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Naturalness in Zen and Shin Buddhism: Before and Beyond Self- and Other-Power
著者 Davis, Bret W.
掲載誌 Contemporary Buddhism: An Interdisciplinary Journal
巻号v.15 n.2
出版年月日2014.11
ページ433 - 447
出版者Routledge
出版サイト https://www.routledge.com/
出版地Abingdon, UK [阿賓登, 英國]
資料の種類期刊論文=Journal Article
言語英文=English
ノートBret W. Davis is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University Maryland. He received his PhD in philosophy from Vanderbilt University and has spent 13 years studying and teaching in Japan, during which time he studied Buddhist thought at Otani University and completed the coursework for a second PhD in Japanese philosophy at Kyoto University. He has been a JSPS Postdoctoral Research Fellow and later Visiting Scholar at Kyoto University, and a DAAD Visiting Scholar at the University of Freiburg. He is the author of Heidegger and the Will: On the Way to Gelassenheit (Northwestern University Press, 2007); translator of Martin Heidegger's Country Path Conversations (Indiana University Press, 2010); editor of Martin Heidegger: Key Concepts (Acumen, 2010); co-editor with Brian Schroeder and Jason M. Wirth of Japanese and Continental Philosophy: Conversations with the Kyoto School (Indiana University Press, 2011); and co-editor with Fujita Masakatsu of Sekai no naka no Nihon no tetsugaku [Japanese Philosophy in the World] (Showado, 2005). His many articles written in English and in Japanese on continental, Japanese, East Asian Buddhist, and comparative philosophy include “Zen after Zarathustra” in Journal of Nietzsche Studies, “The Kyoto School” in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, and two chapters on Japanese philosophy in The Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy. He is a head editor of Indiana University Press's series in World Philosophies. Among his current projects are two monographs on Zen and the Kyoto School and The Oxford Handbook of Japanese Philosophy. For more information, see http://www.loyola.edu/academics/philosophy/faculty/davis.html. Address: Department of Philosophy, Loyola University Maryland, 4501 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD 21210 USA. E-mail:
キーワードBuddhist Doctrines; Zen Buddhism; Shin Buddhists; Buddha (The Concept); Buddhism & Culture
抄録This article seeks to clarify the fundamental similarities and differences between the two most prominent forms of Buddhism in Japan: Zen and Shin (or True Pure Land School) Buddhism. While proponents of Zen typically criticize Shin for seeking the Buddha outside the self, rather than as one's ‘true self’ or ‘original face’, proponents of Shin typically criticize Zen for relying of ‘self-power’, which they understand as inevitably a form of ‘ego-power’, rather than entrusting oneself to the ‘Other-power’ of Amida Buddha. Yet Zen and Shin in fact share some deep commonalities: not only do they both characterize the ultimate ‘Dharma-body’ of the Buddha as ‘emptiness’ or ‘formlessness’, they also both speak of the enlightened state issuing from a realization of this Dharma-body in terms of ‘naturalness’. While attending to the significant differences between the Zen and Shin approaches to this enlightened state of naturalness, this article also pursues the most radical indications of both schools which suggest that this naturalness itself ultimately lies before and beyond both self- and Other-power.
目次Shinran’s path through Other-power to naturalness 435
The paradox of an absolute Other-power 437
Beyond self- and Other-power in Zen and Shin 439
Zen’s true self and self-forgetting 440
The persistence of a provisional Other-power in Shin 442
Notes 443
References 445
ISSN14639947 (P); 14767953 (E)
DOI10.1080/14639947.2014.935258
ヒット数126
作成日2015.11.11
更新日期2017.07.17



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