Reading Notes by Lisa Blasch, edited by Mark Unno
Zhuangzi and Shinran
Part One - Zhuangzi
Zhuangzi portrays the Tao not as a way which human beings must strive
to follow, but rather as a kind of natural virtue which is inherent
in all things and expressed by them in a distinctly individualized
manner. For this reason, the patterns of life are dynamically
interconnected and always in a condition of transition. Human beings,
however, have a tendency to parse out the world in which they are
embedded into opposing dualities in order to understand its meaning
and the place they inhabit within this scheme. This produces a world
of suffering and preoccupation with meaningless trivialities. To
counteract this tendency, Zhuangzi constantly attempts to undermine
the distinction between the appearance of the world as we construct
it and the world as it is. However, this produces a tension: we can
neither make the world into that which we wish it to be, nor can we
assume that it can be known outside a human perspective. I will
discuss the relation between heaven (Nature) and humankind in order
to throw Zhuangzi's view of the self into relief.
Heaven (Nature, Cosmos) and Human Beings
Because Zhuangzi is suspicious of all dualities, that of the
distinction between the natural world (cosmos) and humanity is
another which must be dispensed with. Still, because human beings can
lose sight of the way, this means that there is not automatically no
difference whatsoever. If this were true, nothing that we did could
fall outside the sphere of the way, and Zhuangzi would be a
relativist. Instead, for Zhuangzi, human beings seem to be of both
worlds at once. This explains how we can simultaneously be unified
with the Tao and separated from it.
In one sense, we are composed of as well as limited by the natural
particularity of our life and our social context. As CT explains,
once we are born with a form, we tend to withdraw ourselves from the
world by adhering to the 'little understanding'; by clinging to
purely conventional forms of judgement which distill the self from
the surrounding world and encourage it to recognize nothing beyond
its immediate and particular interests. The beliefs that we have a
self-contained identity which separates us from that to which we are
non-identical, and that good and evil are mutually dependent, both
conceptually and ontologically, are delusions which occur when we
mistakenly parse out the world into distinctly isolated 'pieces,' and
then manufacture abstract concepts with which to identify and relate
them to one another and to ourselves. When we go a step further and
insist that conceptual abstractions such as 'self' and 'other'
actually correspond directly to the real and separate identities of
what is revealed in experience, we have lost touch with the substance
of what is actually real, the spontaneous self-expression of
infinite potentiality: the Tao.
So, human ignorance, error and suffering are all perpetuated by our
tendency to be conceptually discriminating. Instead of exhausting
ourselves chasing after selfish desires and transitory ends according
to the values we see expressed in the society around us, we should
recognize the way in which our particularity and finite capacities
are made possible through the self-expression of the world, and free
ourselves to act accordingly. For this reason Zhuangzi recommends
giving up a life of abstract conceptualization in favor of a mystical
form of spontaneity in which no false intellectualizing can take
place. Thus the Taoist sage finds herself in a state of natural
harmony once she has given up the little understanding in favor of
the great. She neither strives to control the future nor becomes
obsessive about the past because she is free from the attachments
produced by ignorant invention. In her radical spontaneity, each new
moment provides an opportunity for the Tao to manifest itself through
her actions. She is one particular moment of its human
expression.
Still, the self which is spontaneous is not an unthinking self. It is
not that knowledge of ourselves and our universe is impossible, but
that it must transcend naïve realism and the bad faith which are
all too common in our approach to living. I vividly recall a point
about Zhuangzi's notion of subjective agency from an Eastern
philosophy class I helped teach a couple of years ago (Levi). As I
recall, human beings become subjective agents the moment they give up
distinguishing themselves as wholly other from the force which moves
through them. This seems like a paradoxical conclusion, to say that I
become a self the moment I make the choice to give my self up.
However, thinking of the point in other terms helps clear things up.
We are all of us natural creatures, given over to certain needs, ends
and capacities in the same way all other natural things are. At the
same time, my agency is required in order to assist this process
&endash; I must eat, clothe myself and choose to live in ways
which are harmonious with whatever surrounds me if I am to see my
life through to its end. So, my individual agency is an important
factor in the persistence of my natural life.
Questions:
Question 1: Zhuangzi cannot be saying that the self is pre-social,
right? Given that we are dispensing with conceptual distinctions,
Zhuangzi's point seems to be a reminder that human beings are
creatures who are born, live and die in a natural world
interpenetrated with culture, and whose lives are subject to the
contingencies of growth and decay as a unified process. Human beings
are made possible via natural AND cultural processes, so when he
describes enlightenment as accepting the Tao as the source of one's
own being, doesn't that entail accepting culture as well? If so, what
would this mean?
Question 2: I understand that Zhuangzi is advocating a rejection of
the Confucian separation of the Tao into that of humanity and that of
the cosmos. However, given the rejection of this dichotomy, does the
Tao move through culture? If so, is it right to speak of achieving
the enlightened self as an ethical practice? Such a practice would
clearly recognize no standards for right and wrong behavior but
instead would be something like a virtuous disposition, prompting us
to do whatever action would achieve or maintain integration between
ourselves and the world around us. Is this accurate? Is there
more?
Part Two -- Shinran
The similarities between Zhuangzi and Shinran's teachings are
so striking to me that I believe I am having trouble differentiating
them. It seems to me that if one substitutes the Buddha of
Immeasurable Light for the Tao, one has much the same appraisal of
the origin of human suffering, the nature of the world and the
possibility for liberation. Like Zhuangzi, Shinran is concerned with
liberating the self from a world of suffering. While Zhuangzi
discusses suffering in terms of a process of perceiving the world as
a collection of objects which serve as means to further
individualized interests, Shinran explains suffering as our natural
tendency as finite creatures to strive for relief from the burdens of
life's transitoriness. Both ask us to embody the reality which
underlies all appearances. While Zhaungzi criticizes the human
tendency to be conceptually discriminating by describing the Tao as
an infinite self-expression of life-force, Shinran describes the
buddha-nature as the co-originating interdependence of a dynamic
absolute reality. Perhaps the most significant distinction I can
locate between the Shin text of the Tannisho and Zhuangzi
concerns the ethical impact of liberation. Shinran's description of
the unity of liberation with compassion in the condition of
enlightenment appears to be a conclusion that Zhuangzi does not hold.
I will briefly explore enlightenment as the condition of manifesting
absolute reality in order to throw compassion into relief, and then
proceed to my question.
Editors Notes:
There is a concept that Zhuangzi and Shinran share, pronounced
tzu-jan in Chinese and jinen in Japanese. Roughly
translated, it means “becoming so.” Shinran, however,
gives this concept a slightly different meaning, saying that it
signifies “made to become so.” “So” in this
case refers to the thing in itself; a tree becoming so means a tree
becomes itself as an expression of the Tao or the Way of Nature. It
indicates spontaneity. Human beings spontaneously become themselves
in light of the Tao. This spontaneity is an expression of the natural
or spontaneous unfolding of the Tao. Shinran states that human beings
are made or led to become so by Amida Buddha. This difference is due
to the fact that Shinran sees human beings as unable to be
spontaneously in accord with the unfolding of the cosmos, or Amida
Buddha, literally “the awakening of infinite light.”
Human beings, trapped by their own karmic evil, are unable to be
spontaneously one with the infinite light of awakening. Instead, they
must be made or led to become so.
Liberation, Enlightenment and Compassion
The process of liberation hinges upon overcoming limitations in the
practice of manifesting absolute reality. The human condition is
marked by delusions of selfhood and egoistic desires, reinforced by
the reciproal causality of karma. Even though our finitude makes us
fallible in this way, our existence is sustained by the infinite
compassion of Amida Buddha, and this makes it possible for us to
progress from selfish egoists to enlightened beings. When one has
attained a condition of Enlightenment, the experience of the nature
of reality &endash; and thus dependent origination and the
principle of Karma &endash; brings with it wisdom and a powerful
capacity for compassion for the world because it is also
Buddha-nature. However, this is not a life of religious devotion,
since this would reinstantiate the conceptual dichotomies associated
with human limitation. Instead, the transformation involves a kind of
reconstitution of the entire subject-object relationship, a denial of
their duality, not simply a recognition of their interdependence but
an embodiment of it.
Buddha-nature as absolute reality is dynamic rather than static, and
its self-expression includes the arising and passing away of all
sentient beings. Insofar as these sentient beings are manifestions of
Absolute Reality, they constitute its self-expression, are in
explicit existential unity with one another, and have value by means
of their participation in this dynamic process. Therefore, according
to the doctrine of non-self, all that we are and accomplish is
ultimately the active, dynamic expression of Absolute Reality,
including expressing ourselves toward the other sentient beings who
are also its manifestation. In the process of enlightenment, the
person achieving liberation is simultaneously reconnected to all
beings at once. The saying of the nembutsu, Namu Amida Butsu,
involves opening oneself up to the “Other Power”
dynamically manifested in one's own being. The “deep hearing of
the Dharma” is not an intellectual or propositional matter, but
a process in which one's whole being becomes awakened to the
infinite, dynamic unity of the cosmos. In this process, the force of
compassion transforms all accumulated negative karma into enlightened
being, in which no substantial distinction between oneself and others
exists. One becomes a particular moment in the unfolding of Other
Power, thereby indissolubly linked to the fate of all other karmic
beings.
For this reason, (it appears to me) that one actually embodies
compassion insofar as one is an expression of absolute reality,
because one is undeniably bound to those who continue to suffer.
While he or she does not escape samsara, the enlightened person is
karmically transformed into a manifestation of the infinite
compassion of Amida Buddha &endash; he or she expresses the
possibility for all others to achieve the salvation of authentic
selfhood. At the end of life, this person attains complete buddhahood
by being born into the Pure Land; however, this also does not mean
escaping samsara. Because Amida Buddha's nature is always of
transformation, after achieving enlightenment this person returns to
the world to work for the enlightenment of others.
Question:
The upshot of this seems to be that morality is a matter of Absolute
Reality relating to itself according the karmic principle of
indefinite reciprocal causality. The element of spontaneity suggests
that virtuous behavior motivated by compassion will be performed with
perfect immediacy. Is the practice of goodness by the enlightened
person the authentic spontaneous manifestation of Buddha-nature
itself? If so, what becomes of moral reasoning?