Buddhism and the Perils of Advocacy

This article raises problems with the use of advocacy in Buddhist Studies, and critiques those who bring their Buddhist beliefs into the classroom and into their research. It argues that the foundations of the academic discipline (Religious Studies) within which Buddhist Studies is located are groun...

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Main Author: Ian Reader
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for the Study of Global Buddhism 2015-02-01
Series:Journal of Global Buddhism
Online Access:http://www.globalbuddhism.org/jgb/index.php/jgb/article/view/85
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author Ian Reader
author_facet Ian Reader
author_sort Ian Reader
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description This article raises problems with the use of advocacy in Buddhist Studies, and critiques those who bring their Buddhist beliefs into the classroom and into their research. It argues that the foundations of the academic discipline (Religious Studies) within which Buddhist Studies is located are grounded in the search for an objective, non-confessional approach to the study of religion, one that distinguishes Religious Studies from Theology, and that this perspective is what gives the field its integrity. It cites examples of the problems that occur in teaching and research when such objectivity is replaced by confessional approaches, and provides an example from another field (the study of new religious movements) in which immense problems have occurred because some scholars have become advocates rather than analysts, to warn of the problems that can arise when confessional approaches become a dominant field paradigm.
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spelling doaj.art-901c5f8aa5134c938e9f9b6a5ffd1b362022-12-22T04:34:23ZengSociety for the Study of Global BuddhismJournal of Global Buddhism1527-64572015-02-01908311286Buddhism and the Perils of AdvocacyIan Reader0University of ManchesterThis article raises problems with the use of advocacy in Buddhist Studies, and critiques those who bring their Buddhist beliefs into the classroom and into their research. It argues that the foundations of the academic discipline (Religious Studies) within which Buddhist Studies is located are grounded in the search for an objective, non-confessional approach to the study of religion, one that distinguishes Religious Studies from Theology, and that this perspective is what gives the field its integrity. It cites examples of the problems that occur in teaching and research when such objectivity is replaced by confessional approaches, and provides an example from another field (the study of new religious movements) in which immense problems have occurred because some scholars have become advocates rather than analysts, to warn of the problems that can arise when confessional approaches become a dominant field paradigm.http://www.globalbuddhism.org/jgb/index.php/jgb/article/view/85
spellingShingle Ian Reader
Buddhism and the Perils of Advocacy
Journal of Global Buddhism
title Buddhism and the Perils of Advocacy
title_full Buddhism and the Perils of Advocacy
title_fullStr Buddhism and the Perils of Advocacy
title_full_unstemmed Buddhism and the Perils of Advocacy
title_short Buddhism and the Perils of Advocacy
title_sort buddhism and the perils of advocacy
url http://www.globalbuddhism.org/jgb/index.php/jgb/article/view/85
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