Cover image for Hindu and Buddhist ideas in dialogue : self and no-self
Hindu and Buddhist ideas in dialogue : self and no-self
Title:
Hindu and Buddhist ideas in dialogue : self and no-self

Dialogues in South Asian traditions: religion, philosophy, literature and history

Dialogues in south Asian traditions.
Author:
Kuznetsova, Irina (Doctor of philosophy), editor.
ISBN:
9781409443544
Publication Information:
Surrey, England : Ashgate, [2012]
Physical Description:
viii, 255 pages ; 25 cm.
Series:
Dialogues in South Asian traditions: religion, philosophy, literature and history

Dialogues in south Asian traditions.
Contents:
Introduction / Chakravarthi Ram-Prasad -- Senses of self and not-self in the Upaniṣads and Nikāyas / Brian Black -- Why didn't Siddhārtha Gautama become a Sāṃkhya philosopher, after all?/ Marzenna Jakubczak -- Self, consciousness and liberation in classical Sāṃkhya / Mikel Burley -- Buddhist no-self : an analysis and critique / Jonardon Ganeri -- Emotions : a challenge to no-self views / Irina Kuznetsova -- Uddyotakara's defence of a self / John Taber -- The abode of recognition : memory and the continuity of selfhood in classical Nyāya thought / Douglas L. Berger -- Self and memory : personal identity and unified consciousness in comparative perspective / Chakravarthi Ram-Prasad -- Action, desire and subjectivity in Prābhākara Mīmāṃsā / Elisa Freschi -- On the Advaitic identification of self and consciousness / Wolfgang Fasching -- Luminosity, subjectivity, and temporality : an examination of Buddhist and Advaita views of consciousness / Matthew MacKenzie -- Arguing from synthesis to the self : Utpaladeva and Abhinavagupta respond to Buddhist no-selfism / Arindam Chakrabarti -- Indian philosophy and the question of the self / Ankur Barua.
Abstract:
"The debates between various Buddhist and Hindu philosophical systems about the existence, definition and nature of self, occupy a central place in the history of Indian philosophy and religion. These debates concern various issues: what 'self' means, whether the self can be said to exist at all, arguments that can substantiate any position on this question, how the ordinary reality of individual persons can be explained, and the consequences of each position. At a time when comparable issues are at the forefront of contemporary Western philosophy, in both analytic and continental traditions (as well as in their interaction), these classical and medieval Indian debates widen and globalise such discussions. This book brings to a wider audience the sophisticated range of positions held by various systems of thought in classical India."--Publisher's website.
Bibliographical References:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-246) and index.
Field 805:
npmlib 11000208 B132.A8 H56 yh
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