Multiplicities and Contingency: Rethinking ‘Popular Buddhism’, Religious Practices and Ontologies in Thailand

IF 0.5 3区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY Sophia Pub Date : 2024-04-08 DOI:10.1007/s11841-024-01011-3
Jim Taylor
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Abstract

This paper reconsiders explanations of ‘popular’ Buddhism in Thailand initiated in mid-twentieth century anthropological definitions of vernacular articulations of religiosity in village settings. Buddhist localism, in its various manifestations, is seen to contrast with a doctrinal or literate ‘great’ monastic tradition. In this persisting ethnographic argument, an actor may draw randomly on various syncretic elements of their religiosity according to circumstances (an historical complexity which is sourced in a mix of Sinhalese-sourced Buddhism, animism including magic, and folk Brahmanism). It is therefore not wholly or consistently one, but substantively divided into several strands. This long-standing position is problematic as the paper shows. There are multiple coextensive Buddhism/s (plural) within the Greater Theravada tradition, which emerge from an identification of the actors themselves with the one, not the many, as one-unitary-Buddhists. I theorise using a general framework of Meillassoux’s discussion on contingency and, by way of contrast, taking Deleuzian ideas on multiplicity. It is grounded on an understanding of popular or organic lived religion sourced in the early counter-enlightenment or radical enlightenment thinking of Giambattista Vico. Here, it is argued that in Thailand villagers would identify cosmologically as the one, not as the many (in a sense as in the assemblages or varieties of religious practices detached from the totality of the cosmological unitary one). Understanding the creative processes behind cosmological multiplicities is a starting point, with the notion that within specific cultural forms we are faced with a multiplicity of definitions and things to observe, as in an understanding of the varieties of lived Buddhism. The essay is based on an ethnographic assessment from over three decades of field research among ethnic Thai Buddhists at various modalities and settings, and in framing these vernacular religious practices and their ontologies. My gratitude to two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments. The essay does not deal directly with specific ethnographic case studies; instead, it is intended as retheorising representations of ‘Popular Buddhism’ in Thailand as based on early scholarship since the 1960s (where Buddhism is constituted as three or more distinctive but intertwined religious strands).

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多重性与权变:反思泰国的 "大众佛教"、宗教习俗和本体论
本文重新考虑了二十世纪中期人类学对泰国 "大众 "佛教的解释,即乡村环境中宗教的乡土表达。佛教地方主义的各种表现形式被视为与教义或文人的 "伟大 "寺院传统形成对比。在这一持续存在的人种学论点中,行为者可能会根据具体情况(源于僧伽罗佛教、包括魔法在内的万物有灵论和民间婆罗门教的混合体是一种历史复杂性),随意借鉴其宗教信仰中的各种综合元素。因此,它并非完全或始终如一的一个宗教,而是实质上分为几个分支。正如本文所述,这一长期存在的立场是有问题的。在大乘佛教传统中,存在着多种共存的佛教(复数),这些佛教的产生源于参与者本身对 "一 "的认同,而非对 "多 "的认同。我以梅拉苏(Meillassoux)关于或然性的讨论为总体框架,并以德勒兹(Deleuzian)关于多重性的观点为对比,提出了自己的理论。其基础是对流行宗教或有机生活宗教的理解,这种理解源自詹巴蒂斯塔-维科(Giambattista Vico)早期的反启蒙思想或激进启蒙思想。这里的论点是,在泰国,村民在宇宙论上认同的是 "一",而不是 "多"(从某种意义上说,是指从宇宙论统一的 "一 "的整体性中分离出来的宗教实践的组合或多样性)。理解宇宙论多重性背后的创造性过程是一个起点,在具体的文化形式中,我们面临着多重的定义和需要观察的事物,就像理解生活佛教的多样性一样。本文基于三十多年来在不同模式和环境下对泰国少数民族佛教徒进行的田野调查所做的民族志评估,以及对这些本土宗教实践及其本体论的构架。感谢两位匿名审稿人提出的建设性意见。本文并不直接涉及具体的人种学案例研究;相反,本文旨在重新理论化泰国 "大众佛教 "的表述,这些表述基于 20 世纪 60 年代以来的早期学术研究(在这些研究中,佛教被视为三个或更多独特但相互交织的宗教分支)。
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来源期刊
Sophia
Sophia PHILOSOPHY-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: Sophia is now published by Springer. The back files, all the way to Volume 1:1, are available via SpringerLink!   Covers both analytic and continental philosophy of religionConsiders both western and non-western perspectives, including Asian and indigenousIncludes specialist contributions, e.g. on feminist and postcolonial philosophy of religionSince its inception in 1962, Sophia has been devoted to providing a forum for discussions in philosophy and religion, focusing on the interstices between metaphysics and theological thinking. The discussions take cognizance of the wider ambience of the sciences (''natural'' philosophy and human/social sciences), ethical and moral concerns in the public sphere, critical feminist theology and cross-cultural perspectives. Sophia''s cross-cultural and cross-frontier approach is reflected not only in the international composition of its editorial board, but also in its consideration of analytic, continental, Asian and indigenous responses to issues and developments in the field of philosophy of religion.
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