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One of the most common questions about buddha-nature is whether it is the same as or similar to the Christian or Hindu notions of a soul. It is not. Buddha-nature is not an individual entity—there are not separate buddha-natures in each being. Christianity teaches that each person's soul exists independently and will survive that person's death. There is plenty of debate across traditions, but in general the soul is said to be fundamentally polluted by Original Sin and that it requires God's intervention to be saved. The Hindu ''ātman'' is similarly understood to be real, but only in the sense of partaking in a universal divine presence called ''Brahman''; the individuality of the ātman is believed to be illusory. | The Questions | ||
One of the most common questions about buddha-nature is whether it is the same as or similar to the Christian or Hindu notions of a soul. It is not. Buddha-nature is not an individual entity—there are not separate buddha-natures in each being. Christianity teaches that each person's soul exists independently and will survive that person's death. There is plenty of debate across traditions, but in general the soul is said to be fundamentally polluted by Original Sin and that it requires God's intervention to be saved. The Hindu ''ātman'' is similarly understood to be real, but only in the sense of partaking in a universal divine presence called ''Brahman''; the individuality of the ātman is believed to be illusory. | |||
Buddha-nature, in contrast to both of these ideas, is neither individualistic nor a manifestation of a divine presence. Rather, it is the basic faculty of awareness—a natural luminosity that is unchanged no matter how ignorant or benighted we are. It is like water that has been muddied—the water is fundamentally clear, and it will return to that state when left to settle—or like a cloudy sky, the clarity of which remains constant even as clouds pass through it. Because buddha-nature is empty of any conditioning, it is fundamentally pure, no different from the enlightened state of a buddha. For that reason, we all have the potential to cast off ignorance and suffering and achieve buddhahood, and we are solely responsible ourselves for doing so. | |||
If we did not have buddha-nature, it would mean that we are not guaranteed liberation or enlightenment. The doctrine of buddha-nature is the codification of the idea that all people are capable of attaining the same enlightenment that Siddhartha Gautama, Shakyamuni Buddha attained. | |||
Not all Buddhists accept the teachings of buddha-nature, however, and some actually disparage it as non-Buddhist. This is because of the similarities between buddha-nature and the "self," which the Buddha famously declared does not exist. The Buddha taught that all individuals are subject to "dependent arising," which simply means we exist because of causes and conditions. We are made up of parts in dependence on other things, so there is no clear defining line between ourselves and the rest of the world. We exist, but we exist as pieces of a larger process that is constantly changing, and there is no underlying permanence to any of it; as the Greek philosopher Heraclitus said, the only constant is change. Because buddha-nature is described as our "essence" or our "innate nature," some teachers and scholars have argued that it is no different from the self and is therefore in contradiction with basic Buddhism. Some buddha-nature scriptures even use the word self (''ātman'') to describe buddha-nature, but they mean the term in a very different way, describing a basic fact of reality shared by all beings rather than an individual essence. | |||
Others Buddhists argue that the teaching of buddha-nature is merely “provisional” and is not “definitive”; it is not literally true but only useful for motivating people who might otherwise become discouraged, and that it is helpful for understanding the philosophical paradox of enlightenment (that is, how a state of being that is by definition unconditioned can be produced from a different state of being). This is because it would appear to contradict the Buddha's teaching on emptiness, violating the philosophical dictate that the enlightened state cannot be described because it is beyond the reach of dualistic conceptual thought. Still others have argued that buddha-nature is not universal but rather restricted to certain categories of people, or that it is acquired as a result of practice or prayer. | |||
For the most part, buddha-nature is taught to be a literal teaching of the Buddha and to be innate to all beings with a mind, including both human beings and animals. Nevertheless, questions such as whether buddha-nature and tathagatagarbha teachings are to be taken as "definitive" or "provisional," whether buddha-nature is merely an emptiness or whether it represents all the qualities of a completely enlightened buddha, and whether it represents a potential we have that needs to be cultivated or is something that is already perfect that simply needs to be revealed are fundamental questions that Buddhist scholars have debated through the centuries. | |||
Learn more about the controversies here: [[Ideas|Questions and Controversies]] | Learn more about the controversies here: [[Ideas|Questions and Controversies]] |
Revision as of 14:30, 9 January 2020
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