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The Yoga of Dying: Xuanzang on the Nature of Death
Author Brewster, Ernest B.
Date2018
Pages479
PublisherHarvard University
Publisher Url https://www.harvard.edu/
LocationCambridge, MA, US [劍橋, 麻薩諸塞州, 美國]
Content type博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
Language英文=English
Degreedoctor
InstitutionHarvard University
DepartmentEast Asian Languages and Civilizations
AdvisorRobson, James; Abe, Ryuichi; Patil, Parimal
Publication year2018
KeywordDying; Death; Consciousness; Abhidharma
AbstractThis study reclaims the investigation undertaken by Xuanzang (602-667 C.E.) 玄奘, the translator and peripatetic scholar-monk of the Tang Dynasty, and his translation team, into the nature of dying. It conforms to the chronology of the translation and exegesis of the Buddhist texts, including the ancient Āgamas, the recorded discourses of the Buddha, the Mahāvibhāṣa, the Great Abhidharma Commentary, and the foundational works of the subsequent Abhidharma and Yogācāra scholars, undertaken by Xuanzang, and his coterie of scholars and translators, from 645 to 660 C.E. In his comprehensive analyses and translations of the Indic texts on dying, and in his compilation, Demonstration of Consciousness-only, Xuanzang examines the Buddhist teachings on no-self, karma, and reincarnation. In his analysis of the scriptures, he attempts to reconcile the core commitments to the Buddhist doctrines of karma and reincarnation with the tenet of no-self. With the Buddhist theory of the indriyas, attested in the ancient Āgamas, Xuanzang determines that no enduring or permanent self is lost in dying. The corpus of Abhidharma and Yogācāra Buddhist texts translated by Xuanzang and his coterie describes how, by cultivating the skillful indriyas, the spiritual faculties of sentient life, the karma of a sentient being can be improved, as well as the quality of dying and the afterlife. This study uses a source criticism research methodology to investigate the contributions made by Xuanzang on the subject of dying without a self. It finds that within their exegeses and translations of the Abhidharma and Yogācāra texts, Xuanzang and his collaborators, restore the Buddhist tenets of no-self, karma, and reincarnation, and provide the doctrinal basis for deathbed rituals that are practiced across East Asia today.
Table of contentsIntroduction 1
Chapter 1: What is Death? 15
Section One: What are the Essential Components of Life? 15
Section Two: Staying Alive Through the Cooperation of Faculties 87
Chapter 2: Xuanzang on Karma and the Faculties 107
Section One:Xuanzang's Analysis of the Brahmanical and Buddhist Theories on the Faculties and Karma 110
Section Two: Xuanzang's Redefinition of Dying on Terms of the Faculties 273
Chapter Three: Xuanzang on the Karma Quality of Dying: The Good, the Bad, and the Karmically Neutral 321
Section One: On the Roles of Merits and Karma in the Quality of Dying 325
Section Two: On Dying Well with Merit and Yoga 339
Section Three: Three Karmic Valences of the Mind in the Dying Sentient Being: Good, Bad, and Neutral 361
Section Four: Overcoming the Fear of Dying 371
Chapter Four: On Dying the Pious Death 395
Conclusion: On Dying and Rebirth Without a Self 455
Appendix 1 462
Primary Sources 463
Secondary References 466
Hits402
Created date2021.12.11
Modified date2022.05.18



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