ZEN AND AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY
VAN METER AMES
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Philosophy East and West V. 5 (January, 1956)
pp. 305-320
Copyright 1956 by University of Hawaii Press
Hawaii, USA
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American interest in Zen Buddhism is growing.
This response to an Oriental outlook must
answer to a need. Some people seem to feel
that here is the whole answer to what ails
the West. There is no hiding the fact that
Western civilization, and the United States
in particular, confronts not only problems
which its science can cope with but also
troubles for which more than science is required.
There is "more" in the traditional
religion and philosophy of the West, but
this heritage must be reinterpreted to be
adequate now. Wisdom cannot be simply hoarded
and inherited. It must ever be sought afresh,
with new impetus. Today wise men of the East
are stimulating the Western mind, apparently
by infusing it with something foreign, but
perhaps more by awakening it to resources
of its own.
The unwary, the unwilling to think for themselves,
may embrace an Eastern teaching as if nothing
like it could be had at home, as if the West
had gone astray for two thousand years, and
should declare itself culturally bankrupt.
But, swallowed whole, an exotic view is hard
to digest. If it is to be assimilated it
must be domesticated and tried out, to see
what can be worked into the familiar fare,
even as the Chinese arrived at Ch'an or Zen
in the first place, by making their own use
of Indian Buddhism. Since people must rely
upon their understanding they will inevitably
translate what is alien into their idiom,
or employ outlandish expressions merely as
emphatic equivalents for things that could
have been said in household words. When,
after all, what is offered from afar adds
something the American had not been able
to say or even to think, then he should welcome
it and value it for its actual difference.
So he should see, as clearly as possible,
what Zen has in comparison with American
thought. Zen would not be the first import
into the American thought stream; and it
may be that, more than almost any other influence,
Zen has affinity with the most American thinkers.
p. 306
I. DOWN-TO-EARTH BUT UP-AND-DOING
What John Dewey said of Emerson would apply
to Zen: "His ideas are not fixed upon
any Reality that is beyond or behind or in
any way apart, and hence they do not have
to be bent. They are versions of the Here
and the Now, and flow freely. The reputed
transcendental worth of an overweening Beyond
and Away, Emerson, jealous for spiritual
democracy, finds to be the possession of
the unquestionable present."[1] Dewey
linked Emerson and William James as "the
prophetic forerunners," saying of James:
"I love, indeed, to think that there
is something profoundly American in his union
of philosophy with life."[2] Dewey himself
felt that the pursuit of ideals must begin
with what is essentially Zen's appreciation
of the happy aspects which actual experience
happens to have. But, to See that these aspects
are meager, precarious, or not sufficiently
available to many people, meant to him that
more should be done, that the old chores
honored by Zen, even most new jobs, are not
enough.
They are too hard, too slow, too enslaving,
in view of what could be accomplished with
the power of the sign process in science
now. Emerson was stirred by the possibilities
in this direction even in his day. He saw
the climb from worm to man before Darwin
showed it to the world, and would have been
delighted with James's realization that intelligence
is biological as Dewey was to be. Dewey began
to move when he left Hegel for James, in
seeing that intelligence basically is the
way animals use energy and patience, alertness,
caution, quickness to catch their prey and
avoid being caught. Intelligence, then, is
not just another part or capacity of the
organism, but is its vital functioning as
a whole. It follows that the criterion of
mentality is the choice of means in the struggle
for ends. When ends can be entertained and
conduct governed by them, as well as by previous
conditioning, there is not simply the clash
of animals or armies in the night of necessity.
There is the dawning of a new day when activity
is not merely the result of the past but
can also be guided by anticipation of the
future. Thus freedom is introduced and increased,
which brings impatience with old ways of
doing, even though the goal is only to secure
and extend the timeless joy of life cherished
by Zen.
The best is given to begin with, in the riches
of what James calls "pure experience."
Strenuous as he and Dewey are, they join
Zen in appreciation of this fact. To get
back to the joy of the present moment, and
enable more people to enjoy it, is their
motivation. No more than Zen do they draw
a line between doing and enjoying. The moment
need not be otiose to be precious. This is
no less true of Zen than of American thought.
Means and ends flow together for both. But
the American thinkers are for renewing the
means, to enhance their continuity with ends.
Zen stresses the value of doing what has
always been done and still needs doing. Without
in the least denying this value, the men
of the West would add that of doing better.
Yet, it is still true for them that nothing
is better than for men to do the best they
can, and make the most of what they have,
in the moment as it passes.
1. John Dewey, Characters and Events (New
York: Henry Holt & Co., 1929), Vol. I,
p. 275.
2. Ibid., p. 117.
p. 307
II. THE UNQUESTIONABLE PRESENT
Though man thrives on striving, Dewey thinks
of all his effort as taking off from and
taken up into appreciation of the present.
When we are happy we are housed in the here
and now. We leave it only to restore it or
to enrich it with more variety, also with
more reassuring continuity. Dewey likes Emerson's
saying: "If man is sick, is unable,
is mean-spirited and odious, it is because
there is so much of his nature which is unlawfully
withholden from him." Dewey agrees that
what is most needful is "the possession
of the unquestionable Present." When
it can be had in joy and peace, it not only
passes man's understanding but takes the
place of the high-flown ideas of the transcendentalists,
and "removes him from their remoteness."[3]
Then man can enjoy the moment no end. To
live in the moment is to have sheer immediacy,
without beginning or stopping, without thought
of yesterday or tomorrow except as belonging
to the eternal now.
But Dewey was like a bodhisattva, a saint
of Mahayana Buddhism, who would not enter
nirvaa. na if he had to forget the need of
other people to be helped toward it. So was
James, in saying the millennium would not
come as long as a single cockroach suffered
an unrequited love. Yet, James and Dewey
had the Zen secret that it is possible to
be like a turtle on a log even on the go,
as everyone can learn to relax on a train
or plane, in a pause of business, or in the
law's delays. The Zen men knew that the sure
way of getting to the mountains was to have
them in mind. If the Zen experience could
be had while hewing wood or drawing water,
so might it be had while doing whatever needed
to be done. This is the gist of Dewey's aesthetics:
that the enjoyment of art need not be apart
from the usual interests and activities of
life.
His practical attitude is paralleled by the
Buddhist suutra of the Ga. n. davyuuha. Suzuki
explains it as belonging to the Mahaayaana
reaction against Buddhism which "lacks
vitality and democratic usefulness when it
is kept from coming in contact with the concrete
affairs of life."[4] When Buddhism was
brought to earth it was possible to enjoy
the contrast between grand terminology and
a plain meaning. Thus: "Samantabhadra's
arms raised to save sentient beings become
our own, which are now engaged in passing
the salt to a friend at the table, and Maitreya's
opening the Vairochana Tower for Sudhana
is our ushering in a caller into the parlor
for a friendly chat . . . we see both the
Bodhisattvas and the Buddhas shining in the
sweat of their foreheads, in the tears shed
for the mother who lost a child, in the fury
of passions burning against injustice in
its multifarious forms -- in short, in their
never-ending fight against all that goes
under the name of evil."[5]
3. Ibid., p. 75.
p. 308
Here, in the East, is James's fight for ends
and Dewey's devotion to good causes, for
their human value. In the Ga. n. davyuuha
Suzuki sees the transition from Buddhism
as a "mysticism which keeps its votaries
on the giddy height of unapproachable abstractions
making them refuse to descend among earthly
entanglements" to a kind of Buddhism
which "now overlaps this earthly world."
Now: "all the Bodhisattvas, including
the Buddhas -- are ourselves, and their doings
are our doings."[6] Suzuki uses this
suutra to bring out that Zen carries the
same transition further and more deliberately.
Then, to ask, "Who is Buddha?"
is really to ask, "Who are you?"
The name "Buddha" is used "to
help" us appreciate what it is to be
human. "The constant advice given by
the Zen master to his monks is not to cling
to the letter."[7] Suzuki sums it up:
"We can say that the Chinese practical
genius has brought the Buddha down again
on earth so that he can work among us with
his back bare and his forehead streaked with
sweat and covered with mud. Compared with
the exalted figure at Jetavana surrounded
and adored by the Bodhisattvas from the ten
quarters of the world, what a caricature
this old donkey-leading woman-Buddha of Shou-shan,
or that robust sinewy bare-footed runner
of Chih-men! But in this we see the spirit
of the Ga. n. davyuuha perfectly acclimatized
in the Far Eastern soil."[8]
Suzuki is not willing to accept Hu Shih's
interpretation of Zen as "the revolt
of Chinese psychology against abstruse Buddhist
metaphysics." For Suzuki, Zen "is
not a revolt but a deep appreciation"
of Buddhism, expressed "in the Chinese
way."[9] Whether we side with Suzuki
or with Hu, the American question is where
their controversy[10] leaves James and Dewey
in comparison with Santayana. He might seem
closer to Zen in cherishing immediate experience
in the familiar pattern, without interest
in reform. But the striving, fighting philosophy
of James and Dewey is more in the spirit
of Zen's rejection of quietism than is Santayana's
unperspiring detachment from mud and struggle,
his mocking of the runner's heat. He is,
however, more like Zen in keeping a semblance
of the supernatural to express the poetry
of existence, using an otherworldly vocabulary
to do justice to this world. James and Dewey
also recognize that mortal man needs to build
himself up; but they see him doing it through
co-operation with other men, and with the
rest of the setting. If James wavered about
leaving out the supernatural or cleaving
to it, he was most consistent in saying:
"... though one part of our experience
may lean upon another part to make it what
it is ... experience as a whole is self-containing
and leans on nothing."[11] Dewey would
say the same.
4. D. T. Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism,
Third Series (London: Rider and Co., 1953),
p. 78.
5. Ibid., p. 83.
6. Ibid., pp. 78, 83.
7. Ibid., pp. 99, 100.
8. Ibid., pp. 102.
9. Ibid., p. 74.
10. See Hu Shih, "Ch'an (Zen) Buddhism
in China: Its History and Method," Philosophy
East and West, III, No. 1 (April, 1953),
3-24; and D. T. Suzuki "Zen: A Reply
to Hu Shih," ibid., 25-46.
p. 309
III. BLENDING ZEN WITH SCIENCE
Like the Zen Buddhists of China and Japan
and the Greeks of Pericles, James and Dewey
believe that life can be full and good in
its own human terms. They depart from the
wisdom of Zen, the Greeks, and Santayana
in seeing that men can do more than make
the best of life as it has been in the past.
Dewey, even more than James, relies with
Peirce upon the growing momentum and sweep
of the sign process, especially in science,
to carry on a continual reconstruction of
the present, the past, and the outlook for
the future. But, instead of leaving Zen behind,
this may give Zen, too, a new prospect.
As Zen remade Buddhism, and Dewey turned
Hegelian idealism into social idealism, so
a blend of Dewey and Zen is possible. Zen
would need to add the realization that intelligence
can remake the world. Zen was on the way,
but only halfway, to this insight in declaring
the bodhisattvas and buddhas, in their vast
fantastic setting, to be "ourselves,
and their doings our doings."[12] If
Zen is reducing Buddhism to the human level,
it is also raising that level, and laughing
that language cannot be too fancy to fit
what is plain. The more far-fetched, the
more humorous it is to say that the buddhas
and bodhisattvas are we, the more seriously
it can be said. If that was too much to say
before anyone knew the half of it, Zen was
right that silence was best.
Dewey, knowing as much as he knew after learning
from James and Peirce, still was nearly silent
about the Zen aspect of his own thought (at
least before writing Art As Experience),
apparently taking it for granted as too obvious
to insist upon. So he was accused of being
too practical and prosaic, keeping to problems
of a limited sort. But no Zen man would see
any limitation in his concentration upon
the "pure experience" of William
James to make more of it for more people.
11. William James, Essays in Radical Empiricism
(New York: Longmans, Green and Co., 1947),
p. 193.
12. Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism, Third
Series, p. 83.
p. 310
What else was celebrated by Emerson, Thoreau,
and Whitman? Or. by Santayana? What is the
use of saying or doing anything except for
the sake of having life and having it more
abundantly, which Jesus said he came for?
To him this was worth suffering and dying
for. But, if we are for life, and all is
for life, it will still be asked what life
is for. The ancients of the Far East knew,
and Americans from Emerson to Dewey knew,
that life is its own end and answer.
When this truth is put plainly it seems too
plain. To appreciate it men need to seek
it in the far past or on the far side of
the world. The longest way round is the shortest
way home when Westerners fetch from the Far
East what is in their own Bible. The far-fetched
truth is that the high is here, the eternal
is now, the hard is easy, the yoke is light.
St. Augustine said, "Have charity and
do as thou wilt." A Zen master said:
"No bondage from the very first, and
what is the use of asking emancipation? Act
as you will, go on as you feel -- without
second thought. This is the incomparable
way."[13]
But, if the way is easy, it is not easy to
find, or men would not have had to develop
religion and philosophy, with all their discipline
and meditation: Buddhism to Zen, Christianity
to Hegel, Hegel to Dewey (by way of James);
beyond life and down to earth; from East
to West, from the West to the past, back
to the lasting present; from simple to sublime
to ridiculous, to laughter. If the East has
stressed contemplation and has been lacking
in action, the West, with its organized activity,
has been wanting in meditation. Yet, there
have been contemplatives here, doers there,
and whole men in East and West.
The differences now are not so much between
one side of the globe and the other as between
having and not having science, especially
between having and not having the benefit
or science, the good of it more than the
evil, the promise more than the threat. The
world is split by the half use of science.
To live with it, to build, produce, travel,
and make war with it, yet try to believe
without it, is to be fatally divided.
We might get our thoughts and ourselves together
if we could blend science with Zen. Being
pre-scientific, pre-industrial, Zen assumes
the rural simplicities. Being out of date
seems to make it timeless, makes it attractive
in contrast to the fever of modernity. Can
we keep complexity and overcome distraction?
Zen puts that question to us. But we cannot
seriously consider Zen except in connection
with what Dewey represents: a chance to have
the Zen attitude along with scientific thought
and technological advance.
13. Ibid., pp. 43-44.
p. 311
The Psychology of James enabled Dewey to
get rid of dualism, which Zen had done long
before. When that is thoroughly done, a whole
and happy life is on the way. Then it should
not be necessary to take to the woods or
a monastery to have sanity. With science,
society may become man's natural habitat,
as Aristotle thought it was. If it ever was,
it cannot again be without an unprecedented
development and use of intelligence. Darwin
empowered James and Dewey to realize how
human abilities evolve. What some men long
had thought, without enough evidence, could
at last be established: that mind goes with
an animal body, not as the shadow or ghost
of it but as the way it goes, when it hits
difficulties and hunts for the means of getting
through or around. Peirce showed how the
means are found and refined in the sign process.
Dewey said: "The only excuse for reciting
such commonplaces is that traditional theories
have separated life from nature, mind from
organic life, and thereby created mysteries."[14]
To separate things from nature fakes them
and scales them down to make-believe. Dewey
stands by James in seeing what it is hard
for many people to see in our medieval-modern
world: that we are not split and spliced,
as if mind were severed from body and glued
back, to make a man of shape and shadow.
We do not ask how walking can belong to a
body which would be immobile if it did not
move. With James and Peirce, Dewey saw that
thinking is just as natural a process as
walking, and as much part of being a man.
If a man had to have a ghost to make him
go, he might need a soul to think for him.
But if a ghost made him go, the ghost would
need another ghost to make it go, and so
on. Going would become such a ghostly business
there would not be a ghost of a chance to
get going. Man must pick up his bed and leave
the weakness of the infinite regress to take
any steps.
For Dewey, as for James and Peirce, thinking
is seeing connections in the environment,
and guessing what can be done with them,
then going to work to test the guessing,
as every man in a garage or studio picks
up what he needs for what he wants and gets
busy. He does not think inside himself any
more than he walks inside himself, even if
he works at a desk. if he gets anywhere.
Intelligent functioning can be separated
from interaction withenvironment as little
as any functioning of an organism can. To
be, to breathe, to think, takes place, takes
give-and-take with many things -- a world.
A man cannot take a step without stepping
out. A sage said that for one who wears sandals
all the world is paved with leather. For
one who carries the organs and marks of man,
the world is father and mother, wife, brother,
child. Having a born body, man is made to
mate, to be intimate with others, not to
be alone for long.
14. John Dewey, Experience and Nature (Chicago:
Open Court Publishing Co., 1925), p. 278.
p. 312
The human body is as biological as anything
alive, and as much bound to other lives.
But man is less fixed by his original body
and group. Because better able to communicate
than non-human forms, he can plan on a grand
scale. He not only can have more complex
habits but can also develop the habit of
changing habits. This opens unlimited possibilities,
but it has taken man a long time to realize
it. Knowing himself less than the world around
him, he has had a profound sense of dependence
and insufficiency. While language has been
adding cubits to his stature he has been
using his growth to exaggerate his inadequacy.
He has been afraid that the scientific development
of signs, in lengthening his leverage, was
somehow weakening his hold on his situation,
while it was freeing him to control it. He
has resented being weaned from the familiar.
Zen can help here, surprisingly. Although
pre-scientific, it anticipates this problem,
for Zen teaches how to debunk without debasing.
It shows how to keep mystery and wonder without
dualism. When life on the level of everyday
doings can be appreciated anew, then it does
not lessen zest to be more naturalistic.
To lighten the load, speed the work, increase
leisure, need not be demoralizing as long
as there is more than enough to do; to think
when not doing; and to contemplate when not
thinking. Zen seems needed to teach people
to get through a shorter working week and
day, with the fact in plainer view that they
are only human, and buddhas only men.
Zen is a way of keeping the sky high without
leaving the ground, finding exalted language
called for, yet less eloquent than silence.
The secret is in seeing that man can use
his need to reach all that he needs. The
seeing comes in a flash, as in seeing a joke.
Though it is the joy of salvation, it is
funny -- unsuspected -- that the eternal
is now, the universal here, the supernatural
actual. What could be more comforting, or
amusing? It clears the air with a thunderous
guffaw. Then nothing is lacking. There is
nothing to fear. There is nothing to do but
what there is to do, be quiet, be glad that
life is its own answer.
This is what Dewey sees and says, though
he mostly takes it for granted and goes on
from there. Zen itself finds silence most
appropriate to the basic insight, though
finding endless things to say about it. But
when the sign process gets under way it moves
on to more and more that depends upon the
use of words and other signs, in working
out hypotheses and testing them, with consequences
beyond the ken of Zen. The process appeals
to the future in controlling the effort of
the present. Here is the difference between
Zen and Dewey. It is not just a difference
of centuries, or between East and West, but
between wisdom and science.
p. 313
If Zen could do better without science than
men are likely to do without Zen, no matter
how much science they have, the fact is that
Dewey is not without Zen. Americans have
something like Zen in their heritage, which
we need to appreciate before proceeding with
science. But science moves them on, whether
they are ready or not. If they are to recover
their balance under its impetus, they need
to steady themselves with words they have
heard, from Emerson to Dewey and Santayana.
To recognize these words for what they are,
it helps to see that they strike into the
same vein as the wisdom of China and Japan.
As science rests upon experience, good use
of science begins with knowing the importance
of the only reality men have: that of the
passing moment -- not belittling it because
it is theirs, or because men are only themselves.
The Zen sages say that all men are buddhas.
Then the Western land of America is the Pure
Land, as much as any in the East or farther
West. Here men can pass the tea. It may be
whiskey instead, but it might as well be
tea.
Perhaps men need a time in a monastery before
becoming householders, drivers, buyers and
sellers: to learn to sit, to be clean of
dust and clutter. It would do something for
anyone to dust each leaf in a garden. To
rake grains of sand, making them gleam in
rows by a temple, would teach the value of
doing nothing but what most needs to be done.
If men could be more silent, they might delight
more in speaking when spoken to. Then nearly
everything in life might symbolize all there
is. Serving tea does it very neatly. So can
doing the dishes.
The monastery day is a ceremonial version
of what goes on in every household -- set
apart in more silence, more order, more color.
There is more meditation, but it concentrates
the reflection which takes place everywhere
about man's fate. The attempt to reach emptiness,
to smooth out mind to no-mind, and talk to
muteness, is to work through the superfluous
to what is left. Strange questions and answers
are pondered to stalk the mystery of life,
which may be seized in a single word, as
in repeating one of the names of the Buddha
until it makes no sense, to get rid of conventional
meaning and face the reality beneath. But
it is warned that resorting to monastic devices
may be self-defeating if allowed to become
mechanical. The danger of the monastery is
that its members may cease to be men in being
monks.
p. 314
Suzuki says, "... the object of Zen
is to understand what life means."[15]
Then its spirit is that of inquiry, and that
is the spirit of Dewey. But he relies on
science, which Zen originally and characteristically
knows nothing of, or makes little of. And
he seeks to be logical instead of flouting
logic. He does not stick to traditional logic,
which to him is good only for ordering what
is already known. He works out a "logic
of inquiry," in line with the pioneering
of Peirce. The purpose, however, is to free
and enrich immediate experience, which has
no purpose but its own being.
Dewey puts the abstract approach of the logical
with the close touch of the aesthetic. While
the actual can be enhanced by way of the
abstruse, the first-hand fact comes first
and last for him, as for Zen. In both, there
is a fruitful tension between experience
and interpretation, between figuring things
out and feeling what they come to. The logical
and the aesthetic come together in the daily
round of human life, as vij~naana (conceptual
thought) and praj~naa (supra-rational insight)
do. Zen keeps Buddhist terms and turns of
thought while smiling at them; Dewey makes
light of formal learning, while using it.
In both, any attempt to rise above nature
is for a better look at what is there. In
both, intense enjoyment of the immediate
is the aim, with realization that it often
has to be worked for and waited for, especially
if it is to be made widely available and
renewable. Zen is generally democratic in
this fundamental way, as Dewey is. Both hold
that men are significantly equal, and should
be freed from whatever keeps any of them
from the pursuit or happiness. If this goal
is always a dynamic one, it is more so for
Dewey, with the drive of science behind him
and the factory at hand, instead of the monastery.
But Dewey's motivation is not more social,
except in his knowing more about the social
makeup of the self. Going to a monastery
has assumed that men cannot go far alone,
that it helps them to grow to reside there
a while, working with brothers at one or
another common task, sharing their separation
in silence, having the same master to ask
what they all are after.
Both Dewey and Zen have the bodhisattva ideal
of helping others instead of seeking enlightenment
only for oneself. Both are suspicious of
specialization, erudition, any endeavor which
seems to disdain the main stream of life.
For both, the good which does not need to
be justified is the ordinary good of living.
But they recognize that it needs to be made
more sharable, as well as more private, and
that this leaves plenty of room for improvement,
as much as if the end of life were beyond
life.
Santayana has said that man has a prejudice
against himself, a tendency to discount what
he is and what he can do, either by himself
or with the help of his fellows. Man has
looked beyond experience, with its source
and setting in the natural world, in search
of something more. Even James felt impelled
to look beyond. But he worked his way, in
the direction Dewey Took more consistently,
toward what is virtually the old Chinese
Way or Tao. It is the road of holding that
man is basically good, in a universe good
for a good life, if man will take the trouble
to understand himself and his situation.
The difference for Dewey is that he is farther
along on the same road, where it is paved
with progress, where travel has the advantages
of science but also the problems and fears
it brings. With more knowledge, power, and
freedom, it is more necessary to have wisdom.
15. D. T. Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism,
Second Series (Boston: The Beacon Press,
1952), p. 135
p. 315
What was wise once is not enough. The meditation
hall of a Zen monastery would not give adequate
education now. Yet, its final lesson is more
valuable than ever: that study and meditation
are a waste of time, cultivation of simplicity
and restraint not much better, unless the
"secret virtue" is reached. The
secret is: "Life itself must be grasped
in the midst of its flow."[16] This
is the reliance on experience which came
to James, when he saw that what any part
of it leans on is the rest.
The Zen insight was spread by painting and
other forms of art. Though each man would
have to find Zen for himself, the expression
of it was best left to art. No philosophical
statement can come as close; science falls
short. Science hypothesizes, describes, calculates,
generalizes. Yet, all this can be taken up
into vivid living and coalesce with art.
For Dewey, art is the fusion of life and
learning, doing and undergoing. Art expresses
what life is, and makes more of it, bringing
life to a pitch and focus that clarify and
complete it.
The key to Dewey's wisdom, as to that of
Zen, is that the high things are here, though
to hold them takes practice. Dewey said:
"... we should regard practice as the
only means (other than accident) by which
whatever is judged honorable, admirable,
approvable can be kept in concrete existence."[17]
This is the gist of both Dewey and Zen, different
as they are. Practice, for Dewey, is vastly
extended by science and complicated by the
problems of democracy in a technological
age. Zen is a way of facing life in the agricultural
past of China and Japan. Both bring the ideal
down, not to demean it but to keep it and
live with it. Both feel that this makes more
of it than to leave it in the air.
Zen rejects the image of an "exalted
figure ... surrounded and adored by the Bodhisattvas
from the ten quarters of the world"
and prefers to think of the Buddha as an
old donkey-woman.[18] This anticipates Dewey's
saying that philosophy has no authority except
in resting on the goods diffused in human
experience, and appraising them. Dualism
is repudiated by Dewey and Zen. Both refuse
to split experience into here and higher,
into here and hereafter. Dewey weighs value
in the scales of conditions and consequences.
He would have men undertake ever more ambitious
projects, guided by the cost and outcome
of what they do. Zen is more quiet and collected,
but condemns quietism. The monk must be up
and doing most of the time. But historically
he has been occupied with such chores as
sweeping the floor, tilling the ground, gathering
fuel, or trudging to a village with a begging
bowl. What he had to do was done by hand
or foot, when he was not puzzling over an
old book, getting ready to ask a master about
it, or just eating when hungry, sleeping
when tired
16. D. T. Suzuki, Introduction to Zen Buddhism
(New York: The Philosophical Library, 1949),
17. John Dewey, The Quest for Certainty (New
York: Minion Balch & Co., 1929), p. 32.
p. 316
.
Both Zen and Dewey are naturalistic, finding
within experience all they could want. The
obvious difference is that experience has
been traditional and essentially unchanging
for Zen. There are still the same things
to be done, in the same way, as formerly.
There are the same problems to be pondered.
There is the same insight to arrive at, with
the same surprise, though the ways of expressing
it are endless. For Dewey, the development
of the sign process in modern science has
intervened. He sees man doing and thinking,
not only the same old things, but also things
that were never dreamed of. He has not only
the Zen wisdom of appreciating what men are
given, in the world and in the heritage they
carry with them, but also the un-Zen sense
of evolution and of man's getting increasing
control of it. He has the idea of progress:
that humanity can reconstruct the world and
itself.
IV. WITHOUT PURPOSE ON PURPOSE Planning ahead,
which increases with science, apparently
abandons the purposelessness of Zen. There
is no doubt about a departure here from what
Zen has meant. The question is whether the
serenity of Zen can be recovered in a world
on the move, where Zen is needed more than
ever. The answer may be found in the fact
that Dewey, no less than Zen, denies any
purpose beyond that of being absorbed in
the business of living. Does Zen in its most
extreme expressions give up purpose in that
sense? Zen does seem to say that purpose
in any sense must be dropped. But is not
the reason for saying it that losing the
urgency of purpose is instrumental to the
cairn attitude which makes life worth while?
Zen is not above the wisdom of serpents,
as it is above the gentleness of doves. For
all its forthrightness, Zen can be devious
and disingenuous, in word play as in sword
play. The feint of withdrawing purpose enables
Zen to thrust it in.
18. Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism, Third
Series, p. 102.
p. 317
Why have Zen if there is no point to it,
no use in it? And why should Zen develop
its discipline, techniques, and monastic
system? It would all be meaningless if it
had no direction or intention. If the idea
is to get rid of purpose, that is still a
purpose.
The fact is that purposiveness and purposelessness
are not incompatible in the perfection of
experience which Dewey calls aesthetic, as
Kant knew when he spoke of it as Zweckmassigkeit
ohne Zweck. The more one studies The Zen
Doctrine of No-Mind,[19] in which Suzuki
expounds the doctrine of no-purpose, the
more one is aware of an end in view, and
of a search for the means to reach it. The
end is the good life, as free-flowing activity
-- free of inhibition, worry, tension. Aristotle,
to the same end, urged the formation of good
habits -- so did James -- in order that energy
might be directed more or less unconsciously,
so that, for the most part, a man would do
the right thing without thinking. If this
is what Zen means by living without thought
or purpose, it is also what Dewey means.
But Dewey explains what Zen tacitly admits:
that it takes some thought to get back (or
ahead) to living without thinking. He realizes
that, though there is no goal but the going,
the going can be improved. He has no purpose
beyond that. If this is called being without
purpose, it does not preclude but requires
purposes in the plural. As Zen established
monasteries, using manuals and manual duties
to induce, if not to teach, wisdom, so Dewey
was concerned with education. Both Zen and
he believed in learning by doing, believed
that to live is to learn and that to learn
is to live better. Zen served a rather stationary
culture. Dewey tried to help a dynamic civilization
arrive at a sense of rightness and wholeness.
His was the harder task, which cannot be
finished, since every advance of science
and technology, while making life easier
in some respect, makes it harder to recover
the joy of living without hurry or distraction.
And there is the dread of losing control
of fast-moving, wreck-avoiding if not disastrous,
events.
The Zen ideal seemed so simple, even in its
homelands, that it could be asked how the
Zen life differed "from a life of instincts
or a series of impulses."[20] The warning
was necessary that Zen might degenerate into
passivity if not for the constant reminder
that it called for action. And moral anarchism
had to be warned against as a possible consequence
of transcending intellectualism. If men "should
make their minds like a piece of lock be
darkly ignorant,"[21] anything might
happen, and certainly would, in Dewey's age
of power and wrangling nations.
19. D. T. Suzuki, The Zen Doctrine of No-Mind
(London: Rider and Co., 1949).
20. Ibid., p. 111.
p. 318
Dewey can also be considered anti-intellectual,
in his subordination of reasoning and problem-solving
to the wholeness of immediate experience.
But he sees that the joy of the immediate
must be guarded by the far-flung sign process;
also that much thought can be taken up into
the enjoyment of the present, as in appreciation
of art. No sharp demarcation is possible
between reflective and non-reflective experience.
Peirce took down the fence between inference
and intuition. Suzuki himself is obliged,
if not glad, to admit that mind and no-mind
are continuous. Thus he grants that intuition
and abstract reasoning coalesce, saying "praj~naa
is vij~naana and vij~naana is praj~naa."[22]
If Suzuki nevertheless prefers praj~naa,
Dewey prefers aesthetic experience. As he
must buttress the aesthetic with moral effort
and intellectual considerations, so must
Suzuki. Both are purposive and teleological
in wanting to get on (or back) to doing what
is felt to be worth while in itself, as much
as that is possible. The problem is to instate
the joy and peace of Zen in the West, and
to reinstate it in the East, without being
irresponsible. What price responsibility,
if no Zen? To have Zen now, or even Santayana,
we must have Dewey, too. But Dewey fails
if he cannot justify Santayana's saying:
"the happy filling of a single hour
is so much gained for the universe at large,
and to find joy and sufficiency in the flying
moment is perhaps the only means open to
us for increasing the glory of eternity."[23]
There are passages in Dewey and Zen which
are antithetical if taken literally, as there
are many which offer mutual support across
the gulf between past and present. But how
literally should the extreme statements of
Zen be taken? About their enigmatic meaning
Zen scholars themselves differ. We should
not forget that the humor of Zen may fool
us. Some people find Dewey hard to read.
But he is plan as a post, compared to Zen.
In Zen a post may be a baffling thing.
Suzuki seems to ignore this when he says:
"To imagine that Zen is mysterious is
the first grave mistake which many make about
it."[24] But in the same book he says:
"Chinese expressions, especially those
used in connection with Zen thought, are
full of significance which, when translated
into such languages as English, loses altogether
its original suggestiveness. The very vagueness
so characteristic of the Chinese style of
writing is in fact its strength: mere points
of reference are given, and as to how to
connect them, to yield a meaning, the knowledge
and feeling of the reader are the real determinant."[25]
The remark about translation seems gratuitous,
unless to say that Zen is plainer in English
than in the original, and that to make it
plain is to betray it.
21. Ibid., p. 113.
22. D. T. Suzuki, in Charles A. Moore, Essays
in East-West Philosophy: An Attempt at World
Philosophy Synthesis (Honolulu: University
of Hawaii Press, 1951), p. 25.
23. George Santayana, The life of Reason
(New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1933),
Vol. III, Reason in Religion, p. 270.
24. Suzuki, The Zen Doctrine of No-Mind,
p. 138.
p. 319
Perhaps Dewey is too literal for Zen, too
anxious to spell things out, though not always
without humor. The men of Zen are more Socratic
in leading on the interlocutor, teasing him
instead of telling him. Their technique of
question and answer (the mondo) may seem
intended to trip the seeker, to teach him
that there is no end to his quest. But the
mondo has been an effective eye-opener. The
aim is to awaken realization that experience
is its own end and explanation, because there
is nothing else, and that the attempt to
set up something else will only falsify what
there is. An absurd answer is a way of showing
that a question makes no sense until the
asker comes to his senses. Then as good a
reply as any may be a blow with a stick.
Silence may suffice except chat, having learned
to speak and think, men have to work through
speech and thought to get back to silence.
The mondo dialogue, besides being used to
suggest that experience fulfills itself,
may be used as a koan, an exercise to test
whether a person has arrived at Zen-insight
or satori, which is to have the sense of
reaching the utmost "Beyond" in
"coming home."[26] What it comes
to is release from anxiety, from being too
concerned or calculating, realizing, instead,
that the best spiritual cultivation is "not
to practice any cultivation" but "to
do one's tasks without deliberate effort
or purposeful mind."[27]
For an American this brings back the question
of the assumption, which must have been easier
to make in a simpler society, that it is
advisable and possible to live without "deliberate
effort or purposeful mind." If the real
point is to avoid being over-anxious, that
is understandable and laudable. But any society,
and especially a democratic one, depends
upon a considerable amount of responsible
effort and reflective intention. Not only
must able leaders be informed and critical,
with some idea of what they are working toward
and why, but so must the people themselves,
or risk being deprived of conditions which
would justify the joyous relaxation of Zen.
The time has passed, if there ever was such
a time for more than a few, when to have
the Zen joy it was enough to shun society
like the early Taoists. In the atom age men
cannot take to the woods with any more peace
of mind than they can stay with neighbors.
It is too late for Zen if men cannot be happy
at home.
25. Ibid. pp. 129-130.
26. Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism, Second
Series, p. 31.
27. Fung Yu-lan, A Short History of Chinese
Philosophy (New York: The Macmillan Co.,
1948), p. 259.
p. 320
To try now to "be darkly ignorant,"
with a mind "like a piece of rock,"
might seem as far from wisdom as folly could
get. Yet, men seem to be ignorant of any
Absolute Purpose Beyond; they are in the
dark about anything so pretentious as teleology.
But men can know enough to do what needs
doing, while relying on life to see them
through. Jefferson and Emerson knew this,
Thoreau, and many an American down to Dewey.
But what they said can be better appreciated
when it is seen how much they were giving
the wisdom of the East in their own. If what
is required of men takes more than Zen, it
also calls for more Zen: so that the purposeful
can flow into the purposeless, the moral
into the aesthetic, knowing into doing, and
doing into doing nothing but making the most
of the moment, as in having a cup of tea.