The Subject’s Guide to the Realms of Karma

Notes on Reading the Work of Dharma Master Taixu

Authors

  • Jan Vrhovski University of Ljubljana

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/bsrv.21787

Keywords:

Modern Buddhism, Republican China, Taixu, human life, freedom, karma, autonomous subject

Abstract

This article analyses the work of the Dharma Master Taixu, one of the leading figures of Chinese Buddhism in the Republican Period. Its analysis focuses on the meaning of concepts such as “human life,” “freedom,” and “karma” in Taixu’s seminal writings on the role of Buddhism in modern society, politics, and science from the 1920s and early 1930s. The succession of reading notes and reflections on these quintessential concepts in Taixu’s works aims at shedding some light on the relationship between subject and object, and the key question of the autonomy of the subject in modern Chinese Buddhism. Finally, by trying to illuminate the content of the ideas of subject and freedom in the work of this key figure, whose work is a foundational building block in the modernization of Buddhism in East Asia, the present discussion aims at casting some new light on the origins and theoretical foundations of contemporary Buddhism in Taiwan as well as in the broader Chinese cultural sphere.

References

Chen, Yong-ge. 2006. “Fojiao jiaoshe de xiandai zhankai yu renjian Fojiao sichao – yi Taixu dashi dui xiandai xin Rujia de huiying wei zhongxin (The Modern Development of the Interaction between Confucianism and Buddhism and the Ideological Trend of Human Realism Buddhism – Focusing on the Venerable Taixu’s Response to the Modern Confucianism).” Xuanzang Foxue yanjiu 4: 35–53.

———. 2014. “Cong Taishi dashi de xin Fojiao lunshu kan dangdai Zhongguo de renjian Fojiao yundong (Contemporary Movement of Humanistic Buddhism in China: From the Perspective of Master Taixu’s Neo-Buddhist Theory).” Studies in Humanistic Buddhism [Renjian Fojiao yanjiu] 6: 139–167.

Dessein, Bart. 2020. “The Heritage of Taixu: Philosophy, Taiwan, and Beyond.” Asian Studies 8(3): 251–277.

Federman, Asaf. 2010. “What Kind of Free Will Did the Buddha Teach?” Philosophy East and West, 60 (1): 1–9.

Foxue shuju bianjibu ed. 1935. Shiyong Foxue cidian (Practical Dictionary of Buddhism). 3 Volumes. Shanghai: Foxue shuju.

Furth, Charlotte. 2002. “Intellectual Change: From the Reform Movement to the May Fourth Movement, 1895–1920.” In An Intellectual History of Modern China, edited by Merle Goldman and Leo Ou-Fan Lee, 13–96. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Gombrich, Richard. 2013. What the Buddha Thought. Sheffield: Equinox.

Gombrich, Richard and Yu-shuang Yao. 2013. “A Radical Buddhism for Modern Confucians: Tzu Chi in Socio-Historical Perspective.” Buddhist Studies Review 30(2): 237–259.

Goodell, Eric. 2008. “Taixu’s Youth and Years of Romantic Idealism, 1890–1914.” Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal [Zhonghua Foxue xuebao] 21: 77–121.

Hammerstrom, Erik. 2015. The Science of Chinese Buddhism: Early Twentieth-Century Engagements. New York: Columbia University Press.

Hong, Jinlian. 1995. Taixu dashi Fojiao xiandaihua zhi yanjiu (Research into the Venerable Master Taixu’s Modernisation of Buddhism). Taibei: Fagu wenhua.

Huang, Xianian. 2016. “Renjian Fojiao santi (Three Questions about Humanistic Buddhism).” Studies in Humanistic Buddhism 7: 1–9.

Jia, Jinhua. 2018. “Redefining Enlightenment Experience: A Philosophical Interpretation of the Dunhuang Version Platform Sutra.” In Dao Companion to Chinese Buddhist Philosophy, edited by Wang Youru and Sandra A. Wawrytko, 351–368. Dordrecht: Springer.

Kalupahana, David J. 1988. “The Buddhist Conceptions of ‘Subject’ and ‘Object’ and Their Moral Implications.” Philosophy East and West 38(3): 290–306.

———. 1992. A History of Buddhist Philosophy: Continuities and Discontinuities. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.

Keown, Damien. 2003. A Dictionary of Buddhism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Nie, Shiquan. 2005. “Sixiang zhezhong yu xianshi dingwei – Shi Taixu rensheng Fojiao sixiang de xueli jichu (Intellectual Eclecticism and Realist Orientations—The Scholarly Foundations of Venerable Master Taixu’s Idea of Buddhism for Human Life).” Hongshi shuang yue-kan 74: 128–139.

Pacey, Scott. 2014. “Taixu, Yogacara, and the Buddhist Approach to Modernity”. In Transforming Consciousness: Yogacara Thought in Modern China, edited by John Makeham, 149–169. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Pittman, Don A. 2001. Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism: Taixu’s Reforms. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.

Ritzinger, Justin R. 2017. Anarchy in the Pure Land: Reinventing the Cult of Maitreya in Modern Chinese Buddhism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Shichuanfa. 2001. “Renjian Fojiao de shehui yundong—yige dangdai Taiwan Fojiao shi de kaocha (A Social Movement of Humanistic Buddhism—An Investigation into the Contemporary History of Buddhism in Taiwan).” Hongshi shuangyuekan 54: 20–27.

Taixu. 1920a. “Zhenchang zhi rensheng (weiwan) (The Genuine Eternal Human Life (To Be Continued)).” Xin Fojiao [New Buddhism] 1(1): 2–4.

———. 1920b. “Zhenchang zhi rensheng (xu qianhao) (The Genuine Eternal Human Life [Continued from the Last Issue]).” Xin Fojiao [New Buddhism] 1(2): 4–5.

———. 1920c. “Xin weishilun (New Yogacara).” Haichao yin 1(5): 1–43.

———. 1925a. “Rensheng (Human Life).” Haichao yin 6(9): 1–4.

———. 1925b. “Zhongguo ren yong Zhongguo fa zhi zijiu (Saving Chinese People with a Chinese Method).” Haichao yin 6(10): 1–6.

———. 1925c. Rensheng guan de kexue (The Science of the View on Human Life). Shanghai: Taidong tushuju.

———. 1927a. “Shuo geming (Explaining Revolution).” Haichao yin 8(6), 1–6.

———. 1928a. “Duiyu Zhongguo Fojiao geming seng de xunci (Instructions to Chinese Buddhist Revolutionary Clergy).” Haichao yin 9(4): 1–6.

———. 1928b. “Rensheng Fojiao shuoming (An Explanation of Buddhism for Human Life).” Haichao yin 9(6): 1–4.

———. 1928c. Ziyou shiguan (A Historical View on Freedom). Shanghai: Qunzhong tushu gongju.

———. 1929a. Dacheng yu renjian liangban wenhua (Mahayana and Two Kinds of Culture Amongst People). Shanghai: Taidong tushu shuju.

———. 1929b. Rensheng guan de kexue (The Science of the View on Human Life). Shanghai: Taidong tushuju.

———. 1930. “Cong ‘wuwo’ ‘weixin’ de yuzhou guan dao ‘pingdeng’ ‘ziyou’ de rensheng guan (From the ‘Non-Self’ and ‘Mind-Only’ View on the Universe to the ‘Equality’ and ‘Freedom’ View on Life).” Haichao yin 11(4): 13–20.

———. 1932. Ziyou shiguan (A Historical View on Freedom). Shanghai: Foxue shuju.

———. 1934a [1931]. Foxue gailun (Introduction to Buddhism). Shanghai: Foxue shuju.

———. 1934b. Xianshi zhuyi (Realism). Shanghai: Shangwu yinshuguan.

———. 1945. Rensheng Fojiao (Buddhism for the Human Life). Shanghai: Foxue shuju.

Wang, Jia. 2021. “Zhongguo dalu Fojiao 80 niandai chongxin renke Taixu dashi de lishi jincheng (Recognition of Master Taixu in Mainland China during the 1980s).” Studies in Humanistic Buddhism [Renjian Fojiao yanjiu] 11: 142–173.

Wawrytko, Sandra A. 2018. “The Sinification of Buddhist Philosophy: The Cases of Zhi Dun and the Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana (Dasheng Qixin Lun).” In Dao Companion to Chinese Buddhist Philosophy, edited by Wang Youru, Sandra A. Wawrytko, 29–44. Dordrecht: Springer.

Yao, Binbin. 2019. “‘Rensheng Fojiao’ yu ‘renjian Fojiao’ bianyi – jianlun Taixu yu Yinshun Fojiao ‘lixinghua’ sixiang jinglu zhi tongyi (A Study of the Differences between ‘Buddhism for Human Life’ and ‘Humanistic Buddhism’ – Similarities and Differences between Taixu and Yinshun’s Thought of ‘Rationalisation’ of Buddhism).” Studies in Humanistic Buddhism [Renjian Fojiao yanjiu] 9: 45–71.

Published

2023-07-24

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Vrhovski, J. (2023). The Subject’s Guide to the Realms of Karma: Notes on Reading the Work of Dharma Master Taixu. Buddhist Studies Review, 40(1), 27-58. https://doi.org/10.1558/bsrv.21787