Ebook
While process philosophers and theologians have written numerous essays on Buddhist-Christian dialogue, few have sought to expand the current Buddhist-Christian dialogue into a "trilogue" by bringing the natural sciences into the discussion as a third partner. This was the topic of Paul O. Ingram's previous book, Buddhist-Christian Dialogue in an Age of Science. The thesis of the present work is that Buddhist-Christian dialogue in all three of its forms--conceptual, social engagement, and interior--are interdependent processes of creative transformation. Ingram appropriates the categories of Whitehead's process metaphysics as a means of clarifying how dialogue is now mutually and creatively transforming both Buddhism and Christianity.
"The Process of Buddhist-Christian Dialogue is many
things: Reflections on the historical process of Buddhist-Christian
dialogue, the author's own intellectual process of evolving
dialogue, and the vision of dialogue informed by a Whiteheadian
view of process. The multifaceted complexity and richness of the
work, however, issues from Paul Ingram's wholehearted engagement
with dialogue, not just as a scholar, but as a person. In plumbing
the very depths of his own faith, he has been inexorably impelled
to examine his life within the larger scope of human and cosmic
diversity, to reach beyond any sort of dogmatically predefined
boundaries. He is a scholar of Japanese Pure Land thought, East
Asian Buddhism, and religion and science, but it is here in The
Process of Buddhist-Christian Dialogue that he truly reveals
the deep hues of his kaleidoscopic lifework."
--Mark Unno, University of Oregon
"Ingram offers an insightful, well-structured, and panoramic view
of the field of Buddhist-Christian studies, mapping out the
conceptual, socially-engaged, and interior dimensions of the
dialogue that continue to enrich and expand the horizons of both
traditions."
--Ruben L. F. Habito, Perkins School of Theology, Southern
Methodist University
Paul O. Ingram is Professor of Religion Emeritus at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. He is the author of Buddhist-Christian Dialogue in an Age of Science, Wrestling with God, and Wrestling with the Ox: A Theology of Religious Experience.