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4107 found
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  1. Constructing a hermeneutics of re-cognition: accessing Raja Rao’s corpus.Subhasis Chattopadhyay - manuscript
    Lisa Zunshine stayed at Hotel Laxmi Park at Bishnupur, I do not know whether that hotel exists now or not. I sparred with Rukmani Bhaya Nair at an international literary meet at Dehradun in 2017 and I have that video. In this hurriedly written essay for an FDP conducted by a Central University in India in collaboration with a College in New Delhi, I point out the need to distinguish between philosophy and darśana while accessing the corpus of Raja Rao. (...)
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  2. Philosophy as Therapy - A Review of Konrad Banicki's Conceptual Model.Bruno Contestabile & Michael Hampe - manuscript
    In his article Banicki proposes a universal model for all forms of philosophical therapy. He is guided by works of Martha Nussbaum, who in turn makes recourse to Aristotle. As compared to Nussbaum’s approach, Banicki’s model is more medical and less based on ethical argument. He mentions Foucault’s vision to apply the same theoretical analysis for the ailments of the body and the soul and to use the same kind of approach in treating and curing them. In his interpretation of (...)
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  3. Radiance of Time.Gus Koehler - manuscript
    For Vajrayana Buddhism, the now is an interval, a boundary, a point of tension and suspension with an atmosphere of uncertainty. It is a bifurcation point of variable length; its name is “bardo.” The bardo is immersed in the conventional, or “seeming” reality. It emerges from what is called the “unstained” ultimate or primordial emptiness or “basal clear light.” Further, the ultimate is not the sphere of cognition. Cognition, including cognition of time, belongs to conventional reality. Buddhahood, in contrast, is (...)
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  4. Personal or Non-Personal Divinity: A New Pluralist Approach.Julian Perlmutter - manuscript
    Religious disagreement – the existence of inconsistent religious views – is familiar and widespread. Among the most fundamental issues of such disagreement is whether to characterise the divine as personal or non-personal. On most other religious issues, the diverse views seem to presuppose some view on the personal/non-personal issue. In this essay, I address a particular question arising from disagreement over this issue. Let an exclusivist belief be a belief that a doctrine d on an issue is true, and that (...)
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  5. Becoming And Nonentity in Buddhism.Dr A. Baqirshahi - unknown - Kheradnameh Sadra Quarterly 20.
    The main tendendency of Buddha is to represent the universe as a perpetual flow, or nonentity or soullessness. According to Buddhism there is neither being uor non-being but only beeoming. Reality is a stream of becoming.life is a series of the manifestation of becoming. There is nothing which changes; only ceasless change goes on.In Buddhist schools The so-called soul is also reduced to a series of fleeting ideas. The individual self is considered to be the empirisal life of man. In (...)
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  6. Christian-buddhist dialogue—a contemporary phenomenon.Jan M. Bereza - forthcoming - Dialogue and Universalism.
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  7. International Seminar on Buddhism and Christianity.Chung Byung-Jo - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  8. Jesus through a Buddhist's Eyes.José Ignacio Cabezón - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  9. The 1994 European Buddhist-Christian Symposium.David W. Chappell - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  10. Fictionally fictional object: the alleged objecthood of nothingness.Wai Lok Cheung - forthcoming - Asian Studies.
    Nothingness is inconceivable, yet at the same time it is not inconceivable because it is actually referred to. I propose several accessibility relations to illustrate that nothingness is not an object at all. The fictional object that Sherlock Holmes is belongs to the domain of some semantic context, but the fictionally fictional object that nothingness is does not. Based on this idea, I will also discuss the semantics of “Nothingness does not exist”. How is it that it is not an (...)
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  11. Frederick J. Streng Book Award.James Fredericks - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  12. The Second Conference Report of the Tōzai Shūkyō Kōryū Gakkai: Hisamatsu Sensei's Theory of Zen and Shin Buddhism.Hoshino Gempō & Jan Van Bragt - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  13. Frederick J. Streng Book Award.Rita Gross - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  14. Merit Transference and the Paradox of Merit Inflation.Matthew Hammerton - forthcoming - Journal of Value Inquiry.
    Many ethical systems hold that agents earn merit and demerit through their good and bad deeds. Some of these ethical systems also accept merit transference, allowing merit to be transferred, in certain circumstances, from one agent to another. In this article, I argue that there is a previously unrecognized paradox for merit transference involving a phenomenon I call “merit inflation”. With a particular focus on Buddhist ethics, I then look at the options available for resolving this paradox. I conclude that (...)
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  15. Madhyamaka.Richard Hayes - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    The Madhyamaka school of Buddhism, the followers of which are called Mādhyamikas, was one of the two principal schools of Mahāyāna Buddhism in India, the other school being the Yogācāra. The name of the school is a reference to the claim made of Buddhism in general that it is a middle path (madhyamā pratipad) that avoids the two extremes of eternalism—the doctrine that all things exist because of an eternal essence—and annihilationism—the doctrine that things have essences while they exist but (...)
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  16. Review of David. E. Cooper, Pessimism, Quietism, and Nature as Refuge. [REVIEW]Ian James Kidd - forthcoming - Religious Studies.
  17. Frederick J. Streng Book Award.David Loy - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  18. The Shentong Tradition and Classical Theism: A Synthesis.Tyler Dalton McNabb - forthcoming - Philosophy East and West.
    McNabb and Baldwin have recently argued that Classical Theism and Buddhism can be rendered in a logically consistent way. That is, one could theoretically endorse the theses of Classical Theism and the metaphysical theses of what they call mere Buddhism. One criticism of their project goes like this: McNabb and Baldwin’s project, typical to analytic philosophy, is ahistorical. While McNabb and Baldwin’s argument might go through with respect to some very generalized form of Buddhism, McNabb and Baldwin don’t show that (...)
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  19. The First Meeting of the Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies.Donald W. Mitchell - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  20. Frederick J. Streng Book Award.Donald Mitchell & James Wiseman - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  21. Frederick J. Streng Book Award.Joseph S. O'Leary - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  22. Message to Buddhists for the Feast of Vesakh 2007: Christians and Buddhists: Educating Communities to Live in Harmony and Peace.Paul Cardinal Poupard & Pier Luigi Celata - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  23. Reflections upon buddhist-Christian dialogue.John Myrdhin Reynolds - forthcoming - Dialogue and Universalism.
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  24. Unknowing: Christian and Buddhist Soteriological Epistemology.James Dominic Rooney - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Philosophy:1-23.
    Buddhists point to the soteriological value not only of the dispelling of ignorance, but the arising of insight or wisdom which constitutes the salvific goal of practice. Madhyamaka’s unique conception of the ultimate nature of reality makes this cognition of what is metaphysically ultimate distinct from other kinds of knowledge, as these soteriologically valuable cognitive states aim at something unlike anything else so known: the lack of ‘own- being,’ or emptiness, of all reality. After considering and rejecting some popular interpretations (...)
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  25. Paper Fowl and Wooden Fish: The Separation of Kami and Buddha Worship in Haguro Shugendō, 1869-1875.Gaynor Sekimori - forthcoming - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies.
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  26. A Blueprint for Buddhist Revolution: The Radical Buddhism of Seno'o Girō (1889–1961) and the Youth League for Revitalizing Buddhism. [REVIEW]James Mark Shields - forthcoming - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies.
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  27. Buddha.Mark Siderits - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  28. The 1994 International Buddhist-Christian Theological Encounter.Judith Simmer-Brown & John Borelli - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  29. Mindfulness as a mediator between the effective and the ethical manager.Dominique Steiler & Raffi Duymedjian - forthcoming - Business Ethics: A Critical Approach: Integrating Ethics Across the Business World.
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  30. Popular Buddhist orthodoxy in contemporary japan.George J. Tanabe Jr - forthcoming - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies.
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  31. Contrasting Images of the Buddha.Taitetsu Unno - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  32. (1 other version)1992 Meeting of the Japan Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies.Jan Van Bragt - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
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  33. Theravāda Buddhism, Finite Fine-grainedness, and the Repugnant Conclusion.Calvin Baker - 2025 - Journal of Buddhist Ethics 32:1-28.
    According to Finite Fine-grainedness (roughly), there is a finite sequence of intuitively small differences between any two welfare levels. The assumption of Finite Fine-grainedness is essential to Gustaf Arrhenius’s favored sixth impossibility theorem in population axiology and plays an important role in the spectrum argument for the (Negative) Repugnant Conclusion. I argue that Theravāda Buddhists will deny Finite Fine-grainedness and consider the space that doing so opens up—and fails to open up—in population axiology. I conclude with a lesson for population (...)
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  34. Everyday Aesthetics, Happiness, and Depression.Ian James Kidd - 2025 - In Kathleen Galvin, Michael Musalek, Martin Poltrum & Yuriko Saito, Oxford Handbook of Mental Health and Contemporary Western Aesthetics. Oxford University Press.
    This chapter will introduce everyday aesthetics and conceptions of happiness, explore their interconnections, and indicate some ways they might relate to depression. I introduce the main claims and concerns of everyday aesthetics and illustrate these with examples from the Indian, Chinese, and Japanese philosophical traditions. I then consider two popular accounts of happiness – ‘hedonic’ and ‘life-satisfaction’ theories – and offer an alternative phenomenological account of happiness. Aesthetic appreciation and agency and happiness, it is argued, depend on a phenomenologically fundamental (...)
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  35. Buddhist epistemology in the Geluk school: three key texts.Jonathan Samuels - 2025 - New York, NY, USA: Wisdom. Edited by Dar-Ma-Rin-Chen, ʼjam-Dbyangs-Bzhad-Pa Ngag-Dbang-Brtson-ʼgrus & Jonathan Samuels.
    This volume includes translations of three separate Tibetan works composed by individuals who are now regarded as iconic figures of the Geluk school of Buddhism. The first work is Banisher of Ignorance: An Ornament of the Seven Treatises on Pramāṇa, by Khedrup Gelek Palsang (1385-1438), and the second is On Preclusion and Relationship, by Gyaltsab Darma Rinchen (1364-1432). The authors-popularly known as Khedrup Jé and Gyaltsab Jé-are represented as the foremost disciples of Tsongkhapa Losang Drakpa (1357-1419), and each succeeded him (...)
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  36. The empty path: finding fulfillment through the radical art of lessening.Billy Wynne - 2025 - Novato, California: New World Library.
    Providing an antidote to our culture's never-ending quest for more, mindfulness teacher Billy Wynne shows how embracing the Buddhist concept of emptiness can declutter the mind and distill our experience of daily life to its essential beauty, clarity, and joy.
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  37. Just awakening: yogācāra social philosophy in modern China.Jessica X. Zu - 2025 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Yogācāra, one of the two principal schools of Indian Mahayana Buddhism, arose in the first or second century CE and was introduced into Tibet and China in the fourth and fifth centuries CE, where it quickly became a dominant form. Roughly comparable to phenomenology in the West (and acknowledged as an influence by Husserl and Merleau-Ponty), it rejects ontology in favor of experiential foundations and claims that knowledge is produced by individual or collective consciousness. In the late nineteenth through mid-twentieth (...)
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  38. Heart to Heart: A Comparative Study of and Commentary on the Chinese and Sanskrit Heart Sutra Texts.Jayarava Attwood - 2024 - Buddhist Studies Review 40 (2):159-88.
    A comprehensive comparison of the Chinese and Sanskrit texts of the Heart Sutra shows that, even after correcting transmission errors, there are substantial differences between them. Most of the differences appear to arise from the process of translating the text from Chinese to Sanskrit in isolation from Sanskrit Prajñaparamita literary traditions. Some differences appear to reflect the differing doctrinal commitments of those involved in creating/transmitting the texts. Following a suggestion by Huifeng (2014), I take a phenomenological approach when reading the (...)
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  39. Is Buddhism without rebirth ‘nihilism with a happy face’?Calvin Baker - 2024 - Analysis 84 (4):701–710.
    I argue against pessimistic readings of the Buddhist tradition on which unawakened beings invariably have lives not worth living due to a preponderance of suffering (duḥkha) over well-being.
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  40. Three Revisionary Implications of Buddhist Animal Ethics.Calvin Baker - 2024 - Philosophy East and West 74 (4):595-616.
    Many accept the following three theses in animal ethics. First, although animal welfare should not be—or at least, need not be—our top moral priority, it is not a trivial one either. Second, if an animal is sentient, then it is a moral patient. Third, the extinction of an animal species is a tragic outcome that we have moral reason to prevent. I argue that a traditional (i.e., pre-modern) Buddhist perspective pushes against the first thesis and that a naturalized Buddhist perspective (...)
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  41. Personal ontology: mystery and its consequences.Andrew Brenner - 2024 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    What are we? Are we, for example, souls, organisms, brains, or something else? In this book, Andrew Brenner argues that there are principled obstacles to our discovering the answer to this fundamental metaphysical question. The main competing accounts of personal ontology hold that we are either souls (or composites of soul and body), or we are composite physical objects of some sort, but, as Brenner shows, arguments for either of these options can be parodied and transformed into their opposites. Brenner (...)
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  42. Crossing the Stream, Leaving the Cave: Buddhist-Platonist Philosophical Inquiries.Amber D. Carpenter & Pierre-Julien Harter (eds.) - 2024 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Crossing the Stream, Leaving the Cave brings philosophers from two of the world's great philosophical traditions--Platonic and Indian Buddhist--into joint inquiry on topics in metaphysics, epistemology, mind, language, and ethics. An international team of scholars address selected questions of mutual concern to Buddhist and Platonist: How can knowledge of reality transform us? Will such transformation leave us speechless, or disinterested in the world around us? What is cause? What is self-knowledge? And how can dreams shed light on waking cognition? What (...)
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  43. Learning, Living, and Teaching Bodhicitta: Jé Tsongkhapa's Contribution to Spreading Compassion in the World.Bhikṣuṇī Thubten Chodron - 2024 - In David Gray, Tsongkhapa: the legacy of Tibet's great philosopher-saint. New York: Wisdom Publications.
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  44. Metaphysics: East and West.Michael Clark, Li Kang, Kris McDaniel & Tuomas E. Tahko (eds.) - 2024 - Springer Nature.
    The basic concepts we use to frame metaphysical discussions – our tools of metaphysics – profoundly influence how those discussions proceed. Much recent work in anglophone metaphysics has centred on a set of hyperintensional such tools: grounding, dependence, fundamentality, and essence. This topical collection will provide new perspectives on these debates by bringing them into contact with Asian metaphysical traditions.
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  45. Tyron Goldschmidt and Kenneth L. Pearce (eds.): Idealism: New Essays in Metaphysics. [REVIEW]Nevin Climenhaga - 2024 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 96 (1).
  46. Inside the Flower Garland Sutra: Huayan Buddhism and the modern world.Ben Connelly - 2024 - New York, NY, USA: Wisdom.
    Huayan Buddhism arose in the sixth century and was rooted in the Mahayana Flower Garland Sutra. The teachings of Huayan had a profound influence on Chan and Zen. Huayan is relational, practical, and positive. Its emphasis on interdependence, celebration of the sensual world, and diversity of people and practices provides inspiration for what Thich Nhat Hanh called "engaged Buddhism". With Inside the Flower Garland Sutra Zen teacher Ben Connelly explains the significance of Huayan teachings for Buddhist practice. Each chapter is (...)
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  47. Two Paths: A Critique of Husserl’s View of the Buddha.Jason K. Day - 2024 - East Asian Journal of Philosophy 3 (1):211-232.
    In “On the Teachings of Gotama Buddha” (1925) and “Socrates-Buddha” (1926), Edmund Husserl claims that the Buddha achieves a transcendental view of consciousness by performing the epoché. Yet, states Husserl, the Buddha fails to develop a purely theoretical and universal science of consciousness, i.e., phenomenology, because his purely practical goal of Nibbāna limits knowledge of consciousness. I evaluate Husserl’s claims by examining the Buddha’s Majjhima Nikāya. I argue that Husserl correctly identifies an epoché and transcendental viewpoint in the Buddha’s teachings. (...)
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  48. Virupa, Meet Fichte: Uncanny Resonances in Comparative Philosophy.Alexander T. Englert & Jonathan Gold - 2024 - The Immanent Frame 1.
    What happens when scholars come together to study Buddhist and German Idealist perspectives on mind and representation? We explore this question and reflect on methodological considerations in what is often referred to as "comparative philosophy.".
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  49. The Buddha’s Lucky Throw and Pascal’s Wager.Bronwyn Finnigan - 2024 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 102 (3):561-580.
    The Apaṇṇaka Sutta, one of the early recorded teachings of the Buddha, contains an argument for accepting the doctrines of karma and rebirth that Buddhist scholars claim anticipates Pascal’s wager. I call this argument the Buddha’s wager. Does it anticipate Pascal’s wager and is it a good bet? Contemporary scholars identify at least four versions of Pascal’s wager in his Pensées. This article demonstrates that the Buddha’s wager anticipates two versions of Pascal’s wager, but not its canonical form. Like Pascal’s (...)
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  50. Conventionalising rebirth: Buddhist agnosticism and the doctrine of two truths.Bronwyn Finnigan - 2024 - In Yujin Nagasawa & Mohammad Saleh Zarepour, Global Dialogues in the Philosophy of Religion: From Religious Experience to the Afterlife. Oxford University Press USA.
    What should the Buddhist attitude be to rebirth if it is believed to be inconsistent with current science? This chapter critically engages forms of Buddhist agnosticism that adopt a position of uncertainty about rebirth but nevertheless recommend ‘behaving as if’ it were true. What does it mean to behave as if rebirth were true, and are Buddhist agnostics justified in adopting this position? This chapter engages this question in dialogue with Mark Siderits’ reductionist analysis of the Buddhist doctrine of the (...)
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1 — 50 / 4107