Showing posts with label underestimated number of Buddhists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label underestimated number of Buddhists. Show all posts

Thursday, May 10, 2018

WQ hits landmark and gets new editor

Ashley Wells, Xochitl, Seth Auberon, CC Liu, Dhr. Seven, Sheldon S., Wisdom Quarterly

It is in the glorious month of Vesak ("Buddhist Xmas") that we are happy to announce another million views for Wisdom Quarterly: American Buddhist Journal, the toughest statistical slog since going online. And we have voted in a new editor, Crystal Quintero, for a uniquely Latina, indigenous, and anti-colonial spin to stories we cover -- along with our many contributing writers and meditation efforts with the Dharma Meditation Initiative and Four Noble Truths. YOU, too, can be a contributing writer: send in a story idea, feature, news item, or article, and we'll run it through the grammar-and-style chopper and show it to tens of thousands of readers. (For instructions on where to submit, look up top). Don't be alarmed; as always we feature an eye-grabbing view of nurturing to mark the occasion of yet another statistical landmark.

In yer face. Don't try to shame me about my breasts. It's life, it's art, it's just a body:

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Wisdom Quarterly surpasses 4 million views

Ashley Wells, Features Editor, Wisdom Quarterly
Wisdom Quarterly reaches far and wide across the globe concentrating in the West.

"Sitting on a park bench, eyeing little [meditators by the lake] with bad intent" (J.T.)


As Wisdom Quarterly: American Buddhist Journal makes this milestone, surpassing 4,000,000 direct verifiable views, it has become customary for the male editors to discuss breasts, usually Jennifer Love Hewitt's or men's.

Good way to stay healthy
But Breast Awareness Month in Los Angeles begins with Katy Perry and others performing (AMP Radio, CBS Inc., Hollywood Bowl, Oct. 23, 2013, 7:30 pm, also featuring Ellie Goulding, Sara Bareilles, Tegan and Sara, and Kacey Musgraves) to raise awareness about surviving one devastating form of cancer running rampant in our flesh eating population: the cancer of the breasts.

Good way to develop cancer
While many more people read WQ, there is no way to directly count them. It's like when one asks how many views a video has, but then that video is reposted with lyrics or what not by various YouTubers. Only the official VEVO version is counted, which leads to undercounting. Other sites pick up and repost our items and articles or send it out in Hebrew and other foreign languages via RSS feeds, aggregation sites, uncredited outlets, and the occasional plagiaristic "homage." (Thank you, by the way. We are just here to spread the Dharma, increasing wisdom and compassion everywhere).

Monday, September 20, 2010

Taking Numbers Too Seriously



Numbers are deceiving, as the author of Proofiness [think "truthiness"] explains below. Much like us, the ancient Indians had loose terminology for numbers. What do we mean by a zillion or a kajillion, a lot, or a long ways? Answer: It's context-dependent. Whereas a zillion haircuts means a couple of hundred, a zillion stars means "more than we can count."

Similarly people have long asked, How long is a great kalpa (aeon)? It is, of course, four sub-aeons long. One can hardly say exactly. But exactly is what British and German translators demanded, and they got it: 4.32 billion years. (The Buddha instead defined astronomical numbers using staggering similes, but the commentarial Path of Purification is very specific about different types of kalpas).

How many is a lot? That would be precisely 500. When Buddhist sutras use 500, they only really mean "a lot." How long is country mile (yojana)? It is the distance an ox can plough before needing to be unhitched and rested. But more precision was needed, so its true vague meaning was replaced with a proofier sounding "seven miles." Similarly, when the redactors of the sutras went from an oral to a written tradition, things conveniently got sorted by number.

The Numerical Discourses of the Buddha (Anguttara Nikaya) is a great example of how this easy (and potentially misleading) classification system came to look. Anguttara literally means "increased by one." Instead of going by subject matter, any loose sutra that said four of these or five of those made it into the Book of Fours or Book of Fives.

We like 10 and 100, but the ancient Indian preferred 8 and 108. The flexibility of numbers as secondary to the Truth is perhaps never made more clear than with the question, "How many precepts are there?" Five, 8, 10, take your choice since they more or less refer to the same set of items divided up in different ways. In short, numbers are a convenience not to be taken too seriously.

The Dark Arts of Mathematical Deception
Proofiness by Charles Seife (NPR interview)
...But trusting a number too much can be dangerous, the author says. It’s a phenomenon he calls ‘disestimation,’ and it happens when people take a number far too seriously.

Seife recalls the story of a docent at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, who gave the age of a dinosaur as 65 million and 38 years.

“The guide says, well, when I started at this museum 38 years ago, a scientist told me it was 65 million years old. Therefore, now, it’s 65 million and 38.” Seife says the docent was placing far too much value on the 65 million figure, “when in fact, the error involved in measuring the dinosaur was plus or minus a hundred thousand years. The 38 years is nothing.”

And speaking of error, Seife has some choice words about opinion polls and the way they’re reported. “When journalists report polls, they just don’t know better that they shouldn’t take these results literally,” he explains.

Seife says the margin of error you see attached to a poll is only measuring one specific kind of error: taking too small of a statistical sample. “But in fact, when polls go wrong,” he says, “it’s due to a completely different type of error, called a systematic error.”

That means the poll hasn’t been set up correctly or the questions are misleading, or simply that people answering the poll are lying — which Seife says happens quite frequently. “So when journalists report polls, most of which aren’t worth the paper they’re written on, I think they’re kind of innocently performing an act of proofiness.” More>>

Monday, September 22, 2008

Buddhists in Space

The Long-March II-F rocket is assembled at a workshop at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, Gansu province 8/10/08. Astronauts readying for China's next leap into space have arrived at the launch site of the Shenzhou 7 craft, official media reported, as enthusiasm grew over the Olympic host nation's next attention-grabbing feat (Reuters/Stringer).
.
Ignored, denied, or discounted by artificial technicalities, Buddhists in fact comprise one of the largest religions in the world. More than a billion Buddhists are regularly left out of the count. For one thing, American analysts do not recognize that Asians regularly uphold more than one religious affiliation. For another, official Communist party census takers do not ask or care about religious affiliation. It would rather there were no affiliation, and monotheistic traditions are happy to see their counts appear to trump all contenders in the absence of a viable alternative.
.
The Shenzhou-7 manned spaceship, the Long-March II-F rocket and the escape tower are transferred to the launch pad at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, in Gansu province, 9/20/08 (Stringer/Reuters).

What is in fact the fastest growing religion? That changes month to month from place to place. It's probably always been Animism. But Catholicism is almost certainly the largest official faith. No one discounts its numbers on account of the dual-affiliations of its many adherents in third world countries. For example, Haitian, Central and South American, and African Catholics hold many pre-Christian beliefs in spite of the colonialism that brought Catholicism to them when soldiers and missionaries co-conquered them with guns and Bibles. Those pre-Christian (and quite un-Christian) beliefs still thrive in Catholic guise — such as the worship of a large pantheon of gods using Catholic saints as their representations.

The billion plus uncounted Buddhist are mainland Chinese, who also adhere to a Taoist philosophy and Confucian social principles. Buddhism is part and parcel of the Chinese zeitgeist, and Buddhism is the light of Asia. Therefore, as China develops and expands its space presence, so Mahayana Buddhists move into space. And that includes, politically and philosophically, Vajrayana Buddhists from Mongolia and Tibet (semi-autonomous regions of China).
.
The Shenzhou-7 manned spaceship 9/20/08 (Reuters/Stringer).

China's third manned mission to include spacewalk
Christopher Bodeen (AP)

BEIJING — China this week launches its most ambitious space mission yet, a sign of rising confidence as Beijing cements its status as a space power and potential future competitor to the United States.

The Shenzhou 7 mission, to launch as early as Thursday, will be the first to carry a full complement of three astronauts, one of whom will perform China's first space walk, or EVA for "extra-vehicular activity." It is China's third manned mission.

The maneuver will help China master docking techniques needed for the construction of a space station, likely to be achieved initially by joining one Shenzhou orbiter to another. The mission launches from the Jiuquan launch site in northwestern China. The lead astronaut, Zhai Zhigang, is expected to carry out the 40-minute spacewalk, which China will broadcast live.

"Shenzhou 7 is an incremental but important step forward," said Joan Johnson-Freese, an expert on the Chinese space program at the U.S. Naval War College in Rhode Island.

Riding a wave of pride and patriotism after hosting the Olympics, China's communist leaders face few of the public doubts or budgetary pressures constraining such programs elsewhere. That has allowed them to fuse political will and scientific gusto in a step-by-step process that could one day see Chinese astronauts landing on the moon.

Chinese space programs are methodically moving forward in a "very deliberate, graduated" manner, said Charles Vick, a space analyst for the Washington think tank GlobalSecurity.org. Beijing is accumulating the building blocks of a comprehensive program, demonstrating "caution but confidence" as it gains on the U.S. and other space powers, he said.

Future goals are believed to include an unmanned moon landing around 2012, a mission to return samples in 2015, and possibly a manned lunar mission by 2017 — three years ahead of the U.S. target date for returning to the moon. A manned lunar program, although yet to be formally approved, is "certainly the ultimate goal," Johnson-Freese said.

First, Chinese scientists need to put the final touches on the new generation Long March 5 rocket capable of launching 25-ton components for a space station or future lunar missions.

Once that happens, Johnson-Freese said she expects further progress to come rapidly.

"When the new vehicle is ready, China wants to be ready too," she said. Shenzhou craft are currently flung into space by a Long March 2F rocket, the workhorse of the Chinese fleet, with 66 consecutive successful launches.

The first manned Shenzhou mission in 2003 saw China join the United States and former Soviet Union as the only nations capable of launching astronauts into space.

From the start, China has focused squarely on high-payoff areas where it can match or exceed the achievements of others. That garners new capabilities while maximizing the political impact, something observers sometimes call "techno-nationalism."

All along, China has relied heavily on homegrown technology, partly out of necessity. China has trouble obtaining such technology abroad due to U.S. and European bans and is not a participant in the International Space Station.

The Shenzhou ships closely resemble Russia's three-module Soyuz capsule, but have been completely re-engineered and enlarged. China's team of 14 astronauts, sometimes called "taikonauts" from the Chinese word for outer space, are trained at Chinese facilities.

Veteran chief designer Qi Faren says China's systems, while basic, have been carefully designed for safety and reliability.

"What we're proud of is that, although we're not the best, it's our own, and its very Chinese," Qi, 75, said in an interview published in Monday's Beijing News.
.
Astronauts readying for China's next leap into space have arrived at the launch site of the Shenzhou 7 craft, official media reported (Reuters/Stringer).

File photo shows China's Shenzhou ll module being loaded on to the booster rocket unit prior to its launch in Jiuquan, northwest China. A 42-year-old fighter pilot has been chosen to become the first Chinese person to walk in space, with the historic mission set for 9/25/08, the government has said (AFP/Xinhua/File).

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Buddhism by the Numbers


Buddhism so influenced the ancient world that even money felt the impact among the Greeks (see Greco Buddhism).

Buddhists around the world
Vipassana Foundation (thedhamma.ocm)

The number of Buddhists around the world is grossly under-estimated. The statistics found in nearly all encyclopedias and almanacs place the number of Buddhists at approximately 500 million. This figure completely ignores over one billion Chinese people who live in the People's Republic of China.

While China is officially "communist" (although many free market conditions are already in place), it does not keep records on religion statistics. Another problem is that many Western reference sources refuse to accept that a person can belong to more than one religion. In Asia it is quite common for one person to have two, three, or more religions. In China, it is extremely common for a family to have a shrine in their home with statues and icons from Taoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism.

Currently there are about 1.3 billion Chinese living in the People's Republic. Surveys (Gach-Alpha Books, U.S. State Dept. report on China, Global Center for the Study of Contemporary China, BBC News, China Daily, and a report by Christian missionaries in China) have found that about 8% to 91% identify Buddhism as one of their religions.

A percentage near the upper end of this estimate, or about 80%, works out to there being about 1.1 billion Chinese Buddhists. To ignore over one billion people as if they do not count is a terrible miscount and very misleading in the reporting of adherents. A Chinese Buddhist forum (bskk.com) currently has about 60,000 registered members and over 2 million posts, which is about double the amount of the largest English language Buddhist forum (which also has Chinese Buddhists participating in the discussions). But to be above reproach, a more conservative estimate is also shown (see below).

The following are links to studies that have analyzed or counted the number of Buddhists in China and the percentage found in their studies:
The counting of Buddhists in America is also a little problematic since the U.S. Census Bureau does not ask religious affiliation. There are studies that suggest the percentage of Buddhists in America is More>>