The Buddhist Unconscious

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**{{i|''Acknowledgments''|xv}}<br><br>
**{{i|''Acknowledgments''|xv}}<br><br>


**{{i|'''Thematic introduction: a Buddhist critique of the construction of self and world'''|1}}<br><br>
**{{i|'''Thematic introduction: a Buddhist critique of<br>the construction of self and world'''|1}}<br><br>


*{{i|'''PART I'''<br>'''The background and context of the ālaya-vijñāna'''|7}}<br><br>
*{{i|'''PART I'''<br>'''The background and context of the ālaya-vijñāna'''|7}}<br><br>

Revision as of 10:59, 10 August 2020



The Buddhist Unconscious
Book
Book

This is the story of fifth century CE India, when the Yogacarin Buddhists tested the awareness of unawareness, and became aware of human unawareness to an extraordinary degree. They not only explicitly differentiated this dimension of mental processes from conscious cognitive processes, but also offered reasoned arguments on behalf of this dimension of mind. This is the concept of the 'Buddhist unconscious', which arose just as philosophical discourse in other circles was fiercely debating the limits of conscious awareness, and these ideas in turn had developed as a systematisation of teachings from the Buddha himself. For us in the twenty-first century, these teachings connect in fascinating ways to the Western conceptions of the 'cognitive unconscious' which have been elaborated in the work of Jung and Freud.
      This important study reveals how the Buddhist unconscious illuminates and draws out aspects of current western thinking on the unconscious mind. One of the most intriguing connections is the idea that there is in fact no substantial 'self' underlying all mental activity; 'the thoughts themselves are the thinker'. William S. Waldron considers the implications of this radical notion, which, despite only recently gaining plausibility, was in fact first posited 2,500 years ago. (Source: Routledge)

Citation Waldron, William S. The Buddhist Unconscious: The Ālaya-Vijñāna in the Context of Indian Buddhist Thought. Routledge Critical Studies in Buddhism. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003. http://abhidharma.ru/A/Raznoe/0061.pdf.


    • Prefacexi
    • Acknowledgmentsxv

    • Thematic introduction: a Buddhist critique of
      the construction of self and world
      1

  • PART I
    The background and context of the ālaya-vijñāna
    7

  • 1 The early Buddhist background9
  • The three marks of existence9
  • The formula of dependent arising11
    • Causation and continuity without a self16
  • Viññāṇa in the formula of dependent arising19
    • Viññāṇa as consciousness21
    • Viññāṇa as cognitive awareness28
  • The underlying tendencies (anusaya)33
    • The underlying tendency "I am" and conceptual proliferation (papañca)36
    • The debate over latent versus manifest39
  • Reciprocal causality between the two aspects of viññāṇa41

  • 2 The Abhidharma context46
  • The Abhidharma project and its problematic46
    • Background of the Abhidharma47
  • The aim and methods of Abhidharma: dharma as irreducible unit of experience50
  • The basic problematic: two levels of discourse, two dimensions of mind55
  • Analysis of mind and its mental factors57
    • The initial formulation of the problematic in its synchronic dimension: the accumulation of karmic potential, the presence of the underlying tendencies, and their gradual purification in the Kathāvatthu59
    • The problematic in its diachronic dimension: immediate succession versus the continuity of karmic potential62
  • The persistence of traditional continuities: karma and kleśa in the Abhidharma-kośa67
  • Abhidharmic responses to the problematic70
    • The Sarvāstivādin theory of possession (prāpti)72
    • The Sautrāntika theory of seeds (bīja) in the mental stream (santāna)73
  • Questions raised by consciousness, seeds, and the mental stream76
  • The Theravadin theory of life-constituent mind (bhavaṅga-citta)81
  • Conclusion85

  • PART II
    The ālaya-vijñāna in the Yogācāra tradition
    89

  • 3 The ālaya-vijñana in the early tradition91
  • The origins of the ālaya-vijñāna91
  • The new model of mind in the Saṃdhinirmocana Sūtra94
    • The ālaya-vijñāna as mental stream99
  • The Ālaya Treatise of the Yogācārabhūmi101
    • The Proof Portion102
  • The Alaya Treatise, Pravṛtti Portion: analyzing the ālaya-vijñāna in Abhidharmic terms107
    • The ālaya-vijñāna's subliminal objective supports and cognitive processes109
    • The ālaya-vijñāna's mutual and simultaneous relationship with manifest cognitive awareness (pravṛtti-vijñāna)112
    • The ālaya-vijñāna's simultaneous arising with (afflictive) mentation117
  • The Ālaya Treatise, Nivṛtti Portion: equating the ālaya-vijñāna with saṃsāric continuity123
  • Conclusion127

  • 4 The ālaya-vijñāna in the Mahāyāna-saṃgraha
  • 1. bringing it all back home128
  • Appropriating the traditional Buddhist framework129
    • Synonyms of the ālaya-vijñāna in the disciple’s vehicle130
    • The two vijñanas and the two dependent arisings131
    • Seeding the ālaya-vijñāna: the karmic process as simultaneous intrapsychic causality135
  • Resolving the Abhidharmic Problematic139
    • Karma, rebirth, and the ālaya-vijñāna140
    • The continuity of the afflictions (kleśa)142
    • The path of purification: mundane and supramundane150
  • Beyond Abhidharma: adventitious defilements, pure seeds, and luminous minds153

  • 5 The ālaya-vijñāna in the Mahāyāna-saṃgraha
  • 2. looking beyond158
  • The predispositions of speech, self-view, and the life-constituents159
  • Common experience, common embodiment: language, the ālaya-vijñana, and "the arising of the world"160

  • PART III
    Appendices
    171

  • Appendix I The series of dependent arising: affliction, action, and their
    results
    173
  • Appendix II Index of related controversies175
  • Appendix III Translation: the Pravṛtti and Nivṛtti Portions of the Viniścayasaṃgrahaṇī of the Yogācārabhūmi178

    • Notes190
    • Bibliography of works cited247
    • Index of texts quoted255
    • Index259