Date: Friday, September 30, 2022
Time: 7:00-8:30 PM
Location: UBC | The Nest Performance Theatre
This event is hybrid, and can be attended in person or online via Zoom. However you choose to attend, please follow this Zoom Registration link to register. In person attendees will be asked to follow all current UBC pandemic health guidelines in response to COVID 19, such as masking indoors.
About this Event
Buddhism and ahiṃsā today: Buddhist ethical thought aims at a life of ahiṃsā, usually translated as nonviolence or non-harming. Like all Buddhist ethical categories, this is a way of experiencing oneself in the world with implications for motivation and action. Contemporary Engaged Buddhists, such as Thich Nhat Hanh, the Dalai Lama, and Sulak Sivaraksa, have emphasized the importance of structural violence in contemporary society and the danger of its implications in our ordinary lives. I will explore how to conceive structural violence, and ahiṃsā as response to it, from the standpoint of the bodhisattva path as articulated by Śāntideva in How to Lead an Awakened Life (Bodhicāryāvatāra).
About the Speaker – Professor Jay L. Garfield (Smith College and the Harvard Divinity School)
Jay L. Garfield chairs the Philosophy Department at Smith College and directs the Tibetan Studies in India program. He is also visiting professor of Buddhist philosophy at Harvard Divinity School, professor of philosophy at Melbourne University and adjunct professor of philosophy at the Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies. Academicinfluence.com has identified him as one of the 50 most influential philosophers in the world over the past decade.
This keynote is part of the academic workshop, Buddhist Ethics 3.0: In Memory of Michael Jerryson (1974-2021), an event held in collaboration with the Journal of Buddhist Ethics.
This event is free and open to the public, made possible by the generous support of The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation.
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