Dear Fellow Neurosattvas,
The Buddha taught that we should bring peace, contentment, empathy, generosity, charity and enlightenment to the world. He professed various meditations and other practices to realize so. During his Iron Age lifetime, he offered what he could, what was available. Dogen and the other old Zen Masters offered what they had in the Middle Ages. On an individual level, the ancient ways are powerful and beautiful ways, helping and liberating individual practitioners through the centuries, changing the lives of so many, opening insight, to be treasured by us today.
Nonetheless, our Bodhisattva Vow is to "Save -ALL- Sentient Beings," and despite helping so many, in that wider mission, even the Buddha and old Zen Masters failed miserably (as shown by the fact that, after these 25 centuries, human beings as a whole are yet in the state we are in.) Buddhism's traditional methods did not really get the job done in 2+ millenia, not far and wide beyond the individual practitioners, the scattered monasteries, our relatively small Sangha communities among the billions who inhabit this planet. Even the so-called "Buddhist countries," from India to China, Thailand to Tibet, Korea to Japan are today hotbeds of consumerism and consumption, militarism and environmental degradation, not spiritual kingdoms, let alone 'Shangri-La.' The world remains torn by greed, war and other lethal violence, suffering children, poverty, man's inhumanity to man. All our Zazen and Tonglen, chanting chants and twirling beads, prayers and wishes are good and freeing for our hearts, but are drops in the bucket in widely helping the world.
Now, perhaps, there are techniques and methods in the pipeline to more effectively and widely bring greater empathy, peace, contentment, charity and enlightenment to the world. We do not know exactly what science and medicine will bring in the coming years, but there are signs that it will include some helpful new tools. Is the science still vague? Yes, but in many ways, more solid, realistic, specific, science-based and potentially effective than anything which has existed before in Buddhist history. Enough with the wishful talk about peace, contentment, empathy, charity and enlightenment ... there may soon be means to widely bring forth peace, contentment, empathy, charity and enlightenment in the world.
The following paragraphs do not say that we should turn away from the traditional vessels of Zazen and Koans, Chanting and Bowing and Oryoki and simple living. Far from it!! We shall keep on as always! I merely ask what new vessels, new tools and techniques, may be added to our collection of liberating methods and arsenal of peace, to spread Wisdom and Compassion wider, faster, more easily, to so many more ...
I remind readers: In the following I continue to ask, assuming that certain medical, genetic and other technological developments ...
(1) are inevitable and coming anyway, cannot be halted, cannot be ignored;
(2) have a high chance of being misused by bad actors unless we use them in beneficial ways;
(3) can be shown to be effective and safe to use; and
(4) can be introduced in an ethical way respectful of individual free choice, civil and human rights ...
(2) have a high chance of being misused by bad actors unless we use them in beneficial ways;
(3) can be shown to be effective and safe to use; and
(4) can be introduced in an ethical way respectful of individual free choice, civil and human rights ...
... how should such technologies be best employed to heal some of what troubles this world??
My book states:
~ ~ ~
Through the centuries, Buddhists have discovered many techniques to turn the three poisons into three powers for a positive and healthy life by avoiding excesses and by seeing beyond greed, anger and division. Buddhists strive to turn the ‘three poisons’ into their opposites in our personalities, e.g., greed into satisfaction and generosity; anger and violence into feelings of peace and compassion; divided thinking into a sense of cooperation, wholeness and transcendence. Zen Buddhists learn to keep judgements, desires, and emotional impulses in moderation and balance, as well as to see through them altogether via an alternative knowing of reality beyond all judgements, desires, and divisions. If our human race is going to make it into the future without squandering the great resources of this planet, decimating each other in needless wars, suffering unnecessarily by excessively viewing life as divided and dissatisfying, then we are going to have to become more moderate and learn to appraise things differently than we currently do.
It is my belief that we can then attain a world of tomorrow which, while not perfect by all measures … for sometimes, alas, earthquakes will still quake, fires will still run wild, some sicknesses will remain uncurable, death may be delayed but yet inevitable, plans and dreams will frequently fizzle, lovers will leave us, and people often will act in many harmful and disappointing ways far into the future … nonetheless, will be a world that is very good, and impeccably embraceable as it is, all by tweaking just these three poisons.
Century after century, Buddhism has employed various traditional methods and expedient means to attain such good states. Meditation, chanting, twirling beads, reading sutras and engaging in rituals are all a kind of “brain hacking” meant to change how we think, feel and, thus, how we act in order to bring us more in line with Buddhist teachings on wisdom and compassion. Likewise, future technologies and mastery of the brain and body can also serve as expedient means to bring such attainments to life, and more effectively. Future methods of enlightening the sentient being-masses may succeed in ways that, for thousands of years, were attainable only by the rare adept.
Alas, even the Buddha could not succeed in getting all people to listen to, understand and realize what he realized during his lifetime. Generations of later Buddhist teachers, although helping so many beings, have not succeeded in changing the hearts of most people who might benefit, not even close to bringing peace and liberation to the whole world. If we look at the small proportion of this planet’s total historical population that seems truly to have gotten the message of peace, contentment, charity and harmony into their hearts, then, honestly, all the countless hours of Buddhist meditation, all the chanting and other practices, Dharma talks, all the pages of Sutras and their Commentaries, all the twirling beads appear to have been grossly ineffective delivery vehicles as a means to reach most people. Likewise for the ethical preaching and moral philosophizing of other religions and creeds.
Of course, one could respond that we should be patient and stay with the old ways alone, that it will just take a few thousand years more, or a few thousand more reborn lives, or that it is enough that it has been effective for only some and a relative few. However, I think it time to admit that, despite our vows to bring liberation to the masses, people continue to suffer. The Bodhisattvas’ mission is to rescue all sentient beings as promised, and we have failed for the great majority so far.
But is the time of rescue coming soon?
And if so, how?
Let us return to the three poisons:
(to be continued)
Gassho, J
stlah
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