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	  POSTSCRIPT:   CREATIVE  POLARITY  BEYOND 
    TANTRISM   As surprising as it may sound after our
    critical analysis of Vajrayana, we
    would in conclusion like to pose the question of whether Tantric Buddhism
    does not harbor a religious archetype the disclosure, dissemination and
    discussion of which could meet with great transcultural interest. Would it
    not be valuable to discuss as religious concepts such tantric principles as
    the “mystical love between the sexes”, the “union of the male and female
    principles”, or the unio mystica between
    god and goddess? 
	  As we demonstrated at the start of our
    study, Tantrism in all its variants is based upon a vision of the polarity
    of being. It sees the primary cultic event on the path to enlightenment in
    a mystical conjunction of poles, specifically in the mystical union of the
    sexes. From a tantric point of view, all the phenomena of the universe are
    linked to one another through erotic love and sexuality, and our world of
    appearances is seen as the field in which these two basic forces (Tibetan yab and yum; Chinese yin and yang) act. They manifest themselves
    as a polarity in both nature and the realm of the spirit. In the tantric
    view of things, love is the great life force that pulsates through the
    cosmos, primarily as heterosexual love between god and goddess, man and
    woman. Their mutual affection acts as the creative principle. 
	  “It is through love and in the face of
    love that the world unfolds, through love it regains its original unity and
    its eternal nondivision” — this statement is also proclaimed in Vajrayana (Faure, 1994, p. 56). For
    the Tantric, erotic and religious love are not separate. Sexuality and
    mysticism, eros and agape (spiritual love) are not
    mutually exclusive contradictions. 
	  Let us once more repeat the wonderful
    words with which tantric texts describe the “holy marriage” between man and
    woman. In yuganaddha (the mystic
    union) there is “neither affirmation nor denial, neither existence nor
    non-existence, neither non-remembering nor remembering, neither affection
    nor non-affection, neither the cause nor the effect, neither the production
    nor the produced, neither purity nor impurity, neither anything with form
    nor anything without form; it is but the synthesis of all dualities”
    (Dasgupta, 1974, p. 114). In this synthesis “egoness is lost and the two
    polar opposites fuse into a state of intimate and blissful oneness”
    (Walker, 1982, p. 67). 
	  
	A cooperation between the poles now
    replaces the struggle between contradictions (or sexes). Body and spirit,
    erotic love and transcendence, emotions and reason, being (samsara) and non-being (nirvana) are wedded. In yuganaddha, it is said, all wars and
    disputes between good and evil, heaven and hell, day and night, dream and
    perception, joy and suffering, praise and contempt are pacified and
    stilled. Mirada Shaw celebrates the embrace of the male and female Buddha as
    "an
    image of unity and blissful concord between the sexes, a state of
    equilibrium and interdependence. This symbol powerfully evokes a state of
    primordial wholeness an completeness of being" (Shaw, 1994, p. 200). 
	Divine erotic love does not jut lead to
    enlightenment and liberation; the tantric view is that mystic gendered love
    can also free all suffering beings. All forms of time originate from the
    primordial divine couple. Along with the sun and moon and the “pair of
    radiant planets”, the five elements also owe their existence to the
    cosmogonic erotic love. According to the Hevajra Tantra, “By uniting the male and female sexual organs the
    holder of the Vow performs the erotic union. From contact in the erotic union, as the quality
    of hardness, Earth arises; Water arises from the fluidity of semen; Fire
    arises from the friction of pounding; Air ist famed to be the movement and
    the Space is the erotic pleasure” (Farrow and Menon, 1992, p. 134). Language, emotions, the senses —
    all have their origin in the love of the primordial couple. In a world
    purged of darkness the couple stand at the edge of darkness, the Kalachakra Tantra itself says
    (Banerjee, 1959, p. 24). 
	  Nevertheless, as we have demonstrated,
    this harmonious primordial image is misused in tantric rituals by an
    androcentric caste of monks for the ends of spiritual and secular power. We
    refrain from describing once more the sexual magic exploitation in Vajrayana, and would instead like to
    turn to a philosophical question raised by this topic, namely the
    relationship between the ONE (as the male principle) and the OTHER (as the
    female principle). 
	  Since Friedrich Hegel, the OTHER has
    become a key topic of philosophical discussion. The absolute ONE or
    absolute mind is unable to tolerate any OTHER besides itself. Only when the
    OTHER is completely integrated into the ONE, only when it is “suspended” in
    the ONE is the way of the mind complete. For then nature (the OTHER) has
    become mind (the ONE). This is one way of succinctly describing one of the
    fundamental elements of Hegelian philosophy. 
	  
	In Vajrayana
    terminology, the absolute ONE that tolerates no OTHER beyond himself is the
    androgynous ADI BUDDHA. The OTHER (the feminine) surrenders its autonomy to
    the hegemony of the ONE (the masculine). It is destroyed with one word. Yet
    the absolute ONE of the ADI BUDDHA is radically questioned by the existence
    of an OTHER (the feminine); his claims to infinity, cosmocentricity,
    omnipotence, and divinity are threatened. “All is ONE or all is the ADI
    BUDDHA” is a basic maxim of the tantric way. For this reason the OTHER
    frightens and intimidates the ONE. The Buddhist Ken Wilber (a proponent of
    the ADI BUDDHA principle) quotes the Upanishads in this connection: 
	Wherever the OTHER is, there is dread (Wilber, 1990, p. 174) — and
    himself admits that everywhere where there is an OTHER, there is also fear
    (Wilber, 1990, p. 280). As already indicated, behind this
    existential fear of the OTHER lies a fundamental gender issue. This has
    been taken up and developed primarily by French feminists. In the
    “otherness” (autruité) of the
    female Simone de Beauvoir saw a highly problematic fixing of the woman
    created by the androcentric persective. Men wanted to see women as the
    OTHER in order to be able to control them. The woman was forced to define
    her identity via the perspective of the man. Beauvoir’s successors,
    however, such as the femininst Luce Irigaray, have lent “gender difference”
    and AUTRUITÉ (otherness) a highly positive significance and have made it
    the central topic of their feminine philosophy. Otherness here all but
    becomes a female world unable to be grasped by either the male perspective
    or male reason. It evades any kind of masculine fixation. Female
    subjectivity is inaccessible for the male. 
	  
	It is precisely the OTHERNESS which
    lets women preserve their autonomy. They thus escape being objectified by
    men (the male subject) and develop their own subjectivity (the female
    subject). Irigaray very clearly articulates how existing religions block
    women’s path to a self-realization of their own: “She must always be for
    men, available for their transcendence” (quoted by June Campbell, 1996, p. 155) — i.e.,
    as Sophia, prajna, as the “white virgin”, as a “wisdom dakini” (inana mudra). In the male
    consciousness she lacks a subjectivity of her own, and is a blank screen (shunyata) onto which the man
    projects his own imaginings. 
	  Yet the autonomy of the OTHER does not
    need to be experienced as separation, fragmentation, lack, or as an
    alienating element. It can just as well serve as the opposite, as the
    prerequisite for the union of two subjects, complementarity, or copula. The
    masculine and the feminine can behave in completely different ways toward
    one another, either as a duality (of mutually exclusive opposites =
    annihilation of the OTHER) or as a polarity (mutually complentary opposites
    = encounter with the OTHER). It is almost a miracle that the sexes are
    fundamentally permitted to meet one another in love without having to
    renounce their autonomy. 
	  Buddhist Tantrism, however, is not
    about such an encounter between man and woman, but purely the question of
    how the yogi (as the masculine principle of the ONE) can integrate the
    OTHER (the feminine principle) within himself and render it useful by
    drawing off its gynergy. Occult feminism involves the same phenomenon in
    reverse: how can the yogini (here the feminine principle of the ONE)
    appropriate the androenergy of the man (here the OTHER) so as to win
    gynandric power. 
	  The appropriation of the OTHER (the
    goddess) by the ONE (the ADI BUDDHA) is the core concept of Buddhist
    Tantrism. This makes it a phenomenon which, at this level of generality,
    also shapes Western cultures and religions: “Male religiosity masks an
    appropriation,” writes Luce Irigaray. “This severs the relationship to the
    natural universe, its simplicity is perverted. Certainly, this
    religiousness symbolizes a social universe organized by men. But this
    organization is based on a sacrifice — of nature, of the gendered body,
    especially that of the woman. It impels a spirituality cut off from its
    natural roots and its surroundings. It can thus not bring humanity to
    perfection. Spiritualization, socialization, cultivation require that we
    set out from what is there. The patriarchal system does not do this because
    it seeks to obliterate the foundations upon which it is based” (Irigaray,
    1991, p. 33). 
	  The solution to the riddle of its
    mysteries that Tantrism poses is obvious. It can only involve the union of
    the two poles, not their domination of one another. On its own the
    (masculine) spirit is not sufficient to become “whole”, instead nature and spirit, emotions and reason, logos and eros, woman and man, god and
    goddess, a masculine and a
    feminine Buddha as two autonomous beings must wed mystically (as yab and yum, yin and yang) as two subjects that fuse
    together into a WE. The ADI BUDDHA of the Kalachakra Tantra, however, is a divine SUBJECT (a SUPER EGO)
    that tries to consume the OTHER (the goddess). Not until ONE SUBJECT forms
    a copula with ANOTHER SUBJECT can a truly new dimension (WE) be entered:
    the great WE in which both egos, the masculine and the feminine, are truly
    “suspended”, truly “preserved”, and truly “transcended”. Perhaps it is this
    WE that is the cosmic secret to be discovered in the profoundest sections
    of the tantras, and not the ADI BUDDHA. 
	  For in WE all the polarities of the
    universe fuse, subjectivity and objectivity, rule and servitude, union and
    division. The unio mystica with
    the partner dissolves both the individual and the transpersonal
    subjectivity (the human ego and the divine ego). Both poles, the masculine
    and the feminine, experience their spiritual, psychic and physical unity as
    intersubjectivity, as exchange, as WE. They join into a higher dimension
    without destroying one another. The mystic WE thus forms a more
    encompassing quality of experience than the ADI BUDDHA’s mystic EGO which
    seeks to swallow the OTHER (the goddess). 
	  Were man and woman to understand
    themselves as the cosmic center, as god and goddess — as the tantric texts
    proclaim — were they to experience themselves together as a religious
    authority, then the androgynous guru in his role as the supreme god of “the
    mysteries of gendered love” would vanish. In an essay on tantric practices,
    the Indologist Doniger O’Flaherty describes several variants on androgyny
    and supplements these — not without a trace of irony — with an additional
    “androgynous” model which is basically not a model at all. “A third
    psychological androgyne, less closely tied to any particular doctrine, is
    found not in a single individual but in two: the man and the woman who join
    in perfect love, Shakespeare’s beast with two backs. This is the image of
    ecstatic union, another metaphor for the mystic realization of union with
    godhead. This is the romantic ideal of complete merging, one with the
    other, so that each experiences the other’s joy, not knowing whose is the
    hand that caresses or whose the skin that is caressed. In this state, the
    man and the woman in tantric ritual experience each other’s joy and pain.
    This is the divine hierogamy, and, in its various manifestations — as yab–yum, yin and yang, animus and anima — it is certainly the most widespread of androgynous
    concepts” (O’Flaherty, 1982, p. 292). 
	  When together — as Tantrism teaches us
    despite everything — power is concentrated in man and woman; divided they
    are powerless. WE equally implies both the gaining of power and its
    renunciation. In WE the two primal forces of being (masculine—feminine) are
    concentrated. To this extent the WE is absolute, the Omnipotent. But at the
    same time WE limits the power of the parts, as soon as they appear
    separately or lay claim to the cosmos as individual genders (as an
    androgynous Almighty God or as a gynandric Almighty Goddess). To this
    extent, WE is essentially relative. It is only effective when the two poles
    behave complementarily. As the supreme principle, WE is completely unable
    to abuse any OTHER or manipulate it for its own ends since every OTHER is
    by definition an autonomous part of WE. In political terms, WE is a
    fundamental democratic principle. It transcends all concepts of an enemy
    and all war. The traditional dualisms of upper and lower, white and black,
    bright and gloomy unite in a creative polarity in the WE. 
	  As we have been able to demonstrate on
    the basis of both the ritual logic of Vajrayana
    and, empirically, the history of Tantric Buddhism (especially Lamaism), the
    androgynous principle of Buddhist Tantrism leads ineluctably to human
    sacrifice and war. The origins of every war lie in the battle of the sexes
    — this aphorism from Greek mythology is especially true of Tantrism, which
    traces all that happens in the world back to erotic love. Doesn’t this let
    us also conclude the reverse, that peace between the sexes can produce
    peace in the world? Global responsibility arises from mutual recognition
    and from respect for the position of the partner, who is the other half of
    the whole. Compassion, sensitivity towards everything that is other,
    understanding, harmony — all have their origin here. In the cosmogonic
    erotic love between two people, Ludwig Klages sees a revolutionary power
    that even has the strength to suspend “history”. “Were the incredible to
    happen, even if were only between two out of hundreds of millions, the
    power of the spirit’s curse would be broken, the dreadful nightmare of
    ‘world history would melt away’, and ‘awakening would bloom in streams of
    light’” (Klages, 1930, p. 198). The end of history via the love between man
    and woman, god and goddess: the concept would definitely be compatible with
    a tantric philosophy if it were not for the yogi’s final act of masculine
    usurpation. 
	  
	Perhaps, we would like to further
    speculate, mystic gender love might provide the religious mystery for a
    universal “culture of erotic love” built upon both sensual and spiritual
    foundations. Such an idea is by no means new. In the late 1960s in his book
    Eros and Civilization, the
    American philosopher Herbert Marcuse outlined an “erotic” cultural schema.
    Unfortunately, his “paradigmatic” (as it would be known these days)
    approach, which was widely discussed in the late 1960s has become
    completely forgotten. Among the basic joys of human existence, according
    to Marcuse, is the division into sexes, the difference between male and
    female, between penis and vagina, between you and me, even between mine and
    yours, and these are extremely pleasant and satisfying divisions, or could
    be; their elimination would not just be insane, but also a nightmare — the peak
    of repression” (Marcuse, 1965, p. 239). This nightmare becomes real in the alchemic
    practices of the Buddhist tradition. In that Vajrayana dissolves all differences, ultimately even the
    polarity of the sexes, into the androgynous principle of the ADI BUDDHA, it
    destroys the “Eros” of life, even though it paradoxically recognizes this
    sexual polarity as the supreme cosmic force. As we were working on the final proofs
    of our manuscript, the German magazine Bunte,
    which only a few weeks before had celebrated the Dalai Lama as a god on
    earth, carried an article by the cultural sociologist Nicolaus Sombart
    entitled “Desire for the divine couple”. Sombart so precisely expressed our
    own ideas that we would like to quote him at length. “Why does the human project
    have a bipartite form in the divine plan? The duality symbolizes the
    polarity of the world, the bipolarity that is the basis for the dynamic of
    everything which happens in the world. Yin
    and yang. Apparently divided and
    yet belonging together, contradictory, and complementary, antagonistic but
    designed for harmony, synthesis and symbiosis. Only in mutual penetration
    do they complete each other and become whole. The model of the world is
    that of a couple eternally striving for union. The cosmic couple stand by
    one another in the interaction of an erotic tension. It is a pair of
    lovers. The misery of the world lies in the separation, isolation, and
    loneliness of the parts that are attracted to each other, that belong
    together; the joy and happiness lie in the union of the two sexes; not two
    souls, this is not enough, but two bodies equipped for this purpose — a
    pleasurable foretaste of the return to paradise” (Bunte, 46/1998, p. 40). 
	  It is nonetheless remarkable how
    unsuccessful mystic gendered love has been in establishing itself as a
    religious archetype in human cultural history. Although the mystery of love
    between man and woman is and has been practised and experienced by
    millions, although most cultures have both male and female deities, the unio mystica of the sexes has
    largely not been recognized as a religion. Yet there is so much which
    indicates that the harmony and love between man and woman (god and goddess)
    could be granted the gravity of a universal paradigm and become a bridge of
    peace between the various cultures. Selected insights and images from the
    mysteries of Tantric Buddhism ought to be most useful in the development of
    such a paradigm. 
	  Divine couples are found in all
    cultures, even if their religious veneration is not among the central mysteries.
    We also encounter them in the pre-Buddhist mythologies of Tibet, where the
    two sexes share their control over the world equally. Matthias Hermanns
    tells us about Khen pa, the ruler
    of the heavens, and Khon ma, the
    earth mother, and quotes the following sentence from an aboriginal Tibetan
    creation myth: “At first heaven and earth are like father and mother”
    (Hermanns, 1965, p. 72). In the times of the original Tibetan kings there
    was a god of man (pho-lha) and a
    goddess of woman (mo-lha). A
    number of Central Asian myths see the sun and moon as equal forces, with
    the sun playing the masculine and the moon the feminine role
    (Bleichsteiner, 1937, p.19). In one Bon myth, light and darkness are held
    to be the primordial cosmic couple (Paul, 1981, p. 49). 
	  In Tantric Buddhism, the central
    Buddhist couple celebrated by the Nyingmapa School, Samantabhadra and Samantabhadri
    — in translation the “supreme male good” and the “supreme female good”
    — are such a potential primal couple. This Buddha couple are depicted in a yab–yum posture. Both partners are
    naked, i.e., pure and free. Neither of them is carrying any symbols which
    might point to some hidden magicoreligious intention. Their nudity could be
    interpreted as saying that Samantabhadra
    and Samantabhadri are beyond the
    world of symbolism and are thus an image of polar purity, freed of gods,
    myths, and insignia. Only the color of their bodies could be interpreted as
    a metaphor. Samantabhadra is blue
    as clear and open as the heavens, Samantabhadri
    is white as the light. 
	  Were one to formulate such visions of
    the religious worship of the couple in Buddhist terminology, the four
    Buddha couples of the four directions might emanate from a primal Buddha
    couple, without this mystical pentad needing to be appropriated by a
    tantric master in the form of an androgynous ADI BUDDHA (or by a sexual
    magic mistress as a gynandric Almighty Goddess). In one Nepalese tantra
    text, for instance, the ADI BUDDHA (“supreme consciousness”) and the ADI
    PRANJNA (“supreme wisdom”) are revered as the primordial father and the
    primordial mother of the world (Hazra, 1986, p. 21). According to this
    text, all the female beings in the universe are emanations of the ADI
    PRAJNA, and all males those of the ADI BUDDHA. 
	  
	
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	Annex: 
	
	CRITICAL FORUM KALACHAKRA TANTRA 
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