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On the Distinction Between Epistemic and Metaphysical Buddhist Idealisms: A Śaiva Perspective
Author Ratié, Isabelle
Source Journal of Indian Philosophy
Volumev.42 n.2-3
Date2014.06
Pages353 - 375
PublisherSpringer
Publisher Url http://www.springer.com/gp/
LocationBerlin, Germany [柏林, 德國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NoteI. Ratié (&)
Institut fu¨r Indologie und Zentralasienwissenschaften, Leipzig, Germany
e-mail: isabelle.ratie@gmail.com
KeywordIdealism; Buddhism; Manorathanandin; Utpaladeva; Abhinavagupta
AbstractModern scholarship has often wondered whether Indian Buddhist idealism is primarily epistemic or metaphysical: does this idealism amount to a kind of transcendental scepticism according to which we cannot decide whether objects exist or not outside of consciousness because we can have no epistemic access whatsoever to these objects? Or is it rather ontologically committed, i.e., does it consist in denying the very existence of the external world? One could deem the question anachronistic and suspect that with such an inquiry we project onto Ancient and Medieval India a distinction that remains profoundly alien to it, were it not for a few preserved texts where Indian authors themselves distinguish between two such kinds of idealism within the Buddhist philosophical tradition. As already pointed out by Dan Arnold, this is the case in the commentary by Manorathanandin on Dharmakīrti’s Pramāṇavārttika; but the difference between two varieties of Buddhist idealism is also alluded to in Hindu sources, both Mīmāṃsaka and Śaiva. The present article offers a new analysis of Manorathanandin’s short and somewhat ambiguous distinction, and it examines in this connection some important remarks found in the works of the Śaiva nondualists Utpaladeva (c. 925–975) and Abhinavagupta (c. 975–1025). It shows that according to these authors, in fact the epistemic version of the Buddhist argument in favour of idealism is already metaphysical insofar as it necessarily involves a denial of the existence of the external world, and it attempts to assess the faithfulness of this Śaiva interpretation to its Buddhist sources.
Table of contentsThe Buddhist Sākāra-/Nirākāra-vāda Debate and the Distinction Between Epistemic and Metaphysical Idealisms 354
Utpaladeva’s Pratyabhijñā System, or the Śaiva Art of Recycling Buddhist Ideas 357
Manorathanandin’s Distinction Between Two Kinds of Arguments in Favour of Idealism 358
The Śaivas’ Interpretation of this Distinction: The Epistemic Argument as the Argument Par Excellence for Metaphysical Idealism 362
Is the Śaivas’ Interpretation of the Two Kinds of Idealistic Arguments a Betrayal of Their Buddhist Source(s)? 369
Bibliographical References 373
ISSN00221791 (P); 15730395 (E)
Hits251
Created date2014.12.31
Modified date2019.07.30



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