Symbols, icons and stupas

Perrett, Roy W.

The British Journal of Aesthetics
Vol.36 No.4 (Oct 1996)
pp.432-438

COPYRIGHT 1996 Oxford University Press (UK)


            In a recent article Jane Duran has argued that the usual Western 
            historian's description of the Buddhist reliquary stupa in Indian 
            art as a psycho-cosmic symbol is problematic.(1) This is because our 
            notion of a symbol suggests that symbols are heavily conventional, 
            but such a claim about stupas is implausible in the Indian cultural 
            context. Nor should we say that the stupa is symbolic in an iconic 
            sense. Instead she proposes that a Langerian analysis which connects 
            the notion of the symbolic to notions of rite and play is more 
            fruitful for understanding both stupas and our notions of symbol and 
            symbolic. 
            While I agree that connecting the notion of the symbolic to notions 
            of ritual and play may indeed be useful, I shall argue that (pace 
            Duran) the more usual senses of symbol and icon can quite plausibly 
            be used of the Buddhist stupa. 
            First, some terminology. The term symbol is used in various ways in 
            the literature of aesthetics. I shall be using the term in the 
            familiar way it is used in classical semiotic theory. The locus 
            classicus here is, of course, Charles Sanders Peirce's theory of 
            signs. Peirce defines a sign as `something that stands to somebody 
            for something in some respect or capacity' (2.228).(2) In other 
            words, the signification relation is irreducibly triadic: its 
            characteristic form is `X interprets Y as Z' or `Y is a sign of Z to 
            X'. Peirce further divides the class of signs into three categories: 
            icons, indices and symbols. 
            An icon is `a sign which refers to the Object that it denotes merely 
            by virtue of characters of its own' (2.247). Such a sign is suited 
            to represent anything with the corresponding characters. Icons thus 
            isomorphically share properties with what they represent, often in a 
            useful fashion (as when a colour sample is an icon for the paint in 
            a particular tin, or a floorplan is an icon for a room). 
            An index is `a sign which refers to the Object that it denotes by 
            virtue of being really affected by that Object' (2.248). That is, 
            there is a dyadic `natural' relation between sign and object which 
            is independent of our practices of using the sign in certain ways. 
            Thus smoke is an index of fire, low barometric pressure is an index 
            of impending rain. 
            A symbol is `a sign which is constituted a sign merely or mainly by 
            the fact that it is used and understood as such' (2.307). Thus the 
            signs of the devanagari script are symbols for various sounds in the 
            Sanskrit language. The script does not exploit any resemblance 
            between the letters and the sounds, nor is there a `natural' causal 
            relation between the letters and the sounds. Instead there is a 
            general practice of using the script for this purpose and the 
            letters are symbols by virtue of this convention. 
            Duran does not define what she means by the terms symbol and icon. 
            However, her reason for opposing the usual description of stupas as 
            symbols is that the notion of a symbol requires that symbols are 
            heavily conventional, but that in ancient India both the time period 
            and level of literacy would have prevented such conventionalization 
            (pp. 67, 72). This claim seems to imply a notion of symbol that at 
            least overlaps with Peirce's with respect to the emphasis on the 
            conventionality of symbols. 
            Is Duran's argument here sound? I suggest it is not. Firstly, note 
            that the Peircean semiotic account of the general triadic nature of 
            signs entails that a sign is a sign for someone. Hence when we claim 
            that `Y is a sign of Z' we are really claiming that `Y is a sign of 
            Z for X'. But it is not necessary for the truth of our claim that 
            everyone understands Y to be a sign of Z. Instead when we make 
            claims about symbols we usually operate with contextually implicit 
            restrictions of scope. Thus when historians of ancient India claim 
            that the Buddhist stupas were symbols of certain complex 
            psychological and cosmic states, this claim cannot be refuted by the 
            rejoinder that large numbers of people of that period did not 
            understand them as such (any more than the claim that in ancient 
            India certain devanagari signs were symbols for certain Sanskrit 
            sounds can be refuted by the undoubted fact that very large numbers 
            of people of that period did not understand them as such). The 
            conventionality of symbols requires an established practice of some 
            sort, but not a universal practice. 
            Accordingly historians' claims about stupas as symbols are surely 
            supposed to be understood as claims of implicitly restricted scope 
            about the understanding of a, possibly quite small, class of 
            Buddhist practitioners (much as historians' claims about, say, the 
            symbolism of Gnosticism, Jewish Kabbalah or Sufi poetry are to be 
            understood as claims about the understanding of certain, possibly 
            quite small, groups of religious practitioners in the societies of 
            those periods, rather than as claims about the understanding of the 
            members of those societies in general). In other words, Duran's 
            claim that `[we] think of Western religious symbols as symbolic 
            because we assume that they will be understood by many or most 
            adults functioning within the culture' (p. 71) is far too strong. 
            Secondly, Duran supposes that the level of literacy in ancient India 
            would have precluded the availability to the general Buddhist 
            community of the conventions necessary for the stupas to function as 
            symbols for them: `We can hypothesize that literacy and acquaintance 
            with the more ramified parts of the Buddhist tradition would have a 
            great bearing on a supplicant's ability to make the relevant 
            associations, and there is no reason to believe that many would have 
            been so able' (p. 67). In fact this very dubious and unsupported 
            assertion shows little understanding of the importance of oral 
            traditions in India and of the historical situation that gave rise 
            to the building of the stupas and the growth of the cults associated 
            with them. 
            Although there existed writing systems in ancient India from before 
            the time of Asoka (c. 268-232 BCE), the oral tradition has always 
            been very much privileged over the written. Scribes in India have 
            had a low status and the texts they write are judged very 
            unreliable. The written word is valued only as a teaching aid for 
            those too dull to remember. Indeed the very act of writing is held 
            to be ritually polluting in a late Vedic text, where it is said that 
            a pupil should not recite the sacred Veda after eating meat, seeing 
            blood or a dead body, having intercourse or engaging in writing.(3) 
            Even when a considerable body of written texts emerges along the 
            way, these are only regarded as part of an essentially oral 
            tradition. In India it is this oral tradition that is held to embody 
            the pure transmission of knowledge, and even today access to 
            traditional knowledge of subjects like art, music, grammar or 
            philosophy is widely held to require a direct oral transmission from 
            master to pupil. 
            This general feature of Indian learning is also preserved in the 
            living Tibetan Buddhist tradition, which derives from Indian 
            Buddhism.(4) Furthermore, in Tibetan Buddhism (as in Indian Tantric 
            Buddhism) there are very complex visualization meditations that 
            require the practitioner's understanding of an intricate system of 
            symbols. Typically a practitioner's understanding of such symbols is 
            primarily due to an oral explanation by a lame. To be sure, there 
            are written texts explaining some of this symbolism, but these are 
            often deliberately incomplete in their details. Moreover, many 
            Tibetan Buddhist lay practitioners cannot read them anyway, either 
            because they are illiterate in classical Tibetan or because of the 
            scarcity of printed copies of the texts. Nevertheless these 
            practitioners have an excellent grasp of the symbolism involved in 
            their traditional Buddhist practices, which they are well able to 
            articulate orally. 
            These considerations about the primacy of the oral tradition in 
            India need to be coupled with what is known historically about the 
            growth of stupa worship in India.(5) Stupas were originally erected 
            after the death and cremation of Gautama Buddha in order to 
            accommodate his remains. During the early period of Buddhism 
            lay-persons made offerings to the Buddha's remains, but monks were 
            prohibited from concerning themselves with his funeral ceremonies. 
            Gradually the term stupa came to include not only such funerary 
            stupas, but also caityas or sacred sites where no relics were 
            enshrined. Following Asoka's conversion to Buddhism, stupa worship 
            spread throughout India and various sects apparently formed around 
            some of these stupas. 
            At first these stupas were constructed and administered by 
            lay-persons and were not affiliated with any of the monastic schools 
            or sects. Soon, however, stupas were also constructed within 
            monastic compounds and monks came to worship at them. But monks were 
            not permitted to live within the precincts of the stupa nor to 
            receive alms offered to the stupa. Thus the stupas became 
            economically independent institutions (despite monastic 
            counter-arguments that stupa offerings were of little karmic merit). 
            Subsequently groups of believers began to dwell around the stupas, 
            supporting themselves with the offerings made to these stupas. They 
            came to be regarded as independent religious specialists who 
            assisted pilgrims to the stupas, arranging lodgings for them and 
            instructing them in the practice of worship and the significance of 
            the carvings there. 
            These religious specialists were not ordained Buddhist monks 
            (bhiksus), though they resembled monks and nuns in the way they 
            served as leaders of orders, taught lay-persons and received alms 
            from them. They also engaged in strict religious practices. The 
            religious activities of these specialists were a crucial factor in 
            the development of Mahayana Buddhism, with its greater hospitality 
            to the aspirations of lay practitioners. Stupas came to be more than 
            objects of worship. They eventually became centres for a new class 
            of monastic Mahayana practitioners, with quarters for lay devotees 
            located nearby. The building of stupas, the carving of images, and 
            the worship and offerings made at stupas all became included within 
            the variety of practices leading to the attainment of the Mahayana 
            ideal of Buddhahood. 
            This close historical connection between the growth of stupa worship 
            and the laity, coupled with the primacy of the oral tradition in 
            India, means that there are actually very good grounds for supposing 
            that the conventions governing the symbolism of stupas would have 
            been widely understood in the ancient Indian Buddhist community, 
            notwithstanding the level of literacy. The religious specialists at 
            the stupas (many of whom in later times would have been literate) 
            would have orally instructed those many lay-persons whose alms 
            supported the specialists. The popularity of stupa worship in India 
            and the subsequent spread of the architectural form and its 
            associated practices throughout the Buddhist world suggest this 
            instruction was rather successful. 
            Duran's central argument from conventionality for supposing that it 
            is problematic to claim that stupas are symbols thus fails. What 
            about her rejection of the suggestion that stupas are icons? Her 
            argument here is less forthright. She says: `It does not make sense 
            to say that the stupa is symbolic in the flatter, more fully iconic 
            sense in which we so often use the term for European symbols, 
            because our knowledge of the culture indicates that the 
            relationships are more fluid' (p. 73). However, she also wants to 
            allow that `the fit between symbol and thing signified should at 
            least be somewhat iconic' (p. 71). 
            Although Duran does not develop her reasons here in any detail, her 
            ambivalence is easy to sympathize with. On the one hand, to say that 
            stupas are symbols seems to suggest that their relation to what they 
            signify is just conventional. But the fit between the stupa and the 
            psycho-cosmic states it signifies seems tighter than that. On the 
            other hand, to say that the stupa is an icon of such states seems to 
            suggest that the relation is entirely non-conventional and hence to 
            make the fit a bit too tight. 
            Perhaps we can at least blunt the first horn of this dilemma a 
            little by remembering that to say that a symbol is something with a 
            conventional significance does not imply that a symbol's 
            significance is simply decided by an arbitrary fiat. While it is 
            true that it is of the nature of a convention that it might have 
            been otherwise, it does not follow from this that conventions are 
            arbitrarily selected. As David Lewis has shown in some detail, 
            conventions are often adopted as solutions to recurrent problems 
            that can be modelled as game-theoretical coordination problems: like 
            which side of the road to drive on, or which language to adopt.(6) 
            The structure of such co-ordination problems sets quite specific 
            constraints on what will count as a solution; in this sense the 
            convention adopted as the solution is definitely not arbitrary. 
            Now even if the existence of such coordination problems is not 
            necessary for conventions, it is sufficient.(7) Moreover, the 
            practice of pictorial depiction arguably involves solving such a 
            co-ordination problem: the depictor wants her audience to recognize 
            both what her picture is of and that it is a picture, where these 
            two aims can only be achieved by performing a single complex 
            task.(8) The growth and adoption of pictorial conventions arise as 
            solutions to this co-ordination problem and in this sense these 
            conventions are not arbitrary. In so far as stupas are pictorial 
            symbols, they too utilize such non-arbitrary conventions. 
            But while this may alleviate some of our uneasiness about describing 
            stupas as symbols, it still does not go all the way. There remains a 
            strong temptation to regard stupas as more than merely conventional 
            (albeit non-arbitrary) signs. Surely the relation between the stupa 
            and what it is a sign of is supposed to be tighter than that, more 
            isomorphic. Historians like Rowland, for instance, tell us that even 
            the very groundplan of the stupa represents the cosmic structure and 
            that the pilgrim's circumambulation of the stupa mirrors the course 
            of both the sun and the Buddha's life.(9) In other words, is not the 
            stupa better described as an icon, rather than a symbol? 
            This suggestion has some plausibility. After all, at least according 
            to Peirce's semiotic, a floorplan is an icon for a room. When we use 
            a floorplan to study the properties of a room, we exploit a property 
            of the sign which it would have had even if its object had not 
            existed. This is possible because of an isomorphism between the plan 
            and the room: there is a correspondence between properties which 
            each could have had whatever the character of the other. A floorplan 
            can thus provide us with information about the room it plans. For 
            instance, given an understanding of the conventions of 
            representation and scale, measurements on the plan provide us with 
            information about the dimensions of the room. Similarly, the 
            groundplan of the stupa can provide us with knowledge about the 
            nature of the cosmos. 
            The worry about this suggestion, however, is that it seems to make 
            the relation between the stupa and what it signifies not 
            conventional enough. But in fact that difficulty only arises if we 
            are supposing that the stupa has to be a pure icon. In most sign 
            systems, all the signs are to some extent symbols. Take icons like 
            floorplans, for instance. It is only because there exists a general 
            practice of using floorplans that we are able to apply floorplans. 
            In this sense the floorplan is a sort of conventional symbol. 
            However, once we have a general convention that tells us how to use 
            the floorplan as an icon, we do not need a specific convention to 
            determine the meaning of each floorplan. While there may be some 
            highly conventional signs that involve no iconic or indexical 
            elements and hence are pure symbols, our usual examples of icons and 
            indices are not pure. Peirce certainly recognized this point and, as 
            was his wont, coined a neologism for it: `Any material image, as a 
            painting, is largely conventional in its mode of representation; but 
            in itself, without legend or label it may be called a hypoicon' 
            (2.276). 
            The stupa is, I suggest, such a `hypoicon', i.e. not a pure icon, 
            but a symbol with iconic features. As such it is at least partly 
            conventional. Interestingly it is this feature that provides a 
            context for understanding the importance of ritual practice in 
            inculcating an understanding of the general conventions which govern 
            the use of such a sign. It is well recognized that the stupas were 
            constructed so that the pilgrim's circumambulation of the stupa 
            should provide an experience which mirrored the passage to 
            Buddhahood. That is, the pilgrim's ritual practice deliberately 
            symbolically re-enacted the course taken by the Buddha, locating 
            this within the cosmos.(10) This mimetic practice, doubtless guided 
            by the religious specialists resident at the stupa, thus provided a 
            way of initiating practitioners into the general conventions 
            governing the symbolism of the stupa. Thus initiated, the 
            practitioners were themselves able to utilize the stupa's iconic 
            features. 
            I conclude, then, that the customary description of the Buddhist 
            stupa as a symbol is not so very problematic. However, perhaps the 
            most accurate description (at least in the terminology of Peirce's 
            semiotic) is that the stupa is a `hypoicon', i.e. a (semiotically) 
            impure icon that is also a symbol. 
            Roy W. Perrett, Philosophy Department, Massey University, Palmerston 
            North, New Zealand 
            NOTES 
            (1) Jane Duran, `The Stupa in Indian Art: Symbols and the Symbolic', 
            British Journal of Aesthetics, Vol. 36, No. 1(January 1996), pp 
            66-74. The description of stupas as `symbols' is a commonplace among 
            historians of Indian art and religion. Duran cites Benjamin 
            Rowland's well known The Art and Architecture of India (Baltimore: 
            Penguin, 1967) in this respect. Two further representative titles 
            may serve as indices of a general trend: Lama Anagarika Govinda, 
            Psycho-cosmic Symbolism of the Buddhist Stupa (Emeryville: Dharma, 
            1976) and Adrian Snodgrass, The Symbolism of the Stupa (Ithaca: 
            Southeast Asia Program, Cornell University, 1985). 
            (2) Charles Sanders Peirce, Collected Papers (Cambridge, Mass.: 
            Harvard U. P., 1965). I follow custom and cite references to this 
            work by volume and paragraph number (thus 2.228 for Vol. 2, pare. 
            228). There is a very large secondary literature on Peirce. 
            Personally I have found Christopher Hookway's Peirce (London: 
            Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1985) particularly useful. 
            (3) Aitreya Aranyaka 5.5.3 as quoted in Frits Staal, `The Concept of 
            Scripture in the Indian Tradition', in Mark Juergensmeyer and Gerald 
            Barrier (eds), Sikh Studies (Berkeley: Berkeley Religious Studies 
            Series, 1979), pp. 122-123. On the primacy of the oral in the Indian 
            religious traditions, see also William A. Graham, Beyond the Written 
            Word (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987), Chap. 6; and 
            Harold Coward, Sacred Word and Sacred Texts (Maryknoll: Orbis, 
            1988). 
            (4) For a perceptive discussion of some aspects of the oral 
            tradition in Tibetan Buddhism, see Anne Carolyn Klein, Path to the 
            Middle: Oral Madhyamika Philosophy in Tibet (Albany: State 
            University of New York Press, 1994), 99. 1-28. 
            (5) A seminal article here is Hirakawa Akira, `The Rise of Mahayana 
            Buddhism and its Relationship to the Worship of Stupas', Memoirs of 
            the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko, Vol. 22 (1963), pp. 
            57-106. For further references, see his A History of Indian Buddhism 
            from Sakyamuni to Early Mahayana (Honolulu: University of Hawaii 
            Press, 1990), pp. 339 340. 
            (6) David K. Lewis, Convention: A Philosophical Study (Cambridge, 
            Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1969). 
            (7) For the claim that recurrent co-ordination problems are not 
            necessary for the development of conventions, see Stephen R. 
            Schiffer, Meaning (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972), pp. 151-152. 
            (8) For an extended argument to this effect, see David Novitz, 
            Pictures and Their Use in Communication (The Hague: Martinus 
            Nijhoff, 1977), Chap 2. 
            (9) Rowland, pp. 50-51 (as cited in Duran, pp. 66 67). 
            (10) The most spectacular example of this sort of phenomenon. 
            however, is not actually located in India. It is the stupendous, 
            multi-levelled Buddhist monument at Borobudur in Java (alluded to by 
            Duran on p. 72). Of this Dietrich Seckel writes: `Borobudur has 
            rightly been called a psychophysical pilgrim's path: the terraces 
            lead the pilgrim through the different cosmic spheres, levels of 
            apprehension, and stages of redemption. It is an initiation course 
            into the Buddhist faith, executed in stone' [The Art of Buddhism 
            (New York: Crown, 1964), p. 132] 
            My thanks to Peter Lamarque for his useful editorial advice.