Is Violence Justified in Theravada Buddhism?

Focusing on three kinds of textual sources of Theravada Buddhism (the Pali canon, postcanonical Pali chronicles and medieval Sinhala literature), this paper examines whether there is any justification of violence in Theravada Buddhism. Though Buddhism has recognized the relative merits of the use of...

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Main Author: Mahinda Deegalle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: WUFI 2014-10-01
Series:Social Affairs
Subjects:
Online Access:http://socialaffairsjournal.com/Achive/Fall_2014/4_SAJ_1(1)Deegalle.pdf
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spelling doaj-f6a8989259f74b878864bae188bfb15a2020-11-24T23:42:22ZengWUFISocial Affairs2362-08892478-107X2014-10-01118394Is Violence Justified in Theravada Buddhism?Mahinda Deegalle0School of Humanities and Cultural Industries, Bath Spa University, United KingdomFocusing on three kinds of textual sources of Theravada Buddhism (the Pali canon, postcanonical Pali chronicles and medieval Sinhala literature), this paper examines whether there is any justification of violence in Theravada Buddhism. Though Buddhism has recognized the relative merits of the use of mild forms of force in certain rare circumstances, by advocating a path of non-violence as one of its central doctrines Buddhism has rejected the use of violence even as a skill-in-means (Skt. upayakausalya). The paper thus examines justifications both for violence and non-violence within the Theravada Buddhist tradition. It evaluates controversial discussions of violence in the post-canonical Pali chronicle, the Mahavamsa, in which one finds a rare case of justifying violence in the attempt to explain potential war crimes of King Duttagamani. By comparing Mahavamsa’s views with Pali canonical literature, the paper argues that both in theory and practice Theravada Buddhism does not profess violence.Asserting that violence cannot be justified under any circumstance, violence and its manifestations in Buddhist societies can be viewed as a deviation from the teachings of the Buddha.http://socialaffairsjournal.com/Achive/Fall_2014/4_SAJ_1(1)Deegalle.pdfJustifications of ViolenceTheravada BuddhismMorality of War
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mahinda Deegalle
spellingShingle Mahinda Deegalle
Is Violence Justified in Theravada Buddhism?
Social Affairs
Justifications of Violence
Theravada Buddhism
Morality of War
author_facet Mahinda Deegalle
author_sort Mahinda Deegalle
title Is Violence Justified in Theravada Buddhism?
title_short Is Violence Justified in Theravada Buddhism?
title_full Is Violence Justified in Theravada Buddhism?
title_fullStr Is Violence Justified in Theravada Buddhism?
title_full_unstemmed Is Violence Justified in Theravada Buddhism?
title_sort is violence justified in theravada buddhism?
publisher WUFI
series Social Affairs
issn 2362-0889
2478-107X
publishDate 2014-10-01
description Focusing on three kinds of textual sources of Theravada Buddhism (the Pali canon, postcanonical Pali chronicles and medieval Sinhala literature), this paper examines whether there is any justification of violence in Theravada Buddhism. Though Buddhism has recognized the relative merits of the use of mild forms of force in certain rare circumstances, by advocating a path of non-violence as one of its central doctrines Buddhism has rejected the use of violence even as a skill-in-means (Skt. upayakausalya). The paper thus examines justifications both for violence and non-violence within the Theravada Buddhist tradition. It evaluates controversial discussions of violence in the post-canonical Pali chronicle, the Mahavamsa, in which one finds a rare case of justifying violence in the attempt to explain potential war crimes of King Duttagamani. By comparing Mahavamsa’s views with Pali canonical literature, the paper argues that both in theory and practice Theravada Buddhism does not profess violence.Asserting that violence cannot be justified under any circumstance, violence and its manifestations in Buddhist societies can be viewed as a deviation from the teachings of the Buddha.
topic Justifications of Violence
Theravada Buddhism
Morality of War
url http://socialaffairsjournal.com/Achive/Fall_2014/4_SAJ_1(1)Deegalle.pdf
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