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Author Thupten Jinpa.

Title Self, reality and reason in Tibetan philosophy : Tsongkhapa's quest for the Middle Way / Thupten Jinpa.

Publication Info. London ; New York : RoutledgeCurzon, 2002.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xvi, 248 pages) : illustrations.
data file
Physical Medium polychrome
Series Curzon critical studies in Buddhism series
Curzon critical studies in Buddhism.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-239) and index.
Contents Cover; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Preface; Technical Note; Bibliographical Abbreviations; List of Charts and Tables; Introduction; 1 Context and Methodological Issues; The historical contexts of Tsongkhapa's thought; Questions of originality and development in Tsongkhapa's Madhyamaka philosophy; Textual sources for an exegesis of Tsongkhapa's Madhyamaka philosophy; Tsongkhapa's qualms about early Tibetan understandings of emptiness; 2 Delineating the Parameters of Madhyamaka Reasoning; Tsongkhapa's reading of the four-cornered argument in Madhyamaka reasoning.
Distinguishing between the domains of conventional and ultimate discoursesTwo senses of 'ultimate' in the Madhyamaka dialectic; Identifying the object of negation; That which is 'not found' and that which is 'negated'; A logical analysis of the forms of negation; Tsongkhapa's critique of autonomous reasoning; 3 Tsongkhapa's Deconstruction of the Self; Levels of selfhood according to Tsongkhapa; Inadequacies of the Buddhist reductionist theory of no-self; The Madhyamaka seven-point analysis of self: A brief outline; An analysis of the concept of intrinsic existence.
No-self as the emptiness of intrinsic existence4 Personal Identity, Continuity, and the I-consciousness; Personal identity and dependent origination; The nature of the I-consciousness; Individuality, continuity, and rebirth; The analogy of the chariot; 5 No-Self, Truth, and the Middle Way; To exist is to exist in the conventional sense; Everyday reality as fiction-like; Beyond absolutism, nihilism, and relativism; No-self, reason, and soteriology; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; Wylie Transliteration of Tibetan Names; Index.
Summary The work explores the historical and intellectual context of Tsongkhapa's philosophy and addresses the critical issues related to questions of development and originality in Tsongkhapa's thought. It also deals extensively with one of Tsongkhapa's primary concerns, namely his attempts to demonstrate that the Middle Way philosophy's deconstructive analysis does not negate the reality of the everyday world. The study's central focus, however, is the question of the existence and the nature of self. This is explored both in terms of Tsongkhapa's deconstruction of the self and his reconstruction of.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Tsong-kha-pa Blo-bzang-grags-pa, 1357-1419.
Tsong-kha-pa Blo-bzang-grags-pa, 1357-1419.
Philosophy, Tibetan.
Philosophy, Tibetan.
Mādhyamika (Buddhism)
Mādhyamika (Buddhism)
Self (Philosophy)
Self (Philosophy)
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Other Form: Print version: Thupten Jinpa. Self, reality and reason in Tibetan philosophy. London ; New York : RoutledgeCurzon, 2002 0700712798 (DLC) 2006277487 (OCoLC)43969047
ISBN 9781135024505 (electronic book)
1135024502 (electronic book)
0415406056
9780415406055
9780203709689
0203709683
0700712798
9780700712793