- Dharma character school
Dharma-character school (Chinese: 法相宗
pinyin "fa xiang zong", Japanese: Hossō) is the pejorative name for a stream of thought that represented the IndianYogācāra system of thought inEast Asia . One of the founders of the Hosso sect wasTz'u-en . [Sho, Kyodai (2002). "The Elementary-Level Textbook: Part 1: Gosho Study "Letter To The Brothers". SGI-USA Study Curriculum. Source: [http://www.sgi-usa.org/buddhism/library/SokaGakkai/Study/Elementary/Text1.htm] (accessed: January 8, 2007)]Its proponents preferred the title Consciousness-only school (Chinese 唯識,
pinyin "wei shi", also romanized as "wei shih"). The movement that would eventually receive these names was initiated inChina byXuanzang (玄奘), who, on his return from India, brought with him a wagonload of the most importantConsciousness-only texts.These, with government support and many assistants, he translated into Chinese. His disciple
Kuiji (窺基) wrote a number of important commentaries on the Yogacara texts and further developed the influence of this doctrine in China. Kuiji is considered the first patriarch of this school. [Lusthaus, Dan (undated). "Quick Overview of the Faxiang School" 法相宗. Source: [http://www.acmuller.net/yogacara/schools/faxiang.html] (accessed: December 12, 2007)]The Faxiang teachings were transmitted to
Korea (Beopsang ) andJapan (Hossō ), where they made considerable impact. Although a relatively small Hosso sect exists in Japan to this day, the original tradition has all but died out as an independent sect. However, its Consciousness-only teachings made a major impact on the native East Asian traditions that would later develop, most notablyTiantai ,Huayan and ChanBuddhism .The term "Faxiang" itself was first applied to this tradition by the Huayan thinker
Fazang (法藏), who used it to emphasize the inferiority of Faxiang teachings, which only dealt with the phenomenal appearances of thedharma s in contrast to Huayan, which dealt with the underlying nature on which such phenomenal appearances were based.ee also
*
Dan Lusthaus Notes
Refererences
*Lusthaus, Dan (undated). "Quick Overview of the Faxiang School" 法相宗. Source: [http://www.acmuller.net/yogacara/schools/faxiang.html] (accessed: December 12, 2007)
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.