Kulturvänstern stretar på...
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En kritisk recension av en AI-översatt bok om shaolin. Men har inte hela shaolin-grejen redan avslöjats som värsta bluffen?
| Credit: G41rn8 |
OK, so this week the AI is trying to convert me to "Huayan Buddhism". Rather than Soto Zen, that is. A step in the right direction if you ask me. Sometimes there really is progress...
Can you tell me about Huayan Buddhism?
Huayan Buddhism (Chinese: 華嚴, Huáyán; Japanese: Kegon; Korean: Hwaeom) is one of the most profound and philosophically sophisticated schools of Mahāyāna Buddhism. It is based primarily on the Avatamsaka Sutra (also known as the Flower Garland Sutra), a vast scripture describing the universe as an infinitely interconnected web of Buddhas, bodhisattvas, and worlds.
Many scholars consider Huayan to represent one of the high points of classical Chinese Buddhist philosophy.
Huayan developed in China during the Tang dynasty (7th–9th centuries).
Its principal patriarchs include:
Among them, Fazang is especially famous for developing Huayan's philosophical vision.
The school later spread to:
The entire system is based upon the Avataṃsaka Sūtra.
This enormous scripture describes:
Rather than presenting a linear story, it offers a grand vision of reality itself.
Unlike Pure Land Buddhism, where Amitābha is central, Huayan places:
Vairocana
at the center.
Vairocana is not merely another Buddha.
He represents:
Everything exists within Vairocana's enlightened body.
Perhaps the most famous Huayan doctrine is:
The mutual interpenetration of all phenomena.
Nothing exists independently.
Everything reflects everything else.
The traditional image is:
Imagine an infinite net stretching throughout the universe.
At every intersection hangs a jewel.
Each jewel reflects:
Thus:
Every part contains the whole.
The whole contains every part.
This became one of the most influential images in East Asian Buddhism.
Huayan often summarizes reality as:
"One is all, and all is one."
This does not mean everything loses its individuality.
Instead:
Every individual thing retains its uniqueness,
while simultaneously participating in the entire cosmos.
Huayan describes reality through four progressively deeper perspectives.
Ordinary experience.
Trees.
People.
Animals.
Mountains.
Everything shares one ultimate nature:
emptiness.
Ultimate reality and ordinary things are inseparable.
A flower is not separate from ultimate reality.
This is uniquely Huayan.
Every phenomenon supports every other phenomenon.
Everything participates in everything else.
Nothing is isolated.
Huayan strongly emphasizes:
The ideal bodhisattva works endlessly for others because:
there are no ultimately separate beings.
Helping another is helping the whole.
The final chapter tells the story of:
Sudhana
who visits 53 spiritual teachers.
Remarkably,
his teachers include:
This illustrates that wisdom can appear through many different kinds of people and situations.
Huayan is not merely philosophy.
Practices include:
Many Huayan practitioners also practiced:
The traditions often complemented one another.
This may interest you especially.
Huayan never rejected Amitābha.
Instead it saw:
as expressions within the same vast enlightened reality.
Many Chinese masters practiced both:
This combination remains common today.
You've previously described a worldview that includes:
There are clear resonances with Huayan's vision of an interconnected cosmos filled with innumerable Buddhas and bodhisattvas. At the same time, there is one important difference: Huayan does not posit a creator God or an emanating deity. Vairocana is not a creator in the theistic sense but the all-pervading Buddha whose enlightened reality is expressed through the entire cosmos.
That distinction is significant, but many people who appreciate a panentheistic or cosmic religious imagination still find Huayan deeply appealing because of its emphasis on the unity, beauty, and interdependence of all existence.
One of Huayan's best-known summaries captures its spirit beautifully:
"In one is all; in all is one. One particle of dust contains innumerable Buddha-fields, and innumerable Buddha-fields are present in one particle of dust."
This is not meant as a physical claim about atoms or cosmology, but as a contemplative way of expressing the profound interconnectedness of reality as seen through awakened wisdom.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio is the effective ruler of Venezuela, according to a recent article in the New York Times (a summary from another site below).
This raises all kinds of questions (and, I suppose, eyebrows). For instance, if the "Bolivarian Revolution" has widespread popular support, shouldn´t the people of Venezuela protest or even rebel against Delcy Rodriguez? And why does the "Bolivarian" elite accept the new order anyway?
It seems the revolution has fallen on really hard times since the halcyon days of Hugo Chavez. All it took to make Venezuela a US protectorate was to remove Maduro and his wife! Perhaps Trump assumed that the same strategy would work with Iran, but it seems the Islamic revolution is more viable than the Bolivarian one...
Ibland blir man trött på...jag vet inte...kineser eller nåt.
Part 2 of 2 of a recent "conversation" I had with the "AI" tool known as ChatGPT.
This is my problem with Kashmir Shaivism: freedom seems to be above love. What if Shiva creates an evil world because *he* finds it enjoyful to do so? What could constrain Shiva from doing so except love / compassion?
This is a profound philosophical question, and it is one that has been raised both by critics of Kashmir Śaivism and by later Hindu thinkers themselves.
The concern can be stated like this:
If God is absolutely free, what guarantees that God's freedom is good? Why couldn't absolute freedom produce cruelty or arbitrary suffering?
That is a genuine philosophical challenge.
Kashmir Śaivism would reject the premise that freedom and love are competing attributes.
For thinkers like Abhinavagupta, Śiva's nature is simultaneously:
These are not separate qualities that can conflict. Freedom is not the freedom to become evil; it is the freedom of a being whose very essence is perfect consciousness and bliss.
An analogy would be: mathematicians sometimes say that "2 is free to be odd." But it isn't. Not because something constrains it, but because being even is intrinsic to what 2 is. Similarly, Kashmir Śaivism would say that Śiva is not constrained from evil by an external law; rather, evil is incompatible with what Śiva is.
The difficulty, of course, is that this answer may not satisfy someone who asks why the world contains so much suffering.
Your intuition seems to be:
Freedom alone is morally neutral. Love gives freedom its direction.
That is a coherent philosophical position, and it has much in common with several devotional traditions.
For example:
These traditions tend to emphasize divine goodness more explicitly than divine freedom.
Your concern also resembles a reason why Mahāyāna Buddhism does not posit an omnipotent creator. Buddhas are understood to possess boundless compassion (karuṇā) and wisdom (prajñā), but they do not arbitrarily create worlds according to personal preference.
For instance, Amitābha establishes Sukhāvatī through vows motivated entirely by compassion. His freedom is always inseparable from wisdom and compassion.
Some modern interpreters try to express it this way:
Rather than saying,
"Śiva is free, therefore He may do anything,"
they say,
"Śiva is perfectly free because He is perfectly awakened, and perfect awakening is inseparable from perfect love."
That moves the tradition closer to your intuition.
From our conversations over many months, one theme has been remarkably consistent: you place great weight on the idea that ultimate reality must be morally trustworthy. You have repeatedly expressed attraction to a supreme reality that is:
That is a different starting point from systems that begin with metaphysical freedom or pure consciousness. It explains why you've often found yourself drawn toward traditions centered on figures like Amitābha, Avalokiteśvara, Lakṣmī, or Tripurasundarī interpreted as universal compassion. Those traditions tend to foreground love or compassion as the defining characteristic of the highest reality.
One possibility is not to place freedom above love or love above freedom, but to say that in the Absolute they are inseparable.
One might formulate it like this:
God is absolutely free because His nature is perfect goodness, and perfectly loving because His love is the completely free expression of His own infinite being.
In that view, freedom does not permit arbitrary evil, and love is not an external rule imposed on God. Instead, both are aspects of the same perfect reality.
That approach is closer to some currents of Christian mysticism, some forms of Vaiṣṇava theology, and certain modern interpretations of Śaiva and Śākta traditions than to the most rigorous classical formulations of Kashmir Śaivism.
Ultimately, your question points to a real philosophical divide. Traditions differ on whether the primary way to understand the Absolute is through being, consciousness, freedom, love, or some inseparable unity of these. There is no consensus answer across Hinduism or Buddhism, and your concern highlights one of the enduring debates in comparative philosophy of religion.
So I had a "serious" conversation with ChatGPT, which may or may not be of interest only to my own humble self. Part 1 of 2.
Can you tell me about the concept of Shiva creating through freedom and bliss?
Yes. This is one of the most beautiful and distinctive ideas in Kashmir Śaivism, especially in the works of thinkers such as Abhinavagupta and Utpaladeva. The central idea is that Śiva creates the universe not because of a need, lack, or external purpose, but because of His absolute freedom (svātantrya) and overflowing bliss (ānanda).
This differs from many Western conceptions of God, where philosophers have debated whether God creates out of love, necessity, or free choice.
A key word in Kashmir Śaivism is:
svātantrya (स्वातन्त्र्य)
meaning:
Śiva is completely unrestricted. Nothing external compels Him:
Therefore, creation is a free expression of divine consciousness.
One traditional image is that of an artist. A great artist does not paint because they must in order to become complete; they paint because creativity naturally expresses itself. Kashmir Śaiva authors would say that this analogy is still imperfect because even artists have limitations, whereas Śiva's freedom is absolute.
Śiva is also understood to be perfect bliss.
This bliss is not merely pleasure or happiness. It is the fullness (pūrṇatā) of infinite consciousness.
Because Śiva is already complete, creation cannot fill a deficiency. Rather, it is the spontaneous play of that completeness.
This is why many texts speak of the universe as:
The Sanskrit word is:
līlā (लीला)
usually translated "divine play."
Kashmir Śaivism answers:
Because infinite consciousness naturally manifests itself.
A famous analogy is a mirror.
A mirror naturally reflects images without being changed by them.
Likewise:
while never ceasing to be infinite consciousness.
Another analogy is light.
The sun shines because shining is its nature.
Similarly, Śiva manifests universes because manifestation is an expression of His freedom.
Creation is only one of five continuous activities (pañcakṛtya):
All five are expressions of the same freedom.
Your earlier questions about the five faces of Sadāśiva (Sadyojāta, Vāmadeva, etc.) connect directly with these five acts in many Śaiva traditions.
This is one of the hardest questions.
Kashmir Śaivism does not say that evil exists because God lacks power or goodness.
Instead, it says that the One Consciousness freely assumes finite perspectives.
Individual beings experience limitation because Śiva voluntarily veils His own infinitude through tirodhāna.
This does not mean suffering is unreal. Kashmir Śaivism generally affirms that suffering is genuinely experienced. Rather, it says that from the highest perspective, it occurs within the divine play of consciousness.
This point has often been debated, because some critics feel it does not fully explain the moral reality of evil.
You wrote:
God emanates the world because of his loving nature. He "must" create.
This is close, but there is an important difference.
In Kashmir Śaivism, most authors would hesitate to say that Śiva "must" create.
If creation were necessary—even because of love—then Śiva would be constrained by that necessity.
Instead they would say something like:
Śiva is so free that He may create, sustain, dissolve, conceal, or reveal. His creation expresses His nature, but it is not imposed upon Him.
Love is certainly part of this picture, especially because grace (anugraha) is central. Yet love is understood as an expression of freedom rather than a force that obliges God to create.
Since we've often discussed Tripurasundarī, there is a striking parallel.
In Śrīvidyā, the Supreme Goddess is also described as:
Here too, creation is often presented as play (līlā) rather than necessity. Lalitā's very name ("She Who Plays") evokes this sense of effortless, joyous manifestation.
If someone wanted to bring your intuition into closer dialogue with Kashmir Śaivism, they might phrase it this way:
"God does not create because He lacks anything or because He is compelled to create. Rather, His infinite love is itself one expression of His perfect freedom. Creation is the spontaneous overflow of a fullness that neither needs the world nor is diminished by it."
That preserves both the idea of divine love—which seems important in your own outlook—and the Kashmir Śaiva insistence that the Absolute remains utterly free.