In this most recent (2014) publication by Ken Wilber, he explores the
possibilities of Buddhism within his Integral framework. Neither Buddhism nor
Integral are new to Wilber or those familiar with his work. While living and
working in Omaha, Nebraska in the 1970's, he practiced Zen Buddhist meditation.
Since the 1970’s, he’s become the framer of the Integral perspective in the
contemporary world. (Sri Aurobindo, early in the 20th century, used the term,
but no one in the contemporary world has done as much to gather and synthesize
so wide a body of knowledge and practice as Wilber has.) Thus, for those
familiar with his work will find nothing startlingly new here, but what he argues,
because he's teaching and reaching for a new community, bears repeating.
Sometimes I tend to skip over some of what I've learned before, but then I
realize that his architecture and vocabulary, which becomes repetitious at
times or reaches too far attempting to synthesize so many perspectives, is the
best game in town and shouldn't be missed. What he says bears repeating, and in
fairness, he's always refining and expanding his viewpoints, so what often
seems repetitious is really a newer, finer view, or one that is now
incorporating the work of another thinker to give the perspective new depth or
breadth. Likewise, when his attempts to model and map a messy world seem too
neat, I remember that we value models and maps because they clean-up messy
reality in an attempt to allow us to deal with the reality more successfully.
The term "The Fourth Turning" comes from the history of Buddhism,
which is the subject of the first chapter. The First Turning is the teaching of
the historical Gautama Buddha, who lived around 500 B.C. in what is now Nepal
and northern India. His direct teachings and early legacy are preserved and
practiced in the most direct way in the Theravada tradition found in south Asia
(Sri Lanka, Burma, and Thailand). But during the time that Buddhism continued
to thrive in India, new perspectives arose from these first teachings to add
new perspectives to the Buddhist tradition. Thus, the Second Turning arose from
the thought of Nagarjuna, the philosopher of the Madhyamika tradition. This
line of thought led to the Mahayana tradition, or greater vehicle, which began
to see samsara and nirvana as flip sides of the same coin. This is the
tradition of Buddhism that traveled to China and blossomed most notably in the Chan
tradition of China and then became Zen in Japan. It also traveled north into Korea
and south into Viet Nam. Some refer to it as "eastern Buddhism".
Finally, the half-brothers Asanga and Vashubandhu developed the Yogachara or
"mind-only' school of Buddhism that traveled north into Tibet and Mongolia
(and now into the West along with other Buddhist traditions) as the Vajrayana
(Diamond Path) tradition or northern Buddhism. This tradition began in the 4th
century CE and reached a climax around 1100 CE. Thus, the Buddhist traditions
that we know today, all of which have active representatives in the West,
hasn't changed in any significant way in almost 1,500 years. Wilber thinks that
a new Turning is due.
Wilber has argued his entire career (beginning with his first publication, The Spectrum of Consciousness published
in 1977) that the great spiritual traditions have value, but with an ABD in
biochemistry, he also understands and appreciates modern science. Thus, he's
sought to preserve and incorporate that which is viable and valuable in the great
spiritual traditions, and he discards elements that represent ways of knowing
and perceiving that no longer work (for instance, belief in magic). I won't go
into the details—you should go to Wilber's works for his great synthesis—but
humanity has grown in knowledge. While humans have known for eons how we might
WAKE UP (his term—that is, how to reach higher stages of consciousness),
cultural change has allowed us new ways to GROW UP, that is, to move beyond the
magic, mythical, and rationalistic perspectives in the history of human culture
that ground our consciousness. This is where he argues that Buddhism—and all of
the world's great spiritual traditions—must make a “turning”. Buddhism has an
advantage, he argues—and I agree—because it began with a strong streak of
rationality in the original teachings of the Buddha.
Thus, when I read this book, having a sense of what he would say and argue,
I still came away with a new appreciation of his Integral project and
perspective. My only qualm is that within his grand vision he sees humanity
moving onwards and upwards, and I'm more cautious about the future of humanity.
Yes, we could evolve into a rather nice species despite our abysmal past (and
present). But rather than evolving into higher realms of culture and
consciousness, we might just send ourselves to hell in a hand basket. For the
first 40 years of my life, I lived in fear of what a nuclear Armageddon would
bring. And while that fear has subsided (but not disappeared), new fears, such
as massive problems arising from global climate change, economic,/ecological
system collapse, or some like calamity might create a Cormac McCarthy world
instead of the Promised Land of integral harmony. (I think that Wilber would
acknowledge this and has done so in other works, but here it seems all too
rosy.) I hope he's right, but we should work as if it's all hanging in the
balance. He argues that even thinking integral helps bring about such a world,
and in a sense, I think he's right, but I'm not sure that we'll get to the
critical mass in time. Living in India and now in China, we have a whole lot of
humanity that is desperately poor, terribly ignorant, or wanting most of all to
enjoy the good material life. We humans can get very nasty when we're denied
what we think should be ours or when we fear for our well-being.
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