Affichage des articles dont le libellé est metaphors. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est metaphors. Afficher tous les articles

mercredi 5 juin 2024

Luminosity and its slippery metaphors

Dulle Gret/Mad Meg by Pieter Brueghel the Elder (detail, wikimedia)

The translations “light”, “clear light”, “luminosity” and “luminous” are used to refer to different Buddhist concepts, specifically in esoteric Buddhism, in the context of “Buddha nature” (tathāgatagarbha) or “Buddha essence” (buddha-dhātu). The doctrine of Buddha nature is considered as being particularly suitable for esoteric Buddhism and its use of deity practice, and is considered as a bridge leading from Madhyamaka to “Great Madhyamaka” and advanced esoteric practices.
For example, Tārānātha (1575-1634), in his own presentation of the four tenets, the Gzhan stong snying po, divides the fourth tenet (Madhyamaka) into ordinary and Great Madhyamaka (dbu ma chen po). In this work, he based his Great Madhyamaka on a zhentong [gzhan stong] interpretation through a particular understanding of the Yogācāra combined with the Ratnagotravibhāga.[1]

"Great Madhyamaka" brings "luminosity"to emptiness, defined as the lack of self-nature, creating space for positive qualities. Regarding Zhentong, this is how Dölpopa defined it:

Dölpopa considers the buddha nature, or sugata essence, to be natural luminosity (which is synonymous with the dharmakāya) and a primordial, indestructible, eternal great bliss inherently present in every living being. On the other hand, the incidental stains or impurities that veil the buddha nature are the various states of mind associated with the infinite experiences of mundane existence. While the veils of temporary affliction are empty of self-nature, the buddha nature is empty only of phenomena other than itself. (Jonang Foundation)

In his popular Mahāmudrā Prayer, the third Karmapa Rangjung Dorje (13-14th century) follows Dharmakīrti but introduces a luminous nature of mind. 

Looking at objects, there are no objects; we see only mind [citta].
Looking at mind, there is no mind; it is empty of an essence.
Looking at both, dualistic clinging is spontaneously liberated.
May we realize luminosity, the true nature of mind [‘od gsal sems kyi gnas lugs]
. (18)” (Mahāmudrā Prayer, K3 Rangjung Dorje, tr. Nålandå Translation Committee, 1976)[2]
The 3rd Karmapa uses the substantive ‘od gsal, commonly translated as “luminosity” or “clear light”, and in English it is translated as such, whereas it was most often used as a metaphorical adjective: ‘od gsal ba. In Sanskrit prabhāsvara, and in Pāli pabhassara, can be translated both as an adjective and a substantive. E.g. “Pabhassaramidaṁ, bhikkhave, cittaṁ” (AN 1.51), translated in English by Bhikkhu Sujato as “This mind, mendicants, is radiant. But it is corrupted by passing corruptions/And it is freed from passing corruptions.”

Here, “mind” is “citta”, and cittas are the awareness moments (kṣaṇa) of the mental continuum or series (s. saṃtāna). Is the whole “mental continuum”, or are all “cittas” radiant? Or is “this” (p. idaṁ) specific citta, in a series, radiant? If a specific citta in a mental continuum is radiant, i.e. “freed from passing corruptions”, then it may be the “citta” that Dharmakīrti had in mind, and the “luminous nature” thereof. The moment of its [self-]awareness.
The experience is of that [moment of awareness, and] it is of the nature of that [moment of awareness]; it is not [the experience of; or, of the nature] of anything else at all. Moreover, the fact that the [moment of awareness] is the nature of that [experience] constitutes the property of [that moment of awareness] being directly (pratyakṣa), individually-known (prativedya). || 326 ||

There is not something else to be experienced by the [cognition]. There is not something else that is the experience of that. [This is so] because there would be the same problem on the part of a [second-order experience], as well. Therefore, the [cognition] illuminates itself. || 327 ||” (Yiannopoulos, 2020)
The cognition “illuminates” itself, the reflexive experience of that very experience is immediate (Yiannopoulos, 2020[3]). Immediate because it's devoid of subject and object ("prereflective"), that would follow in a second cognition. The light metaphor is used because of this reflexive, “self-illuminating” experience.
Just as an illuminating (prakāśamāna) light (prakāśa) is considered to be the illuminator (prakāśaka) of itself (svarūpa), because of having that nature (tādātmyāt), just so, awareness (dhī) is aware of itself (ātmavedinī). || 329 ||”
When a metaphor is used repeatedly, without the original context, it starts leading a life of itself. And we may recite on a daily basis : “May we realize luminosity, the true nature of mind [‘od gsal sems kyi gnas lugs]”, planting the idea in our minds that the true nature of "mind" is clear light or luminosity. Followed by the affirmation in the verse following it, that this “luminous nature” and “clear light” is the basic idea of all the different paths.
Free from mental contrivance, it is Mahamudra,
Free from extremes, it is the great Middle Way,
Since it encompasses everything, it is Dzogchen –
May we gain the confidence of realizing all through knowing one
.” (19)” (Ari Goldfield)
Free from mental contrivance” here is the translation for mental non-engagement (s. amanasikāra, t. yid la mi byed pa), Advayavajra’s singular method. The "great Middle Way" is probably not Tārānātha’s Great Madhyamaka, but it suggests it is not the “middling Madhyamaka” and therefore likely a Madhyamaka adorned with the gurus words (Tattvadaśaka). "Dzogchen" at K3 Rangjung Dorje’s time is not yet the full-fledged Dzogchen of later times and our times, but more likely the Dzogchen of the Sems-sde, Gö Lotsawa Zhönu Pal (1392-1481) writes about it in his Blue Annals (p. 167). Gö Lotsawa didn’t write much or hardly all about Dzogchen’s kLong sde and Man ngag sde. What K3 Rangjung Dorje, who died in 1339, knew about Dzogchen was probably also limited to Sems de.

After the use of the light metaphor in Pāli and Sautrāntika sources and Dharmakīrti’s epistemology, things got more substantial with Yogācāra and Buddha nature.
In [the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra] buddha nature is said to be the purity of natural luminosity and to abide in the body of all sentient beings as the bearer of the thirty-two marks [of a great being][4].” (Buddha within, p. 17)
In the same text the Buddha explained that Buddha nature was only thought “to avoid [giving] fools a reason for becoming afraid of the lack of essence[5]”. The Buddha expressed a different opinion in the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa-sūtra where those teaching non-self and nirvāṇa are scolded as being “cattle-thieves”.
Therefore I want you to know that after the Tathāgata passes from this world, at that time there will be such people who lecture on the topic of permanence, bliss, self, and purity.”

When a dharma wheel-turning king appears in the world, ordinary people [=śrāvakas] will no longer be able to preach about morality, meditation, or wisdom; they will retreat from such activities, just as the cattle thieves retreated.” (Blum 2013[6])
The light metaphor gradually evolved into a “Luminous Self[7]” with Buddha nature as the embryo ofthe bearer of the thirty-two marks. The thirty-two marks refer to the symbolic body of a Buddha, i.e. his saṃbhogakāya so to speak, inseparable from his dharmakāya. A Buddha’s symbolical body is not his physical body (rūpakāya, in the original sens), but an immaterial charismatic body, “of light”, such as that gods or some great beings (mahāpuruṣa) have, and that can be seen by spiritually advanced beings, who would be qualified to receive their more exceptional teachings.

The Ratnagotravibhāga (I.29) affirms “the unchangeability of the [ultimate buddha] element and inseparability of its qualities in terms of the ultimate aspect of buddha nature” (Buddha within, p. 10).
Now two different sets of qualities can be taken as pertaining to the ultimate. First, an ultimate kāya (paramārthakāya) is said to be endowed with the “thirty-two qualities of the dharmakāya” (i.e., the ten strengths, the four fearlessnesses, and the eighteen exclusive features)

In RGV II.46c-47d it is further specified how the endowment of immeasurable qualities is to be understood:
Since its nature is [that of] the dharmadhātu, [the svabhāvika-kāya] is luminous and pure[8].
The svabhāvika-kāya is endowed with qualities that are immeasurable, innumerable, inconceivable, and incomparable, and that have reached the [state of] final purity [viśuddhi]
.” (Buddha within, p. 10).
The objective of Deity practice and ways of cultivating the “Hidden Vajra Body[9]” or other forms of immortality could be captured in the idea of “deification”. Is this sort of “luminosity” still a metaphor?
II. 46 Because of being stainless, because of being nonconceptual,
And because of being the sphere of yogins [yogināṃ gocaratvataḥ],
It is pure and luminous by virtue of
Having the nature of the dharmadhātu
.”
The first verse refers to emptiness and cognition of emptiness, metaphorically “luminous” by its own right. The pure creation, within the dharmadhātu, which is the “pure” symbolic project of yogins, is luminous in a different way and makes the yogins’ project clearly one of deification and immortality. A lot of ground has been covered from the “luminous” citta (see above) to this pure luminous reality. This is the union of emptiness and “yogic luminosity” (Mahāmudrā Prayer 7), i.e. the yogin’s creation, like anything else, “mind’s magical play” (t. sems kyi rnam ‘phrul), “Empty and unimpeded, it can appear as absolutely anything (t. cir yang)” (Mahāmudrā Prayer 9), including the pure luminous reality, only this time mastered and efficacious (arthakriyā) in the yogic sphere.

In “Emptiness and Luminosity” luminosity is the experience of true reality (tattva), which is empty of inherent existence yet appears vividly. But true reality, or suchness, as defined by Dharmakīrti or Sahajavajra, is not necessarily the luminous yogic reality, the luminous true reality (t. chos nyid 'od gsal kyi bar do) experienced in the Bardo, the post-mortem visionary experiences (the "luminous manifestation of one’s own primordial gnosis for up to five days", D.Germano in Funerary Transformation), or astral travels to hidden and pure lands, ascensions of yogis, etc. “Luminosity” can point to, and evoke all that, and it's all linked to emptiness. For Klaus-Dieter Mathes, Luminosity can point to Buddha Nature, Dharmadhātu, “non-conceptual realization” or "luminous self-empowerment" (s. amanasikāra), intrinsic primordial awareness (t. rig pa).

For the latter, KD Mathes explains in the Buddha Within (p. 100) how Longchenpa (14th c) amended verse I.28 of the Ratnagotravibhāga, to pull it towards his own doctrine. Verse I,28 is quoted by Gampopa (11-12th c) in his Jewel Ornament of Liberation:
Because of the permeation of Sambuddhakāya, of the undifferentiatedness of Tathatā,
And of the existence of families [gotra, rigs], all sentient beings are constantly endowed with Buddha-nature
[6].” (Herbert V. Guenther, p.3)
Gampopa respects the original wording and meaning of the term gotra, spiritual filiation. but Longchenpa “corrects” the Tibetan word rigs” (gotra) in “rig (pa)”, "intrinsic primordial awareness".
In his explanation of the third reason ("because of the potential"), Longchenpa equates potential [gotra] with the dzogchen term awareness [rig pa], adopting as he does the reading rig instead of rigs (potential), and glossing buddha nature as rig pa in the following paraphrase. In other words, all sentient beings possess buddha nature because of their intrinsic primordial awareness [rig pa].” (Buddha Within, p.100)
The Dzokchen “rig pa” is thus equated in shorthand with Buddha Nature and joins the long Luminous list. “Citta” (t. sems) has been abandoned for “rig pa” and "mind" lost its momentariness (s. kṣaṇika).

The combination of emptiness and “luminosity”/”clarity” in this regard is Yogācāra’s and Buddhist Tantrism’s way of stating that “emptiness” in and by itself is not efficacious (arthakriyā) to do “what needs to be done”, and that without “luminosity” (here yogic luminous activity) it would be sterile. “What needs to be done” is a variable. Yogācāra/Buddha Nature/Buddhist Tantrism have very specific ideas about “what needs to be done”, and judge other Buddhist paths on their interest and efficacy, or lack thereof, in this regard. Buddhist paths who have no interest in Yogācāra’s goals fall short and are judged insufficient. Without giving Luminosity its due, it is impossible to realize the full potential of the Luminous Self (“Luminous Dharmakāya”, with its intrinsic qualities (the 32 marks etc.) through luminous yoga and deity practice, and with theblessing” (s. anugraha) and/or thefavour” (s. prasāda) of a sadguru. Once engaged in a relationship with a guru, the only way out is up, towards the light! Otherwise beware!

Light (“clear light”, “luminosity”, “luminous”) is not always what it seems, but it feels good. We all hate darkness and love light, and we naturally know where to stand in the battle between light and darkness.

Dulle Gret/Mad Meg by Pieter Brueghel the Elder (detail, wikimedia)

***

"Very well then, my friend, I will give you an analogy;
for there are cases where it is through the use of an
analogy that intelligent people can understand the
meaning of what is being said
."
MN 24 (The Mind Like Fire Unbound: An Image in the Early Buddhist Discourses, Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu)



[1] Mathes, Klaus-Dieter, A direct path to the Buddha within, Go Lotsawa's Mahāmudrā interpretation of the Ratnagotravibhaga,


[2] Alternative translation:
Looking at objects – there are no objects, they are seen to be mind.
Looking at mind – there is no mind, it is empty of essence.
Looking at both, clinging to duality is self-liberated –
May we realize mind’s abiding nature, luminous clarity
.” (18)”
[3]Dharmakīrti writes at the corresponding juncture of the Pramāṇaviniścaya, PVin 1.38:
“There is not something else to be experienced by cognition (buddhi). There is not something else that is the experience of that [cognition], because cognition is devoid of subject and object. The [cognition] just illuminates itself. || 38 ||


[4] Note 93 LAS, 77.15-17: “You illustrated it as being pure in terms of the purity of natural luminosity and so forth and as being the bearer of the thirty-two marks and as being inside the body of all sentient beings.”
sa ca kila tvayā prakṛtiprabhāsvaraviśuddhyādiviśuddha eva varṇyate dvātriṃśallakṣaṇadharaḥ sarvasattvadehāntargataḥ / from Saddharmalaṅkāvatārasūtram, Gretil

[5] LAS 78.5-11 “Mahamati, my teaching of buddha nature does not resemble the heretical doctrine of a self (ātman). Rather, O Mahamati, the tathāgatas teach as buddha nature what [really] is emptiness, the limit of reality, nirvāṇa, nonorigination, signlessness, wishlessness, and similar categories, and then the tathāgatas, the arhats, the perfect buddhas, in order to avoid [giving] fools a reason for becoming afraid of the lack of essence, teach the nonconceptual experiential object without characteristic signs by means of instructions that make use [of the term] buddha nature.” (Buddha within, p. 17)

[6] BDK English Tripiṭaka Series, THE NIRVANA SŪTRA (MAHĀPARINIRVĀṆA-SŪTRA, VOLUME I (Taishō Volume 12, Number 374) Translated from the Chinese by Mark L. Blum, BDK America, Inc. 2013.

[7] Awakening Wisdom, The Luminous Self, Online course by Mingyur Rinpoche (Tergar).
COURSE OVERVIEW
The recognition of the luminous self is considered to be a powerful way to uproot the causes of suffering. The key to recognition begins with an understanding about the empty nature and the luminosity of the mind. Luminosity, or clarity, allows all experience to take place, and thus we can access innate wisdom in the midst of all situations in life
.”
[8]II. 46 Because of being stainless, because of being nonconceptual,
And because of being the sphere of yogins [yogināṃ gocaratvataḥ],
It is pure and luminous by virtue of
Having the nature of the dharmadhātu
.” When the Clouds Part, Karl Brunnhölzl, p. 424

[9] Kurtis R. Schaeffer, The attainment of immortality: from Nāthas in India to Buddhists in Tibet (2003).

vendredi 12 avril 2024

How inoffensive are religious metaphors and frames?


The religious view of the cosmos and the origin of life that is still in use in our times is a God-centered one in a geocentric model, where “matter”, both subtle and gross, is a combination of the four elements, held together by “intellect” and “life”, and often infused with a “higher consciousness” (nous). From a modern scientific point of view, regardless of the existence of “God”, or a creator, it is an outdated view. Yet, the whole religious spiritual path is built on such a view, which hasn’t changed for thousands of years. The cosmos in which we live and the religious cosmos have irrevocably driven apart. Religions live in the past, because that’s where their divine revelations and references are, that may not be interfered with at loss of authority. Interpretations are the only way for minor temporary adjustments that will last as long as the next interpretation, whether seen and presented as a return to tradition or as progress.

The ancient cosmos and “nature” (“physics”) were considered to be animated by agents, called “daimones” or “genii”, both for believers and “unbelievers”. The “nature” of so-called “natural philosophers” was an animated one. There were debates about whether the intellect was a byproduct of the four elements, or the four elements a product/emanation of the intellect, but there was no doubt that “nature” was animated. Both “theists” and “non-theists” (anachronism) would have agreed on that. This was a given and all would turn to whatever “natural” means and “natural” agents (daimones) available to improve their lives, with perhaps some few exceptions such as Heraclites, Democritus, Epicure etc.

Religion is a given too. There is no point in denying this. Regarding religion, the śramaṇa Buddha may be considered as a minimalist. Śramaṇa ascetics were Do-It-Yourself daimonifiers. They would follow “natural” laws (of which transmigration could be a part) like everybody else, but, when possible, independently of “natural” agents. They measured their “progress” by their “ascension” in the cosmos in order to go beyond (unbind). But “what” exactly was making that ascension? The conglomerate of the four elements with consciousness as a byproduct? Such a conglomerate could only go so far, because earth and water won’t last in the higher and therefore more fiery spheres. The intellect (buddhi)? A “higher consciousness” (nous)? Is there such a thing, independently of the four elements and preexisting them, in Buddhism? In theory no. But in practice? How essenceless is the non-self, and how empty is emptiness, when there is thought to be some sort of a Divine Intellect or Light “above” it? The old Buddha refused to answer this sort of questions, the later ones loved to go into all the details and are still producing revelations that they plug into the minds of recently incarnated “daimones”.

Religions follow tradition, because this is necessary for the religious path to work, just like it did in the past. By following the same old religious maps one has the best chance to end up in the same old spheres, heavens, Pure lands, bhūmis etc. of the same old geocentric model cosmos, and the same material and/or immaterial “bodies”, piloted by something like a “higher consciousness”, that in the highest spheres would shed their burden (bhāra-sutta) and move on all by itself in order to join the Divine Light or something in that neighborhood. Wouldn’t this be like using an old flat world map or sat nav with directions, places, routes, service platforms and commodities that no longer exist? A flat world with the various stages of a huge and endless axis mundi.

Sure, this is a very materialistic way of looking at it, but, knowing what we know now, and living now, is there really any other way? This is the basic religious reference material. It is clearly outdated with regard to the modern view of the cosmos, the elements, and all the biological and neurological discoveries. How can it still “work”? Can a “reference” still work as a symbolic or mock reference, in spite of the huge gap, because of the principle of “I believe because it is absurd” (Credo quia absurdum)? For the first Christians and Buddhists however this view wasn’t absurd at all, it was the only one available, so how would the “absurdum” principle have “worked” for them? Moreover, and for different reasons, some contemporary Christians and Buddhists seem to believe it’s not absurd at all, on the contrary they believe it is true, but in ways that would go beyond our ordinary understanding. To them it somehow corresponds to the core of our awakened psychic or archetypal spiritual make-up, a deeper inner reality, or a higher reality…that hopefully would constitute a way out.

The same thing goes for the various agents (daimones) of “animated nature”. In the Tibetan Buddhist practice, like in allpolytheisticpractices in the past and still in the present, offerings made to “daimones”, deities, lamas, gods and demons are done on a daily basis. In esoteric Buddhism, our subtle body, is the microscopic copy of the macrocosmos, with its own internal axis mundi and its various levels (cakras), inhabited by deities, gods and demons, because “as above, so below”. The “actualized” unified macrocosmos and microcosmos is the same old animated geocentric model. How does a modern practitioner manage to live in two “cosmoses” at the same time? Through living a double life? Through imagining that our modern cosmos is actually an illusion (māyā) and the old one the real thing (sacred outlook)? What law should be followed then, those of the City of Man or of the City of God? The laws of one’s “temporary” countries or the religious laws? To whom should we turn in case we need help in practical matters (health, mental health, infamy, obstacles, obstacles for babies etc.), to worldly helpers or to daimones? “So many questions”.

One solution to try and close the growing gap between religion and philosophy was to continue the established rites of worship (tradition) whilst believing in the true nature of the gods/Gods/God for those who, for various reasons, liked to worship just like their ancestors. This was the case for the Greek Plutarch[1] (1st century BCE) and for the Indian Ratnākaraśānti[2] (11th century). The traditional continuation of worship (puja) is essential, like sacrifices were for Confucius for “the harmony between man and the general order of the world”. But “practice”, or rather praxis, is also the continuation, acting out, or embodiment of a theory, ideology or belief, through which it is tested against the reality (“ehi passiko”, come and see) it seeks to explain or transform, if that is indeed what one would like to do…

Food for thought. Ninety-eight percent of our thought is unconscious. “Most of your ideas, thoughts and opinions exist in your brain without you having any awareness of them. They just seem to automatically be there.” “These unconscious beliefs help determine our deeply-held moral, social and political beliefs.” “Powerful metaphors and frames, often repeated by politicians and the media, sink into our unconscious and create a concept of "common sense” — even when the ideas behind them are the opposite of sensible.” “Knowing that most thought is unconscious, campaigns focus on symbolic language, repetition, and emotional appeal.” “Once certain frames become established in the unconscious, they can be incredibly resilient. This is why changing someone's political opinion can be nearly impossible. Their cognitive frames need to be shifted, not just their conscious thoughts. That is very hard to do.” Quotes from FrameLab, a project by Gil Duran and George Lakoff.

Repetition, automatisms, can lead tonaturalandspontaneousreflexes and experiences, “that seem to be automatically there”, but “emerge” in fact from the ninety-eight percent of unconscious thought. Saṃskāra and vāsanā, as a Buddhist could say. Therefore we should be careful with the metaphors and frames we use and reproduce.

***

[1]If, then, you listen to the stories about the Gods in this way, accepting them from those who interpret the story reverently and philosophically, and if you always perform and observe the established rites of worship, and believe that no sacrifice that you can offer, no deed that you may do will be more likely to find favour with the Gods than your belief in their true nature, you may avoid superstition which is no less an evil than atheism.” "On Isis and Orisis," translation by Frank Cole Babbitt. Also see Bill Thayer online

[2](4) Or, if one meditates only on the true nature of what the deities stand for and not the deities, then in this case too, one would attain Buddhahood in many countless aeons but not quickly.

(5) Therefore, the meditation of both [the mind as deities and the true nature of the deities at the same time], because it is extremely pleasant to the mind and because it is a special kind of empowerment, causes one to obtain the highest perfect awakening very quickly
.” “Madhyamakanising” Tantric Yogācāra: The Reuse of Ratnākaraśānti’s Explanation of maṇḍala Visualisation in the Works of Śūnyasamādhivajra, Abhayākaragupta and Tsong Kha Pa Daisy S. Y. Cheung