nothingness
and the Religious
(Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1987),
126.
Worldviexv, trans.
David Dilworth
Notes fo chapters Twelve
and Thirteen
4-13
2. Ibid. 3.
This and the next two quotations are from Logic of Absolute Nothingness
Masao Abe's
draft of his essay "Sunyata
and the
—The Logic Expounded by the Kyoto School," which he
presented to the American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division, Washington, D.C., December 27-30, 1992. Abe was kind enough to share a draft of this essay with me. This version was adapted by
Abe from
his
published essay "Nishida's Philosophy of
(December
'Place,'" International Philosophical Quarterly 28, no. 4
1988): 355-371.
4. Ibid., 8. 5. Ibid., 9.
6.
Ashok
Gangadean, Meditative Reason: Toward Universal Grammar (New York: Peter Lang
K.
Press, 1993).
CHAPTER TWELVE 1
The proceedings
of this theological encounter group have been published in various issues of
Buddhist-Christian Studies since 1985. 2.
The Purdue meeting tian Theological this
of the
Abe-Cobb
group, by then called the International Buddhist-Chris-
Encounter Group, was held on October 10-12,
encounter are published
in
1986.
The proceedings
of
Buddhist-Christian Studies 8 (1988): 45-168, and 9 (1989):
123-229. 3.
See Donald W. Mitchell, "Compassionate Endurance: Mary and the Buddha, Keiji Nishitani," Bulletin of the Vatican Secretariat for
Non-Christians
A
Dialogue with
21, no. 3 (1986):
296-300; Donald W. Mitchell, "A Dialogue with Kobori Nanrei Sohaku," Japanese ReliW. Mitchell, "Unity and Dialogue: A Christian
gions 20, no. 2 (July 1986): 19-32; Donald
Response
to Shin'ichi
Hisamatsu's Notion of F.A.S.,"
FAS
Society Journal (spring 1986):
6-9. 4.
These persons included Marcello Zago, John Shirieda, and Giuseppe Zanghi.
5.
Abe's stay at Purdue and his four dialogues were funded by a generous grant from the Lilly
Endowment, pher
Inc.
Ives, ed.,
The Rubenstein and Pannenberg
dialogues are published in Christo-
Dixine Emptiness and Historical Fullness:
Conversation with Masao Abe (Valley Forge,
Pa.: Trinity
responses to Suchocki and Egan are published in
A
Buddhist-Jexvish-Christian
Press International, 1995). Abe's
Masao Abe, Buddhism and
Interfaith
Dialogue (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1995). 6.
See Donald W. Mitchell, Spirituality and Emptiness: The Dynamics of Spiritual Life dhism and Christianity (New York: Paulist Press, 1991), 142-181.
7.
See Mitchell, "Compassionate Endurance."
in
Bud-
CHAPTER THIRTEEN 1.
Masao Abe,
in
Arvind Sharma,
ed.,
Our
Religions
2.
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought (Honolulu:
3.
Masao Abe,
in
John Cobb and Christopher
(New York:
HarperCollins, 1993), "4-
University of Hawai'i Press, 1985), 167
Ives, eds.,
The Emptying God:
Christian Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y: Orbis Books, 1990), 27. 4. Ibid. 5.
Abe, Zen and Western Thought,
198.
6. Ibid., 133. 7.
Abe, The Emptying God,
32.
8. Ibid., 33.
9.
Abe. Zen and Western Thought,
211.
A
ishBuddhist -Jewish
Notes to chapters Fifteen
4-ZO
and Eighteen
10. Ibid., 223.
11. Yogava'sistha, 1:28. 12.
Yoshifumi Ueda in his introduction to the English translation of Shinran's Notes on "Essentials of Faith Alone" (Kyoto: Hongwanji International, 1979), 4.
13. Ibid.,
5.
A Human Approach
14.
The
15.
Abe, Zen and Western Thought,
Dalai Lama,
to
World Peace (Boston: Wisdom Publications, 1984),
13.
189.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN 1.
2.
Japanese Religions
11,
(September
no. 2/3
On
Martin Heidegger,
the
Way
1980).
Language
to
(Pfullinger:
Neske, 1959),
i86ff.
and
209ff.
3. Ibid., 187.
4. Ibid., 210. 5. Ibid., 211.
6.
See
7.
Heidegger,
8. B. 9.
Keiji Nishitani, Religion
and Nothingness (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1982).
211.
Buddhadasa, Christianity and Buddhism (Bangkok, 1967).
Saint Augustine, Confessions,
Book
IV.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN 1.
2.
Telephone conversation between Masao Abe and the author, September home in Kyoto; I was in Tallahassee. I
11,
1993.
Abe was
at
describe the impact of that course in the chapter entitled "Tillich and Harvard" in Richard L.
Rubenstein, Power Struggle:
An Autobiographical
(New York: Charles
Confession
Scrib-
ner's Sons, 1974). 3.
The encounter
is
described in the chapter entitled "The
Dean and The Chosen People"
Richard L. Rubenstein, After Auschwitz: History, Theology and Contemporary Judaism, ed. (Baltimore:
in
rev.
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), 3-13.
4.
Richard L. Rubenstein, The Age of Triage: Fear and Hope in an Overcrowded World (Boston:
5.
Masao Abe, "A
Beacon
God:
Press, 1983), 131-133.
Rejoinder," in John B.
A Buddhist-Jewish-Christian God and Dynamic
6.
Abe, "Kenotic
7.
Rubenstein, Power Struggle:
8.
Abe, "Kenotic
Cobb,
Jr.,
Sunyata," in
Ives, eds.,
The Emptying
ibid., 60.
An Autobiographical
God and Dynamic
and Christopher
Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1990), 186.
Confession.
Sunyata," 27.
9. Ibid., 28.
10.
Abe, "A Rejoinder,"
174.
11. Ibid., 184.
12.
Eugene
B. Borowitz,
God,
"The God
Who
Fills
the Universe," in
Cobb and
81.
13. Ibid., 82.
14. Ibid. 15.
Abe, "Kenotic
16.
John
B.
Cobb,
God and Dynamic Jr.,
preface to
Sunyata," 29.
Cobb and
Ives,
The Emptying God,
xi.
Ives,
The Emptying
Notes to chapters Eighteen 17.
and Nineteen
4-Z1
According
to Abe, the religious dimension "signifies that which is neither the divine nor the human, neither the sacred nor the secular, neither the supernatural nor the natural, and that which is neither absolutely good nor absolutely evil Sunyata." (Abe, "Kenotic God and Dynamic Sunyata," 49).
—
18.
The
distinction
between the En Sof and the sefirot is one of the most complex in all of JewI merely want to draw attention to the distinction between the Urgrund
ish mysticism.
and the manifestations of divinity that are revealed to humanity. For a brief discussion of the distinction between the En Sof and manifest divinity, see Gershom Scholem, Sabbatai Sevi: The Mystical Messiah, 1626-1676 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1973), 119-23. 19. Borowitz,
"The God
Who
Fills
the Universe," 84.
20. Ibid.
21. Richard L. Rubenstein, After Auschwitz, 1st ed. (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1966), 154. 22. Christopher Ives, ed., Divine Emptiness
and
Historical Fullness:
Conversation with Masao Ahe (Valley Forge,
Pa.: Trinity
A
Buddhist-Jewish-Christian
Press International, 1995).
23. Ibid., 93-112.
24.
It is
25. Abe,
Orthodox Jews, whose understanding of than Borowitz's.
certainly not the fashion of nonmystical
and the covenant are
"A Rejoinder,"
far
more
literal
God
187.
26. Ibid., 188.
World War II are discussed in Marvin Tokayer and Mary The Untold Story of the Japanese and the Jews during World War II (New York: Paddington Press, 1970); David Kranzler, Japanese, Nazis and Jews: The Jewish Refugee Community of Shanghai, 1935-1945 (Hoboken, N.J.: KTAV, 1988); and BenAmi Shillony, The Jews and the Japanese: The Successful Outsiders (Rutland, Vt.: Charles
27. Japanese-Jewish relations during
Swartz, The
Fugu
Plan:
E. Tuttle Co., 1992), 178-89.
28. Abe, "Kenotic 29. Abe, 30.
John
God and Dynamic
"A Rejoinder," B.
Cobb,
Jr.,
Sunyata," 50.
186.
"On
the Deepening of Buddhism," in
Cobb and
Ives,
The Emptying God,
93.
The Cunning of History (New York: Harper and Row, 1975). In addition to my research, my activities in the domain of public affairs have included serving as president of the Washington Institute for Values in Public Policy, a Washington-based
31. Richard L. Rubenstein,
policy research institution, since 1981. I also serve as editor of In Depth: A Journal of Values in Public Policy and as chairman of the Editorial Advisory Board of the Washingto)i
Times. 32.
Emil L. Fackenheim, "Transcendence and a Jewish Theology," in Herbert
in
Contemporary Culture: Philosophical Reflections
W Richardson and Donald
R. Cutler, Transcendence
(Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), 150. 33. Abe,
"A Rejoinder,"
188.
CHAPTER NINETEEN 1.
Wolfhart Pannenberg, "A Search for the Authentic Self," Christian Sjnritnalit) (Philadelphia:
Westminster Press, 2. Ibid., 97.
Cf.
1983), 93-110.
Masao Abe, "Man and Nature
in Christianity
and Buddhism," Japanese Religions
7(i97'):8. 3.
Pannenberg, Christian
4. Ibid.,
Spirituality, 99.
99-100.
5. Ibid., 101.
Cf. Abe,
"Man and Nature
in Christianity
and Buddhism,"
9.
Notes to chapter Nineteen
4-ZZ 6.
Pannenberg, Christian
Spirituality, 104.
7. Ibid., 105.
8. Ibid., 106.
9.
Cf. also Abe,
Pannenberg, Christian
"Man and Nature
in Christianity
and Buddhism,"
22.
Spirituality, 107.
10. Ibid. 11. Ibid.,
no.
12. Ibid., 108. 13. Cf.
Masao Abe, "Kenotic God and Dynamic Sunyata," Ives, eds.,
The Emptying God:
N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1990), 3-65.
A
John B. Cobb,
in
Jr.,
and Christopher
Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation (Maryknoll,
A shorter,
earlier version of the
same essay was published
Roger Corless and Paul Knitter, eds., Buddhist Emptiness and Christian and Explorations (New York: Paulist Press, 1990), 5-25. in
14. Cf.
Wolfhart Pannenberg, "God's Love and the Kenosis of the Son:
A
Trinity: Essays
Response
to
Masao
Abe," and Masao Abe's rejoinder, "God's Total Kenosis and Truly Redemptive Love," in Christopher Ives, ed., Divine Emptiness and Historical Fullness: A Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation with
Masao Abe
(Valley Forge, Pa.: Trinity Press International, 1995),
244-259. 15.
Pannenberg, "God's Love and the Kenosis of the Son," 246. Cf. Abe, "Kenotic
Dynamic Sunyata,"
God and Dynamic
16.
Abe, "Kenotic
17.
Donald W. Mitchell, Spirituality and Emptiness: The Dynamics of Spiritual and Christianity (New York: Paulist Press, 1991), 55.
18.
Abe, "Kenotic sis
19.
God and
28.
Sunyata," 28.
God and Dynamic
Life in
Buddhism
Sunyata," 27. Cf. Pannenberg, "God's Love and the Keno-
of the Son," 246.
Pannenberg, "God's Love and the Kenosis of the Son," 246. Cf. Abe, "Kenotic
Dynamic Sunyata,"
20. Pannenberg, "God's Love
Dynamic Sunyata," 21. Pannenberg, "God's
God and
38.
and the Kenosis of the Son,"
247. Cf.
Abe, "Kenotic
God and
32, 60.
Love and the Kenosis of the Son," 247.
22. Ibid., 248. 23. Ibid. Cf. Abe, "Kenotic 24. Pannenberg, "God's
God and Dynamic
Sunyata,"
13.
Love and the Kenosis of the Son," 249.
25. Ibid.
26. Ibid., 250. 27. Ibid.
28. Ibid. Cf. Wolfhart Pannenberg, Systematic Theology
I,
trans.
Rapids, Mich.: William B. Eerdmans, 1991), 382-384. 29. Pannenberg, "God's
Love and the Kenosis of the Son,"
250.
30. Ibid. 31.
Abe, "God's Total Kenosis and Truly Redemptive Love,"
32. Ibid.
33. Ibid., 255. 34. Ibid., 256. 35. Ibid., 257. 36. Ibid., 258. 37. Pannenberg, Systematic Theology 38. Ibid., 324.
1
,
320.
253.
Geoffrey W. Bromiley (Grand
and Twenty
Notes to chapters Nineteen Thomas Aquinas, Summa
39. Saint
my book
40. Cf. on this point
Theologiae
Society
and
I,
Q.
4-Z3
29, a. 4, resp.
Spirit (Cranbury, N.J.: Associated University Presses,
1991), 129-39, m which I, too, set forth the nature of God as an underlying force-field but from the perspective of a neo-Whiteheadian process-oriented metaphysics rather than from analysis of the Stoic notion of pneuma as does Pannenberg.
41. Cf. Sacred Texts of the World:
A
Universal Anthology, ed. Ninian Smart and Richard D.
(New York:
Crossroads, 1982), 246: "Form is emptiness, and the very emptiness emptiness does not differ from form, form does not differ from emptiness."
Hecht
is
form;
who
aban-
42. Abe, "God's Total Kenosis and Truly Redemptive Love," 255: "There
is
an agent
He
is
not an agent in the
doned
his
Sonship of
ordinary sense.
He
is
God and
resurrected as the redeemer.
an agentless agent: that
is,
a self-emptying
and yet
self-fulfilling
agent."
CHAPTER TWENTY Hans
1.
Kiing, "Towards a Global Ethic," paper delivered at the 1993 Parliament of the World's
Religions,
August 28-September
5,
1993, Chicago, Illinois.
"God's Self-Renunciation and Buddhist Emptiness:
2.
Roger Corless and Paul Explorations
(New York:
Knitter, eds., Buddhist
A
Christian Response to
Emptiness and Christian
Masao Abe,"
Trinity: Essays
in
and
Paulist Press, 1990), 26-43.
3.
Hans Rung, Christianity and the World Religions: Buddhism (New York: Doubleday, 1986), xiv.
4.
Hans
Kiing, Theology for the Third Millennium:
Paths of Dialogue with Islam, Hinduism and
An
Ecumenical View (New York: Doubleday,
iq88), 123-206.
220.
5. Ibid.,
6. Kiing, Christianity
Hans
10. Kiing, 1.
xiv.
Toward a New World Ethic (New York: Crossroads, (Munich: Piper, 1990)].
Kiing, Global Responsibility:
[Original: Projekt Weltethos
1
Religions,
238-239.
8. Ibid.,
9.
and the World
Theology for the Third Millennium, 227-256.
7. Kiing,
Ibid.,
Theology for the Third Millennium,
1991)
251.
253-256.
12. Kiing, Christianity 13. Kiing, "God's
and the World
Religions.
Self-Renunciation and Buddhist Emptiness," 26-43.
14. Ibid., 42-43. 15. Ibid., 37. 16. Ibid. -
17.
Western Philosophy and Theology in Taitetsu Unno, ed., The Religious Philosophy of Nishitani Keiji: Encounter with Emptiness (Berkeley Asian Humanities Press, 1989), 13-45; Masao Abe, "Will, Sunyata, and History," in ibid.. 279-304. Abe's thinking on the question of human rights and ethics is presented in his "Religious Tolerance and Human Rights. A Buddhist Perspective," published in Leonard Swidler, ed., Religious Liberty and Human Rights in Nations and Religions (Philadelphia:
Masao Abe,
'
"Nishitani's Challenge to
Ecumenical Press,
1986), 193-21
1.
He
has also delivered a paper on this question
at
the
Germany, published in Hans Kiing and Karl Joseph Kuschel, eds., Weltfrieden durch Religumsfrieden—Antworten mis den Wcltrcligionen (Munich: Piper, 1993), 109-40. (I thank Professor Christopher Ives of the University l Puget Sound for information on the above article in English and Professor Hans Kiing himself for the information on Abe's article in German.)
UNESCO-sponsored colloquium
in
4-Z4-
Notes to ckcupter Twenty -One
18.
Abe, "Will, Sunyata, and History," 269.
19.
Abe, "Kenotic God and Dynamic Sunyata," in John Cobb, Jr., and Christopher Ives, eds., The Emptying God: A Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1990), 3-65.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE 1.
Masao Abe, "Zen
Is
Not
a Philosophy, but
.
.
."
Theologische Zeitschrift (Basel) 33 (1977):
251-68. 2.
Translated by Harold H. Oliver, Buddhist -Christian Studies
12 (1992):
83-102. Henceforth
I
refer to this essay as TS.
Der Buddha- Christus
3. Fritz Buri,
als
der Herr des wahren Selhst: Die Religionsphilosophie der
Kyoto Schule und das Christentum (Bern: Paul Haupt Verlag, 1982). Translated by Harold H. Oliver as The Buddha-Christ as the Lord of the True Self: The Religious Philosophy of the Kyoto School and Christianity (Macon, Ga.: forth, 4.
TS, 85.
5. Ibid.,
6.
I
BC,
96.
3 2 3 ff.
7. Ibid.,
324.
8. Ibid.
9. Ibid., 325.
10. Ibid. 11. Ibid. 12. Ibid.
326.
13. Ibid. 14. Ibid.
328.
15. Ibid.
3^9-
16. Ibid.
33°-
17. Ibid. 18. Ibid.
336.
19. Ibid.
339-
20. Ibid.
34°-
21. Ibid. 22. Ibid. 23. Ibid. 24. Ibid. 25. Ibid.
344-
26. Ibid. 27. Ibid.
345-
28. Ibid.
347-
29. Ibid. 30. Ibid.
348.
31. TS, 96 32. Ibid.
97-
refer to this
work
as
BC.
Mercer University
Press, 1997).
Hence-
Notes to chapters Twenty -One
and Twenty Two
4-ZS
33. Ibid. 34. Ibid.
98.
35. Ibid. 36.
EC,
357-
37. Ibid. 38. Ibid. 39. Ibid.
358.
40. Ibid. 41. Ibid.
359-
42. Ibid. 43. Ibid.
360.
44. Ibid.
361.
45. Ibid. 46. Ibid. 47. Ibid.
362.
48. Ibid. 49. Ibid.
363-
50. Ibid. 51. Ibid.
3 6 4-
52. Ibid.
365.
53. Ibid.
54. Ibid.
3 6 7 ff
55. Ibid.
368.
56. Ibid.
3 6 9-
57. Ibid.
37°-
58. Ibid.
372-
59. Ibid.
60. Ibid.
374-
61. Ibid.
375-
62. Ibid. 63. Ibid.
377-
64. Ibid.
379-
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO 1.
Masao Abe, "Zen and Compassion," The Eastern Buddhist
2.
Masao Abe, "Zen and Buddhism," The
3.
In Abe's
2,
no.
Eastern Buddhist 26, no.
1
1
(August 1967): 64. (spring [993): 26-49.
most recent book, Buddhism and Interfaith Dialogue (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i he devotes several chapters to exploring Tillich's theology and its importance tor Christian-Buddhist dialogue. Throughout these readings, the richness of TUlich's religio-philosophy is again apparent as it enables Abe to penetratingly analyze and articulate the basic differences and similarities between the Christian and Zen Buddhist ontic positions. Press, 1995),
4.
Masao Abe, 128.
"In
This
Memory
article
was
of Dr. Paul Tillich,"
The Eastern Buddhist 1, no. 2 (September [966): Buddhism and Interfaith Dialogue, 120-123.
recent!) reprinted in Abe,
J
—
Notes to chapter Twenty -Two
4-Z6 5.
Masao Abe,
Memory
"In
of Dr. Paul Tillich,"
131.
Much
could be said about Tillich and his paper is focused on Masao Abe's
interest in interreligious dialogue; however, since the
dialogue with Tillich, the matter will have to be taken up on another occasion. 6.
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought (Honolulu:
University of Hawai'i Press, 1985), 171-185.
7. Ibid., 171.
8.
"Human
personal existence" indicates the ontological status of a
human
being that has actu-
alized self [personal]-consciousness. Hereafter, the term person will
be
utilized to indi-
cate this status. 9.
Paul Tillich, Systematic Theology, vol.
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951), 49.
I
(Hereafter Systematic Theology will be referred to as ST, with volume and page numbers
ambiguous ambiguous" {ST, III, 32).
following.) "Life remains
moment 10. ST, 1
1.
ST,
I,
is
as long as there
is life"
{ST,
II, 4); ".
.
.
life at
every
170.
34 (my italics). For Tillich, awareness of finitude is awareness of being. Correspondthe awareness of finitude is accompanied by the awareness of infinitude (non-
II,
ingly,
being).
only by the awareness of infinitude that
It is
we
we can
and the
our
realize
own
finitude
"Only something infinite can we realize we are finite. Only because we are Our melancholy able to see the eternal can we see the limited time that is given us. about our transitoriness is rooted in our power to look beyond it." (Paul Tillich, The Shakonly in non-being do
because we look
find the possibilities,
limitations, of being:
at
.
ing of the Foundations 12. Paul Tillich,
"What
Is
[New York: Charles
.
.
Scribner's Sons, 1950] 67.)
Man? A Symposium on
the Individual in
Modern
Society" (unpub-
lished broadcast transcript), Yale Christian Association, January 4, 1957, Tillich Archives,
407:108, p.
3.
13. Paul Tillich, Love, Power,
and
Justice
(New
York:
Oxford University Press,
1954), 33, 34.
(Hereafter referred to as LP].) 14.
Abe, Zen and Western Thought,
6.
15. Ibid., 6. 16. Ibid. 17. ST, 1,61,62. 18. ST, 19.
I,
211.
D. MacKenzie Brown, Ultimate Concern: Tillich in Dialogue
(New
York:
Harper
&
Row,
1965)- 7. 8.
20. ST,
I,
235; LP], 107.
21. LP], 109. 22. ST,
I,
244.
23. ST,
I,
272.
24. ST,
I,
279 (my
25. Paul Tillich,
italics).
The
New
Being
(New York: Charles
Scribner's Sons, 1995), 26.
26. LP], 25. 27. Tillich,
The Shaking of the Foundations,
28. ST,
I,
286.
29. ST,
I,
49.
30. Paul Tillich,
"The Importance of
New
156.
Being for Christian Theology,"
in
Man and
Transfor-
mation, ed. Joseph Campbell (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1964), 174. 31. For a full discussion of the kenotic quality of Jesus as the Christ, see
Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation, ed. John N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1990).
The Emptying Cod:
Cobb and Christopher
A
Ives (Maryknoll,
Notes to chapters Twentu-Two a,nd Twentu -Three
4-Z7
Abe holds that for Buddhism, consistent with pratitya-samutpada, being not ontologically prior to non-being; instead, being and non-being are codependent. As
32. In terms of ontology, is
Abe
explains this difference in regard to the
Zen
resolution,
in Buddhism, since the polarity of being and nothing is a symmetrical polarity, with equal weight for being and nonbeing, the overcoming of this symmetrical polarity entails us straightforwardly to go beyond the horizon of polarity itself to a new
horizon which
is
(Buddhism and
neither being nor nothing
—
that
to a realization
is,
of Sunyata.
Interfaith Dialogue, 106, ioy)
As Abe goes on to say, this Emptiness (Sunyata) must be "emptied" as well. The Zen Awakening destroys the simple objectification of self, others, and God that is necessarily restricted to relatedness between two "others" and instead provides a consciousness that tion
is
—
complete identification with the
other, while
engaging
still
in relative participa-
As Abe states, the Awakened person one and the same time" (ibid., 107).
thus, an identification-participation.
[and originally] both being and nothing at 33. This characterization of
Awakening
as "nondualistic duality"
is
is
"now
from the writings of Richard
DeMartino. 34. Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, "Ultimate Crisis
Eastern Buddhist 35. Richard
8,
no. 2
DeMartino, ed. and
(May
trans.,
and Resurrection, Part
1," trans.
Gishin Tokiwa, The
1975): 28.
"D.
T
Suzuki, Oriental Thought and the West," unpublished
manuscript of original interview that appeared
in the
Asahi journal
36. "Love corresponds to the Buddhist ideal of mahakaruna,
no.
7,
11,
and according
to
March
14, 1965.
Buddhists the
Buddha-heart is no other than mahakaruna itself (D. T Suzuki, "Human Values in Zen," Abraham Maslow, ed., New Knowledge in Human Values [New York: Harper & Row,
in
1959]- 97)-
37. Abe, "Zen
and Compassion,"
66.
38. Ibid.
39.
DeMartino, "D. T. Suzuki, Oriental Thought and the West," 22, 23. DeMartino goes on to add that "though Buddhism has laid much formal stress on undifferentiated-differentiations, it seems not to have worked this out sufficiently as regards the specific relation between love and justice."
40.
Cobb and
Ives,
The Emptying God,
60.
41. Ibid., 61. 42. This criterion
is
one espoused by Robert McAfee Brown
ology (Louisville, Ky: Westminster/John
Knox
book Liberation TheAs indicated by such
in his recent
Press, 1993), 27.
books as Asian Christian Spirituality, ed. Virginia Fabella et al. (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1992), there is profound need by Asians for a spirituality of liberation, and Christian liberation theology is active in supporting the development of spirituality. Zen, and Buddhism as a whole, must similarly answer the spiritual needs of the poor and oppressed in Asia with much greater vivacity and urgency than in the past.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE 1.
God and Dynamic Sunyata," in John B. Cobb, Jr., and Christopher Ives, eds.. The Emptying God: A Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1990). 3- 6 5-
"Kenotic
2.
See Foundations of Christian Faith: Seabury Press, 1978), 63.
3.
Perhaps
in the
case of Zen,
it is
An
Introduction to the Idea of Christianit) (Nevt York
more accurate
to
Take, for example, the famous poetry contest
speak of narrative and rhetorical strategies. in
the Platform Sutra
oj
the Sixth Patriarch
("Where then is a grain of dust to cling?") or the much-quoted maxim "When reduced to one, to what is the one to be reduced?"
all
is
Notes to chapters Twenty Three
4-Z8 "Buddhism
4.
(fall
Is
Not Monistic, but Non-dualistic,"
and Twentu-Five
Scottish Journal of Religious Studies
1,
no. 2
1980): 97-100.
"Buddhism and Christianity as a Problem for Today: Part II," in Japanese Religions 3, no. 3: 8-31. Also, Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1985).
5.
6.
Abe, "Buddhism and Christianity as
7.
Abe, Zen and Western Thought, 161. Later in this text, Abe states that "Zen transcends not only dualism, but also monism and monotheism" (p. 187).
8.
Abe, "Kenotic
9.
Masao Abe, "Memories of Daisetz Suzuki Sensei," in Masao Abe, ki Remembered (New York: Weatherhill, 1986), 218.
God and Dynamic
a
Problem
for Today: Part II," 24.
Sunyata," 27-33. ed.,
A
Zen
Life:
D.
T.
Suzu-
on the relationship between Zen and Jodo Shin-sha, see "The Problem Toward a Critical Understanding," trans. James Fredericks, in the International Philosophical Quarterly 35, no. 4, issue 140 (December 1995): 419—436. Here Abe insightfully explores the intrinsic connection between Zen and Jodo Shin-shu. His standpoint remains that of Nishida's Absolute Nothingness. What if Abe were to interpret Absolute Nothingness from the standpoint of "other power?"
10. For Abe's reflection
of 'Inverse Correspondence' in the Philosophy of Nishida:
1
1.
sure, Abe has published articles having to do with Jodo Shin-shu thought. In 1963 and again in 1964, articles appeared in Japanese on Dogen and Shinran. These articles have recently been translated by Steven Heine and are included as the final chapters of Masao
To be
A Study of Dogen (Stony Brook: State University of New York Press, 1992). Of course, in these early articles no attempt is made to connect Shinran's notion of "other
Abe,
power" with a dynamic approach 12.
to Sunyata.
Jan van Bragt, "Buddhism-Jodo Shin-shu-Christianity: Does Jodo Shin-shu Form a Bridge between Buddhism and Christianity?" Japanese Religions 18, no. 1 (January 1993): 47~75-
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE Kitaro Nishida,
1.
An
Inquiry Into the Good, trans.
Haven: Yale University Press,
Masao Abe and Christopher
Ives
(New
1990).
2. Ibid., xxv. 3. Ibid., xii.
4. Ibid. 5. Ibid., xxx.
6. Ibid., 7.
xv (Abe's introduction); xxx (Nishida's preface).
William James, Essays in Radical Empiricism (New York: Longmans, Green and Co., 1943), The above quotation is in italics in the original.
8. Ibid., 23.
9. Ibid., 40.
10. Nishida, 1
1.
An
Ibid., xviii.
12. Ibid., xix. 13. Ibid., 135. 14. Ibid., 161. 15. Ibid., 150.
Inquiry into the Good,
xv.
-
9-
Notes to chapter Twentu-Six
4-ZS
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX 1.
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought (Honolulu:
University of Havvai'i Press, 1985).
2. Ibid., 152. 3. Ibid., xxi.
4. Ibid., xxii, 152, 170. 5. Ibid., 152.
6. Ibid., 186. 7. Ibid., 202. 8. Ibid.
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid., 186. 11. Ibid., 172.
12. Ibid., 169.
13. Ibid. 14. Ibid., 109.
15. Ibid., 74. 16. Ibid., 74, 189; cf. p. 31. 17. Ibid., 188-189; cf. p. 202. 18. Ibid., 120.
19. Ibid.
20. Ibid.,
xxiii.
21. Ibid.,
xxii.
22. Ibid., 210.
23. Ibid. 24. Ibid.
25. Ibid., 209. 26. Ibid., 85.
27. Ibid., 261-265. 28. Ibid., 266, 268.
29. Ibid., 192-193. 30. Ibid., 193. 31. Ibid.
32. Ibid.
33. Martin Heidegger,
Way
to
"A Dialogue on Language between a Japanese and an Inquirer," Language, trans. Peter Hertz (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1982).
in
On
the
34. Ibid., 4-5. 35. Ibid.,
5.
36. Ibid., 2-3. 37. Ibid., 8. 38. Ibid., 12-13.
39. Abe,
Zen and Western Thought,
131.
J
4-3 O
Notes to chapter Twenty-Seven
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN 1.
—
Masao Abe, "Non-Being and Mu The Metaphysical Nature of Negativity in the East and the West" in Masao Abe, Zen and Western TJtought (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1985), 121-134.
122-123.
2. Ibid.,
3. Ibid., 121.
4. Ibid. 5.
6.
Masao Abe, "Zen and Western Thought"
I
33"
I
in
Abe, Zen and Western Thought,
Mu —The Metaphysical
Abe, "Non-Being and
Nature of Negativity
109.
in the East
and the West,"
34-
7. Ibid., 130.
8. Ibid., 127. 9. Ibid.,
130-131.
10.
Abe, "Zen and Western Thought," 94.
11.
Abe, "Non-Being and West," 126.
Mu —The
Metaphysical Nature of Negativity
in the East
and the
12. Ibid. 13. Ibid., 127.
14. Ibid. 15. Ibid., 128. 16. Ibid., 130. 17. Ibid., 128. 18. Ibid., 126-127.
19. Ibid., 130.
20. Abe, "Zen 21. Abe,
and Western Thought,"
"Non-Being and
Mu —The
102.
Metaphysical Nature of Negativity in the East and the
West," 131-132. 22. Ibid., 133. 23. Ibid., 124. 24. Ibid., 125. 25. Ibid., 133. 26. Ibid. 27. Ibid., 121. 28. For the text of
and
a
commentary on the Heart Sutra
or Hrdaya Prajnaparamita, see
Rabten, Echoes of Voidness, trans. Stephen Batchelor (London:
Wisdom
Geshe
Publications,
1983), 15-45.
Madhyamakasatra in Hans Wolfgang Schumann's Buddhism: An Outline of Its Teachings and Schools (Wheaton, 111.: Theosophical Publishing House, 1974), 146.
29. For Nagarjuna's statement of this point, see the quotation from
30. Abe,
"Non-Being and
Mu —The
Metaphysical Nature of Negativity
in the East
and the
West," p 223. 31. Alan Watts, 32. Ibid.; the
The Way of Zen (New
Diamond
York: Vintage Books, 1957), 126.
Sutra or Vajracchedika Prajnaparamita emphasizes this
movement
negation of substance deepened by a second, self-emptying negation that gives is,
the positive realization of dependent co-arising.
33. Rabten, Echoes of Voidness, 35.
of
rise to, or
Notes to chapters Twentu-Eight
and Twenty-Nine
4-31
34. Ibid., 26-27. 35. Ibid., 33-34. 36. Ibid., 33. 37.
Abe, "Non-Being and West,"
Mu —The
Metaphysical Nature of Negativity
in the
East and the
132.
38. Ibid., 124 (figs.
and
5.1
39. Ibid., 128
(fig. 5.3).
40. Ibid., 129
(fig. 5.4).
5.2).
41. Ibid., 123, 128. 42. Ibid., 133.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT New York
1.
Masao Abe, A Study
2.
Martin Heidegger, Aus der Erfahrung des Denkens (Pfullingen: Neske, 1954),
of Dogen (Albany: State University of
Press, 1992), 141. 21.
3. Ibid., 15.
4.
Heidegger, Gelassenheit (Pfullingen: Neske, 1954), 27.
5. Ibid., 34.
6. Ibid., 7.
52-53.
Stambaugh, Thoughts on Heidegger (Washington, D.C.: University Press of America,
1991),
123-136. 8.
Quoted
9. Ibid.,
Abe,
A
Study of Dogen,
123.
57
Heidegger, Vier Seminare (Frankfurt: Klustermann, 1977), 104.
10. 1
in
1.
Heidegger,
On Time and
Being, trans. Joan
Stambaugh (New
York:
Harper
&
Row,
1972), 43.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE 1.
Masao Abe, "Zen
Is
Not
a Philosophy, but
.
.
.
,"
in
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought
(Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1985), 26. 2.
God and Dynamic Sunyata," in John B. Cobb, Jr., and Christopher Ives, eds., The Emptying God: A Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y: Orbis Books,
"Kenotic
1990), 27. 3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.,
from the Prajnaparamita Sutra. Taisho 8:250b.
5. Ibid.,
26.
6. Ibid., 27. 7.
See Abe, Zen and Western Thought.
8. Ibid., 24.
9.
Thomas
R.
Martland
Jr.,
The Metaphysics of William James and John Dewey (New York:
Philo-
sophical Library, 1963), 92. 10.
1 1
William James, The Principles of Psychology, [first published in 1890]), 467.
vol.
I
(New York: Dover
Publications, Inc., 1950
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought.
12. Ibid.
J
4-3 Z
Notes to chapters Twentu-Nine a.nd rhirtu
13. Ibid. 14. Ibid., 129.
15. Ibid. 16. Ibid., 4.
17. Ibid., 128. 18. Ibid., 129. 19.
Shizuteru Ueda, "'Nothingness' in Meister Eckhart and Zen Buddhism," in Frederick Franck, ed., The Buddha Eye: An Anthology of the Kyoto School (New York: Crossroads Publishing, 1982), 160.
20.
Cobb and
Ives,
The Emptying God,
Zen and Western Thought,
21. Abe,
29.
256.
22. Ibid., 257. 23. Shin'ichi Hisamatsu,
Zen and the Fine Arts (Tokyo: Kodansha International,
1971), 52.
24. Ibid. 25. Kitaro Nishida, Intelligibility
and the Philosophy of Nothingness,
(Honolulu: East-West Center Press, 1958), 26. Abe,
Zen and Western Thought,
trans.
Robert Schinzinger
137.
167.
27. Ibid., 49. 28. Ibid., 67.
CHAPTER THIRTY 1.
Robert A.
F.
Thurman, The Holy Teaching of
Vimalakirti, a
Mahaydna
Scripture (University
Park, Pa.: University Pennsylvania Press, 1976), 46. 2. Ibid., 47. 3. Ibid., 46.
4. Ibid. 5. Ibid., 47.
6.
W.
de Bary
T.
et
al.,
Sources of Chinese Tradition
(New York: Columbia
University Press, i960),
320-322. 7.
On
the relatively
weak position
of the Buddhist sangha in China, see Erik Ziircher,
"Buddhism
China: The Limits of Innovation," unpublished paper contributed to the Conference on the Historical Experience of Change and Patterns of Reconstruction in Selected Axial in
Age 8.
Civilizations, Jerusalem,
Kakuyei Tada, "Buddhism
in
December
China Today,"
28,
1983-January
Pacific
World
1,
2,
1984.
no. 3 (spring 1984): 28-30.
9. Ibid., 28.
10. Ibid., 29. 11. Ibid., 30. 12.
Ryusaku Tsunoda
et al.,
Sources of Japanese Tradition (New York: Columbia University Press, adapted from W. G. Aston.
1958), 50-51. Translation 13. Ibid., 53. 14. Ibid., 50.
Notes to chapter Thirty-One
and Thirty -Two
4-33
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE 1.
See D.
2.
Kitaro Nishida,
3.
Hinduism Today
4.
I
T. Suzuki, Living by
An
Zen (London: Rider
Inquiry into the
&
Co., 1972), 172, for another version.
Good (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1990).
(March 1993): 27 reports that the Dalai Lama recently complained: "When I say Buddhism is a part of Hinduism, certain people criticize me. But if I were to say that Hinduism and Buddhism are totally different, it would not be in conformity with truth. I have always described Hinduism and Buddhism as twin brothers. The only difference is in the concept of atman [the individual soul]. Buddhism does not believe in atman." Perhaps the question of Brahman also needs to be addressed. 15,
no. 3
some of my own thoughts to begin with. Some have plausibly suggested that Hinduism and Buddhism are two distinct but complementary ways of looking at the world and its underlying reality. These ontological approaches in turn mold their soteriological approaches, but the goal of moksa or mukti remains the same for both. Both, in a sense, are unayas. The parallel from the world of science that suggests itself is that of the wave and particle theories of light as two ways of understanding the behavior of light, whose property of revealing things is not affected by these theories. The action of switching on the light is to be distinguished from that of understanding the behavior of light. Both Hinduism and Buddhism, on this analogy, are capable of switching on the light but
offer
phenomenon of light rather differently. Some have argued that the differences between
explain the
the two are minimal, that Brahand purposes can be identified as already mentioned. Other have argued that this is not so, that "Samkara differentiates his doctrine from the sunya-vada of the Madhyamika. ... If according to the Madhyamika it is impossible for thought to rest in the relative, it is equally impossible for it, according to Samkara, to rest
man and
Sunyata for
all
in absolute nothing. ...
distinction (bheda), the
Hiriyanna,
intents
Or as an old writer has Madhyamika negates it
observed, while the Advaitin negates only as well as the distincts (bhidyamana)"
George Allen
Outlines of Indian Philosophy [London:
&
Unwin,
(M.
1932],
372-373)-
One ly to
phenomena a
sometimes wonders whether Hinduism and Buddhism chose not mere-
also
phenomenon
desc.ibe the same
TV screen. As
differently but rather chose to identify different
same occurrence. Let us suppose
of the
that
one
the images disappear completely once the
is
describing the images on
TV is
switched
off,
the images
no self-existence and may be described as empty. However, if the view is entertained that no image can appear without the screen, then it will be implicated in all the images. The first description would then correspond to Buddhist nairatmya, and the second to the Hindu jivatman, the descriptions reflecting a kind of are totally empty; they possess
choice.
not be out of place. A fundamental contribution that understanding of Sunyata was by highlighting its dynamic nature, as the realization that one finally abides neither in samsara nor nirvana. By contrast, the Brahman of Hinduism is understood as immutable, as uncontradicted in all three dimen-
One
final
Masao Abe made
sions of time
change ry;
is
comment may
to
my
and therefore
want of
a better term). In Samkara's Advaita
Madhyamika Buddhism permanence
is
ultimately illuso-
however, as both admit the ultimate reality to be beyond description, are both the
descriptions illusory and 5.
as "static" (for
ultimately illusory; in
common
Tu Wei-ming, "Confucianism,"
in
in their illusoriness?
Arvind Sharma,
ed.,
Our
Religions (San Francisco: Harper-
Collins, 1993), 199.
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO 1.
Masao Abe, A Study of Dogen: His Philosophy and University of
New York
Press, 1992), 167.
Religion, ed. Steven
Heine (Albany: State
Notes to chapters Thirty -Two
4-34-
and Thirty-Four
2.
See Tamura Yoshiro, Kamakura Shin-Bukkyo no Kenkyu (Kyoto: Heirakuji Shoten, 1965), and Tamura, "Critique of Original Awakening Thought in Shoshin and Dogen," Japanese Jour-
3.
Dogen, Shobogenzo Bendowa,
nal of Religious Studies,
no.
no. 2-3 (June
11,
- September 1984): 243-266.
N. A. Waddell and Masao Abe, The Eastern Buddhist (May 1971): 144 (the term realization has been changed to attainment).
1
trans.
Dogen, Shobogenzo "Gyobutsuigi," Dogen Zenji Zenshii, Chikuma Shobo, 1970), 345.
4.
vol.
I,
ed.
Okubo Doshu
4,
(Tokyo:
5.
Yoshinori Takeuchi, The Heart of Buddhism: In Search of the Timeless Spirit of Primitive Buddhism (New York: Crossroads, 1983), 135.
6.
Abe,
A
Study of Dogen,
14.
7. Ibid., 120.
8.
Cited in
ibid., 219.
9. Ibid., 213.
10. Ibid., 216.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR Masao Abe, "The Interfaith Encounter of Zen and Christian Contemplation: A Dialogue between Masao Abe and Keith J. Egan," in Masao Abe, Buddhism and Interfaith Dia-
1.
logue, ed.
Stephen Heine (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press,
1995), 171.
2. Ibid., 172. 3. Ibid.
4. Ibid. 5. Ibid., 171.
6.
Masao Abe, "Education
in Zen,"
The Eastern Buddhist
9,
no. 2 (October 1976): 66.
7. Ibid.
8. Ibid.
9.
Masao Abe, "Kenotic God and Dynamic Sunyata," The Emptying God:
eds.,
A
in
John
B.
Cobb,
Jr.,
and Christopher
Ives,
Buddhist-Jeivish-Christian Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y.:
Orbis Books, 1990). 10.
References in this paragraph and the next four are from Abes paper, which was read and distributed informally at the Third North-American Buddhist-Christian Theological Encounter. This event was held at Purdue University on October 10-12, 1986.
1
1.
12.
orga-
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought (Honolulu:
University of Hawai'i Press, 1985), 274-75.
See especially John B. Cobb, Jr., Beyond Dialogue: Toward a Mutual Transformation of Christianity and Buddhism (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1982).
13.
Cobb and
14.
Abe, Zen and Western Tlxought, 236.
15. Ibid., 148.
16.
The
was Professor Donald W. Mitchell.
nizer
Ives,
The Emptying God,
See also Cobb and
Ives,
Abe, Zen and Western Thought,
11.
The Emptying God,
11.
126.
17. Ibid., 79.
18.
John
B.
Cobb,
Jr.,
"On
the Deepening of Buddhism," in
Cobb and
Ives,
91-101. 19.
Masao Abe, "A
Rejoinder," in
Cobb and
Ives,
The Emptying God,
178.
The Emptying God,
Notes to chapters Thirty-Four 20. In
and
4-3 S
Thirty-Five
An Inquiry into Nothingness and Relatedness (Albany: State York Press, 1994), I address dialogue as religious practice. See also David Tracy, Dialogue with the Other: The Inter-Religious Dialogue (Grand Rapids,
my
Rediscovering the West:
University of
New
Mich.: William B. Eerdmans, 1990); Leonard Swidler, John B. Cobb, Jr., Paul F. Knitter, and Monica K. Hellwig, Death or Dialogue: From the Age of Monologue to the Age of Dialogue (Philadelphia: Trinity Press International, 1990); and Donald W. Mitchell, Spirituality and Emptiness: The Dynamics of Spiritual Life in Buddhism and Christianity (New York: Paulist Press, 1991).
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE 1.
Quoted from
A
Zen
Soiku Shigematsu
Forest: Sayings of the Masters, trans.
(New York: Weath-
erhill, 1981), 87. 2.
The Complete Writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson (New
3.
A
4.
D.
Zen
T
Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism (First Series)
(my 5.
York:
Wm.
H. Wise
8c
Co., 1929), 144.
Forest, 37.
(New York: Grove
Press, Inc. 1961), 265
italics).
Masao Abe, Zen and Western Thought (Honolulu:
University of Hawaii Press, 1985),
161.
6. Ibid., 12. 7.
For a detailed discussion of Christianity, see
how Abe and Emerson
my "Beyond
stand side-by-side in contrast to traditional
Christianity: Transcendentalism
and Zen," The Eastern
Buddhist 24, no. 2 (autumn 1991): 33-68. 8.
Matthew
9.
Luke
10.
John
10:39.
17:20-21. B.
Cobb,
Jr.,
and Christopher
Ives, eds.,
The Emptying God:
ian Conversation (Maryknoll, N.Y: Orbis Books, 1990),
A
Buddhist-Jewish-Christ-
11.
11. Ibid., 17. 12.
Stephen Morris, "Buddhism and Christianity: The Common Ground. A Study of the Radical Theologies of Meister Eckhart and Abe Masao," The Eastern Buddhist 25, no. 2 (autumn 1992): 89-118.
13.
A
14.
See Abe's preface
Zen
Forest, 68.
itual Life in
W
to Donald Buddhism and
Mitchell's Spirituality
Christianity
15.
Masao Abe, "Beyond Buddhism and
16.
Abe, Zen and Western Thought, 274.
dhism and
17. Ibid., 224.
18. Ibid.
Interfaith
(New York:
and Emptiness: The Dynamics of SpirPaulist Press, 1991),
—'Dazzling Darkness"'
Christianity
in
x.
Masao Abe, Bud-
Dialogue (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1995), 138-139.
LIST
OF
CONTRIBUTORS Leslie D. Alldritt
is
Northland College
associate professor of philosophy and religion at
Ashland, Wisconsin. His dissertation concerned
in
the relationship between Paul Tillich and ophy. His current research interest
Thomas
J. J.
is
Zen Buddhist
Japanese
religio-philos-
religiosity.
Altizer, a retired theologian who, after completing his doctor-
ate in the history of religions at the University of Chicago, has devoted a substantial part of his
logue. This
began with
Eschatology and
work
to the Buddhist-Christian theological dia-
his first book, Oriental Mysticism
a radical Christian theologian, a crucial
been an attempt
and
Biblical
recently represented in The Contemporary Jesus. As
is
to
dimension of
work has
this
seek a genuinely Buddhist ground for Christian the-
ology.
Steve Antinoff
Eugene
B.
lives
and works
Borowitz
in Tokyo.
serves as the
Sigmund
L.
Falk Distinguished
Professor of Education and Jewish Religious Thought at
Hebrew
Union College, Jewish Institute of Religion, New York. His most recent book was Renewing the Covenant, a Theology for the Postmodern jew. In the spring of 1999, he and Francie Schwartz will publish The Jewish Moral Values.
Joseph A. Bracken, Cincinnati, Ohio. at Saint
Mary
several books
theology,
S. J.,
He
is
professor of theology at Xavier University,
previously taught at Marquette University, and
of the Lake Seminary, Mundelein, Illinois. Author of
on the relation between process theology and
Bracken
is
trinitarian
interested in the philosophical foundations of the
notion of ultimate reality in the various world religions. His most recent book in this regard
Robert
E.
Canada.
Carter is He studied
is
The Divine Matrix.
professor of philosophy at Trent University in at Tufts,
Harvard and Toronto Universities, with
List of contributors
4-3 8
degrees in both philosophy and theology.
He
has authored and jointly
authored eight books, including The Nothingness Beyond God, which a study of the Japanese philosopher Kitaro Nishida,
work
entitled
Becoming Bamboo. Carter
Watsuji's Rinrigaku (Japanese Ethics).
Japan and
Hawai'i where he
Pure
He
and
a
comparative
a joint-translator of Tetsuro
has researched extensively in
currently working on a study of Japanese ethics.
is
David W. Chappell religion.
is
is
He
is
teaches Chinese Buddhism at the University of professor and graduate chair in the department of
did his doctoral
Land
work
Tao-ch'o.
pioneer,
at Yale University
on the Chinese
His publications include T'ien-T'ai
Buddhism: An Outline of the Fourfold Teachings, and as editor, Buddhist and Taoist Practice in Medieval Chinese Society. He was the founding editor of the journal, Buddhist-Christian Studies.
John
Cobb,
B.
Jr.
professor emeritus of the Claremont School of
is
Theology. As a Christian theologian, renown for his contribution to
process theology, he has been active in interfaith dialogue, especially
with Buddhists.
He
published Beyond Dialogue: Toward a Mutual
He worked with Masao between leading Buddhists and Christian theologians especially in North America, and he co-edited with Christopher Ives The Emptying God: A Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation, focusing on Abes work. Transformation of Christianity and Buddhism.
Abe
to initiate theological dialogue
Thomas Dean
associate professor of religion at
is
Temple
University. In
1989-90 and again from 1991-1994, he taught at Temple University Japan in Tokyo. His publications include "Masao Abe on Zen and
Western Thought" in The Eastern Buddhist (Part One, Autumn 1989; Part Two, Spring 1990), "Enlightenment or Liberation? Two Models of Christ in Contemporary Japanese Theology" in Fukuin to Sekai (October, November, December 1994) with the English version in The Japan Christian Review (December Religious Pluralism
1995), and an edited volume, and Truth: Essays on Cross-Cultural Philosophy of
Religion. Dean's area of research gion,
and he
is
is
cross-cultural philosophy of reli-
currently engaged in a study of Heidegger and the Kyoto
School.
William Theodore de Bary Provost
is
John Mitchell Mason Professor and He was president of the
Emeritus, Columbia University.
Association of Asian Studies 1969-70, and the
Dawn: A Plan for
The Buddhist
the Prince,
Tradition.
is
the author of Waiting for
The Trouble With Confucianism, and
List of contributors
**
Richard
DeMartino
J.
is
4-39
associate professor emeritus (religion) at
and has known Masao Abe since 1952. Besides publishing extensively in the West on Zen Buddhism, DeMartino collaborated with Abe on the English translation of Shin'ichi Hisamatsus "The Characteristics of Oriental Nothingness," pub-
Temple
University,
lished in Japan by the Ministry of Education in Philosophical Studies
of Japan
(II,
i960).
Durwood Foster
professor emeritus of Christian theology at Pacific
is
School of Religion, where he was also dean. Methodist, he earlier taught
York and
at
Duke
University.
at
An
ordained United
Union Theological Seminary
Among
in
New
various writings he has authored
Who Loves on the theology of Paul Tillich. The wider ecumenism of interfaith dialogue, especially with Buddhism, has been a main commitment for some years.
The God
James
L.
Fredericks
ological
studies
at
is
associate professor in the department of the-
Loyola Marymount University,
Los Angeles,
where he teaches comparative theology. He is a specialist in the area of Christianity and Japanese Buddhism, and is a member of the Los Angeles
Buddhist-Catholic
known Masao Abe graduate student
since
at the
1984
dialogue
when he
group.
has
Fredericks
Abe
studied with
as a
University of Chicago. His topic for his doc-
was the Kyoto School. Since that time, he has translated a series of Abe's more technical articles on the philosophy of Kitaro Nishida for the International Philosophical Quarterly, and has edited several of Abes papers. They have appeared frequently on panels together. Currently Fredericks is editing a book by Abe on toral research
the Kyoto School.
Ashok Gangadean
is
professor and chair of philosophy at Haverford
College where he has taught for the past twenty-nine years. first
He was
the
director of the Margaret Gest Center for Cross-Cultural Study of
Religion at Haverford, and has participated in
numerous
professional
conferences on interreligious dialogue and East-West comparative philosophy.
He
seeks to
embody
is
founder-director of the Global Dialogue Institute which the dialogical powers of global reason in
all
aspects of
His book, Meditative Reason: Toward Universal Grammar, attempts to open the way to global reason; and a companion volume, cultural
life.
Between Worlds: The Emergence of Global Reason, explores the dialogical common ground between diverse worlds. His forthcoming book. The Awakening of the Global Mind, further develops these themes for the general reader.
List of contributors
4-4-0
Langdon Gilkey was Theology
for
many
at the Divinity
years the Shailer
from the Japan Society
a grant
Mathews
Professor of
School of the University of Chicago. Through in the spring of 1976,
he was
a visiting
professor at Kyoto University. There he and his wife, Sonya Gilkey-
Weber, became friends with Masao Abe and participated under watchful but kind direction in zazen. This
an interest both
and
trip inspired
Naming
the
others
Gilkeys publications
Whirlwind and Society and the Sacred.
Habito completed
L. F.
among
with Buddhist thinkers such as Abe,
the philosophy of the Kyoto School.
in
include:
Ruben
in interchange
his
doctoral studies in
Buddhism
at
Tokyo
Tokyo (1978— 1989), Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist
University. After teaching at Sophia University in
he took
a position at
University, ty.
He
is
where he
is
now
professor of world religions and spirituali-
the author of Total Liberation: Zen Spirituality and the Social
Dimension, Healing Breath: Zen Spirituality for a Wounded Earth, Original
Enlightenment:
Tendai
Hongaku Doctrine and Japanese
Buddhism, as well as many other volumes
Steven Heine
is
in Japanese.
professor of religious studies at Florida International
University. His recent publications include
The Zen
Poetr)'
of Dogen,
Japan in Traditional and Postmodern Perspectives, and Dogen and the Koan Tradition. His current research is on the relation between philos-
ophy and
folklore in
John Hick was
Zen Buddhist koan
a colleague of
School, of which he
is
literature.
Masao Abes
now an
at the
Claremont Graduate
emeritus professor, and a
member
with
Abe of the International Buddhist-Christian Theological Encounter. The author of a number of books on the philosophy of religion, Hick is currently a fellow of the Institute for Advanced Research in the Humanities
at
the University of Birmingham, U.K.
He
gave the Gifford
Lectures in 1986—87, and received the Grawemeyer Award in Religion for the
book resulting from them,
entitled
An
Interpretation of Religion
in 1991.
Christopher Ives
is
associate professor of religion at the University of
Puget Sound. Author of Zen Awakening and Society, Ives edited Divine
Emptiness and Historical Fullness:
A
Buddhist-Jewish-Christian
Conversation with Masao Abe, and, with John B. Cobb,
The Emptying God:
A
scholarship focuses on Japanese relationship
Jr.,
co-edited
Buddhist Jewish-Christian Conversation. His
Buddhism and
between Buddhism and the
state in
ethics, especially the
Japanese
history.
^Ltst of contributors
Thomas
Kasulis
P.
4-4-1
professor of comparative studies in the humanities
is
Ohio State University, where he teaches courses in religious studies, philosophy, and East-Asian studies. He has written or edited five books, including Zen Action/Zen Person and Self as Body in Asian Theory and Practice, and published over three dozen articles in scholarly journals, books, and encyclopedias, including the article "Japanese at
Philosophy" for the forthcoming Routledge International Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
William
R.
LaFleur
Glossberg Term Pennsylvania.
He
is
professor of Japanese studies and the Joseph B.
Professor of Humanities
the
at
University
of
received degrees from the University of Michigan
He has taught at Princeton, U.C.L.A., He was the recipient of the Watsuji Tetsuro
and the University of Chicago. and Sophia University.
Prize for scholarship in 1989. His books include The Karma of Words: Buddhism and the Literature Arts in Medieval Japan, and Liquid Life: Abortion and Buddhism in Japan. He edited Masao Abe's Zen and Western Thought, and Dogen Studies.
Donald W. Mitchell at
is
professor of comparative philosophy of religion
Purdue University where
He
gram.
is
Studies, and associate editor of
Mitchell
is
also chair of the religious studies pro-
has been active in the its
Buddhist-Christian
Society for
journal, Buddhist-Christian Studies.
author of Spirituality and Emptiness: Tlae Dynamics of
Spiritual Life in
Buddhism and
Christianity,
and co-editor of The
Gethsemani Encounter: A Dialogue on the Spiritual Life by Buddhist and Christian Monastics.
Stephen Morris
graduated from Harvard's Program on Religion and
Education and taught
in various public schools in the
United States
and Japan. He also studied comparative philosophy and received his doctorate from the California Institute of Integral Studies. Today he lives
and writes
in
North
Billerica,
Massachusetts.
Harold H Oliver is professor emeritus of philosophical and comparat e theology and New Testament at Boston University School of Theology. i\
.
He
is
author of Relatedness: Essays
translator of Fritz Buri's
in
Metaphysics and Theology, and
The Buddha-Christ
as the
Tlie Religious Philosophy of the Kyoto School
Heinrich Ott has been successor
to Karl
and
Lord of the True
Self:
Christianity.
Barth as Ordinary Professor
Systematic Theology at Basel University since 1956.
He was
of
appointed
4-4-Z
of contributors
Li.st
chair of systemic theology at Basel University in 1962. Ott has
From 1979
to 1990,
Among
many
his
been a
vis-
Europe, the United States, and East Asia.
iting professor at universities in
Ott was also a
member
of the Swiss Parliament.
publications are books on Rudolf Bultmann, Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, and Martin Heidegger. His work in
ecumenism includes
Glaube und Behennen: Tin Beitrag zum kumenischen Dialog.
Wolfhart Pannenberg, Heidelberg,
Church
in
with
degree
doctor's
a
theology from
in
became an ordained minister of the Evangelical-Lutheran 1955, the same year he became dozent in the field of sys-
tematic theology at Heidelberg. In 1961, Pennenberg accepted the chair in systematic theology at the University of
visiting professor several times at
University of Chicago,
Mainz. Since 1963, he was universities, such as the
American
Harvard University, and the Claremont
Graduate School of Theology. In 1967, he accepted the chair in systematic theology at the University of Munich, where he also served as director of the Institute of until
he became
Ecumenical and Fundamental Theology
a professor emeritus in 1994.
Most
of Pannenberg's
publications are available in English, the most important of his Systematic Theology in three
Felix E. Prieto ed
many
is
Stephen C. Rowe at
Grand
now
retired
is
and
living in
Masao Abe
of the works of
them being
volumes. Spain where he has translat-
into Spanish.
professor and chair of the department of philosophy
Valley State University, and coordinator of the liberal studies
His
program.
books
previous
Rediscovering the West:
An
include
Leaving
and Returning,
Inquiry Into Nothingness and Relatedness,
and The Vision of William James
Richard
L.
Rubenstein is president and CEO of He is professor emeritus of religion
Bridgeport.
the University of at
Florida
State
University where he worked in the fields of theology and the history of religion.
Rubenstein
is
the author of eight books and editor of five
books. His most recent book
is
Contemporary Judaism. During visits to
Rubenstein has made fifteen
Japan, and has maintained a strong interest in Buddhism.
Arvind Sharma
received his early education in India, where he served in
Gujarat as an I.A.S. States,
After Auschwitz: History, Theology and
his career,
and obtained
cializing in
officer.
higher studies in the United
his doctorate in Sanskrit
Hinduism,
in Australia .at
He resumed
at
and Indian Studies, spe-
Harvard University. Sharma began
his career
the University of Queensland in Brisbane and also
-'
List of contributors
4-4-3
taught at the University of Sydney before moving to McGill University in iVIontreal,
Canada.
He
is
currently Birks Professor of Comparative
Religion in the faculty of religious studies at McGill.
Sharma
author of several books as well as the editor of a
on
religion,
and Our
Jeff M. Shore
trilogy
is
the
women and
Religions.
associate professor of English and
Zen Buddhism at the Hanazono University in Kyoto, Japan. Originally from Philadelphia, he has undertaken Zen study and practice for over twenty-five years, the last seventeen in Zen monasteries in Japan. Shore has translated, written, and lectured extensively on Zen Buddhism and the F.A.S. Society, and has edited the FAS Society is
Rinzai Zen-affiliated
Journal for the
Huston Smith
last fifteen years.
is
Thomas
Watson Professor
J.
of
and
Religion
Distinguished Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, Syracuse University. For fifteen years he
and
for a
Saint Louis.
gious
Most
studies,
include
was professor of philosophy at M.I.T., at Washington University in
decade before that he taught
recently he has served as visiting professor of
University of California,
The World's
Religions,
The
World's
Illustrated
Forgotten Truth, Reyond the Post-Modern Mind, and
reli-
His eight books
Berkeley.
Religions,
One Nation Under
God: The Triumph of the Native American Church.
Joel R. Smith
is
associate professor of philosophy at Skidmore College
Saratoga Springs,
New York. He
received degrees in religion and
losophy from Vanderbilt University. His work
phy of religion includes
articles
New York
comparative philoso-
comparing Nietzche and Nishitani, and
comparing Kierkegaard and Shinran. ber of the
in
in
in phi-
He
is
co-founder and board
mem-
State Independent College Consortium for Stud)
in India.
John
Smith is Clark Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Yale University. He is a past president of the American Philosophical E.
Association,
Eastern Division, and general editor emeritus of
Worlzs of Jonathan Edwards. His books include Experience
The
and God,
Purpose and Thought: The Meaning of Pragmatism, and Quasi-Religious:
Humanism, Marxism, Nationalism. Joan Stambaugh University of
is
professor of philosophy at Hunter College of the C
New
York.
She
is
author of Impermanence
and other works on comparative philosophy. She
numerous works by Martin Heidegger, including
is
On
is
it\
Buddha Nature
also translator ot
lime and Being.
4-4-4-
Valdo H. Viglielmo
List of contributors
received his advanced degrees from the department
of Far Eastern languages of Harvard University.
He
has specialized in
the field of Japanese literature and thought, with emphasis on the erature and thought of the
modern
lit-
and especially the philosotranslated numerous works by
period,
phy of the Kyoto School. He has also such authors as Soseki Natsume, Yasunari Kawabata, Kitaro Nishida, and Hajime Tanabe. He has taught at Harvard University and Princeton University as well as at Meiji Gakuin University, Tokyo University, Tokyo Women's Christian College, and International Christian University in Japan.
He
is
currently professor of Japanese
Hans Waldenfels
is
lit-
Manoa.
erature at the University of Hawai'i at
professor of fundamental theology, theology of non-
Christian religions, and philosophy of religion in the faculty of
Catholic theology, University of Bonn.
He
is
a
member
Roman
of the Society
of Jesus, and has twice been dean of the faculty at the University of
Bonn.
His
many
publications
include Absolute Nothingness:
Foundations for a Buddhist-Christian Dialogue.
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Religions in Japan,"
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SO
BibLCoarcipku
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in
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Concilium (April 1988): 41-60. 'Response
to
John Cobb," Buddhist Christian Studies
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(1988): 65-74.
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'Spirituality
and Liberation:
A
'The Concept of Self as Reflected in Zen Buddhist Literature,"
Wind
Bell XXII, no.
1
(spring 1988): 3-9. Spirituality
and Liberation:
A
Buddhist-Christian Conversation with Paul
Knitter,"
F.
Horizons 15, no. 2 (1988): 347-364.
'Dogens View on Time and Space," The Eastern Buddhist XXI, no. 2 (autumn 1988): 1-35.
The Problem
of Self-Centeredness as the Root-Source of
Human
Suffering," Japan-
ese Religions 15, no. 4 (July 1989): 15-25.
There
is
no
Common
Denominator
for
World
Religions:
The
Positive
Meaning
Negative Statement," The Journal of Ecumenical Studies 26, no. 1989): 72-81.
The Impact
my
of Dialogue with Christianity on
Buddhist Christian Studies
9,
1
of this
(winter
Self-understanding as a Buddhist,"
(1989): 62-70.
'God and Absolute Nothingness," Studies in
Interreligious Dialogue
1,
no.
1
(1991):
58-69. 'Nishitani Keiji 1900-1990,"
The Eastern Buddhist XXIV,
no. 2
(autumn 1991): 149-
152.
"Inverse Correspondence' in the Philosophy of Nishida:
The Emergence
of the
Notion," International Philosophical Quarterly XXXII, no. 3 (September 1992): 325-344.
'What 'Zen
is
Religion,"
The Eastern Buddhist XXV, no.l (spring 1992): 51-69.
Buddhism and Hasidism
—
Similarities
and Contrasts," Religious Traditions 15-
17 (1992-1994): 6-13.
'Response to Eugene B. Borowitz," Buddhist Christian Studies 13 (1993): 227-231.
Zen and Buddhism," The Eastern Buddhist XXVI
Two Types
,
no.
1
(spring 1993): 26-49.
of Unity and Religious Pluralism," The Eastern Buddhist XXVI, (autumn 1993): 76-85.
A
no. 2
Report on the 1993 Parliament of World Religions," The Eastern Buddhist XXVI, no. 2
(autumn 1993): 73-75.
--
BibLioaraphu
'Suffering in the Light of our Time,
4-
Our Time
51
in the Light of Suffering,"
The Eastern
Buddhist XXVII, no. 2 (Autumn 1994): 1-13.
The
Logic of Absolute Nothingness, as Expounded by Nishida Kitaro," The Eastern Buddhist XXVIII, no. 2 (autumn 1995): 167-174.
'The Problem of 'Inverse Correspondence' in the Philosophy of Nishida: Toward a Critical Understanding," International Philosophical Quarterly XXXV, no. 4 (December 1995): 419-436.
TRANSLATIONS Nishida Kitaro, "The Problem of Japanese Culture," trans, with Richard DeMartino, in Sources of the Japanese Tradition. NewYork: Columbia University Press, 1958, 350-365. Shin'ichi, "The Characteristics of Oriental Nothingness," trans, with Richard DeMartino, in Philosophical Studies of Japan 2 (1960): 65-97.
Hisamatsu
Dogen, Bendowa,
in
The Eastern Buddhist,
n.s. IV, no.
1
(May
Dogen, Shdbdgenzo Ikkamyouju, in The Eastern Buddhist,
1971): 124-157.
n.s.
IV,
no. 2 (October
1971): 108-118.'
Dogen, Shdbdgenzo Zenki and Shoji,
in
The Eastern Buddhist,
n.s. V, no.
1
(May
1972):
70-80.
Dogen, Shdbdgenzo Genjdkdan,
in
The Eastern Buddhist,
n.s. V, no. 2
(October 1972):
129-140.
Dogen, Shdbdgenzo Zazengi and Furkanzazengi, (Octouer 1973): 115-128. Dogen, Shdbdgenzo Sammai-d-Zammai,
in
in
The Eastern Buddhist,
The Eastern Buddhist,
n.s. VI, no. 2
n.s. VII, no.
1
(May
1974): 116-123.
Dogen, Shdbdgenzo Buddha-nature, Part I, (October 1975): 94-1 12; Part II, no. 2 (October 1976): 71-87. Kitaro Nishida,
An
in
The Eastern Buddhist,
IX, no.
1
(May
n.s. VIII, no. 2
1976): 87-105; Part
III, IX,
New
Haven:
Inquiry into the Good, trans, with Christopher A. Ives.
Yale University Press, 1990.
INDEX
Abba School, 136, 138, 139 Abe, Masao, on Awakening, 7, 9; on Dharma, 378; on education, 408409; on Emptiness, 92-100, 382384, 398-400, 401-402; on ethics, 71, 229-230, 316, 387, 390-391, 402-403; and F.A.S., 35-40, 406-
Blake, William, 158
Bohme, Jocob, 145 Eugene B., 189-190, Bragt, Jan van, 246 Borowitz,
Buri, Fritz, 220-231,
Chappell, David, 69
and Heidegger, 274-275, 278-282, 298-302, 400-401; on Hinduism, 403-404; and Hisamatsu, 4-7, 11-13, 20, 129, 362; on the Holocaust, 73, 98, 177-180, 189-195, 387-388; on James, 396-397; on jinen, 374-375; on kenosis, 52-55, 62, 72, 133-135, 380-381, 384, 389, 394; on Nishida, 260-268, 372-373, 378-379; and Pope John Paul II, 139, 381; and process thought, 66-68; and Pure Land Buddhism, 3-4, 5, 36, 68, 118; on Rahner, 394-395; and Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, 137, 139; on Tillich, 393-394; on Whitehead, 375-376; and Zen, 350-352, 405
Chih-i, 93, 341
group, see
The
International
Buddhist-Christian Theological
Encounter
392-393
Chan-jan, 93
407; and the Focolare, 135-138, 381
Abe-Cobb
191, 195
Ch'ing-yuan, 290, 385
Cobb, John
B.,
61,91,96, 117, 119,
128-129, 177, 194, 359,
Coda, Piero, 138-139 compassion, 99, 217-219, 238-240, 406 Confucianism, 316, 320, 323-325, 333 Dalai Lama, 149, 316, 322 Dallapiccola, Natalia, 138
deconstruction, 157, 158
DeMartino, Richard, 10, 14, 239 Dharma, 96-100, 344-346 Dilworth, David, 26, 29 Dogen, 79, 86, 226-227, 252-254, 261, 297-298, 301, 303, 339-343; on impermanence, 306-307; and Shinran, 337, 343-347; and Soto, 338; andTendai, 340-341
agape, 134-135, 153-160, 203, 204,
207, 236-238, 393-394 anxiety,
234-236
Augustine, 166
Awakening,
5, 7, 9, 57, 232, 238, 241, 244, 301, 340-341, 357,407
Balthasar;
Hans Urs von, 138
Barth, Karl, 152, 154, 155, 212, 223
Berthrong, John, 70
Eckhart, Meister, 145, 152, 154, 155,
367 Egan, Keith, 133 Emptiness, 42-47, 52-56, 92-100, 108113, 134, 244-245, 279-282, 304312, 358-360, 401-402; and Being, 284-295, 398-400; and compassion, 239-241. 406; and Dharma, 96-100, 378; and ethics, 215-219; and God,
J
4-5+ 144-150, 152-160, 201-210, 389;
•
and Holy Nothingness, 187-188, 387; and other religions, xix-xx; and unity, 382-384
ind ex Kung, Hans, 70,91, 128, 211-219, 390391 Kyoto School, 23, 32-34, 77-78, 90, 104, 106, 114, 119, 128, 130, 144,
163-164, 222, 225-226, 252-259,
FAS.
Society, 5, 129, 130, 168-169;
and Abe, xvi; 35-40, 336, 406-407, Fackenheim, Emil, 190, 195 Focolare, 135-138, 140 Fondi, Enzo, 138, 139
269, 296, 336
Lubich, Chiara, 136, 137, 381 Luther, Martin, 152, 200, 201,
great-doubt-mass, 16-17, 37, 57, 355
mahakaruna, see compassion Mitchell, Donald, 74, 192, 202, 371 Moltmann, Jurgen, 98
Heidegger, Martin, 152, 154, 161-162,
Nagarjuna, 44-45, 47
Great Death, 20, 50, 56-57, 349, 355
167, 274-275, 278-282, 297-302,
Niebuhr, Reinhold, 233
385,400-401 Hinduism, 148, 329-334, 403-404
Nietzsche, Friedrich, 153-160, 283,
Hisamatsu, Shin'ichi, 4-7, 11-13, 16-17,
Nishida, Kitaro, 77, 82, 252; and Abe,
357-358
and kenosis, 49-51; and the 105-114,311, 378-379; and pure experience, 4546, 263-268, 396-397; and national polity, 32-34, 372-373; and Western philosophy, 260-268
20, 35, 88, 117, 129, 136, 226, 246,
xv; 23;
255, 258, 297, 362, 406-407
logic of place, 46-48,
Holocaust, 73, 98, 132-133, 177-180, 189-193; and karma, 183-195, 387-
388
HuShih, 316 Hui-neng, 55 Hui-yuan, 319-221
Nishitani, Keiji, 47, 128, 130, 162-163;
on kenosis, 51; and Chiara Lubich, 136
Hung-jen, 47 Husserl,
Edmund, 263 other power,
4, 36,
245-247
Inada, Kenneth, 96 International Buddhist-Christian
Con-
ference, 118, 119-120, 128,220-221 International Buddhist-Christian Theological
Encounter,
xvii,
69-71, 73-74,
91, 117, 119, 124, 128, 130, 143,
242,329, 331, 356-357 Ives, Christopher,
71-72
James, William, 263-266, 306, 396-397 jinen, 51, 55-57,244, 374-375
Pannenberg, Wolfhart, 132, 199-210,
388-389 Parliament of the World's Religions,
211-212 Council
Pontifical
for Interreligious
Dialogue, 137, 139, 381
Pseudo-Dionysius, 133
Purdue Interfaith Project, xvii, 192, 354 Pure Land Buddhism, 4, 5, 36, 68, 71, 72, 133-135, 147, 226, 245-247; and Zen, 343-347
kabbalah, 178-180, 386 kenosis, 49-55, 62, 72, 94, 96, 132,
133-135, 367, 380-381; and compassion, 240; and Emptiness, 138-139,
Rahner, Karl, 94, 242-247 Rubenstein, Richard, 132-133, 178
Kobori, Nanrei, 130
245-247 138-139 Shinran, 147, 246, 337, 343-347
Kohlberg, Lawrence, 97
Shirieda, John, 139, 381
Kosen, Imakita, 41
Shotoku, Prince, 322-324
152-160, 201-210, 384, 395 koan, 18
self
power,
4, 36,
Servais, Jacques,
index Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies, xvii,
Trinity, 132,
134-135, 200, 204, 206-
207. 208-210
120
Socrates,
4-55
356
Soen, Shaku, 41-42 Staal, Frits,
Ueda, Shizuteru, 221, 231
331-332
suchness, 42-45, 50, 52, 55-56, 239, 293, 309, 311, 365,401
Suchocki, Marjorie, 131-132
Watsuji, Tetsuro, 77, 252
Whitehead, Alfred North, 67-68, 224225, 375-376
Sunyatd, see Emptiness
Suzuki, D.T.,
xii,
41, 43-44, 239, 252,
Yusa, Michiko, 33, 373
255,258, 316-317,402 Zen,
xii,
52, 143-144, 156, 177, 226; as
Takeda, Rvusei, 71
practiced by Abe, 6-7, 11-13; and
Takeuchi, Yoshinori, 24, 26, 315, 343 Tanabe, Hajime, 4, 23, 24, 77, 98, 252,
ethics,
296, 343
Tan
Luan, 147
394 Tokiwa, Gishin, 136
and non-thinking, 392; and the present moment, 365-368, 407; and Pure Land, 343-347; Rinzai and Soto, 339-343 logic of, 50;
practice, 168-170;
tathata, see suchness. Tillich, Paul, 119, 185,
215-219, 239, 390-391; and rights, 316-325, 402-403; interpreted by Abe, 350-352, 405;
human
232-241, 393-
L
BUDDHISM
".
.
.
who know Masao Abe have come
all of us
to recognize
.
.
.
the signatures of his distinguished career: sincerity, generosity, diligence,
and single-minded dedication
moving Zen Buddhism to
plumb
the
in
spirit
human
—from
and give
it
efforts
larger play
history.
the Foreword by
Masao Abe: A Zen Life of Dialogue life
mainstream of humanity's
into the
human
task of
to the
is
Huston Smith
a compilation of essays that cover the
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communicators of the twentieth century. Masao Abe has opened up logue between Japan and the West. in the
He
is
considered the leading living
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early mentor, as the foremost
Through
stories
and
a rich dia-
Zen
figure
T. Suzuki, his
exponent of Zen Buddhism in the West.
recollections, thirty-five leading intellectual figures
explore Abe's encounter with the West, including his
work on
interfaith
dialogue as a basis for world peace as well as his comparative philosophical scholarship over the past thirty years. This book
ordinary step ahead in the encounter between
"The contributors bring
to life the
is
a retrospective
Zen and
thought
and an extra-
the West.
and work
of one of
the greatest religious teachers of the contemporary world."
— Donald W. Mitchell at
Purdue University
is
a professor of comparative
in Indiana.
The Dynamics of Spiritual Life
Publishers Weekly
in
He
is
philosophy of religion
the author of Spirituality and Emptiness:
Buddhism and
Christianity.
U.S. $24.95
CHARLES Boston
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