A living tradition, Buddhism began as a way of working with the difficulties we all face as mortal, vulnerable, conscious beings. Its founder imbued this practice with an ethic of care, and teachings we can use today to interpret our experience and as a guide to full human flourishing.
Since the Buddha’s death, the dharma has been expressed in many ways in different cultural settings, and often these border crossings enriched it. But when the dharma appeared in religious guise, it became burdened with cosmic beliefs, its practice regimented, and was used as an instrument of social control, stifling the freedom at its heart.
Secularity encourages a search for the good life in today’s circumstances, not as prescribed by timeless myths. As part of the process of the dharma putting down roots in the west, secular Buddhism offers the vitality of the early dharma, free of religious distortions.
Winton Higgins tracks the emergence of secular Buddhism with a focus on today’s climate emergency and intensifying social injustice that cry out for radical socioeconomic and political change. The ethic of care that underpins a creative dharma practice, he suggests, calls on us to bring our training to bear on these urgent tasks.
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Introduction
Part I Emergence
1. The coming of secular Buddhism: a synoptic view
2. The flexible appropriation of tradition
3. Secular Buddhism: scientistic versus interpretive
Part II Western affinities
4. Martin Heidegger
5. Martin Hägglund
6. Sigmund Freud
7. Peter Watson
Part III The inner life
8. Renewing the practice from first principles
9. Secular insight practice and everyday awakening
10. From goal orientation to honouring process
11. Forms of resistance to the inner life
12. Ask not whether it’s true – ask rather whether it works
Part IV Practising with others
13. Sangha – the western dharma practitioner’s dilemma
14. Dharmic existentialist ethics in a time of pandemic
Part V Dharmic citizenship
15. Defending our common home
16. Transition 177
Conclusion
References
Thanks
About Tuwhiri
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Since 1987 Winton Higgins has been a dharma practitioner and a teacher of insight meditation since 1995. He has contributed to the development of a secular Buddhism internationally and is a senior teacher for Sydney Insight Meditators.
He taught and researched in the politics discipline at Macquarie University until 2000. Since then he has been an associate in international studies at the University of Technology Sydney, while also engaging in creative writing.
He has written two historical novels: ‘Rule of law’ and ‘Love death chariot of fire’, both published by Brandl & Schlesinger in 2016 and 2020 respectively.
Winton was a board member of the Australian Institute of Holocaust and Genocide Studies for 20 years from its inception in 2000, and teaches a course at the Aquinas Academy on various ethical, social and political topics each year.
A member of the editorial board of The Tuwhiri Project, which has also published his ‘After Buddhism, a workbook’ (2018), he lives in Sydney with his partner, Lena.