This book explores a number of themes in connection with the concept of Emptiness, a highly technical but very central notion in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism. It examines the critique by the leading Nyingma school philosopher Mipham (1846-1912), one of the Tibet's brightest and most versatile minds, formulated in his diverse writings. The book focuses on related issues such as what is negated by the doctrine of Emptiness, the nature of ultimate reality and the difference between 'extrinsic' and 'intrinsic' emptiness. These issues continue to be the subject of lively debate among contemporary exponents of Tibetan Buddhist thought. Karma Phuntso's book aptly undertakes a thematic and selective discussion of these debates and Mipham's qualms about the Gelukpa understanding of Emptiness in a mixture of narrative and analytic styles. For the first time, a major understanding of Emptiness, variant to the Gelukpa interpretation that has become dominant in both Tibet and the West, is revealed.
Mipham's Dialectics and the Debates on Emptiness, Karma Phuntso, Curzon Press, Hardcover, 2005, 304 pp, $180.00
Karma Phuntsho was trained to be a Khenpo, a Tibetan monastic abbot, for about a dozen years during which he studied, practiced and taught Buddhism in several monasteries in Bhutan and India. In 2003, he received a D.Phil in Oriental Studies from Balliol College, Oxford. He currently works at the University of Cambridge and the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), Paris as a post-doctral researcher specializing in Buddhism and Bhutan. His main interest lies in he preservation and promotion of Buddhist and Bhutanese culture.
Acknowledgements xii List of abbreviations xiv Introduction 3 Emptiness and what there is 3 Emptiness, to be and not to be 6 Emptiness: a religious issue and the nature 10 of the debates Mipham: a polymath and his works on Emptiness 13 Sources and methodological considerations 19 1 Emptiness: its soteriological, doctrinal, 23 ontological and historical significance in Buddhism Emptiness qua Non-self the heart of Buddhist 24 soteriology Emptiness qua Prajnaparamita: the primary path 28 Emptiness qua Pratityasamutpada: the central 31 doctrine Emptiness qua nitartha: the ultimate topic 32 Emptiness qua the ultimate: the ontological 33 truth Emptiness qua nirvana: the religious goal 34 Emptiness qua Madhyamika philosophy: a 37 historical milestone 2 The big fuss about Emptiness: an outline of 40 the history of debates on Emptiness Controversies in India before Nagarjuna 40 Nagarjuna's critiques and subsequent 42 controversies Controversies during Early Propagation in 44 Tibet Early debates in the Later Propagation 44 Debates after Tsongkhapa 47 Mipham and the later debates 51 (4) 3 What is negated by ultimate analysis? Debates 55 on the delimitation of the Madhyamika negandum The delimitation of the negandum 56 BA, IX/140 and negandum 60 Some Gelukpa criticisms of the Ngarabpa 66 position What is 'hypostatically existent' and when 70 does one negate? On insertion of the qualifiers 75 Mipham's main criticisms 79 On the tetralemma methodology 91 The Gelukpa interpretation of 'neither 95 existent nor non-existent' The nuances of inferential arguments 98 The verification of contexts 101 An analysis of the cognitive negandum (lam 103 gyi dgag bya) On BA, IX/26 107 Resemblances and reciprocal comparisons 109 4 The fully empty: Mipham's theory of the 113 ultimate reality The ultimate and two truth theories 114 The ultimate and the nature of negation 120 On BA, IX/33-5 132 The two ultimates 136 The two ultimates and the two schools 142 The ultimate and the coalescence 148 The ultimate, middle way and elimination of 153 extremes On MK, XIII/8 159 5 Is Emptiness knowable and effable? 162 On whether Emptiness is knowable (jya, shes 163 bya) On BA, IX/2 166 Rebutting his refuters 170 Verifvingsubjective thoughts 175 Apprehension, grasping and the ultimate 178 Conceptuality, non-conceptuality and Emptiness 185 Mipham's theory of non-conceptuality 189(4) On Hwashang and meditation on Emptiness 193 Is Emptiness effable? 198 Some concluding remarks 208 Appendix I 213 Appendix II 215 Appendix III 217 Appendix IV 219 Notes 226 Bibliography 283 Name and place index 297 Subject index 300
|