Among the early Buddhists, the metaphysical
theory was neither affirmed or denied, but simply ignored as being meaningless
and unnecessary. Their concern was with the immediate experience, which,
because of its consequences for life, came to be known as 'liberation'
or 'enlightenment'. The Buddha and his disciples of the southern school
seem to have applied to the problems of religion that 'operational philosophy'
which contemporary scientific thinkers have begun to apply to the natural
sciences. The modern conception
of man's intellectual relationship to the universe was anticipated by
the Buddhist doctrine that desire is the source of illusion.
To the extent that one has overcome
desire, a mind is free from illusion. This is true not only of the man
of science, but also the artist and the philosopher. Only the disinterested
mind can transcend sense and pass beyond the boundaries of animal or average-sensual
human life. Perfect non-attachment
demands of those who aspire to it, not only compassion and charity, but
also the intelligence that perceives the general implications of particular
acts, that sees the individual being within the system of social and cosmic
relations of which he is but a part. In this respect, it seems to me,
Buddhism shows itself decidedly superior to Christianity.
In the Buddhist ethic, stupidity,
or unawareness, ranks as one of the principal sins. At the same time,
people are warned that they must take their share of responsibility for
the social order in which they find themselves. One of the branches of
the Eightfold Path is said to be 'right means of livelihood', the Buddhist
is expected to refrain from engaging in such socially harmful occupations
as soldiering, or the manufacture of arms or intoxicating drugs.
Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)
British author, Playwright and thinker
It is a remarkable indication of the
subtlety of Indian speculation that Gautama should have seen deeper than
the greatest of modern idealists. The tendency of enlightened thought of
today all the world over is not towards theology but philosophy and psychology.
The bark of theological dualism is drifting into danger. The fundamental
principles of evolution and monism are being accepted by the thoughtful.
Prof. Julian Huxley (1887-1975)
British author,
Zoologist and Director General of UNESCO
Page 11
I am ignorant of Buddhism
and speak under correction, and merely in order the better to describe
my general point of view; but as apprehend the Buddhistic doctrine of
karma, I agree in principle with that.
William James (I842-I9I0)
American philosopher and psychologis
When a modern western psychologist
reads the Pali Nikayas*, he again finds passages which he recognizes as
belonging to his field and are concerned with typical psychological problems.
Perception, imagination and thinking are described and the idea of psychological
causality is developed, although in very vague terms. Behaviour and consciousness
are explained as dynamic processes, governed by needs. There are the rudiments
of an understanding of unconscious processes. We find interesting descriptions
of different personality types. And the literature is full of advice on
how to change the conscious processes evidently based on careful observation
and experimentation.
Dr Rure C. A. Johnson M.A. D.
Phil Swedish psychologist and
research psychologist for the Swedish National Defence
As a student of comparative religions, I believe that Buddhism is
the most perfect one the world has even seen. The philosophy of the theory
of evolution and the law of karma were far superior to any other creed.
It was neither the history of
religion nor the study of philosophy that first drew me to the world of
Buddhist thought but my professional interest as a doctor. My task was
to teat psychic suffering and it was this that impelled me to become acquainted
with the views and methods of that great teacher of humanity, whose principal
theme was the chain of suffering, old age, sickness and death.
Dr C.C. Jung
(1875-1961)
Swiss psychologist Founder of the Jungian school of psychology
* Buddhist scriptures
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Paul couples love with
faith and hope, and his conception of love involves faith and hope:
"Love," he says, "believes all things, hopes all things." The love I
mean does not believe all things and hope all things. It survives disillusionment
and persists in despair. Love is not love that ceases without hope or
faith. As long as faith and hope support it, it is hardly more than
puppy love. That love is pleasant is a fashionable myth, or, to be more
charitable about it, an exception. The Buddha knew that love brings
"hurt and misery, suffering, grief and despair"; and he advised detachment.
The love I consider a virtue is not a blind love of the lovers or the
trusting, hopeful love of Paul, but the love that knows what the Buddha
knew and still loves, with open eyes.
Prof. Walter Kaufmann
American philosopher and author
He read widely and
deeply in Buddhist text, translated sutras from French, and even wrote
a biography of the Buddha. But at the root of his absorption in Buddhism
was the fact that he felt it offered him direct philosophical consolation
for the disappointment in his life. . . Jack embraced the first law of
Buddhism above all others, the statement that "All life is suffering"
. . It was as if the words had been written for him.
Ann Charter
comments on American author and poet Jack Kerouac (1922-1969)
The idea of unity-in-diversity
can be followed all the way back to the Pythagorean 'Harmony of the Sphere'
and the Hippocratic's 'sympathy of all things: 'there is one common flow,
one common breathing, all things are in sympathy'. The doctrine that everything
in the universe hangs together partly by mechanical causes but mainly
by hidden affinities (which also accounts for apparent coincidences),
provides not only the foundation for sympathetic magic, astrology and
alchemy: it also runs as a leit-motif through the teachings of Taoism
and Buddhism, the neo-Platonists, and the philosophers of the early Renaissance.
Arthur Koestler (1905-1983)
Hungarian novelist and journalist
If I knew the Buddha
would be speaking here tomorrow, nothing in the world could stop me from
going to listen to him. And I would follow him to the very end.
J.Krishnamuri Indian
philosopher (l895-1986 )
The Indian,
the Aztec, old Mexico! All that fascinates me and has fascinated me
for years, there is glamour and magic for me. Not Buddha. Buddha is
so finished and perfected and fulfilled and "'volender" and
without new possibilities - to me I mean.
D.H. Lawrence (1885-1930)British
novelist
Today science is challenging
the finite quality of the human brain, a brain consisting of some 10,000
million electrically stimulated cells programmed with the instincts of
our long history and receptive to new notions whether true or false. The
aggregate of these cells provides our ever-changing personality and their
partial removal by surgery or altered rhythm by shock treatment changes
our character. By such crude methods, aggression can be turned into fear,
hatred to affection - how much better that they should be changed by appreciation
of the realities that the philosophy of Buddha has placed in our hands.
William Mac Quilty
British Award winning film maker,
Traveller and Fellow of The Royal Geographical Society
The message of the
Buddha is a message of joy. He found a treasure and he wants us to follow
the path that leads us to the treasure. He tells man that he is in deep
darkness, but he also tells him that there is a path that leads to light.
He wants us to arise from a life of dreams into a higher life where man
loves and does not hate, where a man helps and does not hurt. His appeal
is universal, because he appeals to reason and to the universal is us
all: It is you who must make the effort. The Great of the past
only show the way.' He achieved a superior harmony of vision and wisdom
by placing spiritual truth on the crucial test of experience; and only
experience can satisfy the mind of modern man. He wants us to watch and
be awake and he wants us to seek and to find.
Juan Mascan Spanish
Academic and
Educationalist, Lecturer at Cambridge University
I have so often tried
to isolate the quality of "Zen" * which attracted me so powerfully to
its literature and later to the practice of zazen #. But since the essence
of Zen might well be what one teacher called the moment-by-moment awakening
of mind, there is little that may sensibly be said about it without succumbing
to that breathless, mystery-ridden prose that drives so many sincere aspirants
in the other direction. In zazen, one may hope ~ penetrate the ringing
stillness of the universal mind.
Peter Mathiessen American Novelist,
Naturalist and Explorer.
Winner of The National Book Award in 1979
* The Japanese meditation
tradition.
Maugham's interest in mysticism and
Eastern philosophy is not a sudden development of his later life. Although
his early questioning of Christianity culminated in the atheism represented
in Philip Carey, he continued his examination of the religions of the
East and his enquiries into mysticism. 'Faith' a short story published
in 1899' considers sympathetically the dilemma of a young monk who loses
the ability to believe in God. 'The Painted Veil' treated in however
a superficial manner, the serenity of the belief in 'The Way'. In the
'Gentlemen in the Parlour', Maugham discusses the philosophy of Buddha,
and he confessed to finding considerable attraction in the belief in
the transmigration of souls . . . Because of the impact which the 'Razor's
Edge' made in 1944, it has generally been overlooked that in the 'Narrow
Corner', Maugham had already treated in considerable depth the philosophy
of Indian religion. In this understated serious novel there is extensive
discussion of Buddhism, and the progress of the story is a movement
in the direction of that belief by the central figure.
R. L. Calder's comments
On the works of English novelist W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)
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