Showing posts with label science spirituality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science spirituality. Show all posts

2022/11/09

Buddhist Biology: Ancient Eastern Wisdom Meets Modern Western Science Barash, David P.: Books

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Buddhist Biology: Ancient Eastern Wisdom Meets Modern Western Science 1st Edition
by David P. Barash (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars 30 ratings
3.8 on Goodreads
98 ratings

Many high-profile public intellectuals -- including "New Atheists" like Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, and the late Christopher Hitchens -- have argued that religion and science are deeply antagonistic, representing two world views that are utterly incompatible. David Barash, a renowned biologist with forty years of experience, largely agrees with them, but with one very big exception: Buddhism.

In this fascinating book, David Barash highlights the intriguing common ground between scientific and religious thought, illuminating the many parallels between biology and Buddhism, allowing readers to see both in a new way. Indeed, he shows that there are numerous places where Buddhist and biological perspectives coincide and reinforce each other. For instance, the cornerstone ecological concept -- the interconnectedness and interdependence of all natural things -- is remarkably similar to the fundamental insight of Buddhism. Indeed, a major Buddhist text, the Avatamsaka Sutra, which consists of ten insights into the "interpenetration" between beings and their environment, could well have been written by a trained ecologist, just as current insights in evolutionary biology, genetics and development might have been authored by the Buddha himself. Barash underscores other notable similarities, including a shared distrust of simple cause-and-effect analysis, an appreciation of the
"rightness" of nature, along with an acknowledgment of the suffering that results when natural processes are tampered with. Buddhist Biology shows how the concept of "non-self," so confusing to many Westerners, is fully consistent with modern biology, as is the Buddhist perspective of "impermanence." Barash both demystifies and celebrates the biology of Buddhism and vice versa, showing in a concluding tour-de-force how modern Buddhism --shorn of its hocus-pocus and abracadabra -- not only justifies but actually mandates both socially and environmentally "engaged" thought and practice.

Buddhist Biology is a work of unique intellectual synthesis that sheds astonishing light on biology as well as on Buddhism, highlighting the remarkable ways these two perspectives come together, like powerful searchlights that offer complementary and stunning perspectives on the world and our place in it.



Editorial Reviews

Review

"I'm skeptical of attempts to reconcile religion with science. At worst the two are incompatible. At best the reconciliation seems superfluous: why bother, why not just go straight for the science? But if you must essay this difficult reconciliation, Buddhism is surely religion's best shot, at least in the atheistic version espoused by David Barash. And the task is an uphill one, so you'd better pick a very good writer to attempt it. David Barash, by any standards, is certainly a very, very good writer." -- Richard Dawkins, author of The Selfish Gene and The God Delusion


"Most atheists turn from religion with emotions between disdain and relief. Not so David Barash. He is convinced that traditional Western religions fall because they are refuted by modern science, especially in the evolutionary realm of which he is a master. Nevertheless, in Buddhism he finds deep insights about human nature and our obligations to others and to our environment. Barash is sometimes wrong, and sometimes even irritating. But as this provocative and stimulating book shows, he is never boring." -- Michael Ruse, Professor of Philosophy at Florida State University and Editor of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Darwin and Evolution


"All who are motivated to search for life's meaning will be stimulated and guided by David Barash's exploration of similarities and differences between Buddhism as a philosophy and modern evolutionary biology. He demonstrates that combining modern biology with that ancient philosophy can yield a deep and satisfying foundation for enjoying a world that does not care about us." -- Gordon Orians, Former President of the Ecological Society of America


Mentioned in the Wall Street Journal.


"Barash's volume is a fascinating personal manifesto, full of humor and intellectual historical references that mark an exploration of Buddhism from the perspective of a trained scientist embedded in Western culture." --The Quarterly Review of Biology


"The discourse on Buddhism and science has mainly engaged the former with physics, psychology, cognitive science, and neuroscience. Trained as a biologist, Barash brings a new perspective with a focus on ecology and evolution." --Religious Studies Review




About the Author

David P. Barash, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Washington. A long-time evolutionary biologist as well as an aspiring Buddhist, he has been involved in the development of sociobiology as well as the field of Peace Studies, and is the author or co-author of 33 books.



Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Oxford University Press; 1st edition (December 2, 2013)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 216 pages
Customer Reviews:
3.9 out of 5 stars 30 ratings


David P. Barash



David P. Barash is an evolutionary biologist (Ph.D. zoology, Univ. of Wisconsin) and professor of psychology emeritus at the University of Washington. He has written, co-authored or edited 41 books, dealing with various aspects of evolution, animal and human behavior, and peace studies. He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and has received numerous awards. He is most proud, however, of his very personal collaboration with Judith Eve Lipton, his three children, five grandchildren, and having been named by an infamous rightwing nut in his book "The Professors" as one of the "101 most dangerous professors" in the United States. His dangerousness may or may not be apparent from his writing!

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David B Richman

4.0 out of 5 stars An Interesting Take on Biology and BuddhismReviewed in the United States on April 30, 2015
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David Barash is a surprising individual. He would have been the last person I would have expected to write a book on Buddhist philosophy, but in "Buddhist Biology" he has tackled one of the most difficult questions posed by life - how should one live? based on an amalgam of science and Buddhist philosophy. I am a biologist who is sympathetic to the Buddhist view, especially as expressed in Zen, so I found this argument to be quite interesting. The fact is, given what we know about how life evolved, we are somewhat at sea in devising a reason for our existence. Most people cling to some sort of theology or other, even if it is a state-sponsored worship of a personality, to give meaning to their lives. I'm inclined to believe, with the existentialists, that we have to make that meaning for ourselves, but it is not always an easy thing to do. In this book Barash explores the problem invoking a non-theistic form of Buddhism (most Buddhists don't get too hung up on gods, although in some traditions they exist) and biology. In my mind he mostly succeeds in his quest and I found the book to be well-written and based on a deep understanding of the problems involved.

I recommend this book as a exploration of the interface between science and philosophy. Well worth the read, even if one disagrees with Barash!

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M. Miller

5.0 out of 5 stars I tried to explain the amazing convergence between these two world views without successReviewed in the United States on October 29, 2014
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I am a retired biology teacher and a committed Buddhist (also past teacher). I tried to explain the amazing convergence between these two world views without success. Barash has absolutely succeeded in showing this wonderful connection in a well written and enjoyable style. I wish everyone seriously interested in Buddhism would read this book. The Buddha did not teach mysticism. He taught about life here on this planet which is, after all, based in biology.

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Sally Malanga

5.0 out of 5 stars ... reading David's book with all its literary references and wonderful stories and explanationsReviewed in the United States on December 24, 2014
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In reading David's book with all its literary references and wonderful stories and explanations, I developed a new view of the universe from where I stand as a human being. We don't exist apart from all other living beings. Animals, I always cared about, but I have even more reverence for every other living being that co-exists with us. I am reading this book for the second time.

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Swamiwilly

5.0 out of 5 stars useful insights for living an engaged and meaningful life.Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2014
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The scientifically confirmed profound interconnectedness of all things; the human mind - the result of evolution - capable of a measure of freedom unlike anything else; and the modern transcendence of solitary enlightenment in favor of enlightened activism are some of the themes discussed and revealed in this well written book. I liked it better than most of the other books trying to explain the neuroscience of awakened living.

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C. kane

4.0 out of 5 stars makes me thinkReviewed in the United States on November 16, 2015
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i'm enjoying reading this book; it's very technical so i'm having to read it very slowly; it raises excellent points and makes me think



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Frequent Customer

2.0 out of 5 stars The Buddhist Biology connection is not illuminatingReviewed in the United States on February 1, 2017
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Much Buddhism, not much biology. Author seems to thing Buddhism "validates" or prefigures current biological concepts. Example: Buddhist notion of connectedness and ecological concepts. The author also seems somewhat full of himself "It is my view, and I am confident Buddha would agree..." Not an enlightening book. Best gotten from your local library to see if it fits your needs.

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chinh

4.0 out of 5 stars Four StarsReviewed in the United States on June 11, 2015
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great analysis of complex issues; some editing needed.



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Louis Henry

4.0 out of 5 stars Four StarsReviewed in the United States on January 9, 2015
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It made sense to me.

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PG
5.0 out of 5 stars beautifully written and very informative even for someone who knows ...Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 28, 2017
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This is an outstanding book, beautifully written and very informative even for someone who knows a bit about evolutionary psychology and Buddhism! It's filled with many fascinating observations and scholarly insights - you will learn all kinds of things from the Buddhist view of emptiness to the way Cholera changes your gut to advance itself.
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 21, 2015
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Just up my sons street
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ralunicol
3.0 out of 5 stars plutôt cool mais sans autreReviewed in France on July 24, 2022
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Ecrit sur le modèle du physicien F Capra "le Tao et la physique".
Plutôt philosophique ...
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Cheryl Sacamano
4.0 out of 5 stars Four StarsReviewed in Canada on August 31, 2014
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very interesting!
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charles kodikara
5.0 out of 5 stars A GUID TOBUDDHISM AND BIOLOGY.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 3, 2014
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WELL WRITTEN BOOK BY A WESTERN BIOLOGIST. AN ATHEIEST LIKE RIHARD DOKINS SEEMS ADMIT IT. IT SEEMS DAWKINS DID NOT SEE THAT BUDDHISM IS NONTHEISTIC.BOOK GIVES GUIDENCE TO UNDERSTAND BIOLOGY AND BUDDHISM.
Chas HERBERT kODIKARA
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==


Buddhist Biology: Ancient Eastern Wisdom Meets Modern Western Science


David Philip Barash
3.79
98 ratings12 reviews

Many high-profile public intellectuals-such as the well-known "New Atheists" Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, and the late Christopher Hitchens-have argued that religion and science are highly antagonistic, two views of the world that are utterly incompatible. David Barish, a renowned biologist with thirty years of experience, largely agrees with them-with one very big exception. And that exception is Buddhism.
In this fascinating book, David Barash highlights an intriguing patch of common ground between scientific and religious thought, illuminating the many parallels between biology and Buddhism, allowing readers to see both in a new way. Indeed, he shows that there are numerous places where the Buddhist and biological perspectives coincide. For instance, the cornerstone ecological concept--the interconnectedness and interdependence of all things--is remarkably similar to the fundamental insight of Buddhism. Indeed, a major Buddhist text, the Avatamsaka Sutra-which consists of ten insights into the "interpenetration" between beings and their environment-could well have been written by a trained ecologist. Barash underscores other similarities, including a shared distrust of simple cause-and-effect analysis, a recognition of life as transient and as a "process" rather than permanent and static, and an appreciation of the "rightness" of nature along with a recognition of the suffering that results when natural processes are tampered with. After decades of removing predators to protect deer and elk herds, ecologists have belatedly come to a Buddhist realization that predation--and even forest fires--are natural processes that have an important place in maintaining healthy ecosystems.
Buddhist Biology sheds new light on biology, Buddhism, and the remarkable ways the two perspectives come together, like powerful searchlights that offer complementary and valuable perspectives on the world and our place in it.

216 pages, Hardcover


First published January 1, 2013


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216 pages, Hardcover
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December 2, 2013 by Oxford University Press, USA
ISBN
9780199985562 (ISBN10: 0199985561)
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English
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2013
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2017
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2015
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About the author
Profile Image for David Philip Barash.
David Philip Barash
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David P. Barash is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Washington, and is notable for books on Human aggression, Peace Studies, and the sexual behavior of animals and people. He has written approximately 30 books in total. He received his bachelor's degree in biology from Harpur College, Binghamton University, and a Ph.D. in zoology from University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1970. He taught at the State University of New York at Oneonta, and then accepted a permanent position at the University of Washington.


His book Natural Selections: selfish altruists, honest liars and other realities of evolution is based on articles in the Chronicle of Higher Education and published in 2007 by Bellevue Literary Press. Immediately before that was Madame Bovary's Ovaries: a Darwinian look at literature, a popular but serious presentation of Darwinian literary criticism, jointly written with his daughter, Nanelle Rose Barash. He has also written over 230 scholarly articles and is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, along with many other honors.


In 2008, a second edition of the textbook Peace and Conflict Studies co-authored with Charles P. Webel was published by Sage. In 2009, Columbia University Press published How Women Got Their Curves and Other Just-So Stories, a book on sex differentiation co-authored with Judith Eve Lipton. This was followed in 2010 by Strange Bedfellows: the surprising connection between sex, evolution and monogamy published by Bellevue Literary Press, and, in 2011, Payback: why we retaliate, redirect aggression and seek revenge, coauthored with Judith Eve Lipton and published by Oxford University Press. His book Homo Mysterious: Evolutionary puzzles of human nature appeared in 2012, also published by Oxford University Press, and in 2013, Sage published the 3rd edition of his text, Peace and Conflict Studies.


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Vince Darcangelo

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December 28, 2013
http://ensuingchapters.com/2013/12/27...


Forgive me a nostalgia trip to 1994, when alt-jazz rockers Soul Coughing released their debut album Ruby Vroom. The lead track was “Is Chicago, Is Not Chicago,” a hypnotic, oddly existential number allegedly inspired by a bad acid trip in which singer Mike Doughty must distinguish between himself and his surroundings.


It made for a great song, but any biologist will tell you it doesn’t hold up to modern science. Or, for that matter, not-so-modern philosophy.


But Doughty was working toward something significant in that trippy little tune: Where does the “I” end and the “everything else” begin?


It may very well be at the intersection of science and spirituality, according to scientist and self-described Buddhist atheist David P. Barash, author of the brilliant Buddhist Biology.


He admits at the beginning that his goal is an ambitious one: to locate common ground where science and spirituality may coexist. Whereas the Abrahamic religions have long been at odds with science, he argues that Buddhist thought is compatible with high school textbooks.


“Why? Because among the key aspects of Buddhism, we find insistence that knowledge must be gained through personal experience rather than reliance on the authority of sacred texts or the teachings of avowed masters, because its orientation is empirical rather than theoretical, and because it rejects any conception of absolutes.” (18)


That is to say, it allows for the scientific method.


Barash eloquently connects the principles of anatman (not-self), anitya (impermanence) and pratityasamputpada (interdependence) to current biological knowledge. Science has shattered the duality of the actor and the environment, and in doing so has validated thousands of years of Buddhist philosophy.


I am particularly interested in anitya, which leads us into discussions regarding the illusion of time and motion. In considering life as a sequence of moments, Barash distinguishes between the experiencing self and the remembering self (which is similar to Sartre’s Pre-Reflective Cogito, but don’t get me started on my boy Jean-Paul).


The main idea is that each moment is unique and temporary. Nothing lasts, except for in memory, through which we develop a narrative and impose continuity.


Now, I’ll leave the scientific explanations to Barash, as I’m not very qualified to give a proper breakdown, and only slightly more so to discuss eastern philosophy. What I am qualified to provide, though , is a recommendation of Buddhist Biology. Barash takes difficult concepts and presents them in a thoroughly readable and enjoyable narrative. You’ll learn new things, brush up on your philosophy and find it difficult to close this book.


You’ll come away with the realization that there is no distinction between Chicago and Not Chicago, Is and Is Not. There is only this moment.


Or more simply put, There Is.
existentialism

Bob Nichols
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September 19, 2015
Barash draws out the parallels between Buddhism and evolutionary theory. He argues that as life is impermanent and interconnected, there’s no permanent self. Barash then draws out the philosophical implications of these biological facts and their correspondence with Buddhist thought. As there is no biological self, he believes that humans are free to create their essence. Aligned with Sartre this way, Barash refers to his worldview as “existential bio-Buddhism.”


The impermanence of life is clear enough for those who are non-believers, but Barash pushes his other two themes to untenable extremes. First, as genes mutate over time and as we’re modified by our culture, experience, and ideals, Barash argues that there’s no self. But the other side of that argument is that we have inherent temperaments and dispositions that substantially influence what we do and even what we ought to do (i.e., to be “true” to ourselves). These differences can be seen early on in children, though many dispute that. Darwin began his “Origins of the Species” with a discussion of domestic breeding practices to create desired traits and its not clear why we would not have an inherited temperament as well that would constitute some sort of biological self. Even Barash himself lapses into language here and there that supports a notion of a permanent self. Evolution is “callously indifferent to anything but self and gene betterment,” he writes. Kin selection is about an “extended genetic self.” And, he wants us to control “our nature as contained in our genes.” What might these selves and this nature be if we are, in his Buddhistic terms, “not self”?*


In evolutionary terms, we are transformed through time, but what is it, exactly, that is transformed? If it is the replication impulse operating blindly, that still begs a larger question: replication favors certain behaviors and ways to go about the business of survival, in which case would these not be predisposed character patterns? Could it be that we have both a permanent self that essentially defines who we are and a variable self that fills underlying biological form with specific, cultural and experiential content? If we are fearful about death, for example, we can create various paths to eternity beyond death (e.g., Christianity, Hinduism and Buddhism [later versions]).


Second, while we are interconnected with cosmic dust and energy it’s a stretch to say we can be (should be?) connected to it through some form of universal attachment. Given the variability that goes with Darwinian evolution, it’s likely as Barash believes that many are inherent nurturers with the capacity (via mirror neurons?) to identify with the plight of other humans, and even in some cases with life itself. But, acknowledging the obvious, it’s also likely that many are indifferent to the good of the whole and care (and can care) only about the self.


Third, Barash says biology can provide us with no ethical guidelines because of the naturalistic fallacy. Even if we could, he writes that the natural world does not provide “a model of how human beings ought to behave.” “It does no such thing,” he writes, because nature “is neither pleasant nor moral.” And so, Barash removes biology from his prescriptive theory. Going back to Plato,** he argues that we use reason to create our own essence and meaning. Well, in a way, that’s what Stalin and Hitler did. Of course, we can say that we are free to do X, but with Schopenhauer we can ask why choose X over Y? What does reason push off from? What direction do we go?


This is where underlying biological structures that form behavior take on a new significance. What might these biological structures contain? Sure, there’s ego and self-interest and all of that, but there are also those social instincts that make us compassionate, cooperative and considerate, at least for our own “tribe.”*** Even deeper, where do freedom and equality and justice come from if not our biology? Could it be that our need to survive is all about freedom, not only to seek what we need but to defend ourselves against threats to our freedom? Isn’t equality about our need to defend against imposition? Even if we are not inherent nurturers, we can even see that, as a pragmatic matter, and as a deduction from our biological need to be free, mutual respect is necessary to avoid disorder and harm for our own interests.


As a final point, Barash has to engage in a substantial reinterpretation of Buddhist thinking to make it work with biology. Early Buddhism was about withdrawing from the world whereas Barash wants it to be about our engagement with it. And, as another example, he reinterprets reincarnation to mean the literal recycling of our bodies at death. Barash calls his version Buddhism 2.0, which stands in contrast with what others see as the real Buddhism (version 1.0). Biology can stand on its own ground and talk about self, impermanence and interconnectedness in meaningful philosophical ways without redefining Buddhism in this way.


*Also, in a recent book review, Barash writes that sexual reproduction creates “genetic diversity.” Presumably, variability applies to temperament-behavior traits as well as physical traits. The topic of diversity, including variability of temperament and disposition, is covered extensively by Darwin’s associate, George John Romanes, in his “Mental Evolution in Animals” (1884). In writing this book, Romanes relied heavily on Darwin’s research notes.


** Barash uses Plato’s “Laws” to make a point that we use “reason” to reclaim our independence and our unique status as autonomous ‘entities.’ This is interesting as Plato’s divine, eternal, spiritual “reality” is everything that Barash opposes (Barash calls any belief in a spiritual world “a fairy tale”) and Plato’s “rationality” is about understanding that world and how to access it. And, except for an enlightened few, Plato’s “Laws” was about control of the populace, not its autonomy.


***Since we have no essence, Barash denies our biologically-based social nature, yet he presumes such a nature when he urges us to love all beings. Why would we do that if there’s no motivation to do so?


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Profile Image for Jeannette.
Jeannette

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November 19, 2014
I found the first half -- in which Barash makes a case for the congruence between Buddhism and contemporary biological science -- to be quite fascinating and provocative, so much so that I bought the book in hardcover (to augment the digital form I originally read). I want to go back and review all that he covered. It certainly raises the question: so what? If the Buddha and modern biologists agree about the basic nature of life in the universe, what does that imply secular humanists (and students of biology) about how to live in that universe? I found Barash's suggestions in the second half to be less than electrifying, if interesting. But for the first time in my life, I'd like to learn more about Buddhism, thanks to him.


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Benjamin Felser
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January 1, 2021
Really compelling idea, but very dry and disjointed delivery. Felt like a he went along a buffet of science to choose what best aligned with Buddhist ideas. While I agree with much of what he says, I also feel he missed out on the opportunity to address that we don’t NEED science to validate Buddhism, as it as a system itself should be self-validating. Our system of western science can provide additional context and interrelate with it, but it is not necessary to prove Buddhism is “true” (as another writer has put it). Generally includes a broad array of relatively recent science as it pertains to inter being, delusion of selfhood, and origins of suffering.


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Forest
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October 24, 2021
I really wanted to like this book - I love biology, and I'm interested in Buddhism. Unfortunately, I could barely make it through the first 30 pages, which Barash uses to detail all the ways that biology and Buddhism differ. This was a weirdly negative way to open a book specifically about the ways that they are similar!


The way Barash talks about certain Buddhist beliefs and traditions as "wacky" if they don't have a basis in modern Western science struck me as arrogant and racist. As another reviewer put it, Buddhism doesn't need to be corroborated by science in order to be valid.


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Rhea
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July 23, 2017
I guess I don't know this for certain, but it seems like a nice way to introduce Buddhism. Not being Buddhist, I can't say for sure. Would a Buddhist or a religious expert care to comment?


I went into this more expecting The Universe in a Single Atom but it's not exactly the same thing. It's similar, but it's not really: "the same book, but biology". So keep that in mind.
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Fenton Kay

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December 23, 2019
This is an interesting look at an approach to being a biologist. If I were young and just starting in the field, I would probably find the author's approach of interest and might even follow some of his leads. However, I'm a long-time already retired biologist.

====
Western Buddhist Review
Buddhism, Biology, Interconnectedness
On Fri, 7 March, 2014 - 12:15
Dhivan Thomas Jones


In this post I present a fine review by Ratnaprabha of a new book on the meeting of Buddhism and Biology - Dhivan.

David P. Barash, Buddhist Biology: Ancient Eastern Wisdom Meets Modern Western Science, Oxford University Press USA, New York, 2014. 224pp., £20 hback, also available as ebook.

Review by Ratnaprabha

Through the nineteenth century, Western science gradually disengaged itself from Christian religion, and scientists set themselves up as rivals to churchmen in interpreting the world. Nevertheless, religion remains a force in our culture, and some scientists detect a spiritual vacuum in their own hearts, turning back in hope towards religious traditions, at least for their own personal solace. Yet to answer one set of needs through a religious allegiance, and a separate set of needs through the discipline of science leaves a frustrating split, despite Stephen Jay Gould’s recommendation that the two should be confined to ‘non-overlapping magisteria’.[1] David Barash joins the club of those scientists wanting science and religion to be at least on speaking terms with each other, better still to marry. His arranged bride for science is Buddhism.

Thus he proposes a ‘Science Sutra… [in which] not-self, impermanence, and interconnectedness are built into the very structure of the world, and all living things – including human beings – are no exception.… It can help animate – more precisely, humanise – this otherwise cold and dreadful skeleton of rattling bones’ (pp.27-8; the image of science as a rattling skeleton is from Bertrand Russell).

Barash is a psychology professor at the University of Washington who has been active in the field of peace studies, but by training he is an evolutionary biologist, and it is biology in particular that he wishes to give a Buddhist flavour. He is an avuncular and jaunty writer, and this being his 33rd book, you can see that his publishers give him some leeway. He admits that they wanted him to discard altogether a chapter that tries to add existentialism to the mix, and they’ve left him to his own devices to the extent that the Buddhist sections are riddled with, mainly minor, errors of fact and spelling. As for science, he discusses genetics, ecology and neuroscience as well as evolution, and he is on pretty firm ground here, though some mistakes do creep in – including the howler that Newton discovered the second law of thermodynamics (p.58).

An enthusiastic Buddhist for most of his life, Barash’s chief inspiration is the Vietnamese Zen teacher Thich Nhat Hanh. Thus, along with impermanence and non-self, the main Buddhist concept he wishes to apply to his biology is interconnectedness, all things linked in a dance of mutual dependence, a teaching that Thich Nhat Hanh adapts for modern audiences from Chinese Hua Yen Buddhism. Ecology, too, demonstrates that organisms and their environments constitute a net of mutual dependence.

Buddhist teachings argue that anything which depends for its state on external factors must change when those conditioning factors change (anitya), and if no part of that thing is immune from dependencies, then to identify any essential protected nucleus of self must be mistaken (anātman). In biology, impermanence is the rule, and evolution superimposes long-term inter-generational changes on the short-term developments undergone by every organism, so that only the genes themselves are (according to Barash) comparatively stable. My impression here is that Barash’s popular writing has not yet caught up with advances in genetics that he must surely be aware of. The gene as an almost fixed sequence of bases in DNA that codes for some detectable feature of an organism is only one component of inheritance. Genes interact in complex ways determined partly by environmental influences, events can switch genes on and off according to circumstances, and survival-enhancing features innovated by a parent can pass to its descendants without changes to the genetic sequence. As I was reading the book, there was news of research showing that mice taught to become frightened when they smelt cherry blossom could pass that fear to offspring they had no contact with: the genetic basis of the offsprings’ smell receptors had changed as a result of their parents’ experience.[2] A process like this is termed epigenetic, and epigenetics increasingly seems to be a significant factor in evolution.

In highlighting anitya and anātman (just two of the traditional three marks), and then adding interdependence, Barash is already reframing Buddhism according to his own preferences. As well as downgrading the third mark (duḥkha, suffering), he adds pratītya samutpāda, which is indeed basic to a Buddhist understanding of human experience, though it is incorrect either to translate it or to sum it up as only interdependence. It refers to an understanding of how the apparent entities that we single out from our experience come into being and pass away, as well as how they relate with other entities in the present moment. (The Present Moment, incidentally, is the name of Barash’s campervan, named so that he can sometimes claim to be ‘in’ it).

Barash is happy to modify traditional Buddhist teachings, if the results serve the needs of his audience: modern Westerners who have confidence in the findings of science. Thus he would ditch many of the practices of Eastern Buddhists (he rather condescendingly views them as naive and superstitious), and many of the teachings of what he calls ‘originalist’ Buddhism. Someone has drawn his attention to David McMahan’s The Making of Buddhist Modernism, and since it is effectiveness and accuracy that motivate him, he is more than happy to confess that his grasp of Buddhism has come largely from the interpretations and revisions of westernised Buddhists. In fact he goes further, seeking to delineate what almost amounts to his own new religion, which he calls Existential Bio-Buddhism.

I think that this is fine, and it is very gratifying to see a popular scientist sharing an enthusiasm for Buddhism with his readers. Those whose interest is piqued can track down teachers and writers with a stronger basis in Buddhist traditions, and a deeper experience of practising them. But it is disappointing that he lacks the curiosity to further explore the aspects of Buddhism he is tempted to dismiss. (The ‘arrant nonsense’ (p.11) of rebirth, for example, he explains as a ‘silliness about [transmigration of] souls’ (p.138), and concludes that Buddhism must be ‘muddled’ to teach both rebirth and anātman.) One day, through a more daring dialogue than Barash risks, the interpenetration of Buddhism and biology is going to yield exciting fruit.

How is his biology informed by Buddhism? He uses it to speed up the defeat of essentialist and Platonic ideas in biology, and to support engagement with environmental issues, with its visions of interconnectedness and non-violence. Evolution confirms a kinship between humans and animals, hence a sense of solidarity with other forms of life, and a valuing of the natural world around us. Evolution and Buddhism also similarly agree that human beings are not special, indeed none of us as an individual ego is special either. In return, Barash is happy to contribute a conventional critique of Buddhism from a materialist scientific standpoint.

What other fruit could the dialogue yield? What interests me most is the mind as an evolved phenomenon. From a human point of view, which is the only viewpoint we have access to, the degree and scope of our awareness is unparalleled in the natural world. Somehow we have come to the ability to reflect on our own experience, sometimes holding the stream of our consciousness in the illumination of mindful awareness. And we can enhance our level of consciousness through working on the mind with the mind. Perhaps as a consequence of this reflexivity, we seem largely trapped in a sense of separation from the world, a subjective me peering out at its hostile or alluring surroundings, always other. The teaching of pratītya samutpāda states that this consciousness is dependently arisen, i.e. we can come to comprehend the evolutionary processes which gave rise to human consciousness, and thus understand our own minds better.

I feel that this understanding will not be well served by insisting on a materialist standpoint, as Barash and most scientists of standing do at present. Materialism seems to me to be primarily the rotting corpse of an old European debate, a debate that concluded first that mind and matter were two entirely distinct substances, and later that matter was the one real substance that made up everything in the universe, so that mind is nothing but patterns of electrical and chemical processes in the brain. The three truths that Barash imports from Buddhism – impermanence, not self, and pratītya samutpāda – undermine such strict bifurcations as that between mind and matter. And I would say that honest reflection on experience doesn’t allow one to agree that awareness is illusory. Like the objective world, the subjective or “inside” pole of experience must have arisen through law-governed causal sequences that can be understood. This is true of the whole range of minds found amongst animals, human and nonhuman, as well as this particular fleeting event of awareness that is my present moment. Buddhism wants to find evolutionary explanations (using the term ‘evolution’ in a general sense, not just as Darwinian natural selection). Buddhism has an evolutionary vision, as does biology. Biology is particularly interested in the evolutionary history of consciousness, Buddhism teaches its evolutionary potential, the further development of consciousness through contemplative methods.

Once mind or awareness is taken seriously as a genuine (though not substantial) phenomenon, we could consider its importance in the lives of animals as well as humans. It has arisen through evolution by natural selection: did its presence have any effects on the process of evolution? (Recall interdependence.) One possibility is through the Baldwin Effect, whereby innovative behaviours by animals (and behaviours have a mental origin) can propel them into new environmental niches where fresh selection pressures apply. For example, the Galapagos finches which now instinctively use cactus thorns to extract larvae from tree branches could not have started with a mutation for the behaviour – it is far too complex – they must have started with the novel behaviour, then passed it on through learning, until its different components were gradually selected for in the genes.[3]

Then there is the last of the three marks, duḥkha or suffering. Entrenched views don’t just inhibit scientific progress, they may also inhibit compassion, and even promote antisocial practices in science, from cruelty to animals to environmental destruction and involvement in the technology of warfare. I think that an acceptable ethical framework, to be discussed and adopted by scientific communities, has its most likely origin in Buddhist ethics, a natural ethics based in intention and the consequences of behaviour rather than in scriptural commandments. Currently, scientists tend to govern their work with one eye on the law and the other on public opinion, but with little genuinely humanitarian ethical guidance.

Barash gives the impression of being an ethical man, and perhaps in a future work he will attempt to apply Buddhist ethics to his science. It may be for others to investigate how a fresh view of mental processes and their role in evolution, stimulated by Buddhism, could open up new avenues of research, as well as more creative ways of interpreting experimental results. More generally, Buddhism suggests a very open and provisional approach to concepts such as the gene, the species, and the individual organism. Constant reminders of impermanence, not-self, and pratītya samutpāda could release the creativity of scientists when they are entrenched in the ‘normal science’ stage of struggling to fit research results into outdated theories, unwilling to let go of time-honoured biological concepts.

I would recommend Buddhist Biology to readers whose main allegiance is with science. It provides a friendly and engaging tourist guide to some of the features of Buddhism. We natives may chuckle at the guide’s simplifications and inaccuracies, but he points out impermanence, not self and interconnectedness; he shows how they apply to the biological sciences; and so he gives an authentic impression of Buddhism that may lead some of his readers to investigate it more thoroughly elsewhere, and to explore its practices in their own lives.

Ratnaprabha is director of the West London Buddhist Centre, and the author of The Evolving Mind: Buddhism, Biology and Consciousness, Windhorse, 1996, and of Finding the Mind: a Buddhist View, Windhorse, 2012.

[1] Stephen Jay Gould, ‘Nonoverlapping Magisteria,’ Natural History 106 (March 1997): 16–22.

[2] http://www.nature.com/neuro/journal/v17/n1/full/nn.3594.html accessed 1/1/14.

[3] D. Papineau, ‘Social learning and the Baldwin effect’, in A. Zilhão (ed.), Cognition, Evolution, and Rationality. Routledge, 2005; see also Erika Crispo, ‘The Baldwin Effect and Genetic Assimilation’, in Evolution 61.11: 2469–2479 (2007).



2022/11/08

Batchelor Stephen - Alone With Others, An Existential Approach To Buddhism | Tibetan Buddhism | Gautama Buddha

Batchelor Stephen - Alone With Others, An Existential Approach To Buddhism | Tibetan Buddhism | Gautama Buddha





Alone with Others: An Existential Approach to Buddhism Paperback – 8 February 1994
by Stephen Batchelor (Author), John Eaton Calthorpe Blofeld (Foreword)
4.5 

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This uniquely contemporary guide to understanding the timeless message of Buddhism, and in particular its relevance in actual human relations, was inspired by Shantideva's 'Guide To The Bodhisattva's Way Of Life', which the author translated into English, the oral instructions of living Buddhist masters, Heidegger's classic 'Being and Time', and the writings of the Christian theologians Paul Tillich and John MacQuarrie.

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Top reviews from other countries
Ali
3.0 out of 5 stars Three Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 25 July 2017
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Not as good as Buddhism Without Beliefs. Kind of wordy to read.
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John Verdon
5.0 out of 5 stars Pragmatism and awakening
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 4 August 2018
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Here again Batchelor - bring secular clarity in a pragmatic 'culturally light' integration of the teaching of Buddha. Batchelor is always a worthy read.

Being-with-others is an essential structure, restricted to the dimension of possibility; but inthe process of actualization it assumes an existential structure through which we actively participate in the world with others.
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Ty Schultz
5.0 out of 5 stars Enlightening
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 9 December 2021
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This is a very enlightening exploration of what contemporary Buddhist thought is, can become and where it began, was born and developed.
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Janine Poley
5.0 out of 5 stars A valuable book by Batchelor
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 16 June 2018
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This is a great book to have beside your bed. Nice thoughts to go to 😴 sleep peacefully.ie: “A lack of being remains unaffected by a plenitude of having”
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Peter
4.0 out of 5 stars Worthwhile Read
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 4 June 2015
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Stephen Batchelor describes how the essence of Buddhism has become distorted by the various traditions that have stripped out the human connection with Shakymuni and replaced it with institutionalized religion.
One person found this helpful
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Steve Woods
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January 13, 2013
I have been tired lately and not so well. I have opened myself to others and they have done what seems to pass for normal these days and I have been disappointed and hurt. As is my wont in any of those circumstances I experience a strong urge to withdraw behind my walls both physical and psychological and curse the human race in general and the offending parties in particular. At best I want nothing to do with people and at worst I want to rip off arms and legs and if I really give it a run the fantasies based on experience in combat kick in and I begin to entertain murder as an option. Not really, but that does reflect the extremity to which the aversion in me can rise.

Now I love to wallow in that shit, but unfortunately for the monster in me I have chosen another path and if all the work I have done counts for anything and the direction I have taken is to be true for me I have to let all that go as limiting to my spiritual growth. Not only do I simply become one of those whom I, in my righteous indignation, despise I cut myself off from the light.

Since I began this journey nearly six years ago I have often found that the message comes into my hand when I am most tightly wound up in a hard place. That has been the case here. I know that to move towards my personal liberation from the bondage of self, to experience the peace and gladness of life which I have glimpsed from time to time, I must be with others, extending love and compassion equally to all no matter what. This has been the task for me now for over a year, and it has not proven to be an easy one.

Batchelor's message here is timely and as always inspiring. Thankfully because today I need That.
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Lauren
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May 5, 2020
I am alone, and yet not alone, for I am together on this planet with trillions of living creatures, all as eager as myself for happiness, all as afraid of pain and sorrow as I am, all presumably the same right to grasp happiness and flee pain and sorrow to the maximum possible extent. How ought I to relate to these fellow sentient beings in a positive, constructive way?


Big questions and this book is full of them. Of course, with a subtitle that includes "Existentialist Approach...", I expected it. Not an entry-level text or survey, this book assumes a lot of philosophical and theoretical knowledge, and a good working history of Buddhism.
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Jasmine
668 reviews
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October 28, 2012
I originally started this book for a project for school I stopped reading it because I got bored, in fact
...
I am bored. Very very bored, so bored in fact that thinking about this book makes me bored. Does Batchelor understand Buddhism? Really it is tough to say since he seems to be trying so hard to make sure buddhism sounds non-religious and modern that he has forgotten to say much about it at all. And his refusal to pick a buddhism inherently undermines him simply because if you don't pick one nothing means anything at all.
...
I'm sure people would like this book...I will be sticking with Brad Warner.
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Craig
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January 18, 2013
This was a good book for me as a young Zen student, filled with doubts about religion, ritual, and hierarchy. I felt quite comfortable with Batchelor's secular/existentialist (b)uddhism. It probably influenced me to go to a Zen monastery to train. For this, I am grateful. Over the years I have had to drop my ideas about practice in order to practice. Mr. Batchelor's more recent books don't show a similar shift. While this puzzles me a bit, I am encouraged by his ability to bring unsuspecting people into this difficult practice.
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Alan
336 reviews
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June 25, 2018
Decent views on different modes in which humans go about their day, and the ultimate answer to that: existential Buddhism.

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Jerry Smith
381 reviews
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May 31, 2020
Another re-read but it's been years.
A good look at modern buddhism.
2020
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Joe Dwyer
17 reviews
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October 18, 2012
I'll put this book alone with the other insipidly banal mistakes i've read. Though the fact that Mr. Batchelor not only quotes but attempts to link the philosophies of Dostoevsky, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Jaspers and Sartre (the most notable) to the prolific cut-and-pasting of fundamentally different branches of continental philosophy to establish what he claims to be Mahayana Buddhism (I.e a middle way between nihilism and eternalism) within 130 pages. He does however triumph in distorting each random excerpt, from Dostoevsky and Sartre to T.S. Eliot and R.D. Lang, to the point where I not sure if this is a clever mockery of existentialism; or, maybe the simple truth is that the most profound axioms are recited poetically faux-naïf as s/he surrenders herself to the aphorisms on the preverbal bathroom wall of divine omniscience. (As to no longer to "alone")

Professor Paul Williams, brilliant work Mahayana Buddhism writes: "The Doctrinal Foundations Thus enlightenment comes from ceasing to grasp even the most subtle sources of attachment, and this ceasing to grasp requires seeing those things which could serve as sources of attachment as empty, mere conceptual constructs. All things are empty. On the level of what is an ultimate, primary existent there is nothing. On such a level therefore there is an endless absence, an endless emptiness."

One last question, Mr. Batchelor:
Is the tathagatagarbha implying that enlightenment is predeterminable, but we as laymen taint and shroud its purity though the objectification of daily life which it demands or is it necessary to begin corrupted in order that we can see through the impurity of our existence?

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Aisling
29 reviews
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April 10, 2016
"Our present situation is fundamentally similar to that of the Siddhartha. In both cases life has come to be dominated by the unrelenting forces of material and secular values. The concern of man is utterly absorbed and lost in the depersonalised mass of the particular entities of the world. In both cases an existential reaction, motivated by a deeper and more compelling awareness of the question of life as a whole, has arisen. The story of the Buddha indicates that his seeing an old man, a sick man, a corpse, and a wandering mendicant, impelling him to renounce his palatial life. This reaction is evident nowadays in the questioning of our basic values, our notion of progress, and our attitude towards technology. It reveals itself in Kierkegaard's study of anxiety, Marx's concern with alienation, Heidegger's analysis of inauthenticity and death. It is expressed throughout modern literature in the terrifying imagery of Kafka, the despair of elliot, and the nauseating pointlessness of life as described by Sartre. In this light, the 'awakening' of the Buddha should be seen as the actualisation of a meaningful answer to the questions implied within existence, and the teachings of Buddhism as a description of the processes involved in the realisation of authentic life."

Image (photography): Jennis Cheng Tien Li, 'Let's Be Together, Separately.', 2010

Let's Be Together, Seperately Jennis Cheng Tien Li

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Sasha
438 reviews
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September 1, 2017
I originally picked this up on-sale at a bookstore for the name alone. Not particularly interested in Buddhism, I started it more so for the existentialism aspect and insight into human relations. Many of the concepts, I found, were articulated clearly and communicated in such a way, one doesn't need to be thoroughly familiar with the Buddhist religion to make the connections to every day life. The text prompted so many "Mmhm" and "A-ha" moments, I travelled with a pen specifically to underline and make notes in the margins. I'd definitely recommend.
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Germaine Hypher
2 reviews
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September 9, 2012
Quite a convoluted style of writing that I found took a lot of concentration to keep on top of but this made me really focus on the text, often re-reading passages a few times until I felt I'd fully grasped them, so that I ended up absorbing the book more deeply than if it had been an easier read. Thankfully, the book was short enough for me to read it this carefully without giving up on it as I really appreciated it's teachings.

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2022/11/05

The Quaker World. - Daniels, C. Wess, Grant, Rhiannon: Books

Amazon.com: The Quaker World (Routledge Worlds): 9780367142513: Daniels, C. Wess, Grant, Rhiannon: Books


The Quaker World (Routledge Worlds) 1st Edition
by C. Wess Daniels (Editor), Rhiannon Grant (Editor)


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Kindle Australia
$71.05
 
Hardcover
$345.00 
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The Quaker World is an outstanding, comprehensive and lively introduction to this complex Christian denomination. Exploring the global reach of the Quaker community, the book begins with a discussion of the living community, as it is now, in all its diversity and complexity.

The book covers well-known areas of Quaker development, such as the formation of Liberal Quakerism in North America, alongside topics which have received much less scholarly attention in the past, such as the history of Quakers in Bolivia and the spread of Quakerism in Western Kenya. It includes over sixty chapters by a distinguished international and interdisciplinary team of contributors and is organised into three clear parts:
  1. Global Quakerism
  2. Spirituality
  3. Embodiment

Within these sections, key themes are examined, including global Quaker activity, significant Quaker movements, biographies of key religious figures, important organisations, pacifism, politics, the abolition of slavery, education, industry, human rights, racism, refugees, gender, disability, sexuality and environmentalism.

The Quaker World provides an authoritative and accessible source of information on all topics important to Quaker Studies. As such, it is essential reading for students studying world religions, Christianity and comparative religion, and it will also be of interest to those in related fields such as sociology, political science, anthropology and ethics.

About the Author


C. Wess Daniels is the William R. Rogers Director of Friends Center and Quaker Studies at Guilford College, United States. He is the author of Resisting Empire: The Book of Revelation (2019) and A Convergent Model of Renewal: Remixing The Quaker Tradition in Participatory Culture (2015).

Rhiannon Grant is Deputy Programme Leader in the Centre for Research in Quaker Studies at Woodbrooke and Honorary Senior Lecturer in Modern Quaker Thought at the University of Birmingham, United Kingdom. Her most recent books are Theology from Listening: Finding the Core of Liberal Quaker Theological Thought (2020) and Hearing the Light: The Core of Quaker Theology (2021).


Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Routledge; 1st edition (November 4, 2022)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 520 pages
====

Table of Contents
Introduction C. Wess Daniels and Rhiannon Grant  

Part I: Global Quakerism  

1. Quakers in Africa: History of the Quaker Movement in Africa Robert J. Wafula  
2. Transmission of Quaker Missionary Ideas as a Development of Christianity in Western Kenya, 1902 to 1970 Sychellus Wabomba Njibwakale  
3. A Brief History of Quakers in South Africa Penelope Cummins  
4. Quakers in Bolivia: The Beginning of Bolivian Friends Emma Condori Mamani  
5. European Quakers Hans Eirik Aarek  
6. Friends World Committee for Consultation, Section of the Americas Robin Mohr  
7. Together Apart: An Overview of the Asia-West Pacific Section (AWPS) Ronis Chapman and Virginia Jealous  
8. Nitobe Inazō and Quaker Influences on Japanese Colonial Thought Isaac Barnes May and Richard J. Barnes  
9. Progress Friends: Shaping the Liberal Quaker Past and Present Chuck Fager  
10. Stubborn Friends: Quakers and Native Americans in the Long Nineteenth Century Damon B. Akins  
11. Evangelical Friends Jennifer M. Buck  
12. Richard Foster (1942-) Jennifer M. Buck  
13. Movements Within Quakerism - Liberalism Isaac Barnes May  
14. The Life and Thought of Rufus Jones (1863-1948) Richard Kent Evans 
15. H. Louise Brown Wilson (1921-2014): Exemplary North Carolina Conservative Friend Lloyd Lee Wilson  
16. The Incorporation of Committees: The Development of Quaker Institutions Robin Mohr  
17. The Religious Roots of the Quaker Way Stuart Masters 
18. Quakerism in the Eighteenth Century Andrew Fincham  
19. Elizabeth Fletcher: The Youngest of the Valiant Sixty Barbara Schell Luetke  
20. Biography of Margaret Fell Kristianna Polder  

Part II: Spirituality  

21. Quaker Spiritual Autobiography Andrew Pisano  
22. Bayard T. Rustin: The Faith of a Conscientious Objector in the 1940s Carlos Figueroa  
23. Thomas Kelly's Mystical Itinerary as a Spiritual Orientation for Personal Spirituality David Pocta  
24. Hannah Whitall Smith: Nineteenth-Century Free-lance Quaker Heretic Carole Dale Spencer  
25. Loving "That of God": Participatory Love and the Quaker Way Matt Boswell  26. How Far the Theological Message of Liberal British Quakerism Has Changed Over the Last Fifty Years: An Analysis of Key Introductory Texts for Enquirers Hugh Jones  
27. Quaker Decision-Making Meetings Through the Ages: Consistency and Variation Judith Roads  
28. Quaker Decision-Making Process: The Case of Burundi Yearly Meeting David Niyonzima  
29. The Work of Equality: Supporting Quaker Women in Ministry Ashley M. Wilcox  
30. William Penn's Pragmatic Christology: A Christian Philosophy of Religion(s) Benjamin J. Wood  
31. Liberal Quaker Pneumatology Christy Randazzo  
32. Baptized With the Holy Spirit Emma Condori Mamani  
33. Language, Labels and Beyond: The Shifting Foci of Concern Over Adequte Representation in the Liberal Quaker 'Theism-Nontheism Debate' Stewart David Yarlett  
34. Worshipping at the Edge of Words: The Work of Silence and Speech in Meeting for Worship Ann Wrightson  
35. Testimony as Consequence: The Reinvention of Tradition Pink Dandelion  

Part III: Embodiment  

36. Networked to Freedom, but Not My Neighbour: Complicating Legacies of Quakers and the Enslaved Population of North Carolina Krishuna Hines-Gather  
37. Sarah Mapps Douglas: An American Saint Abigail Lawrence  
38. Quaker Advocacy for Peace: From Grassroots to Congress Diane Randall  
39. The Political Activist Life of Pragmatic Quaker Bayard T. Rustin Carlos Figueroa  
40. The Body Is Enough: Towards a Liberal Quaker Theology of Disability Benjamin J. Wood 
41. Theological Foundations in Disability Issues: Evaluating the African Christian Quaker Experience Oscar Lugusa Malande  
42. Representations of Quakers in Television and Film: An Overview Stephen D. Brooks 
43. Quakers Will Soon Engross the Whole Trade of the Kingdom Michael Dutch  
44. John Woolman and Delaware Indians: Envisioning Cross-Cultural Peace in a Time of Conflict Jon R. Kershner  
45. A Short History of Quakers Inclusion of Gay and Lesbian People Brian T. Blackmore  
46. Young Adult Quakers and Epilogue: A Case Study of an 'Alternative' Worshipping Community Matt Alton  
47. Quaker Archives in the United States Mary Crauderueff 
 48. Dismantling White Supremacy in Quaker Archives: A Case Study Mary Crauderueff  
49. The Economic and Political Theology of James Naylor Stuart Masters  
50. George Cadbury: Faith in Practice Andy Fincham  
51. Quaker Dress Deb Fuller  
52. Modern Understandings of Plain Dress Mackenzie Morgan  
53. Capturing the Light: Materializing Past Quaker Lives Christopher Allison  
54. Quakers and Other Animals Chris Lord  
55. Quakers and Marriage Kristianna Polder  
56. Paul Cuffe' Economic Religion: Cuffe's Quaker Identity Beyond the Race Hero Archetype Timothy Rainey II  
57. Distinctive and Harmless? Quaker Nonviolence as a Resource for Future Religiosity Stewart David Yarlett  
58. British Quakers and the Boer War, 1899-1902 Penelope Cummins  
59. Quaker Workcamps Greg Woods  
60. The Ramallah Friends Meeting: Examining 100 Years of Peace and Justice Work Maia Carter Hallward  
61. 'Go Anywhere, Do Anything': The Friends Ambulance Unity, 1914-1959 Rebecca Wynter

====

2022/11/02

25 Years of Quaker Universalism - Friends Journal 2008

25 Years of Quaker Universalism - Friends Journal


25 Years of Quaker Universalism
August 1, 2008

By Rhoda R. Gilman

In May 2008, Quaker Universalist Fellowship turned 25 years old. Many Friends would argue that what we usually call Quaker universalism is as old as the Religious Society of Friends itself and has been alive and well for 360 years, not only 25. Yet around the year 1980 there was a strong impulse among Friends on both sides of the Atlantic to reaffirm the universality of Quakerism in a world vastly different from that known by George Fox. The result was two new organizations, formed within a period of five years: Quaker Universalist Group (QUG) in the United Kingdom and Quaker Universalist Fellowship (QUF) in the United States.

The Religious Society of Friends emerged from World War II with a new generation of pacifist leadership and a global reach. A sign of this was the Nobel Peace Prize, awarded jointly to Friends Service Council of London and American Friends Service Committee in 1947. During the 1950s and 1960s, as the United States and the Soviet Union remained frozen in a balance of nuclear terror, old patterns of colonialism dissolved elsewhere in the world. New voices called for human rights, spiritual renewal, and a struggle for justice through nonviolent protest. Across Asia, Eastern faiths were reawakened both by the challenge of Western science and the hope for independence and social change.

Among Friends, a few like Teresina Havens had already been attracted by Buddhism with its close parallels to Quaker practice, and many had listened to the words of Mohandas Gandhi. Although Gandhi’s voice was stilled in 1948, he was soon echoed by others like Thich Nhat Hanh in Vietnam and the Dalai Lama from Tibet. By 1970 popular culture in the West had been stirred, and a powerful wave of Eastern spiritual practice was sweeping through Europe and the U.S., accompanied by a renewed interest in mysticism and esoteric religion of all kinds.

There was also a counteraction. While unprogrammed Friends, like other liberal Christians, flocked to Zendos and practiced mindfulness meditation on meetinghouse benches, Friends Evangelical churches grew by leaps and bounds through missionary work in Africa and Latin America. At the same time, more traditional Friends in England and the United States defended the Christian foundations of Quakerism.

In 1977, John Linton addressed the Seekers Association in London. He had worked and worshipped for many years in India, and he spoke from his experience at New Delhi Meeting when he challenged Quakers to cut their historic ties to Christianity and fulfill their destiny as "a faith that no longer divides but unites humanity." The time was ripe, and Friends who had silently felt the same need went public in 1979 to form QUG. Three years later, U.S. Friends invited Linton to bring his message across the ocean, and in 1983, at a gathering held in London Grove meetinghouse near Philadelphia, QUF took shape.

Both groups were small and have remained so. Quakers are busy folk, and some questioned the need for yet another organization to support. In the United States QUF also faced barriers of distance and diversity, and active membership was almost by necessity concentrated in the mid-Atlantic states. For a few years QUF held semiannual lectures and workshops. Papers given at them were printed as pamphlets and mailed to a wider membership around the country, accompanied by a short newsletter. Governance was informal, since Internal Revenue Service codes did not then require incorporation for religious nonprofits, and the active members were a small, well-acquainted group. In time, lectures were dropped or were occasionally co-sponsored with other Quaker organizations, but publishing continued.

The de facto headquarters and distribution center of QUF became the 1850 stone farmhouse of Sally Rickerman, who served as treasurer, membership clerk, printer, and sometimes editor. She also maintained outreach by mounting displays and selling pamphlets at the annual gatherings of Friends General Conference. Although the subscriber list was not over 300, pamphlets and the newsletter were mailed on their twice-yearly schedule, and in 1986 QUF produced a 100-page collection of six pamphlets originally published by QUG in Britain. Its ambitious title was The Quaker Universalist Reader Number 1.

A rather sleepy appearance, however, belied the group’s lively intellectual presence. Differing interpretations of universalism evoked searching discussions about whether identification with the Christian history and cultural heritage of Quakerism were essential to a spiritual understanding of Quaker practice, even if not needed for "salvation." In short, are universalists of differing religious faiths truly Friends? Can Christocentric Friends be considered universalist?

Boundaries were pushed even further as Friends in various meetings became concerned about embracing Wicca or paganism and accepting nontheists. Some, who felt under suspicion at their own meetings, maintained that QUF provided them with shelter and a spiritual home; others argued that Quaker universalism by its very nature should be a unifying force, embracing all and not standing at the opposite pole from any beliefs. Two QUF pamphlets, including one by Dan Seeger, its most frequent and best-selling author, became staples of the "Quakerism 101" curriculum produced by Philadelphia Yearly Meeting.

Less controversial over the years were essays and meditations on Buddhist, Hindu, and Islamic thought, and ongoing reflections on the theme of mysticism. Universalists argue for the relationship of early Quakerism to the mystical movements of late medieval Europe, and their interest in the history of that period has led to the reprinting of two 17th-century pamphlets never before made available to modern readers: The Light Upon the Candlestick, 1663/1992, and Fifty nine Particulars—To the Parliament of the Comon-Wealth of England, 1659/2002. Also reprinted have been two studies on the militant forerunners of Quakerism in 17th-century England, written by David Boulton.

As it entered the 1990s, QUF described itself as "an informal gathering of persons who cherish the spirit of universality that has always been intrinsic to the Quaker faith. We acknowledge and respect the diverse spiritual experience of those within our own meetings as well as of the human family worldwide; we are enriched by our dialogue with all who search sincerely. We affirm the unity of God’s creation."

During its second decade the communications revolution brought by computers and the Internet had a transforming effect. The first step, taken in 1995, was to start a conversation among widely scattered QUF subscribers. Until then they had been largely silent, but an e-mail list allowed them to exchange views, life stories, and experiences. Within a few months there was correspondence from Canada, Australia, Japan, England, and all corners of the United States. Some pieces were suitable for short articles, and the newsletter soon took on the character of a small journal.

A year or so later, a website was created. It went through several incarnations until in 2003 it became the main publishing arm of QUF and revitalized the e-mail discussion list with new technology. By then the physical labor of printing, folding, stuffing, and mailing the newsletter and pamphlets, plus the hours required to keep an accurate roster of paid-up members, had outgrown the energy of a handful of aging volunteers. Meanwhile, the freedom and worldwide reach of electronic publishing promised a powerful way to spread ideas and sustain discussion. So the decision was taken to make all publications except books available without charge on the Internet and to rely on contributions from sympathetic and like-minded readers for income. The task of mounting the library of pamphlets on the Web is still going forward hand-in-hand with the production of new materials (see http://www.universalistfriends.org).

The growing visibility of QUF on computer screens across the world has accompanied more activity at annual FGC Gatherings. In 1996 an overflow crowd attended the QUF interest group session, and since then a weeklong series of programs has been sponsored nearly every year. A further step was taken when members decided to devote a modest legacy received in 2003 to bringing distinguished plenary speakers to the Gathering—a service that had been performed for some years by Friends Journal. Named in honor of Elizabeth Watson, an author and longtime spokesperson for Quaker universalism, the QUF lectureship sponsored John Shelby Spong in 2005 and Marcus Borg in 2007.

Those speakers, along with a lecture by Elaine Pagels, which QUF cosponsored with Philadelphia Yearly Meeting in 2006, reflect a new current within the wider world of mainstream Christianity. It has been stimulated during the past century by scholarly study of the Bible and by the rediscovery of ancient texts long excluded from the Christian canon. One spokesperson for this current, Patricia Williams, is the present editor of QUF’s newsletter/journal Universalist Friends. She has recently been invited to membership in the Westar Institute, best known as the organization that sponsors the "Jesus Seminar," and she is the author of Quakerism: A Theology for Our Time, published last year in England. "All Quaker libraries might wish to have at least one copy" of this book, according to a reviewer in the March 2008 issue of the British magazine The Friend.

To Pat’s work the QUF owes a milestone that marks the rounding out of its first 25 years. Sifting through articles published in both Universalist Friends and its British counterpart, the Universalist, Pat selected material for two additional Quaker universalist "Readers." Entitled Universalism and Religions and Universalism and Spirituality, the volumes bring together a wide range of Quaker voices from both sides of the Atlantic. Although differing greatly in the words and images they use, the authors, each in his or her own way, address the agonizing problems of 21st-century global civilization and the religious conflict that threatens to destroy it. All call for Quakerism to fulfill John Linton’s vision of "a faith that no longer divides but unites humanity."
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Rhoda R. Gilman, a member of Twin Cities Meeting in St. Paul, Minn., is a historian and editor. She has authored books on Midwestern and American Indian history. She ran for lieutenant governor of Minnesota on the Green Party tic




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