Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 The question of being: Heidegger’s project
- 2 Reading a life: Heidegger and hard times
- 3 The principle of phenomenology
- 4 Time and phenomenology in Husserl and Heidegger
- 5 Laying the ground for metaphysics: Heidegger’s appropriation of Kant
- 6 Heidegger and the hermeneutic turn
- 7 Engaged agency and background in Heidegger
- 8 Death, time, history: Division II of Being and Time
- 9 Truth and the essence of truth in Heidegger’s thought
- 10 Authenticity, moral values, and psychotherapy
- 11 Heidegger, Buddhism, and deep ecology
- 12 Heidegger and theology
- 13 Heidegger on the connection between nihilism, art, technology, and politics
- 14 The fourfold
- Bibliography
- Index
- Series List
11 - Heidegger, Buddhism, and deep ecology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 The question of being: Heidegger’s project
- 2 Reading a life: Heidegger and hard times
- 3 The principle of phenomenology
- 4 Time and phenomenology in Husserl and Heidegger
- 5 Laying the ground for metaphysics: Heidegger’s appropriation of Kant
- 6 Heidegger and the hermeneutic turn
- 7 Engaged agency and background in Heidegger
- 8 Death, time, history: Division II of Being and Time
- 9 Truth and the essence of truth in Heidegger’s thought
- 10 Authenticity, moral values, and psychotherapy
- 11 Heidegger, Buddhism, and deep ecology
- 12 Heidegger and theology
- 13 Heidegger on the connection between nihilism, art, technology, and politics
- 14 The fourfold
- Bibliography
- Index
- Series List
Summary
Many commentators have remarked on the affinities between Heidegger's thought and East Asian traditions such as Vedanta, Mahayana Buddhism, and Taoism. In this essay, I shall examine critically some aspects of the apparent rapport between Heidegger's thought and Mahayana Buddhism. One reason for recent interest in Heidegger's thought and in Buddhism is that both are critical of and claim to offer an alternative to the anthropocentrism and dualism that some critics say is responsible for today's environmental crisis. According to such critics, Western humankind is particularly anthropocentric. Regarding humanity as the source of all meaning, purpose, and value, humans justify doing anything they want with the natural world. Western humanity also thinks in terms of dualisms and binary oppositions, such as mind versus body, reason versus feeling, humans versus nature, male versus female. Those possessing the “privileged” properties (mind, reason, human, male) allegedly have the right to dominate those possessing the “inferior” properties (body, feeling, nature, female). In an attempt to gain godlike security and power for humankind, modern Western ideologies call for transforming the earth into a titanic factory, thereby threatening to destroy the biosphere on which all life depends.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Heidegger , pp. 293 - 325Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
- 6
- Cited by