The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way
The Perversion of Buddhism (Nagarjuna and Jay Garfield)
[My 2-star Amazon review (NDA) of âThe Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way: Nagarjunaâs Mulamadhyamakalarikaâ by Nagarjuna and Jay L. Garfield.]
This text, by Buddhologist Jay Garfield, provides a lengthy, in-depth Indo-Tibetan interpretation of Nagarjunaâs Mulamadhyamakalarika. Nagarjuna, the founder of the Madhyamika Middle Way of Mahayana Buddhism, is considered by many to have been a philosophical genius who elevated Gautamaâs original Dharma to a higher level. But Iâm not one of the many. In fact, I contend that Nagarjunaâs Middle Way is a perversion of original Buddhism, and that Nagajuna was to Gautama what Joseph Smith and John Calvin were to Jesus â a clueless perverter of the religionâs original Teaching.
I am currrently working on a book on Buddhism, and because I hadnât read Nagarjuna in forty years (I was seriously into Madhyamika and the Prajnaparamita Sutras for a few years in the early â70s), I decided to bone-up by reading three texts â this one by Garfield, âNagarjunaâs Seventy Stanzasâ by David Ross Komito (see my 2-star Amazon review), and âBuddhist Illogic,â by Avi Sion (see my forthcoming 5-star review later in July).
Before I proceed with my review of Garfieldâs book, I will quote a description of Sionâs fine, inexpensive ($1.99 Kindle) text. Sion, like me, is into Aristotelian logic, and rightly finds Nagaruna an affront to the laws of logic. Here is the description:
âSion identifies the many sophistries involved in Nagarjunaâs arguments. Nagarjuna uses double standards, applying or ignoring the Laws of thought and other norms as convenient to his goals; he manipulates his readers, by giving seemingly logical forms (like the dilemma) to his discourse, while in fact engaged in non-sequitars or appealing to doubtful premises; he plays with words, relying on unclear terminology, misleading equivocations, and unfair fixations of meaning; and he âsteals conceptâ using them to deny the very percepts on which they are based.â
Because I donât want to ape Professor Sionâs anti-Nagarjuna arguments, Iâll now present a few of my own critical argument. Know that this is just the tip of the iceberg of my criticism, and also know that because I canât stomach Nagarjuna, I have no interest in spending an inordinate amount of time deconstructing his dense, dry, and deficient writings.Â
First off, Nagarjuna cannot write clearly. Anybody new to his writings will be lost without a guide like Garfield to interpret his many cryptic passages. But because Garfield is a Prasangika-Madhyamikan Buddhist professor who adores Nagarjuna, his âguidanceâ is hardly objective. If you want the âother sideâ to Nagarjuna, get Sionâs book.
Secondly, Nagarjuna is a second-rate philosopher who specializes in ridiculous statements. For example, even Garfield has to reject his absurd statement, âThe identity of mover and motion; the agent and action are identical.â Here are a few more examples of his defective thinking:
âCompound phenomena are all deceptive. Therefore they are false. Whatever is deceptive is false.â
Unbeknownst to Nagarjuna, phenomena are neither true nor false, nor deceptive nor non-deceptive; they just are. The categories that Nagarjuna superimposes on phenomena are simply his own biased and deluded concepts.
âWhatever is dependently arisen, such a thing is essentially peaceful. Therefore, that which is arising itself are [sic] themselves peaceful.â
Again, Nagarjuna is guilty of superimposing his own vale-judgments on phenomena. According to his âlogic,â even Hiroshima was âpeaceful.â
âIt is not tenable for that which depends on something else to be different from it.â
In other words, if you depend on food stamps, youâre not different from them. If you depend on the sunâs light, youâre not different from the sun.
What Nagarjuna attempts to do in this discourse is to demonstrate the emptiness of all phenomenal existents, including conditions, effects, elements, aggregates, et al. The end result, in Garfieldâs words, is: âAs far as analysis, one finds only dependence, relativity, and emptiness, and their dependence, relativity, and emptiness.â Beyond informing us ad nauseum that everything under the sun is dependently originated, and thereby, necessarily, essenceless or empty, Nagarjuna, the epitome of a circumscribed philosopher, has virtually nothing to say.
The Buddha didnât find what Nagarjuna found, mere emptiness. He found the âUncompounded, the Unmade, the Unborn.â And rest in this Unmanifest, timeless, spaceless Domain, the Dharmakaya, is Nirvana, the end of becoming, or entanglement of oneâs consciousness with phenomenal flux. But Nagarjuna, a pointy-headed philosopher just like Jay Garfield (birds of a feather flock together), never moves beyond analysis of phenomena to what underlies and transcends them. Whereas Nagarjuna and Garfield repeatedly encounter infinite regresses, the great sages encounter real Emptiness, the Great Void -- formless, timeless, spaceless Awareness or Mind, the hypercosmic Substratum that eludes Nagarjuna, who canât fathom an âAgent,â or single Great Zen Master prior to and beyond phenomena. Â
If you are interested in Nagarjunaâs pseudo-spiritual, disintegral âfishbowlâ philosophy, with commentaries by a hyper-intellectual academic seemingly incapable of moving beyond the confines of Prasangika-Madhyamika and into real SpiritualityâMind (the Dharmakaya) and Energy (the Sambhogakaya) and the direct means to realize them (treckho and togal) as Bodhicitta, then this could be the book for you.
According to Garfield, âIt is important that objects and their characteristics, personas and their states be unified. But if we introduce essence and entity into our ontology this will be impossible.â
In diametrical opposition to Professor Garfield, I say that unless we do introduce Essence (timeless Awareness) and Entity (the Divine Being, or Ati-Buddha Samantabhadra, or Trikaya, or Godhead, or Great Void, or Sat-Cit-Ananda, or the Unborn and Unmade of Gautama) into our ontology, this unification, and a consequent integral philosophy, is impossible, because contrary to what Nagarjuna and Garfield preach, all dharmas are not empty; rather they are temporary non-binding modifications or permutations of Mind-Energy, the Radiant Transcendental Light-Consciousness; hence, in agreement with modern physics, and in contradistinction to Nagarjuna, all things are not reducible to emptiness; they are reducible to Energy, which itself is irreducible. Ultimate reality is not dependent origination and the emptiness or essenceless of all phenomena; it is Self-Existing, Self-Radiant Self-Awareness. And this is Self-evident to an Awakened, or En-Light-ened One.
[My 2-star Amazon review (NDA) of âThe Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way: Nagarjunaâs Mulamadhyamakalarikaâ by Nagarjuna and Jay L. Garfield.]
This text, by Buddhologist Jay Garfield, provides a lengthy, in-depth Indo-Tibetan interpretation of Nagarjunaâs Mulamadhyamakalarika. Nagarjuna, the founder of the Madhyamika Middle Way of Mahayana Buddhism, is considered by many to have been a philosophical genius who elevated Gautamaâs original Dharma to a higher level. But Iâm not one of the many. In fact, I contend that Nagarjunaâs Middle Way is a perversion of original Buddhism, and that Nagajuna was to Gautama what Joseph Smith and John Calvin were to Jesus â a clueless perverter of the religionâs original Teaching.
I am currrently working on a book on Buddhism, and because I hadnât read Nagarjuna in forty years (I was seriously into Madhyamika and the Prajnaparamita Sutras for a few years in the early â70s), I decided to bone-up by reading three texts â this one by Garfield, âNagarjunaâs Seventy Stanzasâ by David Ross Komito (see my 2-star Amazon review), and âBuddhist Illogic,â by Avi Sion (see my forthcoming 5-star review later in July).
Before I proceed with my review of Garfieldâs book, I will quote a description of Sionâs fine, inexpensive ($1.99 Kindle) text. Sion, like me, is into Aristotelian logic, and rightly finds Nagaruna an affront to the laws of logic. Here is the description:
âSion identifies the many sophistries involved in Nagarjunaâs arguments. Nagarjuna uses double standards, applying or ignoring the Laws of thought and other norms as convenient to his goals; he manipulates his readers, by giving seemingly logical forms (like the dilemma) to his discourse, while in fact engaged in non-sequitars or appealing to doubtful premises; he plays with words, relying on unclear terminology, misleading equivocations, and unfair fixations of meaning; and he âsteals conceptâ using them to deny the very percepts on which they are based.â
Because I donât want to ape Professor Sionâs anti-Nagarjuna arguments, Iâll now present a few of my own critical argument. Know that this is just the tip of the iceberg of my criticism, and also know that because I canât stomach Nagarjuna, I have no interest in spending an inordinate amount of time deconstructing his dense, dry, and deficient writings.Â
First off, Nagarjuna cannot write clearly. Anybody new to his writings will be lost without a guide like Garfield to interpret his many cryptic passages. But because Garfield is a Prasangika-Madhyamikan Buddhist professor who adores Nagarjuna, his âguidanceâ is hardly objective. If you want the âother sideâ to Nagarjuna, get Sionâs book.
Secondly, Nagarjuna is a second-rate philosopher who specializes in ridiculous statements. For example, even Garfield has to reject his absurd statement, âThe identity of mover and motion; the agent and action are identical.â Here are a few more examples of his defective thinking:
âCompound phenomena are all deceptive. Therefore they are false. Whatever is deceptive is false.â
Unbeknownst to Nagarjuna, phenomena are neither true nor false, nor deceptive nor non-deceptive; they just are. The categories that Nagarjuna superimposes on phenomena are simply his own biased and deluded concepts.
âWhatever is dependently arisen, such a thing is essentially peaceful. Therefore, that which is arising itself are [sic] themselves peaceful.â
Again, Nagarjuna is guilty of superimposing his own vale-judgments on phenomena. According to his âlogic,â even Hiroshima was âpeaceful.â
âIt is not tenable for that which depends on something else to be different from it.â
In other words, if you depend on food stamps, youâre not different from them. If you depend on the sunâs light, youâre not different from the sun.
What Nagarjuna attempts to do in this discourse is to demonstrate the emptiness of all phenomenal existents, including conditions, effects, elements, aggregates, et al. The end result, in Garfieldâs words, is: âAs far as analysis, one finds only dependence, relativity, and emptiness, and their dependence, relativity, and emptiness.â Beyond informing us ad nauseum that everything under the sun is dependently originated, and thereby, necessarily, essenceless or empty, Nagarjuna, the epitome of a circumscribed philosopher, has virtually nothing to say.
The Buddha didnât find what Nagarjuna found, mere emptiness. He found the âUncompounded, the Unmade, the Unborn.â And rest in this Unmanifest, timeless, spaceless Domain, the Dharmakaya, is Nirvana, the end of becoming, or entanglement of oneâs consciousness with phenomenal flux. But Nagarjuna, a pointy-headed philosopher just like Jay Garfield (birds of a feather flock together), never moves beyond analysis of phenomena to what underlies and transcends them. Whereas Nagarjuna and Garfield repeatedly encounter infinite regresses, the great sages encounter real Emptiness, the Great Void -- formless, timeless, spaceless Awareness or Mind, the hypercosmic Substratum that eludes Nagarjuna, who canât fathom an âAgent,â or single Great Zen Master prior to and beyond phenomena. Â
If you are interested in Nagarjunaâs pseudo-spiritual, disintegral âfishbowlâ philosophy, with commentaries by a hyper-intellectual academic seemingly incapable of moving beyond the confines of Prasangika-Madhyamika and into real SpiritualityâMind (the Dharmakaya) and Energy (the Sambhogakaya) and the direct means to realize them (treckho and togal) as Bodhicitta, then this could be the book for you.
According to Garfield, âIt is important that objects and their characteristics, personas and their states be unified. But if we introduce essence and entity into our ontology this will be impossible.â
In diametrical opposition to Professor Garfield, I say that unless we do introduce Essence (timeless Awareness) and Entity (the Divine Being, or Ati-Buddha Samantabhadra, or Trikaya, or Godhead, or Great Void, or Sat-Cit-Ananda, or the Unborn and Unmade of Gautama) into our ontology, this unification, and a consequent integral philosophy, is impossible, because contrary to what Nagarjuna and Garfield preach, all dharmas are not empty; rather they are temporary non-binding modifications or permutations of Mind-Energy, the Radiant Transcendental Light-Consciousness; hence, in agreement with modern physics, and in contradistinction to Nagarjuna, all things are not reducible to emptiness; they are reducible to Energy, which itself is irreducible. Ultimate reality is not dependent origination and the emptiness or essenceless of all phenomena; it is Self-Existing, Self-Radiant Self-Awareness. And this is Self-evident to an Awakened, or En-Light-ened One.