Recent years have seen heightened interest in the ritual, juridical, and generally practical aspects of the Buddhist tradition. The contributions to Rules of Engagement build on this trend while venturing beyond the established boundaries of discourse in specialized academic disciplines, presenting state-of-the-art research on the vinaya in all of its breadth and depth. They do so not only by tracing Buddhist textual traditions but also by showcasing the vast variety of practices that are the object of such regulations and throw a new light on the social implications such protocols have had in South, Central, and East Asia.
目次
Foreword 7 Introduction 9
I Identifying the Rules of Engagement 1.Sanskrit Fragments from Eastern Turkestan, Xinjiang, corresponding to the Śaikṣadharma Section of the Shisong-lü: Pelliot Sanskrit Rouge 10.1–6 & Bleu 44, Bibliothèque nationale de France 27 2.A Glimpse into the Tocharian Vinaya texts Pan Tao 67 3.Faxian and the Transmission of Vinayas to China Bangwei Wang 93 4.A Survey of Vinaya Texts on Novice Precepts Preserved in Tibetan Cuilian Liu 111
II Assessing Relationships Between Traditions of Regulation 5.Medieval Japanese Tendai Views of the Precepts 137 6.The Creation of Monastic Codes and the Gradual Transformation of Medieval Chinese Buddhist Monasticism 163 7.The Doctrinal Evolution of Formless Precepts in the Early Chan Tradition: The Theory of Mind Purification in the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra and the Brahmā’s Net Sūtra 197
III Investigating the Implementation of Individual Regulations 8.Legislating Consent: Dispute, Accord, and the Vote in Early Indian Monasticisms 225 9.Pāṃśukūlika as a Standard Practice in the Vinaya 269 10.Analytical Study of the Monks’ pācittiya 波逸提 Rules 317 11.The Theravāda Vinaya and Bhikkhunī Ordination 333 12.Atonement of Pārājika Transgressions in Fifth-Century Chinese Buddhism 369
IV Exploring Communities of Vinaya-Related Practice 13.The Transformation of the Formless Precepts in the platform Sūtra (Liuzu tanjing 六祖壇經) 411 14.A Missing Page in Sui-Tang Vinaya History: Zhishou and the Vinaya Tradition Based on the Great Chanding Monastery in Chang’an 451 15.Can Monks Practice Astrology? Astrology and the Vinaya in China 503