Possessing Enlightenment: Sorcery, Selfhood, and Tragic Responsibility in a Chinese Buddhist Apocryphon

This article explores how the Lengyan jing, or Śūrangama Sūtra – an apocryphal Buddhist scripture written in China around 705 CE – remapped Chinese Buddhist understandings of moral responsibility in consequential ways. Although grounded in the orthodox doctrinal premise that all sentient beings inna...

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Autor principal: Buckelew, Kevin (Author)
Tipo de documento: Recurso Electrónico Artigo
Idioma:Inglês
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Publicado em: Brill 2023
Em: Numen
Ano: 2023, Volume: 70, Número: 4, Páginas: 337-368
(Cadeias de) Palavra- chave padrão:B Sūraṅgamasamādhisūtra / Budismo / Ética de responsabilidade / Dano / Intenção / Demônio
Classificações IxTheo:AB Filosofia da religião
AG Vida religiosa
BL Budismo
NCA Ética
Outras palavras-chave:B Ethics
B Zen
B Chan
B Buddhism
B Demons
B China
B Responsibility
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Resumo:This article explores how the Lengyan jing, or Śūrangama Sūtra – an apocryphal Buddhist scripture written in China around 705 CE – remapped Chinese Buddhist understandings of moral responsibility in consequential ways. Although grounded in the orthodox doctrinal premise that all sentient beings innately possess buddha-nature, the Lengyan jing is punctuated by warnings about the danger that even the most earnest seekers of enlightenment might be possessed by demons, embark on evil behavior, and end up fully demonic. Such warnings depart from longstanding norms in Buddhist ethics, according to which responsibility for fault is measured in terms of a person’s intentions. Instead, I argue that the Lengyan jing articulates a moral logic of what Sandra Macpherson calls “tragic responsibility.” This logic informed important but overlooked aspects of the soteriological vision found in key texts from the Chan (Japanese Zen) tradition, which rose to prominence in the centuries following the Lengyan jing’s composition.
ISSN:1568-5276
Obras secundárias:Enthalten in: Numen
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/15685276-20231698