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To See the Buddha: a Philosopher's Quest for the Meaning of Emptiness |
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Author |
Eckel, Malcolm David (著)
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Date | 1994 |
Pages | 262 |
Publisher | Princeton University Press |
Location | Princeton, NJ, US [普林斯顿, 紐澤西州, 美國] |
Content type | 書籍=Book |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | Originally published: San Francisco : Harper SanFrancisco, c1992 |
Keyword | 空性=Sunyata=Sunnata=Emptiness |
Table of contents | Abbreviations Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Ch. 1 The Story of the Asuras' Cave 11 Ch. 2 The Structure of Bhavaviveka's Thought 22 Philosophy as a Cognitive Quest 23 The Three-Part Structure of Bhavaviveka's Argument 29 Points of Transition from One Stage in the Argument to Another 42 Bhavaviveka's Ironical Point of View 44 Ch. 3 Interpreting the Signs of the Buddha 51 Hsuan-tsang's Encounter with the Indian Landscape 51 The Buddha as a Place Where an Absence Is Present 65 Ch. 4 The Diachronic Dimension of the Buddha's Absence 73 The Buddha's Previous Vows 74 The Buddha's Manifestations 84 The Buddha's Sustaining Power 90 Ch. 5 The Synchronic Dimension of the Buddha's Absence 95 The Dharma Body 97 The Eternal Buddha 109 Ch. 6 Bhavaviveka's Theory of the Buddha 114 The Ultimate Buddha: A Negative Version of the Two-Body Theory 115 The Conventional Buddha: A Positive Version of the Two-Body Theory 122 The Three-Body Theory 125 Ch. 7 Buddhahood and the Language of the Senses 131 Hsuan-tsang's Encounter with the Pirates 131 Bhavaviveka and the Philosopher's Eyes 137 Structural Similarities Between Different Kinds of Vision 141 The Ranking of the Different Senses 147 The Conventional Buddha189 Notes 197 Bibliography 242 Index 259 |
ISBN | 9780691037738 (paperback); 0691037736 |
Hits | 581 |
Created date | 2006.03.14 |
Modified date | 2021.05.28 |
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