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.
Author(s): William Waldron
Series: Critical studies in Buddhism
Publisher: RoutledgeCurzon
Year: 2003
Language: English
Pages: 269
Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Contents......Page 5
Preface......Page 12
Acknowledgments......Page 16
Thematic introduction: a Buddhist critique of the construction of self and world......Page 18
The background and context of the alaya-vijana......Page 24
The early Buddhist background......Page 26
The Abhidharma context......Page 63
The alaya-vijana in the Yogacara tradition......Page 106
The alaya-vijana in the early tradition......Page 108
The alaya-vijana in the Mahayana-sagraha 1. bringing it all back home......Page 145
The alaya-vijana in the Mahayana-sagraha 2. looking beyond......Page 175
Appendices......Page 188
The series of dependent arising: affliction, action, and their results......Page 190
Index of related controversies......Page 192
Translation: the Pravtti and Nivtti Portions of the Vinicayasagraha of the Yogacarabhmi......Page 195
Notes......Page 207
Bibliography of works cited......Page 264
Index of texts quoted......Page 272
Index......Page 276