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GREAT SYSTEMS OF YOGA
THE CHINESE YOGA
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CHAPTER EIGHT
THE CHINESE YOGA
WHEN the Buddha wished to allude to the final achievement or
attainment of human life he spoke of nirvāna, a "blowing-out." This
means that in that experience, there will be an absence of our
familiar limitations known as body and mind. Even the mind is for us
an object of knowledge. The field of our knowledge can be divided
into objective and subjective. Both are within the field—both the
knower and the known, the subject and the object.
Buddha's doctrine was that only in the presence of knowing are
"subject and object" to be seen. Mind with its reasoning
activity—its logic—generally considered as the subject, is in
reality only an instrument. It does not know. 1 Behind or beyond
this mind is
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what among Chinese Buddhists came to be called Essence of Mind. It
is Bodhi, Wisdom. If a man could put aside the error or delusion of
the-self-as-mind there would be the elimination of object and
subject relation from his experience, and then—nirvāna.
It was always held that only man can perform this feat, because
he—not the lower animals—has mind as reason. Of course, there was
lower mind, or instinct, in the animals, but this was accumulated
knowledge—recognition and memory. And every idea or mental picture
in this store of knowledge was accompanied by feeling and therefore
by desire. In modern terms we would call this collection the
subconscious mind, instinct. The sub-conscious mind could not be
regarded as merely a matter of bodily habit. The body is always
changing its particles. The incoming particles cannot be regarded as
possessing the habits which have been learned by the outgoing
particles. So even the continuity of its form is carried on by the
"sub-conscious mind"—not by any powers of the body. This continuity
governs not only the bodily reactions to environmental impacts, but
also the emotions and flow of mental pictures, or association of
ideas. So there is instinct. Buddha called this complex of
continuity the skandhas.
Man has something more than instinct. He has reason,
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although it must be admitted that very often he acts by instinct,
and reason is often if not generally far from its maturity and
power.
The height of reasoning or thinking is meditation, called dhyāna
among the old psychologists of India. In a boat, instinct would tell
us to row, but reason would tell us to put up a sail, until even the
putting up of a sail passed into the sub-conscious and reason led us
further to install a motor. Whatever our problem, reason will
improve our reaction, but reason demands time—we must think the
matter over, consider the nature of water, of boats, of many things
involved, study their relations in mental pictures, and then, after
this process, which takes time, the problem is solved. Meditation is
the complete mental review of the materials of the problem and the
study of their combination. It is applied to ordinary material
problems and to the most abstruse psychological and philosophical
ones.
But this does not tell the whole story of meditation. If properly
carried out it ends up with intuition—something you did not know
before, and have not found in the world. This is sometimes called
prajnā. This intuition is not reason, but is direct perception, and
the state of the mind in which this prajnā or intuition is in power
is called samādhi, which literally taken means completely in
agreement or order.
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[paragraph continues] This experience by direct perception is called
in China and Japan a satori. But I am running ahead. Let us first
look at the way in which the mind gets knowledge for us.
Mind is called "sixth sense." By mind we get to know things not
available to the senses of hearing, touching, seeing, tasting and
smelling. It can operate in three stages, and usually does—through
testimony, reasoning and seeing for ourselves. Someone comes into
the house and says there is a fire on the mountain; this is
supported by reason, because there is smoke; then we can go and find
the fire—and perhaps put it out. So there is testimony and then
reasoning and then direct perception. This applies in religious
matters. Buddha says he has found joy and knowledge; it is
reasonable; we are to go and find it.
When the dhyāna or meditation process was carried into China by the
famous Indian "missionary" Bodhidharma, it came to be known as Chan,
and a little later when it had found its way to Japan the word was
further modified and became Zen. Zen is Japanese meditation-yoga.
It is not to be thought that in either India or China the results of
dhyāna were merely improved subjective experience. In India the
fruit of samādhi was viveka or discrimination, which means a new
valuation. This is stated emphatically by Patanjali in his
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aphorism no. ii 28, which describes the final effect of the
performance of the eight Limbs of Yoga, culminating in samādhi. 2
This is not a perfection of the subjective, but a transcendence of
the subjective conception of the subject-object relation. Subject
and object now live together in the Knowing or Consciousness in a
new way. Subject-self is overcome. It was a piece of Ignorance, a
five-branched tree of ignorance.
In the case of Buddha we have exactly the same teaching, when avidyā,
ignorance, is given as the final "fetter" to be cast off, as shown
in our previous chapter. This was essentially ignorance or error
about self or the subjective entity.
It is natural that the method of practice of the Chan and the Zen
should be somewhat different from that in India, as befits the
racial types of China and Japan. The method is well described in The
Sūtra of Wei Lang, translated by Wong Mou-Lam, 3 and in Christmas
Humphreys' Zen Buddhism, 4 and in several books by Professor D. T.
Suzuki.
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Before we turn to the practices of Zen it is necessary to say that
the fundamental conceptions associated with it are also found in the
old Tao-ism of China, coming down even from Lao Tsu, who lived about
the same time as Buddha. Buddhism became blended with this. The
difference was that Buddha desired not to give a name to nirvāna, as
that would almost inevitably lead to some mental idea of it, which
would then stand in the way of the transcendental experience. Even
the idea of transcendence does so.
In the old teaching there was Tao, the motionless, master of all,
both the subjective and objective sides of Nature, including man. It
could equally be called the absolute motion, which, passing through
every point of space in every direction in every moment of time,
becomes the ever-present soul of all motions, but is motionless from
the standpoint of the subject-object world. 5
From Tao come yang and yin, the active and passive sides of Nature,
light and shadow. In man the two elements appear as intellect and
instinct. The instinct-flow is natural, outward-going, but the
intellect-flow, which is "backward-going, reversed, turned round,"
can become so pure that it gains release, when things are recognized
but not desired. The Secret of
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the Golden Flower, translated by Richard Wilhelm, gives the lay-out
of principles, and is a splendid source-book for this study.
Introspectively, all can see that knowledge and desire go opposite
ways. Desire draws man into complicated experiences, bringing
problems which can be solved only by the intellect seeing things as
they are, untainted by desires concerning them. The path of yoga, in
this field, thus means knowing or seeing without desire. There is,
of course, knowing, or consciousness, in both cases. The animal is
highly conscious, but instinctual; in man the consciousness is
becoming intellectual; in the bodhisattwa (which means one whose
intellect is pure, or whose very nature is intellect) we have man on
the verge of nirvāna, or Tao. In all three cases feeling and
knowledge go hand in hand. Where there is pure knowledge, the
feeling is love—love without desire, full consciousness and approach
completely without antagonism. This is the Zen outlook, whatever
terminology of China or India, of Tao or Buddhism may be used. The
practice of meditation in this field is "seeing without desire." And
the height of it is reached when there is direct perception,
intuition in which reasoning stops. There is no desire for logic to
stop; it does so naturally when its function is fulfilled; then
intuition appears.
If we compare the art of China with that of Greece
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we find that one is more the product of imaginative observation, the
other of introspectional observation. The word imaginative here
means image-making. It is less creative and more contemplative. If
the poise of the Chinese has the relative proportions shown in
diagram A, that of the Indo-European is relatively somewhat as in
diagram B.
It is to be understood, of course, that while this rotary motion is
the same for all sane minds, the standard or evolutionary status is
individual. In the individual there is growth through use or
exercise, whereby each of the three elements is advanced in ability.
Taking this into consideration, it will be seen that the movement is
spiral as well as rotary.
The difference of different minds, and races of men, is a difference
in the proportions and status of these three. I have cited art here
because art is yoga in action, action free from the taint of desire
and utility or use. It gives us a peep-hole into the mind. So the
meditation-systems of China did not develop on very introspectional
lines, as meditation in Europe has done.
In The Secret of the Golden Flower a form of meditation is given in
which a superphysical self is built. Intellect or the light of
seeing is to be freed from the instinctual, is to build a body of
its own. This is done by stopping the flight of
thoughts—concentrate, but quickly pass into contemplation; when
contemplation
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It is to be understood, of course, that while this rotary motion is
the same for all sane minds, the standard or evolutionary status is
individual. In the individual there is growth through use of
exercise, whereby each of the three elements is advanced in ability.
Taking this into consideration, it will be seen that the movement is
spiral as well as rotary.
p. 144
falls into flights again, renew the concentration. This "circulates"
the process—brings it into circle, not drives it round, but puts an
end to wandering off. As in India, attention is to be given at first
to the body—body comfortable, breathing rhythmic, senses quiet. Then
one listens within, to the no-sound, listens to the silence. Thus
within the heart another "body" is gradually built up, which is a
spiritual body.
Though many details are given in The Secret of the Golden Flower
there is no room for them here; besides, the serious student will
supply his own details. It is the body or focus of knowing
(Confucius), of the heart-view (Buddha), of inward vision (Lao Tsu).
The intuition will come; one must hardly ask for it, and certainly
not presuppose its nature. The magical material side of it will be
that the new "body" will be the intuition-vehicle for living free
from the space-limitation of the body, and so, being concerned with
seeing and doing remote from the body, giving what may be called a
practical or objective side also to the intuition, which is not
one-sided but concerns object as well as subject.
Buddha said: "Nor sink the string of thought into the Fathomless."
But men cannot leave it at that; they strive to realize the truth.
Buddha does not object to that, but says it will not be done by
thought. Intuition which is not thought will do it. But intuition
comes to
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us; we do not make it. Is it different from the objective, or
different from the subjective? We must answer, "No," because
difference is a thought, a comparison, an attribute. So not by the
suppression of the world or the mind is intuition to be sought.
Without their absence comes this something which they as such cannot
present. They would not be themselves without it. Ordinarily the
mind is taken up with objective or subjective interests and
activities, leaving no opening for the third. When people seek that
third, intellectual desire is usually present, even if instinctual
desire has been overcome. The first point of Zen meditation is
therefore, "Drop it!" Any means which will start the process and
thwart the intellectual desire will be permissible, provided it does
not prevent the "Go on" or, if there is a teacher, the "Come on!"
which is like that of a mother calling a young child to walk,
without a word about the mechanism of walking.
Three techniques have been specially prominent in the schools of
Zen—the wall-gazing, the sudden question (mondo) and the enigmatic
statement (koan). The first is not gazing at a wall, as one might
think, but gazing like a wall. You are the wall, upright to the
world, set by the plumb-line of your own nose, unaffected, intent on
the Essence of Mind. Bodhidharma is said to have practiced this for
nine years, avoiding commitments and desires, like an upright
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wall. He taught for fifty years in China. The sixth Patriarch in his
succession was Hui-neng, or Wei-Lang, through whom Chinese Buddhism,
harmonized with the Tao, emerged as a definite way of life, allowing
no dogmas, requiring an enquiring mind, searching within, demanding
humble faith in the coming of sudden enlightenment, and—materially—a
simple life of self-restraint, industry and sympathy.
Teachings of Buddha much used by the founders of the Zen sect were:
the Lankavatara Sūtra, the Avatansaka Sūtra, the Surangama Sūtra,
the Mahayana Shraddhotpāda Shastra and the Diamond Sūtra. To these
were added the Sūtra of Wei-Lang. The whole collection is very
conveniently gathered together and presented in Goddard's Buddhist
Bible. 6
The teaching of meditation in the Diamond Sūtra prescribes sitting
alone, erect, motionless, quieting the mind, with attention on no
definite thing, excluding recollection and imagination, abandoning
all notions of an external world, turning to inner intuitive
consciousness, gradually entering samādhi, ideal tranquility, and
thus passing from vagrant thinking and even intellectual activity
into the realization of insight.
It was especially among the Chinese and Japanese that the sudden
enlightenment was brought about by
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sudden means. Intuition is by its very nature always sudden—not
built up—but sudden means or methods were also now brought in, in
the shape of koans and mondos.
The koan is a mind-baffling statement to be meditated upon. The
teacher requires an answer; there is no hurry about it, but you are
expected to tackle it, and to stick at it until you have a solution.
The statement is of such a nature that the intellect cannot
understand it, and all its efforts to do so are in vain. It is thus
thwarted and nullified, and the yogī must therefore sweat and
strain, so to speak, with great will power until an intuitive answer
comes. It is very strenuous, and dangerous unless the koan is given
by a competent teacher to an appropriate student. The intuition is
such that it cannot be expressed in words, but when it comes there
will be a lighting-up of the mind which will cause an involuntary
exclamation or action, such as the laugh or the slap of the thigh
which one gives when there is a sudden seeing of the point of a joke
or the solution of a conundrum, and one says, "I never thought of
that."
As an example, the teacher may say: "You have knees, you have feet.
Come, let us fly." Or, a classical one, "The two hands clap with a
noise; listen to the clap of one hand." There should be no agreed
upon,
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traditional or conventional meaning to these koans. They may be
invented ad lib. A good example occurs accidentally, as it were, in
the Glorious Presence where, after expounding the Vedāntic doctrine
of "Not thus, not thus" from the commentary on the Mūndūkya
Upanishad where Gaudapāda says: "There is no limitation, no
creation, no bondage, no maker, no aspirant, nobody freed—this is
the correct knowledge," the continuation is: "And no 'no,' and there
we are." Another example occurred when the Sixth Patriarch wrote his
first statement: in reply to:
Our body is the Bodhi-tree,
And our mind a mirror bright.
Carefully we wipe them hour by hour,
And let no dust alight.
His stanza said:
There is no Bodhi-tree,
Nor stand of a mirror bright.
Since all is void,
Where can the dust alight?
The last two lines form a perfect koan.
The resulting enlightenment is called a satori. This "goal" as well
as the method is called Zen, just as in India yoga means both the
practice and the attainment. Mr. Christmas Humphreys thus explains
it: "Zen is not an escape from things but a new way of
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looking at things, whereby they are seen to be already in Nirvana."
7 We are denying ourselves, which is the great Error. Still, one
must take care not to call Zen or Nirvāna a state; for that
conception, or any conception, is within the māyā or error. Nor
"looking."
The mondo is question and answer. Here there is no continued
wrestling as it were in terrible unmental attentiveness, as in the
case of the koan. An immediate answer is required, without thought.
It will be noticed that this is another way of side-stepping the
thought process while maintaining the attentiveness. For example, a
Zen master once held out a stick and said, "Call it not a stick; if
you do you assert. Nor deny that it is a stick; if you do, you
negate. Without affirmation or denial, speak, speak!" It is not
recorded what the pupils said, but I tried this on myself and out
came "On, on!" And this carried knowledge, like a dream.
Life sets us koans and mondos all the time, for never do we know
enough to act with full intelligence. As far as we ourselves are
concerned:
All things are rushing to their doom;
Trying to slow the rush
The mind preserves their death.
Footnotes
135:1 In my own terms: there is no such thing as body-consciousness,
and no such thing as mind-consciousness, but only, in these cases,
consciousness of the body and consciousness of the mind.
139:2 For the whole subject see my Practical Yoga: Ancient and
Modern. This book gives a full translation of all the Patanjali
Aphorisms with an explanation in modern terms. Published by E. P.
Dutton and Co., Inc., New York, Rider and Co., Ltd., London, Messrs.
Payot, Paris, Editorial Orion, Mexico City.
139:3 Published for the Buddhist Society, London, by Luzac & Co.,
Ltd.
139:4 Published by William Heinemann Ltd., London.
140:5 See Prof. Wood's writings on The Secret Doctrine.
146:6 Published by E. P. Dutton and Co., New York.
149:7 Zen Buddhism, by Christmas Humphreys, p. 95.
from: Great Systems of Yoga