[Buddha-l] Bertrand Russell

libris libris at singnet.com.sg
Fri Aug 11 20:29:24 MDT 2006


Try "Prisoners of Shangri-la" (Donald S Lopez, Jr, 1998)

Piya Tan

--- Benjamin Tse <benjaminytse at yahoo.com> wrote:

> Richard,
> 
> Is there a book one can read on how the Tibetan Buddhist Priesthood
> was as Russell described?  Thanks
> 
> Richard Hayes <rhayes at unm.edu> wrote: On Thursday 10 August 2006
> 21:27, libris wrote:
> 
> > The quote is actually from "A History of Western Philosophy"
> > (1945), however, I'm not sure of the exact page:perhaps someone
> > can help.
> 
> While someone is looking through that 900-page book in search of 
> Russell's views on Buddhism, we might want to ponder some of what 
> he said in "Why I am Not a Christian."
> 
> \begin{quote}
> There has been a rumour in recent years to the effect that I have 
> become less opposed to religious orthodoxy that I formerly was. 
> This rumour is totally without foundation. I think all the great 
> religions of the world---Buddhism, Hinduism, Christianity, Islam, 
> and Communism---both untrue and harmful. (p. 9)
> \end{quote}
> 
> In light of all the suffering religious people have been inflicting
> 
> on each other and on totally innocent by-standers around the world 
> in the 21st century, it would be hard to disagree with Lord Russell
> 
> on that one. But how about this one:
> 
> \begin{quote}
> But what is true of Christianity is equally true of Buddhism. The 
> Buddha was amiable and enlightened; on his death-bed he laughed at 
> his disciples for supposing that he was immortal. But the Buddhist 
> priesthood---as it exists, for example, in Tibet---has been 
> obscurantist, tyrannous, and cruel in the highest degree.
> (p. 29)
> \end{quote}
> 
> Although Tibetan "priests" were the main focus of that broadside, 
> Lord Russell managed to have some scathing things to say about the 
> ability of Japanese Buddhists priests to think clearly and 
> rationally. All things considered, Buddhism does not come out 
> awfully well in Russell's depictions. The highest praise we find is
> 
> an acknowledgment that the Buddha was amiable and enlightened 
> enough to mock his own disciples.
> 
> Russell's assessment may not have been the most politely worded, and
> 
> one searches in vain for signs of political correctness. But was 
> Lord Russell's assessment of Lord Buddha really all that 
> inaccurate?
> 
> -- 
> Richard Hayes
> Department of Philosophy
> University of New Mexico
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