(PREPRINT) Transitions in Transitivity

The Complexity of Effort, Effortlessness, and Agency in Tibetan Great Perfection Contemplative Practices

Authors

Keywords:

contemplation, Contemplative Studies, Contemplative Sciences, Tibetan Studies, Tibetan Buddhism, Dzokchen/Dzogchen/Great Perfection/Atiyoga, tantric meditation, effort, effortlessness

Abstract

This is a preprint article that has neither been reviewed nor copyedited yet. The revised and copyedited version will replace the preprint version if the article passes the peer review process. Otherwise, this article will be removed from the website. If you have comments on this paper, please contact the author at davidfrancisgermano@gmail.com.

The Seminal Heart (snying thig) variant of the Great Perfection (rdzogs chen) tradition in Tibet is marked by a complex array of contemplative practices that have also changed considerably over its fourteen century history dating. back to the eighth century. A central organizing principle, and a hallmark of their innovative character, is the shifting roles of volitional effort and loci of agency at play in each contemplative practice’s procedures, as well as in the manifest appearances, sensations, and dynamics that constitute the unfolding processes and experiences therein. In addition, subtle and dramatic shifts in transitivity—the directional transfer of energy and locus of agency amongst various agents and patients—can occur throughout any given practice, so understanding these questions of effort and agency requires close attention to the contemplative lexicon of elements and the grammar of contemplation, including moments when there are scripted shifts from procedural techniques to the unfolding logic of experience. This article will focus on the most important formative period of the tradition—from the eleventh through fourteenth centuries—and offer speculative thoughts about how these contemplative issues were crucial factors in the tradition’s dynamic changes over time.

Author Biography

  • David Germano

    David Germano teaches and researches Tibetan and Buddhist Studies at the University of Virginia, where he is a professor in the Department of Religious Studies as well as directs the Contemplative Sciences Center and the Tibet Center. He has lived for many years in Tibetan communities in Asia, where he has studied Buddhist philosophy and contemplation, and worked extensively on programs of community engagement and support, as well as participatory knowledge creation. Since 2011 he been exploring and pursuing educational reform that recenters educational institutions on the facilitation and support of the flourishing of students as whole individuals in the face of the current crisis of wellbeing amongst youth. He also is generating and guiding transdisciplinary research and design projects on past and future contemplative traditions as part of the Generative Contemplation Initiative.

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Published

2023-12-01 — Updated on 2024-01-04

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How to Cite

(PREPRINT) Transitions in Transitivity: The Complexity of Effort, Effortlessness, and Agency in Tibetan Great Perfection Contemplative Practices. (2024). Entangled Religions, 14(4). https://er.ceres.rub.de/index.php/ER/article/view/11176 (Original work published 2023)

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