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WŏNhyo’s Approach to Harmonization of the Mahayana Doctrines (Hwajaeng)
Author Muller, A. Charles
Source Acta Koreana
Volumev.18 n.1
Date2015.06.15
Pages9 - 44
PublisherAcademia Koreana, Keimyung University
Publisher Url http://actakoreana.kmu.ac.kr/
LocationDaegu, South Korea [大邱, 韓國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
KeywordWŏnhyo; harmonization; hwajaeng; doctrinal classification; two truths; faith; essence-function
AbstractWŏnhyo (617–686) is known to the world as Korea’s leading Buddhist thinker and scriptural commentator, mainly due to his numerous exegeses and treatises that attempted to sort out the plethora of new Buddhist ideas generated in the fifth through seventh centuries in East Asia—ideas produced both through the continued influx of newly translated Indian texts, as well as the rapid appearance of fresh East Asian interpretations of the Buddhist doctrine. Wŏnhyo is especially noted for being the only scholar among the great East Asian commentators who had neither sectarian affiliation nor took a sectarian-based approach in the interpretation of Buddhist doctrines. Thus, the privileging of a specific sectarian approach was for Wŏnhyo impossible, since he saw each of the various doctrinal streams of Buddhism as representing a distinct but valid piece of the vast Mahāyāna system—as true as any other piece, but not to be seen as some kind of “ultimate” doctrine. Wonhyo’s method—known as hwajaeng 和諍 (“harmonization”)—is characterized by the juxtaposing of two or more divergent theoretical positions, comparing them, and clarifying their distinctive assumptions and aims. Once these assumptions are properly apprehended, what on the surface appear to be contradictory opinions are shown to be commensurate with each other from a deeper perspective. This article examines in detail the range of motivations, method-ologies, and approaches seen in Wonhyo’s hwajaeng project. Wonhyo’s approach will be examined in terms of three general aspects, which straddle the range of doctrinal/ scholastic, logical/philosophical, and religious, with the religious showing at least three levels of profundity.
Table of contents1. INTRODUCTION 10
(1) Lost in Translation 10
(2) Not doing p’an’gyo 12
2. APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF HAWAJAENG 13
3. WŎNHYO’S WRITINGS, LOGIC, AND MODES OF INQUIRY 17
4. PHILOLOGICAL ANALYSIS: TERMINOLOGICAL BASES FOR HWAJAENG 20
5. PARADIGMATIC BASES FOR WŎNHYO’S PERSPECTIVE OF HARMONIZATION 29
(1) The One Mind 29
(2) Two Truths 31
6. HARMONIZATION, FAITH, AND DISTANCE FROM LANGUAGE 34
(1) Linguistic hwajaeng and non-linguistic hwajaeng 34
(2) Non-conceptual faith as the final destination 36
REFERENCES 41
1. Modern Works 41
2. Wŏnhyo’s Works Cited 42
3. General Classical Sources 43
4. Abbreviations 44

ISSN15207412 (P)
Hits196
Created date2017.02.24
Modified date2019.11.15



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