2022/06/11

William James and Buddhism: American Pragmatism and the Orient

RELIGION

Religion (2000) 30, 000–000
doi:10.1006/reli.2000.0292, available online at http://www.idealibrary.com on
William James and Buddhism: American Pragmatism
and the Orient
D S
William James pursued far ranging enquiries in America across the fields of psychology, philosophy and religious studies between 1890 and 1910. Historical and comparative overlaps emerge between James and Buddhism from these pursuits.

 This article first sets out James’ own nineteenth-century American context. There follows James’ own more explicit references to Buddhism, which particularly focused on the meaning of the term ‘religion’ and on specific elements of Buddhist teachings. In turn comes a substantive comparative look at certain themes in both James and Buddhism, namely, ‘consciousness’, ‘integration’ and ‘criteria of truth claims’. 

The common functionalist tendencies in James and Buddhism are highlighted.

 Finally, the article attempts a wider look at the interaction between American thought and Buddhism during the twentieth century. This interaction is exemplified by John Dewey, Charles Hartshorne, Daisetz Suzuki, Kitaro Nishida and David Kalupahana, and also across the fields of psychology, pragmatism and process philosophy. In all of these areas James emerges as a model for
studying American thought and Buddhism. 

 2000 Academic Press