please login or register to comment, email, share, print

Rorotoko

University of Chicago Press

Much is lost in the claim that the Buddha anticipated Einstein

Donald S. Lopez on his book Buddhism and Science: A Guide for the Perplexed

history, 19th century, science, 20th century, religion, polemics, christianity, christianity , asia, buddhism



In a nutshell

When we think about the relationship between Christianity and Science, iconic events like the trial of Galileo, the Huxley-Wilberforce debate, and the Scopes Trial come immediately to mind. One might easily assume that all religions have a similarly contentious relation to Science. But Buddhism does not.

The first people to introduce European Science to Buddhist Asia were, ironically, Christian missionaries. Here, modern science was not an adversary of the church; it became a weapon in the arsenal of conversion, employed in battle against idolaters and heathens to promote the true faith. Thus, that Christians understood things that Buddhists did not was proclaimed as evidence of the superiority of the Gospel, and of the benightedness of the Buddha and his dharma. For example, in 1552, the Jesuit missionary Francis Xavier criticized the Japanese for not knowing that the sun orbits the earth.

In the nineteenth century, Buddhist leaders began to respond to the charges of superstition being leveled at them by Christian missionaries. And they used the Christians’ own weapon—Science—against them. They could point to any number of Buddhist doctrines (multiple universes, the subtle impermanence of matter, the absence of a creator deity) to make their case that it was Buddhism that was the modern religion; if it was a religion at all. Christianity was a remnant of a primitive theism. The claim that Buddhism is compatible with modern Science thus began in the arena of polemics, as Buddhists defended their religion against Christian missionaries and Asian modernizers. Buddhism was not superstition; it was a scientific religion, the scientific religion.

Over the course of more than a century and half, the great European empires have fallen, their Asian colonies have gained their independence, Christianity no longer poses a threat to Buddhism. Yet the claim that Buddhism is the most “scientific” of the world’s religions continues to be made. Why?



The wide angle

I am a scholar of Buddhism—we call ourselves Buddhologists—focusing on late Indian Buddhism (roughly from the fifth to twelfth centuries) and on Tibetan Buddhism. My early work was on Indian Buddhist philosophy and doctrine, especially as it was understood in Tibet, something that I continue to study. But I also have an interest in the history of the European encounter with Buddhism, and what that has meant for European and North American culture, as well as for Buddhism. In the course of this latter work, I have sometimes caught a fleeting glimpse, out of the corner of my eye, of something referred to as “Buddhism and Science.” I initially paid little attention, assuming it was yet another appropriation of Buddhism by the New Age, another product of the 70s, in this case made famous in Fritjof Capra’s unlikely 1975 bestseller, The Tao of Physics. It turns out that I was right about the 70s, but I was off by a century; claims for the compatibility of Buddhism and Science go back to the 1870s.

I found this perplexing. If people were claiming that Buddhism was compatible with the Science of the late nineteenth century, how could Buddhism also be compatible with the Science of the late twentieth century, two periods, scientifically speaking, that are light years apart? As I read more, I found that the claims made about the compatibility of Buddhism and Science a century and half ago were rhetorically almost identical to the claims being made today. Except that what people meant by “Buddhism” and what they meant by “Science” back then was quite different from what they mean by “Buddhism” and “Science” today. In the nineteenth century, Buddhism was largely the “original Buddhism” preserved in ancient Sanskrit and Pali texts read by the philologists of Europe, and Science was the mechanistic universe. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, Buddhism is often Tibetan Buddhism (reviled as base superstition by the Victorians) and Science is quantum mechanics and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). All this seemed rather strange to me, and in the end, I decided to write a kind of cultural history on the topic.

In the nineteenth century, Buddhist leaders began to respond to the charges of superstition being leveled at them by Christian missionaries. And they used the Christians’ own weapon—Science—against them.

Rorotoko
  • Buddhism and Science: A Guide for the Perplexed

  • by Donald S. Lopez, Jr.
  • University of Chicago Press
  • 278 pages, 6 x 9 inches
  • ISBN: 978 0 226493121
  • Amazon Logo

 1 2 >