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2020/09/12

Buddhism without Beliefs: A Contemporary Guide to Awakening by Stephen Batchelor | Goodreads

Buddhism without Beliefs: A Contemporary Guide to Awakening by Stephen Batchelor | Goodreads








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Buddhism without Beliefs: A Contemporary Guide to Awakening

by
Stephen Batchelor
4.04 · Rating details · 7,546 ratings · 400 reviews
A national bestseller and acclaimed guide to Buddhism for beginners and practitioners alike

In this simple but important volume, Stephen Batchelor reminds us that the Buddha was not a mystic who claimed privileged, esoteric knowledge of the universe, but a man who challenged us to understand the nature of anguish, let go of its origins, and bring into being a way of life that is available to us all. The concepts and practices of Buddhism, says Batchelor, are not something to believe in but something to do—and as he explains clearly and compellingly, it is a practice that we can engage in, regardless of our background or beliefs, as we live every day on the path to spiritual enlightenment. (less)

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Paperback, 127 pages
Published March 1st 1998 by Riverhead Books (first published April 14th 1997)
Original Title
Buddhism without Beliefs: A Contemporary Guide to Awakening
ISBN
1573226564 (ISBN13: 9781573226561)
Edition Language
English

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We do not receive wisdom, we must discover it for ourselves, after a journey through the wilderness, which no one else can make for us, which no one can spare us, for our wisdom is the point of view from which we come at last to regard the world. Marcel Proust Is not Stephen telling us we are free to chose not to believe anything, and that if we seek to lessen our anguish we might explore Siddhartha Gautama four ?

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Jun 01, 2010Greg rated it liked it
Shelves: buddhism
In my personal and soon to be trademarked ethical system, Don't be an Asshole, this book would garner a thumbs up and I'd recommend it as a guidebook for not being an asshole, with Meditation! Or if that is grammatically suspect using meditation to not be an asshole. Not how to use meditation in an non-assholically manner, but that might be the case too.

For some reason this book took me two months to read. At 120 pages, that means I averaged a whopping two pages a day. Yay, me! Not that I read it everyday, actually I didn't read it most days. It wasn't that the book wasn't interesting to me, it was, but it was pretty much just a feel good exercise of affirming that there is another way not being an asshole out there. One that sounds pretty alright, but which I'm not sure why one would embrace it necessarily.

From the scant bit I know about Buddhism there are lots of good things taught, and not all of the bad baggage that the Abrahamic religions have. There is some weird shit, but according to this book you can kind of push that stuff aside, or put it in an indefinite epoche and never phenomenologically touch them again. Actually the practice taught in this book isn't all that different from existentialism (yes I know he wrote a book on existentialism and Buddhism), but without all the drinking and smoking, and with some sitting cross legged on the ground. And it's sort of like Critical Theory, but without the Marxism; and it is sort of like the Situationists, again without the drinking, sex, and the constant banning of members; and it's like the anarcho strands of punk, i.e., the Crasshole brand, but maybe with more of a sense of humor, and no real stance on the issue of women who shave: collaborators or not? And which of course is like the early day of Riot Grrrl, and just about every organic DIY punk scene for about the first six months before all of the rules and hierarchies step in and eventually some of the people you know have turned into scenesters, and then into proto-hipsters and finally whom you hear are living in Brooklyn and are making synthesizer music with a Gameboy.

It's sort of like all these 'in-spirit if not quite so much in practice, or if in practice not necessarily for so long' types of ideas/movements/scenes what-not. But with sitting and being quiet. Which maybe is what I need, since I like the ideas espoused by all of these anti-authoritarian / anti-consumerist ideas and since I no longer like academics or punks and go for silence the way I once upon a time went for loud music this might be for me. But then I think why sign up for something new, why not just keep doddering about in my own little world and not find myself once again disappointed by others? You know when you realize that half of them are actually fascists in disguise just waiting to push their own brand of rules about what is and what isn't acceptable. Is it because a community is something that is needed for people? Or is it not even a community but a name that is important? Being able to say I am a (______), rather than just knowing you are what you are even if there is no name you can easily attach to it or ready made community to fit into?

But, all my whining here aside this is a nice book with many worthwhile things in it. And I'll probably want to disavow everything I've said above a week from now.
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May 21, 2008Kat rated it it was amazing
Recommended to Kat by: Prof. Dana Jack
Shelves: 5-stars
Batchelor is not pro-Buddhism as a religion, or pro-religion at all. He advocates gently but incisively for a "passionate agnosticism"--admitting that you don't know and probably never can, but that this doesn't let you off the hook, since the attempt to find out is necessary to your mental/spiritual survival. He presents Buddhist techniques as common-sense, highly effective ways of dealing with existential problems, and Buddhist philosophy as a framework for understanding things that will become self-evident through doing the consciousness work.

This is the second or third time I've read most of this book before having to return it to the library. I don't identify as Buddhist, but keep coming back to this book for different reasons. In college, the book helped me become aware of the inefficacy of my thought patterns and try to begin to clear some of the clutter and use my mental energy more effectively. That point is exactly as salient for me as it ever was, but on re-reading I also found crucial new ways of thinking about mortality, which has really been anguishing me lately. Batchelor points out that a fixation on death's certainty and the mystery of its timing is a good thing, because it leads to the question "what should I do with my life?" Keeping that at the forefront of one's mind is basically impossible without an emotional/physical concern with life's finiteness. I'm also interested in Batchelor's explanation of meditation itself as a tool for translating thought into emotional/physical knowledge, and that the latter is necessary to get things done.

I don't always require groundedness and common sense from spiritualists, but this book achieves this admirably. I also find a lot of pleasure in reading Batchelor's exceptionally clear, elegant prose. (less)
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May 13, 2017Jan-Maat added it · review of another edition
Shelves: buddhism, 20th-century
Quite possibly my only reason for reading this was so that I could write a review saying that this book throws the Buddha out with the bathwater. But my delight in making poor, feeble jokes is a ridiculous basis for writing reviews particularly when the author's aspiration is to throw the Buddhism out with the bathwater while saving the Buddha as a person who had certain ideas.

Apart from the beginning and the end of the book, Batchelor more or less forgets his objective, so most of the book is an account of how one might practice Buddhism on a daily basis: what one is aiming to cultivate in yourself and how one goes about this.

I think I was most curious, given that it was written by a man born in Scotland, and in this edition published by Bloomsbury, by the Americanisms of side-walks and diapers in the text, in place of the more familiar pavements and nappies. Apart from this then I wondered why did Batchelor write the book - what was he aiming to achieve, why strip out the supernatural or metaphysical bits from the Buddhist system leaving us with something like a pre-Socratic philosophy with an ethical system? Fortunately I didn't have to break my brain over the question since the author kindly provided an answer or two himself.

It turns out that Batchelor envisions the creative collusion of Buddhism and "western" culture and thinks the different notions of freedom in both will be most mutually enriching by stripping out the idea of reincarnation in favour of an agonistic approach to the whole - in plain speech : 'I don't know', it strikes me this may satisfy him, but that some people may be attracted to or find meaningful exactly what he throws out with the bathwater, secondly I do wonder when you start to hack chunks out of a tradition, what you are left with - is tree surgery a success if after the operation there is no longer any tree?

Such a creative collusion one could call syncretism, it's interesting seeing a person setting about it in such a deliberate way.

The nature of faith is that even if you were practising Buddhism, but found it impossible to believe in the metaphysical aspects of it then you'd be pretty much in Batchelor's agnostic position without needing to read his book (view spoiler), equally if you were practising and had no problem with the metaphysics then I don't think that that Batchelor's book has any particular convincing or resounding argument for you either. But it is a nice enough summary of an applied Buddhist practise without metaphysics if that is what you are looking for. (less)
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Jun 08, 2008Adrian Rush rated it it was amazing
Shelves: religion-spirituality, non-fiction-general-knowledge
As this gem of a book points out, "Buddhism without beliefs" is a redundancy. Batchelor cuts to the heart of what sets Buddhism apart from other world religious traditions: It encourages practitioners to question, to penetrate, to rigorously examine everything -- even the Buddha's teachings themselves -- and not to take things on blind faith. In other words, just because a religious leader hands you a doctrine and tells you to believe in something, that isn't good enough. The goal of Buddhism, after all, is to slice through our daily illusions and see the world as it really is, not as we want or hope it to be. We can even take this approach toward such Buddhist cornerstones as karma and rebirth. Batchelor recommends an agnostic but open approach toward the concept of literal reincarnation, for example. That seems to be a healthy approach.

It's also an important message to convey as Buddhism tries to take a foothold here in the skeptical West, where casual observers might see Buddhism as esoteric or exotic. Buddhism has indeed accumulated many practices and rituals -- and even unfounded beliefs and speculations -- in the centuries since it left India, and Batchelor asks us to look through those trappings to return to the kernel of Buddhist teaching. Anything else threatens to sway us from the Path and throw us into the world of clinging to illusions. A fine job.


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Oct 04, 2010Eric added it · review of another edition
Shelves: zen
I might use this as my standard recommendation both for

1. Fellow atheists and sort of Reason-oriented folks with a mistrust of religion. Point isn't try Buddhism, it's Different; as getting the point across about what Buddhism is about/after.

2. Folks who have embraced Buddhism but seem to have gotten the wrong idea about it (ha! as if I knew what the right idea was)

Quotes I found helpful:

"Dharma practice can never be in contradiction with science, not because it provides some mystical validation of scientific findings, but because it simply is not concerned with validating or invalidating them. Its concern lies entirely with the nature of existential experience"

This is particularly important for me because I was never really happy with how people seem content to quote Einstein as saying Buddhism was the only science-friendly religion (apocryphal?), or the Dalai Lama saying that if science should contradict Buddhism the latter should change, or even the "be a light unto yourself" thing from the Buddha. Batchelor's "not because it provides some mystical validation of scientific findings" is a very good guard against that sort of fuzzy headedness. That's still not enough, IMHO; there's more to say, but what a wonderful start

Another nice one: "We should be wary of being seduced by charismatic purveyors of Enlightenment. For true friends seek not to coerce us, even gently and reasonably into believing what we are unsure of. True friends are like midwives who draw forth what is waiting to be born. Their task is not to make themselves indispensable but redundant"

Bingo. OK, this sort of thing has been said before, but what I like about the way Batchelor says things is that he anticipates where people could get the wrong idea about what you're saying and heads them of. His "even gently and reasonably" is an example of this, as his "not because it provides some sort of mystical validation"

I'm a bit uncomfortable with the eagerness to port Buddhism to modern Western liberal culture. Just a bit; it makes sense that it had to be ported to Chinese and other East Asian cultures, etc. It's a sort of "don't fuck with tradition" skepticism on my part, not because the traditions themselves have any inherent value, but because Tradition has a sort of virtue of being time-tested/robust (along with many flaws like noise, corruption [errors crept into the genes], inflexibility). But Batchelor himself acknowledges and anticipates this. I guess I just lean a little bit more on the conservative end of the spectrum, all the while agreeing heartily with what he says. (less)
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Sep 08, 2013Richard rated it did not like it
Shelves: not-gonna-read, nonfiction, abandoned, religion-theology
See postscript for a possible replacement for this failed attempt.

Meh. Maybe I shouldn't have expected much, but I was beginning to be disappointed even before the first chapter began, and the opening lines of that chapter confirmed my suspicion.

The "without Beliefs" of the title is, frankly, a lie. Perhaps this is a description of Buddhism with something subtracted, such as the mystical mumbo jumbo that seems to inhere in anything as old as a major world religion (and, of course, especially in religions), but there are still plenty of beliefs.

For example, the Buddha was still the enlightened one.

That's the first thing that I was hoping to see dispensed with.

You see, I strongly suspect that the founder of any religion was a relatively enlightened genius — for the time. But over on the science side, anyone will acknowledge that while Aristotle — or Galileo, or al-Khwārizmī, or even Newton — is considered brilliant, they're no longer the font of all wisdom.

So why is every religious system so incredibly hung up on their founder? Isn't is more likely that someone studying the Buddha has surpassed the master in the understanding of some aspect of enlightenment, or whatever it is that the religion is supposed to be providing?

Naturally, if the founder is deified, that can't happen. But I was hoping for something better here.

As far as I can tell, Buddhism teaches a more psychologically and philosophically astute version of what the Stoics were working on, at least via the practice of meditation, for example. But if there is a way of learning these ideas without having to wade through and discard all the accumulated dross of centuries of mysticism and power politics between schisms, this doesn't seem to be it.

Postscript: According to the New Yorker article What Meditation Can Do for Us, and What It Can’t: Examining the science and supernaturalism of Buddhism, the arch-agnostic Robert Wright has written Why Buddhism is True: The Science and Philosophy of Enlightenment. The article includes—
Wright’s is a Buddhism almost completely cleansed of supernaturalism. His Buddha is conceived as a wise man and self-help psychologist, not as a divine being[….]

This is a pragmatic Buddhism[….] Nearly all popular books about Buddhism are rich in poetic quotation and arresting aphorisms, those ironic koans that are part of the (Zen) Buddhist décor—tales of monks deciding that it isn’t the wind or the flag that’s waving in the breeze but only their minds. Wright’s book has no poetry or paradox anywhere in it. Since the poetic-comic side of Buddhism is one of its most appealing features, this leaves the book a little short on charm. Yet, if you never feel that Wright is telling you something profound or beautiful, you also never feel that he is telling you something untrue.Joe Bob says check it out.
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Jan 17, 2012Jeff rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: owned
It's long been a cause of great frustration that my attempts to investigate the Buddhist philosophy have repeatedly plunged me into the supernatural. Over the centuries, and in different ways in different areas, Buddhism has become a religion, collecting various ideas on the after-life, reincarnation, multi-incarnation karma, Buddhist hells, demons, and even a pantheon of near-divine once-humans to whom we are exhorted to chant or prostate or pray. Or any combination of the above.

And this was frustrating because I was also vaguely aware that, at its core, what the Buddha taught was not a series of beliefs but, rather, a series of practices to be undertaken in order to smooth one's passage through this life.

In this book, Stephen Batchelor strips out this accumulated religious baggage and leaves behind something more akin to those original agnostic teachings, neither demanding that non-material, spiritual aspects to existence be accepted as real, nor insisting that they are not. It concentrates purely on the practical, attempting to show how the Buddha taught "anguish and the ending of anguish", a means to end suffering. He admits that the Buddha himself appeared to have mystical beliefs but stresses that these were part of his cultural heritage and not in any way relevant to his teachings.

He sets out the Buddha's teachings of dharma practice in a clear and easily comprehensible manner, making the ancient concepts relevant to the modern reader. Even concepts normally regarded as difficult such as non-duality are introduced in a way that makes sense in a non-mystical world-view. In line with the original attitude of the Buddha, he doesn't deny a mystical dimension to our reality but nor does he discuss one; it is impossible from this book alone to gain any insight into the author's beliefs in this area, a sound achievement in this particular context.

I would assume that in a relatively short book like this one he has had to be somewhat superficial but in any case it provides plenty of food for thought. I already know that I will be re-reading this particular volume, probably several times, but it's also whetted my appetite for further exploration, both in book form an in a far more practical sense.

In short, I cannot recommend this book highly enough. (less)
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May 06, 2010DJ rated it it was ok
Recommended to DJ by: David Livingston
Reading this book was a bit like listening to my grandpa rant about LBJ's foreign policy decisions - he's probably right, but without the background to appreciate his frustrations, all I can do is listen and squirm awkwardly in my chair.

Batchelor's book is a polemic against the modern transformation of Buddhism into something as dogmatic and unquestioning as Western religions. He points out that Buddhism is a personal practice of continual awareness and questioning, not a set of beliefs, commitments, or rituals. His insights into Buddhist practices were thought-provoking but being a man of science (and therefore atheist, culturally bankrupt, anti-humanities of course), I didn't have the religious or historical background to appreciate many of his complaints about the disfigurement of Buddhism.

This short book is meant to be read slowly. Each chapter offers ideas worth taking the time to reflect upon and some also suggest particular meditations. Unfortunately, I was borrowing this from a friend at university and had to power through it in two evenings before leaving for the summer.

I likely won't return to this book again though, because my interests in Buddhism are related to cultivating continual awareness, not in defending it against a deplorable watering down for the masses. (less)
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May 13, 2019Caroline rated it did not like it
Shelves: did-not-finish
I only got to about page 35 with this book. As a total newbie to Buddhism, I just found it too difficult to understand. The writing was quite simple, but ideas were just too difficult for me to grasp. I was left just feeling stupid (which may well be the case.) Here are a couple of examples of concepts which evaded me ....

"Likewise, the Buddha acknowledged the existential condition of anguish. On examination he found its origins to lie in self-centred craving. He realized that this could cease, and prescribed the cultivation of a path of life embracing all aspects of human experience as an effective treatment."

"As with understanding anguish, the challenge in letting go of craving is to act before habitual reactions incapacitate us. By letting go of craving it will finally cease. This cessation allows us to realize, if only momentarily, the freedom, openness, and ease of the central path. This sudden gap in the rush of self-centred compulsion and fear allows us to see with unambiguous immediacy and clarity the transient, unreliable, and contingent nature of reality."

For the time being, I don't think I am going to explore Buddhism further. (Mostly because I find meditating difficult, but also because this book has made me feel that Buddhism is something I am not going to be able to grasp.) (less)
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Dec 01, 2008Wayne rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Recommends it for: anyone interested in the essentials of Buddhism, no nonsense stuff.
Recommended to Wayne by: Big Sister Di !!
Shelves: re-reads, buddhism-self-help


To join the Big Clubs or Cults of Catholicism, Hill Song, the Evangelicals etc. etc one must accept a certain set of so-called truths which in no way impinge on the ethical. (I've known plenty who swear by the Virgin Birth but cheat on their wives.)
Buddhism, shorn of its religious trappings of prayer wheels, exotic names, orange robes, priesthoods, hierarchies and consequent blinding fog etc. becomes no set of beliefs but a way of behaving, which we often stumble upon ourselves through sheer common sense.

I quote from the back cover:

"Buddhism Without Beliefs" demystifies Buddhism by explaining, without jargon or obscure terminology, what awakening is and how to practise it.

Stephen Batchelor points out that the Buddha was not a mystic and his awakening was not a shattering revelation that revealed the mysteries of God or of the universe - what the Buddha taught was not something to believe in but something to do. Buddha challenged people to understand the nature of anguish, let go of its origins, realise its cessation and create a certain way of life and awakening. This awakening is available to all of us, and Batchelor examines how to work realistically towards it, and how to practise and live it every day.

This book is an examination of Buddhism which will enable all readers, whether religious or agnostic, to grasp the fundamental meaning of Buddhism." (less)
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Dec 12, 2015Marc rated it it was amazing
Shelves: owned, nonfiction, philosophy-or-philosophical, for-the-soul
It's probably been nearly two decades since I read anything by Stephen Batchelor, but few write with the kind of clarity and thoughtfulness as he does. Sure, this covers the basics, but he always manages to frame things in a different light, to use analogies that open up different perspectives, and to simultaneously convey both a simplicity and an awe about life and approaching it through Buddhism. Instead of rambling on, I'll just share a few choice passages:


"Agnosticism is no excuse for indecision. If anything, it is a catalyst for action; for in shifting concern away from a future life and back to the present, it demands an ethics of empathy rather than a metaphysics of fear and hope."

"A world of contingency and change can offer only simulacra of perfection. When driven by craving, I am convinced that if only I were to achieve this goal, all would be well. While creating the illusion of a purposeful life, craving is really the loss of direction. It is a process of compulsive becoming. It spins me around in circles, covering the same ground again and again. Each time I think I have found a situation that solves all my problems, it suddenly turns out to be a reconfiguration of the very situation I thought I was escaping from. My sense of having found a new lease on life turns out to be merely a repetition of the past. I realize I am running on the spot, frantically going nowhere."

"Instead of taking ourselves so seriously, we discover the playful irony of a story that has never been told in quite this way before."

"In today's liberal democracies we are brought up to realize our potential as autonomous individuals. It is hard to envisage a time when so many people have enjoyed comparable freedoms. Yet the very exercise of these freedoms in the service of greed, aggression, and fear has led to breakdown of community, destruction of the environment, wasteful exploitation of resources, the perpetuation of tyrannies, injustices, an inequalities. Instead of creatively realizing their freedoms, many choose the unreflective conformism dictated by television, indulgence in mass-consumerism, or numbing their feelings of alienation and anguish with drugs. In theory, freedom may be held in high regard; in practice it is experienced as a dizzying loss of meaning and direction."

Hard to believe this was written almost 20 years ago. The strength of his message has grown with time. (less)
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Nov 10, 2015Jessie Mukavetz rated it liked it
4 stars for content, 3 for execution and delivery.

Buddhism Without Beliefs was not a particularly easy read, despite its slight page count. Stephen Batchelor's prose was very, very, very dry. Although he clearly and concisely explained the concepts of Buddhism unlike I've previously read (Buddhism in Very Plain English would be an apt alternative title), his language was imbued with absolutely no sense of style, wit, or warmth. It's not a book to sit down and knock out in a day or two. I barely managed one chapter a day.

Batchelor's examination of Buddhism and how it has been transformed from a practice to an organized religion was—pun intended—enlightening. He wrote: "While Buddhism has tended to become reductively identified with its religious forms, today it is in further danger of being reductively identified with its forms of meditation." Yoga, anyone?

Batchelor broke down a lot of barriers that have been preventing me from committing too deeply to Buddhism, such as feeling like an outsider. If I view Buddhism as an agnostic thought practice, as Siddhārtha Gautama intended, then I don't have to feel intimidated by the formal religious aspects—temples, monks, worshippers, scriptures, and idols. Batchelor's description of desire, or craving, is one that I will remember for quite some time:


"'Letting go' is not a euphemism for stamping out craving by other means. As with anguish, letting go begins with understanding: a calm and clear acceptance of what is happening. [...] Without stamping it out or denying it, craving may be renounced the way a child renounces sandcastles: not by repressing the desire to make them but by turning aside from an endeavor that no longer holds any interest."(less)
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May 19, 2013Matthew Fellows rated it it was amazing
Very good. For those interested in finding a meaningful way of navigating existence without the dogmatic mystical nonsense of religion I cannot recommend this book highly enough. Incidentally, this philosophical approach provides a great alternative to the inane neo-hippie/hipster appropriation of Buddhist catchwords so prevalent in some parts of contemporary Western culture.

I was going to fault Batchelor for not explicitly pointing out the ways in which this secular Buddhism is so strikingly similar to Existentialism (of the Heideggerean and Sartrean variants, not that Victor Frankl psychotherapy nonsense which happens to be hard to distinguish from Western hipster Buddhism...) until I realized that he has dedicated a whole book to this perspective in his Alone with Others: An Existential Approach to Buddhism. (less)
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Sep 23, 2019Sarah Ames-Foley rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Shelves: non-fiction, religion, spirituality, philosopy
16 highlights
This review can also be found on my blog.

This was not a complete waste of time, but was close to it. The book detaches buddhism from religion and formats it not as a belief system, but a certain way of living. At first, I was really impressed with the ideas presented and felt I was getting a lot out of it. According to Dealing with “anguish” seems to be hinged on creating a perspective in which all is temporary: our “cravings” have not always existed, thus they will not always exist. It is turning our feelings into things we can watch ebb and flow rather than something that will overtake us entirely. Action is repeatedly emphasized as the key to dharma practice.

The formatting of the book seems to be without logical flow; it felt more like a general rambling than something coherently laid out. The chapters themselves confused me, as I felt like the author was talking himself around ideas and as soon as he began to approach what I thought was the point, the chapter would end unceremoniously. It was frustrating, since it started out explaining so many interesting ideas only to turn into something unstructured and unhelpful. It seems this may have made a better essay than an entire book. Also, the author is weirdly obsessed with someone they call S, who they refer to as their enemy and who apparently riles them up often. It was strangely distracting. (less)
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May 10, 2018Amy Sturgis rated it really liked it
Shelves: 20th-century, philosophy, buddhism
This was exactly what I was looking for after reading Why Buddhism is True: The Science and Philosophy of Enlightenment by Robert Wright. Stephen Batchelor investigates the background and meaning of the Buddha's teaching -- not Buddhism, Batchelor argues, but dharma practice -- and submits that the Buddha taught a method, not a creed. Or, as Batchelor puts it, "The dharma is not a belief system by which you will be miraculously saved. It is a method to be investigated and tried out." At the heart of this, Batchelor notes, is a foundation of true agnosticism, "a passionate recognition that I do not know."

I will be chewing on this for a while. I recommend it to anyone interested in what's often called "secular Buddhism." (less)
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Oct 30, 2011Craig Shoemake rated it it was amazing
Shelves: buddhist-philosophy, theravada-buddhism
This is my second reading of this book. I can't remember exactly when I read it the first time; the early ohs, probably. But given some of the comments I'd made in the margins, I expected to disagree-perhaps violently-with a lot of it. I was pleasantly surprised.

One thought that kept occurring to me as I read was to try to figure out if the book was appropriate for beginners to Buddhism, or strictly for more experienced sorts. Honestly, I'm still not sure about that, because exactly how to classify Batchelor's little tome even seems problematic. To be frank, I'm not sure you can say it is about Buddhism. It talks a lot about the Buddha and his teachings, no doubt, but the impression I get is that it is more of a meditation on the implications of dharma and dharma practice for modern men and women than something about Buddhism as Buddhism. For example, you get very little of the traditional points of doctrine, or even meditation practice, though a few exercises are discussed. These are all in the background, though, like pieces of furniture, and the reader is expected to find his or her own familiar seat among them and listen while Batchelor discusses whatever's on his mind. So, on this account I think it must be for advanced dharma folks...

But perhaps not. Many people, those "with little dust in their eyes," will be startled and stimulated by Batchelor's eloquent, often insightful ponderings. He points out that the Buddha's way of awakening did not begin as a religion-is not really a religion at all-but started out as an expression of one amazing man's experience of freedom, of his putting an end to suffering-or, as Batchelor rather oddly terms it, "anguish." (I must confess, this translation of the word dukkha jarred me from beginning to end. It's rather too extreme and not general enough.) Batchelor goes on to say-and here is where the controversy starts-that the proper attitude, the one in keeping with the Buddha's own, is agnosticism, a critical, even desperate sense of not knowing, of being open to insight.

At times he explicates this position brilliantly. Consider this passage, for me one of the highlights of the book:

"Such unknowing is not the end of the track: the point beyond which thinking can proceed no further. This unknowing is the basis of deep agnosticism. When belief and opinion are suspended, the mind has nowhere to rest. We are free to begin a radically other kind of questioning.

"This questioning is present within unknowing itself. As soon as awareness finds itself baffled and puzzled by rainfall, a chair, the breath, they present themselves as questions. Habitual assumptions and descriptions suddenly fail and we hear our stammering voices cry out: "What is this?" Or simply: "What?" or "Why?" Or perhaps no words at all, just "?"

"The sheer presence of things is startling. They provoke awe, wonder, incomprehension, shock. Not just the mind but the entire organism feels perplexed. This can be unsettling...

"The task of dharma practice is to sustain this perplexity within the context of calm, clear, and centered awareness..." (pp. 97-8)

A few paragraphs below, Batchelor writes in paraphrase of Tsongkhapa: "Questioning is the track on which the centered person moves." Herein lies the heart of the book.

Immediately I was reminded of the author's Korean Zen (Seon) roots and of the practice of the hwadu, better known by the Japanese term koan. For me the passage hit home for in fact the first awakening experience I ever had resulted from just such a sense of deep questioning following upon a very stimulating conversation with a friend, and my life has never been the same since.

Alas, Batchelor overreaches and in places his agnosticism descends into Western materialist pontificating. This occurs especially in the chapter entitled "Rebirth," where he makes a number of groundless assertions. For example, on page 34 he says "The Buddha accepted the idea of rebirth." The texts, however, make it clear that rebirth was a matter of experiential fact for the Buddha as well as many of his disciples. (My own experience inclines me, rather strongly, to side with the textual accounts.) Batchelor goes on to say "In accepting the idea of rebirth, the Buddha reflected the worldview of his time." But in fact the Buddha redifined the understanding of this process, from one involving a reincarnating soul (atman) to one of impersonal consciousness taking form dependent upon conditions. Cf. the Mahatnhasankhaya Sutta (M.38) which begins "Now on that occasion a pernicious view had arisen in a bhikkhu named Sati... thus: `As I understand the Dhamma taught by the Blessed One, it is this same consciousness that runs and wanders through the round of rebirths, not another.'" That "pernicious view" is none other than the ever popular reincarnation theory of Hinduism and Western New Age claptrap. Batchelor then claims "The Buddha found the prevailing Indian view of rebirth sufficient as a basis for his ethical and liberating teaching" (p. 35). But this is in direct contradiction to the quote from the Buddha on the opposite page: "But if there is no other world and there is no fruit and ripening of actions well done or ill done, then here and now in this life I shall be free from hostility, affliction, and anxieity, and I shall live happily..." Quite plainly, the Buddha's ethics did not derive from a "belief" in reincarnation of any sort. Rather, it was something that possessed independent merits and purpose. Batchelor's incoherence on this point undermines his otherwise excellent thesis that the spirit of the Buddha's teaching is not dogmatic or ideological, but practical, empirical and investigative.

It is quite fine though if someone wishes to remain agnostic on the question of rebirth. That is not an unreasonable position. But where Batchelor's materialist agenda really rears its ugly head is on page 37, where he claims karma (kamma in Pali) is some kind of "ancient Indian metaphysical theory." Batchelor says "...the Buddha accepted the idea of karma as he accepted that of rebirth..." But as he himself notes, the word karma literally means "action" and in the Buddha's psychology specifically conscious action or, to put it redundantly, "intentional intention." The notion that intentions and conscious actions have repercussions, that they condition the psyche and predispose it to certain influences and outcomes, is hardly a "metaphysical theory" but rather a fact seen in direct reflexive observation. A good course of vipassana meditation will make this apparent to any who harbor lingering doubts, for there the impersonal flow of cause and effect in the states and contents of consciousness become palpably, indeed painfully, clear.

Batchelor-good materialist that he is-adopts the notion that consciousness is entirely explicable in terms of brain function-itself an article of faith as yet unverified by any experiment or data. While no one will argue against the notion that changing brain structure or chemistry can alter conscious experience, it is also a fact that by thinking consistently in a certain way, or by determining to do something repetitively-both of which are acts of conscioussness-I can alter my brain structure and chemistry, thereby clearly demonstrating that consciousness and the brain are interdependent; it is not a one way street where the one strictly determines the other. Batchelor, however, is too ideological too consider this point.

I have not yet read this book's successor volume, Confessions of A Buddhist Atheist, which even Christopher Hitchens found palatable. From what I've read though, Batchelor there really presses his brand of agnosticism to the limits, perhaps to the point of utter failure. I'll leave my considerations on that one for a future review, if I ever get around to it. For now I would simply like to say that despite the above noted flaws, Buddhism Without Beliefs is a beautifully written, deeply thought and felt little book worthy of the attention it has received. Batchelor is a wise voice and an excellent writer to boot and though his book deserves criticism it also deserves praise. My final conclusion is that while beginners in Buddhism can benefit from the book, it will probably mean much more to those who have sufficient reading and practice under their belts.

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May 01, 2018Dan Slimmon rated it liked it
Shelves: non-fiction, philosophy
This book is very densely packed with wise-seeming aphorisms. And the nature of wisdom is that you can't tell whether it's actually wisdom until you learn it the hard way. So I guess I'll keep this book around, and I can come back when I'm old to tell myself I told me so.
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Sep 08, 2018Carrie Poppy rated it it was amazing
Great
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Mar 20, 2010Lori rated it really liked it
Recommends it for: agnostics
Shelves: spirituality-or-lack-of
"I am confused." writes Stephen Batchelor. "I am confused by the sheer irrationality, ambiguity, and abundance of things coming into being at all. I am confused by having been born into a world from which I will be ejected by death. I am confused as to who or why I am. I am confused by a labyrinth of choices I face. I don't know what to do."

He goes on: "This confusion is not a state of darkness in which I fail to see anything. It is partial blindness rather than sightlessness."

One way in which we can begin to gain deeper understanding of life and its mysteries is through meditation and contemplation of Dharma practice. Individuals from across faith groups have come to Buddhist thought as a method of digging deeper into their sense of awareness, compassion, responsibility and the pursuit of a more enlightened journey through life. Batchelor addresses dharma practice and Buddhist thought through the perspective of an agnostic.

Agnosticism, coined as a term by T. H. Huxley in 1869 is defined as a method rather than a creed. The principle is expressed as: "Follow your reason as far as it will take you." and "Do not pretend that conclusions are certain which are not demonstrated or demonstrable."

Batchelor expresses the key to my appreciation for the honesty of agnosticism succinctly when he writes that agnosticism is "founded on a passionate recognition that I DO NOT KNOW. It confronts the enormity of having been born instead of reaching for the consolation of a belief."

So much of what the author had to say resonated with my own conflicts. I WANT there to be more. I suspect that, in some way, there is. But I DO NOT KNOW. I appreciate Buddhist thought so much because it is not confined to a particular religion or dogma. It emphasizes individual study and contemplation and personal challenge to be a kinder and more thoughtful person. It does not give any easy "just join up with our group and reap eternal rewards" promise. Buddhist writings give me a spiritual outlet without forcing me to embrace the elements of organized religion that I mistrust.

There is a movement, however, to mystify Buddhism and to create a religious hierarchy around it. Some Buddhists feel comfortable with this approach. Other readers will be excited by the notion of Awakening as a more concrete process. In Batchelor's words: "Awakening is no longer seen as something to attain in the distant future, for it is not a thing but a process -- and this process is the path itself. We have not been elevated to the lofty heights of awakening; awakening has been knocked off its pedestal into the turmoil and ambiguity of everyday life."

I was very inspired by much of what was covered in this book. A slender volume broken down into short chapters, this book can be read and digested a little at a time. I took several notes as I read. Two of the passages that were especially thought provoking for me:

"Life is neither meaningful nor meaningless. Meaning and its absence are given to life by language and imagination."

"Awakening is indeed close by ---and supreme effort is required to realize it. Awakening is indeed far away -- and readily accessible."

Buddhism without Belief is highly recommended to anyone who is curious and not troubled by a lack of religious orthodoxy.
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Jan 07, 2013Behzad rated it it was amazing
For a long time, I have been interested in attempts to combine certain secular aspects of Western culture with Buddhism. Stephen Bachelor's Buddhism Without Beliefs is an important contribution to the effort to harmonize Western thought with the Buddhist understanding of the mind. Bachelor has helped me see that what I like the best about the West and Buddhism are the same -- the promise of a free mind. I can do without the rest -- the West's militarism, ideological conformity, and mindless consumerism; Buddhism's karma, reincarnation, and mythology.

Bachelor (among others) has tried to do with the Buddha what many, including Thomas Jefferson and Tolstoy, tried to do with Jesus -- peel away the layers of myth, the cultural and historical distortions, and keep only what was original and insightful about the teachings. Of course, such a project is probably impossible when dealing with religious figures who have been the subject of centuries of myth-making. When you are done peeling, what is left is often only what you started out wanting to find.

So perhaps it is more accurate to say that Bachelor has not discovered anything, but invented (or re-invented) a Buddhism that is palatable to the modern Western mind: a psychological understanding of the origins of our sufferings, meditation as a tool to still the mind, and a feeling in the bones of the reality of impermanence. (less)
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Sep 17, 2011Steve Woods rated it it was amazing
Shelves: favorites, buddhism, spirituality
Stephen Batchelor is an important author for anyone interested in Buddhism to become acquainted with. Many of the primary tenets of Buddhist practice are quite difficult for westerners to get to grips with and this book is probably the best primer I have seen. He strips away all the jargon and the religious mumbo jumbo that often keeps people from direct contact with a way of thinking and living life that has probably saved mine. The exercises he presents here provide an opportunity for first contact and a base from which to explore further. If a person works their way through this book carefully then goes to work by authors like Jack Kornfield, Frits Koster and Joseph Goldstein it will all satrt to make perfect sense. Essentially Batchelor puts the view that Buddhist practice as set out by the Buddha is possible and efficacious without the necessity to believe anything. He takes the Buddha's exhortation to believe only what one has experienced directly as given. Stripping away the stumbling blocks set up by the views of things like reincarnation and karma commonly held in the west has been a great service. A great first book. (less)
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Confession of a Buddhist Atheist

by
Stephen Batchelor
3.92 · Rating details · 3,716 ratings · 267 reviews
Written with the same brilliance and boldness that made Buddhism Without Beliefs a classic in its field, Confession of a Buddhist Atheist is Stephen Batchelor’s account of his journey through Buddhism, which culminates in a groundbreaking new portrait of the historical Buddha.

Stephen Batchelor grew up outside London and came of age in the 1960s. Like other seekers of his ...more

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Hardcover, 306 pages
Published March 2nd 2010 by Spiegel & Grau (first published 2010)
ISBN
0385527063 (ISBN13: 9780385527064)
Edition Language
English

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Apr 04, 2010Vegantrav rated it it was amazing
First, I should say a brief word about the title: Buddhism is an atheistic religion, so being a Buddhist atheist is not anything at all unusual. Now, granted, many sects of Buddhism believe in various deities and spirits; however, one of the key teachings of Siddhattha Gotama (Batchelor uses the Pali spellings) was his rejection of the theism--his rejection of the existence of Brahman and Atman: God, The Absolutle, the Self--of the Hindu culture in which he lived. Gotama's atheism, as Batchelor points out, was not an explicit argument against the existence of God but rather a recognition that the existence of God is not relevant to the human condition.

Batchelor's confession leads us down two intertwining paths: Batchelor's own personal spiritual journey and a biography of the life of Siddhattha Gotama.

Batchelor relates his initiation into Tibetan Buddhism and his life as a monk and his eventual "disrobing"--giving up the monastic life to become a lay Buddhist teacher. Despite belonging to a branch of Buddhism that retains many superstitious beliefs, Batchelor never had much, if any, affinity for the supernatural elements of that sect but rather sought the peace and truth to be discovered in meditation and in following Gotama's Dhamma (the Pali spelling of Dharma).

The real interest in this book, for me anyway, is Batchelor's quest for the historical Gotama, which is not unlike the quest for the historical Jesus in which biblical scholars are engaged. The Gotama whom Batchelor finds is a man who teaches some things that many Buddhists would find shocking: for example, Batchelor argues that Gotama rejected the belief in karma and reincarnation.

Batchelor's Gotama, though, is not terribly unlike other portraits of the Buddha (I am thinking here of Karen Armstrong's biography of the Buddha): Gotama is a wise and witty man who urges his followers to think for themselves, who urges them to take nothing on faith or on authority or even on his own word but to test all things for themselves. Yes, Gotama does think he has found the answer to salvation in this life, but nibbana (Pali for nirvana) is not some heavenly bliss or even just escape from samsara; rather, nibbana is the condition that is attained upon a recognition and acceptance of the contingency of one's existence and an acceptance of the suffering of life, an embracing of this suffering, and then a transcending of the suffering so that, despite its existence, there is a cessation (a blowing out: nibbana) of the effects of suffering and of one's contingent status upon one's life.

The biography of Gotama that Batchelor provides is drawn from the Pali Canon, and Batchelor uses many of the same critical methods that biblical scholars use in approaching the historical Jesus. Batchelor gives readers a great perspective on the political and social world in which Gotama lived. I am certainly no scholar of Buddhism or of the life of Siddhattha Gotama; however, it seems to me that Batchelor does a great job of providing an accurate portrayal of the life and times of Siddhattha Gotama, and he does so without trying to persuade anyone of any particular religious or philosophical beliefs.

Batchelor is simply telling us the story of the life of the Buddha, and for anyone interested in that story, I would highly recommend this book. The figure of Siddhattha Gotama who emerges in this book is one of who was far more of a philosopher than a religious figure, and Gotama was certainly not dogmatist and seems to have little interest at all in organized religion or in the supernatural elements (God, life after death, karma, spirits, etc.) with which many religions are deeply concerned.

What I found most attractive in this portrait of Gotama (and this feature is born out in other biographies of Gotama) was the emphasis on the individual finding truth for herself or himself. Gotama had attained enlightenment for himself, but he did not ask us to take anything that he taught on faith but rather to seek the truth for ourselves and even to put to the test the core teachings of his Dhamma. (less)
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Feb 01, 2013Rebecca Dobrinski rated it it was amazing
Atheism is NOT About You

Really, it’s not. It is not an affront to your existence. It is about science. It is about questioning and searching for answers. It is about thinking for oneself.

For the God-themed issue of Zen Dixie, I read three books on atheism. No, these books did not provide me with any life-changing realizations – it was more like, as “they” say, “preaching to the choir.”

Yes, I am an atheist. No, I do not believe in anyone else’s God. And, like I said in the opening paragraph, my atheism is not about anyone else but me.

After reading these books, I feel as though the world needs to be reminded that when someone realizes she is an atheist, it is not an attack on everyone else in the world that believes in God. This is the first striking lesson I learned from reading these books. People, even total strangers, take one’s atheism personally.

Next, I am still the same person you knew the minute before you read the words “I am an atheist.” Yep, still the same brunette with brown eyes, tattoos, and (multiple) degrees, who cares for her friends and volunteers for good causes. This is no different than if you never knew I had a cat.

This is another reminder the world needs after being told someone is an atheist. They are still the same person you liked, loved, and respected before you found out. Yes, you may be concerned that he will not be joining you in the afterlife, but he does not join you for dinner every night either. So, remember, it’s OK. The world will not end if your friend is an atheist.

And now, onto the show…

To start this themed review, I began with Seth Andrews’s Deconverted: A Journey from Religion to Reason.

Seth Andrews is the founder of The Thinking Atheist (TTA) community. You can find TTA at the web site (www.thethinkingatheist.com) and on Facebook. Andrews has a number of volunteers who help with the web site and Facebook page. Before he founded TTA, Andrews led a very different life – he was a Christian radio broadcaster and one of the outspoken faithful.

Andrews likened announcing one’s atheism to “dipping yourself in jet fuel and showing up for a candlelight church service. The crowd is convinced you’re going up in flames, and they’re terrified that you’ll take others with you.”

Deconverted was the story of Andrews’s journey from believer to atheist. He chronicled the doubt and questioning, the frustration, and ultimately his desire to “expose the flaws in the very teachings I once held so dear.”

He admitted to writing it in what he calls “plain English,” making the tone and language very accessible. Andrews also provided some insight into what many Americans have experienced when “coming out” as an atheist. He questioned the indoctrination of children into religion before they are mature enough to make the decision on their own. He pointed out the misogyny in the bible as well as the contradictions from book to book. All of these were the little things that planted the seeds of doubt and pushed Andrews to seriously consider the role religion played in his life and in society as a whole.

All in all, Andrews offered the following advice both in Deconverted and at The Thinking Atheist: Assume nothing. Question everything. Challenge the Opposition. And start thinking.

From Deconverted, I picked up Richard Dawkins’s The God Delusion.

Richard Dawkins came to atheism with the mind of science. Being a historian rather than a scientist, I admit that I found Dawkins to be somewhat dry in places. The God Delusion was an excellent book – and one I highly recommend – but, if you are like me, do not expect it to be a quick read.

Dawkins, much like Andrews, highlighted the many inconsistencies of the world’s religions. (Yes, I know that Dawkins wrote The God Delusion before Andrews wrote Deconverted, but I read Dawkins after Andrews – so, for me, this is an accurate statement.) He dove into the roots of religions and tackled the constant claim that “Hitler was an atheist.” (spoiler alert – he wasn’t)

Dawkins is one of the most widely read published atheists. Both believers and atheists read these books, which can be seen on the Amazon reviews. As I am sure you would expect, the reviews were either strongly for or against Dawkins’s book. The God Delusion is not geared toward converting those strongly attached to their faith, but it certainly reminds those questioning that they are not alone.

One of the parts that sticks with me most from Dawkins’s book is the “New Ten Commandments” he found on the ebonmusings.org web site. He calls them an expression of consensual ethics. Here are a few to ponder:

In all things, strive to cause no harm.
Live life with a sense of joy and wonder.
Always seek to be learning something new.
Question everything.

To these he added, along with three others, “Value the future on a timescale longer than your own.”

These commandments helped lead me to the third book, Stephen Batchelor’s Confession of a Buddhist Atheist.

I will admit, out of the three books this was the one I was most looking forward to reading. After being raised Catholic, I had more than a passing fancy for Buddhism. I read a lot and appreciated even more the ideals and guides for living that Buddhism provides.

Stephen Batchelor left his home in England and wound up in India, studying Buddhism where the exiled Dalai Lama resided. He became a monk and began working on translations of Buddhist texts into English. The more he learned, the more he taught others, especially westerners who were flocking to Buddhism in droves in the late 1960s.

Even before he made the decision to de-robe, Batchelor questioned the organization of Buddhism. He researched and read the ancient texts of Siddattha Gotama and learned that the way the Buddha taught was unlike the religion Buddhism had evolved into. As he explained, he wrote Confession of a Buddhist Atheist “from the perspective of a committed layperson who seeks to lead a life that embodies Buddhist values within the context of secularism and modernity.”

Batchelor was heavier on the Buddhism and lighter on the atheism, but that is not as bad a thing as I had originally thought. Upon finishing the book, I was somewhat disappointed that he devoted so much of the narrative to the history of Buddhism. After digesting the work for a day and pondering the ideas, I can see how the reader would need a greater understanding of the Buddha as Batchelor “knew” him.

Because of this, it is easier to not only grasp Batchelor’s de-robing, but to understand how and why he could not continue as a monk. It is also easier to understand that the Four Noble Truths and the eightfold path are not only tools of becoming enlightened, but are ways to creating a more civilized world and dealing with the pain and suffering of life.

With Buddhism, though, it is easier to grasp the transition from Buddhist monk to Atheist as early Buddhism is similar to the Ten Commandments Dawkins found.

There are some interesting observations to be made from these three books. On the surface, both Andrews and Batchelor were part of their respective clergy. Dawkins and Batchelor are both British. When broken down, each likely had similar paths of thinking that are quite compatible with each other.

This review (as a combination review/essay) originally appeared at Zen Dixie, http://www.zendixie.com/read.html (less)
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Apr 22, 2014Nandakishore Varma rated it liked it · review of another edition
This we may term the fundamental posture of the Buddhist mind. The serious commitment of the Occidental mind to the concerns and value of the living person is fundamentally dismissed, as it is in Jainism, and in the Sankhya too. However, the usual Oriental concern for the monad also is dismissed. There is no reincarnating hero-monad to be saved, released, or found. All life is sorrowful, and yet, there is no self, no being, no entity, in sorrow. There is no reason, consequently, to feel loathing, shock, or nausea, before the spectacle of the world: but, on the contrary, the only feeling appropriate is compassion (karuna), which is immediately felt, in fact, when the paradoxical, incommunicable truth is realized that all these suffering beings are in reality - no beings.



The main point of the doctrine is clear enough, however, which is, namely, that, since all things are without a self, no one has to attain extinction; everyone is, in fact, already extinct and has always been so. Ignorance, however, leads to the notion and therefore the experience of an entity in pain. And not disdain or loathing, but compassion is to be felt for all those suffering beings who, if they were only quit of their ego-notion, would know-and experience the fact-that there is no suffering person anywhere at all.

- Joseph Campbell, The Masks of God, Vol. III – Oriental Mythology


The above quote from Joseph Campbell (especially the highlighted portion) delineates the core concept of the philosophy propounded by Gautama Buddha – the non-existence of the soul. Here is where the Buddha takes off from the philosophies extant in India until that point of time, and takes the radical step of the killing off of the soul. Traditional Hindu thought posits the Atman, or individual soul, as an expression of the Brahman, the World Soul: the self and the Self. The aim of enlightenment is to realise that worldly existence is illusory: the “real” existence begins when one’s ego is extinguished and the oneness with the Brahman is known. This frees the soul from the cycle of karma, birth, rebirth and worldly existence.

The Buddha took this philosophy and stood it on its head. He agreed that suffering arises because of the attachment of the ego to the world – the basic illusory nature of the ego is to be understood, and let go. However, after this event, there is no unveiling of a beatific existence in an everlasting garden of the eternal bliss of oneness with the Brahman – because it doesn’t exist. In fact, nothing exists other than this fleeting moment, this here and the now. This is the liberation, the Nirvana.

On the practical front, the Hindu philosophies reinforced the existing political system. If one’s existence on this earth is illusory, it does not matter whether one is a Kshatriya king enjoying all the palace delights or a lowly untouchable scavenger carting away human excrement – the souls of both these people are parts of the same Brahman. In another life with different karma, they can be reversed until ultimately they merge with the world soul. The duty of the individual was to realise this and be a faithful cog in the machine, all the time trying to attain a higher plane of existence.

The Buddha did not question the fact that one is only a cog in the machine – however, by denying the existence of the soul, he proposed a different solution for the ending of pain: that of the cog to stop functioning as a cog. This was revolutionary in the sense that it threatened the existence of Indian society as one knew it at that point of time.

However, as Buddhism grew and spread as a religion, Gautama’s teachings were coloured and corrupted by the local beliefs wherever it reached. It seems that man’s need for transcendence proved stronger than his need for an earthly nirvana – the result is the religion which the world knows today as “Buddhism”, which is ridden with rituals and superstitions, and the very beliefs in karma and rebirth which the Buddha rejected. And in its birthplace in India, Buddhism was assimilated into Hinduism and the Buddha was transformed into an incarnation of Lord Vishnu!

In Confession of a Buddhist Atheist, internationally reputed Buddhist scholar and former monk Stephen Batchelor analyses this transformation. He does it as he recounts his career transformation from monk to layman; from his initiation into Buddhism under the Dalai Lama, to his loss of faith in its polytheistic worldview and subsequent shift to Zen Buddhism in Korea; his disenchantment with its worship of emptiness and hollow rituals which led to his eventual disrobing and marriage to a fellow bhikhuni (nun); his retracing of Siddhartha’s life journey geographically and historically while researching the Buddha’s discourses at the same time; and his ultimate realisation of its essential atheism.

The full review is available on my blog. (less)
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Feb 17, 2011Caitlin rated it it was amazing
Shelves: spirituality
Not since Chogyam Trungpa's "Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism" has an analysis of Buddhism had such a profound effect on me. Part spiritual autobiography, part scholarly text. Batchelor's monastic journey led to studies and work with many important teachers (the Dalai Lama, for one). But his quest became stymied by increasing unease, due to unquestioning allegiances, archaic conventions and, eventually, as he dug deeper into the Pali Canon (bless his patience), contradictions about the historical (romanticized) Buddha and what it appeared the Buddha was actually doing out there under that Bo Tree. It seems that Gautama, the existentialist, was caught in the midst of serious political struggles and cranky benefactors, never out to found a religion at all, but wishing to build community and share his prescription for removal of suffering (the Four Noble Truths). Only later, has the concept of enlightenment become synonymous with struggle and exclusivity, thanks to his vision having been hijacked and fractured by so many splintered schools of thought. That said, even Batchelor doesn't throw baby out with bathwater, and shows the utmost respect for different perspectives. In the end, though he doesn't remain convinced that there is anything beyond this life, he feels that Buddhism offers a tremendously sane and compassionate way to live, whether or not nirvana exists. Even if one doesn't agree with Batchelor, this is a highly important book on Buddhism, and should be read by all who practice Buddhism or wish to further understand this philosophy. (less)
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Apr 21, 2011James rated it it was ok
Shelves: buddhism
I gave up. He lost me when he ran out of stuff to say, but still had half the book left to write.
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Mar 20, 2010Jim Coughenour rated it did not like it
Recommends it for: fans of 1 star reviews
Shelves: memoir, spirituality
"I am glad I belong to a religion that worships a tree." No, this is not Jake Sully saluting the Na'vi in Avatar – it's Stephen Batchelor explaining his "Buddhist atheism." But in this case, 3D means dull, dispiriting and diffuse.

I enjoy confessions, especially when they involve spiritual conturbation: Mark Matousek's Sex, Death, Enlightenment; Andrew Harvey's The Sun at Midnight; even Frank Schaeffer's half-cocked Crazy for God. I also (if rarely) appreciate oblique approaches to spirituality, as in Jacob Needleman's Lost Christianity or Pankaj Mishra's An End to Suffering. What I don't enjoy or appreciate is a book by someone whose journey is as entropic as my own.

Batchelor (who, I have to say, sounds like a genuinely pleasant fellow) wanders through his story like a beggar with his bowl. He aims to recover the genuine teaching of the historical Buddha, but the closest he can get is the jumble of Pali palm-leaf manuscripts, compiled in Siam hundreds of years after Gotama's death. (By comparison the Christian Gospels are terse documentary footage.) He wants to purge Buddhist religiosity of its "supernatural" Hindu elements, yet the Dhammic tenets he retains are as generic and insipid as a fortune cookie.

"I think of myself as a secular Buddhist who is concerned entirely with the demands of this age (saeculum) no matter how inadequate and insignificant my responses to these demands might be. And if in the end there does turn out to be a heaven or nirvana somewhere else, I can see no better way to prepare for it." Astringent radicalism or cutting critique this is not, even with that pointless pinch of Latin.

Batchelor admits he assembles his books like a collage – his Confession bears him out. It's composed of aleatoric autobiography, theological deconstruction, sectarian reconstruction, pilgrimage/travelogue, and tortured, puerile affirmations. One night as he steps into the courtyard of the Lotus Nikko Hotel in Kushinagar, he reflects, "I will never see what Gotama saw, but I can listen to the descendants of the same cicadas he would have heard when night fell in Kusinara all those years ago." Like the Christian hymn "I walked today where Jesus walked," this is kitsch on the verge of nonsense.




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Dec 15, 2018Jenn "JR" rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: bio-memoir-essay
116 highlights
As an atheist, finding myself surrounded by ever increasing volume and number of voices espousing Buddhist beliefs, I was immediately drawn to this book.

I expected more discussion of atheism vs Buddhism but what I found was more detail about the fragmented schools of thought that make up Buddhism. Some of the stories after the mid-point of the book about all the politics of men seemed a bit "one too many' -- perhaps forming the basis of other reviewers critiques that the author ran out of interesting things to say.

In this case, it seems the author is passionately attached to the importance of these stories -- and definitely could have done a bit more editing down to turn some of the tales into boxed sidebars. There's a lot of discussion of politics between the Buddhist leaders and factions -- some of it seemed a bit much and silly to me (but people were willing to kill over the right to worship a deity, for example).

I want to acknowledge that the meditation and mindfulness are important -- as thousands of current books on emotional intelligence, leadership and management insist. However, meditation and mindfulness practice cannot stand alone without having a genuine interest in others and expanding that awareness to the commonality with others around us.

Whether you are adhering to the 4 Noble Truths and the 8 Paths or some other similar structure -- simply meditating to clear your mind and being mindful of the world around you is akin to navel gazing. You must engage with the world around you and pay attention -- and it is this underlying recommendation toward activism that I appreciate most about the author's perspective.

Like the author, I have no interest in building up my record as pious so that I can have a good afterlife. I haven't had much evidence such a thing exists -- and if I can do good while I am living now, that should be credential enough.

I like his definition of atheism vs "anti-theism" -- I have been informed by people that atheism is a religion, but for me -- I just don't think about any specific deities. That's like claiming that the static you at a point on the tv or radio spectrum as a "station" when there's no broadcast.

Two things bother me about the research and the discussion around Buddhism. First -- the Pali text was written/transcribed from oral tradition about 400 years after Buddha died. The author spent a lot of time trying to find the authentic voice of Buddha -- cutting out bits that seemed to come from other traditions or sources. But - how do we even know that is close to accurate? We're talking about oral tradition -- while Ananda must have had a hell of a memory (apparently he was one of the memorizers), who were the others sitting at Buddha's feet to accurately mentally record his discussions word-for-word to pass them down (and how did they do that and to whom)?

While we're at it -- this is nearly entirely a discussion of MEN. True - there are a few women here and there, but even the author's life sounds like a largely male-oriented world. He mentions his mother, his wife, the "moon-faced Korean" women he encounters on a tour, the wife of the wealthy king and the nun who lay down her robes after losing a discussion following Buddha's death about who was the stronger apostle (Ananda or Kassapa).

Fortunately - the use of this framework is not gender specific. I like the concepts of accepting that we will suffer (that's our nature - happiness doesn't last), learning to appreciate the moment and accept that it is all finite/fallible, and don't take things for granted -- test them and observe them on your own.

Key to all of this is the concept that "Mindful awareness is not presented as a passive concentration on a single, steady object, but as a refined engagement with a shifting, complex world." This allows you to make choices based on curiosity not just reacting based on instinct or emotion. The "middle path" is one that doesn't swing to far to the asceticism or to the bacchanalian.

In sum, he says "Buddhism has become for me a philosophy of action and responsibility. It provides a framework of values, ideas, and practices that nurture my ability to create a path in life, to define myself as a person, to act, to take risks, to imagine things differently, to make art." (less)
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Aug 22, 2013Suzanne rated it it was ok
Shelves: buddhism
I'd give Part One, the autobiographical section, a four; my only criticism is that it is too short and lacks detail. Part Two, however, merits at most a two. It is the bulk of the work, and should really be called "In Search of the Historic Buddha." Other reviews have commented that they are not historians and so don't feel that they can judge. I, on the other hand, am an historian, and can and do judge it. This is not a work of history; it is, at best, a speculative work. It is a work written by someone who, while rejecting the supernatural origins of his religious belief, still wants historical authority for what he does believe.

His only source is the Pali canon, which is not a reliable, authentic, or valid historical source. I looked in vain for any objective evidence that there even was such a person as Siddhartha Gautama. His method is completely invalid; he decides a priori what the Buddha's authentic voice would have been, goes looking for it, and finds it. He dismisses any account that does not meet his preconceptions for no other reason than that it does not meet his preconceptions.

He also lacks an adequate understanding of the historical context. For instance, he goes to great lengths to speculate about why Gautama did not have a son until he was nearly 30, yet it never occurs to him that Gautama may have had daughters before that. The text, as he quotes it, says "a son," not "a child." And historically, it is not unlikely that daughters would not have been noted.

I haven't finished it, and doubt that I will. I find it a pointless exercise. Why does it matter whether the Buddha was an historic figure, and if so, exactly what his personality and biography were? Like Jesus, like King Arthur, like any number of saints and martyrs, there probably was a man around whom these legends and myths accrued and to whom these sayings were attributed. If I'm interested in anything in this area, it is in the history of the accumulation of those legends and myths and what they tell us about the societies and cultures that created them, and ultimately what they tell us about the human condition.

We live in a free society in a free age. Extract from those teachings and practices what works for you. There is no need to attempt to justify it by recreating a historical authority. Have the strength and courage of your convictions. (less)
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Jul 16, 2012David Teachout rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: spiritual, psychology, kindle
There are some reviews describing the book as a meandering and sometimes confusing foray into Buddhism and quote the author in his confession of taking on projects in an erstwhile and haphazard fashion. I won't go against the author in his self-description but I will note that the result is neither confusing nor meandering, if anything it achieves exactly what it declares itself to be, a journey of confession where searching for the man behind the myth, the Gotama behind the Buddha, becomes an ever-present shadow stemming from Batchelor's own life. The honesty and humility consistently exhibited here, combined with a deeply personal and committed understanding of the Buddhist experience and doctrine, is refreshing and deeply spiritual. There is never a sense in which the author fails to get to his point, any more than life is ever a failure for continuing. To dwell in the dhamma, to tread peacefully within the truth of uncertainty and take on the mentality of impermanence, this is precisely what is accomplished here and it is a journey that was a joy to walk with the author on. (less)
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Sep 22, 2011Frank Jude rated it it was amazing
Recommends it for: Open-minded people.
Shelves: memoirs, cultural-history, buddhism, philosophy, skepticism
This is simply a wonderful book! The reaction to it from the more 'conservative' Buddhists (like B. Allan Wallace, from the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, and others from the Theravada) is all the evidence one would need to prove Batchelor's point: there are all too many Buddhists who praise the Buddha and the Buddhist traditions for it's rationality and critical questioning, but keep their questioning from reflecting back on the tradition. For such people, it's as though their understanding of what the Buddha is alleged to have taught is the limit of their imagination and curiosity!

And so, countless Buddhist teachers 'tow the party line,' repeating -- regurgitating -- pat formulas, including the dogma that what they are teaching is not dogma! And Batchelor speaks from his experience, and from his understanding and places all his cards on the table. He evidences more humility than many of his critics, and says up front that he is constructing an understanding of the Buddha that speaks to him -- and to those of us with a more secular temperament.

Such a 'secular religion' (and though Batchelor shies away from this term as a 'contradiction in terms -- which is just why I utilize it!) speaks to many today who reject the claustrophobic atmosphere of much religion, and will continue to do so as 'non-believers,' at least according to many recent polls, is the group growing at the fastest pace in the US. (less)
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May 15, 2010Michelle rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: non-fiction, buddhism, memoir, religion
While this book was a bit scattered, it was well worth reading.
Full review: http://bit.ly/ZGcl8E (less)
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Jul 10, 2011Lori rated it really liked it
Shelves: have-it, non-fiction
This is the first Stephen Batchelor book I have read, and it definitely won't be the last. It's exactly what I was looking for. The first half of the book describes his own experience as a Buddhist monk primarily in Tibet and Korea, up until he disrobed. The second half focuses on the Buddha's life and teachings, based on Batchelor's research of the Pali Canon and his own experience in Asia as a lay practitioner.

I think it's safe to say that Batchelor is a representative of Western Buddhism, which can be a controversial subject in and of itself. It was my most concrete introduction to Western Buddhism, of which I apparently associate with the most. I like that he puts some of the Asian cultural influences into context for the Western mind. In the past, I have struggled with some Buddhist concepts because of those cultural differences. Batchelor's teachings of Buddhism resonate with me more than any other author has thus far - it has sparked something within me, and I am now very anxious to get my hands on more of his books. (less)
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