I tuned into part of the webcast of the Dalai Lama at Stanford University today. He held a meditation and discussion for students in the morning, and a more serious spiritual dialogue in the afternoon.
I missed the first hour of the morning session, tuning in just as he was explaining how to do meditation, and then having the auditorium sit for five minutes. It was interesting to watch the webcast during those five minutes of silence. Most people closed their eyes and did some form of meditation or rest, but a few kept their eyes open, somehow unwilling or uninterested in participating. The Dalai Lama looked serene, as did his translator.
Then he answered questions from students (submitted in advance and read by a university official who was serving as host). One that I recall in particular was about whether Buddhism was a religion or more of a philosophical approach. The questioner was uncertain it could be called a proper religion without belief in a creator.
The Dalai Lama talked for a long time about how he thinks about Buddhism. First he positioned it as a "Middle Way" between the extremes of belief in an external God and pure materialism/atheism, which is the equally extreme belief that there is no God. Buddhism exists at the level of the
human, not so concerned with omnipotent beings, but also not downplaying the importance of human consciousness in the world. I find this appealing.
Then he gave another view of how he thinks about Buddhism. He said it can be thought of as containing three mutually supportive components:
- Buddhist science: The teachings on cosmology, the organization of the world, and the details of how the mind works
- Buddhist philosophy: The ideas behind the Buddhist stance in the world, ethics, and other conceptual teachings
- Buddhist spirituality: Rituals, ceremonies, religious practices that have meaning for supporting the Buddhist path
The first part is the part that can engage with Western science. (The Dalai Lama loves science. He once said that if he hadn't been a monk, he probably would have become an engineer). He pointed out that in regard to the natural world, Western science is far more advanced that what Buddhists came up with 2,500 years ago-- hardly surprising! In fact, he called it "wasteful" that Tibetan Buddhist monks have to memorize the entire Abidharma, a text that contains a long chapter on cosmology that is, quite frankly, wrong.
In fact, the Dalai Lama has encouraged the introduction of science teaching into the monasteries. Not all monks learn science, but some are selected to receive teachings in physics, chemistry, biology, and other disciplines. The Dalai Lama is happy to modify the Buddhist texts where they erred because of a lack of science knowledge.
Name another religion that does
that.
On the other hand, he also pointed out that Buddhism really knows a lot more than Western science about the workings of the mind. Western neuoscientists and psychologists are indeed waking up to the fact that what they are studying has been researched thoroughly by Asian monks and mystics for millennia, and they might be able to learn a few things. I would agree with the Dalai Lama here-- Western psychology seems pretty infantile in its descriptions of the amazing thing we possess between our ears.
I also like the fact that the Dalai Lama is explicitly saying that only one-third of Buddhism can really engage with Western science. The other portions lie outside of it, and hence Buddhism cannot be fully understood or encompassed by approaching from a scientific perspective. Some parts are simply inaccessible. (And conversely, the same is true if Buddhism is approached only from a religious or only from a philosophical perspective).
I only caught about a half-hour of the afternoon session, but it contained a funny moment. (The Dalai Lama is very light. Even if you ask him about the Chinese occupation of Tibet, he will answer seriously, but then throw in a joke or humorous story to lighten things up). He was asked a highly abstract question about whether a person who believes in multiple lifetimes might "naturally" be more peaceful and less anxious than one who thinks this lifetime is all there is.
He pondered briefly and then spread his hands, smiled, and said, "I don't know."
Well of course he doesn't know. How would he know? What a silly generalization. He went on to give a brief answer about how a person who believes only in one lifetime might actually be
more peaceful because it is simpler. You do this life, and then you're done. If you have lots of lifetimes to worry about, then the consequences of actions get more complicated. And the causes for your circumstances are more complicated too, because they might have come about from things you did several lifetimes ago.
The questioner persisted, saying that the root of the question was more about having a violent or a peaceful nature, and how we could live peacefully.
Ahhhh! Now it is making sense. Here is what I think the underlying psychology was: The questioner was thinking something like this: "The Dalai Lama is such a peaceful, non-violent, non-angry, compassionate person.
I don't feel that way. I have a lot of anger and irritation, and I think some of it is just part of my nature, not to mention being justified some of the time. And yet, he seems not to have it. Maybe I can think of some way that he is different from me.... ah yes! He believes in multiple lifetimes, and I don't. That must be it! Maybe a person who believes in multiple lifetimes is more peaceful, while people like me are destined to have natural anxiety and violence in them."
See the twistings of the human mind. Our hindrances-- things like sensual desire, anger, hatred, delusion, and greed-- give us all kinds of "logical" reasons why it's OK that they exist. Why we don't have to give them up. Why they are justified and reasonable responses to the circumstances of the world. In this case, the questioner's anger was trying to explain its own existence as perfectly reasonable, indeed "natural."
(Anger
is natural, of course. The difference between the Dalai Lama and the questioner is that the Dalai Lama chooses not to be attached to his anger-- not to grab onto it when it arises. He still has it, but it doesn't have him).
My favorite quote of the day:
"Expect reality."Reality is messy. It is sometimes painful. And sometimes pleasurable. Sometimes surprising, sometimes disappointing, sometimes infuriating. That's just how it is. The problem is that we expect it to be otherwise!
Just this week, I had a problem with my car registration requiring me to go to the DMV ("Take a number!") not once, but twice. It was annoying and one day in particular was frustrating because I had to wait 25 minutes despite having an appointment. But what did I expect? This is reality. This is our life. We deal with it.
If you want more Dalai Lama, he'll be on again tomorrow, doing an all-day panel with Stanford neuroscientists and Buddhist monks discussing the nature of the mind and the choices we make in life. Sounds interesting!