Namaste kuranes,
thank you for the post... yes, you got it correct
kuranes said:
I studied a little Buddhism in college after having become interested through what are most likely considered "pop" Buddhism introductions, a la Alan Watts and Hesse's "Siddhartha".
that would be a fair assesment of these two writers. they are, in a manner of speaking, like the science popularizers that are interpeting lots of information and distilling it into something which is, in its essence, correct, but in its formulations, often somewhat... incomplete, in my view.
I also enjoyed Joseph Chilton Pierce.
i've not heard of this writer before, did you find the writing style to be enjoyable?
In my class the teacher told us of Nagarjuna, and it resonated with me. In later years, I would encounter friends trying to get me interested in NSA, and I tried to keep an open mind to it, but it almost seemed like we were talking about something that couldn't even be called Buddhism, of the sort I had studied in college.
NSA?
But the big shots told me that it was based on the "Diamond Sutra" etc. and was legitimate. I didn't pursue it further in that form.
the Diamond Sutra is part of the Mahayana Sutras so it is quite possible that a Theravedan Buddhist wouldn't place much stock in it. it can be difficult to say which is which without knowing which views that a being holds.
Of course there are many different forms of Christinaity too, differing wildly from one another. I wonder what the exttreme ranges of Buddhism would be.
it's hard to say... my view is, of course, my view... as such, i view the Nichiren group as a rather extreme form of Buddhist practice, which i also happen to disagree with based on some of their assertions and what they teach.
Back to "pop" Buddhism. I really enjoyed those "Alan Watts" days. What schools of Buddhism are associated with views of that sort, or would you characterize him as more into Taoism ?
as Samabudhi indicated, Alan most wrote of Zen and it's practices and so forth. to be frank with you, i do not know if Alan was even aware of the formal Buddhist philosophical schools that are operative, i've not seen any of his writings acknowledge them directly.
Zen is a school in the Mahayana Vehicle of Buddhism...
to use some Christian terminology, Buddhism has three main schools of thought, which we call Vehicles... in my analogy it looks something like this:
Christian view Buddhist View
Orthodox Theravedan (Hinyana)
Catholic Mahanaya (many schools)
Protestant Vajrayana (several schools)
Some people of more recent interest are Jean Gebser, and those who have followed him like Ken Wilber. Parts of Buddhism are conflated within some of their writings, it seems (IMO ), and I wondered if you had any thoughts on that as well.
i do not know who those two authors are... though i've heard the name Ken Wilber previously... i do not recall the context where i saw it... maybe science?
metta,
~v