Why
Buddhism and the West Need Each Other with David Loy
The
Non-Duality of Personal & Social Transformation: A Talk with David Loy
Buddhism
has come to the West and the West has come to Buddhism. Every time Buddhism
spreads to a new culture they interact with each other, and one result in the
West has been the development of socially engaged Buddhism. This does not
merely mean that Buddhism has incorporated a concern for social justice;
Buddhism offers a completely different perspective on social suffering
(dukkha). Our obsessions with entertainment, money, and fame are more than an
individual problem: it reveals where our society is stuck. The 'three poisons'
that the Buddha identified have become institutionalized and taken on a life of
their own: our economic system institutionalizes greed, racism and militarism
institutionalize ill will, and the corporate media institutionalizes delusion.
Our collective sense of separation from the rest of the biosphere lies at the
heart of the ecological crisis. This is the first time in history that Buddhism
does not need to align itself with feudal power structures: Buddhism has
arrived in a modern/post-modern society, and because of these social freedoms
there is the possibility of a real social awakening.
David
Robert Loy is a professor, writer, and Zen teacher in the Sanbo Kyodan
tradition of Japanese Zen Buddhism. He is a prolific author whose essays and
books have been translated into many languages. His articles appear regularly
in the pages of major journals such as Tikkun and Buddhist magazines including
Tricycle, Turning Wheel, Shambhala Sun, and Buddhadharma as well as in a
variety of scholarly journals. He has served on the editorial boards of the
journals Contemporary Buddhism, The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology and
World Fellowship of Buddhist Review. He is also on the advisory boards of
Buddhist Global Relief, the Clear View Project, Zen Peacemakers, and the Ernest
Becker Foundation.
David
lectures nationally and internationally on various topics, focusing primarily
on the encounter between Buddhism and modernity: what each can learn from the
other. He is especially concerned about social and ecological issues. Loy is a
professor of Buddhist and comparative philosophy. From 1990 until 2005 he was
professor in the Faculty of International Studies, Bunkyo University,
Chigasaki, Japan. In January 2006 he became the Besl Family Chair Professor of
Ethics/Religion and Society with Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio, a
visiting position that ended in September 2010. In April 2007 David Loy was
visiting scholar at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. From January to
August 2009 he was a research scholar with the Institute for Advanced Study,
the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. From September through December 2012 he was
in residence at Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado, with a Lenz Fellowship.
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