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What Dies? Xuanzang on the Temporality of Physical and Mental Functionality
著者 Brewster, Ernest Billings (著)
掲載誌 International Journal of Buddhist Thought & Culture=국제불교문화사상사학회
巻号v.33 n.2 Special Focus
出版年月日2023.12
ページ17 - 56
出版者International Association for Buddhist Thought and Culture
出版サイト http://iabtc.org/
出版地Seoul, Korea [首爾, 韓國]
資料の種類期刊論文=Journal Article
言語英文=English
ノートAuthor Affiliation: Rutgers University, USA.
キーワードBiological death; Dying; Mortality; Psychophysical faculties; No-self; Soul
抄録This paper examines the ancient Buddhist investigations into the nature of mortality found within the corpus of Xuanzang (ca. 602–664 CE), the prolific Buddhist scholar-monk of the Tang Dynasty. Upon his celebrated return to his native China in 645 CE, Xuanzang produced a voluminous body of work including retranslations and translations made available in Chinese for the first time, as well as original exegesis of numerous Indic Abhidharma and Yogācāra Buddhist treatises that develop the fundamental tenet of “no-self.” The Buddhist tenet of no-self holds that an individual sentient being is not distinguished by an unchanging “self,” soul, or essence that deserts the body at the time of biological death, traverses the afterlife, and becomes reincarnated in association with a new gross physical body. The tenet of no-self, however, raises thorny questions regarding the nature of survival and mortality: What accounts for the survivability of an individual sentient being? What is death? This paper presents the argumentation put forth in Xuanzang’s corpus in support of the Buddhist doctrine that neither survivability nor dying and death involves a soul or a self. The Abhidharma and Yogācāra works translated into Chinese by Xuanzang propose that death occurs with the terminal disintegration of the “faculties,” the embodied mental and physical powers that sustain “sentient life” (Skt. sattva; Ch. youqing 有情) in conjunction with a body, rather than with the disembodiment of a self, soul, or spiritual substance. Developments in the Buddhist theory of faculties presented not only in his translation of Indic works, but also in his original compilation, the Cheng weishi lun, advance innovative accounts of the survivability and mortality of a sentient being that are harmonious with the core Buddhist tenet of no-self.
目次Abstract 18
Introduction 19
Survival: "Faculties" (Indriyā i) and Corresponding Aggregates Sustain All Sentient Life 22
On the Etymology of the Word Indriya 27
Mortality: The Deterioration of the Faculties Results in Dying and Death 35
Conclusion 41
Abbreviations 53
References 53
ISSN15987914 (P)
DOI10.16893/IJBTC.2023.06.33.2.17
ヒット数9
作成日2024.04.04
更新日期2024.04.04



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