16. The Four
Alternatives and the Five Categories.
There are, according to
Zen, the four classes of religious and philosophical views, technically called
the Four Alternatives,1 of life and of the world. The first is 'the
deprivation of subject and the non-deprivation of object' that is to say, the
denial of subject, or mind, or Atman, or soul, and the non-denial of object, or
matter, or things -- a view which denies the reality of mind and asserts the
existence of things. Such a view was held by a certain school of Hinayanism,
called Sarvastivada, and still is held by some philosophers called materialists
or naturalists. The second is the 'deprivation of object and the
non-deprivation of subject' -- that is to say, the denial of object, or matter,
or things, and the non-denial of subject, or mind, or spirit-a view which
denies the reality of material object, and asserts the existence of spirit or
ideas. Such a view was held by the Dharmalaksana School of Mahayanism, and is
still held by some philosophers called idealists. The third is 'the deprivation
of both subject and object' -- that is to say, the denial of both subject or
spirit, and of object or matter-a view which denies the reality of both
physical and mental phenomena, and asserts the existence of reality that
transcends the phenomenal universe. Such a view was held by the Madhyamika
School of Mahayanism, and is still held by some religionists and philosophers
of the present day. The fourth is 'the non-deprivation of both subject and
object' -- that is to say, the non-denial of subject and object -- a view which
holds mind and body as one and the same reality. Mind, according to this view,
is reality experienced inwardly by introspection, and body is the selfsame
reality observed outwardly by senses. They are one reality and one life. There
also exist other persons and other beings belonging to the same life and
reality; consequently all things share
in one reality, and life in
common with each other. This reality or life is not transcendental to mind and
body, or to spirit and matter, but is the unity of them. In other words, this
phenomenal world of ours is the realm of reality. This view was held by the
Avatamsaka School of Mahayanism, and is still held by Zenists. Thus Zen is not
materialistic, nor idealistic, nor nihilistic, but realistic and monistic in
its view of the world.
There are some scholars
that erroneously maintain that Zen is based on the doctrine of unreality of all
things expounded by Kumarajiva and his followers. Ko-ben,1 known as
Myo-ye Sho-nin, said 600 years ago: "Yang Shan (Kyo-zan) asked Wei Shan
(I-san): 'What shall we do when hundreds, thousands, and millions of things
beset us all at once?' 'The blue are not the yellow,' replied Wei Shan, 'the
long are not the short. Everything is in its own place. It has no business with
you.' Wei Shan was a great Zen master. He did not teach the unreality of all
things. Who can say that Zen is nihilistic?"
Besides the Four
Alternatives, Zen uses the Five Categories2 in order to explain the
relation between reality and phenomena. The first is 'Relativity in Absolute,'
which means that the universe appears to be consisting in relativities, owing
to our relative knowledge; but these relativities are based on absolute
reality. The second is 'Absolute in Relativity,' which means Absolute Reality
does not remain inactive, but manifests itself as relative phenomena. The third
is 'Relativity out of Absolute,' which means Absolute Reality is all in all,
and relative phenomena come out of it as its secondary and subordinate forms.
The fourth is 'Absolute up to Relativity,' which means relative
phenomena always play an
important part on the stage of the world; it is through these phenomena that
Absolute Reality comes to be understood. The fifth is the 'Union of both
Absolute and Relativity,' which means Absolute Reality is not fundamental or
essential to relative phenomena, nor relative phenomena subordinate or
secondary to Absolute Reality -- that is to say, they are one and the same
cosmic life, Absolute Reality being that life experienced inwardly by
intuition, while relative phenomena are the same life outwardly observed by
senses. The first four Categories are taught to prepare the student's mind for
the acceptance of the last one, which reveals the most profound truth.
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