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Edward Conze

Edward Conze, born Eberhard Julius Dietrich Conze (1904–1979) was a scholar of Marxism and Buddhism, known primarily for his commentaries and translations of the Prajñāpāramitā literature.

Edward Conze

Biography

Conze's parents, Dr. Ernst Conze (1872–1935) and Adele Louise Charlotte Köttgen (1882–1962), both came from families involved in the textile industry in the region of Langenberg, Germany. Ernst had a doctorate in Law and served in the Foreign Office and later as a judge.[1] Conze was born in London while his father was Vice Consul[2] and thus entitled to British citizenship.

Conze studied in Tübingen, Heidelberg, Kiel, Cologne and Hamburg. In 1928 he published his dissertation, Der Begriff der Metaphysik bei Franciscu Suarez, and was awarded a doctorate in philosophy from Cologne University.[3] He did post-graduate work at several German universities and in 1932 he published Der Satz vom Widerspruch (The Principle of Contradiction) which he considered his master work.[4] Because it was a Marxist work on the theory of dialectical materialism it attracted hostile attention from the Nazis and most copies were publicly burnt in a campaign conducted by the German Student Union in May 1933.[5] In the early 1930s Conze associated with and helped to organize activities for the Communist Party of Germany. When the Nazis came to power in 1933, he fled to Britain.[6][2]

In England, Conze taught German, philosophy, and psychology at evening classes, and later lectured on Buddhism and Prajñāpāramitā at various universities. He continued as a socialist political activist, writing several pamphlets.[6] He co-authored two books with Ellen Wilkinson, an ex-communist MP: Why Fascism (1934) and Why War?: a handbook for those who will take part in the Second World War (1935). He worked with Cedar and Eden Paul on the revised ninth edition of the book An Outline of Psychology, published by the National Council of Labour Colleges in 1938. During this period he made the acquaintance of Har Dayal, whose book The Bodhisattva Doctrines in Buddhist Sanskrit Literature stimulated his interest in Buddhism. Har Dayal had also been active politically active in the Industrial Workers of the World and studying Marxism. Conze abandoned political activism in 1939.

A midlife crisis in 1941 saw him adopt Buddhism as his religion, having previously been influenced by Theosophy and astrology. He spent a brief period in the New Forest pursuing meditation and an ascetic lifestyle (during which he developed scurvy). At the end of this period he moved to Oxford where he began to work on Sanskrit texts from the Prajñāpāramitā tradition. He continued to work on these texts for the rest of his life.[6]

Conze was married twice: to Dorothea Finkelstein and to Muriel Green. He had one daughter with Dorothea.

In 1979 Conze self-published two volumes of memoirs entitled Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic. Conze produced a third volume which contained material considered to be too inflammatory or libelous to publish while the subjects were alive.[7][8] No copy of the third volume is known to exist. The Memoirs are the principal sources for Conze's biography and reveal much about his personal life and attitudes.

Scholarship

Conze was educated in several German Universities and showed a propensity for languages. He claimed that by twenty-four, he knew fourteen languages.[9]

Conze's first major published work was on the theory of dialectical materialism. This continues to receive attention, with his book The Principle of Contradiction being reprinted in 2016.[10]

Following a mid-life crisis Conze turned to Buddhism and was particularly influenced by D. T. Suzuki. He made his name for his editions and translations of Sanskrit texts of the Buddhist Prajñāpāramitā literature. He published translations of all the principal texts of the genre, including the Aṣṭasāhasrikā (8000 Line), Ratnaguṇasamcayagāthā, Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikā (25,000 Line), Vajracchedikā, and Prajñāpāramitāhṛdaya. All of these show the explicit influence of Suzuki's Theosophy infused Zen Buddhism.[11] However, the only permanent academic post he was offered had to be turned down because US immigration officials declined him a work permit on the basis of his past as a Communist.

A glance at a complete bibliography of Conze's oeuvre confirms that he was a man of industry and focus. His contribution to the field of Buddhist Studies, particularly of the Prajñāpāramitā literature, has had a major influence on subsequent generations.

Legacy

Edward Conze was and continues to be a polarizing figure. As the great Indologist Gerald James Larson said in his review of The Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic, "He was denied a permanent academic position throughout his life, even though his scholarly competence and productivity easily matched and frequently surpassed most of his contemporaries. [...] He treasured the Buddhist notions of anātman, the practice of quiet meditation and the perfection of wisdom, yet he was continually embroiled in personal squabbles in which he was capable of behaviour that was anything but selfless, reflective or wise. He valued authentic learning, serious scholarship and the exchange of ideas, yet he could sit for hours casting horoscopes, reading palms and expostulating with the ancient mysteries."[12]

In his essay Great Buddhists of the Twentieth Century (Windhorse Publications: 1996), controversial British writer and teacher of Buddhism, and personal friend of Conze's, Sangharakshita writes that "Dr. Conze was a complex figure, and it is not easy to assess his overall significance.... He was a self-confessed élitist, which is usually something people are ashamed of nowadays, but he wasn’t ashamed of it at all.... Nor did he approve of either democracy or feminism, which makes him a veritable ogre of ‘political incorrectness’." Nevertheless, Sangharakshita summarizes Conze's legacy as a scholar of Buddhism as follows:

Dr Conze was one of the great Buddhist translators, comparable with the indefatigable Chinese translators Kumarajiva and Hsuan-tsang of the fifth and seventh centuries respectively. It is especially significant, I think, that as a scholar of Buddhism he also tried to practise it, especially meditation. This was very unusual at the time he started his work, and he was regarded then – in the forties and fifties – as being something of an eccentric. Scholars were not supposed to have any personal involvement in their subject. They were supposed to be ‘objective’. So he was a forerunner of a whole new breed of Western scholars in Buddhism who are actually practising Buddhists.[13]

Ji Yun, Librarian of the Buddhist College of Singapore, describes Conze's legacy as follows:

Even to this day, Edward Conze (1904-1979) the German British scholar has to be regarded, not as one of many, but as the most important researcher on Prajñāpāramitā literature. This genius of Buddhist linguist [sic.] and philologist devoted his whole life to the collation, translation and research of Prajñāpāramitā literature in Sanskrit, Tibetan and Chinese – a language relatively neglected by European scholars before him. Although the research of this prolific writer covers well beyond the Prajñāpāramitā category, his works dedicated solely to this, according to an incomplete count by the Japanese scholar Yuyama Akira 汤山明, include 16 books and 46 articles.... In the history of Prajñāpāramitā research Conze can be regarded as a formidable scholar with no comparison, suprpassing [sic.] all past and perhaps even future researchers in his achievement.[14]

However, while religieux continue to idolize Conze, his work has attracted much criticism from within academia. Greg Schopen wrote: "Conze's notes to his edition reproduce all the errors in Chakravarti's edition, and there are a number of cases in which Conze's notations in regard to the Gilgit text are wrong or misleading."[15]

Jonathan Silk has described his edition of the Heart Sutra as "chaotic".[16] His Heart Sutra edition was subsequently shown to contain a number of mistakes.[17]

Conze's translation of the Large Prajñāpāramitā Sutra was met with mixed reviews, though as Schopen concluded in his review, “there is both much to criticized and much to be praised” and that “a review of this kind tends to settle rather heavily on the former.” [18] In his now infamous article, Buddhist Hybrid English: Some Notes on Philology and Hermeneutics for Buddhologists,[19] Paul Griffiths singled out Conze’s Large Sutra translation, to illustrate what he meant by "Buddhist Hybrid English", saying, "Dr. Conze's translation bears only the most tenuous relationship to the English language in terms of syntax, and is full of unexplained technical terminology" (1981). However, Griffith is also making a broader point: "I chose this example not because Dr. Conze's translations are worse than anyone else's; in fact they are better than most. Rather, it illustrates with a concrete example the kind of gibberish that is all too often produced by the Buddhological community in the sacred name of translation" (1981: 30). Griffith's entertaining article is, however, largely rhetorical.  After conceding that Conze understands these texts "better than anyone," he then faults Conze for his decision to translate them in the first place rather than telling us what they say; though this was a task which Conze continued to perform alongside his tireless translation activities, as his many books and articles clearly attest.  Moreover, pioneer translators of Buddhist texts historically have often been said to produce “translationese” [20] or what has been called "Buddhist Hybrid Sinitic" or "Buddhist Hybrid Chinese" [21] in their quest to produce reliable translations that remain true to their source language.

Contemporaries such as Jan Willem de Jong[22] and Edward Bastian,[23] lauded Conze’s scholarly abilities. De Jong emphasized Conze’s work as translator of the Prajñāpāramitā as his most enduring legacy, while the influential British religious studies scholar Trevor Ling called Conze’s “lucid exposition of Buddhist ideas…unrivalled.” [24] Even Alex Wayman, Conze’s sometimes sparring partner, expressed his appreciation both for Conze’s translations and his essays elucidating the Mahayana, and especially the relationship between Madhyamika and Prajñāpāramitā thought.[25] Lewis Lancaster, one of Conze's earliest American students who studied with him at the University of Wisconsin in 1963, along with Luis Gómez, who met Conze when they were both teaching at the University of Washington in 1967, edited Conze's Festschrift, Prajñāpāramitā and Related Systems: Studies in Honor of Edward Conze[26]

In reflections on a life in Buddhist Studies, retiring professor Charles Prebish said "Edward Conze, Leon Hurvitz, Alex Wayman, and a few others, were amongst the meanest individuals in academe [sic]. While they were utterly brilliant scholars, they seemed to take real delight in humiliating students rather than encouraging them."[27] Conze's legacy does not include a host of scholars and students continuing to work on the Prajñāpāramitā texts. On the contrary only a handful of scholars now work on this literature and much of their output is published exclusively in Japanese.

And yet, scholars working in Buddhist studies and on the Prajñāpāramitā literature in the decades following Conze’s death continue to cite him admiringly. While not hesitating to correct his work in light of further research, Jan Nattier refers to him as “the great pioneer of Prajñāpāramitā studies whose work has contributed so much to the understanding of this literature in the West.” [28]

Conze’s work is extensively cited in the Brill’s Encyclopedia of Buddhism article on “Prajñāpāramitā Sūtras” as indispensable for the study of this genre. The author, Stefano Zacchetti, while by no means uncritical, states that “Conze’s work represents a considerable achievement and provides a convenient introduction to this immense literature.” [29]

See also

Prajnaparamita

Buddhism and Gnosticism

Similarities between Pyrrhonism and Buddhism

Selected bibliography

For a complete bibliography of Conze's works see the website, Conze Memorial http://www.conze.elbrecht.com/

  • 1932. Der Satz vom Widerspruch. Hamburg, 1932.
  • 1951. Buddhism: Its Essence and Development.
  • 1956. Buddhist meditation. London: Ethical & Religious Classics of East & West.
  • 1958. Buddhist Wisdom Books: The Diamond Sutra and the Heart Sutra. George Allen & Unwin. Second edition 1976.
  • 1959. Buddhist Scriptures. Haremondsworth: Penguin Classics.
  • 1960. The Prajñāpāramitā Literature. Mouton. Second Edition: [Bibliographica Philogica Buddhica Series Maior I] The Reiyukai Library: 1978
  • 1967. Materials for a Dictionary of the Prajñāpāramitā Literature. Tokyo, Suzuki Research Foundation.
  • 1973. The Large Sutra of Perfect Wisdom. University of California Press.
  • 1973. The Perfection of Wisdom in Eight Thousand Lines and its Verse Summary. San Francisco: City Lights, 2006.
  • 1973. Perfect Wisdom: The Short Prajñāpāramitā Texts. Buddhist Publishing Group.
  • 1975. Further Buddhist Studies: Selected Essays. Oxford, Bruno Cassirer

Notes

  1. ^ Heine 2016; Langenberger Kulturlexikon.
  2. ^ a b Humphreys 1980, p. 147
  3. ^ de Jong 1980, p. 143
  4. ^ Conze 1979
  5. ^ Heine 2016, xiv
  6. ^ a b c Jackson 1981, pp. 103-104
  7. ^ Jackson 1981, p. 102
  8. ^ Houston 1980, p.92
  9. ^ Conze 1979: I 4
  10. ^ Heine 2016
  11. ^ Attwood 2020, pp. 22–51
  12. ^ Larson, James Gerald (1981). "The Cobra's Shining Scales". Religion. 11: 75–82. doi:10.1016/S0048-721X(81)80061-9.
  13. ^ Sangharakshita 1996
  14. ^ Yun 2017, 9-113
  15. ^ Schopen. G. 1989. "The Manuscript of Vajracchedikā found at Gilgit." In L.O. Gómez & J.A. Silk (eds.), Studies in the Literature of the Great Vehicle: Three Mahāyāna Buddhist Texts, 89-139. Ann Arbor: Collegiate Institute for the Study of Buddhist Literature and Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan (Michigan Studies in Buddhist Literature, no. 1).
  16. ^ Silk 1994. The Heart Sūtra in Tibetan: a Critical Edition of the Two Recensions Contained in the Kanjur. Arbeitskreis für Tibetische und Buddhistische Studien, Universität Wien: 32
  17. ^ Huifeng 2014. "Apocryphal Treatment for Conze’s Heart Problems: Non-attainment, Apprehension, and Mental Hanging in the Prajñāpāramitā Hṛdaya". Journal of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies 6: 72-105; Attwood, J. 2015. "Heart Murmurs: Some Problems with Conze’s Prajñāpāramitāhṛdaya.". JOCBS 8: 28-48. and 2018. "A Note on Niṣṭhānirvāṇa in the Heart Sutra." Journal of the Oxford Centre For Buddhist Studies 14: 10-17.
  18. ^ Schopen, Gregory (1977). "Review of Edward Conze, The Large Sutra on Perfect Wisdom with the Divisions of the Abhisamayālaṅkāra". Indo-Iranian Journal. 19(1.2): 135–152.
  19. ^ Griffiths. Paul J. (1981). "Buddhist Hybrid English: Some Notes on Philology and Hermeneutics for Buddhologists." Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 4(2): 17-32.
  20. ^ Gummer, Natalie (2005). Encyclopedia of Religion. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA. p. 1266.
  21. ^ Mair, Victor (2004). Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism. New York: Macmillan Reference USA. p. 154.
  22. ^ de Jong, J.W. (1980). "Obituary - Edward Conze 1904 - 1979". Indo-Iranian Journal. 22: 143–146. doi:10.1163/000000080790080729 – via JSTOR.
  23. ^ Bastian, Edward (1979). "Obituary: Edward Conze". Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies. 2/2: 116.
  24. ^ Ling, Trevor (1979). "Born for Invective". Times Literary Supplement. 29 July 1979.
  25. ^ Wayman, Alex (1969). "Review Thirty Years of Buddhist Studies". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 89/1: 192–193. doi:10.2307/598304. JSTOR 598304.
  26. ^ Prajnaparamita and Related Systems: Studies in Honor of Edward Conze. UC Berkeley. 1977.
  27. ^ Prebish, Charles S. 2019. , Hnet
  28. ^ Nattier, Jan (2003). A Few Good Men. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. p. 49.
  29. ^ Zacchetti, Stefano (2020). "Prajñāpāramitā Sūtras". doi:10.1163/2467-9666_enbo_COM_0017. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)

References

  • Attwood, J. (2020). "Edward Conze: A Call to Reassess the Man and his Contribution to Prajñāpāramitā Studies." JOCBS 19: 22–51.
  • Bastian, Edward (1979) Edward Conze (Obituary) JIABS 2/2
  • Conze, Edward (1979). Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic. Parts I and II. Privately Published.
  • de Jong, J.W. (1980). Edward Conze 1904–1979, Indo-Iranian Journal 22 (2), 143-146.  – via JSTOR (subscription required)
  • Heine, Holger (2016). 'Aristotle, Marx, Buddha: Edward Conze's Critique of the Principle of Contradiction', in Conze, Edward, The Principle of Contradiction. Lexington Books, pp. xiii–lxiii. First published in German as Der Satz vom Widerspruch. Hamburg, 1932
  • Houston, G.W. (1980). Review: The Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic by Edward Conze, The Tibet Journal, 5 (1/2), 91-93.  – via JSTOR (subscription required)
  • Humphreys, Christmas (1980). Edward Conze, 1904-1979, The Eastern Buddhist (new series), 13 (2), 147-148.  – via JSTOR (subscription required)
  • Jackson, Roger R. (1981). Review: The Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic, Parts I and II (Edward Conze), Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 4 (2), 102-105
  • Larson, James Gerald (1981) Review Article 'The Cobra's Shining Scales,' Religion (1981) 11, 75-82
  • Langenberger Kulturlexikon: Immaterielles Kulturerbe der UNESCO. http://www.unter-der-muren.de/kulturlexikon.pdf
  • Nattier, Jan (2003). A Few Good Men. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press
  • Sangharakshita (1996). Great Buddhists of the Twentieth Century, Windhorse Publications
  • Yun, Ji . 纪赟 —《心经》疑伪问题再研究, Fuyan Buddhist Studies no. 7 (2012): 115-182. Trans. Chin Shih-Foong, Is the Heart Sūtra an Apocryphal Text? – A Re-examination, Singapore Journal of Buddhist Studies (2017), 4: 9-113.
  • Zaccheti, Stefano (2020). “Prajñāpāramitā Sūtras”, in: Encyclopedia of Buddhism Online, Editor-in-Chief: Consulting Editors: Jonathan A. Silk, Oskar von Hinüber, Vincent Eltschinger. Consulted online on 26 August 2021 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/2467-9666_enbo_COM_0017>

edward, conze, born, eberhard, julius, dietrich, conze, 1904, 1979, scholar, marxism, buddhism, known, primarily, commentaries, translations, prajñāpāramitā, literature, contents, biography, scholarship, legacy, also, selected, bibliography, notes, referencesb. Edward Conze born Eberhard Julius Dietrich Conze 1904 1979 was a scholar of Marxism and Buddhism known primarily for his commentaries and translations of the Prajnaparamita literature Edward Conze Contents 1 Biography 2 Scholarship 3 Legacy 4 See also 5 Selected bibliography 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBiography EditConze s parents Dr Ernst Conze 1872 1935 and Adele Louise Charlotte Kottgen 1882 1962 both came from families involved in the textile industry in the region of Langenberg Germany Ernst had a doctorate in Law and served in the Foreign Office and later as a judge 1 Conze was born in London while his father was Vice Consul 2 and thus entitled to British citizenship Conze studied in Tubingen Heidelberg Kiel Cologne and Hamburg In 1928 he published his dissertation Der Begriff der Metaphysik bei Franciscu Suarez and was awarded a doctorate in philosophy from Cologne University 3 He did post graduate work at several German universities and in 1932 he published Der Satz vom Widerspruch The Principle of Contradiction which he considered his master work 4 Because it was a Marxist work on the theory of dialectical materialism it attracted hostile attention from the Nazis and most copies were publicly burnt in a campaign conducted by the German Student Union in May 1933 5 In the early 1930s Conze associated with and helped to organize activities for the Communist Party of Germany When the Nazis came to power in 1933 he fled to Britain 6 2 In England Conze taught German philosophy and psychology at evening classes and later lectured on Buddhism and Prajnaparamita at various universities He continued as a socialist political activist writing several pamphlets 6 He co authored two books with Ellen Wilkinson an ex communist MP Why Fascism 1934 and Why War a handbook for those who will take part in the Second World War 1935 He worked with Cedar and Eden Paul on the revised ninth edition of the book An Outline of Psychology published by the National Council of Labour Colleges in 1938 During this period he made the acquaintance of Har Dayal whose book The Bodhisattva Doctrines in Buddhist Sanskrit Literature stimulated his interest in Buddhism Har Dayal had also been active politically active in the Industrial Workers of the World and studying Marxism Conze abandoned political activism in 1939 A midlife crisis in 1941 saw him adopt Buddhism as his religion having previously been influenced by Theosophy and astrology He spent a brief period in the New Forest pursuing meditation and an ascetic lifestyle during which he developed scurvy At the end of this period he moved to Oxford where he began to work on Sanskrit texts from the Prajnaparamita tradition He continued to work on these texts for the rest of his life 6 Conze was married twice to Dorothea Finkelstein and to Muriel Green He had one daughter with Dorothea In 1979 Conze self published two volumes of memoirs entitled Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic Conze produced a third volume which contained material considered to be too inflammatory or libelous to publish while the subjects were alive 7 8 No copy of the third volume is known to exist The Memoirs are the principal sources for Conze s biography and reveal much about his personal life and attitudes Scholarship EditConze was educated in several German Universities and showed a propensity for languages He claimed that by twenty four he knew fourteen languages 9 Conze s first major published work was on the theory of dialectical materialism This continues to receive attention with his book The Principle of Contradiction being reprinted in 2016 10 Following a mid life crisis Conze turned to Buddhism and was particularly influenced by D T Suzuki He made his name for his editions and translations of Sanskrit texts of the Buddhist Prajnaparamita literature He published translations of all the principal texts of the genre including the Aṣṭasahasrika 8000 Line Ratnaguṇasamcayagatha Pancaviṃsatisahasrika 25 000 Line Vajracchedika and Prajnaparamitahṛdaya All of these show the explicit influence of Suzuki s Theosophy infused Zen Buddhism 11 However the only permanent academic post he was offered had to be turned down because US immigration officials declined him a work permit on the basis of his past as a Communist A glance at a complete bibliography of Conze s oeuvre confirms that he was a man of industry and focus His contribution to the field of Buddhist Studies particularly of the Prajnaparamita literature has had a major influence on subsequent generations Legacy EditEdward Conze was and continues to be a polarizing figure As the great Indologist Gerald James Larson said in his review of The Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic He was denied a permanent academic position throughout his life even though his scholarly competence and productivity easily matched and frequently surpassed most of his contemporaries He treasured the Buddhist notions of anatman the practice of quiet meditation and the perfection of wisdom yet he was continually embroiled in personal squabbles in which he was capable of behaviour that was anything but selfless reflective or wise He valued authentic learning serious scholarship and the exchange of ideas yet he could sit for hours casting horoscopes reading palms and expostulating with the ancient mysteries 12 In his essay Great Buddhists of the Twentieth Century Windhorse Publications 1996 controversial British writer and teacher of Buddhism and personal friend of Conze s Sangharakshita writes that Dr Conze was a complex figure and it is not easy to assess his overall significance He was a self confessed elitist which is usually something people are ashamed of nowadays but he wasn t ashamed of it at all Nor did he approve of either democracy or feminism which makes him a veritable ogre of political incorrectness Nevertheless Sangharakshita summarizes Conze s legacy as a scholar of Buddhism as follows Dr Conze was one of the great Buddhist translators comparable with the indefatigable Chinese translators Kumarajiva and Hsuan tsang of the fifth and seventh centuries respectively It is especially significant I think that as a scholar of Buddhism he also tried to practise it especially meditation This was very unusual at the time he started his work and he was regarded then in the forties and fifties as being something of an eccentric Scholars were not supposed to have any personal involvement in their subject They were supposed to be objective So he was a forerunner of a whole new breed of Western scholars in Buddhism who are actually practising Buddhists 13 Ji Yun Librarian of the Buddhist College of Singapore describes Conze s legacy as follows Even to this day Edward Conze 1904 1979 the German British scholar has to be regarded not as one of many but as the most important researcher on Prajnaparamita literature This genius of Buddhist linguist sic and philologist devoted his whole life to the collation translation and research of Prajnaparamita literature in Sanskrit Tibetan and Chinese a language relatively neglected by European scholars before him Although the research of this prolific writer covers well beyond the Prajnaparamita category his works dedicated solely to this according to an incomplete count by the Japanese scholar Yuyama Akira 汤山明 include 16 books and 46 articles In the history of Prajnaparamita research Conze can be regarded as a formidable scholar with no comparison suprpassing sic all past and perhaps even future researchers in his achievement 14 However while religieux continue to idolize Conze his work has attracted much criticism from within academia Greg Schopen wrote Conze s notes to his edition reproduce all the errors in Chakravarti s edition and there are a number of cases in which Conze s notations in regard to the Gilgit text are wrong or misleading 15 Jonathan Silk has described his edition of the Heart Sutra as chaotic 16 His Heart Sutra edition was subsequently shown to contain a number of mistakes 17 Conze s translation of the Large Prajnaparamita Sutra was met with mixed reviews though as Schopen concluded in his review there is both much to criticized and much to be praised and that a review of this kind tends to settle rather heavily on the former 18 In his now infamous article Buddhist Hybrid English Some Notes on Philology and Hermeneutics for Buddhologists 19 Paul Griffiths singled out Conze s Large Sutra translation to illustrate what he meant by Buddhist Hybrid English saying Dr Conze s translation bears only the most tenuous relationship to the English language in terms of syntax and is full of unexplained technical terminology 1981 However Griffith is also making a broader point I chose this example not because Dr Conze s translations are worse than anyone else s in fact they are better than most Rather it illustrates with a concrete example the kind of gibberish that is all too often produced by the Buddhological community in the sacred name of translation 1981 30 Griffith s entertaining article is however largely rhetorical After conceding that Conze understands these texts better than anyone he then faults Conze for his decision to translate them in the first place rather than telling us what they say though this was a task which Conze continued to perform alongside his tireless translation activities as his many books and articles clearly attest Moreover pioneer translators of Buddhist texts historically have often been said to produce translationese 20 or what has been called Buddhist Hybrid Sinitic or Buddhist Hybrid Chinese 21 in their quest to produce reliable translations that remain true to their source language Contemporaries such as Jan Willem de Jong 22 and Edward Bastian 23 lauded Conze s scholarly abilities De Jong emphasized Conze s work as translator of the Prajnaparamita as his most enduring legacy while the influential British religious studies scholar Trevor Ling called Conze s lucid exposition of Buddhist ideas unrivalled 24 Even Alex Wayman Conze s sometimes sparring partner expressed his appreciation both for Conze s translations and his essays elucidating the Mahayana and especially the relationship between Madhyamika and Prajnaparamita thought 25 Lewis Lancaster one of Conze s earliest American students who studied with him at the University of Wisconsin in 1963 along with Luis Gomez who met Conze when they were both teaching at the University of Washington in 1967 edited Conze s Festschrift Prajnaparamita and Related Systems Studies in Honor of Edward Conze 26 In reflections on a life in Buddhist Studies retiring professor Charles Prebish said Edward Conze Leon Hurvitz Alex Wayman and a few others were amongst the meanest individuals in academe sic While they were utterly brilliant scholars they seemed to take real delight in humiliating students rather than encouraging them 27 Conze s legacy does not include a host of scholars and students continuing to work on the Prajnaparamita texts On the contrary only a handful of scholars now work on this literature and much of their output is published exclusively in Japanese And yet scholars working in Buddhist studies and on the Prajnaparamita literature in the decades following Conze s death continue to cite him admiringly While not hesitating to correct his work in light of further research Jan Nattier refers to him as the great pioneer of Prajnaparamita studies whose work has contributed so much to the understanding of this literature in the West 28 Conze s work is extensively cited in the Brill s Encyclopedia of Buddhism article on Prajnaparamita Sutras as indispensable for the study of this genre The author Stefano Zacchetti while by no means uncritical states that Conze s work represents a considerable achievement and provides a convenient introduction to this immense literature 29 See also EditPrajnaparamitaBuddhism and GnosticismSimilarities between Pyrrhonism and BuddhismSelected bibliography EditFor a complete bibliography of Conze s works see the website Conze Memorial http www conze elbrecht com 1932 Der Satz vom Widerspruch Hamburg 1932 1951 Buddhism Its Essence and Development 1956 Buddhist meditation London Ethical amp Religious Classics of East amp West 1958 Buddhist Wisdom Books The Diamond Sutra and the Heart Sutra George Allen amp Unwin Second edition 1976 1959 Buddhist Scriptures Haremondsworth Penguin Classics 1960 The Prajnaparamita Literature Mouton Second Edition Bibliographica Philogica Buddhica Series Maior I The Reiyukai Library 1978 1967 Materials for a Dictionary of the Prajnaparamita Literature Tokyo Suzuki Research Foundation 1973 The Large Sutra of Perfect Wisdom University of California Press 1973 The Perfection of Wisdom in Eight Thousand Lines and its Verse Summary San Francisco City Lights 2006 1973 Perfect Wisdom The Short Prajnaparamita Texts Buddhist Publishing Group 1975 Further Buddhist Studies Selected Essays Oxford Bruno CassirerNotes Edit Heine 2016 Langenberger Kulturlexikon a b Humphreys 1980 p 147 de Jong 1980 p 143 Conze 1979 Heine 2016 xiv a b c Jackson 1981 pp 103 104 Jackson 1981 p 102 Houston 1980 p 92 Conze 1979 I 4 Heine 2016 Attwood 2020 pp 22 51 Larson James Gerald 1981 The Cobra s Shining Scales Religion 11 75 82 doi 10 1016 S0048 721X 81 80061 9 Sangharakshita 1996 Yun 2017 9 113 Schopen G 1989 The Manuscript of Vajracchedika found at Gilgit In L O Gomez amp J A Silk eds Studies in the Literature of the Great Vehicle Three Mahayana Buddhist Texts 89 139 Ann Arbor Collegiate Institute for the Study of Buddhist Literature and Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies University of Michigan Michigan Studies in Buddhist Literature no 1 Silk 1994 The Heart Sutra in Tibetan a Critical Edition of the Two Recensions Contained in the Kanjur Arbeitskreis fur Tibetische und Buddhistische Studien Universitat Wien 32 Huifeng 2014 Apocryphal Treatment for Conze s Heart Problems Non attainment Apprehension and Mental Hanging in the Prajnaparamita Hṛdaya Journal of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies 6 72 105 Attwood J 2015 Heart Murmurs Some Problems with Conze s Prajnaparamitahṛdaya JOCBS 8 28 48 and 2018 A Note on Niṣṭhanirvaṇa in the Heart Sutra Journal of the Oxford Centre For Buddhist Studies 14 10 17 Schopen Gregory 1977 Review of Edward Conze The Large Sutra on Perfect Wisdom with the Divisions of the Abhisamayalaṅkara Indo Iranian Journal 19 1 2 135 152 Griffiths Paul J 1981 Buddhist Hybrid English Some Notes on Philology and Hermeneutics for Buddhologists Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 4 2 17 32 Gummer Natalie 2005 Encyclopedia of Religion Detroit Macmillan Reference USA p 1266 Mair Victor 2004 Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism New York Macmillan Reference USA p 154 de Jong J W 1980 Obituary Edward Conze 1904 1979 Indo Iranian Journal 22 143 146 doi 10 1163 000000080790080729 via JSTOR Bastian Edward 1979 Obituary Edward Conze Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 2 2 116 Ling Trevor 1979 Born for Invective Times Literary Supplement 29 July 1979 Wayman Alex 1969 Review Thirty Years of Buddhist Studies Journal of the American Oriental Society 89 1 192 193 doi 10 2307 598304 JSTOR 598304 Prajnaparamita and Related Systems Studies in Honor of Edward Conze UC Berkeley 1977 Prebish Charles S 2019 Bat Out Of Hell Hnet Nattier Jan 2003 A Few Good Men Honolulu University of Hawai i Press p 49 Zacchetti Stefano 2020 Prajnaparamita Sutras doi 10 1163 2467 9666 enbo COM 0017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint url status link References EditAttwood J 2020 Edward Conze A Call to Reassess the Man and his Contribution to Prajnaparamita Studies JOCBS 19 22 51 Bastian Edward 1979 Edward Conze Obituary JIABS 2 2 Conze Edward 1979 Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic Parts I and II Privately Published de Jong J W 1980 Edward Conze 1904 1979 Indo Iranian Journal 22 2 143 146 via JSTOR subscription required Heine Holger 2016 Aristotle Marx Buddha Edward Conze s Critique of the Principle of Contradiction in Conze Edward The Principle of Contradiction Lexington Books pp xiii lxiii First published in German as Der Satz vom Widerspruch Hamburg 1932 Houston G W 1980 Review The Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic by Edward Conze The Tibet Journal 5 1 2 91 93 via JSTOR subscription required Humphreys Christmas 1980 Edward Conze 1904 1979 The Eastern Buddhist new series 13 2 147 148 via JSTOR subscription required Jackson Roger R 1981 Review The Memoirs of a Modern Gnostic Parts I and II Edward Conze Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 4 2 102 105 Larson James Gerald 1981 Review Article The Cobra s Shining Scales Religion 1981 11 75 82 Langenberger Kulturlexikon Immaterielles Kulturerbe der UNESCO http www unter der muren de kulturlexikon pdf Nattier Jan 2003 A Few Good Men Honolulu University of Hawai i Press Sangharakshita 1996 Great Buddhists of the Twentieth Century Windhorse Publications Yun Ji 纪赟 心经 疑伪问题再研究 Fuyan Buddhist Studies no 7 2012 115 182 Trans Chin Shih Foong Is the Heart Sutra an Apocryphal Text A Re examination Singapore Journal of Buddhist Studies 2017 4 9 113 Zaccheti Stefano 2020 Prajnaparamita Sutras in Encyclopedia of Buddhism Online Editor in Chief Consulting Editors Jonathan A Silk Oskar von Hinuber Vincent Eltschinger Consulted online on 26 August 2021 lt http dx doi org 10 1163 2467 9666 enbo COM 0017 gt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward Conze amp oldid 1084004631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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