M
Marybeloved
Guest
Sorry to come in like this in the middle of the thread (Have not read the entire thread or the other one). But I remember reading a Catholic account of Buddhist Spiritual experience based on the work of the great Catholic Philosopher Jacques Maritain. I didn’t read the work itself (Maritain) but a discussion of it in a Catholic-Eastern dialogue (innerexplorations). It basically was about the “knowing” of being as being- in a direct manner through the negation of conceptual thinking… or something like that.
The argument by those in the discussion was that while Metaphysics approaches this direct knowing of being as being, from one direction/approach, the Buddhists approach it from/in another, but that they ultimately are talking about the same thing (being). The implication seemed to be that Buddhist spiritual experience could be seen from our perspective as a natural contemplation. Contemplation from Catholic understanding is the direct, unmediated, non-conceptual experience of or knowledge of something or someone. Direct, unmediated, non-conceptual experential knowledge. They used Jacques Maritain’s work for this. They seemed to say that Buddhists know by natural contemplation or by direct, unmediated, non-conceptual experience, this being as being, or being in nature, that metaphysics knows in a different way.
They accounted for the difference in Buddhist teaching/philosophy with us, not only in their negation method of meditation but its prioritization in their philosophy over other manners of knowing, such that (from our perspective) they see being, To be without the essences. The existence of things, without the whatness of those things. That is, they see the fact of being (That we are) without the particulars (what we are) which is how they end up with the monist or pantheistic language/philosophy.
Don’t know if anyone has come across this thought before.
The argument by those in the discussion was that while Metaphysics approaches this direct knowing of being as being, from one direction/approach, the Buddhists approach it from/in another, but that they ultimately are talking about the same thing (being). The implication seemed to be that Buddhist spiritual experience could be seen from our perspective as a natural contemplation. Contemplation from Catholic understanding is the direct, unmediated, non-conceptual experience of or knowledge of something or someone. Direct, unmediated, non-conceptual experential knowledge. They used Jacques Maritain’s work for this. They seemed to say that Buddhists know by natural contemplation or by direct, unmediated, non-conceptual experience, this being as being, or being in nature, that metaphysics knows in a different way.
They accounted for the difference in Buddhist teaching/philosophy with us, not only in their negation method of meditation but its prioritization in their philosophy over other manners of knowing, such that (from our perspective) they see being, To be without the essences. The existence of things, without the whatness of those things. That is, they see the fact of being (That we are) without the particulars (what we are) which is how they end up with the monist or pantheistic language/philosophy.
Don’t know if anyone has come across this thought before.