The Sociology of Philosophies

(Wang) #1

  1. See 251–253 in the key to Figure 5.5; and Raju (1985: 61).

  2. Potter (1976: 252–254). This pattern is particularly prominent in modern thinkers
    such as Ramakrishna who represent India to the West.


6. Buddhist and Neo-Confucian China



  1. At the end of the Northern Wei (about 534 c.e.) there were 2 million monks and
    nuns, and 30,000 temples. The size of the Buddhist church fluctuated widely during
    battles for political favor with Taoists and Confucians. In 574–577, the Northern
    Chou emperor, at the instigation of Taoist advisers, confiscated the property of the
    Buddhist temples and returned as many as 3 million monks to lay life. After
    reunification, the Sui emperor in 601 drastically curtailed the Confucian schools
    and promoted Buddhism; during his reign 230,000 monks and nuns were con-
    verted. In the mid-T’ang dynasty (713–741), a time of violent shifts in the political
    popularity of Buddhism, there were 125,000 monks and nuns; in 830 as many as
    700,000 monks were officially registered. In the great persecution of 845 the census
    indicated 260,000 monks and nuns to be returned to secular life, 4,600 monasteries
    and 40,000 temples and shrines destroyed, and several million acres of fertile lands
    confiscated. Even these numbers do not indicate the full extent of Buddhism; they
    do not include novice monks, who may have been far more numerous than the
    fully ordained monks. In addition, the monasteries at this time possessed 150,000
    slaves, who were turned into tax-paying peasants. Data from Ch’en (1964: 136,
    155, 158, 190–191, 200–201, 204, 232, 242, 244, 250–251, 259, 401). On
    Chinese population growth, see McEvedy and Jones (1978). On Chinese social
    history in these periods, see Eberhard (1977); Gernet (1982, 1962); CHC (1986,
    1979). On the development of Buddhism, see Ch’en (1964); Demiéville (1986);
    Zürcher (1959); Weinstein (1987). Network sources are cited in Chapter 2.

  2. On economic growth in medieval China, see Elvin (1973); Jones (1988). On the
    role of Buddhist institutions in economic growth, see Gernet (1956); Ch’en (1964);
    and the theoretical model in Collins (1986: 19–76), and Collins (1997).

  3. Loyang in the east and Ch’ang-an (Sian) in the west were the two great capital
    cities of northern China; the seat of government often changed between them, while
    the other remained the secondary capital.

  4. In fact, the Yogacara doctrine of Consciousness-Only had already been in existence
    in China, previously imported from India by Paramartha around 550; Hsüan-tsang
    himself had studied with these masters before going to Nalanda. Chinese intellec-
    tuals did not fail to understand these doctrines; the school had survived already
    for three generations. And the Hua-yen philosophy that displaced Consciousness-
    Only was fully as abstract and technical.

  5. Hsüan-tsang’s travels to India became the subject of the most popular novel of
    medieval China, Journey to the West (or Monkey). It is a comic fairy tale of
    supernatural demons and protectors, featuring the monkey with magic powers who
    accompanies Hsüan-tsang. The basket of scriptures which is the object of the trip
    is a kind of magical precious object; there is no sense that it has intellectual
    contents. This reflects the way Hsüan-tsang was received by the emperor and the


Notes to Pages 269–288^ •^971
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