Buddhism, Science And
The Western World
May 11, 2017 Adam Frank
NPR
When discussions about science and religion
turn into debates about science versus religion, Buddhism mostly
gets a pass.
Thanks to the work of the Dalai Lama and
others, Buddhism can seem far friendlier to modern, scientifically
minded sensibilities than the Abrahamic religions. This alignment
with science is strengthened by the widespread adoption of
mindfulness techniques — often derived from Buddhist and other
contemplative practices — in domains like medicine and
psychology.
So with its supposed empirical emphasis on
internal investigation, one might wonder if Buddhism is really a
religion at all or, at least, in same the sense as Western
monotheistic traditions. Maybe it's better described as a kind of
"science of happiness?"
Robert Sharf is a scholar of Buddhist studies
at UC Berkeley and he has, apparently, heard this kind of question
before. I was recently introduced to Sharf's insightful writings
via discussions about Buddhism and cognitive science with
philosopher Evan Thompson, who has been doing his own work in these
domains. For Sharf, the easy identification of Buddhism as a kind
of inward-directed science of the mind represents a particular
reading of its long and diverse traditions. Most importantly, what
we get in the West is, for Sharf, a kind of "Buddhist Modernism."
In particular, the affinity Buddhism is supposed to have with
science is, for Sharf, a very specific consequence of Buddhism's
historical encounter with the West — and to miss that history would
be to miss the richer veins of meaning in Buddhism as a
religion.
In a 2007 interview with Tricycle magazine,
Sharf pointed to the response of Buddhists in countries like Japan
and Sri Lanka during their encounters with Western culture in late
1800s. These nations were already being rocked by modernization
and/or colonization. At the same time, the West was undergoing its
own religious transformations. According Sharf, Protestants during
this period were confronting a "crisis of faith" due to the rise of
science. This led to new ways of thinking that tried to mesh
Christianity more smoothly with science and its rational worldview.
In this way, a confluence of Asian and Western interests began that
would help shape a new vision of Buddhism. As Sharf puts
it:
"...the critiques of religion that originated
in the West resonated with [Buddhist's] own needs as they struggled
with cultural upheavals in their homelands. [While] for Westerners,
Buddhism seemed to provide an attractive spiritual alternative to
their own seemingly moribund religious traditions. The irony, of
course, is that the Buddhism to which these Westerners were drawn
was one already transformed by its contact with the
West."
It is this transformed tradition with its
affinity with science that modern Americans are
encountering.
Sharf is not the only one to make this point.
In his book The Scientific Buddha Donald S. Lopez, Jr., a professor
in the department of Asian languages at the University of Michigan,
also sees a lot of selection in what comprises Western Buddhism. In
his words:
"For the Buddha to be identified as an ancient
sage fully attuned to the findings of modern science, it was
necessary that he first be transformed into a figure who differed
in many ways from the Buddha who has been revered by Buddhists
across Asia over the course of many centuries."
Of course, by its very nature religion, all
religions, are changed by their encounters with new cultures. This
is particularly true of Buddhism and its steady march eastward from
its birth in India 2,500 years ago. Religions always have a way of
outgrowing their own scriptural and ritual basis, while
simultaneously holding on to them. As author Karen Armstrong has
shown, practitioners in any age are always selecting out those
parts of their religions that are meaningful to them while ignoring
the parts that seem dated. She called the process "creative
misreading."
Sharf has no problem with the creative
misreading that allows Buddhist Modernism to share space with
scientific worldviews. "My concern," he told Tricycle, "is not with
the selectivity of those who read Buddhism as a rationalist and
scientific religion — it is perfectly understandable given the
world in which we live. It is really not a question of misreading.
It is a question of what gets lost in the process."
Part of the problem for Sharf and others is
that by focusing only on the domains of inner experience (i.e.
mindfulness via contemplative practice), Buddhist Modernism loses
aspects of its function that were central to its history. "Look at
how suspicious many Western Buddhists are of religious ritual," he
says in the Tricycle interview, "... when we downplay ritual, we
risk weakening our bonds to community and tradition. That's a
pretty major loss."
But just as important for both Sharf and Lopez
are the tensions that they think should exist between the Buddhist
and Western worldviews. As Lopez puts it:
"If an ancient religion like Buddhism has
anything to offer science, it is not in the facile confirmation of
[science's] findings ... the Buddha, the old Buddha, not the
Scientific Buddha, presented a radical challenge to the way we see
the world, both the world that was seen two millennia ago, and the
world that is seen today."
Sharf is specific in terms of the challenge he
thinks Buddhism presents the sciences' presumed philosophical
basis. "In order to make Buddhism compatible with science," Sharf
says, "Buddhist Modernism ... accepts a Cartesian dualistic
understanding of the world." This Cartesian separation would, he
claims, be pretty weird to most Buddhist teachers throughout its
history. As he puts it:
"Traditional Buddhist epistemology, for
example, simply does not accept the Cartesian notion of an
insurmountable gap between mind and matter. Most Buddhist
philosophies hold that mind and object arise interdependently, so
there is no easy way to separate one's understanding of the world
from the world itself."
Keeping these differences at the forefront is
important for Sharf because, he claims, they offer possibilities of
generating something more truly original. "In discarding everything
that doesn't fit with our modern view," he says, "we compromise the
tradition's capacity to critique this modern view."
I'm someone interested in how philosophical
traditions from India and Asia might add new dimensions to some key
debates in science. In that sense, I have always been sympathetic
to Buddhist Modernism and am interested in the Scientific
Buddha.
But I also believe scholars like Sharf, Lopez
and Thompson all have a lot to teach us with their close reading of
Buddhism's philosophy and history. As Sharf himself points out, we
don't have to "argue for a naive acceptance of Buddhist
epistemology and cosmology" to be informed about the best ways to
realistically engage with its philosophical insights. "But," as
Sharf says, "we won't see what Buddhism has to offer if, at the
outset, we twist it out of shape to make it conform to contemporary
norms."