The ninth-century Buddhist master Lin Chi is supposed to have said,
If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him. Like much
of Zen teaching, this seems too cute by half, but it makes a valuable
point: to turn the Buddha into a religious fetish is to miss the essence
of what he taught. In considering what Buddhism can offer the world
in the twenty-first century, I propose that we take Lin Chis
admonishment rather seriously. As students of the Buddha, we should
dispense with Buddhism.
This is not to say that Buddhism has nothing to offer the world. One
could surely argue that the Buddhist tradition, taken as a whole,
represents the richest source of contemplative wisdom that any civilization
has produced. In a world that has long been terrorized by fratricidal
Sky-God religions, the ascendance of Buddhism would surely be a welcome
development. But this will not happen. There is no reason whatsoever
to think that Buddhism can successfully compete with the relentless
evangelizing of Christianity and Islam. Nor should it try to.
The wisdom of the Buddha is currently trapped within the religion
of Buddhism. Even in the West, where scientists and Buddhist contemplatives
now collaborate in studying the effects of meditation on the brain,
Buddhism remains an utterly parochial concern. While it may be true
enough to say (as many Buddhist practitioners allege) that Buddhism
is not a religion, most Buddhists worldwide practice it as such,
in many of the naive, petitionary, and superstitious ways in which
all religions are practiced. Needless to say, all non-Buddhists believe
Buddhism to be a religionand, what is more, they are quite certain
that it is the wrong religion.
To talk about Buddhism, therefore, inevitably imparts
a false sense of the Buddhas teaching to others. So insofar
as we maintain a discourse as Buddhists, we ensure that
the wisdom of the Buddha will do little to inform the development
of civilization in the twenty-first century.
Worse still, the continued identification of Buddhists with Buddhism
lends tacit support to the religious differences in our world. At
this point in history, this is both morally and intellectually indefensibleespecially
among affluent, well-educated Westerners who bear the greatest responsibility
for the spread of ideas. It does not seem much of an exaggeration
to say that if you are reading this article, you are in a better
position to influence the course of history than almost any person
in history. Given the degree to which religion still inspires human
conflict, and impedes genuine inquiry, I believe that merely being
a self-described Buddhist is to be complicit in the
worlds violence and ignorance to an unacceptable degree.
It is true that many exponents of Buddhism, most notably the Dalai
Lama, have been remarkably willing to enrich (and even constrain)
their view of the world through dialogue with modern science. But
the fact that the Dalai Lama regularly meets with Western scientists
to discuss the nature of the mind does not mean that Buddhism, or
Tibetan Buddhism, or even the Dalai Lamas own lineage, is
uncontaminated by religious dogmatism. Indeed, there are ideas within
Buddhism that are so incredible as to render the dogma of the virgin
birth plausible by comparison. No one is served by a mode of discourse
that treats such pre-literate notions as integral to our evolving
discourse about the nature of the human mind. Among Western Buddhists,
there are college-educated men and women who apparently believe
that Guru Rinpoche was actually born from a lotus. This is not the
spiritual breakthrough that civilization has been waiting for these
many centuries.
For the fact is that a person can embrace the Buddhas teaching,
and even become a genuine Buddhist contemplative (and, one must
presume, a buddha) without believing anything on insufficient evidence.
The same cannot be said of the teachings for faith-based religion.
In many respects, Buddhism is very much like science. One starts
with the hypothesis that using attention in the prescribed way (meditation),
and engaging in or avoiding certain behaviors (ethics), will bear
the promised result (wisdom and psychological well-being). This
spirit of empiricism animates Buddhism to a unique degree. For this
reason, the methodology of Buddhism, if shorn of its religious encumbrances,
could be one of our greatest resources as we struggle to develop
our scientific understanding of human subjectivity.
The Problem of Religion
Incompatible religious doctrines have balkanized our world into
separate moral communities, and these divisions have become a continuous
source of bloodshed. Indeed, religion is as much a living spring
of violence today as it has been at any time in the past. The recent
conflicts in Palestine (Jews vs. Muslims), the Balkans (Orthodox
Serbians vs. Catholic Croatians; Orthodox Serbians vs. Bosnian and
Albanian Muslims), Northern Ireland (Protestants vs. Catholics),
Kashmir (Muslims vs. Hindus), Sudan (Muslims vs. Christians and
animists), Nigeria (Muslims vs. Christians), Ethiopia and Eritrea
(Muslims vs. Christians), Sri Lanka (Sinhalese Buddhists vs. Tamil
Hindus), Indonesia (Muslims vs. Timorese Christians), Iran and Iraq
(Shiite vs. Sunni Muslims), and the Caucasus (Orthodox Russians
vs. Chechen Muslims; Muslim Azerbaijanis vs. Catholic and Orthodox
Armenians) are merely a few cases in point. These are places where
religion has been the explicit cause of literally millions of deaths
in recent decades.
Why is religion such a potent source of violence? There is no other
sphere of discourse in which human beings so fully articulate their
differences from one another, or cast these differences in terms
of everlasting rewards and punishments. Religion is the one endeavor
in which usthem thinking achieves a transcendent significance.
If you really believe that calling God by the right name can spell
the difference between eternal happiness and eternal suffering,
then it becomes quite reasonable to treat heretics and unbelievers
rather badly. The stakes of our religious differences are immeasurably
higher than those born of mere tribalism, racism, or politics.
Religion is also the only area of our discourse in which people
are systematically protected from the demand to give evidence in
defense of their strongly held beliefs. And yet, these beliefs often
determine what they live for, what they will die for, andall
too oftenwhat they will kill for. This is a problem, because
when the stakes are high, human beings have a simple choice between
conversation and violence. At the level of societies, the choice
is between conversation and war. There is nothing apart from a fundamental
willingness to be reasonableto have ones beliefs about
the world revised by new evidence and new argumentsthat can
guarantee we will keep talking to one another. Certainty without
evidence is necessarily divisive and dehumanizing.
Therefore, one of the greatest challenges facing civilization in
the twenty-first century is for human beings to learn to speak about
their deepest personal concernsabout ethics, spiritual experience,
and the inevitability of human sufferingin ways that are not
flagrantly irrational. Nothing stands in the way of this project
more than the respect we accord religious faith. While there is
no guarantee that rational people will always agree, the irrational
are certain to be divided by their dogmas.
It seems profoundly unlikely that we will heal the divisions in
our world simply by multiplying the occasions for interfaith dialogue.
The end game for civilization cannot be mutual tolerance of patent
irrationality. All parties to ecumenical religious discourse have
agreed to tread lightly over those points where their worldviews
would otherwise collide, and yet these very points remain perpetual
sources of bewilderment and intolerance for their coreligionists.
Political correctness simply does not offer an enduring basis for
human cooperation. If religious war is ever to become unthinkable
for us, in the way that slavery and cannibalism seem poised to,
it will be a matter of our having dispensed with the dogma of faith.
A Contemplative Science
What the world most needs at this moment is a means of convincing
human beings to embrace the whole of the species as their moral
community. For this we need to develop an utterly nonsectarian way
of talking about the full spectrum of human experience and human
aspiration. We need a discourse on ethics and spirituality that
is every bit as unconstrained by dogma and cultural prejudice as
the discourse of science is. What we need, in fact, is a contemplative
science, a modern approach to exploring the furthest reaches of
psychological well-being. It should go without saying that we will
not develop such a science by attempting to spread American
Buddhism, or Western Buddhism, or Engaged
Buddhism.
If the methodology of Buddhism (ethical precepts and meditation)
uncovers genuine truths about the mind and the phenomenal worldtruths
like emptiness, selflessness, and impermanencethese truths
are not in the least Buddhist. No doubt, most serious
practitioners of meditation realize this, but most Buddhists do
not. Consequently, even if a person is aware of the timeless and
noncontingent nature of the meditative insights described in the
Buddhist literature, his identity as a Buddhist will tend to confuse
the matter for others.
There is a reason that we dont talk about Christian
physics or Muslim algebra, though the Christians
invented physics as we know it, and the Muslims invented algebra.
Today, anyone who emphasizes the Christian roots of physics or the
Muslim roots of algebra would stand convicted of not understanding
these disciplines at all. In the same way, once we develop a scientific
account of the contemplative path, it will utterly transcend its
religious associations. Once such a conceptual revolution has taken
place, speaking of Buddhist meditation will be synonymous
with a failure to assimilate the changes that have occurred in our
understanding of the human mind.
It is as yet undetermined what it means to be human, because every
facet of our cultureand even our biology itselfremains
open to innovation and insight. We do not know what we will be a
thousand years from nowor indeed that we will be, given the
lethal absurdity of many of our beliefsbut whatever changes
await us, one thing seems unlikely to change: as long as experience
endures, the difference between happiness and suffering will remain
our paramount concern. We will therefore want to understand those
processesbiochemical, behavioral, ethical, political, economic,
and spiritualthat account for this difference. We do not yet
have anything like a final understanding of such processes, but
we know enough to rule out many false understandings. Indeed, we
know enough at this moment to say that the God of Abraham is not
only unworthy of the immensity of creation; he is unworthy even
of man.
There is much more to be discovered about the nature of the human
mind. In particular, there is much more for us to understand about
how the mind can transform itself from a mere reservoir of greed,
hatred, and delusion into an instrument of wisdom and compassion.
Students of the Buddha are very well placed to further our understanding
on this front, but the religion of Buddhism currently stands in
their way.
Killing The Buddha, Sam Harris, Shambhala Sun, March
2006.
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