Rangtong And Shentong
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''Rangtong'' and ''shentong'' are two distinctive views on emptiness ( sunyata) and the two truths doctrine within Tibetan Buddhism. ''Rangtong'' (; "empty of self-nature") is a philosophical term in Tibetan Buddhism that is used to distinguish the majority Madhyamaka teaching on the meaning of śūnyatÄ or "emptiness", namely that all phenomena are empty of an enduring and/or unchanging essence or "self," and that this emptiness is not an absolute reality, but a mere nominal characterisation of phenomena. It is related to the '' prasangika'' approach, which argues that no syllogistic forms of reasoning should be used to debate the notion of inherent existence, but only arguments which show the logical implications and absurdity of positions based upon inherent existence. This position is the mainstream Gelugpa interpretation of Madhyamaka, one of the main Mahayana schools, which dominates Vajrayana Buddhism. ''Shentong'' (, also transliterated ''zhäntong'' or ''zhentong''; literally "other-emptiness") is a position within Tibetan Madhyamaka. It applies ''śūnyatÄ'' in a specific way, agreeing that relative reality is empty of self-nature, but stating that absolute reality (''Paramarthasatya'') is "non-dual Buddhajnana" and "empty" () only of "other," () relative phenomena, but is itself not empty and "truly existing." This absolute reality is described by positive terms, an approach which helps "to overcome certain residual subtle concepts" and "the habit ..of negating whatever experience arises in his/her mind." It destroys false concepts, as does ''prasangika'', but it also alerts the practitioner "to the presence of a dynamic, positive Reality that is to be experienced once the conceptual mind is defeated." Shentong was systematized and articulated under that name by Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen (1292–1361), who identified absolute reality with the
Buddha-nature Buddha-nature refers to several related Mahayana Buddhist terms, including '' tathata'' ("suchness") but most notably ''tathÄgatagarbha'' and ''buddhadhÄtu''. ''TathÄgatagarbha'' means "the womb" or "embryo" (''garbha'') of the "thus-gone ...
. Shentong was suppressed by the dominant Gelug school for several hundred years, equally for political reasons as doctrinal reasons. In 1658, the Gelug authorities banned the Jonang school for political reasons, forcibly converting its monks and monasteries to the Gelug school, as well as banning shentong philosophy and books, thus making the rangtong position the overwhelmingly majority one in Tibetan Buddhism. After this suppression various shentong views were propagated mainly by Karma Kagyu and Nyingma lamas. The 19th century saw a revival of Shentong-views, and continued with the Rimé movement. Nowadays Shentong is present primarily as the main philosophical theory of the Jonang school, although it is also taught by the Sakya and
Kagyu The ''Kagyu'' school, also transliterated as ''Kagyü'', or ''Kagyud'' (), which translates to "Oral Lineage" or "Whispered Transmission" school, is one of the main schools (''chos lugs'') of Tibetan (or Himalayan) Buddhism. The Kagyu lineag ...
schools, where it is identified with centerless awareness.


Etymology

The term ''rangtong'' is not an autonym but rather arose from the shentong theorist Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen, who coined the term "shentong" to characterise his own teachings and "rangtong" to refer to the teachings he opposed. ''Shentong'' literally means "other-emptiness", "empty" () of "other" (), i.e., empty of all qualities other than its own inherent existence. Yet, the term ''shentong'' also refers to Yogacara teachings, or ''Yogacara Madhyamaka'', which includes the teachings of ÅšÄntaraká¹£ita. In the Gelugpa understanding of the Svatantrika-Prasaá¹…gika distinction, ''Yogacara Madhyamaka'' is labeled as ''svatantrika'', and set against a strict ''prasaá¹…gika'' approach which rejects any inherent existence. Another translation of ''shentong'' is "extrinsic emptiness," a term which is also used to refer to "Great MÄdhyamaka" (''dbu ma chen po''), a term which has also been used by Klong chen pa and Mipham to refer to Prasaá¹…gika Madhyamaka, and Tsongkhapa has also used this term.


Rangtong

''Rangtong'' is the majority Tibetan teaching on the nature of śūnyatÄ or "emptiness", namely that all phenomena are empty of a self-nature in both the relative and absolute sense, without positing anything beyond that. This position is the mainstream Tibetan interpretation of Madhyamaka, especially by the followers of Prasaá¹…gika MÄdhyamaka. Tsongkhapa (1357–1419), who also wrote in response to ''shentong'', is the most outspoken defendant of ''rangtong''. He saw emptiness as a consequence of dependent designation, the teaching that no ''thing or phenomenon'' has an existence of its own, but always comes into existence in dependence upon conceptual designation by a conscious mind. (See Designation & "Conventional Truth".) Tsongkhapa's view on "ultimate reality" is condensed in the sort text ''In Praise of Dependent Arising''Alexander Berzin, ''In Praise of Dependent Arising''
/ref> c.q. ''In Praise of Relativity''
/ref> c.q. ''The Essence of Eloquency''. It states that "things" ''do'' exist conventionally, but ultimately everything is dependently arisen, and therefore void of inherent existence: This means that conventionally things ''do'' exist, and that there is no use in denying that. But it also means that ultimately those things have no 'existence of their own', and that cognizing them as such results from cognitive operations, not from some unchangeable essence. Tsongkhapa: It also means that there is no "transcendental ground," and that "ultimate reality" has no existence of its own, but is the negation of such a transcendental reality, and the impossibility of any statement on such an ultimately existing transcendental reality: it is no more than a fabrication of the mind. Susan Kahn further explains:


Shentong


Philosophy

''Shentong'' views the two truths doctrine as distinguishing between relative and absolute reality, agreeing that relative reality is empty of self-nature, but stating that absolute reality is "empty" () only of "other" () relative phenomena, but is itself not empty. This absolute reality is the "ground or substratum" which is "uncreated and indestructible, noncomposite and beyond the chain of dependent origination." Dolpopa identified this absolute reality with the Buddha-nature. The shentong-view is related to the RatnagotravibhÄga sutra and the Yogacara-Madhyamaka synthesis of ÅšÄntaraká¹£ita. The truth of sunyata is acknowledged, but not considered to be the highest truth, which is the empty nature of mind. Insight into sunyata is preparatory for the recognition of the nature of mind. Hookham explains the Shentong position, referring to her Kagyu teacher Khenpo Tsultrim's ''Progressive Stages of Meditation on Emptiness''. Khenpo Tsultrim presents five stages of meditation, which he relates to five different schools or approaches: * "Sravaka meditation on non-self" - meditation on the emptiness of the skandhas and the non-existence of a personal self; * "Cittamatra-approach" - meditation on the mind-stream, the ever-continuing process of perception, and the non-duality of perceived and perceiver; * "Svatantrika-Madhyamaka approach" - meditation on all dhammas, which are empty of self-nature, and the negation of any "substance"; * "Prasangika-Madhyamaka approach" - meditation on "the non-conceptual (nisprapanca) nature of both the appearance of phenomena and their self-emptiness." In this approach, all concepts are to be abandoned; * Shentong (Yogacara Madhyamaka) - meditation on ''Paramarthasatya'' ("Absolute Reality"), ''Buddhajnana'', which is beyond concepts, and described by terms as "truly existing." This approach helps "to overcome certain residual subtle concepts," and "the habit - fostered on the earlier stages of the path - of negating whatever experience arises in his/her mind." It destroys false concepts, as does prasangika, but it also alerts the practitioner "to the presence of a dynamic, positive Reality that is to be experienced once the conceptual mind is defeated."


Origins and development

The notion of ''sentong'' grew out the Tibetan attempts to reconcile the contradiction between the Madhyama stance on the emptiness of phenomena, and the later notion of an eternal
Buddha-nature Buddha-nature refers to several related Mahayana Buddhist terms, including '' tathata'' ("suchness") but most notably ''tathÄgatagarbha'' and ''buddhadhÄtu''. ''TathÄgatagarbha'' means "the womb" or "embryo" (''garbha'') of the "thus-gone ...
. The earliest shentong views are usually asserted to have been presented in a group of treatises variously attributed jointly to
Asanga Asaá¹…ga (, ; Romaji: ''Mujaku'') ( fl. 4th century C.E.) was "one of the most important spiritual figures" of Mahayana Buddhism and the "founder of the Yogachara school".Engle, Artemus (translator), Asanga, ''The Bodhisattva Path to Unsurpassed ...
and MaitreyanÄtha, especially in the treatise known as the '' Unsurpassed Continuum'' (''UttaratantraÅ›Ästra'', also called the ''RatnagotravibhÄga''), and in a body of MÄdhyamaka treatises attributed to NÄgÄrjuna (e.g., the ''
DharmadhÄtustava Dharmadhatu (Sanskrit) is the 'dimension', 'realm' or 'sphere' (dhÄtu) of the Dharma or Absolute Reality. Definition In Mahayana Buddhism, dharmadhÄtu ( bo, chos kyi dbyings; ) means "realm of phenomena", "realm of truth", and of the noumenon ...
'', "In praise of the
Dharmadhatu Dharmadhatu (Sanskrit) is the 'dimension', 'realm' or 'sphere' (dhÄtu) of the Dharma or Absolute Reality. Definition In Mahayana Buddhism, dharmadhÄtu ( bo, chos kyi dbyings; ) means "realm of phenomena", "realm of truth", and of the noumenon ...
"). The first exposition of a shentong view is sometimes attributed to ÅšÄntaraká¹£ita ( 725–788), but most scholars argue that his presentation of Madhyamaka thought is more accurately labeled ''YogÄcÄra-SvÄtantrika-Madhyamaka''. The eleventh-century Tibetan master
Yumo Mikyo Dorje Yumo Mikyö Dorjé () was a student of the Kashmiri scholar SomanÄtha and an 11th-century Kalachakra master. Yumo Mikyö Dorjé is regarded as one of the earliest Tibetan articulators of a shentong view of śūnyatÄ — an understanding of ...
, a student of the Kashmiri scholar Somanatha, was possibly the first Tibetan master to articulate a shentong view, after his experiences during a
KÄlacakra ''KÄlacakra'' () is a polysemic term in Vajrayana Buddhism that means "wheel of time" or "time cycles". "''KÄlacakra''" is also the name of a series of Buddhist texts and a major practice lineage in Indian Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism. The ta ...
retreat. Shentong was systematized and articulated under that name by Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen (1292–1361), who was originally a Sakya-trained
lama Lama (; "chief") is a title for a teacher of the Dharma in Tibetan Buddhism. The name is similar to the Sanskrit term ''guru'', meaning "heavy one", endowed with qualities the student will eventually embody. The Tibetan word "lama" means "hi ...
, and joined the Jonang school with which ''shentong'' is strongly associated. In 1321 Dolpopa visited Tsurphu Monastery for the first time, and had extensive discussions with Rangjung Dorje (1284–1339) about doctrinal issues. It appears that Rangjung Dorje almost certainly influenced the development of some of Dolpopa's theories, possibly including his shentong method. Dolpopa claimed to have extraordinary insights, and his meditational experience seems to have played a great role in the development of his ''shentong''-stance. Dolpopa developed a new philosophical vocabulary, based on Sanskrit and Tibetan, to express his insights, presenting provisional statements on absolute reality and Buddha-nature as statements of definitive meaning, which didn't require further interpretation.
Chödrak Gyatso, 7th Karmapa Lama Chödrak Gyatso (Tibetan: ཆོས་གྲགས་རྒྱ་མཚོ་, Wylie: Chos grags rgya mtsho) (1454–1506), also Chödrag Gyamtso, was the seventh Karmapa, head of the Kagyu School of Tibetan Buddhism. Chödrak Gyatso was born in ...
(1454–1506), and the Sakya scholar Shakya Chokden (, 1428–1507) were also important proponents of a shentong view. In the Jonang tradition,
TÄranÄtha TÄranÄtha (1575–1634) was a Lama of the Jonang school of Tibetan Buddhism. He is widely considered its most remarkable scholar and exponent. Taranatha was born in Tibet, supposedly on the birthday of Padmasambhava. His original name was Ku ...
575–1635is second in importance only to Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen himself. He was responsible for the short-lived renaissance of the school as a whole in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and of the widespread revitalization of the shentong theory in particular. TÄranÄtha wrote a commentary on the Heart Sutra which asserts that the Sutra, and prajñÄpÄramitÄ, teaches the Shentong view. After the suppression of the Jonang school and its texts and the texts of Shakya Chokden by the Tibetan government in the seventeenth century, various shentong views were propagated mainly by Karma Kagyu and Nyingma lamas. In particular, the eighth Tai Situpa (1700–1774) and
Katok Tsewang Norbu Katok Tsewang Norbu (, 1698–1755) was a teacher of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism who notably championed the shentong () or "empty of other" view first popularised by the Jonang school as well as examining the Chan Buddhist teachings of ...
(1698–1755)—Karma Kagyu and Nyingma lamas, respectively, and close colleagues—were very instrumental in reviving shentong among their sects. Also instrumental was Situ Panchen (1700–1774), senior court chaplain in the Kingdom of Derge, a student of Katok Tsewang Norbu. "In the end it would be Situ more than anyone who would create the environment for the widespread acceptance of the Shentong theories in the next century. This revival was continued by Jamgon Kongtrul, a nineteenth-century
ecumenical Ecumenism (), also spelled oecumenism, is the concept and principle that Christians who belong to different Christian denominations should work together to develop closer relationships among their churches and promote Christian unity. The adjec ...
(''rimé'') scholar and forceful exponent of shentong. shentong views were also advanced recently by the eminent Kagyu Lamas Kalu Rinpoche and Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso Rinpoche.


Criticisms and repression

Shentong views have often come under criticism by followers of all four of the main Tibetan Buddhist schools, but particularly by the Gelug. Shentong was suppressed by the dominant Gelug school for several hundred years, equally for political reasons as doctrinal reasons. In 1658, the Gelug authorities banned the Jonang school for political reasons, forcibly converting its monks and monasteries to the Gelug school, as well as banning shentong philosophy and books, thus making the rangtong position the overwhelmingly majority one in Tibetan Buddhism. "Exclusive Rangtongpas", as the contemporary western
Kagyu The ''Kagyu'' school, also transliterated as ''Kagyü'', or ''Kagyud'' (), which translates to "Oral Lineage" or "Whispered Transmission" school, is one of the main schools (''chos lugs'') of Tibetan (or Himalayan) Buddhism. The Kagyu lineag ...
scholar S. K. Hookham would call them, have claimed that shentong views are inconsistent with the basic MahÄyÄna teaching of emptiness, because Shentongpas posit an absolute. They sometimes label ''shentong'' Madhyamaka "eternalistic Madhyamaka." The great fourteenth-century Sakya master
Buton Rinchen Drub Butön Rinchen Drup (), (1290–1364), 11th Abbot of Shalu Monastery, was a 14th-century Sakya master and Tibetan Buddhist leader. Shalu was the first of the major monasteries to be built by noble families of the Tsang dynasty during Tibet's gre ...
(1290–1364) was very critical of shentong views. Gyaltsab Je and Khedrup Gelek Pelzang, 1st Panchen Lama, two of Gelug founder Je Tsongkhapa's primary disciples, were also particularly critical of the shentong views of their time. Among Kagyupas and Nyingmapas, the noted nineteenth-century Nyingma lama Jamgon Ju Mipham Gyatso wrote works both supportive and critical of shentong positions, as did Mikyö Dorje, 8th Karmapa Lama.


Scholarly studies

According to Burchardi, limited attention is given in academic studies to the various interpretations of ''gzhan stong''. The contemporary western Kagyu scholar Karl Brunnhölzl argues that there is no such thing as "shentong Madhyamaka," but rather that orthodox YogÄcÄra philosophy (when understood properly) is entirely compatible with Madhyamaka, and therefore shentong is not a novel position. He argues that YogÄcÄra has often been mischaracterized and unfairly marginalized in Tibetan Buddhist curricula.


See also

*
Nondualism Nondualism, also called nonduality and nondual awareness, is a fuzzy concept originating in Indian philosophy and religion for which many definitions can be found, including: nondual awareness, the nonduality of seer and seen or nondiffer ...


Notes


References


Citations


Works cited

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Further reading

* * * * * * * * * * *


External links

{{external links, date=October 2022 * Nigel Wellings (2009),
Is there anything there? – the Tibetan Rangtong Shentong debate
' * Adele Tomlin (2018),
The Shentong View of Emptiness – A Short Introduction and Reader
*Alexander Berzin
''Self-Voidness and Other Voidness''
* ttp://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-PHIL/need.htm Scholarly disquisition on ''The Buddha Within'' Buddha-nature Jonang Tibetan Buddhist philosophical concepts