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244 Pages·1997·23.92 MB·English
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REFLECTIONS IN THE MIRROR OF RELIGION Reflections in the Mirror of Religion Ninian Smart Edited with an Introduction by John P. Burris First published in Great Britain 1997 by MACMILLAN PRESS LTD Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS and London Companies and representatives throughout the world This book is published in Macmillan's Library of Philosophy and Religion Series General editor: John Hick Series ISBN 978-0-333-69996-6 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 978-1-349-25627-3 ISBN 978-1-349-25625-9 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-349-25625-9 First published in the United States of America 1997 by ST. MARTIN'S PRESS, INC., Scholarly and Reference Division, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010 ISBN 978-0-312-17247-3 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Smart, Ninian, 1927- Reflections in the mirror of religion I Ninian Smart edited with an introduction by John P. Burris. p. em.-(Library of philosophy and religion) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-312-17247-3 (cloth) I. Religion-Study and teaching. I. Burris, John P. II. Title. III. Series: Library of philosophy and religion (St. Martin's Press) BL4l.S58 1997 200'.7-dc21 96-43975 CIP © Ninian Smart 1997 Introduction ©John P. Burris 1997 Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 1997 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London WlP 9HE. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The authors have asserted their rights to be identified as the authors of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 I 06 05 04 03 02 01 00 99 98 97 To our friend and intellectual collocutor Charles H. Long Contents Preface: Reflections in the Mirror of Religion ix Acknowledgements xii Introduction fohn P. Burris 1 PART I A HERMENEUTICS OF COMPARISON: REFLECTIONS ON THE POSSIBILITY OF A SCIENCE OF RELIGION 1 What would Buddhaghosa have made of The Cloud of Unknowing? (1992) 9 2 The Purification of Consciousness and the Negative ~0~ ~ 3 Our Experience of the Ultimate (1984) 41 4 Foreword to Religion in Essence and Manifestation (1986) 51 5 Identity and a Dynamic Phenomenology of Religion (1985) 63 6 Western Society and Buddhism (1989) 73 PART II RELIGION ON THE GROUND: SOME EXAMPLES OF METHOD FOR DEVELOPING A SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE 7 Consciousness: Permanent or Fleeting? Reflections on Indian Views of Consciousness and the Self (1989) 85 8 Reflections on the Sources of Know ledge in the Indian Tradition (1989) 95 vii viii Contents 9 An Analysis of Hinduism in the Modern World {1986) 108 10 Action and Suffering in the Theravadin Tradition (1984) 120 11 India, Sri Lanka and Religion (1989) 130 12 Discontinuities and Continuities between Mao Zedong Thought and the Traditional Religions of China (1990) 148 13 Asian Cultures and the Impact of the West: India and China (1982) 157 PART III THE NEW DISCIPLINE: RELIGION AS AN ACADEMIC STUDY 14 Introducing the Study of Religion (1990) 175 15 Teaching Religion and Religions: The 'World Religions' Course {1991) 188 16 The Pros and Cons of Thinking of Religion as Tradition (1991) 197 17 Graduate Education: Some Practical Issues (1988) 201 18 Reflections on the Future of Religion (1989) 208 Bibliography 222 Index 225 Preface: Reflections in the Mirror of Religion My good friend and colleague John Burris has assembled this anthology of my essays, and has written also a perceptive introduc tion. In this preface I wanted to add a few thoughts. First, I think it is important that religious studies should incor porate social-science approaches. Sometimes it is too fixated on history of religion and philosophy of religion. Unless it deals seri ously with religion on the ground, it can be lost in antiquity and mere ideas. Still, second, I think my philosophical training in Oxford is important to me: because too often conceptual confusion afflicts our field. For instance, there are scholars who affirm stoutly that there is no such thing as Hinduism. We can understand their perception: but they forget that in recent times there undoubtedly is such a thing as Hinduism. The modem self-understanding emerged above all during the latter part of the nineteenth century, as a response to British and missionary challenges. In a vital sense the British helped to create the modem Hindu ideology. Those who deny that there is a Hinduism should try that idea on a meeting of Hindus in Atlanta or Benares. My essay in Part II is, by the way, a 'decon struction' of Hinduism, but with a differing message from those who deny the religion. In short, there is a conceptual confusion because the fact that Hinduism so-called was once a loose congeries of religions does not entail that it is so now. And what is it be said of its other-defined identity during the Mughal period? Thirdly, important matters hang on our conceptual categoriza tions. Often a stupid division is imposed between religion and so called 'secular' worldviews. Sometimes scholars try to divide religion from, say, Marxism and nationalisms, by appealing to the notion of the transcendent: but can they define the latter? And does Confucianism or Theravada Buddhism have a transcendent in the same sense as, say, Islam? Transcendence can be as much a matter of family resemblance as religion itself. If we accept the conver gence of religion and secular worldview, this makes a profound difference to the sociology of religion and conceptions of the ix Preface X division between Church and State (or Mosque and State, and so on). Consequently there is a vital message in the essay in Part II on Maoism and its relations to the traditional religions of China. Fourth, conceptual clarification is important in the discussion of the nature of religious studies, and a whole host of methodological issues. Sometimes, for instance, there is rather spurious debate between theology and religious studies. Much under the head of theology is a bit of religious studies, for instance Christian history (often, though, chosen selectively). On the other hand in Western countries theology is wrongly separated from its necessary advec tives, such as Christian or Jewish. In England theology means Christian theology; and divinity in Harvard means Christian theol ogy. The trouble is that it is institutionally established in these forms. In theory, why should anyone object to academic defining religious traditions and expressing their doctrinal or philosophical point of view? But not if it is preselected in an established situa tion. So there are conceptual tangles here that need to be sorted out which are of some moral significance: for instance, in England Anglican theology used to be taught without a blush in state supported universities, as if the population did not include Jews, Muslims, Catholics and others. When I started the Religious Studies Department at Lancaster (the first such in England), I determined that an early appointment would be in Judaism as a living religion. I believe it was the first such in the British Isles - a sign of the dreadful grip of establishment, despite Judaism's long and creative presence in the British community. So lack of conceptual clarity about religion was in part the cause of a kind of injustice. In brief, I think that a definition of religious studies which treats it as aspec tual (dealing with a vital aspect of human institutions and experi ence), multicultural (including history, philology, sociology, anthropology, art history, phenomenology, and so on), non-finite (that is, dealing with secular ideologies too), and multidisciplinary, including philosophy. Such a concept of religious studies sets it apart from the usual aims of theology. A vital ingredient, then, in the study of religion is conceptual analysis. Without it we can blunder about in the thickets of scholar ship. Often philology rules in religious studies, but can easily conceal egregious follies: for instance, the idea that Buddhism was a kind of Protestant breakaway from Brahmanism, or that you could have a rounded view of the Hindu worldview by studying a few sacred Sanskrit texts. Philology is necessary but by no means Preface xi sufficient in the exploration of religions: it is necessary, for instance, to understand how they are used - they do not themselves reveal this. Conceptual analysis is especially important amid the welter of theories in the human sciences. These, then, are some of the broader thoughts behind the essays here assembled. I am especially proud of the one called 'What would Buddhaghosa have made of the The Cloud of Unknowing?', to show that despite what I said above I do take the linguistic task seriously. I regard also my long introduction to the major work of Gerardus Van der Leeuw as vital: I recently published a sort of sequel to his Religion in Essence and Manifestation, which I jokingly called 'Daughter of Van der Leeuw', entitled The Dimensions of the Sacred (London and Berkeley, 1996). University of California, Santa Barbara NINIAN SMART

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