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The Body in the Buddha (2017)

economist.com

32 points by mathieutd 3 years ago · 10 comments

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dirk_mcgurk 3 years ago

The idea of mummifying oneself seems quite specific, especially if they ritualized it and had some cocktail of botanicals they ingested to facilitate the process. Is there a name for this 3rd century Chinese Buddhist monastic culture and practice?

  • bakul 3 years ago

    This may be of interest: https://sci-hub.se/https://www.jstor.org/stable/1062719

    The "body in buddha" x-ray showed an iron band supporting the head. There is an explanation in the above paper.

  • dhruval 3 years ago
    • nequo 3 years ago

      Thanks for linking this.

        Sokushinbutsu (即身仏) are a kind of Buddhist mummy. In Japan the term refers to the practice of Buddhist monks observing asceticism to the point of death and entering mummification while alive.
      
      This is so far from what the Buddha taught[1] that is shocking.

        Mendicants, these two extremes should not be cultivated by one who has gone forth. What two? Indulgence in sensual pleasures, which is low, crude, ordinary, ignoble, and pointless. And indulgence in self-mortification, which is painful, ignoble, and pointless. Avoiding these two extremes, the Realized One woke up by understanding the middle way of practice, which gives vision and knowledge, and leads to peace, direct knowledge, awakening, and extinguishment.
      
      [1] SN 56.11: https://suttacentral.net/sn56.11/en/sujato?layout=sidebyside...
      • maphew 3 years ago

        We call many things Buddhism now as a fuzzy shorthand for a plethora of culture and practices that share a heritage and resemble each other. The reason the passage in [1] exists in the canon is because at Buddha's time both extreme indulgence and asceticism were in vogue. As the article makes clear they've continued past his time as well. (Gautama's not yet succeeded in persuading everyone on the wisdom of the middle way.)

        I'm reasonably certain you're quite well aware of this. I just wanted to ensure a between the lines meaning was made explicit in the thread. To remind that Buddhism is nested inside a larger contingent, and that this story lies more in that outer part than in.

trefoiled 3 years ago

https://archive.is/whwL0

v3ss0n 3 years ago

This is not the way of original Buddhism

  • foxyv 3 years ago

    The finger pointing at the moon is not the moon itself. Original Buddhism has died with the people who practiced it. We will never have the original Buddhism again. Only a mummified finger pointing in a general direction which we call original buddhism.

    Buddhism has died many times and been reborn many more times. Just as it has in you. Be careful clinging to signs. Be careful of certainty. We mummify ourselves in many ways other than the literal.

  • shashanoid 3 years ago

    Unfortunately it is extremely hard to explain and for people to understand the way of Buddha...so easy to get mislead

  • simple-thoughts 3 years ago

    Buddhism is not a centralized religion with a pope. Your opinion on what “original Buddhism” is can be yours but universalizing it does not fit within the practices of a relatively decentralization religion.

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