The evolution of Buddhist views on divination: From Original Buddhism to Esoteric Buddhism

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 0 ASIAN STUDIES CHINESE STUDIES IN HISTORY Pub Date : 2023-01-02 DOI:10.1080/00094633.2023.2181613
Yang Gang
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Abstract

Abstract The Buddhist attitude toward divination changed overtime. In early Buddhism, in order to project a positive image of the religious order, to distinguish it from other religious practices, the Buddha had established a precept forbidding monks to engage in divination. However, this prohibition was not strictly enforced, and the Buddha often lumped divination together with other minor illicit conducts. With the development of Mahayana Buddhism, concepts, such as “skillful and expedient means” (upāya-kauśala, 方便善巧) removed obstacles to the secularization of Buddhism, and divination was generally accepted as a worldly means. However, opposition to divination did not disappear completely, and Mahayana Buddhism also attempted to restrain its followers from engaging in divinatory activities. With the mystification of dhāraṇī and the rise of tantric siddhis, the development of Esoteric Buddhism gradually deviated from the path of early Buddhism, and worldly mundane techniques, such as divination were accepted by tantra as symbols of its siddhis’ achievements.
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佛教占卜观的演变:从原始佛教到密传佛教
佛教对占卜的态度随着时间的推移而改变。在早期的佛教中,为了展现宗教秩序的正面形象,将其与其他宗教实践区分开来,佛制定了禁止僧侣占卜的戒律。然而,这一禁令并没有得到严格执行,佛陀经常将占卜与其他轻微的违法行为混为一谈。随着大乘佛教的发展,诸如“巧利手段”(upāya kauśala,方便善巧) 消除了佛教世俗化的障碍,占卜被普遍接受为一种世俗手段。然而,对占卜的反对并没有完全消失,大乘佛教也试图限制其信徒从事占卜活动。随着dhāra的神秘化ṇ随着密宗的兴起,密宗的发展逐渐偏离了早期佛教的道路,占卜等世俗技术被密宗接受为其成就的象征。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
期刊介绍: Chinese Studies in History makes noteworthy works and important trends of historical study in the Chinese-speaking world available to English-language readers. Thematic issues present original papers or articles from academic journals and anthologies that have been selected for translation because of their excellence, interest, and contribution to scholarship on the topic. Topical coverage ranges over all periods and subfields of Chinese and East Asian history as well as more general theoretical and historiographical questions of interest to historians of many specialties. Each issue includes a substantive introduction by the editor or specialist guest editor.
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