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Mānasapratyakṣa as the Perception of Conventionally Real (prajñaptisat) Properties—Interpreting Dignāga’s mānasa-pratyakṣa Based on Clues from Kuiji
Author Keng, Ching
Source Buddhist Philosophy of Consciousness: Tradition and Dialogue
Date2020.11.19
Pages247 - 274
PublisherBRILL
Publisher Url https://brill.com/
LocationLeiden, the Netherlands [萊登, 荷蘭]
Content type專題研究論文=Research Paper
Language英文=English
NoteChapter 9
AbstractIn his writing, Kuiji, (632–682), the foremost disciple of Xuanzang (602–664) interprets the notion of mental perception (mānasa-pratyakṣa) of Dignāga (ca. 480–540) as a function of the mental consciousness that arises simultaneously with a sensory consciousness. For this reason, it is named as “the mental consciousness arising simultaneously together with the five [sensory consciousnesses] (MSF).” To define this as a kind of perception would raise a few issues: Why do we need such a notion? Would it lead to the absurd consequence that even a person born blind can still see? If not, then what is the relation between such consciousness and a simultaneous sensory consciousness? If this qualifies as a kind of perception, then it must be without conceptualization. But what kind of role does it play in cognition as a non-conceptualizing mental perception? Why is it necessary? What is its conscious content? How does the content of a sensory consciousness get transmitted or shared with a MSF? And how do its conscious content and function differ from sensory consciousnesses on the one hand and from conceptualizing mental consciousness on the other? Does it function like a sensus communis so as to accommodate all kinds of sensory content such as visual, auditory and olfactory? This paper seeks to answer the above questions and depict a picture of such cognition based on the works of Kuiji. With this as a clue, we may have a better understanding of Dignāga’s notion of “mental perception.”
ISBN9789004440890 (Hardcover)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1163/9789004440913_014
Hits83
Created date2022.10.14
Modified date2022.10.17



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