Thursday, January 15, 2026

From the Academy via Tricycle

 

JANUARY 2026
From the Academy
Welcome to From the Academy, a monthly newsletter for Premium subscribers offering a scholarly take on topics in Buddhist thought and practice. Each issue highlights a key theme and points to further readings and videos for exploration.
Behind Buddhism for Beginners
In 2025, the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) hosted the tenth Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Program in Buddhist Studies Early Career Retreat. The annual event gathered a global network of fellowship recipients, eminent scholars, and foundation advisors, including members of the Tricycle editorial team. 

In early 2024, Tricycle editors initiated a revamp of the Buddhism for Beginners website. The previous material was written in 2017–2018, and since then, both Buddhist studies and Buddhist communities have experienced significant change. Ongoing research has refined scholarly understanding of Buddhist history, doctrine, and practice, while contemporary Buddhist life has been shaped by globalization and will continue to evolve.

Online engagement with Buddhism has also shifted significantly. AI-driven search tools now play a major role in how people encounter information, prioritizing content that is clearly structured and current. The original Buddhism for Beginners site was not designed with AI in mind. Addressing this challenge required more than a technical redesign; it needed careful editorial judgment about how Buddhist knowledge is organized, explained, and presented. 

Thanks to funding from the Robert H. N. Ho Family FoundationTricycle now has two Buddhism Public Scholars in residence. Their academic expertise, combined with the editorial experience of the Tricycle staff, has shaped the rebuild of this free, trustworthy introduction to Buddhism—one that reflects contemporary scholarship and the reality of how people seek knowledge today.

Knowledge and Practice

Scholarly work can support Buddhist practice, even though book knowledge is sometimes framed as an obstacle. Alan Watts once remarked that “A scholar tries to learn something every day; a student of Buddhism tries to unlearn something daily.” The distinction is important, but it can be overstated. Unlearning matters, yet learning also shapes how Buddhist teachings are understood and transmitted. 

Many common ideas about Buddhism persist because they go unexamined. Oversimplified accounts of meditation, doctrine, or the early Buddhist texts can begin to feel authoritative through repetition alone. Historical and comparative perspectives provide context, not to undermine practice but to firmly ground it.

Buddhism for Beginners draws on academic research while keeping explanations concise and readable. The challenge is deciding what matters most for beginners and then how to explain it without overwhelming the reader. Easier said than done.
This new map for Buddhism for Beginners traces Buddhism’s spread across Asia. It represents broad historical patterns rather than every channel of exchange. Many such maps exist, but each slightly differs because the spread was far more dynamic than any one map can show. This illustrates the challenge of presenting complex ideas in a relatable format, as editors must choose which information to include. | Illustration by Wouter F. Goedkoop at thevoyagersworkshop.com
Many Buddhisms

Buddhist traditions are far from uniform. They have always developed in conversation with surrounding religious, cultural, and political circumstances, resulting in significant variations across time and place. No brief introduction can capture this breadth, but a responsible overview can present diversity without flattening it—acknowledging distinct beliefs and practices while also noting ethical debates, doctrinal disagreements, and ritual change.

Early Western scholarship often treated certain texts as a privileged window into “original,” or authentic, Buddhism. That assumption has now been largely set aside. Buddhism has never been monolithic, and globalization has brought practitioners from many traditions into closer contact than ever before. Learning to navigate this variation provides an essential foundation for understanding Buddhism today and for situating one’s own practice within a wider context.
Looking Ahead

The updated Buddhism for Beginners content reflects this dynamic picture of Buddhist history and practice. Many core topics are already in place, but the project remains ongoing. A new page on Buddhist holidays is planned for 2026, with additional expansions to follow. Each update will continue to rely on careful editorial decisions and current scholarship to present material that is accurate, accessible, and useful. The goal is to offer newcomers—and those revisiting familiar material—a reliable framework for understanding the basics of Buddhism in a changing world.
Additional Material
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