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http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924022981140 



an introduction to 
mahAyana buddhism 



With especial Reference to 

Chinese and Japanese 

Phases 



WILLIAM MONTGOMERY McGOVERN, Ph. D. 

Lecturer on Japanese and Chinese at the 
School of Orien tal Studies ( University of London) ; 
Priest of the Nishi Honganji, Kyoto, Japan 
Author of Modern Japan, Colloquial Japanese, 
Elements of Japanese Writing, etc., etc. 



LONDON : 
KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRUBNER & CO., LTD. 
NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON & CO. 
1922 






w. '^y^^-' 



7 






»' 1 



)]i:)\ • 



DEDICATION 

TO 
MES. C. A. F. BHYS-DAVIDS, M.A., D.LITT. 

Dear Mrs. Ehys-Davids, 

In dedicating to you this exposition of the 
bare essentials of the Mahayana philosophy, I 
feel that I must explain something of its scope 
and aim. 

In its original form the present work was part 
of a thesis which, when presented to the Japanese 
cathedral, the Nishi Honganji, secured me my 
Buddhist degree, and an honorary ordination as 
a Buddhist priest. In consequence I hope that 
it may be considered to represent, as far as it 
goes, what the Japanese Buddhists believe to 
be true, and what they consider accurate. 

In presenting the book in a new dress before 
the Western public, a good deal of revision has 
taken place, but this has been chiefly a matter 
of omission and simplification. All technical 
details have been deleted, and any unusual 
idea or term has had placed after it a few words of 
elementary elucidation. 



iv DEDICATION 

I have called it an " introduction " for three 
reasons. First, because it is intended for a guide 
to the general reader of average education, who 
does not care to go into details ; second, because 
it is intended also to point out the chief sign- 
posts to those who desire to take up the subject 
somewhat more seriously ; and third, because 
it serves as a preface to my longer, more serious, 
and more ambitious book on Buddhism, which is 
now in preparation. 

Finally, -may I add that though working at 
Buddhism through Chinese rather than Pali 
sources, and from the Mahayana rather than the 
Hinayana point of view, with the consequence 
that I am afraid that you will not always agree 
with my presentation, yet I wish to thank you 
most heartily for your encouragement, discussion, 
and occasional advice. 

Yours sincerely, 

WILLIAM MONTGOMERY MCGOVERN. 
Christ Church, Oxford. 



CONTENTS 



CHAP. PAGE 

INTEODUCTION : the doctrinal 

EVOLUTION OP BUDDHISM . . I 

I. EPISTEMOLOGT AND LOGIC . . . . 32 

II. THE NATURE OP THE ABSOLUTE AND 

ITS RELATION TO THE UNIVERSE 48 

III. THE TRIKA'yA — THE BUDDHIST 

DOCTRINE OP THE TRINITY . . 75 

IV. THE NATURE AND POWERS OP 

BUDDHAHOOD . . . . • • 99 

V. PSYCHOLOGY — ^ELEMENTS OF EXIST- 
ENCE . . . . . . . ■ I 32 

VI. THE WHEEL OP LIFE AND THE ROAD 

TO NIRVANA . . . . • • ^SS 

CONCLUSION: A SHORT HISTORY 
OF BUDDHISM AND THE PRINCIPAL 
BUDDHIST SECTS .. .. . . 180 

APPENDIX: the sacred litera- 
ture OP THE BUDDHISTS . . 215 



INTEODUCTION 

THE DOCTEINAL EVOLUTION OF 
BUDDHISM 

Buddhism is divided into two great schools, 
Mahayana and Hinayana. Both systems origi- 
nated in India, but since the former predomi- 
nates in China, Japan, Nepal, and, in a modified 
form, in Tibet and Mongolia, whUe the latter is 
confined almost exclusively to Ceylon, Burma, 
and Siam, they are often, and rather incorrectly, 
known as Northern and Southern Buddhism. 

Mahayana is again divided into unreformed 
and reformed branches, the unreformed branch 
being found all over Eastern Asia, while there- 
formed branch has its centre in Japan. Eoughly, 
we may compare these divisions of Buddhism 
to those of the principal Occidental faiths. Hina- 
yana, or the earlier and more primitive form of 
Buddhism, corresponds to Judaism ; Unreformed 
Mahayana to Catholicism, and Eeformed Maha- 
yana to Protestantism. 

Of recent years, owing to the labours of such 
scholars as Spence Hardy, Gogerly, Prof, and Mrs. 



2 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Ehys-Davids, etc., Hinayana has become more 
or less known to the Western world, but Maha- 
yana stiU awaits adequate treatment. Different 
scholars in dealing with Mahayana have spoken 
of it as a ritualistic and animistic degeneration 
of Hinayana ; as sophistic nihilism, as mystic 
pantheism. They have claimed it to be now 
monotheistic, now polytheistic, now atheistic ; or 
finally, they have contented themselves with 
stating that it is a vast mass of contradictory 
ideas, unassimilated and undefined. 

It is obvious that all of these descriptions can 
not be true, while the historical importance of 
the Mahayana philosophy renders it imperative 
to attempt some more concise interpretation of 
its essential elements, for as Christians far out- 
number Jews, so do Mahayanists far outnumber 
Hinayanists ; as Christianity has had far more 
important cultural connections than Judaism, so 
has Mahayana, at the expense of Hinayana, 
ineffaceably linked itself with the civilizations of 
vast parts of Asia ; and as the early fathers of 
the Christian Church and the schoolmen of the 
Middle Ages buUt up a religious and philosophic 
system far more important than the ideas ex- 
pressed in Eabbinic schools, so is Mahayana the 
outcome of centuries of speculative development. 



INTRODUCTION 3 

enriched by materials from all sources, and ex- 
pounded by the great bulk of the ancient meta- 
physicians of India and China, while Hina- 
yana has remained far more narrow and confined 
in its philosophic evolution. 

Indian Thought at the Time of the Buddha. 

Any adequate understanding of Mahayana 
must be based upon a comprehension of the 
stages of its development, of the processes by 
which it differentiated itself from the more primi- 
tive Hinayana, of the relation of the latter to 
pristine Buddhism, and of the place of this 
pristine Buddhism in Indian thought. 

The period in which Gautama or Qakyamuni, 
the historical founder of Buddhism, lived (some 
five and a half centuries B.C.) was in many ways 
an interesting one. The earlier child-like beliefs 
of the Vedas had dwindled, and the implicit 
acceptance of the primeval deities had given way, 
at least among the educated classes, to a keen 
discussion, from a mystico-rationalist point of 
view of the essential problems of existence. It 
was the age of the formulation of metaphysical 
systems. Bands of mendicant teachers went 
forth proclaiming new syntheses of knowledge, 
new outlooks on Ufe. 



4 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

These Indian philosophers, like their contem- 
porary Occidental brethren, were primarily con- 
cerned with problems relating to (I) the nature 
of ultimate reality, and (II) methods of ascertain- 
ing truth. 

I. — Just as the early Greek philosophers were 
divided into (a) a School of Naive Realists, (6) a 
School of Being, and (c) a School of Becoming, so 
did the Indians divide themselves into (1) those 
who followed the Vedic hymns and accepted the 
universe at its face value, (2) those who taught 
that the ultimate nature of things is quiescent and 
changeless, that beyond the realm of fluctuating 
phenomena is the realm of the absolute, in which 
there is no space and time, but only an eternal 
present, and (3) those who taught that change, 
flux, becoming, integration and disintegration, 
are inherent in the nature of things ; that no 
thing ever remains the same for two consecutive 
moments ; that even the Absolute is ever evolv- 
ing and becoming. 

II. — Consequent upon these differences of out- 
look upon the nature of reality, there arose widely 
divergent theories concerning the basis of truth : 

(1) Truth through sense impression. In early 
days man instinctively believed in the validity 



INTRODUCTION 5 

of his sense impressions. All things were sup- 
posed to be exactly as we see them, and absolute 
truth was to be gained by experience. 

(2) Truth through reason. Gradually, however, 
as the limitations of the senses come to be felt, 
it is recognized that the ceaseless change of the 
phenomenal world prevents our obtaining an 
insight into its nature by means of the senses. 
But the school of Being represented by the 
Upanishads taught that man's soul is not of the 
phenomenal but of the noumenal world, that he 
might, through the exercise of his mental 
powers, gain a direct insight into the 
ultimate nature of reality. This Vedanta doc- 
trine corresponds very closely to certain phases 
of Plato's theory of knowledge. 

(3) Truth through psychological analysis. — 
While the Vedantins and Plato were content to 
accept the validity of reason, supported, no doubt, 
by the seeming absolutivity of mathematics, the 
Indian school of Becoming came to regard the 
mind, not as an independent, unconditioned, and 
eternal entity having a direct insight into truth, 
but as a limited, caused, confined, and con- 
ditioned organism whose- data are of purely rela- 
tive value. Acute analysis of the functions of 
consciousness no doubt aided this conception. 



6 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

and the conflicting nature of all reasoning seemed 
to support it. In spite of age-long disputes, no 
two systems of philosophy agreed, and no single 
rational doctrine could claim universal accept- 
ance. 

Consequently, only the immediate data of 
consciousness could claim assured validity. We 
have no means of ascertaining whether or not 
these data correspond to ultimate reality, or are 
logically consistent, but of the reality of feeUngs 
qua feelings, there can be no doubt. 

Primitive Buddhism. 

Primitive Buddhism, so far as we can judge 
its doctrines by means of higher criticism of the 
various recensions of the Sutra Pitaka, was-the 
supreme example of the Indian Becoming philo- 
sophy. Change was the foundation stone on 
which its metaphysic rested. The body was 
considered a living complex organism, possessing 
no self -nature. The nature of the mind was sup- 
posed to be analogous. The percipient conscious- 
ness had no direct insight into truth through a 
stable and transcendent reason, but was a com- 
pound effected by the chain of causality, and 
conditioned by its environment. 

Consequently at the outset Buddhism assumed 
an agnostic position concerning transcendental 



INTRODUCTION 7 

problems. " These problems the Blessed One 
has left unelucidated, has set aside, has rejected 
— ^that the world is eternal, that the world is not 
eternal, that the world is finite, that the world 
is infinite, etc." 

In a word, Buddhism insisted that we can only 
deal with facts and data of which we are imme- 
diately conscious ; with states of consciousness ; 
with an analysis of the emotions ; with the 
universe as perceived as opposed to the universe 
as it Is. 

The doctrines of primitive Buddhism are all in 
accordance with this psychological basis, as may 
be seen by examining its theory of the Three 
Marks and the Four Noble Truths. 

The Three Marks are not doctrines which are 
to be accepted on faith, or as the result of logical 
reasoning, but are considered the essential charac- 
teristics of life as recognized by every day 
perceptual and emotional experience. 

They are : " (1) All is impermanent. (2) AH 
is sorrowful. (3) All is lacking a self." This 
last phrase refers not only to the soul, but to 
the universe as a whole. It consists not of 
simple or self-existing things, but of complex, 
caused, conditioned things. The fourth mark, 
Nirvana, is no less psychological. By means of 



8 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

contemplation certain forms of Samadhi, trance, 
or ecstasy were experienced. Magnify the ex- 
perience, consider it permanent, associate with it 
the abolition of sorrow, sin, and ignorance, and 
the theory of Ifirvana is formulated, for it must 
be remembered that originally Nirvana is purely 
a state of mind. 

The so-called four Noble Truths are derived 
from the same basic ideas. Transformed from 
an ancient Indian medical rune, they are : — (1) 
Suffering exists. (2) The cause of suffering is 
desire (and ignorance). (3) There is a possible 
end of suffering — Nirvana. (4) This end may be 
achieved by following the Noble Eight-fold Path, 
which consists of (a) right knowledge, (b) right 
aspiration, (c) right speech, (d) right conduct, 
(e) right means of livelihood, (f ) right endeavour, 
(g) right mmdfulness, and (h) right meditation. 

The first and third " truths " (suffering and 
Nirvana) are the same as the second and fourth 
" marks." The fourth (the path to Nirvana) is 
purely a point of ethics, and does not at present 
concern us. The second (the cause of suffering) 
is the most important, and contains the seed of a 
very complete phenomenology, for at a very 
early stage " suffering " became, in this instance, 
synonymous with life, and this " truth " was 



INTRODUCTION 9 

supposed to explain the origin of the experienced 
"worid — ^the experienced universe, let it be noted, 
for eariy Buddhism had no interest in the origin 
of the external universe. 

Primitive Buddhism though agnostic was 
probably realistically inclined. It believed that 
there is an external universe closely corresponding 
to our sense-data, but it realized that in its 
present form the world as we see it is subjective, 
the result of the percipient consciousness 
(vijnana) acted upon by ^Eternal stimuli. 

The theory of the origin, awakening, and 
development of the Vijnana is explained in the 
obscure Pratitya Samutpada, or the twelve-linked 
chain of causation. This, though differently ex- 
plained by the various schools of Buddhism, 
always consists of : — 



(1] 


Ignorance. 


(2) 


Action. 


(3] 


Consciousness. 


(4] 


Name and Form. 


(5] 


The Senses. 


(6) 


Contact. 


(7] 


Sensation. 


(8] 


Craving. 


(9] 


Attachment. 


(10] 


Becoming. 


(11) 


Birth. 


(12) 


Old age, disease, and death 



10 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

The origin of the percipient consciousness is 
ignorance and desire. Without these the indi- 
vidual consciousness would disintegrate, and 
though the experienced universe cannot exist 
without object, it equally cannot exist without 
subject. Consequently when an Arhat (one who 
has attained Mrvana) dies, the experienced world 
for that person comes to an end. 

It will be seen from this that there is a close 
connection between cause and effect. This law 
Buddhism calls Karma, and is one of the fimda- 
mental features of the Buddhist faith. Among 
the innumerable divisions of Karma we find the 
following : — 

Des/'re 

Ac/f'o/?- r > i ffeju//' 

>- 

Another such threefold classification is : — 

1. The Seed. (ffe<«). 

2. Environment or attendant circumstances. 

(Tratyaya). 

3. The result or fruit. (JPlhala). 

The doctrine of Anatman prevents the belief 
in the persistence of the undying personality, 
while the doctrine of Karma, on the other hand, 
demands that there be something that can reap 
the result of a man's good or bad deeds. Accord- 



INTRODUCTION 11 

ingly the early Buddhists taught that the fruit 
of a man's deeds will cause the birth of a new 
personality after the dissolution of the old. This 
birth may be in one of the numerous heavens or 
hells, or it may be on the earth again. 
Hlnaydna Buddhism. 

The philosophy of primitive or pristine Budd- 
hism became crystallized in Hinayana Buddhism, 
the Orthodox branch of the faith which was 
matured during the period from the death of the 
Buddha down to about the time of the beginning 
of the Christian era, after which it had to compete 
with the newly-developed Mahayana. Hinayana 
itself was by no means unified, for shortly after 
the death of Gautama it broke up into a number 
of sects, with widely varying interpretations of 
the earlier philosophy. Out of the eighteen or 
twenty such Hinayana sects, two only require 
especial attention at the present time. These 
are, first, the Sthaviravadins (Pali Thervadins), 
and, second, the SarvaiStivadins. 

The former is probably the school which keeps 
nearest to the tenets of early Buddhism, but 
soon lost its hold over India proper, 
though it has always maintained itself in Ceylon, 
Burma, and Siam. The Sarvastivadins were of 
a more scholastic nature. They transformed 



12 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

Buddhism into a complete and consistent 
philosophy, and wrote in or translated their 
works into classical Sanskrit, while the more 
simple Sthaviravadins retained the more collo- 
quial, popular, and vulgar Pall. The Sarvas- 
tivadins seem to have gained the upper hand in 
India some time before the birth of Christ, and 
long remained the most important school of 
Indian Hinayana. Most of the Hinayana works 
translated into foreign tongues, such as Chinese 
or Tibetan, belonged to this school, and though 
as a separate school it almost expired with the 
extinction of Buddhism in India, it had an 
enormous influence on the philosophic develop- 
ment of the later sects which survived. In fact, 
the Sarvastivadins may be called the Hinayana 
school par excellence. 

Even the more primitive Sthaviravadin school, 
which prides itself upon its maintenance of the 
letter of the law as preached by Qakyamuni, has 
added several important features. The most 
essential point is that in practice it has abandoned 
the agnosticism of the earlier faith, and depending 
upon the fidelity of sense impressions proceeded 
to systematize objective phenomena. Thus, for 
example, it accepted, in a somewhat modified 
form, the ancient cosmography of India, with its 



INTRODUCTION 13 

geography, astronomy, and account of the in- 
tegration and disintegration of the material {i.e., 
external) universe. Where primitive Buddhism 
had ignored, the Sthaviravadins denied, the 
existence of an Absolute. Those problems which 
the early Buddhists has rejected as being irrele- 
vant were answered by the Sthavkavadins, even 
though the answers were relegated to the body 
of relative, as opposed to absolute, truth. The 
latter consisted only of such doctrines as the 
three marks and the four noble truths. 

One of the most important steps to be taken 
was the analysis of the parts of being, approached 
in the first place from the psychological point of 
view. Early Buddhism had taught that instead 
of an ego entity, the personality consisted of five 
constituent parts (skandha), viz. : — Bupa (Form, 
i.e., the body) ; Vedana (sensation or feeling) ; 
Samjna (conception) ; SamsJcara (here meaning 
various mental qualities) ; and Vijndna (con- 
sciousness). The Sthaviravadins divided Form, 
the material world, into 27 or 28 parts ; Sensa- 
tion into 3 or 5 ; Conception into 6 ; Mental 
Qualities into 52 ; and Consciousness into 89 
parts. 

These divisions were the result of introspective 
analysis, but they were considered absolute and 



14 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

final. These several divisions constituted the 
unchanging elements of existence from which all 
phenomena are compounded. Buddhism was 
thus transformed from an agnostic and positivist 
system, concerned only with suffering and the 
alleviation of suffering, into a realistic and 
materialistic philosophy, though the transforma- 
tion was gradual and could hardly have been 
recognized at the time, for early Buddhism per- 
mitted the analysis of subjective states, and the 
elements of existence of the Sthaviravadins were 
enunciated by merely subdividing the divisions 
of early Buddhism, while maintaining the sub- 
jective or psychological point of view. 

The Sarvastivadins are to the Sthaviravadins 
what the Sthaviravadins were to primitive Budd- 
hism. The materialism and reaUsm of the Stha- 
viravadins was made more explicit and categori- 
cal ; the agnostic and psychological aspect was 
largely lost sight of. Buddhism thus became a 
definite and rigid philosophic system, instead of 
remaining a body of truths which were effective 
irrespective of metaphysics. A most important 
step was made when the elements of existence 
were classified from an external or objective as 
well as from a subjective point of view. The older 
or subjective classification was retained (though 



INTRODUCTION 15 

the subdivisions of each skandha were somewhat 
different from those of the Sthaviravadiris), but 
the subdivisions were re-arranged in such a way 
as to constitute a complete analysis of the 
external universe. 

According to the Abhidharma Koga these 
elements (or dharma) are 75 in number, classified 
in the following way : — 

1. Unconditioned Elements (AsamsTcrita Dhar- 
ma) or simple elements, so called because they do 
not enter into combiuations with other elements. 
They are three in number, of which Space or 
Ether, and Nirvana are two. 

2. Conditioned Elements {Samslcrita Dharma), 
or complex elements, so called because they 
enter into combinations, though themselves sim- 
ple and permanent. Their compounds constitute 
the phenomena of the universe. These elements 
are 72 in number, divided into : — 

1. Material elements, 11 in number. 

2. Mind, 1 in number. 

3. Mental Qualities, such as love, hate, etc., 

46 in number. 

4. Miscellaneous elements, such as life, decay, 

etc., 14 in number. 
These elements were considered permanent and 
unchanging, as were the eighty odd physical 



16 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

elements of the scientists of a generation ago. 
In their present state all phenomena were sup- 
posed to be impermanent and unstable, but 
consisted of stable and unchanging rudiments. 

The Transition from Hinayana to Mahdydna. 

In its finished form BQnayana laid great em- 
phasis upon two doctrines. These were : — (1) 
It is necessary for all men to strive after Arhat- 
ship, or salvation from the wheel of life and death. 
This was the religious phase. (2) AH phenomena 
are unstable compounds of a certain fixed number 
of stable elements. This was the philosophic 
phase. 

Neither one of these doctrines can be said to 
be in strict conformity with the principles of 
early Buddhism. As regards the first, in Hina- 
yana a distinction in Jcind was made between the 
Arhat, he who has merely attained Nirvana or 
salvation, and the Buddha who had also attained 
supreme enlightenment, or, more correctly, three 
stages were enunciated : — (1) ArhatsMp, or mere 
salvation ; (2) Fratyeka BuddaJwod, or private 
Buddhahood, supreme enlightenment for oneself 
alone ; and (3) Buddahood proper, supreme en- 
lightenment gained in order to teach the world. 
According to Hinayana not only is there an 



INTRODUCTION 17 

immense difference between each stage, but for 
the average man the only possible goal is Arhat- 
ship ; only one out of many millions may aspire 
to Pratyeka Buddhahood, and only one in many 
cycles may attain Buddhahood. In primitive 
Buddhism, on the other hand, little distinction, 
save one of degree, is made between the Buddha 
and his illuminated disciples, and the highest 
goal is open to all. 

As regards the second point, the thorough- 
going anitya or impermanency doctrine of primi- 
tive Buddhism is presumed to apply to all parts 
of the universe. Every thing, even the com- 
ponent parts of being, are in a perpetual flux or 
becoming, so that the doctrine of a number of 
fixed and changeless elements, constituting an 
eternal being, seems a departure from the original 
outlook on Ufe. To be consistent even the 
dharmas or elements should be considered com- 
plex, caused, conditioned, subject to change. 

On both these points Mahayana rose in revolt 
against Hinayana, and attempted to revert to 
the spirit of the original teachings. They 
claimed that their own teachings more perfectly 
expressed the meaning of the Buddha's teach- 
ing, just as the Protestants wished to revert to 
the ideas of Primitive Christianity. It must be 



18 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

confessed, however, that this desire for reform 
resulted only in the formation of a new system 
of religion and philosophy, which retained 
something of the spirit but little of the letter of 
the earlier faith. Let us take for example the 
question of the universality of the Buddha goal, 
whereby the distinction in kind between the 
Buddha and his disciples was obliterated. 

Mahayana, appealing as it does to the emo- 
tional and devotional elements, regarded the Arhat 
ideal as selfish. It was enamoured of the idea 
of self-sacrifice and proclaimed that those who 
were content with self -salvation or self -enlighten- 
ment might aim only at Arhatship or Pratyeka 
Buddhahood, but insisted that its own followers 
preferred to abandon these lower aspirations in 
order that they might become all-saving Buddhas. 
Once this doctrine had been formulated great 
emphasis was laid upon it, and we find many 
passages breathing the noblest altruism. 

Accordingly in early Mahayana all its own 
followers were called Bodhisattvas, Buddhas-to- 
be, as opposed to the adherents of Hinayana, 
who were termed Qravakas, or aspirants only 
after Arhatship. 

Later Mahayana, the so-called true Mahayana, 
carried this idea still further, and taught that 



INTRODUCTION 19 

supreme and perfect enlightenment (Buddha- 
hood) was the final goal of all. The first half 
of the famous Mahayana scripture, the Lotus of 
the Good Law (Saddharma Pundarika Siitra), 
is given up to shewing that in reality there is but 
one road, that the other goals are but upaya — 
devices — on the parts of the Buddhas for the 
purpose of leading the world away from sensu- 
ality and materialism. 

Strangely enough, however, though throwing 
the gates of Buddhahood open to all, Mahayana 
took great pains to exalt the dignity and powers 
of the Buddhas. In Hinayana the Buddhas are 
men pure and simple, while in Mahayana they 
are looked upon as divine incarnations, or as 
material expressions of the Universal Buddha, 
whose existence Mahayana gradually came to 
teach. 

In Hinayana SUtras sermons are delivered 
by Qakyamuni, generally speaking in simple 
and unaffected phrases so as to make the auditor 
feel the presence of a fatherly and serene old 
philosopher, advising those in the battle of life 
as one who has just emerged victorious himself. 
In Mahayana Sutras, on the other hand, we find 
a mysterious and transcendent person far re- 
moved from the levels of ordinary humanity, 



20 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

who is listened to and worshipped by countless 
hordes of beings, celestial, human, and demoniac, 
who shower flowers upon the sage while he per- 
forms his stupendous supernatural deeds. In 
the Saddharma Pundarika Siitra, for example, 
Qakyamuni sits for long ages in meditation. He 
is the Supreme Euler who has himself led count- 
less thousands to Enlightenment during countless 
ages, and who never really dies and who is never 
really born. The only explanation of this is 
that Qakyamuni and all the other Buddhas, as 
well as the Universal Buddha, are one. 

The Mahayana Buddhism of India. 
The religious aspect of Mahayana developed 
some time immediately prior to the Christian 
era, but its philosophical aspect was formulated 
during the period extending from the first to 
the fifth centuries A.D. Two main schools 
came to be differert1«iated. One was the Madhya- 
nuka school, founded by Nagarjuna and Arya 
Deva in the first and second centuries A.D. 
The other was the Togacarya school, founded 
by Asanga and Vasubandhiu in the fourth 
century A.D. 

The Madhyamika school, which was thus some 
centuries earlier, largely devoted itself to the 



INTRODUCTION 21 

consideration of the second point on which 
Mahayana claimed that Hinayana had departed 
from the original teaching — the question of the 
existence of certain permanent stable elements 
which composed the universe. In accepting 
this doctrine, Hinayana, as we have said, almost 
abandoned its spirit of insistence upon change 
and becoming, and approached the standpoint 
of Western philosophy. The root instinct of the 
religion was too strong, however, and in the 
Madhyamika philosophy a return was made 
to the principle of eternal transience and im- 
permanence. 

The basis of this undeveloped or early Maha- 
yana is ^unya (literally emptiness or the Void). 
This doctrine has been frequently totally mis- 
understood in the West and taken to mean the 
theory of the non-existence of the universe or 
purely Nihilistic Idealism. In reality Qunya is 
simply an insistence that aU things have no self- 
essence ; that they are compounds, unstable 
organisms even in their elemental stage. The 
science of the present generation believes that 
the supposedly rigid physical elements are not 
necessarily permanent ; that they may be broken 
down ; that the elements may themselves prove 
to be compounds possessing the essential quali- 



22 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

ties of transformation and decay. In like 
manner the 5™y* school supposed that the 
Dharmas (elements) are impermanent and have 
no existence-unto-themselves ; that they may be 
broken down into parts, parts into sub-parts, 
and so on eternally. Accordingly all phenomena 
have a relative as opposed to an absolute 
existence. All of life was once more reduced 
to a single underlying flux, a stream of existence 
with an everlasting becoming. 

In a word, then, the Madhyamika doctrine of 
Qunya is that there is no thing-unto-itself, 
nothing with a self essence, nothing that cannot 
be broken up until we reach the great 
transcendent reality which is so absolute that it 
is wrong to say that it is or that it is not. This 
underlying reality — the principle of eternal re- 
lativity, non-infinity — permeates aU phenomena, 
allowing expansion, growth, and evolution, which 
would otherwise be impossible. 

It is easy to see that this early and undeveloped 
Mahayana idea of the Eternal Flux was the germ 
of the later doctrine of the Absolute. The 
doctrine of the Madhyamika school, however, 
was largely a negative one. It reduced all 
phenomena to a constantly changing stream of 



INTRODUCTION 23 

life, but concerning the nature of this stream of 
life it tells us little or nothing. 

The next stage of doctrinal development, as 
found in the Yogacarya school, was a very 
important one, and resulted in the formulation 
of a remarkably complete system of idealism. 
The stream of life was supposed to be the Essence 
of mind, a fundamental Mind substance that was 
permanent and yet ever changing like the ocean. 
From this aU the elements (and the 75 elements 
of the earlier school became 100 in the Yogacarya 
doctrine) and therefore all phenomena are de- 
rived. It was called the Alaya Vijndna, re- 
pository consciousness, yet it was considered to 
be neither matter nor mind, but the basic energy 
that was at the root of both. 

It is the imperceptible and unknowable 
noumenon behind all phenomena. To quote 
Kuroda : "In contradistinction to the fallacious 
phenomena of existence there is the true Essence 
of Mind. The Essence of Mind is the entity 
without ideas and without phenomena and is 
always the same. It pervades all things, and is 
pure and unchanging . . . so it is called 
Bhutatathata — ^permanent reality." 

It would be easy to exaggerate the importance 
of this doctrine and falsely to identify it with 



24 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

more developed systems, but undoubtedly it has 
many points of contact with certain phases of 
modern Occidental philosophy. The Alaya 
Vijnana is like the Elan de Vie of Bergson, the 
Energy of Leibnitz, or the Unconscious of Von 
Hartmann. Like the last, though it is the 
essence of consciousness, it is not itself conscious 
in its earlier stages. It is mental, and yet there 
is a certain objective reality about it. Each 
unit of life may be regarded as a vortex in the 
sea of life. The action and interaction of these 
units one with another and with the common 
stream brings about the phenomenal appearance 
of the Universe. 

Accordingly the Alaya Vijnana is regarded in 
three aspects, viz : — (1) as acti/oe, or the seed of 
percipient consciousness ; (2) as passive, as the 
sensibUia of consciousness ; (3) as the object of 
false belief, inasmuch as being the root of self- 
consciousness, each person comes to regard him- 
self as an eternal ego unity. 

The Early MahdyHna Buddhism of 
China and Japan. 

Buddhism was introduced into China in the 
first century A.D., and was firmly established 
by' the fourth century. It was introduced into 



INTRODUCTION 25 

Japan in the sixth century, and was firmly 
established there in the seventh. The important 
sects of Indian Buddhism were introduced into 
those two countries, and we find a Bidon or 
Kusha sect corresponding to the Sarvastivadin 
school, a Sanron sect corresponding to the 
Madhyamika school, and a Hosso sect correspond- 
ing to the Yogacarya school. These were all 
eclipsed, however, by a number of schools which 
developed in China and Japan itself. In these 
schools we may distinguish two phases, an 
earlier and theoretical or philosophical phase, 
and a later or practical and religious phase. 

The early or philosophic phase is best repre- 
sented by the two schools of Tendai and Kegon. 
The Tendai school is in some ways a further 
development of the Madhyamika school, the 
Kegon of the Yogacarya, but both are synthetic 
philosophies, and have borrowed largely from all 
available sources. The doctrines of the two 
schools closely resemble each other, differing 
chiefly on points of emphasis, so that for the time 
being they may be considered together. 

Their most valuable contribution to Buddhist 
philosophy was the development of the idea of 
the Absolute, which was latent in both the 
Madhyamika and Yogacarya schools. The 



26 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAyAnA BUDDHISM 

Essence of Mind, or the Sea of Life is regarded as 
the one fundamental reality. It alone can be 
said to have a permanent existence, all phenom- 
ena being merely ephemeral manifestations there- 
of. It is very frequently caUed the Middle 
Principle (Chu), since it transcends both Being 
(Ke) and Becoming (Kii). Chinese Mahayanists 
answer the question of Being and Becoming by 
the simile of the ocean. The ocean is the Ab- 
solute, the waves are life's phenomena. The 
ocean is always changing. Waves are constantly 
arising, and no two waves are ever alike. So does 
the stream of life ever go surging past, never 
remaining the same. Yet there is a certain 
stability, a certain being, a fixity, a changeless- 
ness in this very changeability. 

The doctrine of the Absolute of most Western 
philosophies is based upon the idea of pure 
Being. The Mahayana doctrine of the Absolute 
(Bhiitatathata) evolved from the idea of be- 
coming, yet the two doctrines are strangely 
similar. In both the Absolute is the sufficient 
reason of the universe ; it is the principle of 
existence which transcends but includes matter 
and mind, life and death, sameness and difference, 
Samsara (the phenomenal world) and Nirvana 
(the noumenal world). The Bhiitatathata of 



INTRODUCTION 27 

MahSyana is the norm of life, the acme of being, 
the warp and the woof of the universe. It 
comes near to Hegel's conception of the Absolute, 
inasmuch as it is not only the force behind 
evolution, but also the very process of evolution 
itself. 

Betaining, as Chinese MahaySna does, the 
conception that all existence is derived from the 
Alaya Vijflana, which, in turn, has its essence and 
supporting principle in the Bhutathata, it 
declares that the Absolute is both identical and 
non-identical with the material universe. It is, 
to quote the ocean simile again, as if the water 
were stirred up by the winds of ignorance where- 
by the waves are produced. The water there- 
fore is both identical and not identical with the 
waves. To quote scholastic verbiage, the Uni- 
verse is but a mode of the Universal. 

Preceding systems had formulated, as we shall 
presently see, the doctrine that every Buddha 
has three bodies, the BharmaMya, the Body of 
the Law, the SamhTiogakEya, the body of Com- 
pensation, and the Nirmd,naTcaya, or the body of 
Transformation. In developed Buddhism the 
Bhtltatathata is regarded as a sort of Universal 
Buddha. Accordingly It was likewise considered 
to be possessed of the three bodies, so that we 



28 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

find in the later stages an almost Christian idea 
of the Trinity. The Dharmakaya corresponds 
to an impersonalized God the Father, the 
Abstract order of the universe, or better, Mr. 
WeU's Unmanifested Deity, the Sambhogakaya 
a more personalized ideation of the Absolute the 
symbol of moral perfection and the object of 
devotion — Mr. Well's God the Invisible King, 
and the Nirmanakaya is equivalent to the 
Christian God the Son, or the Absolute as 
manifested in the world in the guise of a human 
Buddha. 

The Later MaMyHna Buddhism of China and 
Japan. 

The later schools of Chinese and Japanese 
Buddhism are not so much doctrinal develop- 
ments as various adaptations of the foregoing 
philosophical foundation. The most important 
sects were the Shingon or Mantra sect, the Zen 
or Dhyana sect, and the Jodo or Sukhavati sect. 
All of them agreed in accepting the older philo- 
sophical foundations but gave them a religious, 
and to a large extent mystical bias. 

The Shingon school claims to be the hidden 
or esoteric doctrine of which aU outward or 
exoteric doctrines are but symbols. The full 



INTRODUCTION 29 

truth, or the inner mysteries are revealed only to 
those who have been initiated into the order. For 
the uninitiate the Shingon speaks only in terms of 
parable and symbol. The Absolute and the 
various aspects of the Absolute are represented as 
celestial Buddhas and Bodhisattyas, each one 
with a mystic name, form, colour, and sign — 
each represented by a certain sound. The 
Bhutatathata itself, as a whole, is generally 
represented as Vairocana or the Sun Buddha. 
The noumenal aspect of the universe is called 
the Diamond World ; the phenomenal aspect the 
Womb World, and sacred charts (mandala) are 
drawn illustrating the nature, attributes, and 
relations of each. The Shingon sect corresponds 
very closely to the Lamaism of Tibet and 
Mongolia. Both are derived from the later 
phases of the Yogacarya sect in India, about the 
sixth century A.D., when esotericism became 
rampant in both Hindu and Buddhist circles. 

The Zen Dhyana school represents a different 
type of esotericism or mysticism. The basic idea 
of Zen is that all formulated doctrines, whether 
exoteric or esoteric ; all books ; all speech ; and 
even all thought are inadequate to express the 
full nature of absolute truth. Consequently 
Zen refuses to place complete credence in any 



30 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

one book, or collection of books, Buddhist or 
otherwise. It refuses to tie itself to any doctrine 
or creed. It accepts the philosophy of the Tendai 
and Kegon schools from a relative point of view, 
but insists that absolute truth must be found by 
each man for himself by means of intuitional 
realization to be gained through meditation. 
The only definite teaching to be found in the 
Zen sect is that every man is possessed of the 
Bodhicitta (the heart of wisdom) or the seed of 
Buddhahood. Every man is a sleeping Buddha, 
Consequently a man has but to awaken his 
Bodhicitta by meditation for him to gain a 
direct insight into the nature of reality. The 
Zen sect was introduced into China by Bodhid- 
harma in the sixth century, and into Japan by 
Eisai in 1191. 

The Sukhavati doctrine, more particularly as 
represented by the Shin sect, the reformed 
branch of Mahayana Buddhism may be called 
the mysticism of exclusive adoration. In this 
school the Absolute or Universal Buddha is 
symbolized as Amitabha the Buddha of Infinite 
light, or Amitayus, the Buddha of Infinite Time, 
and as such is the object of fervent devotion. 
Enlightenment, or Nirvana, or Buddhahood is 
symbolized by the Paradise, Sukhavati, or J6do 



INTRODUCTION 31 

of Amltabha. Eebirth in this paradise is to be 
gained by self-forgetting adoration of the 
supreme. In early days Amitabha may have 
been regarded as an historical Buddha, and his 
paradise a place to be gained by death, but, in 
the developed doctrine of Chinese and more 
especially Japanese Buddhism, we are told that 
Amitabha is without beginning and without end, 
that he is but a symbol for an inexpressible 
reality, that rebirth into his paradise is nothing 
more than the awakening of the Bodhicitta here 
on earth, and that this Bodhicitta is to be 
awakened by love and by faith. At the present 
time both Chinese and Japanese Buddhism is 
dominated by the Zen and Jodo ideas — Zen 
being an embodiment of absolute truth for the 
educated, and Jodo its relative symbol for the 
mass of the people. 



CHAPTER I 

EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 

All understanding of Buddhist metaphysics 
must be based upon a comprehension of its theory 
of knowledge. This theory we had best consider 
under three aspects : — (1) The nature of truth, 
(2) The methods of ascertaining truth, and (3) 
The methods of demonstrating truth. 

1. The Nature of Truth. 
In Buddhism we find great emphasis laid upon 
the two-fold and the three-fold aspects of truth. 
In a primitive form the two-fold division is to be 
found in Hinayana Buddhism, and probably 
dates back to the time of Qakyamuni himself, 
but was first emphasized by the Madhyamika 
school of Mahayana. 

According to this there are two forms of truth, 
Relative Truth (Samvritti-satya or Zokutai) 
and Absolute Truth (Paramartha-satya or 
Shintai). In earlier days this distinction was 
applied to differentiate those doctrines which 
were an essential and fundamental part of 



EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 33 

Buddhism (such as the Four Noble Truths,) 
"Which were absolutely true and changeless, and 
those doctrines which were merely adopted by 
Buddhist metaphysicians to fUl out a philosophic 
conception of the universe, and which would 
necessarily be modified as new information came 
to light. To this category belong the various 
theories of cosmography, etc. 

Later Buddhism slightly modified this con- 
ception. Absolute Truth was equivalent to 
complete and perfect enlightenment. Words 
being but symbols are incapable of describing 
adequately or defining it. Thought consists of 
a number of concepts, and any concept being 
equally a symbol and therefore inadequate, it 
follows that a knowledge of Absolute Truth 
cannot be gained merely by a process of ratiocina- 
tion. WhUe, however, Absolute Truth is in- 
conceivable it is not unrealizable for through 
spiritual development we may gain direct 
illumination, more or less adequate, according 
to our nature and the stage of our development. 

Once we have thus acquired a direct insight into 
truth we may inadequately attempt to clothe it 
in words and concepts, and crystalUze it into 
dogmas, as a guide to the later seekers after 
truth. It is, however, like trying to describe 



34 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

the colours of the rainbow to a man blind from 
birth. 

This crystallization of truth by formulation of 
doctrine is what the Mahayanists call relative 
truth. Absolute Truth is ever the same, while 
relative truth is ever advancing, coming nearer 
and nearer to an approximation of Absolute 
Truth, as each generation taking the doctrine of 
its predecessors is able more succinctly to 
interpret it and compare it with new realizations 
of Absolute Truth. WhUe, however, the smaller 
circle of relative truth is constantly expanding 
and thereby approaching in size the greater circle 
of Absolute Truth, the two can never coincide, 
siace the latter is infinite, and the former must 
ever deal with finite instruments, such as the 
brain or speech. 

Mahayana declares that all theories, hypo- 
theses, doctrines, whether verbal or incorporated 
in scriptures, whether scientific, philosophical or 
religious, and including its own doctrines of 
Nirvana, the Universal Buddha, etc., belong to 
the body of relative truth, and must, therefore, 
be modified with the course of time. This 
conception of the nature of truth greatly facili- 
tates the doctrinal development of later Budd- 
hism, allowing for the evolution of new theories 



EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 35 

and interpretations, while the simpler theory of 
truth maintained by the Southern Buddhists 
caused them to stick fast to the letter of the law 
as taught by Qakyamuni. 

The three-fold division of truth is nothing 
more than a restatement of this in other terms. 
The three classes are (1) illusion (parikalpita), 
(2) relative knowledge (paratantra), (3) absolute 
knowledge (parinigpanna). The first is abso- 
lutely false, as when a rope lying in the road is 
mistaken for a snake. The second is a pragmatic 
comprehension of the nature of things sufficient 
for ordinary purposes, as when the rope is seen 
to be a rope. The third deals with the real and 
ultimate nature of things, when the rope is 
analysed and its true nature understood. The 
only real difference between the two-fold and 
the three-fold divisions of truth is that finite 
knowledge is separated into falsehood and that 
which is relatively true, and the latter exalted 
to its proper position, since otherwise, by neglect 
of this important phase, intellectual progress 
would be barred. 

2. Methods of Ascertaining Truth. 

Early Buddhism had no elaborate epistemology 
or logic, but in the period of the full development 



36 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

of Mahayana Buddhism we find the following 
classification of the means of evaluating know- 
ledge : — 

I. INDIRECT. 
1. Tradition. 

a. Exoteric. 

b. Esoteric. 

II. DIRECT. 

1. Experience. 

a. Empirical. 

b. Intuitional. 

2. Reason. 

a. Pure reason. 

b. Practical reason. 

A word must be said concerning each of these 
points. 

Buddhism has both an external and an internal 
standard of truth. The saints and sages of the 
past have had a direct insight into the nature of 
reality, and in consequence the truth which they 
expounded must be accepted by all. On the 
other hand such sages have only achieved en- 
lightenment through means which are open to 
us all. By process of experience, both material 
and spiritual, and by reason, both pure and 
practical, we may test the validity of each of 
their positions and reinterpret their meanings 



EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 37 

into closer accordance with the knowledge of 
the time. 

Tradition is of two kinds, exoteric and esoteric. 
The first is embodied in the external dogmas of 
Buddhism as expounded in the Siitras, Vinayas, 
and the Abhidharmas, which are open so that all 
the world may read, while many branches of 
Mahayana insist that beyond this there is a 
secret tradition which may never be written 
down, which requires proper training and 
initiation before it can be understood. 

Experience was likewise divided into two 
phases. The first is merely the ascertainment of 
truth through ordinary physical sense organs 
and sense objects. Provided the sense organs 
and the sense perceiving aspects of consciousness 
are normally constituted the data which they 
furnish may be taken as valid, at least for the 
establishment of relative as opposed to Absolute 
Truth. Owing to the limitations of the physical 
senses and the brain machine, Absolute Truth 
can only be glimpsed by transcending them and 
gaining knowledge through intuition or direct 
realization. For such purposes all doctrines, 
theories, and scriptures are but fingers pointing 
to the moon, and have no inherent validity. 
This doctrine is called the doctrine of Ton or 



38 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

suddenness, i.e., the means whereby knowledge 
may be gained at one stroke through transcen- 
dental apperception without waiting to piece 
together, one by one, the data of empirical 
knowledge. 

Reason is the means whereby we piece to- 
gether the separate and unconnected sense data, 
whether empirical or transcendental, and thereby 
make a system or a new co-ordination of facts, 
enabling us to lay down generalizations and 
broad formulae. Owing to the whole trend of 
its philosophy Buddhism could not place such 
great stress upon the importance of abstract or 
pure reason as could Plato and Aristotle. Never- 
theless even the Hinayana sutras proclaim that 
nothing is to be accepted that is not in accordance 
with reason, and in the metaphysical systems of 
Mahayana the process of abstract reason was the 
method most frequently employed, more 
particularly in such schools as the Tendai and 
the Avatamsaka or Kegon. 

Yet, inasmuch as Buddhism taught that the 
ephemeral nature of external reality and of 
consciousness was an obstacle to the ascertain- 
ment of Absolute Truth by sophism or bare 
deductive reasoning, we early find a tendency 
towards pragmatism, or a substitution of practlc- 



EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 39 

al for pure reasoning, or a tendency to judge of 
the validity of a doctrine by its effect upon human 
life. Thus for example in the Hinayana stitras, 
in discussing what we might call the freedom of 
the will, we find the Buddha saying " Some 
^ramanas and Brahmins there are who maintain 
that whatever a man has in this life ... is 
purely due to predestination. Others say that 
it is due to the will of Igvara (God), others 
again that it is due to blind chance. Now, O 
monks, when I find Qramanas and Brahmins 
holding or preaching such views I . . . say to 
them, ' So then, you must acknowledge that 
men become murderers, thieves, etc. . . on account 
of Pate, Igvara's will, or blind chance. Accord- 
ingly all attempts at improvement or distinction 
between right and wrong, become of no avail. 
Such being the case the moral regeneration of 
the fallen becomes impossible.' This sort of 
reasoning must silence those who hold any of the 
three views mentioned above ." The pragmatic 
nature of this argument is obvious. 

In Mahayana we find the doctrine carried 
somewhat further, and associated with what we 
might call the symbolic theory of truth, i.e., that 
the nature of absolute truth is so great and so 
infinite that it can never be completely and 



40 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

adequately grasped by finite logic, yet neverthe- 
less it may be expressed or indicated by a 
symbol which teaches us something of its essence 
without limiting it by definition. 

Thus the nature of the Absolute (Bhtitata- 
thata) can never be properly formulated, yet 
by symbolizing it as the universal Buddha, 
as Amitabha, Infinite Light, or Amitayus, 
Infinite Time, we may have a focus for devotion 
which may remain as a living and vital stimulus 
towards the spiritual life even when increasing 
knowledge may cause us to reinterpret our sym- 
bols. This is the doctrine of upaya or h5ben, 
means or devices, or accommodations of truth 
to the minds of the hearers, which is really the 
basis of the Sukhavati or Paradise doctrine. 

3. Methods of Demonstrating Truth. 
Buddhist logic which is comprised in a sort of 
inverted syllogism passed through a very inter- 
esting evolution. Prom the first it was obviously 
a logic of demonstration of ideas already enter- 
tained, rather than a pretence of deduction of 
previously unknown facts, as was claimed, and 
now considered falsely claimed, by Aristotelian 
logic, with which it has otherwise much in 
common. 



EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 41 

Again the frankly Becoming and consequently 
anti-rational position of Buddhism hindered the 
evolution of its logic. Hinayana Buddhism, in 
fact, never produced any logical system, and even 
the reasoning of the early Madhyamika and 
Yogacarya scholars with their five-fold syllogism 
is largely based on analogical reasoning, the 
citing of individual homogeneous and hetero- 
geneous examples rather than the proof of a fact 
by citing a universal and invariable law. 

Dignaga or Mahadignaga was the first to 
devote himself almost exclusively to logic, and 
with him Buddhist logic, properly so called, 
begins. His syllogism is as follows : — 

Thesis, e.g. — Socrates is mortal. 

Reason, e.g. — Because Socrates is a man. 

Example, e.g. — And all men are mortal. 
With this may be compared the Occidental 
formula : — 

Major Premise. — AU men are mortal. 

Minor Premise. — Socrates is a man. 

Conclusion. — Therefore Socrates is mortal. 
Let us examine each of these features some- 
what more in detail : — 

1. The thesis is divided into the subject or 
minor term (pak^a) e.g., " Socrates," and pre- 
dicate or major term (sadbya) e.g., " mortal," 



42 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

Neither subject nor predicate is itself to be 
disputed, but only the thesis or proposition 
concerning their relationship. 

2. The reason or premise must be a known 
truth, or a truth accepted by all. Consequently, 
DignSiga wiU place here only those facts known 
directly, i.e., through reason or experience, and 
not those facts which are known indirectly, e.g., 
by tradition, exoteric, or esoteric. 

3. The same thing must hold true of the 
Example, which is of a more abstract nature. 
The word example (drstanta) is singularly un- 
fitted to denote the idea of the major premise, 
and is derived from the period when the universal 
law of necessary concojnitance was unknown, 
and in its place there was cited one or two 
analogous examples. Thus the old syllogism 
would have run : — 

Thesis. Sound is non-eternal. 

Reason. Because it is produced. 

Example. Like a pot, and not like space, 
while with Dign^ga it is of course : — 

Thesis. Sound is non-eternal. 

Reason. Because it is produced. 

Example. All produced things are non-etemaJ, 
to which might be added, purely for purposes 
of elucidation, and not for proof, the homo- 



EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 43 

geneous example " like a pot," and the hetero- 
geneous example " not like space." 

Dignaga's rule for the formation of his new 
example was to " take the reason for the subject, 
and the major term for the predicate." Thus 
for example : — 

Thesis. All A is B. 

Reason. All A is 0. 

Example. AH C is B, 
or, in other words, to cite another syllogism : — 

Thesis. All diamonds are combustible. 

Reason. Because aU diamonds are carbon. 

Example. And all carbon is combustible. 

This brings us to a discussion of the famous 
doctrine of the 3 phases of the reason or middle 
term (hetu). 

1. The first deals with the relation between 
the middle term (C) and the minor term or 
subject (A). 2. The second deals with the 
relation between the middle term (C) and the 
major term or predicate (B). 3. The third 
deals with the relation between the middle 
term (C) and the heterogeneous example (which 
we win call D). 

For a syllogism to be vaM : — 1. must 
include the whole of A, e.g., the word carbon must 
include all and not merely some of diamonds. 



44 INTRODUCTION TO M AH AY AN A BUDDHISM 

2. All C must invariably apply to B, but it need 
not include all B, e.g., all carbon must be com- 
bustible, though combustible things may include 
other things than carbon. 3. C must include 
no D or Non-B, e.g., carbon must possess no 
non-combustible qualities. 

Finally we come to the fallacies, the presence 
of which in either the thesis, the reason, or the 
example would make the syllogism invalid. 
We are told that there are 9 fallacies of the 
thesis, 14 fallacies of the reason, and 10 fallacies 
of the example, but these as lying within the 
realm of pure technicality, are outside the scope 
of OUT present undertaking. 

4. Absolute Truth, and Buddhist Doctrines. 

Such then is the Buddhist theory of the nature 
of truth, and the means of ascertaining and 
demonstrating it. The question then arises, does 
Buddhism claim a unique possession of truth, 
does it state that its own doctrines are the sole, 
final, and absolute embodiments of reality ? 

Such is far from the case. Its doctrine of the 
distinction between Absolute Truth and relative 
truth, caused it to state that all of its own doc- 
trines, and theories, as well as the sacred works 
containing them, belong exclusively to the 



EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 45 

realm of relative truth, and are, therefore, liable 
to error, and capable of constant improvement, 
that other systems of thought no less than its 
own are equally but the imperfect embodiments 
of inadequate glimpses of absolute reality. This 
idea, more or less common to all forms of Maha- 
yana Buddhism, is emphasized by the Dhyana 
sect. 

The mode of expression adopted by a modern 
leader of the school, Kaiten Nukariya in his 
" Eeligion of the Samurai " is very interesting : — 

" The scripture is no more nor less than the 
finger pointing to the moon of Buddhahood. 
When we recognize the moon and enjoy its 
benign beauty, the finger is of no use. As the 
finger has no brightness whatever so the scripture 
has no holiness whatever. The scripture is 
religious currency representing spiritual wealth. 
It does not matter whether the money be gold 
or sea-shells or cows. It is a mere substitute. 
What it stands for is of paramount importance. 

" Away with your stone knife. Do not watch 
the stake against which a running hare once 
struck its head and died. Do not wait for 
another hare. Another may not come forever. 
Do not cut out the side of the boat from which 
you dropped your sword to mark where it sunk. 



46 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

The boat is ever moving on. The canon is the 
window out of which we observe the grand 
spiritual scenery of spiritual nature. To hold 
communion directly with it we must get out of 
the window. It is a mere stray fly that is always 
buzzing within it struggling to get out. Those 
who spend most of their lives in the study of the 
scriptures are religious flies, good for nothing but 
their buzzing about nonsensical technicalities. 
It is on this account that Binzai declared ' The 
twelve divisions of the Buddhist canon are 
nothing better than waste paper.' " 

After outlining the " Eelative Truth " re- 
garding the Absolute Nukariya goes on to say : — 

" Has then the divine nature of the Universal 
Spirit been completely and exhaustively re- 
vealed to our Enlightened Consciousness ? To 
this question we would answer in the negative, 
for so far as our limited experience is concerned 
Universal Spirit reveals itself as a being with 
profoimd wisdom and boundless mercy ; this 
nevertheless does not imply that this conception 
is the only possible and complete one. It goes 
on to disclose a new phase, to add a new truth. 
The subtlest logic of old is a mere quibble of now- 
a-days. . . . New theories are formed, new 
discoveries are made only to give way to newer 



EPISTEMOLOGY AND LOGIC 47 

theories and newer discoveries. New ideals 
realized or new desires satisfied are sure to 
awaken new and stronger desires. Not an instant 
life remains the same, but it rushes on amplify- 
ing and enriching itself from the dawn of time 
to the end of eternity." 



CHAPTEE II 

THE NATURE OP THE ABSOLUTE AND 
ITS RELATION TO THE UNIVERSE 

1. The OuUoolc on Life 

Questions concerning the outlook on life have 
always played an integral part in Buddhist 
philosophy. In fact, in its essence, Buddhism is 
not an analysis of the ultimate nature of existence 
or an explanation of the noumenon which lies 
behind phenomena, but it is an interpretation 
of the good and bad of life, taken as a whole and 
unanalysed. 

Like all other phases of Buddhist thought its 
theory of the proper evaluation of life has 
undergone great evolution and modification. 
Its various ramifications may best be considered 
under three stages, which, for want of better 
terms, we may call, (1) absolute pessimism, (2) 
absolute optimism, and (3) relative pessimism. 
The first is associated with primitive and Hina- 
yana Buddhism ; the second with the doctrines 
of the various schools of unreformed Mahayana ; 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 49 

the third with the reformed branch of 
Mah&yftna. 

(a). Absolute Pessimism. 

Primitive Buddhism began by saying, as we 
know, (1) all is impermanent, (2) all is lacking a 
self, (3) all is sorrowful. The very nature of 
phenomenal life is transient, and consequently 
all joys are transient. Where there is birth 
there is necessarily old age, disease, and death. 
Those whom we love are estranged, or are taken 
from us. Achievement is disillusionment. The 
few benefit at the expense of the many, and even 
the few find no real enjoyment in life. 

This state of affairs holds true not merely for 
the present earthly existence, but for all possible 
forms of life, whether in heaven or heU, whether 
in the past, present, or future. Consequently 
for primitive Buddhism, and for Hinayana 
Buddhism life, qua life, has no fascination. It 
can find peace and satisfaction only in emancipa- 
tion from all known forms of existence, in com- 
plete escape from the phenomenal world, in the 
annihilation of bodily and mental existence, 
namely Nirvana. 

Nirvana, to be sure, is purely a state of mind 
obtainable anywhere and at any time, and is to 



50 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

be achieved while still ia the flesh, but as life or 
the corporate personality is only formed as the 
result of ignorance and desire in the past, when 
the Arhat, he who has attained Nirvana, dies no 
new personality can be formed, and certainly, 
from our material point of view, the personality 
is wiped out of existence. 

This is what is known as the Shokyoku-teki no 
Nehan or the negative view of Mrvana, where 
Ufe is compared to the waning of the moon. 
Here the moon is compared to the sins and 
sorrows of life. Gradually it wanes imtil finally 
there is nothing left. 

(h). Absolute Optimism. 
All this was changed by the formulation of the 
doctrine of the Absolute, the Universal Buddha, 
or the Essence of Mind, the supreme ideal 
which is behind all life and from which all things 
draw their sustenance. 

Every sentient being is possessed of the 
Bodhicitta (the wisdom heart) or the seed or 
kernel of enlightenment. This is the spark of 
Buddhahood which has only to be awakened to 
spring into the flame of perfection or Buddhahood. 
Consequently aU forms of Ufe spring from the 
nounienoni which is itself good, which is possessed 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 51 

of the four-fold qualities of J5 purity, raku 
pleasure, ga self essence, and jd permanence. 
All phenomenal life is bad only because it is 
relative, incomplete, imperfect, because it in- 
adequately expresses the absolute, because it is 
bounded and conditioned, for latent within each 
phenomenon is supreme bliss. 

Nirvana consists not in escape from the world, 
but in the unlocking of the hidden nature, the 
development of the sleeping Buddha, the un- 
folding of potentialities. It is the fruition of 
life rather than its denial. Sin and sorrow are 
not so much exterminated as transmuted into 
holiness and joy. 

This is known as the ShakkyoTcu-teM no 
Nehan or the positive Nirvana, in which Nirvana 
is compared to the waxing of the moon. The 
moon is the Bodhicitta, which steadily grows in 
intensity until the full moon of Buddhahood be 
reached. 

(c). Relative Pessimism. 

Later followed the inevitable reaction. When 
the world is considered all perfect, men cease to 
strive for the cessation of the imperfect. Sin, 
sorrow, and misfortune are brushed aside as 



52 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

aspects of the whole by which its absolutivity 
may be more adequately judged. 

Shinran, the founder of the Shin school of 
Buddhism (13th century A.D.), accepted the 
philosophy of unreformed Mahayana Buddhism, 
but gave it a practical turn. Though the world 
be potentially good and all men possessed of 
the Bodhicitta, yet do grief and doubt assail us. 
Meditation upon the Absolute may suffice the 
metaphysician, but the man in the street is left 
disconsolate. Weak mortality is unable to 
awaken the Bodhicitta, and for such the older 
philosophies give no help. 

Though acting on these ideas Shinran did not 
deny the validity of the older doctrines, but he 
devoted his life to formulating them in such a 
way that they might serve as a comfort and a 
stimulus. Looked at from the relative point of 
view, so long as our hearts are bent upon 
external pleasures, or are in dependence upon 
material things, there is no true happiness or 
peace of mind. Anguish seizes upon us, and we 
find ourselves forlorn and hopeless. 

Salvation, however, may be found in under- 
standing the true meaning behind the words 
Amida, TariM, and Ojo. Amida, (Sanskrit 
Amitabha) is a symbol of the Infinite, the sum 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 53 

total of OUT highest aspirations. Tariki (liter- 
ally other power) is a complete setting aside of 
personal motives, of self-aspiration in a complete 
adoration of the supreme. It is, as we have 
said, a mysticism of exclusive adoration. This 
awakens the Busshin or Buddha heart (Bodhi- 
citta) which results in Ojo, rebirth in Paradise, 
a rebirth which takes place not merely at death, 
but at the moment in life of complete self- 
abnegation, thereby differing from the older 
Sukhavati doctrine, which gave a purely material 
and post-mortem position to Paradise. 

Life then is relatively evil, that is, evil so long 
as we place our trust in anything save Amida, 
but becomes a resting place, a temporary abode 
of the Bodhicitta, when once the latter has been 
awakened by unselfish adoration. As Amida is 
eternal, so is the Bodhicitta eternal, but whether 
after death it retains its discreteness, or is lost in 
the sea of perfection, only the awakened one can 
know. 

2. The Nature of Reality. 

On no point is the diversity of Buddhist 
philosophy so exemplified as on that of its 
various theories of the nature of ultimate reality. 
There is, of course, the marked line of cleavage 



54 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

between the Hinayana and Mahay 3>na philoso- 
phies, but, in addition, each of these schools 
is several times subdivided. The principal 
stages may be summarized as follows : — 

1. Primitive Buddhism, or psychological 
agnosticism, in which no attempt is made to 
explore the recesses of the noumenal world, and 
no theories concerning ultimate reality are 
postulated. 

2. Hinayana Buddhism teaches a material- 
istic realism, that the universe consists of a 
certain small number of elements, uncreated, 
which enter into combination in accordance 
with causal law, unconnected with any super- 
natural law giver. 

3. The Madhyamika School of MahSySna 
broke up these elements into component parts, 
and stated that there is only a fluid, fluctuat- 
ing stream of life, and that therefore aU seemingly 
unchanging phenomena have only a conceptual 
existence. 

4. The Yogacarya School of Mah&ydLna called 
this stream of Ufe the Essence of Mind or the 
Alaya Vijnana, which is no less fluid or devoid of 
eternal particularity. The evolution of this 
Essence of Mind brings about the formation 
of the phenomenal universe. 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 55 

5. Chinese and Japanese MaJi&yana (especi- 
ally the Tendai and Kegon sects) has developed 
the theory of the Absolute latent In the fore- 
going conceptions, and states that the Bhuta- 
tathata is both the Norm or Pure Form, or 
Supreme Idea, and also the fundamental essence 
of all Ufe. 

This theory of the Absolute or Bhtitatathata 
is so important that a few words of elucidation 
are necessary. It is the doctrine which most 
sharply distinguishes Mahayana from Hinayana, 
and, on the other hand, the pecidiar line of 
development which the theory underwent causes 
it to be essentially different from most other 
doctrines of the Absolute as found in either 
Europe or Asia. 

Classification of Theories Concerning the 
Absolute. 

It is important to understand quite clearly 
just what relationship exists between the 
Mahayana and other theories concerning the 
nature of the Absolute. In attempting to 
explain their own position, modern Mahayana 
scholars have classified the various forms of 
monotheism in the following way : — 

1. Transcendental Monotheism, under which 



56 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Orthodox Christianity and Islam are included. 
In this the Deity and the world are entirely 
separate and distinct. Spirit and matter were 
created by God out of nothing and henceforwards 
exercise their functions in accordance with His 
Laws. This school has three divisions, (a) 
anthropomorphic in which a definite form is 
assigned to the Deity, (b) anthropopathic in 
which the Deity is without body or parts, yet has 
semi-human emotions, and (c) the school in 
which the Deity though more or less personal 
yet is " without body parts, or passions." 

2. Emanational Monotheism is a modified 
form of pantheism which teaches that God and 
the World are not the same, yet the world is of 
a similar nature and is an emanation from the 
Deity. In this school the Divine is the parent as 
weU as the ruler of the Universe. This theory 
which found much favour with the Hindus and 
the Sufis, and which has had a revival amongst 
many members of modern Liberal Christianity is 
usually associated with the idea that the world 
when first emanated was pure, but that it has 
become corrupted, though finally the universe 
and the human soul will once more be purified, 
whereupon it will be reabsorbed into the Divine 
Essence. 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 57 

3. Devolutional Monotheism. With the third 
form of monotheism we definitely enter the 
limits of pantheism strictly so-called. In this 
system God and the world are absolutely synony- 
mous, one word being used for the other. There 
are two forms of this idea, one is that the Divine 
is simply the sum total of the atoms which com- 
pose the universe, the other which has been 
termed panentheism, is that God while the sum- 
total is yet something more, a something in 
itself. 

In either case this school teaches that in the 
manifestation of the universe the Divine has 
changed His essence — that the nature of the 
Absolute was at first pure and undefiled like 
clear water, but that subsequently it became 
polluted as if some mud were mingled with it 
but that at some future time it is to be hoped that 
this mud will be strained off and the water will 
once more resume its clarity. 

4. The Mahayana Conception stands in con- 
tradistinction to all the other teachings. To be 
sure Mahayana is, philosophically at least, 
monotheistic, and at the same time it is Pantheis- 
tic in teaching that the divine and the universe 
are indivisible, though with the Panentheists 
Mahayana asserts that the Universal Buddha is 



58 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

far more than the sum-total of existence. The 
fundamental difference is that according to 
Mahayana the essence of the Divine remains un- 
changed throughout all eternity, and the basic 
nature of one phenomenon is exactly the same 
as another, though the mode of expression or 
manifestation may be widely different. 

We are given two illustrations of this idea. 
The first is that of pots of clay. There are, we 
know, pots of many shapes and sizes, some used 
for good purposes and some for bad, though they 
may all be of the same underlying substance. 
The other illustration is that of the ocean which 
we have already pointed out. The pots and the 
waves are the different phenomena of the 
universe, while the clay and the ocean are the 
Absolute. While, to use the simile of the ocean, 
no two waves are aUke, they are all of the same 
essence, the water, and that essence remains 
unchanged, though it is constantly assuming 
new and different shapes and transformations. 

In like manner, says Mahayana, does the 
Absolute express itself in the Universe without 
in the least affecting its own essence. The 
Bhiltatathata therefore is the Eternal Being and 
yet the Eternal Becoming. Furthermore at 
there can be an ocean without wavei but no 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 59 

waves without ocean, so, Mahayana declares, that 
no life would be possible without having for its 
essence the Bhutatathata. 

TTie Mahdydna Theory of the Nature of the 
Absolute. 

A careful examination of the Mahayana 
theory of the Bhutatathata or Absolute shews 
that it combines two widely different concepts. 
These are (1) the norm of Life, and (2) the essence 
of life. 

(1) On the one hand it is not the Universe, 
but the sufficient reason of the Universe, the 
abstract idea of law and causality, the such- 
as-it-is-ness of life. It thus combines something 
of the Aristotelian conception of the Pure Form 
of the Universe as opposed to its content, with 
the Platonic theory of ideas. In this aspect 
it is the symbol of intellectual and moral per- 
fection. It is for this reason that we find the 
Absolute described as Dharma (Law), or Dhar- 
makaya (The Body of the Law), as the Essence 
of Buddha, since it constitutes the reasons of 
Buddhahood, Bodhi (Wisdom) or the source of 
intelligence, Prajna (Enlightenment), Pdramartha 
(Absolute Truth), etc. 

(2) On the other hand, in addition to being 



60 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

the Norm or the Pure Form of the Universe, 
it is also its ultimate essence. The Bhiitatathata 
is identical with the Essence of Mind, and so it 
is called the seed of life, or the Tathagatagarbha 
(the womb of the Tathagata) when it is thought 
of in analogy to Mother Earth where all the 
germs of life are stored. The Alaya Vijnana 
is but a development of this aspect of the Bhuta- 
tathata. In the early days the word Mahayana 
was used in a similar connection. 

In the famous Mahayana Qraddhotpada Qastra, 
which is accepted as Orthodox by all branches 
of Mahayana, we find the following general and 
detailed explanation of the Buddhist theory of 
the Absolute : — 

(a). General Explanation. 
The Absolute can be considered in two ways, 
(1) Its Substance, and (2) Its Attributes. (1) 
Its Substance. The author of the ^raddhotpada 
Qastra, who is usually supposed to be AQvaghoga, 
declares the Absolute to be " the soul (or heart) 
of all sentient beings and constitutes all things in 
the universe, phenomenal and supra-phenome- 
nal." (2) Its Attributes. The Absolute has a 
triple significance, (i) greatness of quintessence 
or essential nature — an essence which " knows 
no diminution or addition, but remains the same 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 61 

in ordinary people, Qravakas, Pratyeka Buddhas, 
BodMsattvas, and Buddhas. It was not created 
in the past, nor is it to be annihilated in 
the future ; it is eternal, permanent, absolute ; 
and from all eternity it sufflcingly embraces in 
its essence all possible merits." (ii) greatness 
of manifestations, " that is to say (the Absolute) 
has such characteristics as . . : — the effulgence of 
great wisdom ; the universal illumination of 
the dharmadhatu ; the true and adequate 
knowledge ; the mind pure and clean in its self 
nature ; the eternal, the blessed, the self-regulat- 
ing, and the pure." (iii) greatness of activity, 
because as a result of its activity all the innumer- 
able phenomena of the universe came into exist- 
ence, and also because through its influence 
aspiring mankind feels a deep compassion for all 
beings, " Bodhisattvas treat others as their own 
self ; wish to work out a universal salvation of 
mankind in ages to come . . . and do not 
cling to the individual existence of a sentient 
being." 

(6). Detailed Explanation. 

The Absolute has two phases or aspects : — 
(1) the Unmanifest or Transcendental ' phase 
(literally the soul as Pure Form) or the Absolute 



62 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

proper, and (2) The Manifest or Immanent phase 
(literally the soul as birth and death) or the 
Absolute become limited. 

(1) TJie Unmanifested Phase, is the Ideal 
World the underlying unity, the quintessence 
of all being. It is the eternal sameness 
under all apparent difference. Owing to our 
subjective activity (nen) we build up a 
vision of a discrete, particularized universe, but 
jn reality the essence of things ever remains one, 
void of particularity. Being absolute " it is 
not nameable or explicable. It can not be 
rendered in any form of language. It is without 
the range of perception." It may be termed 
Qunya or the Void, because it is not a fixed or 
limited entity but a perpetual becoming, void of 
self -existing component parts. It may likewise 
be termed Agiinya, the Full or the Existent 
because when confused subjectivity has been 
destroyed " we perceive the pure soul manifest- 
ing itself as eternal, permanent, immutable, and 
completely comprising all things that are pure." 

(2) The Manifested Phase is the Womb World 
where are stored all the potentialities of every 
form of life. It is identical with the Alaya 
Vijfiana, the repository consciousness, or the 
Essence of Mind. This Essence of Mind has 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 63 

likewise two aspects, (a) that of Enlightenment 
in which it is regarded as the focus of purity in 
the phenomenal world, (b) Non-enlightenment 
in which the Alaya Vijnana becomes entangled 
by ignorance, and as the result of consequent 
confused subjectivity gives rise to the formation 
of the phenomenal world, which is, of course, at 
bottom subjective. 

(a) EnligJitenment consists of supreme 
wisdom and purity. In one sense it is latent 
in all sentient beings however low their state. 
This is known as Potential Enlightenment, or 
enlightenment a priori. The majority of man- 
kind, however, have still to develop this seed of 
Buddhahood until this enlightenment be made 
manifest and conscious. Enlightenment is then 
known as Active Enlightenment or enlighten- 
ment a posteriori. The various ranks such as 
Common People, Qravakas, Pratyeka Buddha, 
Bodhisattvas, and Buddhas are but stages 
leading to Active Enlightenment. 

(b) Non-enlightenment consists of the fecunda- 
tion of the Essence of Mind by Ignorance which 
results in blind activity and the subsequent 
evolution of units of consciousness, which, 
interacting with one another create for themselves 
the image of the phenomenal world. " There- 



64 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

fore the three worlds are nothing but the mani- 
festation of the Alaya Vijnana — separated from 
the mind there would be no such things as the 
six objects of sense." In order to explain the 
evolution of the phenomenal world the Mahayan- 
ists have brought in the Pratitya Samutpada 
or the twelve Nidanas, which in Hinayana refer 
almost exclusively to personal origination, to 
explain the evolution of the external world. 
First comes ignorance, which, acting upon the 
Absolute, brings about action, which results in 
the formation of consciousness — and so on 
through the list. 

An examination of the details of this theory 
lies outside the scope of our present undertaking, 
but the following points should be of interest. 
The BhUtatathata quickened by ignorance and 
ready to be realized in the world of the particu- 
lars is known as Tathagatagarbha, literally *the 
Tathagata's womb, or store house. It may 
rightly be called the womb of the universe 
which gives birth to the stream of consciousness. 

The stream of life being set flowing, from the 
action arising therefrom we find the beginning of 
the individualization of the particular units of 
latent consciousness. Thus is the Alaya Vijnana 
which as Suzuki says, " is a particularized ex- 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 65 

pression in the human mind of the Tathagata- 
garbha. It is an individual, ideal reflex of the 
cosmic garbha. It is this psychic germ, as the 
Alaya is often designated, that stores all the 
mental possibilities which are set in motion by 
the impetus of the external world." 

The Alaya Vijnana ( Vijnana means conscious- 
ness, and Alaya repository) is not waking or 
normal consciousness. In itself it is more like 
the unconsciousness which is behind matter and 
spirit, thought and extension. Although it is 
individualistic, or the centre of blind activity, it 
has not yet reached the stage of self-consciousness, 
or distinguished itself from other such centres. 
It is but the seed from which the flower of 
consciousness will blossom, or the material 
out of which the world of subject and object 
will be constructed. 

Gradually, just as the Unconsciousness of 
Von Hartmann evolves into the Conscious in 
mankind, so does the Alaya Vijnana evolve into 
the Kligtomano-vijnana. KUgto-mano-vijndna 
is literally " SoUed Mind Consciousness " and 
means the state in which the unit of life begins to 
be aware of itself, to distinguish itself from other 
such units, to become a co-ordinated organism. 
As this organism comes more and more into 



66 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

contact with the stream of life around it, it 
begins to react to its external environment, to 
distinguish sensations, to group them together, 
to abstract them into ideas and to associate ideas 
into memory and reason. Instinctively, follow- 
ing the line of self-preservation, it likes certain 
sensations and dislikes others, to crave for the 
pleasant and to avoid the unpleasant. In this 
way the Mano-vijfiana (Mind consciousness) 
comes into being. 

The external world has, in its essence, a real 
existence. It is a part of the stream of life 
based in the Essence of Mind. The world as it 
appears, to us, however, is the result of action 
of the Alaya, Kligto-mano, and Mano-vijnUna, 
stimulated by contact with the real external 
world, which in turn is but a phase of the uni- 
versal Alaya. 

Sectarian Views on the Relation between the 
Absolute and the World of Phenomena. 

The foregoing may be said to represent the 
views of all branches of Mahayana irrespective 
of sect. Most of the schools, however, were very 
fond of metaphysical hair splitting, and it may 
be of interest to see something of the manner 
in which they carried on their discussions. As 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 67 

an instance let us examine, for a moment, the 
manner in which some of the sects have vied 
with one another in formulating examples of the 
unity of life, and the identity in essence of all 
phenomena. 

The argument employed is somewhat compli- 
cated, and to understand it at all it is necessary 
to bear in mind two things, one, the old distinction 
between the noumenon and phenomena (the 
Samskrita and Asamskrita Dharmas of the older 
Buddhist phraseology), the other, the three 
states of being, or the three philosophies of life, 
Ke, Ku, and Chu. 

A. In China and Japan the noumenon or 
the Essence of Miad is sometimes called Ri or 
Eeason or Principle, as opposed to phenomena, 
Ji or Thing. These terms should be remembered 
as discussions concerning the nature of the Ab- 
solute, the relationship between the Absolute 
and the material world, and the relation of one 
thing to another, were carried on solely in these 
terms. 

B. The three states of being, it will be re- 
membered, referred to the metaphysical stand- 
point of different stages of Buddhist develop- 
ment. 

1. Ke, stands for Eealism, where the various 



68 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

phenomena of the universe are disintegrated into 
a number of real and self -existing permanent 
elements. 

2. Ku, or QJunya, has no direct European 
equivalent. It is usually expressed by Nihil- 
istic Idealism, but in reality it is neither nihUistio 
nor idealistic. The Qunya doctrine simply 
asserts that there is nothing-unto-itself, that 
there is nothing changeless and eternal, but that 
every thing is in a state of flux, that there is 
never a Being but only a Becoming. Modern 
European science is nihilistic in asserting that 
there is no changeless and self-existing table, 
as every table is a changing concatenation of 
elements. The ^tinya doctrine, as we have 
already observed, goes on to say that these 
elements are in turn composite, and continues its 
process of desintegration until we reach the 
ceaselessly flowing stream of life. 

3. CJiu, or Madhya is the ontological de- 
velopment of this stream of life. Madhya in its 
metaphysical aspect is equivalent to the Absolute 
or the Essence of Mind, the BhUtatathata. It 
is the norm of existence which is ever the same 
and yet ever changing. It is thus the union 
of opposites. In the light of the Madhya 
doctrine we are able to say that the Universe 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 69 

both exists and non-exists. The universe has 
no final existence per se, i.e., it may be broken up 
into component parts, so that to regard it as a 
fixed reality is an illusion. On the other hand 
it has a relative existence. As a complex it 
does exist and being derived from the Essence of 
Mind its existence is based upon ultimate reality. 
The Universe is but a passing phase of the 
Universal Life Essence. 

So much by way of introduction. Now for the 
discussion itself. In Chinese or developed 
Mahayana we find two main systems of thought, 
one that of the Avatamsaka or Kegon school, 
which was adopted by the Mantra school, the 
other that of the Tendai school which was taken 
over by the Dhyana School. 

According to the Avatamsaka School the 
teachings of its rival consists of the Bi-ji-muge 
doctrine and its own the Ji-ji-muge doctrine. 
Let us see exactly what this means. 

Bi-ji-muge Ji-ji-muge. 



j/'m m A 



-/?/ 



> 



Bi it will be remembered stands for reason, 
Principle, the iSToumenon, or the Absolute ; 



70 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Ji for the particular^ phenomena, the various 
objects of the universe. Muge means undivided. 
Now in Mahayana, as we know, the Absolute 
or the Noumenon and the World of Life and 
Death or the realm of phenomena are identical. 
Accordingly, to use the technical phrase, the 
Ri and the Ji are undivided, the greater including 
the less. The followers of this school try, by 
means of meditation, to unlock the secrets of 
aU phenomena (Ji) by fathoming the real nature 
of the one noumenon (Ei). 

We know moreover, that it is not the case 
only for one phenomenon, but that all things 
are one in essence with the essence of mind. 
In consequence, following out the idea on logical 
lines, we have. 

If A =1 

and B =x 

then A =B. 
Substituting for x the Ri, and for A any pheno- 
menon ( Ji No. 1), and for B any other phenomenon, 
(Ji No. 2), we have 

Ji No. 1 =Ji No. 2. 
or in other words, the fundamental essence 
of any phenomenon is the same as all other 
such objects. In this school of thought (the Ri- 
ji-muge), however, one thing equals another 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 71 

thing only indirectly, i.e., only because the two 
things are both identical with the one transcend- 
ing Bi and not because of their own essence. 

The Kegon School declares that this doctrine 
is not that of the true immanence of the Uni- 
versal Buddha, which is only to be found in the 
theory of the Ji-ji-muge. Literally, of course, 
Ji-ji-muge means " Phenomena-phenomena- 
undivided " or more freely, the direct identity 
(in essence) of all phenomena. This doctrine 
insists upon what we may call the a priori unity 
of aU the material objects of the universe. 

The line of argument employed in working out 
this system is the very opposite of the preced- 
ing :— 

By investigating their basic nature we discover 
that one object is of the same substance with all 
the others, or let us say, 

If Ji No. 1 =Ji No. 2 
And Ji No. 2 =Ji No. 3, etc., 
then we must postulate a universal noumenon 
which is at the back of them all. 

In this system phenomena are emphasized at 
the expense of the noumenon, or let us say that 
instead of trying to understand the nature of the 
particular by comprehending the universal, as is 
done in the Tendai School, we must attempt to 



72 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

understand the universal by studying the par- 
ticular. 

It can readily be understood from this that 
while the Ei-ji-muge idea tends to make one seek 
the Buddha in the mind, the Ji-ji-muge concep- 
tion causes us to look for the Universal Buddha 
in the body. Following out the former idea the 
flesh is regarded as a shackle imprisoning the 
enquiring spirit, so that by retiring from the 
world one should reduce it to proper submission 
and thereby obtain enlightenment, while with the 
Ji-ji-muge School illumination can only be 
found through perfecting the flesh by bringing 
out its latent potentialities, and thereby un- 
covering the Buddha hidden in the human heart. 

As a matter of fact, however, the Tendai and 
the Kegon school have much the same idea on 
the subject, since not only are the two doctrines 
not fundamentally different, but, in addition, 
the Tendai school really teaches the Kegon 
conception of the Ji-ji-muge under another name, 
which it calls Enyu or the doctrine of complete 
identity. 

This introduces the question of the three 
states of being, K%, Ee, and CJiu, and also the 
fact that later metaphysicians like to distinguish 
between the shallow Tendai and the profound 



THE NATURE OF THE ABSOLUTE 73 

Tendai doctrine. From the fact that the pro- 
found doctrines developed in the home of the 
school (Mt. Tendai, or T'ient'ai) it is called the 
Sange (mt. home) doctrine. The shallow 
doctrine developed in various temples away from 
the centre, so it is called Sangai (outside the 
mountain) doctrine. These names, sange and 
sangai, should be noted for future reference. 

Mahayana scholars like to codify the two 
doctrines regarding the nature of identity in the 
following way : — 

I. The Shallow {Sangai) Doctrine of 
Identity. 

AbsoMeTrufA / ". \ /^ou/nenon 

\ CfJU / I („om,na//e/ uni//wi/ea'J 

/?e/af/oe Truf/i _ /^ _ /i^enome/ja = ZheJOOO PVorMs 
II. The Profound Doctrine {Sange) of 
Identity. 

A/aumeno/? | ^^^^vX^^ 7?ie le/enf/fi/ 



fihena/ne/ia 




' ^//)e 3 Truths 



Another way of presenting the same idea is : — 
I. The Shallow Doctrine. 

f A/oumenon ) 

/Tu == C/iD 

I 



Y 



He 
fP/rename/yffJ 



74 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

II. The Profound Doctrine. 




Those who have followed the line of thought 
hitherto presented will not find these graphs 
difficult to understand. In the Sangai school 
Absolute Truth is associated with the principles 
of Qunya (KH) and Madhya (Chu), which in 
turn represent the nomenal side of the universe 
as opposed to the phenomena as represented by 
Eelative Truth and Illusory existence (Ke). 
In the Sang4 system all of these various sets of 
opposites are found to be separate aspects of the 
same thing. 



CHAPTER III 

THE TEIKlTA— THE BUDDHIST DOC- 
TEmB OF THE TEINITT 

I. The Evolution of the TriJcaya Doetrine. 

The doctrine of the Trikaya, the three bodies, 
or the three aspects of the Buddha, is one of the 
most fascinating features of Mahayana, and the 
relationship that exists between it and the 
Trimurti of Hinduism, and the Trinity of 
Christianity, etc., is of especial interest to students 
of comparative religion. 

Certain scholars have supposed that the triune 
doctrine, certainly as found in the West, is the 
result of the idealization of the human fanuly of 
Father {e.g., the Egyptian Osiris), Mother {e.g., 
Isis), and Son {e.g., Horus). Certainly as far as 
Buddhism is concerned, this supposition proves 
fallacious, for the present doctrine of the Trikaya 
is the result of a long and intricate line of 
doctrinal evolution. 

Needless to say, in Hinayana the doctrine is 
entirely extraneous, though, as with other points, 
careful study shews that it contains the rudi- 



76 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

ments of each of the Kaya or bodies individually, 
though naturally in an entirely undeveloped 
form. 

The Trikaya are : — 

1. DharmaMya, or the Body of the Law, 

practically synonymous with 
the Bhutatathata. 

2. Sambhogakaya, or Body of Compensation. 

The symbol of the Buddha 
ideal. 

3. NirmanaMya, or Body of Transformation, 

the Universal Manifested in 
the World. 
1. Nirm&naMya. 

The Nirmanakaya is of course, Qakyamuni, 
and the other human Buddhas, having all the 
qualities of mortals, subject to disease, old age, 
and death. (Hence the name Transformation). 
Being, however, the voice of the Universal 
Buddha they are one with it. The Nirmanakaya 
might be more freely rendered as the Body of 
Incarnation. 

Gradually, if we trace the history of the 
evolution of the Buddha legend, the human 
Buddhas came to be glorified and elevated far 
beyond the possibilities of corporal persons. 
They are possessed of the thirty-two major and 



THE TRIKAYA 77 

eighty minor physical marks of excellence. 
They are endowed with the supermundane powers 
of clairvoyance, clairaudienee, increase and de- 
crease of statiire, etc. They have power over 
the whole universe, and over all sentient beings. 
They are the quintessence of holiness, wisdom, 
purity, mercy, and all other ideal qualities. 

This process is visible in Hinayana, as weU as 
in Mahayana, but it is not carried to the same 
extreme. Furthermore, the Hinayanists have 
tried to keep more or less within the bounds of 
possibility, and all the marvels recorded refer 
to the human Buddha. In Mahayana, however, 
the limits of a single personality were trans- 
cended, and beUevers soon began to expend 
lavish poetical adornment upon the ideal of the 
Buddha. He is attended by myriads of Devas 
and Bodhisattvas. He sits for long kalpas in 
meditation. His death is only an illusion, an 
upaya, and in reality he is ever alive helping 
on the progress of the world. 

2. SambhogaJcdya. 

The Buddha of the Mahayana Sutras, then, is 
an idealized' Buddha, and has the same relation 
to the historical Buddha as the Christ, or the 
Logo? to the historical Jesus, or perhaps to the 
glorified Christ of the resurrection. It is this 



78 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

aspect of the Buddha which is known as the 
Sambhogakaya. 

Strangely enough, the Occidental idea which 
comes nearest to the Buddhist doctrine of the 
Sambhogakaya, is Mr. Well's theory of God the 
Invisible King. Wells contrasts the God behind 
the VeU, the God of Abstract Justice, with the 
conception of God as the Ideal, as the object of 
devotion, as the symbol of the Christ spirit. The 
God behind the VeU is the Bhutatathata, or the 
Dharmakaya, and the Invisible King is the 
Sambhogakaya, the Body of Glory, the Buddha 
Spirit behind all human Buddhas. 

The Buddha of most of the Mahayana Sutras 
is this Sambhogakaya, who merely uses the 
Nirmanakaya as his mouth-piece, and though he 
is one with all the Buddhas, and not merely 
^akyamuni, he is often called by this name. 
Thus for exaniple, the Saddharma Pundarika 
Siitra speaks of the Buddha as being the loving 
father who rescues his children (all sentient 
beings) from the burning house of the three 
worlds. For this reason do the innumerable 
Bodhisattvas appear to testify to the fact that 
all through eternity the Buddhas have at various 
times appeared to teach all mankind the Law. 

" Every drop of water in the vast ocean can 



THE tRIKAYA 79 

be counted, but the age of ^akyamuni none can 
measure : crush Mt. Sumeru into particles as 
fine as mustard seed and we can count them, but 
the age of §akyamuni none can measure . . . 
the Buddha never entered into Parinirvana, 
the Good Law will never perish. He shewed an 
earthly death merely for the benefit of sentient 
beings." 

The meaning of all this is obvious. Mahay ana 
does not deny the earthly career of Qakyamuni 
lasting for some eighty odd years, and subject 
to the usual frailties of human existence, but 
teaches that the latter was only the Nirmahakaya, 
the Body of Transformation, behind which was 
the eternal Sambhogakaya, or the Body of 
Glory. 

3. Dharmakdya. 

While then the Nirmanakaya is the human 
Buddha, and the Sambhogakaya the glorified 
Buddha ideal, the Dharmakaya is the essence 
of Buddhahood, the norm of existence, and is 
therefore synonymous with the Bhiitatathata of 
which it is but a devotional symbol. 

The idea of the Dharmakaya probably origin- 
ated in the fact that shortly before his death 
Qakyamuni is supposed to have told his disciples 



80 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

that though after his decease no longer person- 
ally would he be with them, yet (metaphorically 
speaking) he, like all other Buddhas, would 
continue to exist in the Law of Dharma. Now 
in the first place, by " existing in the Law " he 
may have meant merely existing in the doctrine 
which he taught, but to quote Suzuki, " Dharma 
is a very pregnant word, and covers a wide range 
of meaning. It comes from the root dhr, which 
means to hold, to carry, to bear, and the primitive 
sense of dharma is that which carries, supports, 
or bears. Then it came to signify that which 
forms the norm or regulates the course of things, 
i.e. the Law, institution, rule, doctrine . . . 
essential quality, substance, that which exists 
in reality, being." 

Accordingly, though originally the spirit of the 
Buddha may have been synonymous with the 
doctrines of the Buddha it was not long before it 
became synonymous with the root of life, the 
essence of being, the norm of the universe. 
In a word, then, comparing the Trikaya with 
Western ideas we may say that Bhiitatathata 
stands for the Essence of Godhood, the ultimate 
and unmanifested Deity, the Dharmakaya to 
the norm of the manifest world, the Christian 
God the Father, the Sambhogakaya to a com- 



THE TRIKAYA 81 

pound of the Logos, the Eesurrected Christ, and 
Well's Invisible King, and the Mrmanakaya to 
the incarnation of the divine. 

II. The Three Bodies in Detail. 

Later Mahayana scholars considerably 
amplified these ideas and subdivided each kaya. 
In the Orthodox Tendai system the arrange- 
ment of the Trikaya is as foUows : — 

1. Dharmakaya Eeason 

2. Sambhogakdya Wisdom 

a. Body of self enjoyment 

b. Body for the enjoyment 

of others. 

3. Nirmdnakdya Love 

a. Ojin — complete incarnation 

i. superior sfto-ojm 
ii. inferior rettojin 

b. Eeshin — ^incomplete incarnation 

1, The DharmaJcdya. 

In this arrangement the Dharmakaya is the 
Heart of Life devotionally considered. It is 
the co-ordinating principle of existence, the acme 
of perfection, the fountain head of intelligence. 
All the other aspects or kaya are included in it, 
but in itself it is primarily the personification of 



82 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Eeason or Intelligence. It is, par excellence, the 
Universal Buddha symbolized in various ways 
and under diverse names, and as such is the 
background of all the Buddhas, and even of the 
glorified Buddha-ideal, the Sambhogakaya. All^ 
sentient beings find their raison d'etre in the 
Dharmakaya and are based on the fundamental 
nature of its essence. It has been the object of 
adoration, and in the religious literature of 
Mahayana we find numberless passages devoted 
to its praise. 

According to certain schools the Dharmakaya 
is divided into two aspects. One is the Hosshd 
Hosshin (The Dharma nature Dharma body ) which 
is the Dharmakaya in its normative and abstract 
sense. This is, to quote Lloyd, " the spiritual 
Body of the Buddha as he is which is still con- 
sidered as an integral part of the SMnnyo Hosshd 
(Bhutatathata). This is formless and incapable 
of description, and answers more or less exactly 
to God as he is hinted at rather than described in 
certain passages in the Old Testament. But it 
is impossible for men with their finite thoughts 
and still more finite language to speak of God 
except under some form with which they are 
themselves familiar. Hence we get in the Old 
Testament the anthropomorphic language about 



THE TRIKAYA 83 

God, His holy arm, His feet, etc. Such language 
the Japanese would call hoben (upaya) an 
accommodation of the truth to the capacity of 
the hearer and Buddhist Theology speaks not 
only of Hossho Hosshin which it is beyond the 
power of man to describe but also of Hoben 
HossJiin a spiritual body of God accomodated 
to the capacity of man, and spoken of under a 
human shape." ** 

This Hoben Hosshin or second aspect of the 
Dharmakaya is nothing but the personification 
or symbolization of the idea of the supreme ideal 
inherent in the Shinnyo Hossho (Bhiitatathata) 
and the Hossho Hosshin. But it has an objective 
as well as a subjective existence. Just as the 
waking consciousness, the Mano-Vijnana 
gradually evolves from the Kligto-mano and the 
Alaya Vijndna so does the essence of Buddha- 
hood gradually manifest or crystallize itself 
from the Hossho Hosshin and the Shinnyo 
Hossho. The latter two are essentially self 
existing principles, the former an active ideal 
revealing itself to the world in many guises 
suitable to the needs of the times. 

A passage from the Suvarna Prabhasa on the 
nature of the Trikaya gives some idea of the 
relationship between the Dharmakaya, and the 

*• A. Lloyd. Shinran and His Work. 



84 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

other two Kaya or Bodies : — 

" The Tathagata when he was yet at the stage 
of discipline practised divers deeds of morality 
for the sake of sentient beings. (Through this 
practice) he finally attained perfection, reached 
maturity and by virtue of its merits he acquired 
a wonderful spiritual power. He revealed him- 
self in the right place assuming various bodily 
forms. These bodily forms are called the 
Nirmanakaya of the Tathagata. 

" But when the Tathagatas, in order to make 
the Bodhisattvas thoroughly conversant with 
the Dharma . . . manifest themselves to 
the Bodhisattvas in a form which is perfect with 
the thirty-two major and eighty minor features 
of excellence and shining with the halo around 
the head and back, the Tathagatas are said to 
have assumed the Body of BUss or Sambhogakaiya. 

" When all possible obstacles arising from sins 
are perfectly removed, and when aU possible 
good dharmas are preserved there would remain 
nothing but Suohness (the Bhiltatathata) — ^this 
is the Dharmak§ya. The first two forms of the 
Tathagatas are provisional (and ephemeral exist- 
ences) but the last one is a reality, wherein the 
former two find the reason of their existence." ** 

** Trans, by Suzuki, Outlines p. 256."^ 



THE TRIKAYA 85 

2. The Sambhogdkdya. 

There is little distinction between the Hoben 
Hosshin or the personalized Dharmakaya and 
the Hoshin or the Sambhogakaya. At the most 
the Sambhogakaya is a stiQ further personaliza- 
tion, an attempt to make the Universal more 
vivid and intimate. 

We see from this that the Sambhogakaya is an 
embodiment of the Buddha ideal, a permanent 
ideal which is not affected by the passing away 
of any human Buddhas which are but fleshly 
counterparts of the quintessence of perfection. 
It is in this sense that we have compared it to 
Well's Invisible King. The relationship between 
the two may be seen from the following passages : — 

" The writer believes that the centuries of 
fluid religious thought that preceded the violent 
ultimate crystallization of Nicea was essentially 
a struggle . . to reconcile . . two separ- 
ate main series of God-ideas . . . These 
two antagonistic typical conceptions of God may 
be best contrasted by speaking of them as God- 
as-nature or the Creator, and of the other as 
God-as-Christ or the Eedeemer. One is the 
Outward God ; the other is the Inmost God* 
The writer's position . . is, firstly, complete 
ganosticism in the matter of God the Creator, and 



86 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

entire faith in God the Eedeemer . . . God 
presents Himself as finite, as struggling against 
and taking a part against evil. . . . He will 
assert that his God is a god of salvation, that he is 
a spirit and a person, a strongly marked and 
knowable personality, knowing, loving, inspir- 
ing, and lovable, who exists or strives to exist 
in every human soul." 

In WeUs we find a strong antagonism between 
the Infinite God and the Eedeemer God. Mahay- 
ana recognizes the difference, but asserts that 
their counterparts, the Dharmakaya and the 
Sambhogakaya are but different aspects of the 
same reality. 

Nor must the other aspect of Sambhogakaya 
be forgotten — ^it corresponds to the Christian 
conception of the resurrected Christ. This view 
has been voiced by Arthur Lloyd in the following 
words : — 

" The Body of compensation is the body in 
which Amida Butsu (the universal Buddha) the 
glorified Saviour who has worked out man's 
salvation is now set forth as the personal object 
of worship for the believer. It is, as it were, the 
counterpart of that glorified humanity in which 
we believe that our Eisen Saviour Jesus Christ, 
having passed into the Heavens, is sitting in his 



THE TRIKAYA 87 

meditorial kingdom ' at the right hand of God.' " 
This perhaps helps us to understand two points, 
first the name of the Body, for it is the Body of 
Compensation or the glorious reward of the long 
ages of self-sacrifice for the benefit of sentient 
beings, and second the two-fold division of the 
Sambhogakaya. These are : — 

1. The Ji-jiyu-hosJiin, or the body of self- 

enjoyment. 

2. The Ta-jiyu-hoshin, or Body for the En- 

joyment of Others. 
The first is the Body of Compensation proper, 
that which each Buddha has gained by dint of 
his religious discipline through the long ages of 
the past. It is the recipient of ceaseless devotion 
which is constantly being offered by worshippers. 
It may therefore be called the immediate object 
of worship, for when one wishes to worship the 
divine in any aspect, the devotion is received by 
the Body of Bliss. 

The second, or Ta-jiyH-hoshin, on the other 
hand, is supposed to be that aspect of divinity 
which is constantly shedding its illumination 
over all the world. These spiritual rays are 
thought to be for the benefit of all men imparti- 
ally, the sinner as well as the saint, the ignorant 
as well as the wise. It is obvious, however, 



88 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

that it is tlie spiritually minded who benefit the 
most by them, since it is the latter who are 
the most conscious of them and are the most 
willing to profit thereby. 

This Ta-jiyu-hoshin has many ways of re- 
vealing itself to man, but one especially in which 
it assumes an apparitional body in the various 
Sukhavatis or Paradises for the instruction of the 
Bodhisattvas. Descriptions of this body are 
to be found in many devotional scriptures, e.g., 
the Amitayus-Stltropadesa. 

One point deserves especial attention. Every 
Buddha is supposed to possess this Sambhogakaya 
and yet each Sambhogakaya is considered 
infinite in space and time, co-extensive with the 
universe. It is obvious that in order to prevent 
the theory of innumerable eternals and omni- 
presents, Mahayana was forced to state that in 
reality there was but one great Sambhogakaya 
of which those of individual Buddhas are but 
different aspects. The same thing, of course, 
holds true with regard to the Sukhavatis. The 
view held by most philosophic Mahayanists is 
expressed by Suzuki when he says : — 

" The reader must not think that there is but 
one Pure land which is elaborately described in 
the Sukhavati-Vyflha Sutra as the abode of the 



THE TRIKAYA S9 

Amitabha, situated innumerable leagues away 
in the West. On the contrary, the Mahay ana 
texts admit the existence of as innumerable Pure 
Lands as there are Tathagatas and Bodhisattvas, 
and every single one of these holy regions has no 
boundary and is co-existent with the universe 
. . . It would look to every iatelligent mind 
that those innumerable Buddha countries exist- 
ing in such a mysterious and incomprehensible 
manner cannot be anything else than our own 
subjective creation." ** 

3. The Nirmdnakdya. 
Though the Sambhogakaya provides for the 
enlightenment of Bodhisattvas and earnest as- 
pirants after Truth, a still more concrete and 
material expression of the Absolute is required for 
the masses who still slumber in ignorance. This 
the Mahayanists find in the Nirmanakaya or the 
physical bodies of the human Buddhas, who by 
their example and instruction lead men to the 
Path of Light. 

Mahayana looks upon the Buddhas as both 
divine and human. They are human in that 
they are persons who have gained their positions 
as the result of a long period of spiritual develop- 
ment. Potentially they are of the same nature 

** Suz. Outlines p. 269. 



90 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

as ourselves, since we too have tlie Buddha 
nature within us and every one of us shall at 
some future time attain to the supreme goal. 
They are divine, however, in as muph as in them 
the Buddha seed has come to fruition. They are 
not only potentially but actually one with the 
Dharmakaya and Sambhogakaya. Their advent 
to earth is merely to make manifest the wisdom 
and perfection of the absolute. 

Later Mahayana goes more into detaU. The 
Mrmanakaya is of two classes, which are called 
(in Japanese) the Ojin and EesMn, which may 
somewhat inadequately be called the Complete 
and Incomplete Incarnations. The Ojin is 
divine a priori, the Keshin is divine a posteriori. 
The Ojin is identical in essence with the Samb- 
hogakaya, no distinction can be made between 
the two ; the Keshin is merely a man in whom 
the spirit of the universal Buddha dwells, in- 
spiring his teaching and elevating his personality. 
The latter is frequent and universal, whereas the 
only two examples of the Ojin in recent times are 
Qakyamuni, and the Buddhist Messiah, Maitreya 
(Miroku) whose advent Cakyamuni prophesied. 

The Ojin has again two bodies or aspects, the 
superior or Sho-ojin and the inferior or Eett5jin. 
The Bodhisattvas are sufficiently enlightened 



THE TRIKAYA 91 

to be able to receive their instruction directly 
from the Sambhogakaya, wbUe the Sho-ojin is 
for Pratyeka Buddhas, those who aim at en- 
lightenment for themselves alone, selfish yet 
capable of deep theoretical understanding, 
while the Eettojin or Inferior Body is for the 
purpose of instructing the ^^avakas, those who 
merely aim at freedom from the wheel of life and 
death. 

According to Mahayana the doctrines of 
Hinayana were revealed by the Eettojin (the 
inferior aspect) while its own system was taught 
by the Sh6-5jin, though many schools of Mahay- 
ana prefer to state that the deeper aspects were 
taught by the Universal Buddha directly, which, 
however, we know was the same as Qakyamuni 
in his highest Samadhi. 

III. Sectarian Views on the Trikaya. 
So far the theory of Trikaya has been in accord 
with the teachings of aU the various schools of 
Mahayana. As on other points, however, later 
discussion gave rise to certain points of doctrinal 
differentiation, chiefly concerning the mutual 
relationship of the Three Bodies and their 
connection with the world as a whole. These 
we may classify under the teachings of the 



92 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Kegon school, and the Tendai school, the last 
being again divided into the shallow (sangai) 
and the profound (sang6) doctrine. 

1. The Kegon and Tendai Doctrines. 
The difference between the Kegon and Tendai 
schools of Mahayana is usually expressed in 
the following manner : — 

The Kegon Doctrine. 



/%. 



'e/tomena 

= JomMo^a A//rmana/raua 

/rat/<7 ^ 

The Tendai Doctrine. 

A/aumenon r DharmaJfat/a j 

\ J Sam6/ioga/rai/a \ 

P/}e/io/ne/?a / \ A//r/naf7a^3i/a ) 

In the Kegon school the Dharmakaya alone 
is the Noutnenon {Ui) and the other two bodies 
belong to the Ji or world of phenomena, though, 
since the noumenon and phenomena are united, 
the three Bodies are likewise indirectly united. 
In the Tendai school, on the other hand, they are 
directly identical. 



THE TRIKAYA 



93 



As a matter of fact, since the Kegon school 
teaches the doctrine of the JijimugS (vide page 
69 supra), the doctrines of the two sects are 
not very different. 

2. The Sangai and Sangd Doctrines. 
Coming now to the two schools of the Tendai 
order, the Sang6 and the Sangai, we find that 
their relationship has been expressed thus : — 



The Sangai Doctrine. 




SomMo^a/foya 



AZ/rmana/rai/a 



The Sange Doctrine. 

l}/iar/na/rat/o 




Sa/nMoga/raya 



/V/r/nonaJfai/a 



The Sangai or less developed doctrine teaches 
the separation and independence of the TrikSya. 



94 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Since all things are ultimately derived from the 
Dharmakaya, both the Sambhogakaya and the 
Nirmanakaya are in reality one in essence with 
it, and hence indirectly united one with another, 
but from the phenomenal point of view their 
functions and attributes are different. They are 
in a word separate entities with a common basis 
rather than one entity with three phases. The 
Sangai doctrine is perhaps comparable to the 
Christian doctrine of the Trinity " three persons 
but one God." 

The Sang6 doctrine teaches that in reality 
the three Kayas are absolutely identical, are but 
three ways in which the Absolute reveals itself 
to the world, or even but three ways of regarding 
the Absolute. In certain respects the Sang6 
doctrine approximates the Sabellian heresy in 
Christianity, which of course held that there is 
but one god with three aspects rather than one 
God with three persons. 

3. TJie 8hddomon and Jodomon Doctrines. 

The slight distinction which exists between the 
Shodomon (Arya-marga-dvara) and Jodomon 
(Sukhavati-dvara) concerning the Trikaya 
should also be noticed. Eoughly speaking the 
Shodomon consists of the older and philosophic 



THE TRIKAYA 95 

sects, and is the unreformed section of Mahayana. 
The Jodomon consists of those who seek enligh- 
tenment through the grace of Amitabha, and 
since the most powerful branch of this school, 
the Shin sect, has considerably modified the older 
rules of organisation, the Jodomon is usually 
known as the reformed branch of Mahayana. 
The Shodomon includes the Kegon (Avatamsaka), 
the Tendai, the Mantra (Shingon), the Dhyana 
(Zen), and the Nichiren sects, with other 
similar schools in China. The Jodomon is 
divided into the Jodo or Sukhavati sect proper, 
and the Shin or True Sect. The Shodomon 
seeks Buddhahood by being reborn upon earth 
until perfection be gained, the Jodomon hopes to 
attain the supreme goal by means of being re- 
born into the Sukhavati or Land of Bliss, through 
the great love of the Universal Buddha. The 
ShSdomon is based upon reason, the Jodomon 
upon wisdom, faith, and mercy. 

It is but natural therefore, that the Shodomon 
should lay especial emphasis upon the reason 
side of the Absolute, which is, as we know, the 
Dharmakaya, while the Jodomon gives especial 
deference to the Sambhogakaya which is the 
wisdom or mercy aspect. WhUe theoretically 
the two schools do not differ in their interpreta- 



96 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

tion of the two bodies, the fact that the object 
of especial worship in one is the Dharmakaya, 
in the other the Sambhogakaya has necessarily 
resulted in somewhat different theological 
attitudes, so much so in fact that in Shodomon, 
the Dharmakaya almost corresponds to the 
Christian God the Father, and the Sambhogakaya 
to the Holy Ghost, while in the Jodomon the 
rdles are exactly opposite. 

One last word about the Trikaya must be 
added. In the earlier sects of Mahayana, such 
as the Avatamsaka and the Tendai schools, the 
Trikaya was a purely philosophic conception 
unconcerned with the devotional life. In the 
slightly later Mantra sect, however, the three 
bodies were personified or symbolized and 
given the names of ideal Buddhas. The Dhar- 
makaya was known as Vairocana (Dainichi 
l^yorai) the Sambhogakaya as Amitabha (Amida) 
while the Nirmanakaya was personified by 
Qakyamuni. The Mantra (Shingon) sect be- 
longs to the Shodomon, so that Vairocana is 
the chief object of worship, but in the Sukhavati 
or Jodo school where the Sambhogakaya is the 
object of worship it is Amitabha who is exclusively 
adored. In this school, however, Amitabha is 
not merely the Sambhogakaya but the other 



THE TRIKAYA 97 

two bodies as well, so that except for Amit- 
abha's two manifestations Avalokite§vara 
(Kannon) and Mahasamprapta (DaiseisM), the 
symbols of Love and Wisdom respectively, the 
worship of other beings is either prohibited or 
deprecated. 

This may be said to represent the final stage 
in the development of the Trikaya doctrine 
proper, but this in turn led to stUl further 
doctrinal formulation. The three bodies of 
the Universal Buddha were regarded as Upaya 
(hoben) accommodation of truth, three ways of 
regarding an indivisible unity. Such being the 
case, it is obvious that there is no inherent reason 
why this three-fold division of the functions of 
the Absolute should be the only one. Should 
circumstances render it advisable the Absolute 
coxdd be symbolized in fifty, a hundred, or a 
thousand ways. 

Under these circumstances the multiplicity 
of the representatives of the Universal Buddha 
should cause no surprise. On the contrary it 
is remarkable that they are not more numerous, 
and more inconsistent, for in Chinese and Japan- 
ese Buddhism practically aU the important 
symbolizations of the Absolute may be classified 
under the ten bodies of the Avatamsaka sect, 



98 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

and the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas of the two 
mandalas of the Mantra sect. Into these, 
however, the limits of time and space prevent 
our going. 



CHAPTEE IV 

THE NATUEE AND POWEES OF 
BUDDHAHOOD 

I. The Roads to Buddhahood 
Qakyamuni is supposed to have said, " Only 
one doctrine do I preach : — suffering and the 
cessation of suffering." Certainly the whole 
essence of Buddhism is bound up in those words. 
ALL sentient beings led astray by ignorance and 
desire undergo perpetual birth and rebirth in 
one or another of the six realms of, 

1. The Narakas or Hells. 

2. The Preta Eealm. 

3. The Animal Eealm. 

4. The Asura Eealm. 

5. The Human Eealm. 

6. The Heavens. 

In all of these worlds there is more or less 
pleasure or pain, but in none of them is there 
supreme bUss or perfect enlightenment. Dura- 
tion of bliss in these worlds varies, but in none 
of them are the inhabitants free from decay, 
change, and death. 



100 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

The total cessation of sorrow and change is 
to be obtained by the complete suppression of 
ignorance and desire, the attainment of Nirvana. 
Transcending the six realms is the Path of Holi- 
ness, marked by the following stages : — 

1. The (Irdvaha Stage. This is divided into 

four sub-stages : — 

i. Qrotdpanna, he who has entered the 
Path, or a beginner in the way of 
enlightenment. 

ii. SaJcriddgamin, he who has progressed 
sufficiently to enable him to gain 
Nirvana in the next rebirth. Ac- 
cordingly he is known as one who 
returns but once to the three 
worlds (of Kama, Eupa, Arupa). 

iii. Andgamin, he who returns no more to 
the three worlds, acquiring Nir- 
vana in the next life (i.e. in heaven). 

iv. ArJiat, he who has freed himself com- 
pletely from the wheel of life, and 
who is to reincarnate no more. 

2. The Pratyeha Buddha Stage. One who has 
understood the chain of causaUty (the 12 
Nidanas). This state is one of enlighten- 
ment as contrasted with the mere salvation 
of the Arhat, but enlightenment for one- 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BVDDHAHOOD 101 

self alone, no attempt being made to 
influence or assist mankind. 

3. Tlie Bodhisattva Stage. The Bodhisattva 
is he who renounces the attainment of 
of Arhatship and Pratyeka Buddhahood, 
and having become a candidate for com- 
plete Buddhahood strives for the welfare 
of all sentient beings, making the four 
great vows, and practising the six trans- 
cendent virtues (paramitas). a. The 
four vows are : — (1) to save all beings, 
(2) to destroy all passions, (3) to know 
and teach others the truth, (4) to lead 
others to the path of Buddhahood. 
b. The six paramitas are : — (l)almsgiving 
and teaching the ignorant, (2) keeping the 
Qilas or moral Laws, (3 ) patience and long 
suffering, (4) diligence in keeping the 
vows, (5) meditation or contemplation, 
(6) wisdom. 

4. The Buddha Stage. He who has attained 
the goal, achieving supreme and final 
enlightenment and emancipation, possess- 
ing the three bodies of Mrmanakaya, 
Sambhogakaya, and Dharmakaya. 

To each of these stages are assigned certain 
spiritual prerogatives, the possession of certain 



102 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

transcendent virtues, and the ability to perform 
certain supernatural acts. With these we are not 
concerned for they play a comparatively small 
part in philosophic Buddhism. 

aWhat is of more importance is the question 
of the limitation of the attainment of the supreme 
goal. Hinayana asserts that for the majority, 
the vast majority of people, the attainment of 
the higher stages is out of the question, and the 
ordinary person must content himself with 
arhatship. Undeveloped Mahay ana declares 
that all who desire to take the vows of the 
Bodhisattva and continue therein will sooner or 
later attain to Buddhahood, yet that many do 
not do so, and aim merely after Arhatship or 
Pratyeka Buddhahood, so that for them the 
supreme goal is forever closed. It is possible, 
however, for the aspirants after the lower stages 
whose course has not yet been definitely fixed 
to modify their goal, and to enter the path of the 
Bodhisattva. ^ 

Developed Mahayana, such as the Kegon and 
the Tendai and later schools declared that in 
reality there are not three goals but only one 
goal — the highest, Buddhahood, which sooner or 
later everyone must attain. The other seeming 
goals are but upaya (devices) which the Tatha- 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 103 

gata has used for the purpose of bringing his 
children (all sentient beings) from the burning 
house of the three worlds. 

On this point all schools of true Mahayana are 
essentially agreed, though the Tendai and Kegon 
sects choose to emphasize different aspects of the 
same idea. The Tendai Doctrine is known as 
the BoTcyo or doctrine of Sameness, the Kegon as 
the BekTtyo or the doctrine of Difference. The 
former insists upon the unity of the goal, the fact 
that all paths lead to the same gateway. The 
latter declares that though the goal is one, the 
paths are many, and that there is a different path 
for every type of mind, that each school of 
thought, in fact each religion, is but a different 
path, and that accordingly we are to seek for 
the underlying unity in aspiration of all. 

The different branches of Buddhism differ 
even more decisively upon the means of attain- 
ing Buddhahood. 

Three principal methods are inculcated : — 

1. Salvation by Works, 

2. Salvation by Knowledge, 

3. Salvation by Faith or Devotion. 

1. Salvation by Works. 
Hinayana with its insistence upon the doctrine 
of Karma declared with St. Paul, " as ye sow so 



104 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

shall ye reap " — that by the performance of 
good deeds a man reaps his rewards and gradu- 
ally attains a higher and higher state until the 
supreme goal is reached. Do so many good acts, 
and in your next life you will be a king. Acquire 
so much more merit (though of a somewhat 
more transcendental type) and Buddhahood will 
be achieved. This is the message of Hinayana. 
This idea has its benefits in encouraging 
charity and discouraging evil living, but, on the 
other hand, it leads to hypocrisy and " dead 
letterism." The bestowment of alms will com- 
pensate for a neglect of the development of the 
spiritual faculties. 

2. Salvation by Knowledge. 
MahSyana, keeping in mind the fact that 
Buddhahood is a state of mind and not a place of 
existence, has insisted that much depends upon 
the condition of the mind and soul, and that 
consequently more importance is to be placed 
on their development than upon the acquirement 
of merit through any external means. Though 
there is no sharp distinction to be made, in 
Hinayana in calctdating the reward of an act of 
charity, the amount given is largely taken into 
consideration, in MahaySna emphasis is laid 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 105 

upon the spirit in whicli the alms are bestowed. 
As an example of this we find the Japanese 
(Mahayanist) Emperor Seimu had engraved upon 
a bronze pillar the sentence " a light bestowed by 
a poor man wUl be of much more worth than a 
million lights offered by a rich man," and " If a 
man approves a good thing in another man it 
will have the same effect as if he had done it 
himself." Accordingly, like the Vedanta 
school of Hinduism, the Shodomon school of 
Mahayana teach that Enlightenment is to be 
gained chiefly through philosophic insight, and 
realization. 

3. Salvation by Faith. 
The later Shin sect declares that the chief 
fault with this idea is that if people are persuaded 
that they will be " saved " by knowledge they 
wUl indulge in logical hair-splitting and useless 
metaphysics rather than engage in the cultivation 
of spirituality. Accordingly the Jodomon and 
more especially the progressive Shin sect teaches 
that the only means of acquiring the Buddha 
state is through devotion or faith in the Universal 
Buddha typified by Amitabha. This " faith " 
might be better expressed by the words " de- 
votional realization," or self -surrender. As in 
Protestant Christianity, which holds a similar 



106 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

conception, faith will always be followed by good 
works. 

The real meaning of this, of course, is that man 
catches a glimpse of the true Buddha nature, 
which results in the awakening of faith in his 
own heart. This results, first, in the increase in 
the knowledge of Amitabha and further increase 
of faith, etc., and second, in the ho-on or the 
performance of good works out of thanksgiving. 

Faith and works are therefore identical, as are 
also faith and the object of faith (this is a typic- 
ally Mahayana conception) since in Mahayana 
the subject and object, the Universal Buddha and 
sentient beings are one. 

Each of the two great schools of Mahayana, 
the Shodomon and the Jodomon, is again 
divided into two, Zen, the gradual and Ton, the 
sudden schools, i.e., 

Mtnaydna (Indirect) 1. Qrdvakas (aspirants 

after Arhatship). 
2. Pratyeka Buddhas. 
Mahayana (Direct) 3. Bodhisattvas. 

i. Gradual. 

a. Shodomon, Shushutsu. 

b. Jodomon, OsJiutsu. 
ii. Abrupt. 

a. Shodomon, Shucho. 

b. Jodomon, Ocho. 



, THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 107 

The gradual schools of Shodomon, consisting 
chiefly of the Madhyamika and Yogacarya 
schools of Indian Mahayana, teach that a 
man continues to be reborn on earth untU he 
gradually passes one by one through the various 
stages of discipleship and Bodhisattvahood, of 
which the last ten and most important stages 
are : — 

1. Pramudita. 

2. Vimila. 

3. Prabhakari. 

4. Ar§ismati. 

5. Sudurjana. 

6. Abhimukti. 

7. Diirangama. 

8. Acala. 

9. Sadhumati. 
10. DharmarneghS. 

The abrupt school of the Shodomon, consisting 
chiefly of the Avatamsaka, Tendai, and more 
especially the Shingon (Mantra) and Zen (Dhy- 
ana) school teaches that it is not necessary to 
pass through each one of these stages successively, 
for proper realization may enable one to jump 
over or leave out several stages or even to pass 
at one step from the lowest to the highest degree. 



108 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

The Jodomon teaches that salvation by one's 
personal effort is difficult and useless, since we 
have at our comnaand the omnipotent and all 
embracing Tariki (other power) of Amitabha, 
the Universal Buddha who is, however, the true 
self of each one of us. Accordingly, if we 
practise the Tariki and have a deep devotion to 
the one Buddha we shall enter at death into the 
Pure Land of Amitabha, which is the surest and 
quickest way to gain Buddhahood. Consequently 
in the view of the Gradual school of the J5domon» 
to which belong the Jodo sect proper, the Pure 
Land is but a stepping stone to Buddhahood, 
while the Abrupt school, to which belongs the 
Shin sect, teaches that entering Jodomon is 
equivalent to becoming Buddha. 

II. The Attributes of the Buddhas. 

The path to Buddhahood having been dis- 
cussed we are now free to consider the nature and 
the powers of the Buddhas. In Hinayana the 
Buddhas, though the highest of all beings were 
yet men pure and simple. Gradually an interest- 
ing development took place. Even in Hinayana 
the Buddhas are regarded as embodiments of 
the Dharma or Law. As the conception of the 
Dharma body or kaya evolved, so did the idea 
that the Buddha is an embodiment of the 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 109 

noumenal world amplify. Even in the un- 
developed Mahayana systems where we find the 
theory of the Absolute in its first form, the view 
that the human Buddhas are one in essence with 
it, and consequently its material representatives, 
is strongly brought out. 

In developed Mahayana the doctrine of the 
unity of the Absolute and the human Buddhas 
has been given added emphasis. The Buddhas 
are supposed to so perfectly manifest the divine 
essence that their appearance on earth is equiva- 
lent to an appearance of divinity. The origin 
of the Buddhas is indeed human. They have 
only gained their high station through a 
long process of evolution, yet once they have 
brushed away the mists of ignorance the 
Buddha seed within the heart of each becomes 
apparent — " the word was made flesh and dwelt 
among us, and we beheld his glory, glory as the 
only begotten Son of the Father full of life and 
truth." (i.e. all Buddhas are forms of one 
Nirmanakaya, or are one aspect of the divine.) 

On the nature of the unity of the human 
Buddhas with the Universal Buddha the Tendai 
school again distinguishes between the Sangai 
and Sang4 conceptions. The Sangai doctrine, 
as in other cases, has a slight tendency towards 



no INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

separateness in contradistinction to the doctrine 
of the absolute unity as we find it in the Sang6 
system. 

1. The Sangai Conception. 
The doctrine of the ShugensoTcu or " assuming 
the appearance of the Noble Form." 




/ Mar/naAai/o 

In this arrangement the Nirmanakaya, 
Q)akyamuni or the human Buddha, is equal to 
the Sambhogakaya, Amitabha the glorified 
Buddha only indirectly, i.e. through the Dhar- 
makaya which unites aU things. Qakyamuni, 
however, the preacher of the Saddharma Pund- 
arika Sutra, while he is not really identical with 
the Glorified Buddha assumes his appearance or 
claim to be equal and undivided for the sake of 
instructing the ignorant, just as public oflficials 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 111 

in reading the proclamations of sovereigns 
assume the place of or represent for the time 
being the sovereign. 

The chart representing the Sang6 doctrine has 
already been given in another place (page 93) 
but it will be perhaps as well to repeat it here. 

II. The Sange Conception. 

The doctrine of the FushugensoTcu. or " Non- 
assumption of the appearance of the Noble 
Form." 



/?/>ar/na^ayi 




Sa/nb/?o^a/rat^ Mr/?7a/7aJrac/a 



In this arrangement the Nirmanakaya, 
Qakyamuni, and other physical Buddhas are 
absolutely and directly equal, so that the human 
Buddhas are as perfectly and absolutely divine 
as the Christian of the most orthodox section 
would make the Christ, the only difference being 
that the Buddhas according to Mahayana have 
attained their position by gradual development, 



112 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

and also that such incarnations are not unique 
but comparatively frequent in their occurrence. 

Moreover, in the Sang6 doctrine the Nirman- 
akaya is both the Dharmakaya and the Samb- 
hogakaya ; The Sambhogakaya is both the 
Nirmanakaya and the Dharmakaya ; and the 
Dharmakaya is both the Nirmanakaya and the 
Sambhogakaya, so complete is their identity. 

This is as far as the idea evolved in China, but 
in Japan where Buddhism has reached the highest 
form the logical corrollary has been brought out, 
viz., that in every phenomenon of the Universe 
each of the three Kayas is to be found immanent, 
so that in a flower there is dormant the three 
persons of the Buddhist trinity. 

While the human Buddhas were being thus 
deified it was but natural that the conception 
of their power became amplified. A century 
or so after the death of Qakyamuni, before 
Mahayana proper came into existence Hinayana 
Buddhism was divided into eighteen schools, 
grouped together in two main sections the 
Sthaviravada (literally " the Way of the Elders,") 
and the Mahasdnghika (literally the " Great 
Council School "). The first was that which 
retained the true Buddhist orthodoxy. Its 
descendant (in Pali, Theravada) is the official 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 113 

Hinayana of to-day. The second was the more 
heretical, bolder in speculation, and more com- 
prehensive in aim. It was from this that the 
later Mahayana probably arose. Especially 
in matters concerning Buddhology do we find 
the Mahayana views foreshadowed, e.g. : — 

1. The Mahasanghika school taught that the 
body of the Buddha is transcendent and free 
from " original sin " to use a Christian term for 
the Sanskrit Bhavagrava while the Sthavirav- 
adins said that though the Buddha is " enlight- 
ened " he is not free from " concupiscence " or 
taint of bodily existence. 

2. The Mahasanghika taught that every- 
thing the Tathagata said was full of spiritual 
meaning, while the opposite school declared that 
though the words of the Blessed One were never 
false yet that he said many things in the course 
of ordinary social life which had no interior or 
metaphysical significance. 

3. According to the Mahasanghika school the 
Buddha needed no rest or sleep. His life is as 
long as he desires it, while the Sthaviravadins 
admitted that the body of the Holy One was 
subject to the usual frailties of the flesh. 

It should be remembered, however, that after 
glorification of the Buddha had reached a certain 



114 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

point the mystic powers of the Buddhas were 
relegated to the Sambhogakaya, the symbolic 
Buddha, and in later Mahayana the physical 
body of the Buddhas were regarded in a more 
normal light. 

The great question which all Occidental 
students of Mahayana propound is whether or 
not Buddhahood means personal annihilation, or 
the extinction of the individuality. In Hinayana, 
except for certain rudiments of the idea of 
continued existence in the Law, extinction of 
personality is necessarily absolute, since owing to 
the distinction between Asamskrita and Sam- 
skrita Dharmas already observed (vide page 15) 
continued existence is an evil which must be 
eliminated. In Mahayana, however, with its 
doctrine of the Absolute and the Trikaya, since 
the Nirmanakaya (the human Buddha) is com- 
pletely equal to the Dharmakaya and the 
Sambhogakaya which are eternal, it follows that 
the Nirmanakaya is also eternal, but whether 
or not this means that the separate individual- 
ities of the Buddhas persist apart from the 
whole, Mahayana is not emphatic on either side. 
In a general way it may be said that true Maha- 
yana with the possible exception of the Dhyana 
or Zen school favours the idea of the persistence 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 115 

of the individuality. In the Saddharma Punda- 
rika Siitra and many others we read of the 
" totally extinct " Buddhas who re-appear 
before ^^-kya'Diiini in their perfect form. The 
Sambhogakaya is the ideal form of aU the Budd- 
has, yet while it comprehends them all, the 
individual facet exists and can not be annihilated. 
^One other feature which has received a great 
deal of attention in Mahayana is the doctrine of 
the turning over of merits. The idea is not 
peculiar' to Northern Buddhism. It is found in 
Hinayana and is discussed at length in " The 
Questions of King MUtnda." While a man may 
not transfer bad karma to others he may refuse 
to accept the fruit of his good karma, which is 
then inherited by the world at large. In 
Mahayana this point has been especially empha- 
sized. Bodhisattvas are supposed to perform 
innumerable good deeds and to turn this karma 
over to all sentient beings. (Compare in this 
connection the Eoman Catholic doctrine of 
super ogatory acts). This is an act which is 
strongly encourageiT and many Mahayana 
treatises end with the phrase " May the merit 
gained by the composition of this work be taken 
by all sentient beings, and aid in the awakening 
of their Buddha Heart." Its equivalence to the 



116 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Christian doctrine of atonement is, of course, 
marked. 

III. Tlie Life of the Buddha. 

Finally a few words must be added concerning 
the Buddhist doctrines relating to Qakyamuni 
himself, the historical founder of Buddhism. 

In the early stages of the development of the 
Mahayana faith a great deal of attention was 
paid to the incidents of the Buddha's life. Details 
were embellished, legends were invented, and all 
the lavish adornments of a poetic imagination 
were called in to aid in glorifying the founder's 
name. 

Once the conception of a Universal Buddha 
had been attained, however, less emphasis came 
to be laid on the historical Buddha, so that the 
study of Chinese and Japanese Buddhism throws 
little fresh light on biographical points. 

An excellent epitome of the main features of 
Qakyamuni's life as systematized by later Maha- 
yana is to be found in Ifanjo's " Short History of 
the Twelve Japanese Buddhist Sects ". The es- 
sential points there brought out are as follows : — 

Birth. Qakyamuni was born in the Kingdom 
of KapUavastu in Central India, 1027 B.C. 
His father was the Maharaja Quddhodhana and 
his mother the Devi Maya. Many miraculous 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 117 

incidents are related of his early life. A story 
frequently represented is that at the moment of 
birth he arose and taking seven steps in each 
direction and pointing one hand to the heavens 
above and the other to the earth below, he pro- 
claimed in a loud voice " I alone of all beings in 
heaven or below am worthy of honour." 

Early Life. At the age of seven he was master 
of Astronomy, Geography, Arithmetic, and 
Military Science, the four branches of ancient 
education. At ten he had surpassed all other 
princes in shooting through seven iron targets. 
At fifteen he was formally recognized as the 
heir apparent. At seventeen he was betrothed 
to Ya§odhara. 

All measures were taken to prevent him from 
coming into contact with sorrow and misery, 
but at the age of eighteen he began to think of 
leaving home realizing how inherent in mundane 
existence were the pains of birth, old age, and 
death. On the seventh day of the second month 
of his nineteenth year he forsook the world and 
entered the jungle in order to attain enlighten- 
ment. 

EnligJitenment — Preaching the Law. More 
than ten years were spent in fruitless search, but 
exactly eleven years afterwards he awoke to 



118 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

perfect knowledge under the BodM tree. After 
his enlightenment the Buddha sat for seven days 
absorbed in meditation wrapped in the beatitude 
of the Law. He then set about proclaiming 
his gospel. Needless to say, at the time of his 
enlightenment the Buddha comprehended the 
profound truths of Mahayana as well as the 
doctrines of the simpler Hinayana. At first 
he attempted to expound the whole body of truth 
in the Avatamsaka Sutra preached in the second 
week after the attainment of Buddhahood. 
Finding, however, that his auditors were unable 
to comprehend him he decided, for the time 
being, to confine himself to the Hinayana system 
and gradually to lead his followers into the more 
complete comprehension of the law. According- 
ly after the second week of his enlightenment 
for twelve years he taught only the pure Hinayana 
Sutras. After that, for another eight years he 
taught the Vaipulya or developed SUtras 
which revealed the first stages of Mahayana. 
Subsequently for another twenty years he 
taught a still further stage of wisdom emphasiz- 
ing the Qiinya doctrine in the Prajnaparamita 
Sutra, and others of the same type. Finally, 
for the last eight years of his life he returned to 
the complete position of truth in the Saddharma 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 119 

Pundarika, the Nirvana, and the Sukhavati 
Sutras. 

Conversion to the Faith. In the mean time the 
even tenor of ^akyamuni's life was disturbed 
by few incidents of striking importance. The 
years were spent as an itinerant mendicant 
teacher, and time was marked chiefly by the 
retreats of the rainy season, and the conversion 
to the new faith of various notable people. In 
the fourth week of his enlightenment he con- 
verted the Nagaraja MacUinda On the seventh 
day of the third month he won over Devapala. 
On the following day we journeyed to Varanasi 
where Kaundinya and others were converted. 
At the age of thirty-one he converted the Qre?- 
thin or wealthy merchant Yagas. Then he went 
to the powerful Kingdom of Magadha, then the 
home of Indian Culture, and converted TJruvilva 
Kagyapa and others. Then proceeding to 
Eajagriha, the capital, he converted the king 
Bimbisara and his retainers. From this 
period dates the recognition and popularity of 
Buddhism as a religion. In the same year the 
wealthy merchant Kalya presented to the 
Buddha and his order of monks the famous 
monastery of Venuvana, or the Bamboo Grove. 
At the age of thirty -two he converted the nftgas 



120 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

and yaksas at Mt. Gajagirija. The next year 
Qariputra and Mahamaudgalyayana, later his 
foremost apostles, became his disciples. At 
this period those of his disciples who had attained 
to Nirvana numbered twelve hundred and fifty. 
In the same year Mahaka§apa, the sage of the 
order, later revered as the chief apostle of 
Mahayana, became a disciple of the Buddha, 
presenting to the Lord a robe of incalculable 
value. 

At thirty-four the members of his monastic 
order having increased in number it became 
necessary to formulate rules for their organiza- 
tion. Accordingly in this year, while at Vaisali, 
Qakyamuni established the Vinaya or the Laws 
of Discipline, and year by year, in accordance 
with the growing needs of the order, the rules 
were amended and amplified. At thirty five 
the ^resthin Sudatta of Qravasti together with 
Prince Jeta presented to the Holy One the 
Jetavana Anathapindada arama where many of 
the most important discourses of the Buddha 
were delivered. 

In this year the Lord returned to his native 
Kapilavastu, not having visited it since his 
flight from the palace many years previously. 
His father, King Quddhodana sent his retainers 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 121 

and subject people to meet him at a distance of 
forty miles. Great was Ms reception as befitted 
a Prince of the Law, and upon his entrance into 
the city he discoursed upon the chain of causa- 
tion. 

At thirty-seven Ananda his cousin and later 
his beloved disciple, the Buddhist St. John, 
entered the Order when only eight years, old. 
At thirty-eight Eahula, his son by Yagodhara, 
became his disciple, when only nine years of age. 
At thirty-nine the Buddha once more visited 
Magadha and converted King Pusya (?). In 
this year a votive altar, the first of many, was 
erected in Jetavana grove. 

At forty ^akyamuni discoursed to Maitreya, 
he who is to be the next Buddha, upon the deep 
meaning of the Law. At forty-one he returned 
to Kapilavastu a second time whereupon his 
father and his father's court advanced in the 
comprehension of the truth. In this year his 
aunt Mahaprajapati left the world and became a 
Biksuni or Buddhist nun. 

Later Life. The next few years are chiefly 
noted for the famous sermons which were 
delivered during this period. At forty-four he 
preached on Mt. Lanka in the Southern Seas. 
From forty-five to forty-nine he discoursed at 



122 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

intervals to Buddhas and Bodliisvattvas assemb- 
led in the ten quarters of the Universe upon a 
miraculous staircase made between the world 
of desire, (the kamadhatu) and world of form 
(rGpadhatu). Thereafter the Buddha gradually 
led his followers into the path of Mahayana. 
At the age of seventy-five, his father died. At 
the age of seventy-nine which was in 949 B.C. 
the Buddha ascended to the Trayatimsa Heaven 
and discoursed to his mother Queen Maya. 
Eeturning to earth he gave his last sermon. 
At midnight of the fifteenth day of the second 
month of the same year the Buddha entered 
Parinirvana, lying down in an avenue of Qala 
trees near the city of Kuginaga. He was 
mourned by all the sentient beings of the 
Universe. 

These may be said to represent the main points 
in the popular Mahayana legends of the Buddha. 
A comparison of it with the Southern accounts 
is full of interest, but lies outside the scope of 
our present undertaking. 

What is of especial importance is the way in 
which an attempt has been made to insert the 
preaching of the various Mahayana Siitras into 
the different periods of the Buddha's life. Ma- 
hayana, at least as a definite system, was ,un- 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 123 

doiibtedly the result of several centuries of 
phUosopliic development probably in contact 
with alien influences. The language and style 
of the Mahayana sutras differs greatly from those 
of Hinayana. Its doctrines present even greater 
divergence. 

Since, however, Qakyamuni was retained as the 
historical founder and as the ultimate source of 
all the ahaylater Mana doctrine, it became 
necessary to evolve some explanation of how such 
different views originated in one person, for it 
must be remembered that while Hinayana re- 
gards Mahayana as a corruption of the original 
Buddhism, or at best as a false and decadent 
branch, Mahayana regards Hinayana not as 
false or contrary to true Buddhism, but 
simply as incomplete or the superficial doctrine 
which ^akyamuni taught to those who were 
incapable of comprehending the more profound 
truths of Mahayana. 

In the early days several different and mutu- 
ally contradictory syntheses of the Buddha's 
life were formulated which would allow room for 
all aspects of Buddhism. The most plausible 
and the one which eventually came to be con- 
sidered the Orthodox explanation was that 
expounded by the Chinese Chiki, the founder 



124 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 



of the Tendai school of Mahayana. This con- 
sisted of the theory of the five periods of Qaky- 
amuni's life, the four classes of doctrine which he 
delivered, and of the four styles of teaching. 

Their mutual relationship is shewn in the 
following chart : — 



4J/l//fj 



l.JeuCitn 



i-Cn^uxf 



.Jeenf 



^ _ C/heWermi/Ktf 




This graph appears far more complicated 
than in reality it is. The three categories when 
taken separately are simplicity itself. 

(a.) The Five Periods. 

The five periods have already been examined 
in our brief review of the Buddha's Ufe. They 
are named after the principal sutras which were 
preached in their respective periods. 

The first period beginning in the second week 
of the Holy One's enlightenment was that in 
which he delivered the Avatamsaka Sutra 
containing the Mahayana philosophy in all of its 
profundity. This work is one of the most im- 
portant in the whole Mahayana canon. Upon 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 125 

it was founded one of the two great Mahay- 
ana metaphysical schools of China. Textual 
criticism shews it to be undoubtedly of late 
composition, but it is an invaluable storehouse 
of information concerning the development of 
the Buddhist philosophy. It is a great pity 
that up to the present time no attempt has 
been made to translate it into English. 

The Buddha, finding this incomprehensible 
to the masses, next preached the Agama Sutras, 
containing the fundamental principles of Hina- 
yana. There are four Agamas which are 
practically identical with the four Nikayas of 
Southern Buddhism, which (sometimes with 
the addition of an added fifth) compose the 
Sutta (Siltra) Pitaka or division of the Pali 
Canon. Much of the Pali version has been 
rendered into English, so that an important task 
for future scholars is to compare it with the 
Chinese translation of the Agamas. 

The majority of his pupils having at length 
passed beyond this stage the Master then de- 
livered the Vaipulya Sutras. Literally these 
mean the Expanded Discourses and betray an 
aflSorescence both as regards style and doctrine. 
Practically none of these are to be found in th« 
Southern canon, but in most of the Vaipulya 



126 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

sutras the Mahayana teachings presented are 
in a decidedly rudimentary state. 

They are chiefly marked by the growth of the 
Buddha legend, and the introduction of many 
supernatural elements, though the later theories 
of the Bodhisattva ideal and of the Universal 
Buddha are set forth in a more or less undevelop- 
ed state. To this period belong the important 
Sutras the Vimalakirtti Nirdega Sutra, the 
Lankavatara Sutra, and the Maha vaipulya 
Sannipata Sutra. These sutras are frequently 
cited even by the developed Mahayana schools- 

The next or fourth period was occupied in 
delivering the Maha-prajna-paramita Sutra and 
others of a like nature. In these the doctrine 
of Qunya was fully developed, and by negating 
negation the idea of the transcending Middle 
Principle (Madhya) above existence and non- 
existence was formulated. 

The fifth and final period was once more de- 
voted to the pure and undiluted Mahayana 
doctrine. To this belong the Saddharma 
Pundarika Sutra, perhaps the most important 
of the Mahayana SUtras, and the Nirvana Sutra 
which is much studied in China and is not to be 
confused with a Hinayana Sutra with a similar 
name. Finally there was also the two most 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 12 

famous Sukhavati Sutras, tlie Amitayur Dhyana 
Sutra and the Sukhavativyiiha Sutra, on which 
are based the Paradise seeking sects which play 
such an important part in later Mahayana. 
(6.) The Four Classes of Doctrine 

The synthesis expounded by Tendai Daishi 
(as Chikii was later called) goes on to state 
that all the teachings of Buddhism may be 
classified into four groups, different aspects 
of which were revealed during the above men- 
tioned five periods of ^akyamuni's life. 

The first of these is the Zo or Tripitaka 
doctrine, meaning in this instance by the Trip- 
itaka only the orthodox Hinayana system 
expounded in the Abhidharma Koga, and also 
the primitive QHnya school founded on the 
Satya Siddhi Qastra. This class corresponds 
exactly to the Agama period of the Buddha's 
life though occasionally touched upon by the 
Vaipulya Sutras. 

The next in the order of development is the 
Tsu, or intermediate school, so-called because It 
is the system which is intermediate between the 
Tripitaka doctrines and the later and more 
perfect doctrines of true Mahayana. To this 
class belong the Dharamalak^ana or Yogacarya 
and the Tri$astra or the Madhyamika school. 



128 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

The Tsu or intermediate doctrine was taught 
both in the Vaipulya and the Prajna-paramita 
periods. 

With the third class, the Betsu or Differ- 
entiated doctrine, we at length reach real Maha- 
yana. In this school, which is perhaps most 
characteristic of the Avatamsaka sect the Trans- 
cending Middle Principle (Madhya) is formulated ; 
but in this case it is the transcendality which is 
insisted upon. It is above all things and can be 
attained only by going through ten stages of 
1. The Naraka or Hells ; 2. The realm of the 
Pretas, or Goblins ; 3. Animals ; 4. The realm of 
the Asuras ; 5. Mankind ; 6. The Devas ; 
7. The stage of the Qravaka ; or hearers (as- 
pirants after Arhatship) ; 8. Pratyeka Buddhas ; 
and 9. Bodhisattvas leading up to the tenth and 
last stage of true Buddhahood, which is synony- 
mous with the Middle Principle. This root of 
existence though above the Universe or rather 
though far more than the universe yet ever aids 
at making aU sentient beings attain emancipation 
and so instead of revealing only the one road 
(dokyo) it uses many updya (means) and teaches 
in many different manners, (Betsu-kyo or 
Bekkyo) to suit the exigencies of the times. Ac- 
eordingly it is called the Differentiated achool. 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OP BUDDHAHOOD 129 

This was inculcated in tlie Vaipulya, Prajaap 
paramita and Avatamsaka periods, but most 
purely in the last. 

The fourth and highest doctrine is that of 
En or Completeness. This is the teaching 
which emphasises the immanence as well as the 
transcendence of the Absolute and seeks to find 
the Universal Buddha in the lowest inhabitant 
of heU as well as in the supremely illuminated sage. 
The doctrines of Completeness as taught in the 
Avatamsaka Sutra (the shahu-en or old complete- 
ness as it is called) is merely the highest of the 
four classes of doctrine, whUe the En of the 
Saddharma Pundarika Sutra (the hon-en or the 
new completeness) is the only doctrine in which 
aU the others are included. 

(c.) The Four Styles of Teaching. 

The four modes of Qakyamuni's instruction 
require but little attention. The first or Ton 
means suddenness and is the method whereby 
the learner is told directly and immediately the 
whole truth. The second, the Zen or the 
Gradual method, was to lead the student step by 
step through all the stages on the path. The 
first belongs exclusively to the Avatamsaka 
period, and the second to the Vaipulya, Agama, 
and Prajna paramita periods. 



130 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

The third method is that of Eimitsu or 
Secrecy, and may be said to be the esoteric 
transmission of truth. In this the aspirant 
is initiated into the inner mysteries which 
cannot be adequately expounded in exoteric 
doctrines. 

The fourth and highest is the Fujd or Undeter- 
mined. In this the Law is expounded in such a 
way that every person may understand it 
according to his capacity. The same sutramay 
be used for persons of different profundity, 
the less intelligent receiving therefrom the same 
stimulus as the most enlightened though the 
actual substance extracted therefrom will differ 
with each individual. 

Both the third and the fourth styles of teach- 
ing belong to the first four periods, while the 
fifth period is in reality beyond all manners and 
styles, though more particularly connected with 
the Fujo or Undetermined Style. 

The doctrine of the five periods, four classes 
of doctrine, and four styles of teaching is the 
most important synthesis of Qakyamuni's life, 
but it is by no means the only one. The only 
other two which require attention are the three 
doctrine, and five doctrine classification of 
the Buddhas' life. 



THE NATURE AND POWERS OF BUDDHAHOOD 131 

According to the three doctrine theory which 
is taught by the Dharmalak^ana, or Yogacarya 
school, Qakyamuni taught, first, the doctrine 
of the existence of all phenomena, or the doctrine 
of Beiug (ke), second, the doctrine that all such 
existence is purely relative or the doctrine of 
Becoming (lit., Tcu or non-existence) and third, 
the doctrine of the Middle Principle (cM) 
which transcends both existence and non- 
existence. 

The five-fold division of Gautama's life is 
made by the Avatamsaka (Kegon) school and 
consists of (1) 8hd or the doctrine of smallness, 
in which the primitive Hinayana doctrines are 
inculcated, (2) 8M the doctrine of beginning, 
in which the undeveloped Mahayana doctrines 
are unfolded, (3) Ju or the end in which the 
purely metaphysical aspect of Mahayana 
reached its final development, (4) Ton or sudden- 
ness, the doctrine of the immediate intuition 
of Truth without words or symbols associated 
with the teachings of the Dhyana school, and 
finally (5) Hn or the doctrine of Completion, 
associated with the Avatamsaka Sect in which the 
perfection fruition of all the other schools is 
to be found. 



CHAPTEE V 

PSYCHOLOGT-^ELEMBNTS OF 
EXISTENCE 

I. TTie Analysis of the Personality 

One of the most difacult points for Western 
students of all forms of Buddhism to understand 
is the doctrine of Anatman, which is unusually 
translated " soullessness." Buddhism insists 
that the soul is not a rigid unchanging, 
self-constituted entity, but a living, complex, 
changing, evolving organism. Non-Buddhistic 
philosophers have usually supposed that the 
soul is a simple substance which inhabits the 
body and which after death is rendered free 
from the shackles of corporeality. This is the 
core of the Hindu theory of the atman. 

In Buddhism the theory of anitya or im- 
permanency is applied even to the psychic life, 
largely on the analogy of the human body. 
The body exists but it has no self essence, i.e. 
it is made up of component parts which, in many 



PSYCHOLOGY 133 

cases, are constantly replaced. There is no one 
centre of the body which is its ultimate essence, 
for neither the heart nor the brain, etc., could 
function without the other organs. Since the 
material parts of which it is composed are 
continually changing, in one sense it may be 
said that our bodies of to-day are not identical 
with our bodies of yesterday, yet it is obvious 
that they are not different since they have a 
sequential, or causal, or what the Buddhists 
would call a karmaic connection. 

All this, says Buddhism, applies equally to 
the soul. There is no atman for the personality 
consists of five skandhas or aggregates, or 
faculties, viz. : — (1) Bupa, body or form, in 
other words the physical body, (2) Vedana sen- 
sation or perception, (3) 8amjna conception or 
ratiocination, (4) Samslcara mental qualities, 
such as love, hate, etc., and (5) Vijnana con- 
sciousness, more especially in this connection, 
self-consciousness. None of these can claim 
pre-eminence. One is not the basis around 
which the others are grouped. They are all 
co-ordinated parts, constantly changing, so that 
at no two moments can the personality claim 
to be identical, yet at the same time there is a 
eonstant Karmaic persistence. 



I3i INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

This division of the personality into five 
skandhas (Pali Khandhas) is undoubtedly very 
ancient, and probably goes back to the time of 
Qakyamuni himself. The keen pleasure which 
the Indian mind takes in metaphysical analysis 
and dissection, however, would not allow thiis 
simple formula to stand alone and later systems 
divided each skandha into a number of fundamen- 
tal elements. In the Sthaviravada or Theravada 
school of Hinayana represented by the Order in 
Ceylon, Burma, and Siam, we fiud the following 
classification of each of the skandhas : — 
The Five Skandhas and their Divisions. 

1. Bupa, or material qualities, 27 (or 28) in 
number. Four elements, earth, water, fire, and 
air. Five sense organs, eye, ear, nose, tongue, 
body. Four sense objects, form sound, smell, 
taste. Two distinctions of sex, male and female. 
Three essential conditions, mental action, vital 
spirits, food. Two means of communication, 
gesture and speech. Seven qualities of material 
bodies, buoyancy, pliancy, adaptability, integra- 
tion, continuance of integration, decay and 
impermanency. 

2. Vedana or sensation, 3 or 5 in number. 
Three, pleasurable, painful, neutral. Two or 
more are sometimes added, mental and physical 
sensation. 



PSYCHOLOGY 135 

3. Samjnd {Sannd) or Conception, 6 in 
number. One for each of the senses, and one 
mental. " The Perception of ' blue ' for instance 
is classed under sight, or ' sweet ' under taste." 

4. Samshdra {Sanhhdra) Mental Qualities. 52 
in number. Seven mental properties which are 
common to every act of consciousness, viz : — (1) 
contact (phassa), (2) sensation (vedana), (4) 
conception (sanna), (5) volition, (cetana) (6) in- 
dividualization of object (ekaggata), (7) mental 
alertness (Jivitindriya), (8) attention (manasi- 
kara). 

Six mental properties which sometimes are and 
sometimes are not present in consciousness, 
viz : — (1) initial application (vitakka), (2) sus- 
tained application (vicara), (3) deciding as to 
object (adhimokkha), (4) effort (viriya), (5) 
pleasurable interest (piti), (6) impulse (chanda). 

Fourteen evU mental qualities, viz : — (1) dull- 
ness (moha), (2) impudence (ahirika), (3) reckless- 
ness (anotappa), (4) distraction (uddhacca), (5) 
greed (lobha), (6) error (dhittha), (7) conceit, 
(mana), (8) hate (dosa), (9) envy (issa), (10) 
selfishness (macchariya), (11) worry (kukkucca), 
(12) sloth (thina), (13) torpor (middha), (14) 
perplexity (vicikiccha). 



136 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

Nineteen virtuous mental qualities, viz : — •(!) 
faith (saddha), (2) mindfullness (sati), (3) pru- 
dence (hiri), (4) discretion (otappa), (5) dis- 
interestedness (alobha), (6) amity (adosa), (7) 
Balance of mind (tatramajjattata), (8) composure 
(passaddM) of body^ or (9) of mind, (10) buoy- 
ancy (lahuta), of body or (11) of mind, (12) 
pliancy (muduta) of body or (13) of mind, (14) 
adaptability (kammannata) of body or (15) of 
mind, (16) proficiency (Pagunnata) of body or 
(17) of mind, (18) rectitude (ujukata) of body or 
(19) of mind. 

Three forms of propriety, viz : — (1) right 
speech, (2) right action, and (3) right livelihood. 
Two Ulimitables, (1) pity, and (2) appreciation. 
One supreme possession, reason (panna). 

5. Vijnana {Vinndna) or Consciousness. 
In the South it is usual to divide consciousness 
into 89 classes from the point of view of the 
merit or demerit resulting from different forms 
of consciousness. These do not especially con- 
cern us. The six-fold division of consciousness is 
also found, these six forms are, one for each of 
the senses, and one purely " mental conscioue- 



^ Some would translate KS.ya her* by " Mental prep»Ttie« ' 
ather than " Body " and so below. 



PSYCHOLOGY 137 

In the Sarvastivadin school of HlnaySna, an 
attempt was made to give a more comprehensive 
view of the universe, and, as we have seen, all 
phenomena were reduced to a certain number of 
fixed dharmas or elements of existence. In the 
Abhidharma Koga they are enumerated as 
seventy-five in number. These are in reality 
nothing more than the objectification of the 
divisions of the skandhas, arising from the 
examination of the parts of the universe rather 
than merely from the human mind. The 
Sarvastivadins admit, however, that this com" 
prehensive analysis may also be approached 
from the subjective as well as the objective 
point of view, so that they present us with the 
following two-fold classification : — 

I. Subjective Classification of Phenomena. 

A. The 5 Skandhas or the aggregates of being 
which compose the " soul." As in the Southern 
account they consist of Eupa or form, Vedana 
or sensation, Samjna or conception, Samskara 
or mental qualities, and Vijnana or consciousness. 
These five Skandhas may be broken down into 
seventy-five dharmas, of which in fact they may 
be considered compounds. 

B. The 12 Ayatanas or, the bases from which 
mental action arises, Buddhists argue that before 



\36 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

consciousness can function there must be present 
twelve things, namely the five sense organs, 
the five sense objects, manas or the percipient 
mind, and dharma or things in general or ab- 
stract ideas. 

C. The 18 Dhatus or Factors of Conscious- 
ness, consist of the 12 Ayatanas plus the six 
Vijnana or aspects of consciousness. 

II. Objective Classification of Phenomena. 

A. Asamshrita Dharmas, simple or uncon- 
ditioned elements of existence. These are three 
in number, namely (1) Space or Ether (akaga), 
(2) The unconscious cessation of existence 
(apratisankya-nirodha) a form of deep trance, 
and (3) conscious cessation of existence, (prati- 
samkya nirodha) which is equivalent to Nirvana. 

B. SamsJcrita Dharmas or conditioned ele- 
ments of existence, so-called, it wUl be remember- 
ed, because though themselves simple and primal 
they enter into combinations one with another. 
They are 72 in number, divided in the follow- 
ing way : — 

1. Rupa Dharmas or material elements, 11 
in number, consisting of the five sense organs 
(eye, ear, nose, tongue, and body), the five sense 



PSYCHOLOGY 139 

objects (sight, sound, smell, taste, and toncli), 
and avijnapti-rupa, or latent or unmanifest 
matter. 

2. Citta DJiarma or mental element, only- 
one in number, consisting of mind itself, though, 
the one mind is divided into six vijnana and the 
three modes. 

3. Caitta Dharmas, or mental qualities, 
corresponding to the Samskara Skandha of the 
South. This has 46 divisions, classified in the 
following way : — 10 MahahJiumika Dharmas, or 
neutral elements which are always present in 
consciousness, (1) Vedana or Sensation, (2) 
Samjna or Conception, (3) Cetana or motive, (4) 
Sparca or contact, (5) Chanda or Conation, (6) 
Mati or intellect, (7) Smriti or memory, (8) 
Manaskara or attention, (9) Adhimok§a or 
determination, and (10) Samadhi or contempla- 
tion. Next follow the 10 Eugala mahab- 
humika dharmas or good elements which are 
always present, (1) ^^addha or faith, (2) Virya 
or diligence, (3) Upek^a or indifference, (4) 
Hri or shame, (5) Apatrapa or modesty, (6) 
Alobha or noncovetousness, (7) Adve§a or non- 
hatred, (8) Ahimsa or harmlessness, (9) Pra. 
gabdhi or serenity and (10) Apramada, tem- 
perance or non-slackness. Next come the 6 

K 



140 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Klega mahabhumiks, dharmas, or great evil 
elements, (1) Moha or nescience, (2) Pramada 
intemperateness or carelessness, (3) Kansidya 
or indolence, (4) Agraddha or disbelief, (5) 
Sty ana or idleness, and (6) Andhatya or rash- 
ness, Next come the 2 ATcugala maJiSbhumiJcS 
dharmas or non- virtuous great elements, (1) 
Ahrikya shamelessness, and (2) Anapatrapa 
or immodesty. Next come the 10 UpaMe- 
fobJiumiJcd dharmas or the lesser evil elements 
so called because they are not present in all 
forms of sentiency, but only in those forms of 
life which are possessed of self-consciousness. 
These are (1) Krodha, or wrath, (2) Mrakga or 
hypocrisy, (3) Matsarya or envy, (4) Ir§ya 
or jealousy, (5) Paritapa or anguish, (6) VihimsS 
or injury, (7) Upanaha or rancour, (8) Maya or 
deceit, (9) ^Sbthja or trickery, and (10) Mada or 
arrogance. Finally there are the 8 Aniya- 
tdbhumika dharmas or the miscellaneous minor 
mental qualities, which are (1) Kaukritya or 
repentance, (2) Middha or torpor, (3) Vitarka or 
judgment, (4) Vicara or investigation, (5) Eaga 
or cupidity, (6) Pratigha or anger, (7) Mana or 
pride, and (8) Vicikitsa or doubt. 

4. Citta Viprayulcta Dharmas or miscell- 
aneous elements, 14 in number, viz : — (1) Prapti 



PSYCHOLOGY 141 

or attainment, (2) Aprapti or non-attainment, 
(3) Sabhagata or general characteristics, (4) 
Asamjnika or unconsciousness, (6) Asamjni- 
samapatti or ecstacy with the loss of conscious- 
ness, (6) Nirodha-samapatti or a continuation 
of the above equivalent to the cessation of 
existence, (7) Jivita or life, (8) Jati birth or 
origin, (9) Sthiti or continuance, (10) Jara or 
decay, (11) Anityata or impermanency, (12) 
Namakaya or words, (13) Padakaya or sentence, 
(14) Vyanjanakaya or letters. 

The subjective and objective classifications 
are supposed to be equivalent one to another, 
to be but different ways of enumerating the 
same phenomena. 

In the later schools, such as the Satyasiddhi 
gect with its 84 Dharmas, and the Yogacarya sect 
with its 100 Dharmas, the essential relation- 
ship between the subjective and objective 
classifications is not changed though the onto- 
logical background was radically modified. In 
the Satyasiddhi and Madhyamika schools the 
dharmas, the skandhas, and the component 
parts of the skandhas are themselves all im- 
permanent, complex and reducible to finer 
sub-divisions ad infinitum. In the Yogacarya 
school the whole of Ufa was reduced to the 



142 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

stream of life, and all the dliarmas are but 
vortices or centres in this universal substance. 
AM the phenomena of life including the Dharmas 
are but mental ejects or objectivizations of 
various aspects of the essence of mind. This 
point brings up the question of the nature of 
Vijnana or consciousness and the part which it 
plays in the appearance of the external universe. 
The Abhidharma Koga knows nothing of the 
89 divisions of Vijnana taught in the Pali tradi- 
tion, but only the six-fold aspects of conscious- 
ness. The first five of these, it will be remem- 
bered, correspond to the five sense organs and 
sense objects. The last or Manovijnana may 
be called the faculty of ratiocination which 
produces thought and reason from the data 
received from the purely passive five vij&ana. 

II. The Nature of Perceptio n. 
The Abhidharma Koga is realistic. It believes 
that there is an external universe closely corres- 
ponding to the sense data which we experience, 
but it realises that in its present form the world 
as we see it is subjective, the result of the 
action of the percipient consciousness (vijQana) 
acted upon by external stimuli. 

Accordingly, from the individual point of view, 
the origin of the experienced universe, as opposed 



PSYCHOLOGY 143 

to the Universe in itself — to use Kantain phrase- 
ology is as follows : — 

The Five Sense Objects. The Five Sense Organs. 
Vedana (sensation or perception.) 
Vijnana (self consciousness.) 
Samjna (consciousness of the external 

universe.) 
Samskara (the fully developed world of 
subject and object, life and death.) 

We see from this that the Sarvastivadin 
school of Hinayana teaches a philosophic as 
opposed to a crude realism. Necessarily, the 
world as we see it is subjective, even though it 
is based on an external reality. Being Hinayana, 
and therefore more in accordance with the 
primitive Buddhism, no attempt is made to 
elucidate the real nature of the external universe 
or to premise its origin or end, but with the uni- 
verse as perceived it is closely concerned. We are 
told how it came into existence and how it 
will come to an end when Parinirvana, final 
emancipation, is achieved. 

The epistemology, ontology, and phenomen- 
ology latent in this system should be carefully 
thought out before we pass to the Yogacarya 
system, since the latter, though antithetical, 
is yet derived from the earlier teaching. In the 



144 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Togacarya school there are eight forms of 
consciousness or Vijnana postulated. The 
first six are more or less in accord with the six 
vijnana of the Hinayana doctrine, save that the 
Mano-vijaana or the Abhidharma Koga is 
divided into two, Mano-vijnana proper or normal 
waking consciousness, and Kli§to-mano- 
vijnana which is more subjective, and corresponds 
to self-awareness. The eighth VijQana, Alaya 
Vijnana, or receptacle consciousness, so called 
because it contains the seed of all things, is, as 
we have said, like the Unconscious of Von- 
Hartmann, the sea of Ufe from which both 
subject and object are derived, for it is at once 
that which sees and that which is seen. 

The llaya Vijnana has four aspects or faculties 
viz : — 

1. Form Outer or Objective. 

2. Perception \ 

3. Eatiocination i Inner or Subjective. 

4. Beflection. ) 

In Hinayana the external world is taken for 
granted and we start with the percipient con- 
sciousness fully developed. In the Yogacarya 
school, we are told that both the external 
world and consciousness are ultimately reducible 
to the llaya Vijnana. The Alaya Vijnana 



PSYCHOLOGY 145 

in its as yet non-dividuated phase is the energy 
behind inanimate life, the world of minerals, 
etc. It is also the life force behind life in the 
vegetable world. As such it is the Form or the 
essence of the objective world. 

Eventually this life force attains the power of 
sensation and percipiency It is latent in the 
vegetable world and is fully developed in the 
animal world. It becomes aware of the other 
currents in the stream of life, or, if you prefer, 
the other phases of the Alaya Vijnana, from 
which we understand why it is said that it is 
both subject and object. 

As this sensatory or perceptive faculty de- 
velops, there arises the ability to retain impress- 
ions, to compare and associate them, and so the 
third faculty, thought or normal consciousness 
comes into being. This is to be found only in 
the higher animals and in man, etc. This in 
turn develops into self-consciousness or re- 
flection, the fourth faculty only to be found 
in the highest order of sentient beings. 

This may be caUed the cosmic evolution of 
the Alaya Vijnana, or the evolution of the 
Universe in itself, or the universe as it really is, 
as compared with the experienced universe, 
which each person creates for himself, 



146 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

As regards the latter we are told that the 
stages in the formation of the microcosm are 
as follows : — 

1. The Alaya Vijnana gives rise to the 
Seed Alaya proper — the basis of consciousness — 
and to the sense organs, and the sense objects or 
the external world. The actual world has thus 
already been created, but its replica has not 
yet been created by the mind. This is the stage 
at which Hinayana begins. From the inter- 
action of these three there comes into being the 
essence of the world as perceived, the basis 
of the empirical world. 

In the meanwhile the seventh Vijnana, the 
Kligto-mano-Vijnana, or self-consciousness, 
that which firmly distinguishes between subject 
and object, having developed, it is fecundated 
by the Seed Alaya, and becoming aware of the 
external universe, proceeds to take it into its 
comprehension and so gives to it form and shape, 
which are, needless to say, secondary or sub- 
jective qualities, and not inherent in the real 
external world. 

2. The sixth Vijnana, Mano-vijnana, Normal 
Consciousness, or the faculty which discriminates 
between the various phenomena of the universe 
is then developed and, fecundated by the Seed 



PSYCHOLOGY 147 

Alaya, adds to the gradually evolving germ the 
concept of Uke and dislike associating with it 
other objects in terms of cause and effect, etc. 

3. There then develop the remaining five 
forms of consciousness corresponding to the five 
sense organs. These are : — 

1. CaJcsu Vijnana, visual consciousness, 

mental action depend- 
ent on the eye, etc. 

2. (J^otra Vijnana, oral consciousness. 

3. OJirana Vijnana, nasal consciousness. 

4. Jihva Vijnana, cognition of objects 

of taste. 

5. Kdya Vijnana, cognition of the objects 

of touch. 

When these are developed and impregnated 
by the Seed Alaya which may be called the seed 
of personality, they give, on coming into contact 
with the germ of objectivity the final touches 
of the experienced world. Thus, for example, 
the first vijnana or Visual Consciousness, gives 
the sense of colour, and presents the 
phenomenon in question in the form which our 
ordinary sense impressions make familiar to us. 

By means of the interaction of these various 
Vijnana, a man builds up for himself the external 
world which he experiences. The absence of 
any of them would destroy the completeness. 



148 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Without the first Vijnana he could not see, 
without the sixth he could not understand 
the relative value of the various phenomena 
presented to him. Without the seventh he 
could not formulate a conception of shape or 
size, while without the eighth neither he nor the 
external object could exist. 

One last word concerning certain details. The 
eighth Vijfiana is the root or essence of all things 
so that aU other seven Vijnanas are derived 
from it. The Seventh and Eighth Vijnana are 
closely associated and so maintain a direct and 
immediate relationship. The sixth Vijnana serves 
to co-ordinate the remaining five. Among the 
ignorant and the unenlightened the sixth 
Vijnana or normal consciousness is aware of the 
existence of only the seventh Vijnana. This 
they suppose to be their real selves and to be an 
eternal and unchanging reality. Bodhisattvas 
are able to see the true state of affairs. They 
are able to penetrate to the core of the seventh 
Vijfiana, and thus come into contact with the 
eighth or Alaya Vijfiana the ever fluid medium 
which is the true cause of all existence. 

— __., 8. ///nana , 

7?,i£xfe>7,a/ (<- rJ^ 7^S' l///Jyanoi - 



^^'^^ ^"^- ^ / /i^^ y'//!Sno (2 (CauseJ 



PSYCHOLOGY 149 

Buddhism distinguislies two elements in 
causality, the In (hetu) the seed or cause 
proper, the En (pratyaya) environment or 
attendant circumstances, and the Ka (phala) or 
the result or fruit. Thus for instance a mango 
seed is planted, the sun, rain, and the earth act 
upon it, and a mango tree springs up, the mango 
seed is the In, the sun, rain, and earth are the 
En, and the mango fruit the Ka. 

From the epistemological point of view, says 
the Togacarya school, in the origin of the 
experienced world, the sixth Vijnana is the seed, 
the seventh and eighth Vijnana the condition, 
and the experienced world the fruit. This, 
of course, is obvious. That which really formu- 
lates the eject of externality is the normal 
waking consciousness, though this is based upon 
the discriminating faculty of the seventh Vij- 
nana, and the essence of mind as expressed in 
the Alaya Vijnana. 

III. Immortality. 

Finally the question of the survival of the 
personality must be examined. Having no 
fixed unchanging atman, Buddhist immortality 
is somewhat different from that taught in other 
religions, yet actually the difference in outlook 
is less than might be supposed. The personality 



150 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 



as a complex and changing organism persists 
from year to year. The component parts vary 
in each incarnation, there is no underlying 
substance which is retained throughout, yet 
there is a Karmaic connection which allows us 
to say that it is the same personality. 

•If the deeds in this life have been evil, at the 
the moment of death a new personality (which 
is yet the same) will be formed in one of the hells; 
if a man has been virtuous he will be reborn in 
one of the heavens, or, according to his Karma 
in one of the other realms, possibly as a man 
again. 

This idea, common to aU forms of Buddhism, 
the Yogacarya school expresses in the following 
way : — 

/^rese/?/^ Pas/ 



( 8. l///'nana \ 



( O _ yz/noro \ 




PSYCHOLOGY ISl 

The state of the sixth Vijnana at the moment 
of death, moulds from the plastic mind substance 
a new sixth Vijnana, and the same is true of 
the seventh and eighth Vijnanas. The con- 
dition or stage of development of the new eighth 
Vijnana is supposed to be greatly affected by 
the activity of the sixth Vijnana during the 
previous existence, which in turn is strongly 
influenced by the external conditions and 
previous observance of the various moral com- 
mandments. 

The new Vijnanas having thus come into 
existence, the creation of the new experienced 
universe goes on as before. In this way the 
wheel of life and death continues for ever, or 
until Nirvana be gained. 

It should be observed that in both the heavens 
and the hells, man does not exist as a dis- 
embodied spirit as is presumably taught in 
Christianity, but that he has a body with the usual 
sense objects and sense organs, etc. (the only 
exception to this are the Arupa Heavens, where 
there is, of course, no form) correlated to the 
eighth Vijnana, so that the chart for the method 
of re-birth and the method of the creation of 
the experienced universe applies to the super- 
natural as well as to the physical worlds. 



152 INTnODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Finally, it should be added, that just as the 
later Mahayanist philosophers considered these 
supernatural worlds to be purely subjective, 
so did they come to think that reincarnation was 
general rather than particular, that there was no 
specific survival of each personality, but that 
the stream of life seen in the development of 
the human race alone survived, that each person 
added his quota to the general stream, and that 
the individual Karma was added to the Universal 
Karma which conditions the life of future 
generations. This idea has been especially 
emphasized by the Dhyana sect. 



CHAPTEE VI 

THE WHEEL OF LIFE AND THE EOAD 
TO NIEVANA 

Whether taken as objective realities or symbols 
of subjective states, great emphasis has been 
laid upon the various gati or realms of existence 
in which men are for ever being born and die. 
The gati are frequently symbolized by a wheel 
of life, a symbol which is common to all forms 
of Buddhism. A few words of explanation con- 
cerning a typical chart, such a chart as the 
Lama elucidated to Kim, will perhaps be found 
useful. 

(a.) At the centre are the three animals 
symbolic of the three fundamental sins which 
result in the formation of the phenomenal 
world. These are the serpent (anger), the boar 
(ignorance), and the dove (lust). They are 
catching one another by the tail and so typify 
the train of sins which produces the wheel of 
life. In most Chinese and Japanese representa- 
tions of the wheel the Buddha is placed in the 



154 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

middle to show that in spite of the evil of existence 
the Universal Buddha is latent in aU. In the 
Tibetan chart the Buddhas and Bodhisavattas 
are placed outside showing that the phenomenal 
world is regulated by and contained in the 
noumenal world. 

(b.) In the next circle are placed the symbols 
of the twelve Nidanas, or the twelve links in 
the chain of universal causality whereby all 
things are evolved. The twelve, it will be 
remembered are : — 

1. Ignorance represented by a blind woman. 

2. Action represented by a potter at work 

or a man gathering fruit. 

3. Consciousness represented by a restless 

monkey. 

4. Name and Form represented by a boat. 

5. Sense Organs represented by a house. 

6. Contact represented by a man and woman 

sitting together. 

7. Sensation represented by a man pierced 

with an arrow. 

8. Desire represented by a man drinking 

wine. 

9. Craving represented by a couple in union. 
10. Birth represented by child birth. 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 155 

11. Life represented by a man carrying a 

a corpse. 

12. Disease, old age, and death, represented 

by an old woman leaning on a 

stick. 
These twelve nidanas have played an im- 
portant part in Buddhist phenomenology and 
have been carefully explained in various 
works on all forms of Buddhism. 

(c.) The next circle typifies the whole body of 
sentient beings including the inhabitants of all 
the six realms though here represented in human 
form. This is divided into two parts, Sugati 
(on the left) the state of happiness, and Durgati 
(on the right) the state of misery. 

Sentient beings however, never exist in a pure 
or unembodied form but are inhabitants of one of 
the six realms shewn in the six sections of the 
outer circle, or for a short time in Bardo or 
intermediate state between death and rebirth. 

In this arrangement, the first gati is the 
realm of human beings, for though in pleasure and 
duration of life it is far inferior to the Devalokas 
or Abodes of the Gods or the Eupa or Arupa 
Heavens, it is here alone that progress in the 
path of the Bodhisattva may be made. For this 
reason rebirth as a human being is highly 



156 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

prized and is considered difficult to achieve. 
In the Tibetan chart we see a woman on account 
of merit in a past life being reborn as a monk 
who will in due course attain Nirvana. Im- 
mediately above him are two Lamas or monks 
of the exoteric school. The four armed deity 
is Avalokitegvara the symbol of Universal 
Love or Mercy, leading men to emancipation. 
On either side are two Bodhisattvas who by 
following the esoteric school are soon to attain 
Buddhahood. The other figures represent 
various aspects of human life. 

The second gati is the realm of the devas or 
Gods in which are also included the inhabitants 
of the eighteen heavens of the World of Form and 
the four heavens of the World of Formlessness. 
Here the meritorious are born to enjoy the fruits 
of their good Karma. It is a place of enjoyment 
but not of culture and progress in the way of 
Bodhisattva perfection. 

The third gati portrays the realm of the 
Asuras the Demons or Genii the ancient enemies 
of the Devas. The fourth is the realm of the 
animals, the fifth is the realm of the Pretas, 
the hungry ghosts or the ghouls, the sixth is the 
underworld, where are situate the Narakas or 
Hells. 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 



157 



The other kinds of supernatural beings of 
which Buddhism speaks have no separate realm 
of their own but are distributed among the six 
gati, while in some accounts there are only five, 
the Asuras being grouped with the Devas. It 
should also be noted that no account is taken 
of the vegetable world. Contrary to the teach- 
ing of certain Hindu schools Buddhism does not 
consider that vegetables belong to the world 
of sentient beings, so that it is impossible to be 
reborn in that state. 

These realms are sufficiently important to 
require slightly more detailed consideration, 
(a.) The World of the Gods. 

This includes the four Arupa or formless 
heavens, the eighteen, (or 16) Heavens of Form 
or Eiipa or Brahma Heavens, as well as the six 
Deva heavens of the World of Desire. The 
duration of life as well as the average stature, etc., 
of the inhabitants of these heavens is as follows : 

Average 



Name of Heaven. Duration of life. 



1st Devaloka 
2nd Devaloka 
3rd Devaloka 
4th Devaloka 
5th Devaloka 2,304 
6th Devaloka 9,216 



9 million years. 
36 
144 
576 



Stature. 
J Kroga 

f „ 

1 „ 



158 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 



Fame of Heaven. Duration of life. 


Stature. 


1st Eupaloka 


i mahakalp 


a J yojana. 


2nd Eupaloka 


i 


11 


1 , 




3rd Eupalaka 


1 


>) 


li, 




4th Eupaloka 


2 


)) 


2 , 




5tli Eupaloka 


4 


)) 


4 , 




eth Eupaloka 


8 


)j 


8 , 




7tli Eiipaloka 


16 


)? 


16 , 




8tli Eupaloka 


32 


11 


32 , 




9th Eupaloka 


64 


11 


64 , 




10th Eupaloka 


125 


11 


125 , 




11th Eupaloka 


250 


11 


250 , 




12th Eupaloka 


500 


11 


500 , 




13th Eupaloka 


500 


11 


500 , 




14th Eupaloka 


1,000 


11 


1,000 , 




15th Eupaloka 


2,000 


11 


2,000 , 




16th Eupaloka 


4,000 


11 


4,000 , 




17th Eiipaloka 


8,000 


11 


8,000 , 




18th Eupaloka 


16,000 


11 


16,000 , 




1st ArUpaloka 20,000 mahakalpas. 


The inhabitants 


2nd ArUpaloka 


40,000 


11 




of the Arupa- 


3rd Ariipaloka ( 


30,000 


11 




lokas have no 


4th Ariipaloka i 


^0,000 


11 




bodies. 


(b.) 


The World of 


Men. 


Men are to be found 


in all 


the innumerable 


Cakravala (worlds) scattered 


thr 


oughc 


)ut the 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 159 

universe. In each Cakravala there are four 
continents one lying on each side (ISTorth, South, 
Bast, and West) of the great central mountain 
and the seven rocky circles. 

1. In the Iforthern continent called Uttara- 
kuru the inhabitants live for a thousand years, 
none die young and there is no pain, yet owing 
to the difficulty of treading the Holy Path there 
it is called one of the evil places. 

2. In the Western continent called Apara- 
godaniya the inhabitants live for five hundred 
years, but some die younger, and anxiety is 
sometimes experienced. 

3. In the Eastern continent called Pur- 
vavideha the inhabitants live for two hundred 
and fifty years or less. Here also is there 
sorrow and anxiety. 

4. In the Southern continent which includes 
all the known worlds and is called Jambudvipa, 
the age of the inhabitants, varies from ten years 
to an asamkeya. From the purely hedonistic 
point of view it is inferior to the other continents; 
but it is the best place to train for Bodhisattva- 
hood. 

" Among the beings of the three worlds 
(Kama, Kiipa, and Arupa Eealms) men are more 



160 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

full of thought than the others. Therefore is 
human existence to be sought." 

(c.) The World of Asuras. 

The Asuras are semi-divine demons who are 
usually credited with the power of transformation. 
We find it frequently stated that though the 
Asuras have much in common with the Devas 
occasionally there is conflict between the two 
classes in which the Asuras are always eventually 
beaten. The story of this conflict is very ancient 
and can be traced to pre-vedic days when the 
Aryans had not yet reached India. In Persia 
the Ahuras (Asuras) are the conquerors and the 
Devas are the evil beings, in direct contrast 
to the Indian conception. Many Chinese 
Buddhists divide the Asuras into four classes, 
viz., 1. Animal Asuras, whose abode is in the 
depth of the ocean and deep sea caverns. 2. 
Preta Asuras, who are very much like the ordinary 
Pretas or Ghouls but are of a somewhat higher 
order and are endowed with certain fundamental 
virtues and powers. 3. Human Asuras, , who 
have fallen from virtue in Heaven and reside 
near the sun and moon. 4. Deva Asuras, the 
divine asuras who resemble and are but little 
below the dignity of the Gods (Devas) them- 
selves. 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE J 61 

(d.) The World of Animals. 
In Nanjo we have the following description 
of the animal kingdom :** — " There are insects 
whether flying quickly or moving slowly, such as 
wasps and caterpillars, there are animals of the 
scaly tribe, and those covered with shells or 
crusts. There are some animals which are 
covered with hair or naked. Some are one horned 
and others are two horned. Some are two- 
footed and some are many footed. Some have 
wings with which they fly and others have talong 
with which they seize their prey. There are 
large animals called whales ; the ferocious are 
tigers and wolves ; the poisonous are vipers 
and water bugs ; and the cunning are foxes 
and badgers ; there are horned owls which eat 
their mothers. There are some animals called 
owl cats which eat their fathers. There are 
several different kinds of animals of which the 
weaker is always injured by the stronger. Such 
is the state of beings who have entered into the 
nature of animals." (Page VIII). 

(e.) The World of Pretas. 

Those who are born as Pretas or hungry ghosts 

undergo great suffering. Some have " bellies 

as large as a hill while their mouths are as small 

as the eye of a needle, so that they can neither 

•* 12 Sects of Japanese Buddhism. 



162 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

eat nor drink. There are Pretas for whom 
water is always changed into fire as soon as they 
desire to drink, so that they can never satisfy 
their thirst. There are Pretas who eat nothing 
but excrement and decaying matter. There 
are Pretas whose bodies are pierced with their 
own hairs, the points of which are as sharp as 
swords. Again there are Pretas who eat their 
own children. This state is not seen by human 
eyes but among mankind there is often seen 
something like the above." (Nanjo). 

(f.) The Nardkas or Hells. 

In contradistinction to the one hell of Chris- 
tianity, Buddhism postulates the existence of 
innumerable places of torment though all of a 
temporary nature. The most important are the 
eight hot heUs and the eight cold hells. These 
are : — 

A. Sot Hells. (1) Samjiva, (2) Kalastitra, 
(3) Samghata, (4) Eaurava, (5) Maharaurava, 
(5) Tapana, (7) Mahatapana, (8) Avici. 

B. Cold Hells. (1) Arbuda, (2) Nirarbuda, 
(3) Atata, (4) Hahava, (5) Huhuva, (6) Utpala, 
(7) Padma, (8) Mahapadma. 

Owing to the action of Karma man continues 
to be reborn in these realms until at. length he 
succeeds in destroying ignorance, anger, and lust, 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 163 

after which there is no cause for the creation of 
the perceptual or experienced world and thus 
Nirvana is attained. 

All schools of Buddhism have placed much 
emphasis upon the Eoads to Buddhahood and 
the necessary stages which must be passed. 
In the Chinese work entitled Esuan Fo P''u 
(Senbuppu) translated by Timothy Eichards as 
" A Guide to Buddhahood " we find a very 
systematic presentation of the usual ideas on 
the subject, more particularly from the point 
of view of the T' ien t 'ai or Tendai school. 

In this work the stages to be passed are 
arranged in three classes. The first is pre- 
liminary, and is subdivided : — 

1. Steps in the departure from evil. 

2. Steps in the imperfect religious life. 

3. Steps in doing good and suppressing evil. 
When this stage has been reached the disciple 

definitely enters upon the path which leads to 
Buddhahood. This involves training in the 
three practises common to aU forms of Buddhism. 
These are : — 

1. Steps in the growth of (Jila {Km) dis- 
cipline, or moral law which is summed up in 
the various commandments and rules and regu- 
lations of the Buddhist order. 



164 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

2. Steps in the growth of Sam&dM (J6) 
contemplation, meditation, or ecstacy. 

3. Steps in the growth of PrajnS, {E) or 
wisdom. 

Up to this point the path has been the same 
for all disciples. But from hereon the aspirant 
chooses one of the four paths or schools into 
which the Tendai sect divides all aspects of 
Buddhism. These are : — 

1. Steps in the PitaTca or Z5 school, the 
original Hinayana doctrine. 

2. Steps in the Intermediate or Tsu school, 
the undeveloped Mahayana doctrine. 

3. Steps in the Differentiated or Betsu 
school, represented by the Avatamsaka or Kegon 
sect. 

4. Steps in the Perfect or En school re- 
presented by the Tendai sect itself. 

All these four schools belong to the Shodomon 
or Aryamarga school of Buddhism. In addition 
there are the stages in the Jodomon or Suk- 
havati school whereby one attains to Nirvana 
by entering into the land of Bliss of Amitabha. 

Though seemingly of Little other than purely 
technical importance the great emphasis laid 
upon these matters necessitates our examining 
the details of each one of the foregoing steps. 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 165 

I. Preliminary Stages. 

A. Steps in the Departure of Evil. These 
consist of twenty-one steps whicli may be 
classified into seven groups, viz : — 

I. 1. The Ten worst crimes ; 2, the Ten 
intermediary crimes ; 3, the Ten lighter crimes. 
These three stages aU consist of breaking to a 
greater or lesser degree the ten Buddhist com- 
mandments which are : 1, not to kill ; 2, not to 
steal ; 3, not to commit adultery ; 4, not to lie ; 

5, not to slander ; 6, not to indulge in vain 
conversation ; 7, not to covet ; 9, not to bear 
malice ; and 10, not to hold wrong views. 

II. 4, Self-will ; 5, charity without love ; 

6, convential virtue ; 7, formalism. 

III. 8, The ten lower worldly virtues ; 9, 
the ten intermediary virtues ; 10, the ten 
higher virtues : These three consist in obeying 
the above ten commandments to a greater or 
less degree. 

IV. 11. Indulging in superstition or false 
views ; 12, dabbUng in contemplation. 

V. 13. Practice of the four Dhyanas or the 
four stages of ecstacy ; 14, meditation on the 
four infinite virtues, viz., love, pity, joy, and self- 



166 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

eacrifice ; 15, meditation on the aspects of 
immateriality, corresponding to the four realms 
of the Arupadhatu. 

VI. 16. Contemplation of human opinion ; 
17, practice of religion for name and gain. 

VII. 18. Transcendental happiness ; 19, the 
transcendental moral commandments (Qfla). 
These are the precepts of the Buddhist order. 

20, Transcendental contemplation (Samadhi) ; 

21, Transcendental wisdom (Prajna). 

B. Steps in the Imperfect Religious Life. He 
who understood the foregoing steps has under- 
stood the essence of Buddhism. In attempting 
to follow them however, he must pass through 
the following stages. 

1. Breaking of the commandments ; 2, 
breaking of the eight special commandments 
(see below) ; 3, bringing the truth into disrepute ; 
4, despising learning ; 5, Increasing in conceit. 

C. Steps in Doing Good and Suppressing 
Evil. Meanwhile the disciple must guard him- 
self against relapse into evil ways and seek to 
establish himself in the Holy Path by : — 

1. Causing all sentient beings to hear the 
doctrine of the Buddhas ; 2, by protecting the 
Dharma ; 3, seeking instruction in the Dharma ; 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 167 

4, mutual confession of sin ; 5, confession of 
sin to all the Buddhas ; 6, stamping out the 
need for confession. 

II. Practice in the Three Sciences. 
A. Steps in the increase of Discipline ( Qlla). 

1. The Five Commandments of the Layman. 
These are 1, not to destroy life ; 2, not to steal ; 
3, not to commit adultery ; 4, not to lie ; 5, 
not to take intoxicating liquors : These are 
binding at all times on Buddhists. 

2. The Eight Special Commandments for 
Laymen. These are the preceding five plus : — 

1, not to eat food at forbidden times ; 2, not 
to use garlands or use perfumes ; 3, not to sleep 
on high or broad beds (chastity). These three 
are not obligatory on laymen but are undertaken 
at various times to acquire merit. 

3. The Ten Commandments of the Monk. 
These are the preceding eight plus : — 1, to 
abstain from music, singing and stage plays ; 

2, to abstain from the use of gold and silver 
(money). 

4. The Two Hundred and Fifty Rules for 
Monies. These rules are an epitome of the whole 
vinaya. 



168 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

5. The Secondary Course of Rules for Monica. 
Those who have successfully practised the two 
hundred and fifty rules proceed to follow these 
higher and more difficult precepts. 

6. The Complete Observance of all the Rules 
of the Yinaya. The foregoing constitute the 
letter of the Law, the remainder constitute its 
spirit. 

7. Abiders in the Law. 8. Peacemakers. 
9. Those who practise Purity. 10. Those who 
practise superior Purity. 11. The rule of con- 
scious Purity. 12. The rule of unconscious 
Purity. 13. The unsurpassed Law or the 
peerless wisdom which pervades all the lesser 
commandments. 

B. Steps in the Growth of Ecstacy (Samadhi). 
These consist in a number of rules whereby a 
peculiar form of ecstatic meditation may be 
induced in many cases resembling a state of 
trance or auto-hypnosis. Lack of space prevents 
our more than enumerating the principal 
stages : 

1. Six transcendental gates of meditation. 

2. The sixteen victories : These consist for 
the most part of various breathing exercises, 
correlated to various mental stages. 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE I69 

3. Comprehensive reflection. Eef lection on 
breathing, on matter, on mind, and on causation. 

4. The ninefold mental perceptions. These 
consist of thought on the various evils of cor- 
poreal existence as compared with the purity 
of the noumenal world. 

5. The eight-fold mental perceptions : These 
are called mental perceptions because one is 
supposed to hold the mental image vividly 
before one. They are 1, The Buddha ; 2, The 
Dharma ; 3, The Order of the Monks ; 4, The 
Vinaya ; 5, Sacrifices ; 6, The various Heavens ; 
7, Sentient beings ; 8, Death. 

6. The ten-fold mental perceptions. 7. The 
eight-fold reflection on mortification. 8. Ee- 
flection on the eight victorious battles. 9. 
Eeflection on the ten Universal Ideas : These 
consist of various subjects for meditation while 
the aspirant is engaged in attaining Samadhi. 

10. Contemplation on the nine proceeding 
stages : As a result of this severe mental train- 
ing, ecstacy ensues, of which we are given three 
stages : — 

11. The master's ecstatic contemplation. 
This consists in eliminating desire and trans- 
cending the four Arupa states. 

12. Surpassing ecstacy. 



170 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

13. Eoyal Ecstacy in which innumerable, 
indescribable joys are experienced, more especi- 
ally joy in transcending all twenty-five stages of 
existence. 

C. Stages in the Growth of Wisdom (Prajnd). 
By means of samadhi and ordinary forms of 
reflection and contemplation, wisdom is at 
length achieved. This also consists of several 
stages : — 

1. Inauguration of the Cravaka heart, where- 
by one understands the four Noble Truths and 
is able to attain Arhatship. 

2. Inauguration of the Pratyeka Buddha 
heart, whereby one understands the twelve 
Nidanas, the chain of causation, and so attains 
to complete wisdom. 

3. Inauguration of the Bodhisattva heart, 
whereby one makes the four vows and practises 
the six paramitas. 

4. Eeflection on Qunyata. Recognition 
that aU phenomena are impermanent and have 
no self-essence. 

5. Eeflection on the three-fold nature of 
phenomena, Ku, Ke, and Chu. 

6. Transcending reflection on the Essence 
of Mind, which is perfect and complete (En) 
and immediate (Ton). The older forms of 



THE WHEEL OP LIFE J 71 

Mahayana would have us stop here, but the later 
branches add two more : — 

7. Desire to be re-born in the inner mansion 
of Maitreya. The Bodhisattva who is to be the 
next Buddha to appear in this world at present 
resides in the Tusita Heaven. Those who have 
high aims are re-born there to garner wisdom 
of him. 

8. Desire to be re-born in the Sukhavati 
of Amitabha Buddha. 

III. Stages in the Four Schools. 

The disciple is now able to enter definitely 
some particular path which leads to Nirvana. 
The Tendai school thinks that there are four 
paths identified with the four principal phases 
of Buddhism. 

A. Steps in the PitaTca or Zo School. 

1. The five heart rests consisting of med- 
itation on 1, the evils of existence ; 2, 
compassion and transcendality ; 3, 
causality ; 4, the elements of existence ; 
5, the methods of samadhi. 

2. Thought on differentiation, or analysis. 

3. Thought on Totality or Synthesis. 

In practice these consist in the application 
of the three or four marks to the body 
and mind. 



172 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

4, The Hot Zeal Stage. 5. The Mountain 
top stage. 6. The stage of perseverance : 
When this stage has been attained, there 
is no return, no " falling from grace." 

7. The highest stage in the phenomenal 
world. 

8. The Qrotapanna stage : he has entered upon 
the stream, the lowest of the four supreme 
stages of the Pitaka school. 

9. The Sakridagamin stage : he who will be 
reborn but once before attaining Nirvana. 

10. The Anagamin stage, he who returns no 
more to the world but being reborn in the 
Arupa worlds there attains to I>firvana. 

11. The stage of Arhatship : he who has 
attained to the state of bliss and emanci- 
pation from the phenomenal world. This is 
the highest stage to which, according to 
the Pitaka school, most men can attain. 

12. The stage of Pratyeka Buddha : he who 
forsaking mere emancipation aims at 
complete enlightenment but for himself 
alone. 

13-14-15. Various degrees in the Bodhisattva 
stage : who have undertaken the four vows 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 173 

and practice the six paramitas, working 
through innumerable kalpas for the salva- 
tion of aU mankind. 
16. Buddhahood. 

B. Steps in the Intermediate or Tsu School. 

These consist of the attainment of the follow- 
ing : — 1, wisdom ; 2, spiritual nature ; 3, 
eight forms of patience ; 4, spiritual per- 
ception ; 5, indifference to pleasure and 
pain, wealth and poverty ; 6, freedom from 
desire ; 7, finished work : This is equi- 
valent to Arhatship which is the highest 
goal of Hinayana but which is itself but a 
stage in the later schools ; 8, Pratyeka 
Buddhahood. In undeveloped Mahayana 
including the Intermediate school this is 
the highest stage to which ordinary 
humanity may aspire ; 9, Bodhisattva- 
hood ; 10, Buddhahood. 

C. Steps in the Differentiated or Betsu School of 
Mahayana — 52 in number : — 

1-10. The ten aims (literally the ten hearts). 
These are 1, faith ; 2, thoughtfulness 5 
3, progress ; 4, wisdom ; 5, contem- 
plation ; 6, perseverance ; 7, protec- 
tion of the Dharma ; 8, returning to the 



174 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

source of things ; 9, Qlla, morality ; 10, 
the determination or vow to save others. 
11-20. The ten grades. 

1. The increase of spirituality. This is 
equivalent to the stage of Qrotapanna. 

2. Submission to rule. Equivalent to 
preparation for the Sakridagamin 
stage. 

3. Cultivation of Virtue. Equivalent to 
the attainment for the Sakridagamin 
Stage. 

4. Noble birth = preparation for the 
Anagamin stage. 

5. Perfect means = attainment of Ana- 
gamin stage. 

6. Eight mind = Preparation for Arhat- 
ship. 

7. The grade of no-retrogration = the 
attainment of Arhatship. 

8. Immortal youth = Pratyeka Buddha- 
hood. 

9. Sons of the King of the Law = the 
Intermediate conception of Bodhi- 
sattvahood. 

10. The summit of attainment =the 
Intermediate conception of Buddha- 
hood. 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 175 

21-30. The ten characteristics (literally 
actions). Each stage is associated with 
one of the ten paramitas (4 vows plus 6 
paramitas), viz : — 1, joy ; 2, mercy ; 3, 
absence of hatred ; 4, irresistible ; 5, 
absence of fanaticism ; 6, power of mani- 
festation ; 7, absence of self wiU ; 8, 
reverence ; 9, the virtuous law ; 10, the 
absolute truth. 

31-40. The ten returns, so called because in 
this stage man returns to his original 
nature which is latent behind all evil : — 
1. Eeturn from the absolute world to the 
world of phenomena to save all sentient 
being. 2. Eeturn to the indestructible. 
3. Eeturn to equality with all the Budd- 
has. 4. Eeturn to omnipresence, and 
6, to inexhaustible treasures. 6. Eeturn 
to the source of absolute virtue, and 7, 
to primal equality. 8. Eeturn to the 
Buddha nature, and 9. to deliverance from 
bondage. 10. Eeturn to the infinite es- 
sence of things. 

41-50. The ten attainments. These are the 
same as the ten stages of Bodhisattva- 
hood, already explained (page 107). 
They are : — 1, joy ; 2, purity ; 3, 



176 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

brightness of intellect ; 4, brightness of 
wisdom ; 5, diflacult to surpass ; 6, 
everpresent manifestations ; 7, far dis- 
tant attainment ; 8, attainment of the 
immovable state ; 9, holy wisdom ; 10, 
the cloud of the Dharma. 

51. Attainment of the Final stage of Bodhi- 
sattvahood. 

52. Attainment of the Buddhahood of 
transcendent wisdom with the develop- 
ment of the three bodies (Trikaya). 

D. Steps in the Perfect or En School of 
Mahaydna. This is the highest of the four 
schools and corresponds as we have seen to the 
doctrine of the Tendai school itself. The names 
of the stages is much the same as in the Differ- 
entiated school, but the arrangement is slightly 
different, and the Tendai sect claims that the full 
meaning of each stage is more profound, so that 
the two sets do not correspond as closely as 
would appear at first sight. The usual classi- 
fication is as follows : — 

(Outer Division). « 

1. The stage of reason and speculation. 

2. The stage of names and letters or formal 
learniag. 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 177 

3. The stage of contemplation. The five 
arts. 

(Inner Division). 

4. The stage of the imperfect conception of 
truth. 

a. The ten aims. 

5. The stage of the partial comprehension of 
truth. 

a. The ten grades. 

b. The ten characteristics. 

c. The ten returns. 

d. The ten attainments. 

e. Universal enlightenment. 

6. The complete comprehension of truth. 
Finally there is the Sukhavati school which 

eliminates all the preceding stages and seeks to 
attain Nirvana by entering directly into the 
Pure Land of the Universal Buddha. With 
some this pure land is taken literally, as a 
material heaven to be attained by faith in 
Amitabha. Among all philosophic Buddhists, 
however, the Pure Land is a symbol, a state of 
mind, an awakening of the Buddha seed, the 
bursting into flame of the spark of spiritual life 
to be obtained by means of mystic adoration and 
devotional realization of the true nature of 
reality. This rebirth into Paradise is to be 



178 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

attained here and now, at the moment when the 
Boul throws off the trammels of the lesser self, 
and realizes its fundamental and h priori union 
with the Greater Self. 

Whether taken UteraUy of metaphorically, the 
Sukhavati Buddhists divide the Pure Land into 
two sections, Hodo or the True Land for the 
completely awakened, and Kedo, Apparent Land, 
for those whose faith is tinctured with selfish- 
ness and doubt. 

One very important feature of the Jodo 
theology which has often been overlooked by 
Western students of the subject, is that it teaches 
that even after being reborn in Jodo a man must 
come back repeatedly to earth for the sake of 
saving all creatures (This is called the doctrine 
of genso eico). Accordingly there is but little 
real difference between the salvation by works 
Bchool and that by means of the Pure Land, for, 
to quote a booklet by S. Kuroda : " Though 
there are the two different passages of Shodomon 
and Jodomon, mok^a (emancipation, here 
equivalent to I^Tirvana) can be obtained equally 
through both . . . Those who follow the 
former division, though they obtain Buddhahood 
in this world must still accomplish the excellent 
deeds m^ yows of Bodhisattvas in the Pore 



THE WHEEL OF LIFE 179 

Land while the followers of the latter, though 
they be born in the Pure Land must likewise 
cultivate and practise them, being reborn in the 
Impure Land (This world)." 



CONCLUSION 

A SHORT HISTOEY OF BUDDHISM AND 
THE PEINCIPAL BUDDHIST SECT 

I. India. 

(a.) The Rise and Spread of Buddhism. 

Most scholars have now agreed that Qsikja- 
muni must be assigned to the latter half of the 
sixth century B.C. Then, as for a long time 
thereafter, the civilization of India was confined 
to the Ganges basin and the surrounding country. 
Caste rules as regards marriage and possibly as 
regards food already set in, but were not so rigid 
and inviolable as in later times. There 
seems to have been little over population, and 
the people must have led an easy and fairly 
comfortable existence. The country was broken 
up into a number of small principalities, each 
ruled over by an hereditary prince or king, 
though democratic states such as that of the 
Licchavi's, who elected their ruler were by no 
means unknown. It is quite possible that 
Prof. Ehys-Davids is right in asserting that 
Quddhodana was not the king, but only ^ chief 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 181 

or senator in a democratic ^akya state. The 
most powerful countries were Kogala and 
Magadha. The rulers of both countries seem to 
have been on favourable terms with the Buddha, 
terms, however, which did not prevent them from 
supporting other teachers, and seeking truth in 
other religions. 

Then, as in later times, it was the custom to 
support various religious bodies ; to bestow alma 
upon mendicant monks of various creeds, and 
at no time did Buddhism possess exclusive 
jurisdiction over the religious mind of India. At 
certain times owing to especial patronage in 
royal circles, its influence was predominant, but 
a new ruler might shed his favour in other 
quarters without a serious hitch in the religious 
world. The Brahmins seem to have gone on 
with their daily rites unimpeded. 

Although the orthodox accounts of the 
success of the Buddha's ministry are probably 
greatly exaggerated. Buddhism certainly met 
with popular recognition during the Ufe time of 
its founder, though it is doubtful if it would have 
become the great religion of India had it not been 
for the impetus given it by Agoka, the Buddhist 
Constantine, who lived some two centuries and a 
half after Qakyamuni. A$oka was the son of 



182 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

Bindusara and the grandson of Candragupta, who 
was the founder of the famous Maurya dynasty, 
and the first Indian Empire of any importance, 
though, of course, even this was confined to 
Northern India. Candragupta began his reign 
sometime between 320 B.C. and 315 B.C. and 
Agoka waded to his throne through the blood 
of his relatives about 256 B.C. 

The early Mauryas were certainly not Budd- 
hists, and probably favoured Jainism. Agoka, 
however, in repentance for his former misdeeds, 
turned his mind to religion, and, though from his 
edicts we know that he favoured the Ajivakas 
and Mrgranthas as well as the Buddhists, 
Buddhism claimed his chief sympathy, and he 
despatched a number of Buddhist missionaries 
to other kingdoms, so that Buddhism from being 
confined to Madhyadega, and Pragdega spread 
to Mysore, Kagmira, Gandhara, etc. The most 
famous mission was that of Mahendra, the son or 
nephew of Agoka to Ceylon, which was quickly 
converted to the faith, and has ever since been a 
stronghold of Buddhism, even when it died out 
in its native land. Buddhism reached Burma, 
Siam, etc., from Ceylon, and consequently 
remained faithful to Hinayana, for though 
during the middle ages Ceylon seems to have 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 183 

dallied with Mahayana for the most part it 
was the headquarters of the more primitive 
faith, i.e, Sthaviravadin Buddhism. 

Agoka's descendants were weaklings and the 
Maurya dynasty was overthrown by Pusyamitra, 
a zealous Hindu, and for some generations 
Buddhism suffered an eclipse in India, though 
it maintained its activity in Central Asia, 
Bactria, Persia, etc. 

The next important stage in Indian Buddhism 
began with Kani§ka, who founded a Sythian 
dynasty, and, being converted to Buddhism, 
re-established its prestige and importance. 
Kani§ka's date has been the subject of much 
dispute, but probably he must be referred to 
the first century A.D. It was in his reign 
that we first hear of Mahayana activities, 
though Kani§ka himself chiefly patronized 
the Sarvastivadins. Mahayana, however, was 
soon to become powerful, and owing to its 
devotional aspect, and to the greater scope of 
its phUosophio activity, as well perhaps to 
the fact that it incorporated many Hindu and 
possibly Persian ideas, succeeded in greatly 
overshadowing its rival, though Hlnayana con- 
tinued to exist as long as Buddhism remained 
in India. 



184 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

The next few centuries constituted the flower 
of Indian Buddhism. l!fagarjuna was born 
about the end of Kaniska's reign, and was 
quickly followed by a long line of eminent 
speculators, including Arya Deva, Asanga, Vasu- 
bandhu, Dignaga, Candragomin, Candrakirti, 
Dharmakirti, etc. Soon after Nagarjuna's time 
the famous Buddhist University of IS'alanda 
was founded and continued until the 9th century 
to be the seat of great learning. Almost all 
the great dynasties of India, with one or two 
outstanding exceptions, either favoured Budd- 
hism or permitted it to grow unchecked. 

The decline of Buddhism in India dates from 
the middle of the eighth century. Its downfall 
was aided by the attacks of the great Indian 
philosophers such as Qankara, but the more 
important reason was the adoption by Buddhism 
of Mantric, Tantric, and Esoteric forms and 
beliefs. Hindu Tantrism developed at the same 
time and along similar lines. In many cases it 
became impossible to distinguish between them. 
Hindu Tantrism absorbed many Buddhist 
elements, as in fact did all forms of Hinduism 
80 much so that modern Hinduism might be 
called a combination of ancient Brahmanism 
and Buddhism. All this tended to decrease 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 185 

the independent power of Buddhism, though 
the Pala kings who ruled over Gauda and the 
surrounding regions from A.D. 800-1050 were 
Buddhists, during which time the Buddhist 
University of Vikramagila was a renowned 
centre of Tantric learning, replacing the ancient 
Nalanda. 

The Mohammedan conquests profoundly dis- 
turbed all native Indian religions. Temples 
were burnt, monks and priests massacred, and 
" heathen " practises put down. At his time 
Buddhism did not possess the recuperative 
power of Hinduism, and the torch of the Dharma 
became extinct in its native land. In Bengal 
alone. Buddhism lingered until the sixteenth 
century, when it became absorbed by Hinduism, 
not without leaving strong traces of the original 
tradition. 

(ft.) Councils and Canons. 

The development of the different sects or 
schools of Buddhism was strongly affected by 
the Buddhist theory of the great councils. 
Two great councils are acknowledged by all 
forms of Buddhism. The first was supposed 
to have been held immediately after the 
Buddha's death, to recite the scriptures preached 
by him, namely the Sutra and Vinaya pitakas, 



186 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

to which some would add the Abhidharma pitaka. 
Some northern accounts would hold that there 
were two such councils held contemporaneously, 
one for the Sthaviravadins, and one for the 
Mahasanghikas. Others would say that there 
were three, adding one in which the Mahayana 
Sutras were recited. For the most part, Western 
scholars have rejected the story of the first 
councU as a myth. Certainly the scriptures in 
their present form cannot have been recited 
then, but it seems quite likely that an informal 
meeting to discuss matters of policy took place. 
This is known as the council of Eajagriha. 

The second council or the council of Vaigali, 
took place some 110 years after the death of 
the Buddha, in order to condemn certain practises 
on the part of those monks who had broken away 
from the ancient precepts. The Sthavtravadins 
claim that the monks thus condemned were the 
Mahasanghikas, but this seems improbable. 

Regarding the next two councils the Buddhist 
records disagree. The Sthaviravadins or the 
Theravadins, maintain that a third council took 
place during the reign of Agoka. Of this we 
find no record in orthodox Northern accounts* 
and probably it consisted only of a meeting of 
the Theravadin worthies, who were already but 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 187 

one among many conflicting sects. The Thera- 
vadins equally ignore the Northern acconnt of a 
council supposed to have been held in the reign 
of Kani§ka, which composed Sanskrit com- 
mentaries on the three pitakas, and was probably 
under the control of the Sarvastivadins. There- 
after Buddhism knows of no great councils. 
Even the Mahayanists failed to convoke one. 

The Hinayana sutra and vinaya pitakas were 
probably cofnposed from previously existing 
materials, shortly before the time of Agoka. 
Most likely each sect made its own redaction 
which differed considerably in arrangement 
among themselves, and also as regards the 
language employed. The claim of the Pali 
canon to be the original and only genuine 
version, is almost certainly false, though it was 
undoubtedly one of the first to be compiled. 
The Chinese translations of the Nikayas or 
Agamas seems to have been from an independent 
but almost equally early source. 

Each sect evolved its own commentary, and 
exposition of the early writings, and these were 
later crystallized into the third or Abhidharma 
Pitaka, As far as we can judge from the two 
which have come down to us, the Sthaviravadin 
works in Pali, and the Sarvastivadin works 



188 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

translated from Sanskrit into Chinese, they were 
entirely independent creations, except for the 
misleading similarity of certain titles. As re- 
gards their age we can only say that the bnlk of 
the Pali or Sthaviravadin Abhidharma works 
must have been in existence at the time of or 
shortly after Agoka, while the seven main works 
of the Sarvastivadin Abhidharma, were com- 
posed some time before the time of Kaniska's 
council. 

Later and non-canonical commentaries and 
expositions followed in great profusion untU we 
have the vast mass of Hinayana literature 
which meets our eyes to-day. 

The Mahayana sutras are unquestionably 
much later than the main portion of the Hinay- 
ana canon, and is evidenced by the language and 
style employed. Many of them, however, must 
have been composed at the time of Kani§ka 
(1st century A.D.) as they are frequently cited 
by Nagarjuna as authoritative, though there 
were probably many later additions, inter- 
polations, and emendations. The majority of 
Mahayana sutras probably reached their settled 
form between Nagarjuna (2nd cent.) and Asanga 
(5th cent.) The very few Mahayana works 
dealing with the Vinaya must have been com- 
posed more or less at the same time. 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 189 

Mahayana has no fixed or well defined canon 
of AbMdharma works, such as we find with either 
the Sthaviravadins or Sarvastivadins, but the 
various works of the Mahayana Patriarchs were 
accepted as the standard expositions of truth, and 
as such were incorporated in the Chinese Canon 
of the Mahayana Abhidharma. These works 
sprang up in the first century A.D. As far as 
China is concerned few were translated after the 
seventh century (Hsuan Chuang was the last of 
the great translators) and Dignaga was the last 
author of any importance to be incorporated ,in 
the Chinese Canon. Tibet, on the other hand, 
though starting in the field much later than 
China carried out the work of translation for 
some time further, and for the Indian Buddhist 
works from the seventh century down to the 
extinction of Buddhism in India we have only 
the Tibetan Tanjur to guide us, because with the 
exception of a few works kept in Nepal, almost 
the whole of the extensive Buddhist Sanskrit 
literature has perished. 

(c.) The Establishment of the Sects. 

All accounts agree that Buddhism early 

broke up into a number of different schools. In 

Hinayana alone, before the time of Agoka we hear 

of the eighteen (or twenty) sects of Hinayana. 



190 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

The study of their differences is most interesting 
and instructive, but unfortunately we can 
secure no uniform or coherent account of them. 
This is, no doubt, largely accounted for by the 
fact that the sects were not what we mean 
by the term, but correspond in their early 
stages to the distinctions between High, 
Low, and Broad Churches in the Church cf 
England. 

We have only three principal sources to guide 
us, and none of these agree. The first of these is 
the Southern account found in the Pali work, 
Kattha Vatthu, one of the seven Pali Abhid- 
harma works, a large portion of which was 
probably composed about the time of AQoka. 
The famous Mahavansa account of the schools is 
based upon this. The second is Vasumitra's 
account of the eighteen sects, three translations 
of which were made into Chinese, and one into 
Tibetan. This may be called the principal 
Northern account. The third is Bhavya's work 
on the subject, and exists only in a Tibetan 
translation. It differs considerably from Vasu- 
mitra's on several details, but is obviously 
in accordance with the same general tradition 
as contrasted with the quite different Kattha 
Vatthu. 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 191 

On one point, however, all traditions agree. 
Hinayana was early divided into two great 
schools, the Sthaviravadin, or the school of the 
Elders, and the Mahasanghika, or the school of 
the Great Council. These two schools were 
chiefly divided on questions touching Buddhology 
rather than on metaphysical grounds, the former 
regarding the Buddha as essentially human, and 
subject to the frailties of the flesh, whUe the 
latter considered the Buddha as transcendental, 
as immune from human limitations, and even 
approached the attitude of Christian Docetism in 
teaching that the Buddha never really appeared 
on the earth, but only created an appartional 
form for the salvation of the world. The 
Mahasanghikas were obviously the forerunners of 
Mahayana. 

According to Northern accounts the Mahasang- 
hikas were divided into nine (or eight) divisions, 
namely, (1) Miila-mahasanghika, (2) Ekavy- 
avaharikas, (3) Lokottaravadins, (4) Kauru- 
kullaka, (5) Bahugrutiya, (6) Prajnaptivadins, 
(7) Caityagailas, (8) Avaragailas, (9) Uttara- 
gailas. Of these the only one that is definitely 
known to us is the Lokottaravadins whose 
Mahavastu has been so ably edited by Senart. 
To what branch of the Mahasanghikas the 



192 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

Chinese Mahasanghika Vinaya, and the Sam- 
yukta Agama belong, we do not as yet know. 

The JISTorthern accounts further state that the 
Sthaviravadins were divided into eleven (or ten) 
schools, namely (1) Haimavantas, or Sthavirav- 
adins proper, (2) Sarvastivadins, (3) Vatsi- 
putrlyas, (4) Dharmottaras, (5) Bhadrayanikas, 
(6) Sammitiyas, (7) Sannagarikas, (8) Mahl- 
gasakas, (9) Dharmaguptas, (10) Kagyapiyas, 
(11) Sautrantikas. Of these the most important 
were the Sthaviravadins proper, who clung the 
nearest to the psychological agnosticism of 
early Buddhism, second the Sarvastivadins, 
later known as the Vaiba§ikas from their Vib- 
ha§as or great commentaries, closely related 
with which were the Dharmaguptas, Kagyapiyas, 
and Mahigasakas who formulated a completely 
realistic philosophy from the analytical data of 
earlier Buddhism ; finally the Sautrantikas bo 
called from their insistence upon the Sutras 
themselves, as opposed to the Abhidharma 
works. Though realistically incUned the 
Sautrantikas taught that we have only an in- 
direct (as opposed to direct of the Sarvastivadins) 
perception of the external universe, and in 
certain cases seem to have taught a pure con- 
ceptualism, i.e. that all external objects are 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 193 

merely conceptions in so far as they appear to 
have an absolute self-existence. To some branch 
of the Sautrantikas probably belongs the Satya 
Siddhi Qastra which expounds an undeveloped 
form of the Qunya doctrine, or the theory of the 
purely relative existence of all phenomena. 

Mahayana Buddhism probably arose from the 
combination of the Buddhological ideas of the 
Mahasanghikas, and the metaphysical theories 
of the Sautrantikas, suitably modified in both 
cases. There can be no doubt that the first 
systematic presentation of the Mahayana 
philosophy was in the Madhyamika school 
founded by N^agarjuna. Its doctrine of Qunyata 
and the Middle Principlte including and trans- 
cending both existence and non-existence we 
have already examined. The Madhyamikas 
were soon divided into several sub-sects, of which 
the most important were the Svatantrikas, and 
the Prasanghas of which the Prasanghas wer^ 
destined to become triumphant. 

The influence of the Madhyamika sect was 
enormous. Many of its doctrines were in- 
corporated in the Yogacarya sect, and ita 
teachings form the basis of most of Tibetan 
Buddhism, and the Sanron and Tendai sect of 
China and Japan as well as the later schools 



194 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

founded thereon. Even the later, more complete, 
more elaborate, and more consistent Yogacarya 
sect was unable to supplant it. The later 
Madhyamika philosophers waged war on the 
innovations of the Yogacaryas, claiming that 
they were but ephemeral additions to relative 
truth, and therefore already potentially included 
in the absolute truth of their own teaching. For 
this reason most Tibetan and Chinese histories 
of Buddhism give the Yogacarya system as the 
stepping stone from Hinayana to the perfect 
Mahayana represented by the Madhyamikas. 

As far as China is concerned this slight to the 
Yogacarya school is due to the fact that the 
Madhyamikas, or their dependents had already 
triumphed before the Yogacarya doctrines were 
introduced, and, thus entrenched, lost no oppor- 
tunity of belittling any possible usurper. What 
influence the Yogacaryas did possess was chiefly 
through the earlier and incomplete translations of 
certain individual works such as the Mahayana 
Qraddhotpada Qastra, and the Da^abhumika 
Qastra, etc., and even the schools based on these 
works united with the Madhyamikas in con- 
demning the full exposition of the Yogacarya 
doctrine as contained in the translations of 
Genjo (Hsuan Chuang). 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 195 

Notwithstanding this fact the Yogacarya 
Bchool must be considered the full blossom of 
Mahayana philosophy, the high water mark of 
metaphysical Buddhism. Not content with 
accepting the vague Qunya doctrines of the 
Madhyamika school it formulated a remarkably 
lucid and consistent doctrine of idealism, ex- 
plaining how the universe was the product of 
mind, and yet at the same time guarded itself 
from the dangers of solipsism. As yet too little 
is known of the Yogacarya metaphysics, but 
when translations are made from their philo- 
sophical works we shall be able to appreciate, for 
the first time, to what a high level Indian and 
Buddhist speculation had reached. 

In its later and more degenerated stages the 
Yogacarya school took up several forms of 
mysticism and esotericism. Its several stages on 
this path may be marked off in the following 
way : — First came what we may call Man- 
trayana, or the doctrine of salvation by spells, 
exorcisms, and incantations. This includes the 
use of dharanis and mantras. With the theory of 
the mystic value of sound, there also arose the 
idea of the value of certain colours, and the 
symbolic meaning of certain positions of the 
hands (mudra). With this evolved the whole 



196 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

doctrine of an esoteric as opposed to an exoteric 
tradition. The next stage, which is usually 
called Tantrayana, is marked by still further 
symbolism and esotericism. The Absolute is 
symbolized under various aspects, and in addi- 
tion to the celestial Buddhas and Bodhisattvas of 
earlier times, the feminine or Great Mother cult 
was introduced. To each Buddha and Bod- 
hisattva was added a feminine counterpart. In 
certain cases Nirvana was mystically pictured as 
Niratma Devi. She is to all intents and purposes 
a metaphor for the infinite void. From the 
highest stage in the material world the aspirant 
leaps into the embraces of Ntratma Devi and 
enjoys something Kke the pleasures of the senses, 
and disappears in her as salt disappears in water. 
The final stage is marked by the downfall of the 
older systems and the triumph of demonology, 
in which a man seeks for success, and pleasure 
through the worship of the terrible furies of 
nature. 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 197 

II. China and Japan 

(a). The Introduction of Buddhism 

Buddhism reached China in the first century 
A.D. during the reign of the Emperor Ming Ti. 
We are told that in the year A.D. 64 the emperor 
had a dream which caused him to send a com- 
mission to the West to seek for a new religion. 
In 67 the commission returned bringing back 
with them two Buddhist monks, Kagyapa 
Matanga and Dharmarak§a, both of whom died 
three years later, not, however, without leaving 
traces of their influence. One of their trans- 
lations into Chinese, the Sutra of the Forty Two 
Sections, which has come down to us presents 
little metaphysics, but expounds the ethical 
import of Buddhism, whether Hinayana and 
Mahayana, in short pithy sentences. It has 
several times been translated into English. 

Buddhism, however, was by no means firmly 
established. From time to time further mission- 
aries and translators arrived in China, and were 
established in monasteries, and carried on their 
work, but how little influence it can have obtained 



198 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

is seen by the fact that it was only in the begin- 
ning of the 4th century that native Chinese were 
officially allowed to become Buddhist monks. 
From the fourth century onwards, however, 
Buddhist influence was constantly on the in- 
crease in spite of occasional persecution, until 
the summit was reached in the T'ang dynasty 
(618-907). The Sung dynasty (908-1280) saw 
the revival of Confucian philosophy, which, 
however, in its new form borrowed a very great 
deal from the doctrines of Buddhism, and 
generally speaking from that time on Confucian- 
ism has been the state code, though Buddhism 
has always retained its hold over the broad 
masses of the people. The favour shown by 
the literati to Confucianism did not help the 
philosophical or educational standard of the 
Buddhist priesthood, who were content to pander 
to the superstition of the masses. Of recent, 
years, however, a great many reforms have taken 
place. There is a genuine revival of interest in 
the philosophic side of Buddhism among the 
cultured, and consequently the intellectual 
standard of the monkhood has been considerably 
elevated. 

China once converted to the Buddhist faith 
turned missionary herself, and most of the 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 199 

surrounding countries received their Buddhism 
through Chinese influences. Tibet first came 
into contact with Buddhism in the seventh 
century through the marriage of the Tibetan 
King, Srong Tsan Gampo, with the Buddhist 
daughter of the Chinese Emperor. Subse- 
quently a number of translations of Buddhist 
works were made from Chinese into Tibetan, 
but, as was only natural, once Buddhism was 
really established Tibet looked to India for her 
Buddhist guides, and became permeated with 
the Mantrayana and Tantrayana of later Indian 
Buddhism even more than Chinese Buddhism, 
which had received its Buddhism in the first 
place in the more virile days of the pure Mad- 
hyamika and earlier Yogacarya philosophy. 
The Tibetan form of Buddhism, known popu- 
larly as Lamaism was destined to triumph in 
Mongolia, and the Himalayan States. 

Buddhism reached Korea in A.D. 372, and 
quickly over-ran the whole of the peninsula. 
Its Golden Age was from the tenth to the four- 
teenth century. At that time a change in 
dynasty unseated the paramount position of 
Buddhism, and as in China Buddhism remained 
the devotional home of the peasantry and the 
broad mass of the people, being rejected by the 



200 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

aristocracy as a whole. Since the beginning of 
the 20th century, however, the revival spoken 
of in China has been even more noticeable in 
Korea. The astonishing reorganization of 
Korean Buddhism, and its effect upon the 
people has been well described by Starr in his 
Buddhism in Korea. 

Japan first came into contact with Buddhism 
through an embassy sent from Korea in the year 
A.D. 552, and, after a prolonged conflict with 
Shinto, Buddhism universally triumphed, aided 
largely by the genius of the Prince Im- 
perial Shotoku Taishi, the Japanese Agoka or 
Constantine. Though Shinto never entirely died 
out, from the end of the sixth century untU the 
beginning of the seventeenth. Buddhism was the 
premier philosophy and religion of all sections of 
the nation. During the Tokugawa Shogunate 
(1608-1867) the rehabilitated Confucianism of the 
Sung period came into favour in state and edu- 
cated circles, though Buddhism was never sup- 
planted. Finally the early stages of the restoration 
government (from 1867 onwards) was marked by 
an attempt to secure supremacy to Shinto as 
opposed to both Confucianism and Buddhism, 
but this movement was largely a failure. Con- 
fucianism faUed to survive, but Buddhism has 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 201 

never been on a stronger or more secure founda- 
tion, although it plays no oflBcial part in the 
machinery of government. 

More particularly do the Zen and the Shin 
schools prosper at the present moment. In both 
a high standard of education is required for 
ordination, and the various Buddhist colleges, 
universities, and seminaries scattered throughout 
Japan, are now the leading centres of Buddhist 
learning throughout the whole world. Here the 
sacred works of Buddhism, whether Pali, Sans- 
krit, Tibetan or Chinese, are studied in the 
original, and all the machinery of higher criticism 
evoked in their consideration. Here also not 
only are aU the various systems of Buddhist 
metaphysics taught, but at the same time 
Occidental science, philosophy and religion are 
brought before the eyes of all persons training 
for the priesthood. 

In recent years Japan has once more turned 
missionary, Japanese Buddhist temples have 
been established in Formosa, Korea, Manchuria, 
and China, and have largely assisted in the 
revival of Buddhism going on in those countries. 
Similar institutions have also been established 
in Hawaii, America and Canada, etc, chiefly 
for the benefit of Japanese living abroad. 



202 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

(b). The Compilation of the Canon. 

The Pali Canon is concerned with only one 
out of many Hinayana sects, and ignores the 
later developments of Bnddhist philosophy which 
largely centred itself in Mahayana schools. 
Sanskrit literature on Buddhism has largely 
disappeared, except for a few works in Nepal, so 
that the Chinese and Tibetan collections of the 
Buddhist scriptures remain our principal, and 
in many cases our only, means of studying the 
evolution of Buddhism, and the civilization of 
the countries with which it came into contact. 
Both collections contain works of widely different 
ages and countries, and have at least one or two 
works from practically all the important sects, 
both Hinayana and Mahayana. 

Of the two, the Chinese is the better for the 
study of the earlier phases of Buddhism, the 
Tibetan the later ; but though the Tibetan trans- 
lations are usually more literal, the Chinese 
canon is much more complete and comprehensivOj 
frequently giving two or more translations of 
the same work at different dates, which is in- 
teresting from the point of view of higher 
criticism, and finally, whereas the Tibetan added 
but little to the philosophic development of 
Buddhism, in China and Japan many more 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 203 

important works were composed, and Buddhist 
philosophy underwent considerable and very 
valuable evolution in those two countries. 

The works contained in the Chinese canon are 
of a very varying character. It consists of 
works of very uneven merit, translated and 
composed at widely separated periods, by 
writers of very unequal abihty, but of its value 
as a store-house of Buddhist knowledge, there 
can be no doubt. 

In the early days no attempt seems to have 
been made to fix a definite canon, but indivi- 
dual translations or original works were accepted 
on their merits. From time to time, usually 
at the Imperial command, catalogues were made 
of the existing Buddhist books. There are 
thirteen such catalogues which are stUl extant, 
the earliest of which dates back to A.D. 520. 
Occasionally a collected edition of such works 
was printed, though it is remarkable that the whole 
collection of the Buddhist Canon which became 
larger and larger in the course of time, was 
preserved in MS. only, from A.D. 67 (the intro- 
duction of Buddhism into China), until A.D. 972. 
Thereafter such a collection was frequently 
printed from wooden blocks specially carved. 
It should be noted, however, that no two such 



204 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

catalogues or editions agreed for the frequent 
destruction of libraries by fire and civil war 
in China caused many books to disappear, whose 
places were taken by newer works. 

The most famous and what proved to be the 
final or definitive catalogue of Buddhist works 
in China, which unconsciously became elevated 
into a Canon, was the Ming catalogue, so called 
from the fact that it was compiled during the 
Ming dynasty (1368-1644). This consisted of 
1662 works, including many duplicate trans- 
lations and incidently contained the twelve 
older catalogues. Later catalogues of the 
Chinese Euddhist scriptures have practically all 
confined themselves to a rearrangement of th« 
works in the Ming list, and subsequent editions 
have aU been based upon it, so that it may be 
justly called a Canon in the strict sense of the 
word, like the Pali Canon, though of a strangely 
miscellaneous character. In the last generation 
three new editions of this Canon have been 
printed — one in China and two in Japan. These 
are known respectively as the Nanking, TokyS 
and Ky5to editions. 

The present generation has also seen the 
formation of several new and subsidiary canons. 
The most famous of these is the Chinese Supple- 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 205 

mentary canon (Zoku-z6-kyo) which consists 
of a few translations from Sanskrit, and a large 
number of original works by Chinese monks, 
which for some reason or other were not included 
in the older Canon. This was compiled in Japan 
and printed in Kyoto, and is now everywhere 
recognised as authoritative, chiefly no doubt 
because most of the works contained therein 
were individually very well known before. 

Aijaong the other canons thus formed and 
printed, we find a collection of canonical work* 
by various Japanese worthies, irrespective of 
sects, and various sectarian canons, such as 
the definitive editions of the sacred works of 
such sects as the Zen, Shin, Jodo, Nichiren, 
etc. Finally a Japanese translation of the whole 
of the Chinese Canon is now being issued in 
Tokyo. 

(c.) The Establishment of the Sects. 

The establishment of sects in the early days 
of Chinese and Japanese Buddhism was 
accomplished in a very peculiar manner, and 
was largely based upon the translation of certain 
books or groups of books. The early Chinese 
sects may be arranged in the following manner : — 

1. The Sanron or Three ^astra Sect, was so 
called because it based itself upon the following 



206 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

three Qastras or metaphysical works : — (a.) The 
Madhyamika Qastra by Nagarjuna, (b.) Qata 
Qastra by Arya Deva, and (c.) Dvadaga-nikaya 
Qastra by Nagarjuna. To these three there is 
sometimes added a fourth, the Prajna Paramita 
Sutra Qastra by Nagarjuna. This sect dates back 
to the translation of the three castras by Kumara- 
jiva in 409. This school is the Chinese counter- 
part of the Indian Madhyamika or Qunya 
school. 

2. The Jojitsu or Satyasiddhi Sect, so called 
from the Satyasiddhi Qastra likewise translated 
by Kumarajlva. There was no sect corres- 
ponding to it in India, but it was probably the 
work of some branch of the Sautrantika school. 
In both China and Japan this school has never 
had a separate existence, but was incorporated 
in the Sanron sect, as its teachings were nothing 
more than a Hinayana variation of the Qfinya 
doctrine. 

3. The Nehan or Nirvana sect was so called 
from its dependence upon the Mahayana Maha- 
parinirvana Sutra (translated by Dharmarak^a 
423). This sect had much in common with and 
was later incorporated in the Tendai sect. It 
claimed to be the last and most perfect teaching 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 207 

of the Buddha, and emphasized the doctrine of 
the permanent reality or the Universal Buddha 
or the Absolute. 

4. The Jiron or Dagabhumika Qastra Sect 
based on Vasubandhu's work on the ten stages 
of the Bodhisattva's path to Buddhahood. In 
reality this is one of the works of the Indian 
Yogacarya school which reached China in A.D. 
508 when Bodhiruci first published his transla- 
tion. This sect was later absorbed by the 
Kegon or Avatamsaka school. 

5. The Jodo or Sukhavati sect, also founded 
by Bodhiruci, and including Donran, D5shaku, 
and Zendo among its patriarchs, taught the 
doctrine of salvation through faith in Amitabha 
and rebirth in his Western Paradise. By the 
seventh century this school was very firmly 
established, and has ever since exercised great 
influence over Chinese and Japanese Buddhism. 

6. The Zen or Dhyana school, the school of 
contemplation, was established in China by 
Bodhidharma who came from India about A.D. 
527. This school emphasized the value of 
intuition as opposed to scriptural authority, and 
deprecated the acceptance of any doctrine as 
ultimate or final. This also has come to have 
enormous influence over the Far East. 



208 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

7. The Ritsu or Vinaya sect was founded to 
encourage the study of the Vinaya or Buddhist 
ecclesiastical discipline or Canon Law. The 
Chinese have accepted several versions of the 
Vinaya, but pay especial reverence to the 
Dharmagupta Vinaya or the Vinaya of the Pour 
Divisions, translated by Buddhaya§as about 
A.D. 410. It produced a number of famous 
writers during the T'ang dynasty (618-907). 

8. The Shown or Mahayana-samparigraha 
5a«tra Sect was based on the work of that name 
by Asanga and translated by Paramartha in 
A.D. 563. This work was also one of the principal 
works of the Yogacarya sect of India, and like 
the Jiron sect was subsequently absorbed by the 
Kegon sect. 

9. The Tendai sect which developed into one 
of the most important of all the schools was 
founded in the sixth century, and had for its 
basic scripture the Saddharma Pundarika Sutra 
or the Lotus of the Good Law. In reality thig 
sect is the consummation of the Madhyamika 
tradition, and represents the stronghold of the 
transcendental philosophy. After its establish- 
ment the Sanron sect which clung more literally 
to the teachings of the Madhyamika sect sank 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 209 

into disfavour. The Tendai sect has added many 
original elements to Buddhist philosophy, and is 
not merely a presentation of Indian thought. 

10. The Kegon or Avatamsaka sect, so 
called because of the Buddhavatamsaka Sutra or 
Gandha-vyuha (translated in A.D. 418), became 
firmly established in the sixth and seventh 
centuries A.D. This sect plays the same relation 
to the Yogacarya sect as Tendai does to the 
Madhyamika. It represents the immanent 
aspect of Chinese Buddhist philosophy. In 
some ways it marks the high water mark of Far 
Eastern Buddhism. 

11. The Hosso or Dharma-lakgana sect came 
into being on the return of Genjo (Hsuan Chuang) 
from India, when he set about translating all of 
the important Yogacarya works. This plays the 
same relation to the Yogacarya school as the 
Sanron sect does to the Madhyamikas, and just as 
the Tendai sect flourished at the expense of the 
Sanron, so did the Kegon school flourish at the 
expense of the Hosso school in spite of the great 
prestige and influence of Genjo who left his mark 
on the teachings of the other schools. 

12. The Bidon or Abhidharma sect represents 
the philosophy of orthodox Hinayana, more 
particularly of the Sarvastivadin school. This 



210 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Beet first arose on the translation of the Abhid- 
harma Hridaya Qastra in A.D. 391 but received 
its chief impetus from Genjo, who translated 
the bulk of the Sarvastivadin scriptures in 
addition to those of the Yogacarya school. The 
most important work was Vasubandhu's Abhid- 
harma Ko§a from which fact the school is often 
called the Kusha Sect. Just as the Jojitsu sect 
remained subsidiary to the Sanron sect, so did the 
Bidon or Kusha sect remain subsidiary to the 
Hosso sect. 

13. The Shingon or Mantra sect was the last 
importation from India, being promulgated 
about A.D. 716. This represents the Mantrayana 
stage of Buddhism mentioned above, when the 
Yogacarya school in India had developed into 
esotericism, but before Tantrayana or sexual 
mysticism had made much way. 

The above thirteen schools represent the 
various phases of Chinese Buddhism proper. In 
later days Lamaism with its Tantrayana gained 
a certain hold in isolated parts of China but never 
secured general recognition. 

Apart from Lamaism the Chinese Buddhist 
sects never possessed any elaborate ecclesiastical 
hierarchy. They, like the early Hinayana sects, 
were more Uke the parties in the Church of 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 211 

England than independent organizations. As 
time went on this fusion became more marked, 
and at the present time, speaking generally, all 
Chinese Buddhist temples belong more or less to 
one sect, accepting for its discipline the Dhar- 
magupta Vinaya, for its relative truth or doctrine 
either the Tendai or Kegon systems, and for its 
principle or absolute truth the doctrine of Zen. 
In addition all of them preach the Sukhavati or 
Jodo doctrine in some form or other, usually as 
a symbolic veiling of truth. 

The Japanese sects correspond very closely to 
those of China, but the chronological order is 
somewhat different. For historical reasons they 
may best be classified into three groups, (1) The 
ancient or pre-Heian sects, (2) The medieval 
sects, and (3) The modern sects, as each group 
marked a distinct phase in Japanese history. 

1, The Ancient Sects. From A.D. 552 to 
A.D. 800 Japan was busily engaged in importing 
Chinese culture, in remodelling her institutions on 
Chinese lines, and in attempting to form a 
civilization of her own. In this scheme Buddhism 
played a very important part, and in Japan as 
elsewhere proved a veritable medium or harbinger 
of general learning, with which it inculcated aU its 
believers. During the latter part of this period 



212 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDBHISM 

the capital of Japan was situate in Nara, in the 
South, so that the six Buddhist sects which were 
imported at that time are often called the Nanto 
sects. In the earliest days there seems to hare 
been no emphasis on any particular sect, as was the 
case in the early days in China, but in A.D. 652 
the Qiinya doctrine in both its Sanron (Mad- 
hyamika) and Jojitsu (SautrSntika) forms were 
introduced into Japan. Shortly after Genjo 
(Hsuan Chuang) having returned to China from 
India and his fame being noised abroad, various 
Japanese monks went to China to study under 
him, and subsequently brought back the Hosso 
(YogScarya) and Kusha (Sarvastivadin) doctrines 
to Japan. This took place on four occasions 
between A.D. 658 and 716. In 736 a Chinese 
monk brought over the Kegon or Avatamsaka 
doctrine to Japan. In 754 another Chinese priest 
established the Eitsu or Vinaya sect. As the 
result of aU this ecclesiastical activity the Buddhist 
priests amassed a great deal of power, both 
spiritual and temporal, so much so in fact that 
the Emperor Kammu decided to change his 
capital to Heian or Kyoto lest his court be too 
much dominated by the temples of Nara. 

2. The Medieval Sects. At the beginning of 
the ninth century not only was the capital 



A SHORT HISTORY OF BUDDHISM 213 

changed, but two young Japanese monka were 
despatched to China to bring back some other 
forms of Buddhism which might supplant the 
over powerful Ifara sects. As the result of this 
Dengyo Daishi brought back the Tendai sect, 
and Kobo Daishi the newly imported Shingon 
or Mantra sect. These two schools waxed very 
powerful, and long retained the allegiance of the 
Emperor and his court, though they were of too 
complex and metaphysical a nature to be readily 
understood by the people. 

3. The Modern Sects are only comparatively 
speaking modern as the last was founded in 
A.D. 1253. These sects are four in number, and 
are all simplifications of Buddhist metaphysics. 
In 1174 Honen Shonin founded the Jodo or 
Sukhavati sect, in 1191 Eisai establised the 
Zen sect as an independent organization (It 
had previously been taught by the Japanese 
Tendai school, which was eclectic). In 1224 
Shinran Shonin founded the Shin sect or re- 
formed Buddhism, which was a stiU further 
development of the Sukhavati doctrine,, and in 
1253 Mchiren founded the Mchiren sect, which 
is largely a popularization of the Tendai sect. 
The Zen sect had the general adherence of the 
Japanese Samurai or military class, and the Shin 



214 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

Beet the adherence of the people at large. The 
Shin is famous for its reorganization of the 
priesthood somewhat along the lines of the 
Church of England, whereby the priests are 
allowed to marry, to eat meat, etc. The Shin 
and Zen sects are now by far the most powerful 
sects in Japan. The Zen school has probably 
the most educated laity, and the Shin the most 
educated clergy. Both of them are at present 
manifesting considerable practical activity. 

Lamaism is divided between the old or un- 
reformed order, the Ningma-pa, whose aherents 
wear red hats and red clothing, the new or re- 
formed order, the Gelug-pa which is now the 
more powerful and has secured temporal control 
of Tibet, and whose adherents wear yellow hats 
and robes. There are also several sub-divisions 
of each, and several semi-reformed sects such as 
the Kargyu-pa and Sakya-pa which range be- 
tween the old and the new orders. There is little 
doctrinal difference. 



APPENDIX 

THE SACEED LITEEATUEB OF THE 
BUDDHISTS 

Our work would not be complete without a 
brief survey of the principal types of Buddhist 
scriptures. At present Buddhism may be said 
to be possessed of six canonical languages. These 
are Pali, Sanskrit, Tibetan, Chinese, Mongolian, 
and Manchurian. The last two may safely be 
neglected as they are but translations of extant 
Chinese and Tibetan works, but a word or two 
must be said concerning each of the others. 
I. Pali Literature. 

The oldest body of Buddhist literature is to 
be found in the Pali canon, which constitutes the 
sacred works of the Sthaviravadins, or Thera- 
vadins. Though Pali was not the original 
language of Buddhism, the other or earlier 
redactions of the scriptures of primitive Buddhism 
have disappeared. In common with other forms 
of Buddhism there are three great divisions of 
the Canon, viz : — 

1. The Vinaya Pitdka or rules for the dis- 
cipline and organization of the monkhood. 



216 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

2. The Sutra (Sutta) Pitaha or the discourses 
of the Buddha, expounding the general 
principles of the Buddhist religious and 
philosophical system. 

3. The Abhidharma Pitaka, consisting of 
various -works on the intricate points of 
Buddhist metaphysics, or systematic 
theology. 

The following details concerning each of the 
three Pitakas may be of interest : — 

1. The Vinaya PitaJca comprises three books : 
(a.) The Sutta-vibhanga, a full exposition of the 
pratimoksa or patimokkha, the 227 rules for the 
conduct of the monks, and a somewhat larger 
number of rules for the nuns, and of the penances 
whereby transgressions of these rules may be 
purged. The Sutta Vibhanga is divided into 
two books, the Bhikkhu-vibhanga dealing with 
the rules for the monks, and the Bhikkhuni- 
vibhanga dealing with the rules for the nuna, 
(b.) The KhandhaJcas which contaiu rules for the 
organization of the order, what clothes are to 
be worn, how temples and monasteries are to be 
erected, how admission may be had to the order, 
etc. The Khandhakas are likewise divided into 
two books, the Mahavagga or larger divisions, 
and. the CuUa Vagga or smaller division, (c.) 



SACRED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS 217 

Parivara or appendix, a short manual of later 
addition, probably composed in Ceylon and not in 
India, and comprising a sort of catechism, or 
examination paper on the whole Vinaya, arranged 
for purposes of instruction. 

2. The Sutra {Sutta) PitaJca consists of four 
or five Nikayas or books, viz : — (a) the Digha- 
nikaya or collection of longer discourses on 
various points of the Buddhist faith, such as 
rejection of caste, the four noble truths, etc. 
The Pali version consists of 34 long dialogues, 
(b) The Majjhima-nikaya or collection of dis- 
courses or dialogues of medium length, containing 
152 dialogues, (c) Anguttara-nikaya or collec- 
tion of suttas or dialogues arranged according to 
numbers. This is a favourite Indian method of 
composition. Things of a single category come 
first, two-fold categories second, and so on. 
In this way the three marks (lak^ana) come in 
the third division, the four noble truths in the 
fourth division, the five skandhas in the fifth 
division, etc. This nikaya contains 2,399 short 
Buttas. (d) The Samyutta-nikaya or collection 
of suttas arranged according to subjects, or 
systematically classified. This nikaya containi 
2,889 short suttas. In addition to these four 
principal nikayas, the Southern accounts gener- 



218 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

ally agree in enumerating a fifth, the Khuddaka- 
nikaya, or smaller nikaya, a collection of mis- 
cellaneous works, many of which are among 
the most famous books in the Buddhist canon. 
They are 15 in number. 

3. The Abhidharma {AbMdhamma) PitaJca 
consists of seven works, which are systematic 
expositions, with enumeration and classification 
of details, of the various works of the Sutta 
Pitaka. They are especially concerned with the 
psychological analysis of phenomenal existence. 
These works are : — (a) The Dhammasangani 
or compendium of dhamma or factors of existence, 
(b) The Vibhanga a continuation of the fore- 
going, (c) Katha-vatthu or discussion of the 
points of controversy between the eighteen 
early sects of Hinayana Buddhism with the 
defense of the Sthaviravadin attitude towards 
each problem, (d) The Puggala-pannatti on the 
nature of the personality, (e) Dhatu-katha, and 
(f) Yamaka, smaller treatises on psychological 
subjects, and (g) Patthana or discussion of the 
Southern view of causation and mutual relation- 
ship of phenomena. 

In addition to the foregoing canonical works 
we have a large number of commentaries, many 
written by Buddhaghosa, and a number of highly 



SACRED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS 219 

respected independent works, sucli as the 
Milinda-panha or Questions of King Milinda, the 
Vissuddhi-Magga or Path of Pnrity by Buddha- 
ghosa the standard exposition of orthodox Ther- 
avada philosophy, and the Abhidhammattha- 
sangaha or compendium of the meaning of the 
Abhidhamma, a more concise work on the same 
subject, etc. 

II. SansJcrit Literature. 
1. Hlnayana WorTcs. 
The Pan works of the Sthaviravadins have 
been preserved to us almost intact. The other 
great school of ancient Hinayana, the Sarvas- 
tivadin sect, wrote in, or translated their works 
into Sanskrit. As a whole this literature has 
perished, though a certain amount has been 
preserved to us in Chinese and Tibetan trans- 
lations. Eecent discoveries in Central Asia have 
restored to us certain framents of the original. 
This sect has also its Vinaya, its Sutra, and its 
Abhidharma Pitakas, the first two corresponding 
very closely to the Pali version, the last con- 
sisting likewise of seven works but written 
independently, and having no connection with 
the PaU Abhidharma, showing that the whole 
Abhidharma literature was the creation of later 
times, at a period subsequent to the introduction 
of sectarian differences. 



220 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

The scriptures of the other Hinayana sects 
seem to have perished completely save for the 
Mahavastu which in its original form was prob- 
ably the introduction to the Lokuttara version 
of the Mahasanghika Vinaya. The Chinese have 
also a translation of the Mahasanghika Vinaya, 
and the Chinese Samyukta Agama (Sanyutta- 
nikaya) was also probably made from a Mahasan- 
ghika original. The little known Satyasiddhi 
(^astra, known only in a Chinese translation, 
incorporates many of the ideas of the Sautranti- 
kas. 

2. Mahay ana WorTcs. 

These must be considered slightly more in 
detail : — 

1. Vinaya. For the most part the Mahay- 
anists were content to accept, in theory at least, 
the Vinaya works of Hinayana, so that little 
contribution was made to this branch of Budd- 
hist literature by the more developed school, 
gave by certain works which emphasized the 
Bodhisattva as opposed to the Arhat ideal, and 
laid down certain additional rules in consequence. 
Even the Hinayana Vinaya contained many 
episodes relating to the biography of ^akyamuni, 
many tales of his former rebirths (Jatakas) and 
many tales of the retribution of merit and the 



SACRED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS 221 

punishment of sin in the past and present births 
(avadanas), etc. These portions were greatly 
amplified by the Mahayanists, and though these 
amplifications of the Vinaya were almost always 
classed as Sutras, and not as Vinaya works, we 
may say that with Mahayana Buddha bio- 
graphies, jatakas, and avadanas took the place 
of the Vinaya pitaka proper : — 

(a) Buddha Biographies. In this section, in 
addition to the Mahavastu which belongs more 
properly to the Hinayana school, we find the 
Lalita Vistara and the Buddha-carita of 
A§vagho§a. The Lalita Vistara has been trans- 
lated many times into European languages, 
and has become doubly famous through the fact 
that Sir Edwin Arnold's " Light of Asia " was 
largely based upon it. In its original form, the 
book belonged to the Sarvastivadins, but it was 
later remodelled by the Mahayanists after which 
it assumed an important place in their canon. 
The Buddha Carita is a magnificent epic Life 
of Qak.j2im.xim by Agvaghoea, and is interesting 
both from the doctrinal and the literary point 
of view. 

(b) Jataka and Avadana Works. To the 
former belongs the Jataka-mala or the Garland 
of birth stories, a series of thirty-four or five 



222 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

previous lives of the Buddha, and to the latter 
such well-known works as the Avadana-gataka 
(The 100 Avadanas), the Agokavadana, etc. 
Many of these have been translated in whole or 
in part from Sanskrit into English or French. 

2. Sutras. Amongst the vast mass of sutras 
we may select the Avatamsaka (or Gandha- 
vyuha), the Saddharma Pundarika, and the 
Sukhavati-vyuha as the most important. 

The Avatamsaka or Gandha-vyuha claims, as 
we have seen, to be the first sutra preached by 
Qakyamuni after his enlightenment. Part of it 
was delivered on earth and part in the vaiious 
heavens. It is full of mysticism, and preaches 
the doctrine of the Absolute or Universal Buddha, 
the Trikaya, or three bodies as weU as the ten 
bodies of the Buddha, the Dharmadhatu or 
eternal ideal world as opposed to the phenomenal 
world, and the glory of the path of the Bodhi- 
sattvas and the stages in that path. 

The Saddharma Pundarika claims to be one 
of the last sutras proclaimed by the Buddha and 
to contain the essence of his doctrine. It is 
probably earlier than the Avatamsaka. It is 
less metaphysical, and mystical, but even more 
devotional. C^^y^'iinini is said to be the 
eternal father who seeks to save his children 



SACRED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS 223 

(all sentient being) who suffer in the burning 
house of the three worlds. In reality he is 
never born, and never dies, but only appears to 
do so in order the better to save mankind. 

In the Sukhavati-vyuha (there are two, one 
long, and one short) the Universal Buddha is 
caUed Amitabha, and all men are taught to seek 
salvation through bei^jg reborn in his Western 
paradise. 

Other highly important works are the various 
versions of the Prajna Paramita Sutra, which 
teaches the Madhyamika doctrine of Qunya or 
the unsubstantiality of all things ; the Surangama 
Sutra ; and the Vimala-Kirti-nirdega Sutra which 
teach a later form of the Madhyamika doctrine 
verging, on the theory of the Absolute ; and 
the Lankavatara Sandhinirmocana and Suvarna 
Pravhaga, which belong to the Togacarya 
school with its explicit idealism. 

3. AbhidJiarma. The Sanskrit Mahayana 
literature may be divided into two classes, 
(1) those works which belong to the Madhyamika 
school, and (2) those which belong to the Yog- 
acarya school. 

(a.) The Madhyamika works composed by 
Nararjuna, Arya Deva or their disciples em- 



224 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

phasize the doctrine of Qunya. To this clas« 
belong : — 

1. The Prajfia Paramita Sutra Q^^tra, bjr 

Nagarjuna. 

2. The Dvadaga-nikaya ^astra, by Nagarjuna 

3. The Madhyamika Qastra, by Nagarjuna. 

4. The Qata ^S'Stra, by Arya Deva. 

5. The Bodhicaryavatara, by ^anti Deva. 
(b.) The Yogacarya works are chiefly the 

writings of Asanga and Vasubandhu, two brothers. 
The Bodhisattva Maitreya is also frequently 
mentioned as the founder of the school. The 
nature of his personality remains in doubt. He 
is supposed to be the future Buddha residing in 
the Tu§ita heaven, who came down to India to 
proclaim the true doctrine, as in the Yoga- 
caryabhumi Qastra. Some suppose him to be 
a fictions person evoked by Asanga to suit his 
own purpose ; others suppose him to be an 
historical person, later identified with the 
mythical Bodhisattva. Asanga must be con- 
sidered the chief Patriarch of the school. His 
younger brother Vasubandhu was first an 
adherent of the Sarvastivadin school, during 
which time he composed the famous Abhidharma 
Koga, and was later converted by Asanga to 
Mahayana, and subsequently composed many 
metaphysical works on the later doctrine. 



SACRED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS 225 

The most important works of this class are : — 

1. The Yogacarya-bhumi Qastra by Maitreya. 

2. The Prakaranaryavaca ^astra by Asanga. 

3. Sutralankara-tika by Asanga. 

4. Mahayana-samparigraha Qastra by Asanga 

5. Dagabhiimika Qastra by Vasubandhu. 

6. Alambana-pratyaya-dhyana Qastra by 
Jina. 

7. Vidyamatra-siddhi ^astra by Vasubandhu. 

8. Mahayana-abhidharma-sangiti-^astra by 
Asanga. 

At a slightly subsequent period arose a long 
line of Buddhist logicians, beginning with 
Dignaga, and including Dharmakirti. These 
works have been lost in the original Sanskrit, 
but the Chinese canon contains two such works, 
and the Tibetan a much larger quantity. 

III. Tibetan Literature. 

The Tibetan version of the Buddhist literature 
is divided into two classes. — 

1. The Kanjur consisting of the Vinaya and 
Sutras (100 or 108 volumes in all), and 

2. The Tanjur consisting of various Abhid- 
harma works, commentaries and doctrinal ex- 
positions, etc., (225 volumes in all). 



226 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANJ BUDDHISM 

1. The Kanjur — 

The Kanjur consists of the following seven 
great divisions : — 

1. Vinaya, consisting of a translation of 
one variation of the Sarvastivadin Vinaya. 
(13 vols.) 

2. Prajnd-Pdramita, the sutras preaching the 

Qunya doctrines or the theory of un- 
substantiality. (21 vols.) 

3. Avatamsaka, consisting of the Buddha- 
vatamsaka Sutra or Gandha-vyuha, the 
mystico-metaphysical siitra supposedly 
first delivered by the Buddha. (6 vols.) 

4. BatnaJcuta, a collection of various Buddho- 
logical sutras, including the Sukhavati- 
vyuha. (6 vols.) 

6. Sutra, all sutras not otherwise classified, 
and including the Saddharma Pundarika, 
Lankavatara Sutras, etc., and various 
Hinayana sUtras. (30. vols) 

6. Nirvana, consisting of the Maha-pari- 
nirvana Sutra (Mahay ana version) con- 
taining an account of the last acts and 
teachings of the Buddha. (2 vols.) 

7. T antra, containing the works of the later 
esoteric doctrine in the earlier (Mantra) 
and later (Tantra) phases. (22 vols.) 



SACRED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS 227 

2. The Tanjur. 

This is divided as follows : — 

1. T antra, various works dealing with the 
esoteric doctrines, chiefly from an ex- 
pository point of view. 

2. Sutra, various works dealing with the 
exoteric doctrines, including translations 
of the works of Nagarjuna, Arya Deva, 
Maitreya, Asanga, etc. 

One separate volume contains hymns of 
praises of several Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, 
and another volume fulfils the functions of an 
index. Incidentally it may be remarked that 
while the Kanjur is more or less known to us, 
much spade work remains to be done before it 
can be said that we have mastered the contents 
of the Tanjur, which from many points of view 
is the more interesting of the two, as well as 
containing much information which is otherwise 
inaccessible. 

IV. The Chinese Canon. 

The most complete and comprehensive collec- 
tions of Buddhist books is to be found in the 
Chinese Canon, which preserves in translation 
many works of the various schools which would 
otherwise be lost. Including duplicate trans- 
lations of the same work, which are many, it 



228 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

contains 1662 separate works, which may be 
arranged in the following way : — ** 

I. Indian Worlcs. 
(books written in India and translated int® 
Chinese). 

1. The Sutra PitaJca. 

A. Mahayana Sutras. These are divided into 
five classes, corresponding to the Mahayana 
theory of the periods of the Buddha's life. These 
classes are : — (1). Avatamsaka class ; (2). 
Vaipulya class ; (3). Prajna Paramita class ; 
(4). Saddharma Pnndarika class ; (5). Maha- 
parinirvana class. The last two are frequently 
counted together. 

B. Hinaydna Sutras. These consist of the 
works supposed to have been preached by the 
Buddha during his second or Hinayana period. 
These are divided into two classes : — (1). Agama 
class consisting of translations of the four 
Agamas corresponding to the four Nikayas of 
the Pali canon, together with translations of 
many separate sutras contained therein ; (2) 
Sutras teaching Hinayana doctrines but not 
classed under the agamas. 

2. The Vinaya PitaTca. 
A. Mahayana Vinaya. consisting of the 
Mahayana Brahmajala sutra, and other simila* 

** The arrangement here given is that of the Toky5 edition. 



SACRED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS 229 

works, giving the Mahayana or Bodhisattva 
Pratimokga, or precepts for those striving after 
Buddhahood, in place of the Hinayana Prati- 
mok§a, or precepts for those striving after 
Arhatship. 

B. Hinayana Vinaya. Consisting of various 
versions of the Hinayana disciplinary rules. 
The most important schools represented are 
(l) The Dharmagupta, (2) Mula-sarvastivadin, 
(3) Sarvastivadin, (4) Mahigasaka, (5) Kagy- 
aplja, (6) Mahasanghika, etc. 

3. The AbMdJiarma Pitaka. 

A. Mahayana Ahhidharma. These may be 
divided into (1) Works dealing with Mahayana in 
general irrespective of sects, (2) Works belonging 
to the Madhyamika school, (3) Works belonging 
to the Yogacarya school. 

B. Hinayana Ahhidharma. These may be 
divided into (1) Works dealing with Hinayana in 
general irrespective of sects, (2) Works belonging 
to the Sarvastivadin sect, (3) Works of other 
sects, such as the Satyasiddhi Qastra of the 
Sautrantikas, etc. 

4. The Kalpa PitaTca. 
A, Mantras and Dharanis. These represent 
the early stages of Mahayana esotericism, with 
their various magical formulae, and invocation 
of celestial Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, etc. 



230 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAY AN A BUDDHISM 

B. Tantras and Later Esoteric WorTcs. These 

consist of the few works of the later Tantrayana 

of India which were translated into Chinese, 

in which mysticism and occultism were curiously 

mixed. The whole of the Kalpa, or Mystery 

Eitual, Pitaka belongs exclusively to Mahay ana. 

n. CHINESE WORKS. 

(Original works composed in China.) 

1. Commentaries. 

A. Commentaries on the Sutra Pitaka, divided 
into Mahayana and Hinayana works, though some 
of the commentaries on Hinayana works were 
composed by Mahayanists. 

B. Commentaries on the Vinaya Pitaka, like- 
wise divided into Mahayana and Hinayana 
works, though the Hinayana Vinaya was for the 
most part accepted by aU Mahayanists. 

C. Commentaries on the Abhidharma Pitaka, 
Mahayana and Hinayana, giving the Chinese 
interpretation of Indian Buddhist philosophy, 
though presenting many original ideas. 

2. Sectarian Works. 
These consist of expositions of the systems of 
the various schools of Chinese Buddhism, and 
are divided into works on : — 

A. The Kegon or Avatamsaka school. 

B. The Tendai school. 



S ACHED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS^23l 

C. The Shingon or Mantra school. 

D. The Eitsu or Vinaya school. 

E. The Jodo or Sukhavati school. 

F. The Zen or Dhyana school. 

3. Miscellaneous Works. 
These consist of various types of works, which 
may be divided into : — 

A. Eituals and Confessions. 

B. Histories and Biographies. 

C. Anthologies and Compilations. 

D. Dictionaries and Catalogues, etc. 

V. The Chinese Supplementary Canon. 

Using the Chinese Canon as a base there 
gradually arose a vast mass of literature of a 
commentarial, critical, and expository nature, 
which came to be considered the standard inter- 
pretations of Chinese Buddhist philosophy. 
These together with a few miscellaneous trans- 
lations from Sanskrit, which had not been 
included in the former collection, were grouped 
together to form the Chinese Supplementary 
Canon. Their arrangement corresponds very 
closely to that of the original canon, and is as 
follows : — 

I. Indian WorJcs. 

A. Translations from the Sutra Pitaka of the 
six classes. 



232 INTRODUCTION TO MAHAYANA BUDDHISM 

B. Translations from the Vinaya Pitaka 
especially the Mula-Sarvastivadin. 

C. Translations from the Abhidharma Pitaka, 
Hinayana, and Mahayana. 

D. Translations from the Kalpa Pitaka, or 
esoteric works. 

II. Chinese Works. 
1. Commentaries. 

A. Commentaries on the Sutra Pitaka (1) 
Hinayana and (2) Mahayana. 

B. Commentaries on the Vinaya Pitaka (1) 
Hinayana and (2) Mahayana. 

C. Commentaries on the Abhidharma Pitaka 
(1) Hinayana and (2) Mahayana. 

2. Sectarian Works. 
Works expounding the principles of : — 

A. The Sanron or Madhyamika school. 

B. The Hosso or Yogacarya school. 

C. The Tendai school. 

D. The Kegon or Avatamsaka school. 

E. The Shingon or Mantra school. 

F. The Zen or Dhyana school. 

G. The Jodo or Sukhavati school. 

3. Miscellaneous Works. 

A. Histories and Biographies. 

B. Compilations and Anthologies. 



SACRED LITERATURE OF THE BUDDHISTS 233 

Finally we may add that many Japanese sages 
wrote commentaries which have come to be 
considered standard expositions of the doctrines 
of their own sects. 



FINAL NOTE 

1. Technical terms. For the most part, 
wherever practical technical terms have been 
reduced to their Sanskrit form. Through lack 
of type, no distinction has been made between 
cerebral and dental t., etc., or between the 
various classes of nasals. Where no Sanskrit 
form exists the Japanese pronunciation of the 
Chinese ideographs has been employed. 

2. Authorities. Owing to the popular nature 
of the present work, I have felt it unnecessary 
to cite authorities, which are dealt with at 
length in my larger work, now in preparation. 
This omission is largely due to the fact that the 
authorities are, for the most part, in languages 
not accessible to the general student. 



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