Dependent Co-evolution:
Kropotkin’s Theory of Mutual Aid and Its Appropriation by Chinese Buddhists
Justin R. Ritzinger
University of Miami
http://enlight.lib.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-BJ001/bj001390679.pdf
Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal (2013, 26: 89-112)
New Taipei: Chung-Hwa Institute of Buddhist Studies
ᷕ厗ἃ⬠⬠⟙䫔Ḵ⋩ℕ㛇ġ 枩 89-112炷㮹⚳ᶨ䘦暞Ḵ⸜炸炻㕘⊿烉ᷕ厗ἃ⬠䞼䨞
ISSN: 1017-7132
Abstract
The encounter between Buddhism and science has long been recognized as
one of the key events in the formulation of Buddhist modernisms. Yet only
recently has this begun to be explored in its historic specificity. This paper
examines Republican-era Chinese Buddhists’ engagement with the theory of
evolution at the peak of its cultural influence in the 1920s and 30s. It argues
that while Buddhists largely accepted biological evolution, Darwinist theories
of survival of the fittest were rejected. Instead, they embraced the alternative
theory of Peter Kropotkin, who saw mutual aid as the driving force of
evolution. This theory was not only less offensive to Buddhist sensibilities,
but also amenable to a rhetorical strategy of subsumption in which Kropotkin
was presented as anticipated and fulfilled by Buddhist doctrine. This tactic
allowed Buddhists to portray the religion as modern, scientific, and
progressive while avoiding what were seen as the pernicious corollaries of
Darwinism. Effectively, Buddhists who employed this tactic attempted to
annex Kroptokin’s discursive space, taking advantage of the internal
variegation of modernity in order to constitute it as part of a modern discourse
and superscribe that discourse with their own concerns.
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