8. Zen is not
Nihilistic.
Zen judged from ancient Zen
masters' aphorisms may seem, at the first sight, to be idealistic in an extreme
form, as they say: "Mind is Buddha" or, "Buddha is Mind," or,
"There is nothing outside mind," or, "Three worlds are of but
one mind." And it may also appear to be nihilistic, as they say:
"There has been nothing since all eternity," "By illusion you
see the castle of the Three Worlds'; by Enlightenment you see but emptiness in
ten directions."1 In reality, however, Zen2 is neither
idealistic nor nihilistic. Zen makes use of the nihilistic idea of Hinayana
Buddhism, and calls its students' attention to the change and evanescence of
life and of the
world, first to destroy the
error of immutation, next to dispel the attachment to the sensual objects.
It is a misleading tendency
of our intellect to conceive things as if they were immutable and constant. It
often leaves changing and concrete individual objects out of consideration, and
lays stress on the general, abstract, unchanging aspect of things. It is
inclined to be given to generalization and abstraction. It often looks not at
this thing or at that thing, but at things in general. It loves to think not of
a good thing nor of a bad thing, but of bad and good in the abstract. This
intellectual tendency hardens and petrifies the living and growing world, and
leads us to take the universe as a thing dead, inert, and standing still. This
error of immutation can be corrected by the doctrine of Transcience taught by
Hinayana Buddhism. But as medicine taken in an undue quantity turns into
poison, so the doctrine of Transcience drove the Hinayanists to the suicidal
conclusion of nihilism. A well-known scholar and believer of Zen, Kwei Fung (Kei-ha)
says in his refutation of nihilism:1
"If mind as well as
external objects be unreal, who is it that knows they are so? Again, if there
be nothing real in the universe, what is it that causes unreal objects to
appear? We stand witness to the fact that there is no one of the unreal things
on earth that is not made to appear by something real. If there be no water of
unchanging fluidity, how can there be the unreal and temporary forms of waves?
If there be no unchanging mirror, bright and clean, bow can there be the
various images, unreal and temporary, reflected in it? If mind as well as
external objects be nothing at all, no one can tell what it is that causes
these unreal appearances. Therefore this doctrine (of the unreality of all
things) can never clearly disclose spiritual
Reality. So that
Mahabheri-harakaparivarta-sutra says: " All the sutras that teach the
unreality of things belong to the imperfect doctrine " (of the Shakya
Muni). Mahaprajña-paramita-sutra says The doctrine of unreality is the
entrance-gate of Mahayana."
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