Buddhist Biology
Ancient Eastern Wisdom Meets Modern Western Science
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Many high-profile public intellectuals -- including "New Atheists" like Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, and the late Christopher Hitchens -- have argued that religion and science are deeply antagonistic, representing two world views that are utterly incompatible. David Barash, a renowned biologist with forty years of experience, largely agrees with them, but with one very big exception: Buddhism.
In this fascinating book, David Barash highlights the intriguing common ground between scientific and religious thought, illuminating the many parallels between biology and Buddhism, allowing readers to see both in a new way. Indeed, he shows that there are numerous places where Buddhist and biological perspectives coincide and reinforce each other. For instance, the cornerstone ecological concept -- the interconnectedness and interdependence of all natural things -- is remarkably similar to the fundamental insight of Buddhism. Indeed, a major Buddhist text, the Avatamsaka Sutra, which consists of ten insights into the "interpenetration" between beings and their environment, could well have been written by a trained ecologist, just as current insights in evolutionary biology, genetics and development might have been authored by the Buddha himself. Barash underscores other notable similarities, including a shared distrust of simple cause-and-effect analysis, an appreciation of the "rightness" of nature, along with an acknowledgment of the suffering that results when natural processes are tampered with. Buddhist Biology shows how the concept of "non-self," so confusing to many Westerners, is fully consistent with modern biology, as is the Buddhist perspective of "impermanence." Barash both demystifies and celebrates the biology of Buddhism and vice versa, showing in a concluding tour-de-force how modern Buddhism --shorn of its hocus-pocus and abracadabra -- not only justifies but actually mandates both socially and environmentally "engaged" thought and practice.
Buddhist Biology is a work of unique intellectual synthesis that sheds astonishing light on biology as well as on Buddhism, highlighting the remarkable ways these two perspectives come together, like powerful searchlights that offer complementary and stunning perspectives on the world and our place in it.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Conceived without its supernatural elements, modern Buddhism coalesces "in outlook and insight" with modern biology, says evolutionary biologist Barash (Homo Mysterious). Buddhism's rejection of absolutes, its empiricism, and its emphasis on experience over dogma are only a few of the ways it mirrors biological disciplines. And its "Big Three" tenets "are built into the very structure of the world": anatman (not self), anitya (impermanence), pratitya-samutpada (connectedness). Both Buddhism and biology see the individual as less important than the ever-changing natural world: in Buddhism, the individual is the result of eons of karma; in biology, the individual is the result of eons of evolution, or "gene-based karma" We matter less than our genes, which matter less than all genes. Buddhism, unlike Judeo-Christianity, preaches reverence for nature; for mammals that "use sonar to hunt moths on the wing... bacteria that can prosper in superheated underwater deep-sea vents, eagles that can make out the face of a dime while hovering a hundred feet in the air." Biology and Buddhism part ways where the former reserves compassion for kin while the latter urges compassion for all. Barash proclaims Buddhism as biology's sentient partner, not its servant, in this provocative and poetic riff on spirituality and science.
Customer Reviews
Cool Book AND Cool Author
Professor Barash has a very interesting article in the New York Times, Sunday Review, September 28, 2014, entitled God, Darwin and my Biology Class. If you first read the article, you too will gravitate to this well written book.