East Asian Yogācāra
East Asian Yogācāra refers to the Mahayana Buddhist traditions in East Asia which developed out of the Indian Buddhist Yogācāra systems. In East Asian Buddhism, this school of Buddhist idealism was known as the "Consciousness-Only school".
The 4th-century brothers, Asaṅga and Vasubandhu, are considered the classic founders of Indian Yogacara school. The East Asian tradition developed through the work of numerous Buddhist thinkers working in Chinese. They include Bodhiruci, Ratnamati, Huiguang, Paramārtha, Jingying Huiyuan, Zhiyan, Xuanzang and his students Kuiji, Woncheuk and Dōshō.
The East Asian consciousness only school is traditionally seen as being divided into two main groups. There are the "Old Translation 舊譯 " or "Ancient Vijnaptimatra 唯識古學 " schools, which refers to the earliest traditions to develop in China prior to Xuanzang, primarily the Dilun and Shelun, which heavily blends buddha-nature thought with Yogācāra. The other branch is the "New Translation 新譯 " or "Contemporary Vijnaptimatra 唯識今學 " Schools, which refers specifically to the tradition of Xuanzang and tends to focus much more strictly on mainstream Yogācāra philosophy following the Indian master Dharmapala.
Names
In Chinese Buddhism, the overall Yogācāra tradition is mostly called Wéishí-zōng which is a translation of the Sanskrit Vijñānavādin. The consciousness-only view is the central philosophical tenet of the school which states that ontologically there are only vijñāna.Yogācāra may also be referred to as Yújiāxíng Pài, a direct translation of the Sanskrit term Yogācāra.
The term Fǎxiàng-zōng was first applied to a branch of Yogacara by the Huayan scholar Chengguan, who used it to characterize the teachings of the school of Xuanzang and the Cheng Wei Shi Lun as provisional, dealing with the characteristics of phenomena or dharmas. As such, this name was an outside term used by critics of the school, which eventually was adopted by Weishi nevertheless. Another lesser known name for the school is Yǒu Zōng. Yin Shun also introduced a threefold classification for Buddhist teachings which designates this school as Xūwàng Wéishí Xì.
In opposition to the "Dharma characteristics" view, the term Dharma nature school is used to refer to a form of Yogācāra which blends Yogācāra with buddha-nature thought, especially with the doctrines of texts like the Awakening of Faith. This term would include schools like Dilun, Shelun, Chan, and Huayan, who affirm basic Yogācāra principles like mind-only, while also promoting metaphysical views which are not strictly compatible with orthodox Yogācāra.
Characteristics
Like the Indian parent Yogācāra school, the East Asian Weishi tradition teaches that reality is only consciousness, and rejects the existence of mind-independent objects or matter. Instead, Weishi holds that all phenomena arise from the mind. In this tradition, deluded minds distort the ultimate truth, and project false appearances of independent subjects and objects.In keeping with Indian Yogācāra tradition, Weishi divides the mind into Eight Consciousnesses and the Four Aspects of Cognition, which produce what we view as reality. The analysis of the eighth, the ālayavijñana, or store-consciousness which is at the root of all experience, is a key feature of all forms of Weishi Buddhism. This root consciousness is also held to be the carrier of all karmic seeds. A disintct teaching of the Faxiang School is that of three kinds of cognitive objects innovated by Xuanzang 唯識三類境. Another central doctrinal schema for the Weishi traditions is the schema of the three natures.
The central canonical texts of Weishi Buddhism are the classic Indian sutras associated with Yogācāra, such as the Saṃdhinirmocana-sūtra and the Daśabhūmikasūtra, as well as the works associated with Maitreya, Asanga and Vasubandhu, including the Yogācārabhūmi-śāstra, Mahāyānasaṃgraha, Viṃśatikā, Triṃśikā, and the Xianyang shengjiao lun.
Besides these Indic works, the Cheng Weishi Lun compiled by Xuanzang is considered the central work of the tradition, which is generally studied alongside the three commentaries of Kuiji, Huizhao, and Zhizhou known as the Three Commentaries on Weishi 唯識三個疏.''
There are different sub-sects of the East Asian Weishi, including the early schools such as Dilun and Shelun, the school of Xuanzang, as well as Korean and Japanese branches of Weishi.
History in mainland Asia
Translations of Indian Yogācāra texts were first introduced to China in the early fifth century. Among these was Guṇabhadra's translation of the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra in four fascicles, which would also become important in the early history of Chan Buddhism. Another early set of translations where two texts by Dharmakṣema : the Bodhisattvabhūmi-sūtra, and the Bodhisattva Prātimokṣa. Soon following the first traditions of Chinese Yogacara formed, the Dilun and Shelun schools which flourished during the Northern and Southern Dynasties to the early Tang before being eclipsed by Xuanzang's new translation school.Old Translation Schools
The earliest Yogacara traditions were the Dilun and Shelun schools, which were based on Chinese translations of Indian Yogacara treatises. The Dilun and Shelun schools followed traditional Indian Yogacara teachings along with tathāgatagarbha teachings, and as such were really hybrids of Yogācāra and tathāgatagarbha. While these schools were eventually eclipsed by other Chinese Buddhist traditions, their ideas were preserved and developed by later thinkers, including the Korean monks Woncheuk and Wohnyo, and the patriarchs of the Huayan school like Zhiyan, who himself studied under Dilun and Shelun masters and Fazang.Dilun school
The Dilun or Daśabhūmikā school was a tradition that derived from the translators Bodhiruci and Ratnamati. Both translators worked on Vasubandhu's Shidijing lun, producing a translation during the Northern Wei.Bodhiruci and Ratnamati ended up disagreeing on how to interpret Yogacara doctrine and thus, this tradition eventually split into northern and southern schools. During the Northern and Southern Dynasties era this was the most popular Yogacara school. The northern school followed the interpretations and teachings of Bodhiruci while the southern school followed Ratnamati. Modern scholars argue that the influential treatise called the Awakening of Faith was written by someone in the northern Dilun tradition of Bodhiruci. Ratnamati also translated the Ratnagotravibhāga, an influential buddha-nature treatise.
According to Hans-Rudolf Kantor, one of the most important doctrinal differences and points of contention between the southern and northern Dilun schools was "the question of whether the ālaya-consciousness is constituted of both reality and purity, and is identical with the pure mind, or whether it comprises exclusively falsehood, and is a mind of defilements giving rise to the unreal world of sentient beings."
According to Daochong, a student of Bodhiruci and the main representative of the northern school, the storehouse consciousness is not ultimately real and buddha-nature is something that one acquires only after attaining Buddhahood. On the other hand, the southern school of Ratnamatiʼs student Huiguang held that the storehouse consciousness was real and synonymous with buddha-nature, which is immanent in all sentient beings like a jewel in a trash heap. Other important figures of the southern school were Huiguangʼs disciple Fashang, and Fashangʼs disciple Jingying Huiyuan. This school's doctrine was later passed on to the Huayan school via Zhiyan.
An important founding figure of the southern Dilun, Huiguang was the leading disciple of Ratnamati, who composed various commentaries, including: Commentary on the Ten Grounds Sutra, Commentary on the Flower Garland Sutra, Commentary on the Nirvana Sutra and Commentary on the Sutra of Queen Srimala.
[|Shelun school]
During the sixth century CE, the Indian monk and translator Paramārtha widely propagated Yogācāra teachings in China. His translations include the Saṃdhinirmocana Sūtra, the Madhyāntavibhāga-kārikā, the Triṃśikā-vijñaptimātratā, Dignāga's Ālambana-parīkṣā, the Mahāyānasaṃgraha and the Viniścayasaṃgrahaṇī. Paramārtha also taught widely on the principles of Consciousness Only, and developed a large following in southern China. Many monks and laypeople traveled long distances to hear his teachings, especially those on the Mahāyānasaṃgraha. This tradition was known as the Shelun school.The most distinctive teaching of this school was the doctrine of the "pure consciousness" or "immaculate consciousness". Paramārtha taught that there was a pure and permanent consciousness that is unaffected by suffering or mental afflictions, is not a basis for the defilements, but rather is a basis for the noble path. Thus, the immaculate consciousness is the purifying counteragent to all the defilements. According to Paramārtha, at the moment of enlightenment, one experiences a "transformation of the basis" which leads to the cessation of the storehouse consciousness, leaving only the immaculate consciousness. Some texts attributed to Paramārtha also state that the perfected nature is equivalent to the amalavijñāna. Furthermore, some sources attributed to Paramārtha also identify the immaculate consciousness with the "innate purity of the mind", which links the idea with the doctrine of Buddha nature.
Xuanzang's New Translation school
By the time of Xuanzang, Yogācāra teachings had already been propagated widely in China, but there were many conflicting interpretations among the different schools. At the age of 33, Xuanzang made a dangerous journey to India in order to study Buddhism there and to procure Buddhist texts for translation into Chinese. He sought to put an end to the various debates in Chinese consciousness-only Buddhism by obtaining all the key Indian sources and receiving direct instruction from Indian masters. Xuanzang's journey was later the subject of legend and eventually fictionalized as the classic Chinese novel Journey to the West, a major component of East Asian popular culture from Chinese opera to Japanese television.Xuanzang spent over ten years in India traveling and studying under various Buddhist masters. These masters included Śīlabhadra, the abbot of the Nālandā Mahāvihāra, who was then 106 years old. Xuanzang was tutored in the Yogācāra teachings by Śīlabhadra for several years at Nālandā. Upon his return from India, Xuanzang brought with him a wagon-load of Buddhist texts, including important Yogācāra works such as the Yogācārabhūmi-śastra. In total, Xuanzang had procured 657 Buddhist texts from India. Upon his return to China, he was given government support and many assistants for the purpose of translating these texts into Chinese.
As an important contribution to East Asian Yogācāra, Xuanzang composed the treatise Cheng Weishi Lun, or "Discourse on the Establishment of Consciousness Only." This work is framed around Vasubandhu's Triṃśikā-vijñaptimātratā but it draws on numerous other sources and Indian commentaries to Vasubandhu's verses to create a doctrinal summa of Indian consciousness only thought. This work was composed at the behest of Xuanzang's disciple Kuiji, and became a central representation of East Asian Yogācāra. Xuanzang also promoted devotional meditative practices toward Maitreya Bodhisattva.
Xuanzang's disciple Kuiji wrote a number of important commentaries on the Yogācāra texts and further developed the influence of this doctrine in China, and was recognized as the second ancestor of the school, who closely guarded the teachings of Xuanzang from deviation. His Cheng weishi lun shuji is a particularly important text for the Weishi school.
After Kuiji, the second patriarch of the Weishi school was Hui Zhao. According to A.C. Muller "Hui Zhao 惠沼, the second patriarch, and Zhi Zhou 智周, the third patriarch, wrote commentaries on the Fayuan yulin chang, the Lotus Sūtra, and the Madhyāntavibhāga; they also wrote treatises on Buddhist logic and commentaries on the Cheng weishi lun." Four generations after Xuanzang, the transmission of the school is considered to have ceased with the last known member of the lineage being Yizhong
Another important figure is Yijing 義淨, who traveled to India in imitation of Xuanzang. He translated several works of Vinaya, as well as Yogācāra commentaries by Dharmapāla on Dignāga's Ālambana-parīkṣā and on Vasubandhu's Viṃśikā.
Wŏnch'ŭk's school and Korean Yogācāra
While the lineage of Kuiji and Hui Zhao was traditionally considered the "orthodox" tradition of Xuanzang's school, there were also other lineages of this tradition which differed in their interpretations from Kuiji's sect. Perhaps the most influential heterodox group was a group of Yogācāra scholars from the Korean Silla kingdom, mainly: Wŏnch'ŭk, Tojŭng, and Taehyŏn.Wŏnch'ŭk was a Korean student of Xuanzang as well as a disciple of the Shelun master Fachang. He composed various texts, including Haesimmilgyǔng so, an influential commentary to the Saṃdhinirmocanasūtra which was even translated to Tibetan and is known as the "Great Chinese Commentary" to Tibetans. This work later influenced Tibetan scholars like Tsongkhapa.
Wŏnch'ŭk's interpretations often differ from that of the school of Xuanzang and instead promotes ideas closer to those of the Shelun school, such as the doctrine of the "immaculate consciousness" and the idea that the ālayavijñāna was essentially pure. Due to this, Wŏnch'ŭk's work was criticized by the disciples of Kuiji. Wŏnch'ŭk's tradition came to be known as the Ximing tradition, and it was contrasted with Kuiji's tradition, also called the Ci'en tradition after Kuiji's monastery at Da Ci'ensi.
While in China, Wŏnch'ŭk took as a disciple a Korean-born monk named Tojŭng, who travelled to Silla in 692 and propounded and propagated Woncheuk's exegetical tradition there where it flourished. In Korea, these Beopsang teachings did not endure long as a distinct school, but its teachings were frequently included in later schools of thought and also studied by Japanese Yogācāra scholars.
Another influential figure in Korean Yogācāra is Wŏnhyo. While he usually seen as a Huayan scholar, he also wrote many works on Yogācāra and according to Charles Muller "if we look at Wŏnhyo's oeuvre as a whole, along with accounts of his life, his involvement in Yogācāra studies looms large, and in fact, in terms of sheer quantity, forms the largest portion of his work." His work was influential on later Chinese figures like Fazang.
Dharma characteristics vs Dharma nature debates
With the rise of other Sinitic Mahayana schools to prominence, like Huayan and Chan, the Yogacara tradition of Xuanzang came under some doctrinal criticism. Sinitic schools like Huayan were influenced by the buddha-nature and ekayana teachings, especially the doctrines of the Awakening of Faith. They were thus connected with the teachings of the Dilun and Shelun schools. As such, their doctrines differed in significant ways from that of the school of Xuanzang.The scholars of the Huayan school like Fazang, Chengguan, and Zongmi, critiqued the school of Xuanzang, which they termed "Faxiang-zong", on various points. A key contention was that Xuanzang's school failed to understand the true Dharma-nature, even if they did understand the nature of dharmas. According to Dan Lusthaus, "This distinction became so important, that every Buddhist school originating in East Asia, including all forms of Sinitic Mahayana, viz. Tiantai, Hua-yen, Ch'an, and Pure Land, came to be considered Dharma-nature schools."
The Huayan school sees the Dharma nature as dynamic and responding to conditions, it also sees the Dharma nature as the basis and source of samsara and nirvana. As such, Huayan scholars like Zongmi critiqued the view of the Xuanzang "Faxiang" school which held that the Dharma nature was "totally inert" and "unchanging" in favor of the view found in the Awakening of Faith which sees the one mind as having both an unconditioned and a conditioned aspect. This conditioned aspect of the dharma nature is an active and dynamic aspect out of which all pure and impure dharmas arise. As Imre Hamar explains:
The issue at stake is the relationship between the Absolute and phenomena. Is the tathata, the Absolute, dependent arising, or is it immovable? Does the Absolute have anything to do with the phenomenal world? According to the interpretation of the final teaching of Mahayana, the Absolute and phenomena can be described with the 'water and wave' metaphor. Due to the wind of ignorance, waves of phenomena rise and fall, yet they are not different in essence from the water of the Absolute. In contrast with this explanation, the elementary teaching of Mahayana can be presented by the metaphor of 'house and ground'. The ground supports the house but is different from it.Another key distinction and point of debate was the nature of the alayavijñana. For Xuanzang's school, the alayavijñana is a defiled consciousness, while the so-called "Dharma-nature" position is that the alaya has a pure untainted aspect as well as an impure aspect.
The schools which were more aligned with the "Dharma-nature" position also affirmed the ultimate truth of the one vehicle, while the Xuanzang school affirms the difference among the three vehicles. They also reject Xuanzang's view that states that there is a certain class of very deluded beings called icchantikas who can never become Buddhas. The Xuanzang school also maintained the Five Natures Doctrine which was seen as provisional and as being superseded by the one vehicle teaching by schools like Huayan and Tiantai.
Decline
After the fourth patriarch, the influence of the school of Xuanzang declined, though it continued to be studied at certain key centers, such as Chang'an, Mt. Wutai, Zhendingfu (now) Shijiazhuang), and Hangzhou. The Weishi school survived into the Song and Yuan dynasties, but as a minor school with little influence. However its texts have remained important sources for the study of Yogācāra thought down to today.The Xuanzang school's influence declined due to competition with other Chinese Buddhist traditions such as Tiantai, Huayan, Chan and Pure Land Buddhism. Nevertheless, classic Yogācāra philosophy continued to exert an influence, and Chinese Buddhists of other schools relied on its teachings to enrich their own intellectual traditions.
An important later figure associated with Yogācāra studies was the syncretic Chan scholar monk Yongming Yanshou, who wrote the Record of the Source Mirror that extensively discusses Yogācāra.
Other Yogācāra teachings remained popular in Chinese Buddhism, such as devotion to the bodhisattva Maitreya. Various later Chinese figures promoted Maitreya devotion as a Pure Land practice and as a way to receive teachings in visions. Hanshan Deqing was one figure who describes a vision of Maitreya.
Ming Dynasty Yogacara Revival
By the Ming dynasty, through the turbulence of Yuan dynasty and its fall, Yogacara studies had entered an unprecedented period of stagnation. Whilst Xuanzang's lineage had long since ceased to be in the Tang dynasty, the texts and commentaries of his disciples were still in circulation until sometime in the Yuan dynasty. But by the time Ming scholars turned their focus to Yogacara, even these commentaries had been lost and Yogacara came to be seen as an extinct discipline.Two Generations Later
After Putai, another independent source of the Ming, Yogacara studies was Gaoyuan Mingyu 高原明昱, whose commentary on the Cheng Weishi Lun finished in 1611 marked a turning point in history. Prior to this, scholars were limited to collating texts or commenting on short, introductory works like the Verses on the Eight Consciousnesses and the Hundred Dharmas, but his was the first commentary on the central text of the Chinese Yogacara school, that opened the tide for a wave of new commentaries on the work. Mingyu's lineage continues to this day and is referred to as the Huayan-Yogacara combined lineage, with prominent monks such as Haiyun Jimeng 海云继梦.Mingyu, like Putai was a Huayan master, but based in Sichuan, from a distinct Huayan lineage to that of Putai whose tradition centred around Beijing. Despite this both scholars share similar mystical stories on the origin of their knowledge of Yogacara. Putai is said to have been travelling through a storm came upon the home of an old couple to avoid the rain. Upon listening to their conversation, he realised they were discussing the tenets of Yogacara, so he asked to study under them. Similarly Mingyu was described having encountered a mysterious monk at a site in Mount Zhongnan associated with Kuiji who instructed him on the Cheng Weishi Lun. While Putai's knowledge has a tracable origin, no earlier inspiration can be identified for Mingyu.
A New Curriculum
Hongen whilst not producing any commentaries of his own, lectured extensively on Yogacara and collated together and published a group of eight texts named the "Eight Essentials of the School of Characteristics", which came to be the standard curriculum until the Republican Era, and were described as the "stairway" to understanding Yogacara. The eight texts included are:- Treatise on the Hundred Dharmas 百法明門論 Author: Vasubandhu ; Translator: Xuanzang
- Thirty Verses on Consciousness-Only 唯識三十論 Author: Vasubandhu ; Translator: Xuanzang
- Treatise on the Object-Support Condition 觀所緣緣論 Sanskrit: Ālambanaparīkṣā Author: Dignāga ; Translator: Xuanzang
- Explanation of the Six Connectives and Separables 六離合釋 Author and translate unknown
- Commentary on the Ālambanaparīkṣā 觀所緣緣論釋 Commentary by Dharmapāla ; Translator: Yijing
- Nyāyapraveśa 因明入正理論 Author: Śaṅkarasvāmin ; Translator: Xuanzang
- The Three-Part Inference 三支比量 *
- Verses on the Structure of the Eight Consciousnesses 八識規矩頌 ''''
Movement's Peak
Hongen's students continued his study of Yogacara, with Yiyu Tongrun 一雨通潤, penning the second commentary on the Cheng Weishi Lun following Mingyu also in 1611 but published in the following year.Wang Kentang's burgeoning interest in Yogacara led him to study with several students of Hongen and also Mingyu, bringing together two disparate traditions. And it is through consulting the commentaries of Mingyu and Tongrun, that he produced the third commentary on the Cheng Weishi Lun published in 1613. Wang's text is often seen as the pinnacle of Ming commentaries, building on previous works and using careful evidential methods through citing all Indic and Chinese sources available producing a voluminous and well researched work.
Following Mingyu, Tongrun, and Wang there came to be another wave of commentaries on the Cheng Weishilun, the most influential being Oyui Zhixu's 蕅益智旭 Cheng Weishi Lun Guanxin Fayao 观心法要, a unique work that employs Tiantai exegetical methods to expound Yogacara. Other works of this period include those of Zhuhong's and Mingyu's disciples.
One scholar categorises commentaries on the Cheng Weishi Lun into two periods:
1. Investigatory.
2. Internalisation.
Mingyu, Tongru, and Wang represent the first stage citing extensively of surviving Indic and Chinese Yogacara texts to reconstruct an extinct commentarial tradition. Later works, like those by Ouyi, are building on the basis of this reconstructed tradition, and aim not to as accurately reconstruct an ancient tradition, but rather make accessible what was now a well researched discipline. These later commentaries are marked by a significantly reduced number of citations and shorter lengths.
The Yogacara fervour ended after the early Qing period, by which time up to 16 commentaries had been produced on the Cheng Weishi Lun alone, exceeding even the output during the Tang dynasty. Although, few new works were published in the Qing, the study of Yogacara continued, eventually culminating in a second revival in the Republican era with the retrieval of lost Tang Dynasty commentaries from Japan and new translations from Sanskrit and Tibetan.
Transmission to Japan
The revived interest in Yogacara in the Ming dynasty led to the publication of many new commentaries on the subject, which were then exported in Japan both as individual texts, as well as part of the new Jiaxing Canon that incorporated newly authored texts in the Ming. We find based on records of imported books that various works, most importantly those of Mingyu and Ouyi, were imported to Tokugawa Japan.These new publications found a new life in Japan, where they became the subject of much interest and debate, currently 16 individual Japanese commentaries on the Yogacara texts of Mingyu and Zhixu, as well as two on the Hundred Dharmas edited by Putai can be identified. Mingyu's commentary on the Verses of the Eight Consciousnesses received the most attention, having eight sub-commentaries written on it alone. These Japanese commentaries were primarily located in Tendai temples, implying that Tendai monks had a great deal of interest on these Ming writings.
However, the reception of the Ming dynasty masters was not universally positive. Native Yogacara experts such as Kiben 基辨 of the Hosso-Shu and Kaidō 快道 of the Shingon-Shu were extremely critical of Zhixu and Mingyu, describing their commentaries as contributing nothing more than "extra words" onto the base text. The crux of their criticism originates from the Ming author's lack of Tang dynasty sources and so failed to correctly interpret the texts, mis-identified arguments and opponents, and were unable to move beyond the surface meaning.
Even these critics were implicitly influenced by the Ming revival as there was a revitalised interest in commenting on Yogacara texts, especially ones that had received minimal attention in the past, such as Dignāga's Alambana-parīkṣā an essential text to the Ming Yogacara scholars.
Modern Revitalisation
The 20th century saw a flourishing of Weishi studies in China. Important figures in this revival include Yang Wenhui, Taixu, Liang Shuming, Ouyang Jingwu, Wang Xiaoxu, and Lu Cheng. Weishi studies was also revived among Japanese philosophers like Inoue Enryō.Modern Chinese thinkers of the Weishi studies revival also discussed Western philosophy and modern science in terms of Yogacara thought.
In his 1929 book on the history of Chinese Buddhism, Jiang Weiqiao wrote:
Ouyang Jian founded the Chinese Institute of Inner Studies, which provided education in Yogācāra teachings and the Prajñāparamita sūtras, given to both monastics and laypeople. Many modern Ccommentariesist scholars are second-generation descendants of this school or have been influenced by it indirectly.
New Confucian thinkers also participated in the revival of Weishi studies. New Confucians like Xiong Shili, Ma Yifu, Tang Junyi and Mou Zongsan, were influenced by the philosophy of Indian Yogācāra philosophy, and by the thought of the Awakening of Faith, though their work also critiqued and modified Weishi philosophy in various ways.
The work of Xiong Shili was particularly influential in the establishment of what is now called New Confucianism. His A New Treatise on Vijñaptimātra draws on Yogacara and Confucian thought to construct a new philosophical system.
History in Japan
Early period
The Consciousness-Only teachings were transmitted to Japan as "Hossō-shū", and they made considerable impact. There were various key figures who established early Hossō in Japan. One of them was Dōshō 道昭, a student of Xuanzang from 653 to 660. Dōshō and his students Gyōki and Dōga followed the "orthodox" texts and teachings of Xuanzang's school and transmitted these to Japan at Gangōji Temple. Other important figures who also studied under Xuanzang were Chitsu and Chitatsu. Together with Dōshō they defended the orthodox interpretations of Kuiji.Another line of transmission was that of Chihō, Chiran, and Chiyu, as well as the later figures Gien / Giin and Genbō. This tradition is known as the "Northern Temple transmission" since the lineage came to be based at Kōfuku-ji. This tradition was known to follow the teachings of the school of the Korean monk Wŏnch'ŭk in contrast to the "southern temple" tradition of Gangōji.
The northern and southern temple traditions debated each other for centuries over their varying interpretations. These debates can be found in various later Hossō doctrinal sources, including: Record of the Light of the Lamp of Hossō by Zen'an, Summary of the School of the Weishi lun by Ryōsan 良算 and Chapters Providing a Brief Study of the Mahāyāna Yogācāra by Gomyō.
Hossō was an influential school during the Heian period. Hossō scholars also frequently debated with other emerging schools of Japanese Buddhism at the time. Both the founder of Shingon, Kūkai, and the founder of Tendai, Saichō, exchanged letters of debate with Hossō scholar Tokuitsu. Saichō condemned the school for not accepting the one vehicle teaching of the Lotus Sutra, which was seen as a provisional teaching in Hossō. Kukai, who became an influential figure at Nara, was more conciliatory with Hossō, and maintained amicable relations with the tradition. After Kukai, Shingon scholar monks often studied and commented on Hossō sources, while Hossō monks adopted Shingon ritual practices. However, over time, the universalist doctrine of the Tendai school won out and the Hossō position became a marginal view.
Kamakura revival and modernity
The tumultuous Kamakura period, saw a revival and reform of Hossō school teachings, which was led by figures like Jōkei and Ryōhen. The reformed doctrines can be found in key sources like Jō yuishiki ron dōgaku shō, Jōkei's Hossōshū shoshin ryakuō and Ryōhen's Kanjin kakumushō. A key element of Jōkei's teachings is the idea that even though the five classes of beings and the one vehicle teaching are relatively true, they are not ultimately so. He also affirms that even icchantikas can attain enlightenment, since they will never be abandoned by the Buddhas and their compassionate power.In a similar fashion, Ryōhen writes:
Thus it should be remembered that in our school the doctrine of one vehicle and the doctrine of five groups of sentient beings are regarded as being equally true, for the doctrine of one vehicle is formulated from the standpoint that recognizes the unchangeable quality of the underlying substance of dharrnas, whereas the doctrine of the five groups of sentient beings has its roots in the distinctiveness of conditioned phenomena.... Thus, since our standpoint is that the relationship between the absolute and conditioned phenomena is one of "neither identity nor difference," both the concept of one vehicle as well as the concept of five groups of sentient beings are equally valid.During the Kamakura, several new Buddhist schools were founded, with the various Pure Land sects derived from Hōnen becoming especially popular. As a novice monk, Hōnen had studied with Hossō scholars, but he later debated them while promoting his Pure land path. Jōkei was among Hōnen's toughest critics.
Jōkei is also known for popularizing the devotional aspects of Hossō, and for working to make it accessible to a wider audience. Jōkei promoted devotion to various figures, like Shakyamuni, Kannon, Jizo, and Maitreya, as well as numerous practices, like various nembutsu seeking birth in a pure land, dharani, precepts, liturgy, rituals, lectures, worship of relics, etc. His pluralist and eclectic teachings thus offer a contrast to the more exclusive Kamakura schools who focused on one Buddha or one practice. For Jōkei, difference and diversity matters and people are not all the same, and thus it is not true that one practice or one Buddha is suitable for everyone. However, like the Pure Land schools, Jōkei stressed the importance of relying on the "other power" and of birth in a pure land, as well as practices that were accessible to less elite practitioners.
Jōkei is also a leading figure in the efforts to revive monastic discipline at places like Tōshōdai-ji, Kōfuku-ji and counted other notable monks among his disciples, including Eison, who founded the Shingon Risshu sect.
Although a relatively small Hossō sect exists in Japan to this day, its influence diminished due to competition from newer Japanese Buddhist schools like Zen and Pure Land. During the Meiji period, as tourism became more common, the Hossō sect was the owner of several famous temples, notably Hōryū-ji and Kiyomizu-dera. However, as the Hossō sect had ceased Buddhist study centuries prior, the head priests were not content with giving part of their tourism income to the sect's organization. Following the end of World War II, the owners of these popular temples broke away from the Hossō sect, in 1950 and 1965, respectively. The sect still maintains Kōfuku-ji and Yakushi-ji.