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Otherness in the Pratyabhijna philosophy |
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著者 |
Ratié, Isabelle
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掲載誌 |
Journal of Indian Philosophy
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巻号 | v.35 n.4 |
出版年月日 | 2007.08 |
ページ | 313 - 370 |
出版者 | Springer |
出版サイト |
http://www.springer.com/gp/
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出版地 | Berlin, Germany [柏林, 德國] |
資料の種類 | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
言語 | 英文=English |
抄録 | Idealism is the core of the Pratyabhijñã philosophy: the main goal of Utpaladeva (fl. c. 925–950 AD) and of his commentator Abhinavagupta (fl. c. 975–1025 AD) is to establish that nothing exists outside of consciousness. In the course of their demonstration, these Śaiva philosophers endeavour to distinguish their idealism from that of a rival system, the Buddhist Vijñānavāda. This article aims at examining the concept of otherness (paratva) as it is presented in the Pratyabhijñā philosophy in contrast with that of the Vijñānavādins’. Although, according to the Pratyabhijñā, the other subjects are not ultimately real since all subjects are nothing but limited manifestations of a single absolute subject, the fact that we are aware of their existence in the practical world has to be accounted for. The Vijñānavādins explain it by arguing the we infer the others’ existence. The Pratyabhijñā philosophers, while refuting their opponents’ reasoning as it is expounded in Dharmakīrti’s Santānāntarasiddhi, develop a particulary original analysis of our awareness of the others, stating that this awareness is neither a perception (pratyakṣa) nor an inference (anumāna), but rather a guess (ūha) in which we sense the others’ freedom (svātantrya). |
目次 | Introduction Otherness—a philosophical problem? 314 I. The Buddhist controversy over otherness as presented by Abhinavagupta(I¯PV I, 5, 5) 317 I. 1. The context: a discussion on idealism 317 I.2. The externalist’s criticism: the Vijn˜ a¯nava¯da reifies the other subjects 319 I.3. The Vijn˜ a¯nava¯din’s answer: alterity is known through inference 322 I.4. The externalist’s criticism 326 II. Otherness according to the Pratyabhijn˜ a¯ philosophy (I¯PV I, 1, 5) 336 II. 1. The self-luminosity of knowledge: a subject’s consciousness is self-established for that subject 336 II. 2. Praka¯s´a and vimars´a: action as the essence of knowledge 338 II. 3. Incarnated action as the final stage of knowledge 345 II. 4. The nature of the awareness of others: perception, inference, guess, recognition 354 II. 5. The intersubjective world: an expression of the universal subject’s freedom 364 Conclusion. Of distraction and recognition 367 References 369
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ISSN | 00221791 (P); 15730395 (E) |
ヒット数 | 295 |
作成日 | 2007.11.26 |
更新日期 | 2019.07.31 |

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