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Can One Prove That Something Exists Beyond Consciousness? A Śaiva Criticism Of the Sautrāntika Inference Of External Objects |
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Author |
Ratié, Isabelle (著)
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Source |
Journal of Indian Philosophy
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Volume | v.39 n.4-5 |
Date | 2011.10 |
Pages | 479 - 501 |
Publisher | Springer |
Publisher Url |
http://www.springer.com/gp/
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Location | Berlin, Germany [柏林, 德國] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Keyword | Utpaladeva; Abhinavagupta; Pratyabhijnñā; Vijñānavāda; Sautrāntika; Consciousness |
Abstract | This article examines how the Kashmiri non-dualistic Śaiva philosophers Utpaladeva (tenth century) and Abhinavagupta (10th—11th centuries) present and criticize a theory expounded by certain Buddhist philosophers, identified by the two Śaiva authors as Sautrāntikas. According to this theory, no entity external to consciousness can ever be perceived since perceived objects are nothing but internal aspects (ākāra) of consciousness. Nonetheless we must infer the existence of external entities so as to account for the fact that consciousness is aware of a variety of objects: just as a mirror takes on a variegated appearance only by reflecting a multiplicity of objects that remain external to it, in the same way, phenomenal variety can be explained only by assuming the existence of various objects external to consciousness. In Īśvarapratyabhijñākārikās I, 5, 8—9 and their commentaries, Utpaladeva and Abhinavagupta endeavour to criticize this theory, which challenges their own idealistic principles: according to them, the Sautrāntikas' inference is neither legitimate nor even possible. The passage is particularly telling as regards the strategy developed by Pratyabhijñā philosophers with respect to their Buddhist opponents: they make use of certain arguments propounded by Dharmakīrti in defense of Vijñānavāda in order to criticize the Sautrāntikas' inference, but they also exploit this discussion to underline the superiority of their idealism over that of the Vijñānavādins. |
Table of contents | Introduction—Why Prove (or Refute) Externalism? 480 The Saiva Presentation of the Sautrantikas’ Thesis 481 The First Assault on the Sautrantika’s Inference: An Inferred Cause Must Have Been Previously Perceived 484 The Sautrantika’s Riposte: The Argument of the Sense Organs 486 Utpaladeva’s Answer: In the Case of the Sense Organs, Causality is Directly Perceived 488 Is Utpaladeva Providing an Argument Against His Own Theory? 491 The Ambiguity of the Concept of Externality (bahyata) 493 What Differentiates the Pratyabhijna’s Criticism from the Vijnanavadins’? 496 Conclusion—What Does Utpaladeva’s Refutation Prove? 498 |
ISSN | 00221791 (P); 15730395 (E) |
DOI | 10.1007/s10781-011-9143-y |
Hits | 211 |
Created date | 2019.10.11 |
Modified date | 2023.10.18 |
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