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Buddhist No-Self, the Person Convention, and the Metaphysics Of Moral Practice: Is Hayashi's Emergentist Account Of Vasubandhu's Ontology Of Persons Explanatorily Self-Defeating? |
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Author |
Fletcher, Michael Joseph
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Source |
Philosophy East and West
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Volume | v.70 n.2 |
Date | 2020.04 |
Pages | 303 - 337 |
Publisher | University of Hawaii Press |
Publisher Url |
https://uhpress.hawaii.edu/
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Location | Honolulu, HI, US [檀香山, 夏威夷州, 美國] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | Author Affiliations: Department of Philosophy and Religion Studies, Coastal Carolina University |
Table of contents | 1. Anglophone Buddhist Studies and Analytic Metaphysics 303 1.1 The Explanatory Framework 304 1.2 Moral Practice, Buddhist No-Self, and the Person Convention 306 2. Motivating Persons as (Weak) Emergents within Vasubandhu’s Mereologically Oriented Metaphysics 310 3. Hayashi’s Account of Persons as “Weakly” Emergent 315 3.1 The Epiphenomenalist Move: Making Persons Ontologically Excludable Hayashi states: 316 3.2 The Weak Epistemic Emergentist Move: Introducing a Dual-Domain Framework 318 3.3 The Representational-Cognitive Emergentist Move 321 4. The Argument from Explanatory Superiority 322 5. Hayashi’s Weak Emergentism: Explanatorily Superior or Self-Defeating? 327 6. Conclusion 331 Acknowledgments 332 |
ISSN | 00318221 (P); 15291898 (E) |
DOI | 10.1353/pew.2020.0023 |
Hits | 394 |
Created date | 2020.06.22 |

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