Abstract

This article examines the relationship between the practice and theory of medicine and Buddhism in premodern Tibet. It considers a polemical text composed by the 16th–17th-century Tibetan physician and tantric Buddhist expert Sokdokpa Lodrö Gyeltsen, intending to prove the Buddhist canonical status of the Four Medical Tantras, the foundational text of the Tibetan medical tradition. While presenting and analyzing Sokdokpa’s polemical writing in the context of the broader debate over the Buddhist pedigree of the Four Tantras that took place during his time, this discussion situates Sokdokpa’s reflections on the topic in terms of his broader career as both a practicing physician and a tantric Buddhist ritual and contemplative specialist. It suggests that by virtue of Sokdokpa’s tightly interwoven activities in the spheres of medicine and Buddhism, his contribution to this debate gives voice to a sensibility in which empiricist, historicist, and Buddhist ritual and contemplative inflections intermingle in ways that resist easy disentanglement and classification. In this it argues that Sokdokpa’s reflections form an important counterpoint to the perspectives considered thus far in the scholarly study of this debate. It also questions if Sokdokpa’s style of argumentation might call for a recalibration of how scholars currently construe the roles of tantric Buddhist practice in the appeal by premodern Tibetan physicians to critical and probative criteria.

Highlights

  • An important goal recently formulated in the study of Buddhism and medicine is to chart the initial stirrings of a critical epistemic distance between the pragmatic mechanisms of healing and traditional Buddhist learning (Gyatso 2015)

  • A key implication of this line of inquiry is to analyze how the case of Buddhism and medicine might compare with the presumed cleavage between traditional authority and empirical inquiry in late premodern Europe that is often associated with the birth of modernity

  • I attempt to contribute to this research agenda by considering how the 16th–17thcentury doctor, tantric Buddhist ritual expert, and doctrinal scholar Sokdokpa Lodrö Gyeltsen (Sog bzlog pa Blo gros rgyal mtshan, 1552–1624), critically interrogated the textual sources of the Tibetan medical tradition

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Summary

Introduction

An important goal recently formulated in the study of Buddhism and medicine is to chart the initial stirrings of a critical epistemic distance between the pragmatic mechanisms of healing and traditional Buddhist learning (Gyatso 2015). Gyatso points out another important target of critique not mentioned by Karmay: the fabulous details of the basic Tantra’s narrative setting, the presumed teacher, audience, time, teaching, and, most importantly, place—the city of Sudarśana, along with the description of its surrounding mountains and the medicinal herbs said to be growing on them.. To better understand Sokdokpa’s thoughts on these topics, a general introduction to the text and its context of production, along with a brief foray into the wider significance of the “five excellences”, are first in order

Critique and Reconciliation
The Five Excellences
Historical Persons and Trans-Historical Buddhas
Authenticating Visionary Revelations
Concluding Reflections
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