Author

Publication

2019 - Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, England

Language

English

Word Count

55,500 words, Guess

Page Count

222 pages

Identifiers

and 1 more

Classifications

  • DDC294.3/42
  • LCCBQ4040 .W35 2019
  • LCCBQ704

Description

"What are we to make of Western Buddhism? Glenn Wallis argues that in aligning their tradition with the contemporary self-help industry, Western Buddhists evade the consequences of Buddhist thought. This book shows that with concepts such as vanishing, nihility, extinction, contingency, and no-self, Buddhism, like all potent systems of thought, articulates a notion of the "real." Raw, unflinching acceptance of this real is held by Buddhism to be at the very core of human "awakening." Yet these preeminent human truths are universally shored up against in contemporary Buddhist practice, which contradicts the very heart of Buddhism. The author's critique of Western Buddhism is threefold. It is immanent, in emerging out of Buddhist thought but taking it beyond what it itself publicly concedes; negative, in employing the "democratizing" deconstructive methods of François Laruelle's non-philosophy; and re-descriptive, in applying Laruelle's concept of philofiction. Through applying resources of Continental philosophy to Western Buddhism, A Critique of Western Buddhism suggests a possible practice for our time, an "anthropotechnic", or religion transposed from its seductive, but misguiding, idealist haven"--

Subjects

Other Editions

  • A critique of Western Buddhism: ruins of the Buddhist realBloomsbury Publishing Plc2019-01-01

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