A MILLENNIUM OF BUDDHIST LOGIC
Book Specification
Item Code: | IDC248 |
Author: | Alex Wayman |
Publisher: | Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd. |
Language: | English |
Edition: | 1999 |
ISBN: | 8120816463 |
Pages: | 376 |
Cover: | Hardcover |
Other Details | 8.8" X 5.5 |
Book Description
This is Volume One of Texts (from Sanskrit and Tibetan sources) of the two planned volumes on Buddhist Ligic (the second volume to be on topics and opponents). This first volume is in two parts: Part I (Introductory) has Asanga's Rule of Debate, Dharmakirti's Nyayabindu with Kamalasila's commentary, and Santi-pa's treatise on 'inner pervasion. Part II, devoted to the Dignaga-Dharmakirti system, has five sets of eleven verses, then a study of Bu-Ston's commentary on Dharmakirti's Pramanaviniscaya, and finally Tsong-kha-pa's Mun sel on the Seven Books of Dharmakirti. The 'Millennium' goes from Asanga to Tsongkha-pa. The texts here included began to be translated in the 1970s, and were brought to their present condition in the 1990s. Doubtless the present volume took longer than originally anticipated, and hopefully this published result will compensate for the many years of delay.
About the Author:
ALEX WAYMAN became Professor of Sanskrit at Columbia University in 1967 and has the title Professor Emeritus of Sanskrit, effective July 1991. His awards include the honorary D. Litt. at Nalanda University, India (April, 1978), and a work in his honor Researches in Indian and Buddhist Philosophy (Delhi, 1993). He published in Japan, 1994, his main contribution to Sanskrit per se, a translation of the Visvalocana lexicon. He is well-known for his publications in non-tantric and Tantric Buddhism, using the Sanskrit and Tibetan languages, his stream of books and articles now over a hundred and fifty. Showing he will complete as promised, he presents here the first of two volumes on Buddhist logic.
Illustration for Dust Jacket:
Tibetan 'chams dancer in Gelugpa tradition (from the F.D. Lessing collection). Here, depicting Vaisravana in the role of a wealth deity and a Dharmapala (protector of Buddhism). In his right hand, a symbol of the Buddhist three Jewels (Buddha, Dharma, Sangha); in his left hand, a symbol of the wish-granting jewel. Just as in debate there are two sides, with expected rewards.
Foreword
Preface
Prologue
Introduction
Abbreviations
Asanga's Rules of Debate (Sanskrit-English)
- The Debate in itself
Setting of the Debate
Foundation of the Debate
The Debate's Ornament
Points of Defeat in the Debate
Decision Whether to Undertake the Debate
Attributes of Much Utility in the Debate
Dharmakirti's Nyayabindu (Sanskrit-English)
- Pratyaksa (Direct Perception)
Svarthanumana (Inference for Oneself)
Pararthanumana (Inference for Others)
- Adversaries of Direct Perception
Adversaries of Inference for Oneself
Adversaries of Inference for Others
- Paragraphs 1-10
Paragraphs 11-16
Introduction to the Dignaga-Dharmakirti system by the 'Elevens'
- PS-Prat, First Eleven Verses
PV-Sid, First Eleven Verses
PV-Prat, First Eleven Verses
PV-Sva, First Eleven Verses
PV-Par, First Eleven Verses
- Pratyaksa (Direct Perception)
Svarthanumana (Inference for Oneself)
Pararthanumana (Inference for Others)
- Object
Subject
Means of Understanding the Object
Index