BUDDHIST WELL-BEING Christopher W. Gowans Fordham University (
[email protected]) Buddhism is a religion in some obvious respects, but many of its practices are animated to a surprising extent by a striking philosophical outlook. However, serious philosophical reflection on Buddhism by those trained in Western philosophy has a fairly short history, gaining momentum only in the past fifty years or so. This has produced some very impressive results, yet, I suspect, in many ways philosophical scholarship on Buddhism is probably still at an early stage of its development. Much remains to be done, especially in the area of moral philosophy.1 There are at least three kinds of questions that such scholarship might address, pertaining respectively to understanding, comparison and criticism. First, what is the proper philosophical elucidation of Buddhist ideas? Second, in what ways, if any, do these ideas relate to ideas in Western philosophy (contemporary as well as historical)? Finally, to what extent might these two domains—Buddhist philosophy and Western philosophy—learn from one another and challenge one another? That is, to what extent might they critically interact so as to advance our philosophical understanding?2 In this paper, I will outline some ways in which these questions might be answered with regard to the concept of well-being, one of the fundamental topics in both Buddhism and contemporary moral philosophy. My focus will be the Buddhism of the Pāli Canon and closely related early texts. There are three primary ways in which Buddhism is committed to an understanding of well-being. First, according to the doctrines of karma and rebirth, there is a sense of well-being in which a person’s well-being is proportionate to that person’s moral virtue.