by Li Jianmin
WUXI, Jiangsu, March 29 (Xinhua) -- Sakyamuni's
followers carried out a rare face-to-face dialogue with science workers in the
eastern Chinese city of Wuxi Sunday in hope to converge their wisdom and jointly
build a harmonious society.
The dialogue was conducted as a seminar of the Second
World Buddhist Forum that gathered more than 1,700 Buddhist monks, scholars and
celebrities from around the world.
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The 11th Panchen Lama, Bainqen Erdini
Qoigyijabu (front) attends a sub-forum of the Second World Buddhist Forum
(WBF) in Wuxi, east China's Jiangsu Province, on March 29, 2009. Bainqen
Erdini Qoigyijabu, attended the forum Sunday here with businessmen and
monks, where they discussed Buddhist philosophies related to business.
(Xinhua/Han Yuqing) Photo Gallery>>> |
The three-hour seminar attracted an audience of
almost 200 and late-comers had to stand in the aisle of a small meeting room in
the gigantic Buddha Palace on Mt. Lingshan.
It is acknowledged by both Buddhists and experts of
social sciences that Buddha is a human being, but not a god, and everybody's
destiny is in his own hand, not in Buddha's.
It is also a consensus that Buddhism does not worship
superstition, or the enemy of science. On the contrary, it opposes superstition
and stresses "cause and effect". In addition, Buddhism contains many thoughts of
dialectics, and most importantly, it has supported science and technological
development all along.
"In my view, Buddhism is a religion of atheism and it
is very rational," Dr. Jiang Jinsong, associate professor of the Institute for
Science, Technology and Society with the prestigious Tsinghua University, told
Xinhua at the forum.
"In many respects, Buddhism shares common features
with scientific spirit," he said. "Take for instance, Buddha also opposes
worshiping authority blindly or accepting a theory without thinking."
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The 11th Panchen Lama, Bainqen Erdini
Qoigyijabu (R), talks with an attendee during a sub-forum of the Second
World Buddhist Forum (WBF) in Wuxi, east China's Jiangsu Province, on
March 29, 2009. Bainqen Erdini Qoigyijabu, attended the forum Sunday here
with businessmen and monks, where they discussed Buddhist philosophies
related to business. (Xinhua/Han Yuqing) Photo Gallery>>> |
Buddhism was introduced into ancient China from India
more than 2,000 years ago. Currently, about 100 million people on the Chinese
mainland, or one out of 13, are Buddhism followers.
A basic fact is that Buddhism has never fought
against science in history. Moreover, quite a few monks in Chinese history are
scientists or technicians themselves, such as Master Yi Xing (673-727) during
the Tang Dynasty (618-907) who was a notable astronomer, mathematician, and
mechanical engineer. He made two astronomical celestial globes along with a
government official and was the first to measure the length of meridian in the
world.
Today, like lay men, Buddhist monks in almost all
temples are also enjoying conveniences brought by science and technology --
communicating "this world" via cell phones and promoting their doctrines via
computers and Internet.
"Master Xue Zang (a famous monk in the Tang Dynasty)
spent 17 years traveling tens of thousands of miles to India to seek Buddhist
scriptures. But now, I just need to click a computer mouse to read sutras," said
Master Man Sheng from Taiwan's Fo Guang Shan Monastery at the forum.
"I myself encourage monks to learn science," Master
Xue Cheng, vice president and secretary-general of the Buddhist Association of
China, told Xinhua.
"But on the other hand, the fast development of
science and technology lets the people pay -- the natural environment has
witnessed damages due to overuse of natural resources and excessive discharge of
wastes, the social environment made up of different races has witnessed hatred
and even wars due to contests for resources," he said.
"So science and technology alone cannot ensure a
happy life for the mankind, who still need to possess moral ethics and values,
and Buddhism can play a certain role in this regard," he added.
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The performance of "Song of
Auspiciousness" is staged at the Buddhist Palace in Lingshan Mountain in
Wuxi, east China's Jiangsu Province, on March 29, 2009, marking the end of
the first phase of the Second World Buddhist Forum (WBF). The second phase
of the forum will take place in Taipei from March 31 to April 1.
(Xinhua/Wu Xiaoling) Photo Gallery>>> |
Zhu Qingshi, a well-known chemist and academician of
the Chinese Academy of Sciences, told Xinhua that he treats Buddhism as a
knowledge, but not a religion.
"It is a profound knowledge and is the cream of the
human culture and wisdom," said Zhu, also former president of the University of
Science and Technology of China.
"If you think Buddhism only means burning incense and
praying, then you are going far away from its real spirit," he said.
He cited an abstruse example to show there is
connection between science and Buddhism -- the string theory in physics and the
theory of origin in Buddhism, both trying to explain the question of "what is
the real nature of the material world."
Zhu added that science and Buddhism can meet in three
fields: physics, brain science and psychology.
In addition, Master Bei Ji, vice president of the
Buddhist Association of Taiyun in northern China, ethics is another field on
which Buddhism and science can converge.
Buddhists and scholars said it is the first time for
China to host such an international, high-level and face-to-face dialogue
between Buddhism and science, or religion between science, therefore the
dialogue is not supposed to solve all issues instantly.
"But the significance is that it shows both Buddhism
and science can contribute to building a harmonious society and a harmonious
world at large," Jiang said.
China has been committed to building a harmonious
society in the country and pushing for building a harmonious world over recent
years, and it has been rallying all positive forces to attain the goal,
including seeking wisdom and inspiration from its profound traditional culture.
"Buddhism is part of the traditional Chinese culture
and treasure of the Chinese nation. So why can't we use it?" Jiang said.
Probably because the dialogue between Buddhism and
science was carried out within the framework of a Buddhist forum, therefore, few
people from the science circle came to attend the dialogue Sunday.
But Zhu still has confidence, saying that dialogue
between religion and science is not a "new thing" in the western nations.
"This dialogue in China is just like a seed, which
will sprout so long as it is sown," he said. (Shi Yonghong and Gui Tao
contributed to this report.)
WBF participants say
dialogues significant in Buddhism development
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The model of a pagoda being built in the
Famen Temple is shown at a press conference in Wuxi, east China's Jiangsu
Province, on March 29, 2009. The Famen Temple in China's northwestern
Shaanxi Province will finish building a pagoda in May to house a special
relic, a fragment of Buddha's finger bone, and a grand ceremony would be
held in May to mark the enshrinement of the sarira, or remains, according
to the press conference.(Xinhua/Han Yuqing) Photo
Gallery>>> |
WUXI, Jiangsu,
March 29 (Xinhua) -- Participants hailed the importance of dialogues in the
development of the Buddhism as the Second World Buddhist Forum wrapped up its
first part on Sunday in Wuxi City of east China's Jiangsu Province.
The jointly-held forum, which will continue in Taipei on Tuesday, is
installed with eight sub-forums in Wuxi where more than 1,700 participants from
nearly 50 countries and regions can have dialogues on a series of topics, such
as Buddhism and Education, Buddhism and Science and Buddhism and International
Exchanges.
Panchen Lama says China enjoys
religious freedom
WUXI, Jiangsu, March 28 (Xinhua)
-- The 11th Panchen Lama, Bainqen Erdini Qoigyijabu, said here Saturday that
China enjoys religious freedom.
Addressing the opening ceremony of the Second World Buddhist Forum in
English, the living buddha said that this event fully demonstrates that China
nowadays enjoys social harmony, stability and religious freedom. It also shows
China is a nation that safeguards and promotes world peace.
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