34 David
Biihna-Lilieand
Wininn
Higgins
learneda
strong
lessonin
just
how
imponanl
the
principles
ofassnciation
under-
pinning
thcir
spiritual
lifeand
practicereally
are.
Although
these
points
arenow
reasonably
clear
intherear-vision
mirror.there
can
henosenseinwhich
Australian
layinsight
meditatorsandtheir
organizations
havereachedsomesortof
temtinusafiera
period
of
pioneering
tran
on.On
the
contrary.
thereis
every
reasonto
regard
existingarrangements
as
intractably
tentative.
evenif
they
area
llttlelessnaive
andmakeshiftthan
they
weretwo
decadesearlier.Butthen
again,
ashuman
beings
weliveandbreathe
‘contingency’
in
the
dependentarising
of
eventsand
conditions,
whichhave
given
risetothe
unique
unfolding
ofBuddhist
institutions‘down
under'.
Notes
l In
particular,
weneedto
exercisecare
aroundBaumsnu'suseof
theterms“traditional'
inthi,
nntexi.forit
implies
thattheBuddhism
ottheother
stages
is
non-traditional
7
a
usage
that
suggests
thata
traditionis
necessarily
something
hidehound.
Many
ofthe
inntlvattunswedcitlwithin
this
chapter
aretraditional
ina
perhaps
moreuseful
sense,
one
derivedfrom
Maelntyre(”85),
He
conceptuallzes
a
living
(as
opposed
toa
dead)
tradition
asan
intergencratiunal
‘cenvcrsation‘
whose
participants
remain
awareofthe
tradition‘s
original.generative
questions
andhow
questions
andanswers
haveevolved
fromthe
beginning
Inthis
sense.
many
oi
today's
Buddhistinnovators
especially
Intheir
enthusiasmfor
retrieving
the
original
canon
a
aremore‘tmdiliontll'thantheir
conservativeeri‘t s.
2 Thisterm
'
edincontrastto
moralbeliefsand
reflectstheauthors‘
suspicion
otmuml
reintiv
nt,
h
.edontheviewthat
morality
shouldbean
cfiieient
guide
toconductin
the
pursuit
it the
dharrntt.
3 In
expressing
the
moralconflictin
this
way.
we
adopt
the
widespreadassumptions
of
eoniernpntury
or
moral
philosophy.
thatmoral
knowledge
needstohecuntt‘xtualin‘d
ina
particular
cultureandtimeand that
moral
sensittvttydevelops
overtime:
sec.
for
instance.
IiiyltirU989.
introduction).
WhileBuddhis
assuch
adopt
the
original
precepts.
weneed
[0avoid
essentiatiring
Buddhist
morality
asifitwere
something
exhaustivelyexpressed
inthose
precepts
andthus
treating
later
moral
specificattons
as
optionalextras.
as
lnet'sential’value
preferences‘.
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