Zhanran
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Jingxi Zhanran (; J. Keikei Tannen; K. Hyŏnggye Tamyŏn, c. 711-782) was the sixth patriarch of the
Tiantai Tiantai or T'ien-t'ai () is an East Asian Buddhist school of Mahāyāna Buddhism that developed in 6th-century China. Drawing from earlier Mahāyāna sources such as Madhyamaka, founded by Nāgārjuna, who is traditionally regarded as the f ...
school of
Chinese Buddhism Chinese Buddhism or Han Buddhism ( zh, s=汉传佛教, t=漢傳佛教, first=t, poj=Hàn-thoân Hu̍t-kàu, j=Hon3 Cyun4 Fat6 Gaau3, p=Hànchuán Fójiào) is a Chinese form of Mahayana Buddhism. The Chinese Buddhist canonJiang Wu, "The Chin ...
. Zhanran is considered to be the most important Tiantai figure after the founder
Zhiyi Zhiyi (; 538–597 CE) also called Dashi Tiantai (天台大師) and Zhizhe (智者, "Wise One"), was a Chinese Bhikkhu, Buddhist monk, Buddhist philosophy, philosopher, meditation teacher, and Exegesis, exegete. He is considered to be the foun ...
."Zhanran", in Silk, Jonathan A. et al. ''Brill’s Encyclopedia of Buddhism'': Volume II: Lives, pp. 814-817. He was also called Master Miaole (Sublime Bliss), Dharma Master Jizhu (Lord of Exegesis), and Jingqi (荊溪) after his birthplace. Zhanran helped to define, defend and popularize the Tiantai tradition during the Tang, developing its doctrinal system further by building on Zhiyi's writings. Zhanran wrote some important commentaries on Zhiyi's works as well as original treatises of his own. He is also the first figure to use the term "Tiantai School" (Tiantai zong).


Life

Zhanran was born in Jingqi (荊溪), in modern-day
Yixing Yixing () is a county-level city administered under the prefecture-level city of Wuxi in southern Jiangsu province, China, and is part of the Yangtze Delta, Yangtze River Delta. The city is known for its traditional Yixing ware, Yixing clay ware t ...
宜興 county,
Jiangsu Jiangsu is a coastal Provinces of the People's Republic of China, province in East China. It is one of the leading provinces in finance, education, technology, and tourism, with its capital in Nanjing. Jiangsu is the List of Chinese administra ...
province. His lay surname was Qi (戚). After receiving a Ruist (
Confucian Confucianism, also known as Ruism or Ru classicism, is a system of thought and behavior originating in ancient China, and is variously described as a tradition, philosophy, religion, theory of government, or way of life. Founded by Confucius ...
) education, Zhanran became attracted to the study of Tiantai Buddhism at the age of eighteen. He later became a student of Master Xuanlang (673–754), the past head of the Tiantai community on Mt. Tiantai who had now retired to Mount Zuoxi (
Zhejiang ) , translit_lang1_type2 = , translit_lang1_info2 = ( Hangzhounese) ( Ningbonese) (Wenzhounese) , image_skyline = 玉甑峰全貌 - panoramio.jpg , image_caption = View of the Yandang Mountains , image_map = Zhejiang i ...
province). Zhanran stayed with Xuanlang on Mount Zuoxi as a lay practitioner and lecturer for twenty years, studying and practicing Zhiyi's ''Mohe zhiguan''. Zhanran later entered the monastic order at thirty eight in Jingle si (淨樂寺) at Junshan (君山). Early in his monastic training, he studied the
Vinaya The Vinaya (Pali and Sanskrit: विनय) refers to numerous monastic rules and ethical precepts for fully ordained monks and nuns of Buddhist Sanghas (community of like-minded ''sramanas''). These sets of ethical rules and guidelines devel ...
with precept master Tanyi (曇一, 692-771) at Huiji (會稽). After this period, Zhanran traveled around for a bit, looking for shelter during the An Lushan Rebellion (755–763). In 755, while staying in Lin’an (臨安; Zhejiang province), he wrote the first draft of his magnum opus, the ''Zhiguan fuxing chuanhong jue'' (止觀輔行傳弘決; A Resolution to Assist and Promote the Practice of “Concentration and Insight,” T. 1912). This is his main commentary on Zhiyi's '' Mohe Zhiguan.'' He later moved back to Mount Tiantai in 764. It was during this tumultuous time that Zhanran wrote the first editions of many of his commentaries. Guoqing Temple Zhanran worked to revive and unify the various temples of the tradition under the banner of one school, the "Tiantai school" (Tiantai zong). Before the rise of Zhanran, the Tang Tiantai tradition had begun to be challenged by other traditions, like Huayan, Esoteric Buddhism and Chan (
Zen Zen (; from Chinese: ''Chán''; in Korean: ''Sŏn'', and Vietnamese: ''Thiền'') is a Mahayana Buddhist tradition that developed in China during the Tang dynasty by blending Indian Mahayana Buddhism, particularly Yogacara and Madhyamaka phil ...
) and some Tiantai monasteries like those on Mt. Wutai had begun to draw on these traditions as well. Zhanran's writings are in part a response to this challenge, and a reassertion of the preeminence of Zhiyi's teachings, as well as an effort to construct a sense of a Tiantai ''zong'' (宗, school). Zhanran spent much time and energy writing commentaries on the works of
Zhiyi Zhiyi (; 538–597 CE) also called Dashi Tiantai (天台大師) and Zhizhe (智者, "Wise One"), was a Chinese Bhikkhu, Buddhist monk, Buddhist philosophy, philosopher, meditation teacher, and Exegesis, exegete. He is considered to be the foun ...
, and defending Tiantai doctrines against the competing
East Asian Yogācāra East Asian Yogācāra refers to the Mahayana Buddhist traditions in East Asia which developed out of the History of Buddhism in India, Indian Buddhist Yogachara, Yogācāra (lit. "yogic practice") systems (also known as ''Vijñānavāda'', "the d ...
, Chan, and Huayan schools, who he also studied deeply. For example, Zhanran's commentaries on the ''Lotus Sutra'' specifically address and refute the interpretations of Faxiang scholar
Kuiji Kuiji (; 632–682), also known as Ji (), an exponent of Yogācāra, was a Chinese monk and a prominent disciple of Xuanzang.Lusthaus, Dan (undated). ''Quick Overview of the Faxiang School'' (). Source(accessed: December 12, 2007) His posthumous ...
, which grant the ''Lotus Sutra'' a status lower to
Yogācāra Yogachara (, IAST: ') is an influential tradition of Buddhist philosophy and psychology emphasizing the study of cognition, perception, and consciousness through the interior lens of meditation, as well as philosophical reasoning (hetuvidyā). ...
scriptures which teach the theory of icchantika. Zhanran's writings on the distinctions between Tiantai and these others schools became central to later Tiantai Buddhism's sense of identity. In the 770s, Zhanran traveled widely and taught at various places throughout China, including Suzhou (蘇州), Mount Wutai and Kaiyuan si (開元寺) in Suzhou. He was even invited by Chinese emperors Xuanzong (r. 712–756), Suzong (r. 756–762), and Daizong (r. 762–779) to lecture at the imperial court, but he declined to attend, citing illness as an excuse.Chen (2014), pp. 218-219 Scholars disagree on the reasons why he might have stayed away from court. He may have wanted to avoid politics and favored personal connections with his disciples, or he may have been worried that the emperors were more supportive of
Daoism Taoism or Daoism (, ) is a diverse philosophical and religious tradition indigenous to China, emphasizing harmony with the Tao ( zh, p=dào, w=tao4). With a range of meaning in Chinese philosophy, translations of Tao include 'way', 'road', ...
and Esoteric Buddhism. Later in life, he retired to Guoqing temple on Mt. Tiantai. He died at Folong in 782. With time, Zhanran's influence grew and his works became authoritative in the Tiantai school as he was later considered to be the 9th patriarch of the Tiantai tradition and a Dharma heir (fazi 法子) of Xuanlang. However, his status during his lifetime is less clear, and he likely did not gain such prestige officially during his lifetime.


Works

There are at least 33 works attributed to Zhan-ran, though only 21 are extant, and eleven of them have been questioned by modern scholars as being later works. Zhanran's three main works are all large influential commentaries on the works of Zhiyi: * ''Zhiguan fuxing zhuan hongjue'' (止觀輔行傳弘決, T1912), a commentary on the '' Mohe Zhiguan'' (摩訶止觀, ''The Great Calming and Contemplation,'' T1911). * ''Fahua Xuanyi Shiqian'' (法華玄義釋籤, T1717), a sub-commentary on ''Fahua Xuanyi'' (法華玄義, ''The Profound Meaning of The Lotus Sutra'', T1716), Zhiyi's commentary to the ''
Lotus Sutra The ''Lotus Sūtra'' (Sanskrit: ''Saddharma Puṇḍarīka Sūtram'', ''Sūtra on the White Lotus of the True Dharma'', zh, p=Fǎhuá jīng, l=Dharma Flower Sutra) is one of the most influential and venerated Buddhist Mahāyāna sūtras. ...
''. * ''Fahua Wenju Ji'' (法華文句記, T1719), a sub-commentary on ''Fahua Wenju'' (法華文句, ''The Words and Phrases of The Lotus Sutra'', T1718), Zhiyi's other commentary to the ''Lotus Sutra''. He also wrote several other shorter digests of his commentary on the Mohe Zhiguan. These smaller works are the ''Zhiguan yili'' (止觀義例, T. 1913) which critiques Chan meditation, the ''Zhiguan fuxing suyao ji'' (止觀 輔行捜要記, X. 919), and the ''Zhiguan dayi'' (止觀大 意, T. 1914). Zhanran also wrote two sub-commentaries to Zhiyi's '' Vimalakirti Sutra'' commentaries. Zhanran also wrote some original works, such as the influential ''Adamantine Scalpel Treatise'' (''Jin’gangpi Lun'' 金剛錍論, T. 1932), which discusses how Buddha-nature, being all-pervasive and
non-dual Nondualism includes a number of philosophical and spiritual traditions that emphasize the absence of fundamental duality or separation in existence. This viewpoint questions the boundaries conventionally imposed between self and other, min ...
, is also found in inanimate things like mountains and rocks. This was perhaps his most influential work, on which around sixty commentaries have been written since. His other independent treatise is the ''Beginning and the End of the Mind Essence'' (''Shizhong xinyao'' 始終心要), a small text which is a concise encapsulation of the heart (xin 心) of Tiantai thought.


Teaching

Zhanran is best known for his scriptural exegesis of Zhiyi's Tiantai teaching, as well as his promotion of the influential doctrine of universal
Buddha-nature In Buddhist philosophy and soteriology, Buddha-nature ( Chinese: , Japanese: , , Sanskrit: ) is the innate potential for all sentient beings to become a Buddha or the fact that all sentient beings already have a pure Buddha-essence within ...
, which is said to fully pervade (bian 念) insentient as well as sentient beings. This teaching is called "the Buddha-nature of Insentient Beings" (wujing youxing 無情有性) and after Zhanran it became one of the key distinctive teachings of the Tiantai tradition. Through the influence of Saicho and the Japanese
Tendai , also known as the Tendai Dharma Flower School (天台法華宗, ''Tendai hokke shū,'' sometimes just ''Hokkeshū''), is a Mahāyāna Buddhist tradition with significant esoteric elements that was officially established in Japan in 806 by t ...
school, this doctrine also infused all of
Japanese Buddhism Buddhism was first established in Japan in the 6th century CE. Most of the Japanese Buddhists belong to new schools of Buddhism which were established in the Kamakura period (1185-1333). During the Edo period (1603–1868), Buddhism was cont ...
. Zhanran's contribution also includes the systematic doctrinal classification schema known as the Five Periods and Eight Teachings (五時八教). While this system has traditionally been attributed to Zhiyi, modern scholars like Sekiguchi Shindai have shown that the full system was developed by Zhanran, who first used the term in his ''Zhiguan fuxing chuanhong jue'' (T. 1912 LVIp. 292a20).


Buddha-nature

Zhanran's ''Adamantine Scalpel Treatise'' (金剛錍 ''Jin'gang Pi'') is the key source for the Tiantai doctrine of "the Buddha-nature of Insentient Beings". While the idea that “grass and trees too have buddha-nature” (caomu yiyou foxing 草木亦有佛性) had been mentioned in the works of Jizang and also relies on the thought of Jingying Huiyuan, it is Zhanran who provides the most famous exposition of this Chinese Buddhist doctrine which argues that all insentient things like water, buildings, flora, sounds, smells, rocks all have buddha-nature.Shuman Chen. Buddha-Nature of Insentient Beings. Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion, 2nd ed., vol. 1, pp. 208–212, 2014 According to Zhanran:
Every blade of grass, tree, pebble, and particle of dust is perfectly endowed with
buddha-nature In Buddhist philosophy and soteriology, Buddha-nature ( Chinese: , Japanese: , , Sanskrit: ) is the innate potential for all sentient beings to become a Buddha or the fact that all sentient beings already have a pure Buddha-essence within ...
...The practitioner of the perfect teaching, from beginning to end, knows that ultimate principle is non-dual and that there are no objects apart from mind. Who then is sentient? What then is insentient? Within the assembly of the Lotus, there is no discrimination.
Zhanran's understanding of buddha-nature relies on the classic Tiantai view of threefold buddha nature (三因佛性) which means that buddha-nature can be understood as having three aspects:Dehn (2023), pp. 59-60 # Buddha-Nature as the Proper Cause (正因佛性), the inner potential for Buddhahood in all and the true nature of reality itself # Buddha-Nature as the Revealing Cause (了因佛性), the wisdom of Buddhahood, the wisdom that leads to Buddhahood # Buddha-Nature as the Conditioning Cause (緣因佛性), the practices leading to Buddhahood and the activities of Buddhahood Thus, when Zhanran says all things have buddha-nature, he means it in this threefold sense, which is always present in this triple way. That is to say, one never has just one of these aspects, when one is present, the others are present.Ziporyn (2000), p. 186 Furthermore, this triple buddha-nature is
non-dual Nondualism includes a number of philosophical and spiritual traditions that emphasize the absence of fundamental duality or separation in existence. This viewpoint questions the boundaries conventionally imposed between self and other, min ...
with suffering, delusion and karma. From the perspective of deluded beings, there is just suffering, delusion and karma. But from the Buddha's point of view, suffering includes the potential for Buddhahood (proper cause), which is known by wisdom (revealing cause) and acted upon (conditioning cause). As such, Zhanran's summarizes his doctrine of Buddha-nature with the following statement:
From the beginningless past, you have had nothing but afflictions,
karma Karma (, from , ; ) is an ancient Indian concept that refers to an action, work, or deed, and its effect or consequences. In Indian religions, the term more specifically refers to a principle of cause and effect, often descriptively called ...
, and
suffering Suffering, or pain in a broad sense, may be an experience of unpleasantness or aversion, possibly associated with the perception of harm or threat of harm in an individual. Suffering is the basic element that makes up the negative valence (psyc ...
. Precisely this is entirely the Three Causes (of Buddhahood, i.e., the Threefold Buddha-nature) as Principle and as the Nature.
Zhanran's view of buddha-nature is not the same as that commonly found in Chan/
Zen Zen (; from Chinese: ''Chán''; in Korean: ''Sŏn'', and Vietnamese: ''Thiền'') is a Mahayana Buddhist tradition that developed in China during the Tang dynasty by blending Indian Mahayana Buddhism, particularly Yogacara and Madhyamaka phil ...
, which sees it as an "enlightened essence" or "pure Mind" which exists unblemished by the defilements. He also does not see it as some pure ground of all reality from which everything arises. Indeed, he rejects any view of buddha-nature that sees it as some inner core, transcendent mind or pure substratum.Ziporyn (2000), pp. 186-187 Instead, he sees buddha-nature as that which pervades all things and is non-dual with all things (pure or impure, samsaric or nirvanic), writing in the ''Diamond Scalpel'' that "this nature is neither internal orexternal, utpervades-all ikeempty space; it is the same as all the Buddhas, and equal to the Dharma Realm ( Dharmadhātu)... his natureuniversally inherently-entails ll" Thus, for Zhanran, delusion and suffering have always existed and did not arise at some point out of a pure basis or devolved out an enlightened mind. At the same time, delusion and suffering are nothing but the threefold buddha-nature seen from the perspective of a Buddha (and thus, are also
Buddhahood In Buddhism, Buddha (, which in classic Indo-Aryan languages, Indic languages means "awakened one") is a title for those who are Enlightenment in Buddhism, spiritually awake or enlightened, and have thus attained the Buddhist paths to liberat ...
). Delusion contains in it the potential for wisdom and suffering the potential for nirvana. Furthermore, even though we talk of sentient beings as containing a potential (the Proper Cause) which is not yet expressed or active (in beings who do not practice or know the Dharma, i.e. who are deluded and suffering), this is merely a provisional perspective. In reality, buddha-nature has always been functioning, and when Buddhahood is attained, one will realize that this previous perspective (of buddha-nature as a potential that has to be realized) was itself the Revealing Cause, and that one's practices to attain buddhahood were none other than the Conditioning Cause.


Space-like all-pervasiveness

The next step in Zhanran's exposition of buddha-nature is explaining its all-pervasiveness:
this nature is neither within nor without and pervades all space, and thus it is the same as all Buddhas and equal to the entire dharma-realm. Once he/she accepts that it pervades all, I would next reveal that it inherently includes and entails all. That is, since it is the same as all Buddhas and equal to the entire dharma-realm, this all pervasive nature inherently includes and entails the bodies of all Buddhas, such that one body is all bodies. And again, it (inherently includes and entails) all the lands that are called forth by all Buddhas, such that one land is all lands. The body and the land it inhabits are thus identical, such that speaking of the body is speaking of the land. The same is true for large and small and for one and many. It is because beings possess this nature that we say they have the (Buddha-)nature.
Zhanran emphasizes the all-pervasive character of buddha-nature as its defining attribute, employing this characteristic (which is also Suchness itself) to argue for its applicability to the insentient. Since Buddha-nature, by its very nature, is not some "thing" external nor internal to all things, and since excludes nothing, it must also pervade everything (at all times), including that which lacks
sentience Sentience is the ability to experience feelings and sensations. It may not necessarily imply higher cognitive functions such as awareness, reasoning, or complex thought processes. Some writers define sentience exclusively as the capacity for ''v ...
. For Zhanran, the proper view of buddha-nature must include an understanding that it is not just something "within" beings, but also something found "externally" as well. Indeed, it must pervade all things and thus can be described as a nature that “neither internal nor external but pervades all ikeempty space.” This universal character of buddha-nature is also shared with the three truths taught in
Tiantai Tiantai or T'ien-t'ai () is an East Asian Buddhist school of Mahāyāna Buddhism that developed in 6th-century China. Drawing from earlier Mahāyāna sources such as Madhyamaka, founded by Nāgārjuna, who is traditionally regarded as the f ...
(and indeed, buddha-nature is in a way identical to the three truths). Zhanran primarily derives his theory of buddha-nature's universality from
Mahayana sutras The Mahayana sutras are Buddhist texts that are accepted as wikt:canon, canonical and authentic Buddhist texts, ''buddhavacana'' in Mahayana, Mahayana Buddhist sanghas. These include three types of sutras: Those spoken by the Buddha; those spoke ...
which compare buddha-nature to space (虛空 '' ākāśa''), seeing it as all-pervasive. The '' Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra'' for example states "the Buddha-Nature of sentient beings is like empty-space. Empty-space is neither thingof the past, nor of the future, nor of the present; nothing is internal nor external o itBuddha-Nature is also like this." The ''Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra'' also states that buddha-nature is all pervasive and omnipresent, permeating all times and places: "Those dharmas which have permanence o thempervade all places, like empty-space; there is nowhere where they do not exist. The Tathagatas are also like this; pervading all places and therefore they are permanent." This character of buddha-nature is also related to the fact that it is also, like
nirvana Nirvana, in the Indian religions (Jainism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Sikhism), is the concept of an individual's passions being extinguished as the ultimate state of salvation, release, or liberation from suffering ('' duḥkha'') and from the ...
, uncompounded (無爲, asaṃskṛtā), not-contingent or dependent on anything. Zhanran draws on the idea of space because it is something which is found everywhere in a general sense. It is equally there in empty space and in "filled in" or occupied with matter. Likewise, buddha-nature is there when buddhahood is manifest and when it is locally absent. It is not something that can be removed nor attained or created, but unconditioned and omnipresent. This is the reason why for Zhanran, buddha-nature cannot be restricted to sentient beings and must also include the insentient. If it was restricted to living beings, buddha-nature would be limited and conditioned, which is inconsistent with the theory as described in the sutras.


Mutual Inclusion

Zhanran also invokes the Tiantai doctrine of inherent entailment (xingju 性具) or mutual inclusion. Dehn describes this unique and distinct Tiantai doctrine as follows: "the identities of things are not fixed or finite, but rather that all things always and everywhere inherently-entail 性具 all others— including their opposites." This means that, for any thing X, it can be said that it is non-dual with all non-Xs, since whatever is not X is also a part of what defines and conditions X.Dehn (2023), pp. 67-68 Since the identity of any individual thing is constituted also by what it is not, nothing could exist in a vacuum separated from all other things which are not it. Thus, every phenomenon (
dharma Dharma (; , ) is a key concept in various Indian religions. The term ''dharma'' does not have a single, clear Untranslatability, translation and conveys a multifaceted idea. Etymologically, it comes from the Sanskrit ''dhr-'', meaning ''to hold ...
) has an identity which includes what it is and also what it is not. As Dehn explains, "this entailing of every dharma or phenomena in every other must hold across the three times of past, present and future; it must be true of delusion and enlightenment, and cause and effect." This theory includes the idea that there are indeed distinct individual phenomena, along with the idea that all distinct phenomena share a mutual identity. Thus, it does not collapse into a kind of existence
monism Monism attributes oneness or singleness () to a concept, such as to existence. Various kinds of monism can be distinguished: * Priority monism states that all existing things go back to a source that is distinct from them; e.g., in Neoplatonis ...
. Brook Ziporyn explains the structure of this doctrine by comparing it to a joke, which has a setup and punchline. The setup's seriousness is part of what makes the punchline funny, and thus part of what makes the ''whole joke'' funny (which includes the setup itself, now recontextualized as "funny and serious", funny ''because'' it is serious). If the setup was not serious, it could not be funny, and there would be no joke. This dual identity is the structure of mutual inclusion between any entity and all other entities that are not it.


The non-duality of Buddhas, beings and lands

Mutual inclusion also means that delusion and sentient beings inherently entail wisdom and Buddhahood. Since Buddhahood pervades all things, sentient beings and their delusion are pervaded by Buddhahood. Due to inherent entailment, the same is true vice versa, meaning that Buddhahood also includes and is pervaded by "sentient-beingness" and delusion (which in turn inherently entail Buddhahood and wisdom). This symmetrical non-dual relationship between all phenomena is the Tiantai understanding of buddha-nature, which Zhanran supports by quoting a key passage from the '' Avatamsaka Sutra'': "the three ind, Buddhas, and sentient beingsare no different". For delusion to inherently entail wisdom means that wisdom also inherently entails delusion. It also means that both delusion and Buddha-wisdom inherently entail and pervade all dharmas. The same is true for Buddhahood and sentient-beingness. Zhanran compares this view with the view of other traditions, like Zen, who have an asymmetrical view in which buddha-nature or the pure mind included within deluded beings but the reverse is not true (i.e. delusion is not included within Buddhahood) Relying on the doctrines of mutual inclusion and all-pervasiveness, Zhanran argues for "the non-duality of primary and dependent armicrecompense." This means that a being's karma fructifies as both their body and mind and as their environment. As such, Buddhas and their buddhalands are non-dual, and this is likewise the case of beings and their environment. Since sentient beings and Buddhas mutually entail each other (along with their lands), we can say insentient elements include buddha-nature. The mutual inclusion theory further entails the mutual inclusion of the ten dharma realms - a cosmological schema which contains all of reality. In this view, each realm of existence contains all others, and so do sentient and insentient phenomena as well. Mutual inclusion thus subverts the conventional dichotomy between subject and object, rendering their distinction merely provisional. Such a view affirms the non-duality of sentience and insentience, as well as of mentality and materiality, thereby undermining any absolute bifurcation between these categories.Chen (2014), pp. 207-208. Zhanran writes:
the common ndthe sacred are one suchness;
very Very may refer to: * English's prevailing intensifier Businesses * The Very Group The Very Group Limited is a multi-brand online retailer and financial services provider in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Its head offices are based in the ...
form and fragrance is utterly identical with purity. The circumstantial etribution(i.e. the objective and insentient world) and the true etribution(i.e. the subjective body) of the Avīci ellare in all cases the mind of the Supreme Sage; the body and land of Vairo anado not go beyond a single thought of the lowest vulgar eing
Due to mutual inclusion and all-pervasiveness, Buddha bodies and buddhalands are understood as interwoven with all beings and all realms other than the Buddha realm. Consequently, even the material environments of this world—regarded as insentient—are affirmed to possess Buddha-nature. This doctrine establishes a continuity between Buddha-nature and insentient existence. Although Zhanran articulates a strong position regarding the presence of Buddha-nature in the insentient, he is less explicit concerning the possible realization of Buddhahood by insentient things. Nevertheless, the internal consistency of his argumentation appears to suggest such a possibility, since he must dissolve the rigid boundary between sentient and insentient existence.


Incorporation of Huayan ideas

Zhanran's view of Buddha-nature also shows traces of
Huayan school The Huayan school of Buddhism (, Wade–Giles: ''Hua-Yen,'' "Flower Garland," from the Sanskrit "''Avataṃsaka''") is a Mahayana, Mahayana Buddhist tradition that developed in China during the Tang dynasty, Tang dynasty (618-907).Yü, Chün-fan ...
influence (particularly from Fazang), especially in his discussion of the theory of " Suchness according with conditions" (真如随縁).Asai Endō 浅井円道
"The Lotus Sutra as the Core of Japanese Buddhism Shifts in Representations of its Fundamental Principle."
''Japanese Journal of Religious Studies'' 41/1: 45–64 © 2014 Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture
Zhanran's ''Diamond Scalpel'' contains the following passage:
The myriad dharmas are none other than Suchness, because it is unchanging. Suchness expresses itself as the myriad dharmas, because it accords with conditions. Isn’t your belief that insentient beings lack Buddha-nature the same as saying that the myriad dharmas do not participate in Suchness?
According to Brook Ziporyn, the success of Zhanran's revival of Tiantai Buddhism was partly:
on the strength of his incorporation of Huayan "nature-origination" (xingqi) thought into the further development and schematization of the "nature-inclusion" (xingju) conceptions that Zhanran saw in classical Tiantai, with a corresponding but ambiguous tendency toward the idealism of the later (Chan-influenced) Huayan school. In Zhanran's case, this seems to have been a method by which nature-inclusion could be reinstated and gain the upper hand by sublating the Huayan strains of thought that had been gaining ground.
These Huayan influences would becoming more pronounced in the thought of later thinkers who drew on Zhanran, eventually culminating in the Song era debates between the faction of Siming Zhili and the so called "off mountain" faction.Ziporyn (2000), pp. 196-197


References


Bibliography

* Chen, Shuman (2011)
Chinese Tiantai Doctrine on Insentient Things’ Buddha-Nature
Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal 24, 71-104 * Chen, Shuman (2014).
The Liberation of Matter: Examining Jingxi Zhanran’s Philosophy of the Buddha-Nature of Insentient Beings in Tiantai Buddhism
" PhD diss., Northwestern University. * Dehn, Tyler (Rev. Jikai) (2023)
"Buddha-Nature” (Foxing 佛性) in Zhanranʼs (湛然) Adamantine Scalpel Treatise (Jinʼgangpi Lun 金剛錍論), with special focus on its congruence with the Saddharmapundarika (Miaofalianhua Jing 妙法蓮華經) and Mahaparinirvana Sutras (Niepan Jing 涅槃經)
, Dissertation, Macquarie University * Guo Chaoshun 郭朝順, 1999, “Zhanran wuqing youxing sixiang zhong de zhenru gainian 湛然「無情有性」思想中的 「真如」概念 (The Concept of Suchness in Zhanran’s Thought on Insentient Beings Having Buddha-nature)”, Yuanguang Buddhist Periodical 圓光佛學學報, 3(February): 45–72. * Jin, R. (2024)
What is Other than “Us”: The Non-Buddhist Sources in the Chinese Buddhist Commentary ''Zhiguan Fuxing Chuanhong Jue''
Journal of the European Association for Chinese Studies, 5, 207–223. * Pap, Melinda (2011)
Demonstration of the Buddha-nature of the Insentient in Zhanran's The Diamond Scalpel Treatise
Doctoral Dissertation, Budapest: Eötvös Loránd University * Tseng, Chih-Mien, Adrian (2014)
A Comparison of the Concepts of Buddha-Nature and Dao-Nature in Medieval China
PhD Thesis, Hamilton, Ontario: McMaster University, pp. 189-246 * Yu Xueming 俞学明, 2006, ''Zhanran yanjiu: Yi Tangdai Tiantaizong zhongxing wenti wei xiansuo'' 湛然研究: 以唐代天台宗中兴问题为线索 (A Study of Zhanran: A Clue to the Issue of the Revival of the Tiantai School in the Tang Dynasty). Beijing: Zhongguo shehui kexue. * Ziporyn, Brook. (2000). ''Evil and/or/as the Good: Omnicentrism, Intersubjectivity, and Value Paradox in Tiantai Buddhist Thought'', Harvard University.


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Short biography in Chinese
{{Authority control 711 births 782 deaths Tiantai Buddhists Chinese scholars of Buddhism Tang dynasty Buddhist monks Tendai