125 lines
7.4 KiB
Plaintext
125 lines
7.4 KiB
Plaintext
This document can be acquired from a sub-directory coombspapers via anonymous
|
|
FTP and COOMBSQUEST gopher on the node COOMBS.ANU.EDU.AU
|
|
|
|
The document's ftp filename and the full directory path are given in the
|
|
coombspapers top level INDEX file.
|
|
|
|
Date of the document's last update/modification 03/09/93
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------
|
|
HISTORICAL ROOTS OF ZEN
|
|
original filename: zenisnot.txt
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
This file is the work of Stan Rosenthal. It has been placed here, with his kind
|
|
permission, by Bill Fear. The author has asked that no hard copies, ie. paper
|
|
copies, are made.
|
|
|
|
Stan Rosenthal may be contacted at 44 High street, St. Davids, Pembrokeshire,
|
|
Dyfed, Wales, UK. Bill Fear may be contacted at 29 Blackweir Terrace, Cathays,
|
|
Cardiff, South Glamorgan, Wales, UK. Tel (0222) 228858 email fear@thor.cf.ac.uk.
|
|
Please use email as first method of contact, if possible. Messages can be sent
|
|
to Stan Rosenthal via the above email address - they will be forwarded on in
|
|
person by myself - B.F.
|
|
|
|
NOTE:
|
|
You may find and odd sentence or missing information every now and again in
|
|
the files. Hopefully not to frequently. This is because the files were
|
|
originally written on a machine using CP/M and had to be converted to dos
|
|
format. Many of the 5.25 disks were very old and had bad sectors - thus missing
|
|
info.
|
|
................................Beginning of file...............................
|
|
|
|
|
|
Much has already been written of Zen from within a Buddhist context, but Zen
|
|
itself is not the prerogative of any specific religious group, even though in
|
|
its modern form, a large proportion of its practitioners are drawn from
|
|
followers of the Buddha, Guatarma Siddhartha. Historically of course, Zen
|
|
probably owes its major debt to its Buddhist practitioners for their
|
|
systemization of its concepts, and even more than this, it must be remembered
|
|
that the founder, or first codefier of Zen, The Boddhidharma, was also the
|
|
twenty-eighth Buddhist patriarch in direct teaching descent from the Buddha
|
|
himself.
|
|
|
|
However, in any serious discussion of Zen, we must also recall that something
|
|
relating to the development of Zen did occur during the four hundred years
|
|
prior to 526 CE, when the Boddhidharma arrived in the Shao-lin Temple in the
|
|
Hohan Province of Northern China, to codefy Zen practice during his prolonged
|
|
meditation, now know as 'the nine years before the wall'. What occurred during
|
|
the four hundred year period preceding the arrival of the Boddhidharma in China
|
|
was that following the establishment of Shao-lin as a major, and possibly the
|
|
first, Buddhist Temple in China in 100 CE, there was a considerable dialogue
|
|
between the Buddhist monks who inhabited the temple, and many of the people who
|
|
were indiginous to the area, and who called themselves Taoists; a fact which is
|
|
hardly surprising considering that the temple was previously a Taoist retreat.
|
|
|
|
At this point, it will probably help to clarify a number of issues if we
|
|
understand that even by 100 CE there has developed two forms of Taoism, the
|
|
earliest Tao-chia, being philosophical Taoism based upon Yin Yang theory as
|
|
explained in the esoteric theory of 'changes' ('I Ching') and in the later work,
|
|
'the Way of Virtue' ('Tao Te Ching') by the philosopher Lao Tzu who lived
|
|
towards the end of the Period of the Warring States (c 600 BCE). The later
|
|
form of Taoism known as Tao-chiao, although based upon its philosophical
|
|
precedessor, was practiced as a religion rather than a philosophy, and made
|
|
considerable use of both shamanistic and mystical religious practices,
|
|
bordering on the occult, and by 100 CE the followers of religious Taoism far
|
|
outnumbered the philosophical Taoists.
|
|
|
|
It is probable that by the beginning of the Christian era in the West, the
|
|
philosophical Taoists had lost their influence, and continued their work only
|
|
in remote regions, far from the large cities and seats of government. We know
|
|
with certainty that by this time religious Taoism held considerable influence
|
|
in what was, by now, the Chinese kingdom or empire. It was to the remote
|
|
provinces that the remaining followers of philosophical Taoism had travelled,
|
|
and so it probably was that it was in such areas as these that the dislohur
|
|
between Mahayana Buddhism and Taoist Philospphy began. It was the Buddhist
|
|
monks, practising the compassion for which many Buddhist sects are stil
|
|
reknowned, who gave succour to the 'exiled' Taoist philosphers, who in turn
|
|
shared their knowledge with their Buddhist benefactors.
|
|
|
|
So it is that it is now believed that on his arrival at Shao-lin, the
|
|
Boddhidharma found something quite foreign to the Indian practice of Buddhism,
|
|
strange but not alien. It was to prove to be the Boddhidharma's undertaking to
|
|
codify the synergized practices he discovered, but even scant knowledge of the
|
|
life of the Buddha himself provides a clue as to why the philosophy of Taoism
|
|
would not have been completely foreign to the Boddhidharma, and would certainly
|
|
not have been unknown to the Buddha himself.
|
|
|
|
It is well documented that the Prince, Guattama Siddhartha, spent many years as
|
|
a peripatetic seeker prior to his enlightenment, and many of his conversations
|
|
with 'wise men' are described in detail. Since trade had taken place between
|
|
China and India for many hundreds of years before the birth of the Buddha,
|
|
trade routes were of course well established, and it is more than likely that
|
|
young seeker would have used such routes, not only as a means of travel, but
|
|
also in order to meet with strangers to his own land. As it the case even
|
|
today, much can be learned about foreign ideas, philosophies and customs
|
|
through trading in artifacts, and many goods are decorated with the symbols
|
|
indiginous to their place of origin. With such a brilliant intellect as we
|
|
know Guttama Siddhartha possessed, it is indeed unlikely that he would not have
|
|
learned of 'Yin Yang' theory, upon which Taoist philosophy is based. Zen
|
|
Buddhist scholars themselves acknowledge many instances in which Buddhist ideas
|
|
are concommitant with those of Taoist philosophy, but there will probably
|
|
always be an element of disagreement regarding which school of thought borrowed
|
|
most from the other.
|
|
|
|
All this is not to deny the Buddhist element in any form of Zen, but only to
|
|
illustrate that Zen is not wholly Buddhist, nor wholly Taoist. For many Zen
|
|
practitioners there is indeed no dichotomy, nor any need for distinction. But
|
|
it is only fair to all concerned to point out that to many non-Zen Buddhists
|
|
even Zen Buddhism is a heresy and to state that many Buddhists belonging to
|
|
non Zen sects, time and energy spent in Zen practice is considered to be of
|
|
little or no significance. For their own part, many Zen practitioners consider
|
|
their orthodox Buddhist bretheren to be 'brothers in spirit', but are
|
|
disapproving towards the hierarchical rigor with which their more orthodox
|
|
brothers consider the Buddhist deities, and with which the orthodox Buddhist
|
|
institutions are organized.
|
|
|
|
I am fully aware that I have not described what Zen is, but have hopefully
|
|
illustrated that whatever it is, it is not orthodox, not essentially a religion,
|
|
and not specifically Indian. It is possibly necessary to provide one more
|
|
negation, and this is that contrary to much public opinion in the Europe and
|
|
the USA, Zen is most certainly not Japanese in origin.
|
|
|
|
...................................End of file..................................
|
|
|
|
|