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Difference between revisions of "Nichiren Buddhism and Empowerment"

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Yoichi Kawada, director of The {{Wiki|Institute of Oriental Philosophy}}, {{Wiki|Tokyo}}
 
Yoichi Kawada, director of The {{Wiki|Institute of Oriental Philosophy}}, {{Wiki|Tokyo}}
  
(August 26, 1999, at the  American [[Psychological]] Association Convention, {{Wiki|Boston}}, {{Wiki|USA}})
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(August 26, 1999, at the  [[American]] [[Psychological]] Association Convention, {{Wiki|Boston}}, {{Wiki|USA}})
  
[[Nichiren]] is the 13th-century {{Wiki|Japanese}} [[Buddhist]] [[teacher]] whose teachings inspire the activities of the SGI. In this paper I would like to explore areas of [[contact]] between [[Nichiren Buddhism]] and the idea of [[self]]-[[empowerment]].
+
[[Nichiren]] is the 13th-century {{Wiki|Japanese}} [[Buddhist]] [[teacher]] whose teachings inspire the [[activities]] of the [[SGI]]. In this paper I would like to explore areas of [[contact]] between [[Nichiren Buddhism]] and the [[idea]] of [[self]]-[[empowerment]].
  
[[Nichiren]] himself was thoroughly versed in the [[intellectual]] history of [[Buddhism]]. His understanding was rooted in the [[Sutras]] recording the teachings of [[Shakyamuni]], and drew from the theories and {{Wiki|exegeses}} of the [[Indian]] [[scholars]] [[Nagarjuna]] (c. 2-3 century C.E.), [[Vasubandhu]] (5th-century C.E.), the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] [[T'ien T'ai]] School, and {{Wiki|Japan}}'s [[Saicho]] (8th-century C.E.). Thus, in discussing [[empowerment]], I will start by exploring points of [[contact]] between modern Western [[psychology]] and the "[[eight consciousness]]" theories developed by [[Nagarjuna]] and [[Vasubandhu]], and adopted and developed by [[T'ien T'ai]] and [[Nichiren]].
+
[[Nichiren]] himself was thoroughly versed in the [[intellectual]] history of [[Buddhism]]. His [[understanding]] was rooted in the [[Sutras]] recording the teachings of [[Shakyamuni]], and drew from the theories and {{Wiki|exegeses}} of the [[Indian]] [[scholars]] [[Nagarjuna]] (c. 2-3 century C.E.), [[Vasubandhu]] (5th-century C.E.), the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] [[T'ien T'ai]] School, and {{Wiki|Japan}}'s [[Saicho]] (8th-century C.E.). Thus, in discussing [[empowerment]], I will start by exploring points of [[contact]] between {{Wiki|modern}} [[Western]] [[psychology]] and the "[[eight consciousness]]" theories developed by [[Nagarjuna]] and [[Vasubandhu]], and adopted and developed by [[T'ien T'ai]] and [[Nichiren]].
  
It was the historian Arnold Toynbee who said that the two great discoveries of this century were the [[theory of relativity]] in the [[realm]] of {{Wiki|physics}} and the work of uncovering the [[unconscious]] in the [[realm]] of [[psychology]]. He further remarked that the discovery of the [[unconscious]] revealed that each individual is in fact a cosmos, a [[universe]].
+
It was the historian Arnold Toynbee who said that the two great discoveries of this century were the [[theory of relativity]] in the [[realm]] of {{Wiki|physics}} and the work of uncovering the [[unconscious]] in the [[realm]] of [[psychology]]. He further remarked that the discovery of the [[unconscious]] revealed that each {{Wiki|individual}} is in fact a [[cosmos]], a [[universe]].
  
Credit for the discovery of the [[unconscious]] in Western [[psychology]] goes to {{Wiki|Freud}}, whose work was followed by {{Wiki|Adler}}, {{Wiki|Jung}}, {{Wiki|Maslow}} and others, who have dramatically extended our exploration of the [[psychic]] cosmos.
+
Credit for the discovery of the [[unconscious]] in [[Western]] [[psychology]] goes to {{Wiki|Freud}}, whose work was followed by {{Wiki|Adler}}, {{Wiki|Jung}}, {{Wiki|Maslow}} and others, who have dramatically extended our exploration of the [[psychic]] [[cosmos]].
  
In the East some 2,500 years ago, [[Shakyamuni]], widely known as the [[Buddha]], creatively adapted and recast the ancient [[philosophy]] of the {{Wiki|Upanishads}} as he developed his own [[philosophy]]. His [[awakening]] as he [[meditated]] beneath the [[bodhi tree]] may be considered a {{Wiki|seminal}} event, a critical moment, in Eastern [[psychology]]. This [[awakening]] started with his insights into his own [[unconscious]] and expanded to illuminate a vast [[psychic]] cosmos.
+
In the [[East]] some 2,500 years ago, [[Shakyamuni]], widely known as the [[Buddha]], creatively adapted and recast the [[ancient]] [[philosophy]] of the {{Wiki|Upanishads}} as he developed his [[own]] [[philosophy]]. His [[awakening]] as he [[meditated]] beneath the [[bodhi tree]] may be considered a {{Wiki|seminal}} event, a critical [[moment]], in Eastern [[psychology]]. This [[awakening]] started with his [[insights]] into his [[own]] [[unconscious]] and expanded to [[illuminate]] a vast [[psychic]] [[cosmos]].
  
 
[[File:Nichiren 225 n.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Nichiren 225 n.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
  
His exploration of his inner [[world]], this inner cosmos, moved beyond the individual level, deepening eventually to include all humankind. He continued to explore the bounds of selfhood, from commonality of all living things, to those depth [[realms]] where the [[self]] is fused with the [[Earth]], the {{Wiki|solar system}} and the entire [[universe]]. He finally [[awakened]] to the fundamental [[wisdom]] of [[life]], the [[life]] of the [[universe]] itself, which gives rise to all [[phenomena]] as they evolve in harmonious unity with the [[psychic]] cosmos.
+
His exploration of his inner [[world]], this inner [[cosmos]], moved beyond the {{Wiki|individual}} level, deepening eventually to include all humankind. He continued to explore the bounds of [[selfhood]], from commonality of all living things, to those depth [[realms]] where the [[self]] is fused with the [[Earth]], the {{Wiki|solar system}} and the entire [[universe]]. He finally [[awakened]] to the fundamental [[wisdom]] of [[life]], the [[life]] of the [[universe]] itself, which gives rise to all [[phenomena]] as they evolve in harmonious {{Wiki|unity}} with the [[psychic]] [[cosmos]].
  
Later practitioners would refer to the cosmic [[life-force to which [[Shakyamuni]] [[awakened]] as the [[Buddha-nature]]. They would explore means and methods of practice by which all [[people]] can manifest the vast [[energy]], [[dignity]] and [[wisdom]] of this [[life]]-state; methods, in other words , of [[self]]-[[empowerment]].
+
Later practitioners would refer to the [[cosmic]] [[life-force to which [[Shakyamuni]] [[awakened]] as the [[Buddha-nature]]. They would explore means and [[methods]] of practice by which all [[people]] can [[manifest]] the vast [[energy]], [[dignity]] and [[wisdom]] of this [[life]]-[[state]]; [[methods]], in other words , of [[self]]-[[empowerment]].
  
 
'''A Three-Layered Structure of [[Consciousness]]'''
 
'''A Three-Layered Structure of [[Consciousness]]'''
  
Here I would like to give a brief outline of the [[eight consciousness]] teaching that forms an important basis of [[Buddhist psychology]].
+
Here I would like to give a brief outline of the [[eight consciousness]] [[teaching]] that [[forms]] an important basis of [[Buddhist psychology]].
  
The word that is translated as [[consciousness]] is the [[Sanskrit]] [[vijñana]], which indicates a wide range of activities include [[sensation]], cognition, affect and [[conscious]] [[thought]]. [[Vijñana]] can be [[thought]] of referring to the entire [[psychic]] cosmos.
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The [[word]] that is translated as [[consciousness]] is the [[Sanskrit]] [[vijñana]], which indicates a wide range of [[activities]] include [[sensation]], [[cognition]], affect and [[conscious]] [[thought]]. [[Vijñana]] can be [[thought]] of referring to the entire [[psychic]] [[cosmos]].
  
 
According to the [[Yogacara School]], [[vijñana]] comprises three layers:
 
According to the [[Yogacara School]], [[vijñana]] comprises three layers:
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2) the [[mano consciousness]]; and
 
2) the [[mano consciousness]]; and
  
3) the [[alaya consciousness]], with the [[alaya]] being regarded as the most core, or fundamental site of [[psychological]] activity.
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3) the [[alaya consciousness]], with the [[alaya]] being regarded as the most core, or fundamental site of [[psychological]] [[activity]].
  
In other words, the content of the [[alaya]] layer makes it [[self]] known, and becomes manifest, in the activities of the [[mano]] layer, as well as in the [[five senses]] and the waking [[consciousness]]. Conversely, the activities of the more superficial layers are inscribed in the depths of the [[alaya consciousness]]. There is thus a constant and intimate interaction between the different layers of [[consciousness]].
+
In other words, the content of the [[alaya]] layer makes it [[self]] known, and becomes [[manifest]], in the [[activities]] of the [[mano]] layer, as well as in the [[five senses]] and the waking [[consciousness]]. Conversely, the [[activities]] of the more [[superficial]] layers are inscribed in the depths of the [[alaya consciousness]]. There is thus a [[constant]] and intimate interaction between the different layers of [[consciousness]].
  
 
[[File:Nichiren calms.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Nichiren calms.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
  
It should also be clarified at this point that the [[alaya consciousness]] should not simply be understood in an {{Wiki|ontological}} [[sense]], as existing, but as embracing a {{Wiki|cognitive}} and even an [[ethical]] dimension.
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It should also be clarified at this point that the [[alaya consciousness]] should not simply be understood in an {{Wiki|ontological}} [[sense]], as [[existing]], but as embracing a {{Wiki|cognitive}} and even an [[ethical]] [[dimension]].
  
The [[mano]] and [[alaya]] layers of [[consciousness]] in many [[senses]] correspond to the individual and collective [[unconscious]] in Jungian [[psychology]].
+
The [[mano]] and [[alaya]] layers of [[consciousness]] in many [[senses]] correspond to the {{Wiki|individual}} and collective [[unconscious]] in {{Wiki|Jungian}} [[psychology]].
  
I would like first to look at the [[mano consciousness]], which is described as emerging from the [[alaya consciousness]] and as being focused in its "[[attention]]" on the [[alaya consciousness]].
+
I would like first to look at the [[mano consciousness]], which is described as [[emerging]] from the [[alaya consciousness]] and as being focused in its "[[attention]]" on the [[alaya consciousness]].
  
In this [[sense]], the [[mano]] layer can be understood as the seat of the most basic [[consciousness]] of [[self]]. The [[Sanskrit]] verb from which this derives is [[manas]], meaning to think or to consider. Thus the [[mano consciousness]] is always [[thinking]] about, considering, and in fact reifying the [[alaya consciousness]] of the individual, which it perceives as something unique and isolated from other things. It is from this strong [[attachment]], or [[clinging]], to a reified [[alaya consciousness]] that [[mano consciousness]] generates the [[sense]] of a limited, isolated [[self]] referred to in [[Buddhism]] as the lesser [[self]].
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In this [[sense]], the [[mano]] layer can be understood as the seat of the most basic [[consciousness]] of [[self]]. The [[Sanskrit]] verb from which this derives is [[manas]], meaning to think or to consider. Thus the [[mano consciousness]] is always [[thinking]] about, considering, and in fact reifying the [[alaya consciousness]] of the {{Wiki|individual}}, which it [[perceives]] as something unique and isolated from other things. It is from this strong [[attachment]], or [[clinging]], to a reified [[alaya consciousness]] that [[mano consciousness]] generates the [[sense]] of a limited, isolated [[self]] referred to in [[Buddhism]] as the lesser [[self]].
  
When the [[mano consciousness]] functions in this manner it gives rise to a series of powerful [[delusions]] that manifest in the other, more immediate layers of [[perception]] and [[consciousness]] as [[attachment]] to and {{Wiki|pride}} in this proscribed [[sense]] of selfhood. The [[delusion]] that the reified [[alaya]] [[conscious]] is one's true [[self]] is identified with [[fundamental ignorance]], a turning away from the [[truth]] of the interconnectedness of all being. It is this [[sense]] of one's [[self]] as separate and isolated from others that gives rise to discrimination against others, to destructive [[arrogance]] and acquisitiveness.
+
When the [[mano consciousness]] functions in this manner it gives rise to a series of powerful [[delusions]] that [[manifest]] in the other, more immediate layers of [[perception]] and [[consciousness]] as [[attachment]] to and {{Wiki|pride}} in this proscribed [[sense]] of [[selfhood]]. The [[delusion]] that the reified [[alaya]] [[conscious]] is one's true [[self]] is identified with [[fundamental ignorance]], a turning away from the [[truth]] of the interconnectedness of all being. It is this [[sense]] of one's [[self]] as separate and isolated from others that gives rise to {{Wiki|discrimination}} against others, to {{Wiki|destructive}} [[arrogance]] and acquisitiveness.
  
The lesser [[self]] is deeply insecure, and vacillates between [[feelings]] of superiority and inferiority with regard to others; in the pursuit of its own fulfillment, the lesser [[self]] will unthinkingly harm or wound others. When the [[mano consciousness]] is filled with these [[delusions]] about the nature of the [[self]], they give rise to a whole series of [[delusions]] that the early [[Buddhist]] took great [[pains]] to name, number and classify, but which I will omit here in the interest of time. Suffice it to say that the [[mano consciousness]] functions to create a strong [[sense]] of disjunction between [[self]] and others and to generate discriminatory attitudes towards those we [[experience]] as "other."
+
The lesser [[self]] is deeply insecure, and vacillates between [[feelings]] of {{Wiki|superiority}} and {{Wiki|inferiority}} with regard to others; in the pursuit of its [[own]] fulfillment, the lesser [[self]] will unthinkingly harm or wound others. When the [[mano consciousness]] is filled with these [[delusions]] about the [[nature]] of the [[self]], they give rise to a whole series of [[delusions]] that the early [[Buddhist]] took great [[pains]] to [[name]], number and classify, but which I will omit here in the [[interest]] of time. Suffice it to say that the [[mano consciousness]] functions to create a strong [[sense]] of {{Wiki|disjunction}} between [[self]] and others and to generate discriminatory attitudes towards those we [[experience]] as "other."
  
 
[[File:768ew.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:768ew.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
  
'''Characteristics of the [[Alaya Consciousness]]'''.
+
'''[[Characteristics]] of the [[Alaya Consciousness]]'''.
  
In the [[Trimsika-vijnapti]], [[Vasubandhu]] ascribes the following characteristics to the [[alaya consciousness]]. First, it is not obscured by [[delusion]] and is morally neutral, that is, it is equally receptive to the [[karmic]] imprint of both negative and positive [[causes]]. Next, it is extremely dynamic; its flow is compared to that of a raging torrent. In [[Sanskrit]] the word [[alaya]] means to [[store]], and it is in this [[consciousness]] that the latent [[causes]], often described metaphorically as seeds, are retained.
+
In the [[Trimsika-vijnapti]], [[Vasubandhu]] ascribes the following [[characteristics]] to the [[alaya consciousness]]. First, it is not obscured by [[delusion]] and is {{Wiki|morally}} [[neutral]], that is, it is equally receptive to the [[karmic]] imprint of both negative and positive [[causes]]. Next, it is extremely dynamic; its flow is compared to that of a [[raging]] torrent. In [[Sanskrit]] the [[word]] [[alaya]] means to [[store]], and it is in this [[consciousness]] that the latent [[causes]], often described {{Wiki|metaphorically}} as [[seeds]], are retained.
  
[[Karma]] is, of course, a basic concept in [[Buddhism]]. It posits that our [[thoughts]], words and deeds (whether [[conscious]] or in the [[unconscious]] [[realm]] of the [[mano]] layer) invariably exert an influence that is impressed or imprinted into the deepest layers of [[life]], the [[alaya consciousness]]. When they encounter the right enabling conditions, these latent [[causes]], or [[karmic]] seeds, become manifest as the functions of the [[mano]] or other more superficial layers of [[consciousness]].
+
[[Karma]] is, of course, a basic {{Wiki|concept}} in [[Buddhism]]. It posits that our [[thoughts]], words and [[deeds]] (whether [[conscious]] or in the [[unconscious]] [[realm]] of the [[mano]] layer) invariably exert an influence that is impressed or imprinted into the deepest layers of [[life]], the [[alaya consciousness]]. When they encounter the right enabling [[conditions]], these latent [[causes]], or [[karmic]] [[seeds]], become [[manifest]] as the functions of the [[mano]] or other more [[superficial]] layers of [[consciousness]].
  
These [[karmic]] seeds can be either positive or negative. Positive latent [[causes]] become manifest in positive [[psychological]] functions such as [[trust]], [[non-violence]], [[self]]-control, [[compassion]] and [[wisdom]]. Negative latent [[causes]] become manifest as various forms of [[delusion]] and destructive behavior. In this [[sense]] the functioning of the [[alaya consciousness]] can be understood as prior to that of [[delusions]]; it is not stained or influenced by them. It remains neutral and equally receptive to either type of [[karmic]] imprinting.
+
These [[karmic]] [[seeds]] can be either positive or negative. Positive latent [[causes]] become [[manifest]] in positive [[psychological]] functions such as [[trust]], [[non-violence]], [[self]]-control, [[compassion]] and [[wisdom]]. Negative latent [[causes]] become [[manifest]] as various [[forms]] of [[delusion]] and {{Wiki|destructive}} {{Wiki|behavior}}. In this [[sense]] the functioning of the [[alaya consciousness]] can be understood as prior to that of [[delusions]]; it is not stained or influenced by them. It remains [[neutral]] and equally receptive to either type of [[karmic]] imprinting.
  
As mentioned, the [[alaya consciousness]] interacts constantly and intimately with other layers of [[consciousness]] such as the [[mano consciousness]], waking [[consciousness]] and the sensory functions. It is not a separate, independent thing or entity. It is better [[thought]] of as a fluid and vitally evolving flow. It is this lack of fixity, this fluidity, that opens the possibility to transforming the content of the [[alaya consciousness]], and thus the functioning of the other layers of [[consciousness]].
+
As mentioned, the [[alaya consciousness]] interacts constantly and intimately with other layers of [[consciousness]] such as the [[mano consciousness]], waking [[consciousness]] and the sensory functions. It is not a separate, {{Wiki|independent}} thing or [[entity]]. It is better [[thought]] of as a fluid and vitally evolving flow. It is this lack of fixity, this [[fluidity]], that opens the possibility to [[transforming]] the content of the [[alaya consciousness]], and thus the functioning of the other layers of [[consciousness]].
  
 
[[File:Imaadd.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Imaadd.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
  
'''Transforming [[Consciousness]] and Gaining [[Wisdom]]'''
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'''[[Transforming]] [[Consciousness]] and Gaining [[Wisdom]]'''
  
The idea of transforming [[consciousness]] and gaining [[wisdom]] is central to [[Buddhist psychology]] and perhaps represents [[Buddhism]]'s most direct contribution to the idea of [[self]]-[[empowerment]].
+
The [[idea]] of [[transforming]] [[consciousness]] and gaining [[wisdom]] is central to [[Buddhist psychology]] and perhaps represents [[Buddhism]]'s most direct contribution to the [[idea]] of [[self]]-[[empowerment]].
  
The [[Indian]] [[Yogacara School]] elucidated the eight-layered structure of the [[consciousness]] outlined above. It was the [[T'ien T'ai]] and [[Hua-yen]] ([[Kegon]]) schools in [[China]] that uncovered a [[ninth consciousness]], an undefiled [[amala consciousness]] underlying, supporting and embracing the functioning of the [[alaya consciousness]].
+
The [[Indian]] [[Yogacara School]] elucidated the eight-layered {{Wiki|structure}} of the [[consciousness]] outlined above. It was the [[T'ien T'ai]] and [[Hua-yen]] ([[Kegon]]) schools in [[China]] that uncovered a [[ninth consciousness]], an undefiled [[amala consciousness]] underlying, supporting and embracing the functioning of the [[alaya consciousness]].
  
Taking up the thread of the nine [[consciousness]] teaching, [[Nichiren]] describes different types of [[wisdom]] that manifest in each layer of [[consciousness]]. The [[amala consciousness]] manifests the [[wisdom]] to understand that we are one with the cosmic [[life]]-force. This is the fundamental [[wisdom]] of the living [[universe]], and it is by manifesting this most fundamental [[wisdom]] that we are able to transform the workings of the other layers of [[consciousness]], including that of the [[alaya consciousness]], where profound [[karmic]] [[causes]] reside. This transformation is the objective of [[Buddhist psychology]] and of [[Buddhist]] practice, including the pursuit of the altruistic [[bodhisattva way]].
+
[[Taking up]] the thread of the nine [[consciousness]] [[teaching]], [[Nichiren]] describes different types of [[wisdom]] that [[manifest]] in each layer of [[consciousness]]. The [[amala consciousness]] [[manifests]] the [[wisdom]] to understand that we are one with the [[cosmic]] [[life]]-force. This is the fundamental [[wisdom]] of the living [[universe]], and it is by [[manifesting]] this most fundamental [[wisdom]] that we are able to [[transform]] the workings of the other layers of [[consciousness]], [[including]] that of the [[alaya consciousness]], where profound [[karmic]] [[causes]] reside. This [[transformation]] is the [[objective]] of [[Buddhist psychology]] and of [[Buddhist]] practice, [[including]] the pursuit of the {{Wiki|altruistic}} [[bodhisattva way]].
  
[[Buddhist]] practice impresses the seeds of positive [[causes]] in the [[alaya consciousness]]. The more and the stronger these [[causes]], the more fully the content of the [[alaya consciousness]] is transformed. As the [[alaya consciousness]] is transformed, it shines with the [[light]] of a [[wisdom]] that can be likened to a great mirror, perfectly reflecting all [[phenomena]] in their true aspect. This is the [[wisdom]] of [[interdependence]], the [[wisdom]] to perceive and understanding that, at the most profound level, we are all interconnected and interdependent.
+
[[Buddhist]] practice impresses the [[seeds]] of positive [[causes]] in the [[alaya consciousness]]. The more and the stronger these [[causes]], the more fully the content of the [[alaya consciousness]] is [[transformed]]. As the [[alaya consciousness]] is [[transformed]], it shines with the [[light]] of a [[wisdom]] that can be likened to a great [[mirror]], perfectly {{Wiki|reflecting}} all [[phenomena]] in their [[true aspect]]. This is the [[wisdom]] of [[interdependence]], the [[wisdom]] to {{Wiki|perceive}} and [[understanding]] that, at the most profound level, we are all interconnected and [[interdependent]].
  
When the [[alaya consciousness]] is transformed in this manner, it stimulates the arising in the [[mano consciousness]] of the [[wisdom]] to perceive the equality of all things. In other words, the [[mano consciousness]] no longer functions as the site of a fundamentally discriminatory [[consciousness]], but can perceive its "own" [[alaya consciousness]] as equally part of a creatively evolving cosmic [[life]]-force. In other words, the [[mano consciousness]] ceases to generate a falsely proscribed [[sense]] of "[[self]]" in profound ontological conflict with others.
+
When the [[alaya consciousness]] is [[transformed]] in this manner, it stimulates the [[arising]] in the [[mano consciousness]] of the [[wisdom]] to {{Wiki|perceive}} the equality of all things. In other words, the [[mano consciousness]] no longer functions as the site of a fundamentally discriminatory [[consciousness]], but can {{Wiki|perceive}} its "[[own]]" [[alaya consciousness]] as equally part of a creatively evolving [[cosmic]] [[life]]-force. In other words, the [[mano consciousness]] ceases to generate a falsely proscribed [[sense]] of "[[self]]" in profound [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] conflict with others.
  
 
[[File:HqnhcO l.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:HqnhcO l.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
  
[[Overcoming]] the deep-rooted tendency to reify and cling to the [[alaya consciousness]] enables the individual to overcome [[feelings]] of {{Wiki|fear}} and dread toward [[physical]] [[death]]. This is replaced by a profound [[awareness]] that the [[alaya consciousness]] is a flow of [[life]], repeatedly undergoing cycles of [[life]] and [[death]], supported and embraced by the fundamental [[vitality]] and [[wisdom]] inherent in the [[universe]], that is, the [[amala]], or ninth, [[consciousness]]). [[Death]] comes to be understood as the cyclical waning of the ability to support the active functioning of the [[mano consciousness]], the waking [[consciousness]] and the sensory organs. These functions become latent within the [[alaya consciousness]] upon [[death]], but the [[alaya consciousness]] does not undergo extinction when an individual dies, but maintains the continuity of the [[life]]-flow over the course of cycles of [[life]] and [[death]].
+
[[Overcoming]] the deep-rooted tendency to reify and [[cling]] to the [[alaya consciousness]] enables the {{Wiki|individual}} to overcome [[feelings]] of {{Wiki|fear}} and dread toward [[physical]] [[death]]. This is replaced by a profound [[awareness]] that the [[alaya consciousness]] is a flow of [[life]], repeatedly undergoing cycles of [[life]] and [[death]], supported and embraced by the fundamental [[vitality]] and [[wisdom]] [[inherent]] in the [[universe]], that is, the [[amala]], or ninth, [[consciousness]]). [[Death]] comes to be understood as the cyclical waning of the ability to support the active functioning of the [[mano consciousness]], the waking [[consciousness]] and the [[sensory organs]]. These functions become latent within the [[alaya consciousness]] upon [[death]], but the [[alaya consciousness]] does not undergo [[extinction]] when an {{Wiki|individual}} [[dies]], but maintains the continuity of the [[life]]-flow over the course of cycles of [[life]] and [[death]].
  
When deep-seated [[delusions]] regarding the nature of the [[self]] and its [[existence]] are overcome, the [[mano consciousness]] can now function as the site of positive characteristics such as [[trust]], [[self]]-control, and [[compassion]].
+
When deep-seated [[delusions]] regarding the [[nature]] of the [[self]] and its [[existence]] are overcome, the [[mano consciousness]] can now function as the site of positive [[characteristics]] such as [[trust]], [[self]]-control, and [[compassion]].
  
The transformation of the deepest layers of [[consciousness]] impacts the functioning of cognition and [[perception]], located in waking [[consciousness]] and the sensory apparatus. These become imbued with their own forms of [[wisdom]], including the [[wisdom]] to freely control the functions of the [[senses]] and to act in a manner that most effectively advances one's own [[life]] and the lives of others.
+
The [[transformation]] of the deepest layers of [[consciousness]] impacts the functioning of [[cognition]] and [[perception]], located in waking [[consciousness]] and the sensory apparatus. These become imbued with their [[own]] [[forms]] of [[wisdom]], [[including]] the [[wisdom]] to freely control the functions of the [[senses]] and to act in a manner that most effectively advances one's [[own]] [[life]] and the [[lives]] of others.
  
A [[person]] who constantly strives to effect this kind of profound transformation of all layers of [[consciousness]], and who seeks to inspire and aid others in this quest, is referred to as a [[bodhisattva]].
+
A [[person]] who constantly strives to effect this kind of profound [[transformation]] of all layers of [[consciousness]], and who seeks to inspire and aid others in this quest, is referred to as a [[bodhisattva]].
  
'''The SGI Movement and the Way of the [[Bodhisattva]]'''
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'''The [[SGI]] {{Wiki|Movement}} and the Way of the [[Bodhisattva]]'''
  
In [[Nichiren Buddhism]], the fundamental practice is that of reciting the [[mantra]] [[Nam-myoho-renge-kyo]] to the [[mandala]] inscribed by [[Nichiren]] for the purpose of enabling [[people]] to manifest the [[wisdom]] of the ninth or [[amala consciousness]]. In this manner, we seek to transform [[consciousness]] and gain [[wisdom]], awaken the [[Buddha nature]] that is one with the cosmic [[life]]-force and to establish a boddhisattvic [[self]].
+
In [[Nichiren Buddhism]], the fundamental practice is that of reciting the [[mantra]] [[Nam-myoho-renge-kyo]] to the [[mandala]] inscribed by [[Nichiren]] for the {{Wiki|purpose}} of enabling [[people]] to [[manifest]] the [[wisdom]] of the ninth or [[amala consciousness]]. In this manner, we seek to [[transform]] [[consciousness]] and gain [[wisdom]], [[awaken]] the [[Buddha nature]] that is one with the [[cosmic]] [[life]]-force and to establish a boddhisattvic [[self]].
  
[[Nichiren]] identifies four [[virtues]] of the [[bodhisattva]] as true [[self]], eternity, purity and [[joy]].
+
[[Nichiren]] identifies four [[virtues]] of the [[bodhisattva]] as true [[self]], {{Wiki|eternity}}, [[purity]] and [[joy]].
  
The [[virtue]] of true [[self]] might be understood as the [[experience]] of expansive freedom and hope that is rooted in a [[sense]] of unity with the [[life]]-force of the cosmos. Eternity indicates the creativity inherent in the [[life]] of the [[universe]] that drives constant renewal and rejuvenation; the [[vitality]] to surmount any obstacle. Purity is the function of the cosmic [[life]] to cleanse the restrictive {{Wiki|egotism}} that stains and distorts the [[self]]. Finally, the [[virtue]] of [[joy]] is the quality of [[self]]-[[realization]], a [[life]]-state of utter [[confidence]] and [[serenity]] based on one's identification with the [[universal]] [[life]].
+
The [[virtue]] of true [[self]] might be understood as the [[experience]] of expansive freedom and {{Wiki|hope}} that is rooted in a [[sense]] of {{Wiki|unity}} with the [[life]]-force of the [[cosmos]]. {{Wiki|Eternity}} indicates the {{Wiki|creativity}} [[inherent]] in the [[life]] of the [[universe]] that drives [[constant]] renewal and rejuvenation; the [[vitality]] to surmount any [[obstacle]]. [[Purity]] is the function of the [[cosmic]] [[life]] to cleanse the restrictive {{Wiki|egotism}} that stains and distorts the [[self]]. Finally, the [[virtue]] of [[joy]] is the [[quality]] of [[self]]-[[realization]], a [[life]]-[[state]] of utter [[confidence]] and [[serenity]] based on one's identification with the [[universal]] [[life]].
  
[[Nichiren]] asserts that a genuine [[bodhisattva]] manifests the entire spectrum of these four [[virtues]]. And it is these [[virtues]], true [[self]], eternity, purity and [[joy]], that enable the [[bodhisattva]] to transform negative circumstances into the occasion for growth and the creation of value. It is for this [[reason]] that the [[bodhisattva]] does not avoid or [[retreat]] from the difficulties and challenges of [[life]], but rather places her- or himself in their very midst, acknowledging and confronting them head-on.
+
[[Nichiren]] asserts that a genuine [[bodhisattva]] [[manifests]] the entire spectrum of these four [[virtues]]. And it is these [[virtues]], true [[self]], {{Wiki|eternity}}, [[purity]] and [[joy]], that enable the [[bodhisattva]] to [[transform]] negative circumstances into the occasion for growth and the creation of value. It is for this [[reason]] that the [[bodhisattva]] does not avoid or [[retreat]] from the difficulties and challenges of [[life]], but rather places her- or himself in their very midst, [[acknowledging]] and confronting them head-on.
  
[[Nichiren]] describes the benefit of the reciting of [[Nam-myoho-renge-kyo]] as that of transforming the inevitable [[sufferings]] of living--what [[Buddhism]] terms the "four [[sufferings]]" of [[birth]], aging, illness and [[death]]--into the four [[virtues]] of true [[self]], eternity, purity and [[joy]]. The [[bodhisattva]], by transforming those [[experiences]] that are so often the [[cause]] of great [[suffering]] into the opportunity for development and advancement, inspires others to pursue a [[path]] of "transforming [[consciousness]] and gaining [[wisdom]]."
+
[[Nichiren]] describes the [[benefit]] of the reciting of [[Nam-myoho-renge-kyo]] as that of [[transforming]] the inevitable [[sufferings]] of living--what [[Buddhism]] terms the "four [[sufferings]]" of [[birth]], [[aging]], {{Wiki|illness}} and [[death]]--into the four [[virtues]] of true [[self]], {{Wiki|eternity}}, [[purity]] and [[joy]]. The [[bodhisattva]], by [[transforming]] those [[experiences]] that are so often the [[cause]] of great [[suffering]] into the opportunity for [[development]] and advancement, inspires others to pursue a [[path]] of "[[transforming]] [[consciousness]] and gaining [[wisdom]]."
  
Through active engagement with others, we can continually strengthen and deepen this bodhisattvic [[self]], in an endeavor that is not limited to the pursuit of personal [[happiness]], but involves a commitment to the [[realization]] of [[peace]], both for humankind and for the entire biosphere.
+
Through active engagement with others, we can continually strengthen and deepen this [[bodhisattvic]] [[self]], in an endeavor that is not limited to the pursuit of personal [[happiness]], but involves a commitment to the [[realization]] of [[peace]], both for humankind and for the entire {{Wiki|biosphere}}.
  
The work of the [[Soka Gakkai]] International to promote a contemporary movement of the [[Bodhisattva]] Way is rooted in the efforts of individuals to transform their inner, [[psychic]] cosmos. By manifesting [[wisdom]] in all layers of [[consciousness]], and encouraging the development of this [[wisdom]] in our families, communities and societies, we seek to overcome the [[delusions]] that give rise to a host of well-rehearsed personal and social ills: from the [[sense]] of disempowerment that plagues so many [[people]], to intra- and intersocietal conflicts, to ecological destruction. While the [[path]] of the [[bodhisattva]] may represent a gradualist approach, we are confident that it represents a fundamental transformation, with the [[power]] to change for the better the lives both of individuals and of all humankind.  
+
The work of the [[Soka Gakkai]] International to promote a contemporary {{Wiki|movement}} of the [[Bodhisattva]] Way is rooted in the efforts of {{Wiki|individuals}} to [[transform]] their inner, [[psychic]] [[cosmos]]. By [[manifesting]] [[wisdom]] in all layers of [[consciousness]], and encouraging the [[development]] of this [[wisdom]] in our families, communities and {{Wiki|societies}}, we seek to overcome the [[delusions]] that give rise to a host of well-rehearsed personal and {{Wiki|social}} ills: from the [[sense]] of disempowerment that plagues so many [[people]], to intra- and intersocietal conflicts, to {{Wiki|ecological}} destruction. While the [[path]] of the [[bodhisattva]] may represent a [[gradualist]] approach, we are confident that it represents a fundamental [[transformation]], with the [[power]] to change for the better the [[lives]] both of {{Wiki|individuals}} and of all humankind.  
  
  

Latest revision as of 22:50, 23 November 2020

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Yoichi Kawada, director of The Institute of Oriental Philosophy, Tokyo

(August 26, 1999, at the American Psychological Association Convention, Boston, USA)

Nichiren is the 13th-century Japanese Buddhist teacher whose teachings inspire the activities of the SGI. In this paper I would like to explore areas of contact between Nichiren Buddhism and the idea of self-empowerment.

Nichiren himself was thoroughly versed in the intellectual history of Buddhism. His understanding was rooted in the Sutras recording the teachings of Shakyamuni, and drew from the theories and exegeses of the Indian scholars Nagarjuna (c. 2-3 century C.E.), Vasubandhu (5th-century C.E.), the Chinese Buddhist T'ien T'ai School, and Japan's Saicho (8th-century C.E.). Thus, in discussing empowerment, I will start by exploring points of contact between modern Western psychology and the "eight consciousness" theories developed by Nagarjuna and Vasubandhu, and adopted and developed by T'ien T'ai and Nichiren.

It was the historian Arnold Toynbee who said that the two great discoveries of this century were the theory of relativity in the realm of physics and the work of uncovering the unconscious in the realm of psychology. He further remarked that the discovery of the unconscious revealed that each individual is in fact a cosmos, a universe.

Credit for the discovery of the unconscious in Western psychology goes to Freud, whose work was followed by Adler, Jung, Maslow and others, who have dramatically extended our exploration of the psychic cosmos.

In the East some 2,500 years ago, Shakyamuni, widely known as the Buddha, creatively adapted and recast the ancient philosophy of the Upanishads as he developed his own philosophy. His awakening as he meditated beneath the bodhi tree may be considered a seminal event, a critical moment, in Eastern psychology. This awakening started with his insights into his own unconscious and expanded to illuminate a vast psychic cosmos.

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His exploration of his inner world, this inner cosmos, moved beyond the individual level, deepening eventually to include all humankind. He continued to explore the bounds of selfhood, from commonality of all living things, to those depth realms where the self is fused with the Earth, the solar system and the entire universe. He finally awakened to the fundamental wisdom of life, the life of the universe itself, which gives rise to all phenomena as they evolve in harmonious unity with the psychic cosmos.

Later practitioners would refer to the cosmic [[life-force to which Shakyamuni awakened as the Buddha-nature. They would explore means and methods of practice by which all people can manifest the vast energy, dignity and wisdom of this life-state; methods, in other words , of self-empowerment.

A Three-Layered Structure of Consciousness

Here I would like to give a brief outline of the eight consciousness teaching that forms an important basis of Buddhist psychology.

The word that is translated as consciousness is the Sanskrit vijñana, which indicates a wide range of activities include sensation, cognition, affect and conscious thought. Vijñana can be thought of referring to the entire psychic cosmos.

According to the Yogacara School, vijñana comprises three layers:

1) the five senses and waking consciousness;

2) the mano consciousness; and

3) the alaya consciousness, with the alaya being regarded as the most core, or fundamental site of psychological activity.

In other words, the content of the alaya layer makes it self known, and becomes manifest, in the activities of the mano layer, as well as in the five senses and the waking consciousness. Conversely, the activities of the more superficial layers are inscribed in the depths of the alaya consciousness. There is thus a constant and intimate interaction between the different layers of consciousness.

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It should also be clarified at this point that the alaya consciousness should not simply be understood in an ontological sense, as existing, but as embracing a cognitive and even an ethical dimension.

The mano and alaya layers of consciousness in many senses correspond to the individual and collective unconscious in Jungian psychology.

I would like first to look at the mano consciousness, which is described as emerging from the alaya consciousness and as being focused in its "attention" on the alaya consciousness.

In this sense, the mano layer can be understood as the seat of the most basic consciousness of self. The Sanskrit verb from which this derives is manas, meaning to think or to consider. Thus the mano consciousness is always thinking about, considering, and in fact reifying the alaya consciousness of the individual, which it perceives as something unique and isolated from other things. It is from this strong attachment, or clinging, to a reified alaya consciousness that mano consciousness generates the sense of a limited, isolated self referred to in Buddhism as the lesser self.

When the mano consciousness functions in this manner it gives rise to a series of powerful delusions that manifest in the other, more immediate layers of perception and consciousness as attachment to and pride in this proscribed sense of selfhood. The delusion that the reified alaya conscious is one's true self is identified with fundamental ignorance, a turning away from the truth of the interconnectedness of all being. It is this sense of one's self as separate and isolated from others that gives rise to discrimination against others, to destructive arrogance and acquisitiveness.

The lesser self is deeply insecure, and vacillates between feelings of superiority and inferiority with regard to others; in the pursuit of its own fulfillment, the lesser self will unthinkingly harm or wound others. When the mano consciousness is filled with these delusions about the nature of the self, they give rise to a whole series of delusions that the early Buddhist took great pains to name, number and classify, but which I will omit here in the interest of time. Suffice it to say that the mano consciousness functions to create a strong sense of disjunction between self and others and to generate discriminatory attitudes towards those we experience as "other."

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Characteristics of the Alaya Consciousness.

In the Trimsika-vijnapti, Vasubandhu ascribes the following characteristics to the alaya consciousness. First, it is not obscured by delusion and is morally neutral, that is, it is equally receptive to the karmic imprint of both negative and positive causes. Next, it is extremely dynamic; its flow is compared to that of a raging torrent. In Sanskrit the word alaya means to store, and it is in this consciousness that the latent causes, often described metaphorically as seeds, are retained.

Karma is, of course, a basic concept in Buddhism. It posits that our thoughts, words and deeds (whether conscious or in the unconscious realm of the mano layer) invariably exert an influence that is impressed or imprinted into the deepest layers of life, the alaya consciousness. When they encounter the right enabling conditions, these latent causes, or karmic seeds, become manifest as the functions of the mano or other more superficial layers of consciousness.

These karmic seeds can be either positive or negative. Positive latent causes become manifest in positive psychological functions such as trust, non-violence, self-control, compassion and wisdom. Negative latent causes become manifest as various forms of delusion and destructive behavior. In this sense the functioning of the alaya consciousness can be understood as prior to that of delusions; it is not stained or influenced by them. It remains neutral and equally receptive to either type of karmic imprinting.

As mentioned, the alaya consciousness interacts constantly and intimately with other layers of consciousness such as the mano consciousness, waking consciousness and the sensory functions. It is not a separate, independent thing or entity. It is better thought of as a fluid and vitally evolving flow. It is this lack of fixity, this fluidity, that opens the possibility to transforming the content of the alaya consciousness, and thus the functioning of the other layers of consciousness.

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Transforming Consciousness and Gaining Wisdom

The idea of transforming consciousness and gaining wisdom is central to Buddhist psychology and perhaps represents Buddhism's most direct contribution to the idea of self-empowerment.

The Indian Yogacara School elucidated the eight-layered structure of the consciousness outlined above. It was the T'ien T'ai and Hua-yen (Kegon) schools in China that uncovered a ninth consciousness, an undefiled amala consciousness underlying, supporting and embracing the functioning of the alaya consciousness.

Taking up the thread of the nine consciousness teaching, Nichiren describes different types of wisdom that manifest in each layer of consciousness. The amala consciousness manifests the wisdom to understand that we are one with the cosmic life-force. This is the fundamental wisdom of the living universe, and it is by manifesting this most fundamental wisdom that we are able to transform the workings of the other layers of consciousness, including that of the alaya consciousness, where profound karmic causes reside. This transformation is the objective of Buddhist psychology and of Buddhist practice, including the pursuit of the altruistic bodhisattva way.

Buddhist practice impresses the seeds of positive causes in the alaya consciousness. The more and the stronger these causes, the more fully the content of the alaya consciousness is transformed. As the alaya consciousness is transformed, it shines with the light of a wisdom that can be likened to a great mirror, perfectly reflecting all phenomena in their true aspect. This is the wisdom of interdependence, the wisdom to perceive and understanding that, at the most profound level, we are all interconnected and interdependent.

When the alaya consciousness is transformed in this manner, it stimulates the arising in the mano consciousness of the wisdom to perceive the equality of all things. In other words, the mano consciousness no longer functions as the site of a fundamentally discriminatory consciousness, but can perceive its "own" alaya consciousness as equally part of a creatively evolving cosmic life-force. In other words, the mano consciousness ceases to generate a falsely proscribed sense of "self" in profound ontological conflict with others.

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Overcoming the deep-rooted tendency to reify and cling to the alaya consciousness enables the individual to overcome feelings of fear and dread toward physical death. This is replaced by a profound awareness that the alaya consciousness is a flow of life, repeatedly undergoing cycles of life and death, supported and embraced by the fundamental vitality and wisdom inherent in the universe, that is, the amala, or ninth, consciousness). Death comes to be understood as the cyclical waning of the ability to support the active functioning of the mano consciousness, the waking consciousness and the sensory organs. These functions become latent within the alaya consciousness upon death, but the alaya consciousness does not undergo extinction when an individual dies, but maintains the continuity of the life-flow over the course of cycles of life and death.

When deep-seated delusions regarding the nature of the self and its existence are overcome, the mano consciousness can now function as the site of positive characteristics such as trust, self-control, and compassion.

The transformation of the deepest layers of consciousness impacts the functioning of cognition and perception, located in waking consciousness and the sensory apparatus. These become imbued with their own forms of wisdom, including the wisdom to freely control the functions of the senses and to act in a manner that most effectively advances one's own life and the lives of others.

A person who constantly strives to effect this kind of profound transformation of all layers of consciousness, and who seeks to inspire and aid others in this quest, is referred to as a bodhisattva.

The SGI Movement and the Way of the Bodhisattva

In Nichiren Buddhism, the fundamental practice is that of reciting the mantra Nam-myoho-renge-kyo to the mandala inscribed by Nichiren for the purpose of enabling people to manifest the wisdom of the ninth or amala consciousness. In this manner, we seek to transform consciousness and gain wisdom, awaken the Buddha nature that is one with the cosmic life-force and to establish a boddhisattvic self.

Nichiren identifies four virtues of the bodhisattva as true self, eternity, purity and joy.

The virtue of true self might be understood as the experience of expansive freedom and hope that is rooted in a sense of unity with the life-force of the cosmos. Eternity indicates the creativity inherent in the life of the universe that drives constant renewal and rejuvenation; the vitality to surmount any obstacle. Purity is the function of the cosmic life to cleanse the restrictive egotism that stains and distorts the self. Finally, the virtue of joy is the quality of self-realization, a life-state of utter confidence and serenity based on one's identification with the universal life.

Nichiren asserts that a genuine bodhisattva manifests the entire spectrum of these four virtues. And it is these virtues, true self, eternity, purity and joy, that enable the bodhisattva to transform negative circumstances into the occasion for growth and the creation of value. It is for this reason that the bodhisattva does not avoid or retreat from the difficulties and challenges of life, but rather places her- or himself in their very midst, acknowledging and confronting them head-on.

Nichiren describes the benefit of the reciting of Nam-myoho-renge-kyo as that of transforming the inevitable sufferings of living--what Buddhism terms the "four sufferings" of birth, aging, illness and death--into the four virtues of true self, eternity, purity and joy. The bodhisattva, by transforming those experiences that are so often the cause of great suffering into the opportunity for development and advancement, inspires others to pursue a path of "transforming consciousness and gaining wisdom."

Through active engagement with others, we can continually strengthen and deepen this bodhisattvic self, in an endeavor that is not limited to the pursuit of personal happiness, but involves a commitment to the realization of peace, both for humankind and for the entire biosphere.

The work of the Soka Gakkai International to promote a contemporary movement of the Bodhisattva Way is rooted in the efforts of individuals to transform their inner, psychic cosmos. By manifesting wisdom in all layers of consciousness, and encouraging the development of this wisdom in our families, communities and societies, we seek to overcome the delusions that give rise to a host of well-rehearsed personal and social ills: from the sense of disempowerment that plagues so many people, to intra- and intersocietal conflicts, to ecological destruction. While the path of the bodhisattva may represent a gradualist approach, we are confident that it represents a fundamental transformation, with the power to change for the better the lives both of individuals and of all humankind.


Source

www.iop.or.jp