The Sociology of Philosophies

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narrator then tells us at the end of the chapter that the interlocutors talked of
karma. This may be a late interpolation, since the lines appear at the end of a
chapter. If not, it implies that karma—in whatever version at that time—was a
secret doctrine, not a view that would be accepted as religiously binding by most
hearers. As late as the Bhagavad Gita, a series of interpolations in the Mahabharata
influenced by the new Hindu philosophical schools ca. 100–500 c.e., there is a
mixture of conflicting doctrines about reincarnation and other forms of life after
death (e.g., 1.42.44; 8.6.23–25; 9.25). The thread which is retrospectively empha-
sized, that favorable reincarnation depends on performance of one’s duties under
caste law, becomes the dominant religious interpretation still later, in the final
onslaught against Buddhism around 700 c.e..


  1. For debates on these dates, see Hirakawa (1990: 22–23).

  2. The futile questions which the Buddha tells his followers to avoid are similar to
    Kant’s antinomies: the beginning and end of the universe, the difference between
    body and soul, life after death. These are favorite debating topics among the
    Upanishadic sages; by denying their solubility, the Buddha claims a superior level
    of reflexive sophistication.

  3. For various translations and sources, see Nakamura (1980: 66–69; Kalupahana
    (1986: 10–16).

  4. The Ajivikas too received royal patronage, for instance, under the Maurya dynasty.
    Mahavira and Makkhali Gosala were close associates until their debates led to a
    sharp break between their respective sects. Mahavira and Shakyamuni competi-
    tively proselytized some of the same lay patrons. But Shakyamuni’s strongest
    enemy, in tactical struggles in the lay community as well as in debate, was Makkhali
    Gosala (Mizuno, 1980: 120–141; Basham, 1951; OHI, 1981: 77, 130). This rivalry
    probably resulted from the fact that Shakyamuni was both appropriating and
    negating Makkhali’s key doctrine in proposing a method to overcome karmic fate.

  5. Mizuno (1980: 99, 104). The Jainas also preached, although not as aggressively
    as the Buddhists.

  6. Chakravarti (1987: 122–149). This recruitment base continued throughout the
    lifetime of Indian Buddhism.

  7. The range of meditation techniques includes one-pointed concentration, observing
    one’s breath, stilling the inner dialogue, focusing on consciousness itself apart from
    its objects (Buddhist and Yoga techniques); visualizing energies or lights within
    one’s own body, especially in the genitals; raising inner heat and moving it about
    one’s body (tantric techniques); inwardly visualizing symbols, gods, the experience
    of one’s own death, the letters in the name of God, and so on (Tibetan Buddhist,
    Sufi, Taoist, Kabbalist techniques); outwardly focusing on visual symbols (man-
    dalas, crucifixes, etc.); chanting mantras (pure sounds) or sutras (holy texts),
    singing verbal hymns; rhythmic dancing (Sufi darvish sects, medieval Japanese
    Amidaists); physical activities to the point of exhaustion, or self-torture (Sufis,
    shramanas, Christian ascetics, shamans, tribal vision-seekers); verbal prayer or
    communication with a personified deity (Christianity); counting, slowing, or hold-
    ing breaths (Buddhists, Taoists); blowing and spitting (Chinese Huai-nan Tzu);


964 •^ Notes to Pages 200–206

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