<p>"Gyatso has put together a collection written by some of the indisputably top-ranking people in the field. All the contributors are internationally recognized scholars, and the level of their essays is uniformly very high: scholarly, erudite, but above all pioneering, fresh, original. The collection is thought-provoking and challenging, yet deeply responsible and responsive to the tradition of textual interpretation. It is very interesting, gripping from beginning to end." — David M. Levin, Northwestern University</p>
This book studies the diverse array of species of memory in Buddhism. Contributors focus on a particular school, group of texts, terms, or practices and identify a considerable range of types of mnemonic faculties in Buddhism. Included are discussions of Buddhist teaching, meditation, visualization, prayer, commemoration of the Buddha, dhārani practice, the use of mnemonic lists to condense lengthy scriptures, and the purported recollection of infinite previous lives that immediately preceded Sakyamuni's attainment of Buddhahood. Even enlightened awareness itself is said by some Buddhist schools to consist in a "mnemic engagement" with reality as such.
The authors explore Buddhist views on mundane acts of memory such as recognizing, reminding, memorizing, and storing data as well as special types of memory that are cultivated in religious practice.One of the most striking discoveries is that perception is intimately related to certain types of memory. Several essays investigate if, and if so, how, meditative mindfulness and recollection of the past-both of which can be designated by the term smrti-are connected within the Buddhist tradition. The question of whether recollection of the past can be explained without violating the foundational Buddhist notions of radical impermanence and no-self is addressed by several of the contributing scholars.
Among the primary sources for the studies in this volume are the northern and southern Abhidharma literature, the Mtks, Pli and Mahyna stras, works of the Buddhist logicians, Yogācāra materials, the Tibetan Great Perfection (Rdzogschen) tradition, and Indian and Tibetan commentarial works. Affinities of Buddhist views on memory with those found in Western phenomenology, semiology, psychology, and history of religions are considered as well.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Janet Gyatso
Memories of the Buddha
Donald S. Lopez, Jr.
Smrti in the Abhidharma Literature and the Development of Buddhist Accounts of Memory of the Past
Padmanabh S. Jaini
The Omission of Memory in the Theravadin List of Dhammas: On the Nature of Sanna
Nyanaponika Thera
Mindfulness and Memory: The Scope of Smrti from Early Buddhism to the Sarvastivadin Abhidharma
Collett Cox
Memory in Classical Indian Yogacara
Paul J. Griffiths
Buddhist Terms for Recollection and Other Types of Memory
Alex Wayman
The Matikas: Memorization, Mindfulness, and the List
Rupert Gethin
Letter Magic: A Peircean Perspective on the Semiotics of Rdo Grub-chen's Dharani Memory
Janet Gyatso
Commemoration and Identification in Buddhanusmrti
Paul Harrison
The Amnesic Monarch and the Five Mnemic Men: "Memory" in Great Perfection (Rdzogs-chen) Thought
Matthew Kapstein
Remembering Resumed: Pursuing Buddhism and Phenomenology in Practice
Edward S. Casey
Glossary
Contributors
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Janet Gyatso is Assistant Professor of Religion at Amherst College.