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The Buddhist Analysis of Matter
Author Karunadasa, Y.
Date2015
Pages233
PublisherCentre of Buddhist studies, The university of Hong Kong
Publisher Url http://www.buddhism.hku.hk/
Location香港, 中國 [Hong Kong, China]
Content type書籍=Book
Language英文=English
NoteY. Karunadasa, Ph.D. (London), Ph.D. Honoris Causa (Mahamakut: Thailand), D. Litt. Honoris Causa (Kelaniya), is a Professor Emeritus of the University of Kelaniya and a former Director of its Postgraduate Institute of Pāli and Buddhist Studies. He was a Commonwealth Academic Staff Fellow (1974-1975) and Visiting Professor (1993) at SOAS of the University of London, Distinguished Numata Chair Professor at the University of Calgary (2001), and Tung Lin Kok Yuen Visiting Professor at the University of Toronto (2008). Subsequently he served as the MaMa Charitable Foundation Visiting Professor at the University of Hong Kong. Among his published works at the Centre of Buddhist Studies, The University of Hong Kong are Early Buddhist Teachings: The Middle Position in Theory and Practice and The Theravāda Abhidhamma: Its inquiry into the nature of conditioned reality.
AbstractThe present work is an exposition of the Buddhist analysis of matter and is mainly based on the literary sources of Theravāda Buddhism. Where necessary, it refers to parallel views and interpretations in other schools of Buddhist thought, so as to bring the subject into a wider perspective and to present it with a greater measure of precision. The bulk of the work is, however, devoted to an exposition of the basic material elements into which the whole of material existence is resolved and to explain their interconnection and interdependence on the basis of conditional relations. All of the material elements are subsumed under two headings as primary and secondary. The primary class represents four fundamental properties of matter, viz. solidity and extension, viscidity and cohesion, temperature of cold and heat, distension and mobility. The secondary class consists of material elements of two varieties. The first variety includes those material elements which have their own objective realities, namely, the five material sense-faculties, four varieties of sense-objects, two faculties of sex, the material faculty of vitality, the material property of nutrition, and the physical seat of mental activity. The second variety includes those material elements which are nominal entities with no autonomous objective counterparts of their own, namely, two physical modes of self-expression, three characteristics and four phases of the matter that enters into the composition of a living being, and the space delimited by matter. The study concludes with an attempt to understand the nature and relevance of the Buddhist analysis of matter in the context of Buddhism as a religion.
Table of contents[Table of Contents]

Preface to the second Edition / x
Preface to the First Edition / xi

Chapter One: Introductory 1
The generic and specific senses of the term ‘rūpa’
Commentarial descriptions of the term ‘rūpa’
Does ‘rūpa’ occur in a psychological sense, as well?

Chapter Two: Definition of Matter and the Basic Material Factors 9
Definition of matter in the Theravāda
Definition of matter in the Sarvāstivāda
Congruence of the two definitions
Division of matter into primary and secondary
The list of secondary factors
Its representation among the twelve sense-spheres (āyatanas)
The category of dhammāyatana-rūpa (to be known only as objects of mind)
The dhammāyatana-rūpa and the definition of matter

Chapter Three: The Primary Elements 21
Non-recognition of space as a primary element
Earth-element as solidity and spatial extension
Water-element as viscidity and cohesion
Fire-element as temperature of cold and heat
Air-element as distension and mobility
Denial of motion
Basic characteristics of the four primaries
Exclusion of the water-element from the sense of touch
Primary elements as ultimate material data

Chapter Four: Secondary Elements: Group A 37
Nipphanna material elements as real
Why only Nipphanna are real
The Sense-Organs
Objective Fields
Faculties of Sex
Material Faculty of Life
Material Nutriment
Physical Basis of Mental Activity

Chapter Five: Secondary Elements: Group B 59
Anipphanna material elements
Why only Anipphanna are nominal
Modes of self-expression
Characteristics of matter
Theory of momentary being
Phases of matter
Element of space

Chapter Six: Classification of Material Elements 91
The role of divisions and classifications
General classifications
Special classifications
Appropriated (upādiṇṇa) and non-appropriated (anupādiṇṇa)
Mind-conditioned non-mind-conditioned
Internal and external
Classification-charts

Chapter Seven: Correlation of Material Elements 115
Analysis (bheda) and Synthesis (saṅgaha) as two complementary methods
The twenty-four conditional relations
The four causes and six conditions of Sanskrit Buddhism
Some similarities and differences
The position of material elements in relation to conditional relations
Conditional relations not applicable to material elements

Chapter Eight: Atomic Clusters 133
Theory of rūpa-kalāpa as Theravāda version of atomism
Its parallelism to Sanskrit Buddhist theories
The Vaibhāṣika definition of the atom (paramāṇu) and the molecule (saṃghāta-paramāṇu)
Rūpa-kalāpa as the smallest unit of matter
The Sautrāntika and Vijñānavāda criticism of Vaibhāṣika atomism
Rūpa-kalāpa as possessing spatial dimensions Non-contact between atoms
The octuple molecule of Theravāda and Vaibhāṣika
Different kinds of rūpa-kalāpa
Classification of rūpa-kalāpa
Position of rūpa-kalāpa in relation to rūpaloka

Chapter Nine: Time and Temporality 157
Time as neither conditioned nor unconditioned
Technical terms signifying ‘time’
Time as confluence of conditions (karaṇa-samavāya)
Denial of absolute time
Time determined by events: plurality of times
The use of the term ‘time’ (samaya) in three different cases
Mutual relationship between time and consciousness
Definition of time by mind and mind by time

Chapter Ten: The Ehico-philosophical Basis of the Buddhist Analysis of Matter
Buddhist analysis of matter in the context of Buddhist ethics
The ethical and practical approach
Different interpretations on the philosophical basis of Buddhism
Realistic view of existence as the most tenable
Developments in the Abhidhamma
List of material factors: its significance in the context of Buddhism as a religion

End notes 177
Abbreviations 207
select Bibliography 210
I
ISBN9789881684349 (精)
Hits726
Created date2015.11.12
Modified date2015.11.12



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