Yogācāra (Sanskrit: "yoga practice"; "one whose practice is yoga Chinese: Yüjiazong "Yoga School" 瑜珈宗) is an influential school of Eastern
philosophy and
psychology emphasizing
ontology and
phenomenology through the interior lens of
meditative and
yogic practices, that developed in
Indian Mahāyāna Buddhism circa fourth century C.E.. Hattori Masaaki (2005) states that
Yogācāra:
...attaches importance to the religious practice of yoga as a means for attaining final emancipation from the bondage of the phenomenal world. The stages of yoga are systematically set forth in the treatises associated with this tradition.
Keenan, et al. (2003) states that:
...the Yogācāra thinkers did not simply comment on Mādhyamika thought. They attempted to ground insight into emptiness in a critical understanding of the mind, articulated in a sophisticated theoretical discourse.
The origins of the scholarly Indian Yogācāra tradition were rooted in the syncretic scholasticism of Nālandā University where the doctrine of Cittamātra was first extensively propagated. Doctrines, tenets and derivatives of this school have influenced and become well-established in China, Tibet, Japan and Mongolia and throughout the World via the dissemination and dialogue wrought by the Buddhist diaspora.
Yogacara discourse views that all phenomena is mind. This view is founded on the existential truth of the human condition: there is nothing that humans experience that is not mediated by mind.
Nomenclature, orthography and etymology
Sanskrit:
Yogācāra,
Vijñānavāda,
Vijñapti-matra,
Vijñapti-matrata
Tibetan:
sems tsam
Chinese:
Wei-shih,
Fa-hsiang
Japanese:
Yugāgyo-ha,
Yuishiki
English: Way of Yoga School, Yoga Practice School, Knowledge Way, Yogachara, Consciousness-Only School, Subjective Realism, Autonomous School
Yogācāra may be orthographically rendered according to English convention as "yogachara", which also approximates the
phonetic value. An alternate nomenclature for the school is
Vijñānavāda (Sanskrit:
vāda holds a
semantic field of "doctrine" and "way";
vijñāna holds a semantic field of "consciousness" and "discernment". Hence,
Vijñānavāda may be rendered as "Consciousness Doctrine" or "Discernment Way"; though it is commonly rendered as "Knowledge Way. The English rendering of "Autonomous School" refers to the use in the tradition of autonomous syllogisms.
History
The
Yogācāra and
Mādhyamika are the two principal schools of Indian Mahayana Buddhism. Keenan (2003) holds that
Śūnyatā and
Pratītyasamutpāda and the theme of "
two truths" are central in
Yogācāra thought and meditation.
Origination
Masaaki (2005) states that: "[a]ccording to the , the first Yogācāra text, Buddha set the "wheel of the doctrine" (
dharmacakra) in motion three times. Hence, the
as the doctrinal trailblazer of
Yogācāra, inaugurated the endemic categorical
triune of the
Three Turnings of the Dharmacakra; establishing its tenets as amongst the
exegesis of the
Dharmacakras "Third Turning". The Yogācāra texts are generally considered part of the Third Turning along with the relevant sūtra. Moreover, Yogācāra discourse survey and syncretically redact, all' Three Turnings.
Yogācāra, like all Indian schools of Buddhism, eventually became virtually extinct within India.
Vasubandhu, and Maitreya-nātha
Yogācāra, originated by the forementioned trailblazing sutra, was attributed to the
brahmin born half-brothers
Vasubandhu and
(who was said to be inspired by the quasi-historical
Maitreya-nātha or the divine
Maitreya).
Lineage and traditions of
sadhana and
Dharma transmission is primary and key to Buddhism. This school held a prominent position in the
Indian scholastic tradition for several centuries due to its lauded pedigree and propagation at
Nālandā.
Yogācāra was transmitted to
Tibet by
who initiated
Atiśa into the
Yogācāra lineage; wherein,
Yogācāra became integral to
Tibetan Buddhism.
Yogācāra is primary to the
Nyingmapa and its zenith,
Dzogchen.
Yogācāra also became central to
East Asian Buddhism. The teachings of
Yogācāra became the Chinese
Wei Shih school of Buddhism.
Yogācāra and Mādhyamika
Notably, this school was in protracted
dialectic (as different from opposition) with the
Mādhyamika. In short (and though rather simplistic and not entirely true), while the
Mādhyamika held that asserting the existence or non-existence of any ultimately real thing was inappropriate, some exponents of
Yogācāra asserted that the mind (or in the more sophisticated variations, primordial wisdom) and only the mind is ultimately real. Not all Yogācārins asserted that mind was truly existent,
Vasubandhu and
in particular did not.
Later Yogācāra views synthesized the two, in particular Shantarakshita whose view is attributed as Yogacara-Svatantrika-Madhyamika. In his view the Mādhyamika position is ultimately true and at the same time the mind-only view is a useful way to relate to conventionalities and progress students more skillfully toward the ultimate. This synthesized view between the two positions — which also incorporated views of valid cognition from Dignaga and Dharmakirti — was one of the last developments of Indian Buddhism before it was extinguished in the eleventh century during the Muslim incursion.
This view was also expounded by Xuanzang, who after a suite of debates with exponents of the Madhyamaka School, composed in Sanskrit, the no longer extant three-thousand verse treatise on "The Non-difference of Madhyamaka and Yogācāra".
Later Yogācāra teachings are especially important in Tantric Buddhism, which evolved within their development in India.
Current debates among Tibetan schools between the Shentong (empty of other) versus Rangtong (empty of self) views appear similar to earlier debates between Yogācāra and Mādhyamika but the issues and distinctions have evolved further. Though the later Tibetan views could be said to have evolved from the earlier Indian positions, the distinctions between the views became increasingly subtle especially once Yogācāra incorporated the Mādhyamika view of the ultimate. In the 19th century rime movement commenter Ju Mipham — in his commentary on Shantarakshita's synthesis — wrote that the ultimate view by both schools is the same and the result of each path also leads to the same ultimate state of abiding.
Divergence of the Yogacara of India and China
By the closure of the
Sui Dynasty (589-618), Buddhism within China had developed many distinct schools and traditions.
Xuanzang, in the words of
Dan Lusthaus:
...came to the conclusion that the many disputes and interpretational conflicts permeating Chinese Buddhism were the result of the unavailability of crucial texts in Chinese translation. In particular, he [Xuanzang] thought that a complete version of the Yogācārabhūmi-śāstra, an encyclopedic description of the stages of the Yogācāra path to Buddhahood written by Asaṅga, would resolve all the conflicts. In the sixth century an Indian missionary named Paramārtha (another major translator) had made a partial translation of it. Xuanzang resolved to procure the full text in India and introduce it to China.
Moreover, Dan Lusthaus charts the different dialectic and divergent traditions of Buddhism within India and China discovered by Xuanzang and mentions the Buddha-nature, Awakening of Faith, Tathāgata-garbha:
Xuanzang also discovered that the intellectual context in which Buddhists disputed and interpreted texts was much vaster and more varied than the Chinese materials had indicated: Buddhist positions were forged in earnest debate with a range of Buddhist and non-Buddhist doctrines unknown in China, and the terminology of these debates drew their significance and connotations from this rich context. While in China Yogācāra thought and Tathāgata-garbha thought were becoming inseparable, in India orthodox Yogācāra seemed to ignore if not outright reject Tathāgata-garbha thought. Many of the pivotal notions in Chinese Buddhism (e.g., Buddha-nature) and their cardinal texts (e.g., The Awakening of Faith) were completely unknown in India.
Principal exponents of Yogācāra
Principal exponents of
Yogācāra categorized and alphabetized according to location:
Philosophical dialogue: East and West
Yogācāra has also been rendered and aligned in the Western Philosophical tradition as
Idealism, or more specifically
Subjective idealism, though this is now viewed as incorrect by scholars of Buddhism.
Yogācāra has also been aligned with
Phenomenalism. In modern Western philosophical
discourse,
Edmund Husserl and
Maurice Merleau-Ponty have approached what Western scholarship generally concedes as a standard
Yogācāra position.
Western scholarship
Lusthaus (1999) holds that
Étienne Lamotte, a famous student of
Louis de La Vallée-Poussin, "...profoundly advanced Yogaacaara studies, and his efforts remain unrivaled among Western scholars.
Five treatises of Maitreya
Tibetan sources consider the scriptural heart of the Yogācāra tradition to be the "Five Treatises of Maitreya." These texts are said to have been related to by the Buddha Maitreya. They are as follows:
- Ornament for Clear Realization (Abhisamayalankara, Tib. mngon par rtogs pa'i rgyan)
- Ornament for the Mahayana Sutras (Mahayanasutralankara, Tib. theg pa chen po'i mdo sde'i rgyan)
- Sublime Continuum of the Mahayana (Mahayanottaratantrashastra, Ratnagotravibhaga, Tib. theg pa chen po rgyud bla ma'i bstan)
- Distinguishing Phenomena and Pure Being (Dharmadharmatavibhanga, Tib. chos dang chos nyid rnam par 'byed pa)
- Distinguishing the Middle and the Extremes (Madhyantavibhanga, Tib. dbus dang mtha' rnam par 'byed pa)
A commentary on the Ornament for Clear Realization called Clarifying the Meaning by the Indian scholar Haribhadra is often used, as is one by Vimuktisena.
Most of these texts were also incorporated into the Chinese tradition, which was established several centuries earlier than the Tibetan. However, the Ornament for Clear Realization (Abhisamayalankara, is not mentioned by Chinese translators up to the 7th Century, including Xuanzang, who was an expert in this field, which suggests it may possibly have emerged from a later period than is generally ascribed.
Yogacara Tenets
Muller (2005) charts two principal points of entry into the tenets of Yogācāra
soteriology: the first, employs an admixture of the 'eight consciousnesses' (Sanskrit: ), 'four parts of cognition', 'three natures', and the '
doctrine of selflessness', etc.; the second, embraces the '
two hindrances' (Sanskrit: ; Tibetan:
sgrib pa gñis).
Muller (2005) furthermore states that:
There is no special need to try to assess whether one of these approaches is better than the other, for indeed, in the vast and complex system that is known as Yogācāra, all of these different approaches and categories are ultimately tied into each other, and thus, starting with any one of them, one can eventually enter into all of the rest.
The Three Natures
The
Yogācāra defined three basic modes by which we perceive our world. These are referred to in
Yogācāra as the
three natures of perception. They are:
- Parikalpita, literally "fully conceptualized", or Imaginary Nature, wherein things are incorrectly apprehended based on conceptual construction, through attachment and erroneous discrimination.
- Paratantra, literally "other dependent", or Dependent Nature, by which the correct understanding of the dependently originated nature of things is understood.
- Parinispanna, literally "fully accomplished", or Absolute Nature, through which one apprehends things as they are in themselves, uninfluenced by any conceptualization at all.
Also, regarding perception, the Yogācāra emphasized that our everyday understanding of the existence of external objects is problematic, since in order to perceive any object (and thus, for all practical purposes for the object to "exist"), there must be a sensory organ as well as a correlative type of consciousness to allow the process of cognition to occur.
Eight Consciousness (Sanskrit: )
Perhaps the best known teaching of the
Yogācāra system is that of the
eight layers of consciousness. This theory of the consciousnesses attempted to explain all the phenomena of cyclic existence, including how rebirth occurs and precisely how
karma functions on an individual basis. For example, if I carry out a good or evil act, why and how is it that the effects of that act do not appear immediately? If they do not appear immediately, where is this
karma waiting for its opportunity to play out?
The answer given by the Yogācāra was the store consciousness (also
known as the base, or eighth consciousness; Sanskrit: 'ālayavijñāna') which simultaneously acts as a storage place for karma and as a fertile matrix that brings karma to a state of fruition. It may be ultimately traceable to the "luminous mind" of the agamas. The likeness of this process to the cultivation of plants led to the creation of the metaphor of seeds (Sanskrit, bijas) to explain the way karma is stored in the eighth consciousness. The type, quantity, quality and strength of the seeds determine where and how a sentient being will be reborn: one's species, sex, social status, proclivities, bodily appearance and so forth.
On the other hand, the karmic energies created in the current lifetime
through repeated patterns of behavior are called habit energies (Sanskrit:
vasana). All the activities that mold our bodymind, for better
or worse--eating, drinking, talking, studying, practicing the piano or
whatever--can be understood to create habit energies. And of course, my
habit energies can penetrate the consciousnesses of others, and vice
versa--what we call "influence" in everyday language. Habit energies can
become seeds, and seeds can produce new habit energies.
Śūnyatā in Yogachara
The doctrine of emptiness (Skt.
Śūnyatā) is central to
Yogācāra, as to any
Mahayana school. Early
Yogācāra texts, such as the
Yogacarabhumi-sastra, often act as explanations on
Prajnaparamita sutras. See also the
Samdhinirmocana Sutra.
As one Buddhologist puts it, "Although meaning 'absence of inherent existence' in Madhyamaka, to the Yogacarins [śūnyatā] means 'absence of duality between perceiving subject and the perceived object.'
This is not the full story however, as each of the three natures (above), has its corresponding "absence of nature". ie:
- parikalpita => laksana-nihsvabhavata, the "absence of inherent characteristic"
- paratantra => utpatti-nihsvabhavata, the "absence of inherent arising"
- parinispanna => paramartha-nihsvabhavata, the "absence of inherent ultimacy"
Each of these "absences" is a form of sunyata, ie. the nature is "empty" of some particular qualified quality.
The Legacy of the Yogācāra
There are two important aspects of the
Yogācāra schemata that are of special interest to modern-day practitioners. One is that virtually all schools of
Mahayana Buddhism came to rely on these
Yogācāra explanations as they created their own doctrinal systems--even the
Zen schools. For example, the important
Yogācāra explanation of the pervasiveness of one's delusions through "mind-only" had an obvious influence on Zen.
That the scriptural tradition of Yogācāra is not yet that well known among the community of Western practitioners is perhaps attributable to the fact that most of the initial transmission of Buddhism to the West has been directly concerned with more practice-oriented forms of Buddhism, such as Zen, vipaśyanā, and Pure Land. Also, it is a complicated system, and there are still not really any good, accessible, introductory books on the topic in Western languages. However, within Tibetan Buddhism more and more Western students are becoming acquainted with this school. Very little research in English has been carried out on the Chinese Yogācāra traditions.
Yogācārins, those that hold to the tenets of Yogācāra, generally uphold the doctrine of the Ālaya vijñāna: a fundamental, root or base consciousness. The ālaya vijñāna is the fecund matrix, the substrate fabric of consciousness and being. The ālaya vijñāna houses the karmic bīja that "seed" our experience of reality and "perfume" our worldview. The Ālaya vijñāna and the Tathāgata-garbha doctrine developed and resolved into the Mindstream or the "consciousness-continuity" doctrine (Sanskrit: citta santāna) to avoid being denounced as running counter to the doctrine of Śūnyatā and the tenets of Anātman. These developments, whether perceived as evolutions, devolutions or hybridizations are contentious, often divisive between and within schools and traditions.
Notes
References
- Zim, Robert (1995). Basic ideas of Yogacara Buddhism. San Francisco State University. Source:
(accessed: October 18, 2007).
- Shantarakshita & Ju Mipham (2005) The Adornment of the Middle Way Padmakara Translation of Ju Mipham's commentary on Shantarakshita's root versus on his synthesis.
- Norbu, Namkhai (2001). The Precious Vase: Instructions on the Base of Santi Maha Sangha. Shang Shung Edizioni. Second revised edition. (Translated from the Tibetan, edited and annotated by Adriano Clemente with the help of the author. Translated from Italian into English by Andy Lukianowicz.)
- Keenan, John P. (1993). Yogācarā. pp.203-212 published in Yoshinori, Takeuchi; with Van Bragt, Jan; Heisig, James W.; O'Leary, Joseph S.; Swanson, Paul L.(1993). Buddhist Spirituality: Indian, Southeast Asian, Tibetan, and Early Chinese. New York, USA: The Crossroad Publishing Company. ISBN 0-8245-1277-4
External links
- "Early Yogaacaara and Its Relationship with the Madhyamaka School", Richard King, Philosophy East & West, vol. 44 no. 4, October 1994, pp. 659–683
- "Vijnaptimatrata and the Abhidharma context of early Yogacara", Richard King, Asian Philosophy, vol. 8 no. 1, March 1998, pp. 5–18
- "The mind-only teaching of Ching-ying Hui-Yuan" (subtitle) "An early interpretation of Yogaacaara thought in China", Ming-Wood Liu, Philosophy East & West, vol. 35 no. 4, October 1985, pp. 351–375
- Yogacara Buddhism Research Association; articles, bibliographies, and links to other relevant sites.