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The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast

Episode 112, 'The Philosophy of Buddhism' with Jay Garfield (Part II - Further Analysis and Discussion)

The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast

Jack Symes | Andrew Horton, Oliver Marley, and Rose de Castellane

Education, Philosophy, Society & Culture, Courses

4.8612 Ratings

🗓️ 6 November 2022

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A prick of the skin; the sorrow of grief; the inevitability of change; our dependence on the whim of the cosmos. Suffering bleeds into every aspect of our existence and, according to Siddhārtha Gautama (the Buddha), the anguish of our misfortune stems from our ignorance and confusion. If we were to see the world for how it really is – a place of impermanence, interdependence, and emptiness – then, according to Buddhism, we might free ourselves from illusion and discover the path to liberation and enlightenment. Today, this insight is shared by over half a billion people. Yet, most philosophy departments in Europe and America offer no courses in Buddhist philosophy and (within the leading journals) academic papers focusing on the central tenets of Buddhist philosophy of religion are vastly outweighed by their Abrahamic (and predominantly Christian) counterparts.

Professor Jay Garfield, our guest for this episode, is the exception to this rule. Championing the globalisation of philosophy and reshaping perceptions of Buddhist scholarship, Professor Garfield is Chair of Philosophy at Smith College in Massachusetts, Visiting Professor at Harvard Divinity School, Professor at Melbourne University, and adjunct Professor at the Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies. Named amongst the 50 most influential philosophers of the past decade – with over 30 books and over 200 publications – it is safe to say that Professor Garfield is one of the leading exponents of Buddhist philosophy in contemporary academia.

For Garfield, if philosophy won't diversify, then let's call it out for what it is: a colonial discipline that ignores the rich and relevant insights of non-Western thought. As philosophers, we cannot afford to ignore the metaphysical, ethical, epistemological, and existential insights of Buddhist scholarship. It's time to engage with Buddhism, and rid ourselves of our prejudices, ignorance, and confusion. Buddhism is a philosophy of the present, not a philosophy of the past, and it's time we treated it that way.


This episode is produced in partnership with The Global Philosophy of Religion Project at University of Birmingham, led by Yujin Nagasawa and funded by the John Templeton Foundation.


Contents

Part I. The Nature of Reality

Part II. Further Analysis and Discussion


Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Pan Psygast

0:04.0

Part two, further analyses and discussion.

0:23.3

So welcome back, listener.

0:24.3

In our previous section, we were focusing on the four noble truths of Buddhism,

0:28.9

the existence of suffering, the cause of suffering, the remedy to our suffering,

0:32.8

and the release from suffering.

0:34.6

I'd like to begin this section, Jabba. Discussing some of Buddhism's

0:37.8

kukier views of metaphysics and eschatology and so on. A significant proportion of Buddhists

0:45.4

believe in samsara, also known as the wheel of existence. There's lots of realms on this Tibetan

0:50.4

wheel of existence, hells, realms of hungry ghosts and non-human animals, human realm, realms for gods. Where we end up on this wheel of existence, hells, realms of hungry ghosts and non-human animals, human realm,

0:55.3

realms for gods. Where we end up on this wheel of existence is determined by our karmic actions

1:00.4

in previous lives. If you're good, you'll be reincarnated higher up the chain, and if you're bad,

1:05.6

you'll be reincarnated further down the chain. So ultimately, what's the end goal for the Buddhist?

1:12.7

What's the purpose of being a good person, of following the eightfold path? What do they want from existence?

1:18.1

Okay. So the first thing to remind ourselves of is that there's a lot of Buddhists in the world.

1:25.3

So there's going to be a diversity of answers to that question.

1:28.4

The second thing to remind ourselves of is that when we look at that representation of the wheel

1:34.5

of life, the Bavha chakra, it's an iconic representation. And so it's already a metaphor.

1:40.5

There are very useful ways to read that metaphor, and there are multiple ways to read that metaphor.

1:45.6

The third thing to say, before I actually start unpacking it, is that when you look at those

1:51.2

six realms of existence, and I'll talk about them each at a minute, and at the hub of that wheel

1:56.9

are attraction, aversion, and confusion that are kind of driving the wheel around,

...

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