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Changing the Way Society Changes: Transposing Social Activism into a Dramatic Key
Author Hershock, Peter D.
Source Journal of Buddhist Ethics
Volumev.6
Date1999
Pages154 - 181
PublisherDepartment of History & Religious Studies Program , The Pennsylvania State University
Publisher Url https://history.la.psu.edu/
LocationUniversity Park, PA, US
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NotePeter D. Hershock, East-West Center, Asian Studies Development Program.
AbstractWhile many Buddhists are rightly committed to working in the public sphere for the resolution of suffering, there are very real incompatibilities between the axiomatic concepts and strategic biases of (the dominant strands of) both current human rights discourse and social activism and such core Buddhist practices as seeing all things as interdependent, impermanent, empty, and karmically configured. Indeed, the almost startling successes of social activism have been ironic, hinging on its strategic and conceptual indebtedness to core values shared with the technological and ideological forces that have sponsored its own necessity. The above-mentioned Buddhist practices provide a way around the critical blind spot instituted by the marriage of Western rationalism, a technological bias toward control, and the axiomatic status of individual human being, displaying the limits of social activism’s institutional approach to change and opening concrete possibilities for a dramatically Buddhist approach to changing the way societies change.
Table of contentsCaution on the Tracks: Recognizing the Possibility of Technological Barriers to the Meaning of Social Change 156
Social Activist Strategy: Legally Leveraging Institutional Change 160
Giving up the Ghost and the Machine: A Buddhist Critique of the Technologies of Autonomous Selfhood 162
Emptiness as Horizonless Interconnection and Mutual Relevance: Freeing Ourselves from the Ideal of Factual Autonomy and the Costs of Dramatic Anonymity 165
Activism in Buddhist Perspective: The Disparate Karma of Social and Societal Strategies 168
Opening the Borders: Taking Responsibility for What Society Means 175
Notes 179
Works Cited 180
ISSN10769005 (E)
Hits197
Created date2014.07.21
Modified date2017.07.10



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