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The Story of Buddhism: A Concise Guide to Its History & Teachings
Author Lopez, Donald Sewell, Jr.
Date2002.08.20
Pages288
PublisherHarperOne
Publisher Url http://www.harpercollins.com
LocationNew York, NY, US [紐約, 紐約州, 美國]
Content type書籍=Book
Language英文=English
Keyword三寶=The Three Jewels; 佛教人物=Buddhist; 佛教宗派=Buddhist Sects=Buddhist Schools; 佛教哲學=Buddhist Doctrines=Buddhist Philosophy; 佛教教義=Buddhist Doctrines=Buddhist Teachings; 剃度=出家=Ordination; 修行方法=修行法門=Practice; 道場生活=寺院生活=Monasticism=Monastic Life=Community Life
AbstractWritten by a renowned Buddhologist, The Story of Buddhism is a sophisticated overview, particularly emphasising Buddhism's diversity in practice. In his introduction Lopez summarises approaches to his task that he has opted not to follow. He does not, for instance, give a philosophical account of the evolution of Buddhist doctrines nor attempt to present a coherent historical narrative. He points out that writing a single book called The Story of Buddhism would, until recently, not have been a very 'Buddhist' undertaking. For there have been many times and places when particular Buddhist schools have found each other mutually unintelligible in both their theory and practice.

This is a salutary thought, since Buddhism is often regarded as a single world. Lopez doesn't so much reject this claim as show the problematic nature of demonstrating in what the unity of Buddhism consists. Not only, says Lopez, is Buddhism always changing but the actual process of characterising and reviewing Buddhism changes it. So, while aspiring to avoid the errors and prejudices of the past, he recognises that his work is a product of a time when scholarly interest has begun to focus more on Buddhist practice than on Buddhist philosophy; more on the local manifestations of Buddhist themes than on global overviews; and more on ritual than on doctrine.

Primarily, Lopez approaches Buddhism 'as a religion to which ordinary people have turned over the centuries for the means to confront, control, or even escape the exigencies of life'. The task he sets himself is to describe the various activities in which Buddhists have engaged with reference to their doctrinal background, rather than to evaluate their credibility.

Refreshingly, the book is organised according to a traditional Buddhist teaching: the Three Jewels. The first chapter signals the approach that is to follow by offering an overview of Buddhist cosmology, a subject often glossed over by accounts of Buddhism that present the subject historically. Already we are invited to perceive the Buddha and the development of his teachings within a mythic-imaginative rather than a purely historical framework. This enables Lopez to give an account of the Buddha that takes 'magical' events as seriously as 'historical' ones. The Buddha is presented as much as a mythic personality as an historical individual. Thus Lopez takes traditional Buddhist understandings of who the Buddha was and how he is to be appreciated as seriously as critical-historical approaches.

In examining the Buddha, Lopez introduces not only what are regarded as the main teachings of the historical Buddha but also the concept of different 'bodies', and this enables him to introduce the archetypal Buddhas as found within the Mahayana traditions, and the Tibetan Buddhist practice of tulku succession. Thus he shows how a fundamental theme of Buddhism - the Buddha - evolved and manifested in different ways within different Buddhist traditions.

In approaching the Dharma section, Lopez concentrates on the problem of how the Buddha's teaching is to be determined and interpreted - rather than giving an account of the 'main' Buddhist teachings. He shows that claiming a certain teaching to be authentically 'Buddhist' is not at all straightforward; he characterises Buddhist teaching as a dialogue - sometimes amicable, sometimes aggressive - that has evolved over many centuries. Rather than assume the authority of any particular teachings, he presents what at times seem bewilderingly inconsistent doctrines and practices as all worthy of serious attention.

His account of the Sangha covers monasticism and lay practice, including many engaging stories, not a few of which show Buddhism in practice to be just as degenerate and doctrinally inconsistent as medieval Christianity. For instance, he notes the practice of 'posthumous ordination' in Japan, where - for a fee - a deceased person may be ordained as a monk, a ce
ISBN9780060099275
Hits2065
Created date2008.08.04
Modified date2008.08.04



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