Thursday, April 16, 2015

The Scientific Buddha




Today, the Scientific Buddha is often mistaken for Gautama 
Buddha, the historical Buddha, the real Buddha. But they are 
not the same. And this case of mistaken identity has particular
consequences for those who seek to understand and practice 
the teachings of Gautama Buddha.

Some 2,500 years after the lifetime of the historical Buddha, 
the following quotation about Buddhism was ascribed to Albert 
Einstein: “The religion of the future will be a cosmic religion. It
should transcend a personal God and avoid dogmas and theology. 
Covering both the natural and the spiritual, it should be based on 
a religious sense arising from the experience of all things, natural 
and spiritual, as a meaningful unity. If there is any religion that 
would cope with modern scientific needs, it would be Buddhism.” 

This statement cannot be located in any of Einstein’s writings. But 
there is something about Buddhism, and about the Buddha, that 
caused someone to ascribe these words to Einstein. And since the 
time when Einstein didn’t say this, intimations of deep connections 
between Buddhism and science have continued, right up until today. 
In any given month, such publications as The New York Times and The 
Washington Post report on clinical studies investigating the affinity of 
Buddhism and science, particularly neurobiology.

I had once imagined that claims for the compatibility of Buddhism 
and science derived from the 1960s, gaining their first popular 
expression in Fritjof Capra’s 1975 best seller The Tao of Physics. The claims did derive from the ’60s, but I was off by a century. 
Statements about the compatibility of Buddhism and science were 
being made in the 1860s—in Europe and America during the Victorian 
period, as Buddhism became fashionable in intellectual circles, and 
at the same time in Asia, as Buddhist thinkers were defending 
themselves against the attacks of Christian missionaries. Thus, to 
understand what the compatibility of Buddhism and science means 
today,it is necessary to understand what it meant a century and a half 
ago. Buddhists first encountered science, perhaps ironically, in the 
guise of Christianity. In missionary attacks on Buddhism, from Francis 
Xavier in Japan in the 16th century to Spence Hardy in Sri Lanka in 
the 19th century, Christianity is proclaimed as superior to Buddhism 
in part because it possesses the scientific knowledge to accurately 
describe the world, something that Buddhism lacked. For the 
missionaries, then,science was not an opponent of religion, or at 
least of the true religion, but its ally. Science would serve as a tool 
of the missionary and as a reason for conversion. Later, science 
would be portrayed as the product of a more generalized “European civilization,”something that this civilization would take around the 
world. The vehicle for that journey was colonialism.

The efforts by Buddhist elites of the late 19th and early 20th centuries 
to counter these claims and to argue that, on the contrary, Buddhism 
is the truly scientific religion (an argument that they seem to have eventually won) were directly precipitated by the Christian attacks. 
In a sense, the Buddhists wrested the weapon of science from the 
hands of the Christians and turned it against them. Whether to counter 
the missionary’s charge that Buddhism was superstition and idolatry, 
or to counter the colonialist’s claim that the Asian was prone to fanciful 
flights of mind and meaningless rituals of body, science proved the ideal 
weapon for the Buddhists. It was not, they argued, Christianity but 
Buddhism that was in fact the scientific religion, the religion best suited 
for modernity, not just in Asia but throughout the world. Buddhism was 
the opposite of Christianity. Christianity has a creator God, and Buddhism 
has no God; Christianity has faith, Buddhism has reason; Christ is divine, 
the Buddha is human. And it was this human, this Asian, this Buddha, 
who knew millennia ago what the European was just beginning to discover.
Some even went so far as to declare that Buddhism was not a religion at 
all, but was itself a science, a science of the mind. The implications of such 
a statement become evident in light of Victorian theories of social evolution, 
which saw the human race progressing from the state of primitive superstition to religion and then to science. As a science, Buddhism—once condemned 
as a primitive superstition both by European and American missionaries and
by Asian modernists—was able to leap from the bottom of the evolutionary 
scale to the top, bypassing the troublesome category of religion altogether.

For the Buddha to be identified as an ancient sage fully attuned to the 
findings of modern science, it was necessary that he first be transformed 
into a figure who differed in many ways from the Buddha who has been 
revered by Buddhists across Asia over the course of many centuries. The Buddha was first encountered by European missionaries and travelers as 
but one of many idols, an idol known by many names. It was only in the 
late 17th century that the conclusion began to be drawn that the various 
statues seen in Siam, Cathay, Japan, and Ceylon, each with a different 
name, all represented the same god. And it was not until the early 19th 
century that it was known with certainty that that god had been a man, 
and that that man had been born in India. By that time, Buddhism was 
all but dead in India, and European scholars, many of whom had never 
met a Buddhist or set foot in Asia, created a new Buddha, a Buddha made
from manuscripts. This was the age of the quest for the historical Jesus. 
European philologists set out on their own quest for the historical Buddha, 
and they felt they had found him. This Buddha was portrayed as a prince 
who had renounced his throne, who proclaimed the truth to all who would
listen, regardless of their social status, who prescribed a life dedicated to morality, without the need for God. Such a savior held a special appeal to Europeans and Americans in the last half of the 19th century, an appeal 
only heightened by the fact that unlike Jesus, the Buddha was not a Jew 
but an Aryan. It was this Buddha, unknown in Asia until the 19th century, 
who would become the Buddha we know today, and who would become 
the Scientific Buddha.

In the long history of the discourse of Buddhism and science, what has 
been meant by Buddhism, as well as its perceived goals, has changed. 
In the beginning, Buddhism was the original Buddhism postulated by 
European Orientalists, a Buddhism that then came to be identified with 
the Theravada traditions of Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia, or at least with 
their Pali canon. In the period after the Second World War, Buddhism 
became Zen, especially as it was represented by D. T. Suzuki. During the 
1960s and ’70s, Buddhism was often the Madhyamaka philosophy of 
Nagarjuna and the doctrine of emptiness. Over the past two decades, 
the Buddhism in dialogue with science has largely been Tibetan Buddhism,
a form of Buddhism that just a century ago was regarded as a form of superstition so degenerate that it did not deserve the name Buddhism, 
but was referred to instead as Lamaism. A century later, the figure once 
known to Europeans as the Grand Lama of Lhasa, shrouded in mystery 
for so long, holds annual seminars with some of the leading scientists in 
the world.

The referent of “science” has also changed. Although quantum physics 
and cosmology still capture attention in some quarters today, the greatest energy is being directed toward neuroscience, and especially research on meditation. The assertions being made in this domain are qualitatively 
different from the assertion that the Buddha understood the theory of 
relativity. At the more recent turn of the century, meditation has become
the centerpiece of the Buddhism and science discourse. Experiments are currently being conducted, data are currently being gathered, and that information is being broadly interpreted, with some scientists seeing more 
in it than others. But if forms of Buddhist meditation are shown to reduce 
what we today call “stress,” what, if anything, does that mean? Is Buddhism, then, a form of self-help? Has Buddhism always been, in its own way, a 
self-help movement?

Research on meditation has been conducted to test its benefits for 
weight loss, for lowering blood pressure, for lowering cholesterol, 
and for reducing substance abuse. That is, meditation is regarded 
in these studies as a therapy for stress reduction. Indeed, one of 
the forms of meditation examined in the federal study is MBSR, 
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, which seeks to induce a form 
of awareness that focuses on the present moment, observing “the 
unfolding of experience, moment to moment.”

But is stress reduction a traditional goal of Buddhist meditation? A 
glimpse at any number of forms of Buddhist meditation suggests 
that this is not the aim. Take, for example, one of the most common 
teachings of the Nyingma or “Ancient” sect of Tibetan Buddhism, 
called the four ways of turning the mind away from samsara (blo 
ldog rnam bzhi). These are part of the so-called preliminary practices 
(sngon ’gro), meditations that must be completed in order to receive 
tantric initiation. Versions of these practices are found among all four 
of the major sects of Tibetan Buddhism.

The first of these is meditation on the rarity of human birth: how, 
among the beings that populate the six realms of rebirth, those 
reborn as humans with access to the Buddha’s teaching are incredibly 
rare. The second meditation is on the certainty of death and the 
uncertainty of the time of death, the recognition that one will definitely 
die, yet the time of death is utterly indefinite. The third preliminary 
practice is to meditate on the workings of the law of karma, how 
negative deeds done in the past will always ripen as suffering and how 
over the beginningless cycle of rebirth each of us has committed 
countless crimes. The prospect of eternal suffering lies ahead. And 
what are those sufferings? The fourth meditation is on the faults of 
samsara, visualizing in detail the tortures of the eight hot hells and 
the eight cold hells, the four neighboring hells, and the various trifling 
hells; the horrible hunger and thirst suffered by ghosts; the sufferings 
of animals, the sufferings of humans that we know so well, even the 
sufferings of gods. For in Buddhism, the gods also suffer.Scientific Buddha 2

The goal of such meditation is to cause one to regard this life as a 
prisoner regards his or her prison, to cause one to strive to escape 
from this world with the urgency that a person whose hair is on fire 
seeks to douse the flames. The goal of such meditation, in other words, 
is stress inductionThis stress is the result of a profound dissatisfaction 
with the world. Rather than seeking a sense of peaceful satisfaction with 
the unfolding of experience, the goal of this practice is to produce a 
state of mind that is highly judgmental, indeed judging this world to be 
like a prison. This sense of dissatisfaction is regarded as an essential prerequisite for progress on the Buddhist path. Far from seeking to 
become somehow “nonjudgmental,” the meditator is instructed to judge 
all the objects of ordinary experience as scarred by three marks: 
impermanence, suffering, and no self.

With that prerequisite in place, the Buddhist practitioner embarks on a 
path intended not to reduce stress or lower cholesterol but to uproot 
more fundamental forms of suffering. These include what are referred 
to as the sufferings of pain; in the case of humans, these include birth, 
aging, sickness, and death, losing friends, gaining enemies, not finding 
what you want, and finding what you don’t want. And the sufferings of 
pain are only the most overt. The Buddha also spoke of what he called 
the sufferings of change. These, in fact, are feelings of pleasure, which, 
by their very nature, will eventually turn into pain. The claim here is that pleasure and pain are fundamentally different: that pain remains painful 
unless something is done to alleviate it, while pleasure will naturally turn 
into pain. The most subtle form of suffering of all is one to which the unenlightened are said to be oblivious: that our minds and bodies are so conditioned that we are always subject to suffering in the next moment.

The history of Buddhism and science is filled with false resonance: the 
doctrine of karma sounds like the theory of evolution, the Buddhist 
account of the origin of the cosmos sounds like the Big Bang, the doctrine 
of emptiness sounds like quantum physics. Immanuel Kant once observed 
that “since human reason has been enraptured by innumerable objects in various ways for many centuries, it cannot easily fail that for everything 
new, something old can be found which has some kind of similarity to it.” 
It is also true that our minds make consistent use of comparison to 
organize experience. Comparison may be an evolutionary adaptation.
But in the case of Buddhism and science, something else seems also to 
be at work.

This is not to suggest that research on the neurology of meditation should 
not be conducted. Meditation is the virtuoso practice par excellence of the 
tradition, and monks have devoted themselves to its practice, and other 
monks to its theory, for more than two millennia. Clearly something was 
occurring in their brains, regardless of how it was described, and it would 
be fascinating to know whether it could be measured somehow. But it 
would be a great loss should the rich vocabulary and imagery of Buddhist 
meditation be abandoned in the process of scientific research.

It is often claimed that time in Buddhism is cyclic, but that is not so. 
Worlds come in and out of existence, in phases of creation, abiding, 
destruction, and nothingness. Beings wander among the six realms. 
Yet time moves forward to a time when there is no time, when samsara
itself comes to an end. Despite the confusion that seems to surround us, 
there is movement forward.

This cosmic order is disrupted by the Scientific Buddha. He appeared in 
the world before the teachings of the buddha of our age, Gautama 
Buddha, had been forgotten, before his teachings had run their course. 
The Scientific Buddha was not predicted by a previous buddha, nor did 
the world await his coming. And yet he has served a useful role. He was 
born into a world of the colonial subjugation of Asia by Europe. He 
fought valiantly to win Buddhism its place among the great religions 
of the world, so that today it is universally respected for its values of 
reason and nonviolence. We might regard the Scientific Buddha as one 
of the many “emanation bodies” of the Buddha who have appeared in 
the world, making use of skillful methods (upaya) to teach a provisional 
dharma to those temporarily incapable of understanding the true teaching. 
For this, the Scientific Buddha was stripped of his many magical elements,
and his dharma was deracinated. The meditation that he taught was only 
something called “mindfulness,” and a pale form of that practice. He 
taught stress reduction, something never taught by any other buddha in
the past, for previous buddhas sought to create stress, to destroy 
complacency, in order to lead us to a state of eternal stress reduction, 
that state of extinction called nirvana. Having taught his version of the 
dharma, it is now time for the Scientific Buddha to pass into nirvana.

The Scientific Buddha is a pale reflection of the buddha born in Asia, a 
buddha who entered our world in order to destroy it. This buddha has 
no interest in being compatible with science. The relation of Buddhism 
and science, then, should not be seen as a disagreement over when and 
how the universe began. It should not be seen, in Stephen Jay Gould’s memorable phrase, as “nonoverlapping magisteria,” with science 
concerned with fact and religion concerned with morality. It should not 
be seen, in Buddhist terms, as the two truths, with science concerned with 
the conventional truth and Buddhism concerned with the ultimate truth. Buddhism and science each have their own narrative, each their own telos
If an ancient religion like Buddhism has anything to offer science, it is not 
in the facile confirmation of its findings.One of the most famous statements
in Buddhist literature occurs in the Diamond Sutra, where the Buddha says
to the monk Subhuti:
In this regard, Subhuti, one who has set out on the bodhisattva path should have the following thought, “I should bring all living beings to final extinction in the realm of extinction without substrate remaining. But after I have brought living beings to final extinction in this way, no living being whatsoever has been brought to extinction.” Why is that? If, Subhuti, the idea of a living being were to occur to a bodhisattva, or the idea of a soul or the idea of a person, he should not be called a bodhisattva. Why is that? There is no dharma called “one who has set out on the bodhisattva path.”
This appeal that we continue to remember the Buddha in the various ways 
that he has been understood over the long history of Buddhism in Asia is 
not to suggest that Mount Meru can be found using GPS any more than 
that Noah’s Ark will ever be unearthed. It is not to claim that Buddhist descriptions of the world carry the same status as the descriptions of the 
most current scientific research (that is, those descriptions that have not 
yet been displaced). Nor is it to consign the Buddha to some vague realm 
of “the ultimate,” conceding all else to “the conventional.” It is to say, 
instead, that the Buddha, the old Buddha, not the Scientific Buddha, 
presented a radical challenge to the way we see the world, both the world 
that was seen two millennia ago and the world that is seen today. What he taught is not different, it is not an alternative, it is the opposite. That the 
path that we think will lead us to happiness leads instead to sorrow. That 
what we believe is true is instead false. That what we imagine to be real is unreal. A certain value lies in remembering that challenge from time to time.

To understand oneself, and the world, as merely a process, an extraordinary process of cause and effect, operating without an essence, yet seeing the salvation of others, who also do not exist, as the highest form of human endeavor—this is the challenge presented by that passage from the 
Diamond Sutra. The scientific verification of this bold claim would seem 
to lie, like buddhahood itself, far in the future.

Donald S. Lopez, Jr., is the Arthur E. Link Distinguished University Professor 

of Buddhist and Tibetan Studies at the University of Michigan. He is the author of several books, including Buddhism and Science: A Guide for the Perplexed and Prisoners of Shangri-La: Tibetan Buddhism and the West. This article was adapted from The Scientific Buddha: His Short and Happy Life by Donald S. Lopez, Jr. © 2012. Reprinted with permission of Yale University Press.
Illustrations by Beppe Giacobbe.

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