Santāna and Santānāntara: An Analysis of the Buddhist Perspective Concerning Continuity, Transformation, and Transcedence and the Basis of an Alternative Philosophy PsychologyOn the Buddhist doctrine on impermanence; based on Dharmakirti's Santanantara-siddhi. |
From inside the book
84 pages matching susceptibility to continuity in this book
Where's the rest of this book?
Results 1-3 of 84
Contents
Abbreviations | xiii |
Towards a Buddhist Critique of | xl |
in the Direction of Accounting | 19 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accept Ālayavijñāna analysis of continuity Anātmatā Anattā Anityatā Asanga aspects bare particulars bring Buddha Buddhist analysis Buddhist conceptual framework Buddhist philosopher change and continuity Chinchore clusters coherently conceivable commonsensical concept of Santāna connection consideration considered context contingent feature convergence counter-intuitive in character Dharmakirti Dharmakirti's philosophy discrete Duḥkha emancipation emphasise epistemic epistemology essenceless existential external objects fact further hand held hold human important incoherent individual inspite intellectual internal coherence interrelated intuitively isolated issue kind knowledge Kṣaṇabhanga Kṣaṇikatā least Likewise Madhyamikas Mahāyāna matter methodological mind mind-involving mode momentary Nāgārjuna nature necessary and sufficient need not necessarily non-Buddhists non-counter-intuitivity non-living ontological particular pattern perceptual cognition philosophical anthropology philosophical psychology philosophically satisfactory pillars of Buddhism plausibility preference of categories presupposes rationale reality reference repudiate respectable Sanskrit Santānāntara Santānāntarasiddhi Sautrāntikas sense sort stake susceptibility to change susceptibility to continuity thing thought trends understanding understood Upādāna Vaibhāṣikas Vasubandhu veridical Vijñānavādins visual Yogācāra