Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
5, 347-361
Emptiness ( #nyat&) for Caring the Self in the Middle Path: Reinvestigating the Middle Path Philosophy of N g rjuna
Mathew Varghese
The Eastern Institute (Toho Gakuin) Classical Indian Buddhist philosopher N g rjuna is known for his philosophical interpretations of the central conception of Buddhas teachings, the philosophy of Middle Path (M dhyamika). Notably he had introduced the unique concept of emptiness ((#nyat&) to explain the Middle Path philosophy: the philosophical meaning of emptiness is dependent co-arising of various elements that support the worldly experience. This study investigates how this concept is used in explaining the subjectivity of a human person and how it is used for interpreting the unique process of human existence. The discussions on subjectivity are imprecise in modern and contemporary philosophy. But N g rjunas philosophy enables us to explain subjectivity conclusively, without it having to be explained using metaphysical positions. #nyat& may introduce a new definition for the concept of non-self: not for negating the self but for caring self from the problems of life by making it centered in the Middle Path (madhyama-pratipat), where one may naturally be able to use his wisdom (praj&) as the guiding principle: not mere knowledge (j&na). #nyat& is understood using fourfold (catu ko i) logical analysis, not twofold analysis employed normally by other philosophers. Here, the Buddhist notion of self as the co-dependent evolution process of five aggregates (pacaskandhas) is reinterpreted using the unique method of tetralemma (catu ko i). This critique explores the Western philosophys conceptions on human reasoning, logocentrism, and the objective analytical method of modern science. After careful cross examination of the rival philosophical positions, it reasons out why the rationale of nature is always superior to human reasoning and logocentrism. Keywords: wisdom, subjectivity, Middle Path, co-dependent, co-arising, five aggregates, logocentrism
1. Introduction
Philosophical discourses in the early years of 21st century are obviously searching for a new perspective and methodology that the discourses initiated in the 17th century have reached an end point. Today, among the contemporary philosophers, there is an expressed concern about the sustainability and interdependence of human life on earth. The discourses in the last few centuries were initiated to learn about the foundational principles of natural laws using the human reasoning that centered around a kind of objective analytical method for understanding everything in the living world. This movement has initiated the scientific world view, where it is presumed that human reasoning can generate clear and certain knowledge by analyzing deeply the laws of nature (rationale of nature) and, thereby, humans can dominate the rationale of nature. In 21st century those assumptions are faced with its own counter discourses in the form of environmental
Mathew Varghese , Ph.D., Post Doctorate, Researcher at The Eastern Institute (Toho Gakuin); Lecturer at Aoyama Gakuin University, Japan; main research field: Buddhist and Comparative Philosophy.
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problems, resource depletion, poor distribution of wealth, etc., where the human person moves into the realm of fears, worries, and sufferings. Today, evidently there is a kind of dialectics emerging between rationale of nature and human reasoning. The human reasoning based on sciences that were suppose to have liberated the humanity from the shackles of wrong knowledge (ignorance) is now created a jungle of viewpoints and theories promoting only ignorance and speculative views. The human person today is more confused and directionless than ever before. And now a new world view should have to be emerged to counter the present systems promoted by Western philosophy since 17th century: an accumulation of speculative views supported with ignorance-driven knowledge sources. Today, with the emergence of cutting edge technologies the ignorance is further accentuated by machine-generated speculative views. At this point it is important to reinterpret the world view of scientific philosophy. 1 N g rjunian philosophy offers the unique resource of (#nyat& that could interpret the subjectivity and self, which is ignored in philosophy today, and may also help us generate authentic perspectives to understand the natural laws or the rationale of nature. In the classical Western philosophy, the discourses on the conception of self or subjectivity were based on the idea of soul and its intrinsic connection with the eternal reality: God; this relationship may be understood as the dominion of subjectivity. But this conception of soul was unacceptable to the modern Western philosophy after 17th century, which followed scientific reasoning where the relationship between soul and God is anathema, and declined to discourse on it. N g rjuna and the Buddhists also declined to endorse intrinsic relationship between the individual human person and the eternity, yet the conception of self was accepted on the basis of a different framework: a co-evolving, internally structured, and self sustaining system formulated on the basis of the five aggregates (pacaskandha) that is following the principles of dependent co-arising (prat.tyasa utpada). Therefore, the concept of dominion of subjectivity is used for contextually explaining the conception of self. It is argued here that the conception of (#nyat& of N g rjuna makes us understand the dominion of subjectivity as co-dependent and co-evolving elements, and the mechanism of it is meant to protect the self, not to decline it or reject it. It is controlled by deep insight or wisdom (praj&), not knowledge and ignorance; and the nature of it is compassion, not fear, greed, anger, passion, or hatred. It is possible for humanity to find ways to live with the rationale of nature, not by challenging it using the principles of logocentrism and the aggressive methods of scientific philosophy.
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about the dominion of subjectivity, but the ambiguity, in interpreting it, has only increased the formation of speculative views and ignorance (Japers 2004, 25). The quest for adducing pure knowledge using the methodology of science, by analyzing the objective world, has failed to explain the real status of the human person and his sense of being alive. The imprecision and vagueness of dasein is understood later as a singular individual human person looking at the rest of the world. The isolated individual self now struggles to survive in the world that all other selves are equated as objectified entities and are being analyzed for finding the ultimate objectivity. This understanding and world view has now reached the most difficult situation as the way Nietzsche perilously worried: the prospect of the human person being pushed into the depths of nihilism.2 In the classical Greek philosophy the relationship between God and self is that of the creator and the created. The Platonic conception on this relationship was explained as: God made first the soul, then the body. The soul is compounded of the indivisible-unchangeable and divisible-changeable; it is a third and intermediate kind of essence (Russell 1961, 158). The ambiguity in explaining clearly the relationship between God and soul, especially the scientifically indefinable idea of indivisible-unchangeable and divisible-changeable, may have prompted the modern Western philosophers to abandon the idea of soul and a precise and effective discourse on the dominion of subjectivity. The definition of self in the contemporary philosophical discourses is in its most minimalist conception: the awakened mind, being aware of its own existence, but on which one may have the least reflective freedom. In this context, the Heideggerian conception of dasein and hermeneutics as a method to achieve pure knowledge about subjectivity can be interpreted as a method to dissect the ownership of God on soul. The structuring of the dominion of subjectivity in this case is vague, and, with hermeneutical interpretation, it would turn in to an object, which is the biggest controversy in this much acclaimed method of Heidegger that is inimically followed even today. The methods of scientific philosophy isolated the individual human person and made him struggle in searching for his own identity which is vaguely defined as freedom. On such a fulcrum of freedom, scientific philosophy advances all its systems and the world view.
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experience possible. 3 So, the N g rjunian view on the co-dependent structuring of the five aggregates (pacaskandha) introduced in the Buddhist teachings as the dominion of subjectivity should be reinterpreted with a proper conception of (#nyat&. The reason for this is that he had strongly negated any real conception of each of the elements of the five aggregates as it had been discoursed in the Abhdharma schools of Buddhist philosophy4 as well as the singular entity conception of &tman promoted mainly by the Vedic schools, because such a conception may give a false notion that the self is protected by a soul connected with a transcended entity of God who determines the fate of the self on which we have no control. N g rjunian method is based on a unique formulation of negative dialectics, through which he revealed to us the idea of emptiness ((#nyat&) that explains the structure of the Buddhist concept of no soul (nair&tmya) as the co-dependent evolution of the five aggregates (pacaskandha) together with the objective aspect of phenomena (caturbh#ta) in the dominion of subjectivity of a person.5 The idea of no soul (nair&tmya) is not the negation of subjectivity but its momentary existence in the dominion of subjectivity. We shall come back to the discussion on negative dialectics later.
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efforts of a person with his life in the living world are meant for purifying the self, to realize the &tman. The self should be liberated in the dominion of subjectivity by following the path of action (karma) and knowledge (j&na). Though various Vedic schools may vary their opinion on this, it is generally understood that each person has distinct karmas and j&nas determined by the selfs karma-sa sk&ras (Dasgupta 1922, 267). The purpose of a life is to work, towards losing the influence of karmic sa sk&ras, by following the path directed by the Vedas to realize the true nature of soul (&tman), and in its perfect purity that it would be merging with the eternityBrahman (Varghese 2008, 96).6 This is the life process and it happens within the dominion of subjectivity. The relationship between &tman and Brahman is described as: The fundamental idea which runs through the early Upani ads is that underlying the exterior world of change there is an unchangeable reality which is identical with that which underlies the essence in man (Dasgupta 1922, 42). The Buddha identified that the Brahminical philosophy is inherently leaning towards extreme understandings on the aspects of the existence of human person and shall put him into the trap of sufferings. The &tman as the basis of self is an extreme position leading only to neglecting the process of accruing sufferings; in the same way, rejecting the &tman is another extreme position creating the same suffering situations. So instead of &tman, in the text of Khandhasa yutta (Sa yutta Nik&ya 22.48), the Buddha introduced the conception of five aggregates:
And what, bhikkhus, are the five aggregates? Whatever kind of form there is, whether past, future, or present, internal of external, gross or subtle, inferior or superior, far or near: this is called the form (r#pa) aggregate. What kind of feeling there is this is called the feeling (vedana) aggregate. Whatever kind of perception there is this is called the perception (sa ja) aggregate. Whatever kind of volitional formations there are these are called the volitional formations (sa sk&ra) aggregate. Whatever kind of consciousness there is, whether past, future, or present, internal or external, gross or subtle, inferior or superior, far or near: this is called the consciousness (j&na) aggregate. These, bhikkhus, are called the five aggregates. (Sa yutta Nik&ya, 886, emphasis added)
In contrast to the classical Western philosophy or the Brahmanical schools of Indian philosophy, in the Buddhist conception, the self of a human person is conceived as that each element of the five aggregates co-depends with each other to evolve it. In the same way, the elements of each self of personalities would co-depend and co-evolve in a unique structuring format with the nature and the world around. This structuring of co-dependent evolution is the dominion of subjectivity. And the dominion of subjectivity and the co-dependent structuring of the five cognizable aggregates may explain various factors that guide a persons life in the living world, notably the conception of own being (svabhava) and how one develops interdependent relations with other persons in inexplicable ways. In the Buddhist view, the own being (svabhava) is not a permanent feature because it always changes, therefore, the definition that may be given to the own being (svabhava) of a person may change into its counter definition soon: creating confusion. This form of complex co-dependent evolution arises anywhere and everywhere in the living world: the human reasoning may not be able to define it in the sphere of words (ak araj&nagocaram), or to bring it into the principles of logocentrism. The reason for this is that the co-dependent evolution opens up innumerable possibilities that are leaning to contradictions and infinite regress. For example, people are driven towards material possessions and to materialism in general when form faculty (r#pa) is active; similarly they may be emotionally attached when feeling faculty (vedana) guides as the source of co-dependent evolution. They can be dispositionally and culturally linked when the dispositional faculty (sa skara) is active. They may be ideologically connected when concept faculty
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(sa ja) is active. It is possible to have such relationship flourishing within a variety of combinatorial possibilities in any situation that are supported by the infinite potential of each of the five aggregates to form co-dependent relationships. But such possibilities can also easily destroy a human person when the influence of any of the aggregates is extraneously dominating the dominion of subjectivity: say sa skara (dispositions), a person may become a religious fanatic; or following certain doctrinal positions sa ja, one could be a theoretician, or a scientific philosopher, working only on cognizable theories. Therefore, Buddhist philosophy stresses that all our perspectives and viewpoints are to be guided by true and direct knowledge or wisdom (praj&), and thereby it is possible to develop strong intuitive awareness about the co-dependent evolution of the self in the dominion of subjectivity and save it from destruction. But the problem of infinite regress due to the accentuation of the other elements in the dominion of subjectivity and the knowledge will not be directed and well reflected with deep insight, 7 then a person may fall into the depth of ignorance (wrong knowledge) and will be controlled by speculative views.
The intrinsic connection between speculative views and ignorance and the prospect of its controlling the human life was something that worried the Buddha the most. The Buddha had clearly understood that speculative views influenced by ignorance had been controlling the views of various schools of philosophies at his time. Here, the speculative views are understood to have been produced out of the pursuance of the infinite possibilities of the co-dependent evolutions of the five aggregates, the self forming views with ignorance (wrong knowledge) in the consciousness faculty (vij&na), which are proven to be true with the support of rational and empirical evidences. In the context of a world view where knowledge is founded on human reasoning and again directed by various conceptions of logocentrism, the Buddhist conception of self and dominion of subjectivity could formulate an excellent counter discourse on the problem of wrong knowledge (avidya) controlling all sorts of reasoning process that are to struggle with innumerable speculative views pushing human life into sufferings and destruction. To advance such a discourse we may have to know the structure of the negative dialectics of N g rjuna.
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When N g rjuna introduced his philosophical hermeneutics of the dominion of subjectivity, he in fact interpreted the view of these two discourses, Sa yutta Nik&ya 33.2 and PHS, 2. Instead of advancing direct criticism on the views of the Abhidhama schools, he candidly said that the idea of skandhas may not easily be understood by everyone. He pointed out it in the text of Lok&t.tastava: it was only through the skandhas the Buddhas taught his courageous teachings to the most courageous thinkers (disciples) to understand that each of the skandhas is essentially to be understood as manifestations of either an illusion (m&ya), a mirage (marici), a celestial city (gandharvanagara), or a dream (svapna): or a combination of all these four manifestations. 10 The five aggregates (pacaskandhas) are perceived to be existing just because of certain causes (hetus), without which we may not apprehend them, so they are only fit to be called as reflected images (not true entities). When those causes are no longer valid, such entities or collection of them may cease to exist.11 He implicitly criticizes the supremacy of human reasoning and the conception of logocentrism that we adduce knowledge only from the reflected images, not true entities.
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The Pudgalav da schools taught that the skandhas may continue to exist till a person become a Buddha (Priestley 1999, 53-59). But N g rjuna explains that the fire extinguishes not just on the depending sources, and the fire itself cannot be discerned clearly that it functions in the realm of (#nyat&. N garjuna uses tetralemma (catu ko i) to explain the framework of (#nyat& philosophically.
7.1. Negating the Permanence of Form (R#pa): Using Fourfold Analysis (Tetralemma)
As we have explained earlier (Sa yutta Nik&ya 22.48) form faculty (r#pa) reveals the objective basis of our phenomenal experience. All the objects, according to Buddhist philosophy, are construed of four elements (caturbh#tas): earth, fire, water, and air. N g rjuna has negated this view with an argument that we cannot perceive each of the elements of those four elements separately, so how can it be possible to perceive the true form of the objects with our eyes that are constructed out of inconceivable elements, which, according to him, is an absurd understanding. Therefore, it is possible to negate the idea that one has truly perceived the true form of an object (r#pagr&ho niv&rita ).12 But at the same time it is not possible to completely negate the cognition of the object of perception which is an epistemological fallacy. In the two prong logical analytical method, we need to accept one proposition as true (p) and the other as untrue (#p): when p is accepted #p is needed to be negated and vice versa. The possibility of accommodating #p is negative in this case. To solve this problem, the philosophy of Middle Path uses tetralemma (catu ko .), instead of two prong logical method that had been established in the discourse of the Buddha with Vacchagotta (cf. Sa yutta Nik&ya 33.2). We can see that the phenomenal experience is beyond the realm of affirming the object (p) or rejecting it (#p), or both affirming and rejecting (p and #p), or neither affirming nor rejecting ([neither p nor #p] Varghese 2012, 171). This conception on the true objectivity of the phenomenal experience proves the conception of emptiness ([(#nyat&] Varghese 2012, 245), because the conception of neither p nor #p is not the acceptance or rejection of the perceived phenomena (object p) ; but it entails the analyzer to use another set of proposition using q; and the enquiry can proceed endlessly unless the truth is being found and established. The establishment of the true knowledge about the object behind the phenomenal experience is proven to be impossible, but by using this method, the process of analysis may continue for developing different perspectives that may help one articulate an intuitive awareness on phenomenal experiences. The discernment of (#nyat& in this case is that it gives us a wider picture of the object of the phenomenal experience and it also gives us an insight (praj&) about the entities of our experience. The form element (r#pa) according to the text Praj¶mitah daya S#tra is functional only within the realm of (#nyat& (cf. PHS, 2).
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futile exercise.13 On the contrary, whether the knowledge is true or false, the chances for emotions to breed further and destroy a person are very high in normal human life. The only emotion that would not destroy a person is compassion (karu a) and it shall sprout in the mind when the dominion of subjectivity reflects the phenomenal experience with deep insight (praj&). Feeling faculty controls human emotions that lead to sufferings and it is assumed that compassion (karu a) is the only emotion that protects one from accruing sufferings. Understanding the function of feeling faculty is important to understand the way world view is forming in the contemporary situations. The conceptions of human reasoning and logocentrism are meant to override the problems of emotions (vedana), but they always remain subservient to emotions, except in situations where one conceptualizes (sa ja) on others or on ones own feelings (vedana). It is not always possible.
7.3. Negating Authority of Concepts: The Analogy of Fire and Its Indistinct Burning Properties
As far as understanding the validity of the concept faculty (sa ja)14 is concerned, it is the element that defines the characteristic features of being a human person. It explains the ability to conceive a phenomenon and to create a conceptual framework for making the phenomenal experience possible; it is the element that helps one form conceptual understandings and formulate his own ideas; it is the framework of all perceptive faculties and freedom of the mind to perceive chosen things; it is the defining aspect of a human person to use language and signs for interpreting his own intentions and thoughts. The defining feature of human beings in comparison with other living beings in the world is the ability to use language such that one can memorize and recollect the past and use it for future actions. All these aspects and other connected features are in the realm of concept faculty (sa ja). N g rjuna asks the Buddhist thinkers of his time (say, Pudgalav dins), who attribute own being to sa ja, that if this element has an own being (svabhava) then arguably the concepts it formulates also should have own being (svabhava). In that case, arguably, if one utters the word fire, his face should burn immediately, because burning is an own being (svabhava) of fire: an instance of p; contrarily, we take the opposite of this view that the word fire has no signifying value (the sign and signified): should it mean then that what is being signified by the word fire is no fire (#p)? Or the word fire expresses both fire and no fire, like p and #p, which again confuses us with an uncertain inference that when we utter the word fire, it may and may not burn the mouth. The fourth possibility is something one should look forward to its being neither p nor #p; here the concept of fire is looking at finding new definitions for fire using another preposition, q, and can be explained more than many other characteristic prosperities of fire, not just mouth burning based on proposition p. N g rjuna explained this aspect in these words: If the concept15 (sa ja) and the object16 (artha) are the same (non-different) then the mouth would burn when one utters the word fire. But, if they are different we cannot acquire any knowledge about existence.17 This you said when you talked about the existents.18 The arguments of the Pudgalav dins, or other such schools of Buddhism, that consider the Buddhas discourses on concept faculty (sa ja) as a real element of the self like various conceptions of &tman in the Vedic schools of philosophy should be aware of the impossibility of burning the mouth on uttering the word fire. They cannot also escape from the fact that any defined form (lak ya) of a phenomenal experience and the definitions of it (lak a am) are different, then the information acquired from the form is false definitions (alak a a ),19 and is also not suitable for construing concepts.20 N g rjuna might have expressed his view on this, to confute some of the schools of Abhidharma Buddhism which propound the idea of own
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definitions (svalak a a) of the forms of the objects as the basis for constructing concepts.21 The word fire signifies various properties of fire and human person may use it according to the situation, where the logical possibility opens for further analysis by the method of tetralemma (catu ko .). In the contemporary situation the method adopted is to analyze everything based on knowledge drawn from objectified entities where creating concepts on empirical knowledge sources is a method. With the function of karma which originates from ones inherent dispositions one is at liberty to redefine himself against any created knowledge on him.
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constructing knowledge (j&na). Knowledge is revered by all systems of philosophy. The logocentric perspective of modern Western philosophy that is based on pure knowledge directed by human reasoning presumes that the true being of the natural laws and the nature can be revealed by its scientific methods. But as we have discussed earlier, if the true knowledge about the form (r#pa) of a phenomenal experience is difficult to be established (ajn &yam&nam), then how can it be an object of knowledge (jeyam)? Since the form (r#pa) of the objects lacks an own being (svabhava) for establishing its objectivity, how can it be possible to discuss on the validity of knowledge (j&na)26 and the objects of knowledge (jeya) as entities with own being? N g rjuna explained the difficulties in accepting the eminence of knowledge. He explained it as: That which is unknown cannot be an object of knowledge. No consciousness (vijn nam)27 is possible without an object of knowledge. You have said clearly that knowledge and the object of knowledge have no own being (svabh va) of their own.28 M dhyamika philosophy of N g rjuna may be the only school of thought that directly criticized the authority of knowledge and the ways of our knowledge seeking methods, thereby criticizing the illogical foundations of epistemology and logic. N g rjunian critique asks questions on the premises of human rationality and the conception of logocentrism that each of the entities, in the phenomenal world of existence, is interdependent and the paradigm of which is expressed through emptiness ((#nyat&).
8.1. Analogy of Seed and Sprout to Confute Logocentrism and Human Reasoning
N g rjuna has negated the logical structure of human reasoning by questioning the supremacy of reasoning. It is illogical to say that from the principles of lost causes (vina &t-k&ra0atatv&t)31 or the opposite non-lost causes (avina &t) can an effect come into being; at the same time, it is equally illogical to
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imagine that the effect comes into existence as it is being happened in a dream.32 Here, N g rjuna expresses how difficult it would be to introduce logocentrism in explaining the true expression of the natural laws. The way of analytical science in using this method indiscriminately to formulate its concepts is only adding to the confusion instead of solving it: similar to the case of a sprout coming into being from its lost causes (the destroyed seed) or the non-lost causes. The natural understanding about a seed is that it produces a sprout, but when the sprout comes into being then what happens to the seed? If it is to conclude that when the sprout is originated, its main cause, the seed gets lost: then one must admit that all lost seeds are to be sprouted. The seed one has eaten would not have spouted. Otherwise, to avoid all controversies it is good to say the sprout comes into being like an object originates in a dream. It is clear that all seeds will not sprout even though it is a seed that causes the sprout, but the eaten seeds, or the dry seeds, or the seeds sawed on rocks would not sprout. A seed needs to have certain dependent conditions like water, air, fertile soil, and care of a farmer to sprout well and form itself into a tree. Logocentrism and human reasoning presumptuously accept that each seed is a potential tree, and accept using methods of science to artificially create a situation for each one to produce a tree. This method struggles against the rationale of nature. Now those methods are being faced with its counter discourse: creating alarming fears on the continued existence of the humanity.
10. Conclusion
The subjectivity of a human person or the conception of self is one of the serious philosophical questions discoursed in different traditions. The classical Western philosophical conception of it as the soul that is intrinsically connected with God is a concept that is rejected by modern philosophy. It is largely silent on this issue that their purpose was to introduce a world view that is acceptable to science. The scientific
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philosophy of the West objectified everything including the individual subject for the science to perform its logocentric analytical methods. The ideas like dasein only accentuated the individualism based on logocentric perspectives. The Eastern philosophical views like the Brahmanical schools of Indian philosophys promotion of &tman as the basis of self have rejected the values of this worldly life and a necessary value for the materialistic aspects of life. Their emphasis on the conception of &tman and its purity has neglected the value of the self of a human person in the living world. The Buddhist conception of subjectivity as five aggregates opened up a way to understand the self of a human person and its existence in this living world. For it uses the co-dependent evolution of all the elements of human experience with the subjective and objective world as the basis of the self of a human person. The conception of the dominion of subjectivity explains the subjective and objective aspects of this co-dependent evolution process of all the elements that inhere with a persons life in the living world. To avoid the prospect of a transcended entity controlling the life in the world, N g rjuna argues that the framework of this process is (#nyat& and it reveals the Middle Path and it creates an insightful awareness (praj&) in the mind of a person about life in the world. The idea of (#nyat& enables us to protect our selves by helping us view the functioning of the nature and the natural laws with apt attention and insightful awareness (praj&). N g rjuna used negative dialectics to help one develop the intuitive awareness (praj&). Now the world views are formulated on the basis of the logocentric perspectives of science which functions on speculative views constructed on confusing knowledge sources which are parochially chosen. The co-dependent evolution aspect that is ingrained in the Buddhist conception of self would help us tremendously if we understand it using (#nyat&. We may understand the world and the natural laws with the help of continued investigations that are made possible by the application of fourfold (catu ko i) logical analysis. Modern science and scientific philosophy only follow twofold logical analysis.
Notes
1. Karl Jaspers used to criticize the difficulties of an exclusive scientific method to explain the world of existence. That is also endorsed here (Jaspers 2004, 24). 2. Nietzsche was a philosopher in the modern world who showed real concerns about the inabilities of the modern analytical science to explain subjectivity: He [Nietzsche] prophesied the advent of a period of nihilism, with the death of God and the demise of metaphysics, and the discovery of the inability of science to yield anything like absolute knowledge; but this prospect deeply worried him. (Schacht 1993, 178). 3. M#lam&dhyamika K&rika, 24.18. 4 .The Pudgalav da Buddhist schools such as V stiputr$yas and Soutr ntikas promote implicitly the elements of pacaskandha as having true existence. 5. Lok&t.tastava, verses 21-22. 6. See also Dasgupta, 1922, 23. 7. Prakar ena j&n&ti sarva iti praj&. 8. See also Majjima Nik&ya 72.14. 9. Iha (&riputra r#pa (#nyat&, (#nyataiva r#pam / r#p&nna p thak (#nyat&, (#nyat&y& na p thag r#pam / yadr#pa s& (#nyat&, y& (#nyat& tadr#pam // evameva vedan&sa j&sa sk&ravij&n&ni. 10 . Tepi skandh&stvay& dhman dhmadbhaya sa prak&(it& / m&y&mar.cigandharvanagarasvapnasam nibh& (Lokat.tastava, verse 3). 11. Hetuta sa bhavo ye & tadabh&v&n na santi ye / katha n&ma na te spa a pratibimbasam& mat& ( Lokat.tastava, verse 4). 12 . Bh#t&ny acak urgr&hy& i tanmayam c&k u a katham / r#pam tvayaiva bruvat& r#pagr&ho niv&rita
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(Lokat.tastava, verse 5). 13. Vedan.ya vin& n&sti vedan&to nir&tmik& / tacca vedya svabh&vena n&st.ty abhimata tava (Lokat.tastava, verse 6). 14. Sa ja means knowing well, which is also concept formation, perception, etc.. 15. Sa ja is the psychological aspect of perception which can be tentatively termed as idea or concept (sa ja) that would recognize the distinctive characteristics of things, for example, it perceives the distinctive characteristic of fire that is to burn. Sa j& is another part of the skandha. 16. In Buddhist parlance artha is object, aim, goal, purpose, etc.. 17. If the concept of fire and the object fire are the same then the mouth should burn with the utterances of the word fire. In the previous verses (5 and 6) we found the anomalies of accepting the skadhas like form (r#pa) and feelings (vedana). 18. Sam jn &rthayor ananyatve mukha dahyeta vahnin& / anyatvedhigam&bh&vas tvayokta bh#tav&din& (Lokat.tastava, verse 7). 19. Alak a am is the opposite of laka am, meaning no indication or characteristic. 20. Lak y&llak a amanyaccet sy&ttallak yamalak a am / tayorabh&vonanyatve vispa a kathita tvay& ( Lokat.tastava, verse 11). 21. It is important to have both the characterized (lak a am) and characteristics (lak ya) for both to be emphasized. There is no possibility to have knowledge without objects of knowledge. 22. A subject is conditioned by his sa sk ra. The moral and spiritual development of an individual is determined by it. 23. The existence of both can be discerned only by the mutual dependence of karta and karma. 24. Na kart&sti na bhokt&sti pu y&pu ya prat.tyajam / yat prat.tya na taj j&ta prokta v&caspate tvay& (Lokat.tastava, verse 9). 25. In this case, the existence of sam sk ra that determines an individual person is refuted. 26. Consciousness (j&na) is dependent on knowledge and object of knowledge. But they can exist only in mutual dependence, cannot exist per se, as each of them has no nature of their own (swabh va). 27. Jn &nam is the fifth element of the skandha. It means the consciousness or awareness in its active, discriminative form of knowing and its subliminal or unconscious bodily and psychic functions. It must be noted that vijn na means not just a stream of mental awareness (see Keown 2003). 28. Ajn &yam&namna jn eyamvijn &namtadvin& na ca / tasm&t svabh&vato na sto jn &najn eye tvam #civ&n (Lokat.tastava, verse 10). 29. Accintyastava, verse 41. 30. It is originated from v dh&tu, meaning to cover. The word samv ti should mean well covered with an existent meaning, but it is dependent on certain conditions that we may overlook. 31. This is the main stay of Buddhists arguments that it will not support the conventional views on creation, at the same time they will not reject them going in the way of the opposing arguments. 32. It is illogical to say that from the lost causes an effect comes into being; so also from the non-lost causes; nor do you support the view that the effect is like a dream. Vina &t k&ra &tt&vat k&ryotpattir na yujyate / na c&vina &t svapnena tulyotpattir mat& tava (Lok&t.tastava, verse 17).
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