英文摘要 |
the process of“sinification”would have an origin in the fact that what entered China as Buddhist ideas were not made in India. The sustainable development of Buddhism in China hardly has any relationship with the Indian tradition. And the Chinese influences on Buddhism are as obvious and impressive as Buddhism affected Chinese civilization. The word“sinificationth”us provides the researchers a very useful conceptual instrument to capture the main part of the Buddhist movement, from the Taoist tendency to the Chan school where Chinese Buddhism establishes its autonomy. The problem which follows is that the birth of the “sinification”, treated as a concept, remains all the more vague when this term becomes more productive. As we shall observe, in the frequent uses of this term, there is not a will to know its early designer or representative. The task of this article is to trace the formation of this concept and understand its implication. It asks:Who is capable of elaborating this concept?A scholar that studies the history of Chinese philosophy and that of Chinese Buddhism, Hu Shih, in particular, with regards to his studies on the Chan School, is among others a possible candidate for taking on snification as a concept. This identification implies simultaneously another question: what does Hu intend to express in this study?Against conventional understanding of Hu's work, the problem of his study is not characterized by his antireligious mentality, but rather lies in his conception of Buddhism in three stages, the history of Chan, the Chinese Renaissance and the as “Indianization of China” Distinguishing essentially the Chinese school of Buddhism from whatis Indian, Hu's study tells us a possible story of how the idea of“sinification”was first conceived. |