黑料不打烊

Pamela D. Winfield publishes chapter on Japanese Buddhist material theory

Her chapter explains how two great Japanese Buddhist masters described their philosophies of form.

This month, Pamela D. Winfield published a chapter in “The Routledge Handbook of Material Religion” ed. Jennifer Hughes, Pooyan Tamimi Arab, and S. Brent Plate (Routledge Press, 2023).

鈥淢aterial Theories in Japanese Buddhism: What K奴kai and D艒gen Thought About Things鈥 appears in the first section of the volume dedicated to the world鈥檚 diverse 鈥淕enealogies of Material Religion.鈥 Her chapter explains how two great Japanese Buddhist masters described their philosophies of form. As opposed to Greek and Christian neo-platonic cosmology that posits a vertically oriented emanation of forms from an ineffable source, these two Buddhist masters describe a radically immanent and horizontally-oriented dependent arising of forms that manifest in and as emptiness. K奴kai describes form and emptiness ontologically as mutually reflexive terms, but D艒gen sees them epistemologically as the experience of form, then emptiness, then form again (albeit in a transformed light). Her analysis in this volume thus contributes to our understanding of materiality both across and within religious traditions.