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dc.contributor.authorTom J. F. Tillemans-
dc.date.accessioned2018-12-21T13:51:51Z-
dc.date.available2018-12-21T13:51:51Z-
dc.date.issued1999-
dc.identifier.isbn0 - 8 6 1 7 1 -1 5 6 - 4-
dc.identifier.urihttp://tnt.ussh.edu.vn:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/899-
dc.description.abstractSc r i p t u r e , l o g i c , l a n g u a g e launches Wisdom’s scholarly series, Studies in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism. This scries was conceived to provide a forum for publishing outstanding new contributions to scholarship and also to make accessible seminal research not widely known outside a narrow specialist audience. Wisdom also intends to include in the series appropriate monographs and collected articles translated from other languages. Much o f the new scholarly research in Indian and Tibetan Buddhist philosophy and practice is worthy of wider circulation among an intelligent readership. Several outstanding dissertations are produced each year at academic institutions throughout the world. Such significant contributions are normally accessible only through University Microfilms or through research journals that are scattered across the academic landscape. It is heartening to the editors at Wisdom to see how much of the scholarship being produced today is the result of collaboration with scholars belonging to the indigenous traditions of Tibet and the Indian subcontinent. Wisdom Publications is certain that this approach has the greatest possibilities for enriching both academic scholarship and Buddhist practice. Increasingly, researchers must be able to work in a bewildering variety o f languages and disciplines in the humanities and social sciences. What a visionary like the late Richard H. Robinson hoped to produce in his Wisconsin curriculum were scholars able to work with living exponents of the Asian traditions in their own languages. He also dreamt of researchers who would be able to keep abreast of the advances in Western thought. A scholar like Tillemans is a realization of Robinson’s dreams. Tom Tillemans, the author whose work is presented here, is a scholar’s scholar. He is able to work in a vast variety o f languages: all major Western languages and Sanskrit, Tibetan, Chinese and Japanese. He is trained in modern Western philosophy and can see how the traditions of East and West interact. The eleven essays presented here were published over the period 1986-1999. They appeared in a number o f journals or as contributions to Festschriften. Tillemans has now arranged these essays into a unified and compelling structure. One can now see clearly the underlying structure and understand the significance o f Tillemans’ contributions to Buddhist logic, language and epistemology. Tillemans’ scholastic ancestry is rooted in the great names o f European scholarship, such as F. I. Stcherbatsky, Eugene Obermiller and Erich Frauwallner. Tillemans brings a sophisticated understanding o f developments in Western logic and epistemology to the traditional scholarship o f Indian and Tibetan thinkers. He presents in these carefully crafted pieces a clear delineation of the varying approaches o f the Indie masters and their Tibetan interpreters. This is a fascinating work with which to begin the new series.en_US
dc.description.tableofcontentsSeries Editor’s Preface by E. Gene S m i th ......................................... ix Acknowledgments and Notes on the Bibliographic Sources . . . xi Abbreviations......................................................................................... xv Introduction ............................................................................................ 1 SCRIPTURALLY BASED ARGUMENTATION 1. Dharmakirti, Aryadeva and Dharmapala on Scriptural Author i ty..................................27 2. How Much of a Proof is Scripturally Based Inference?................................................... 37 3. Pre-Dharmakirti Commentators on the Definition of a Thesis ...................................................... 53 L o g ic 4. On Pardrthdnumana, Theses and Syllogisms .........................69 5. On Sapaksa......................................................................................89 6. Formal and Semantic Aspects of Tibetan Buddhist Debate Logic ..........................................117 7. Dharmakirti and Tibetans on Adrsyanupalabdhihetu ............................................................151 8. What is the Svadharmin in Buddhist logic? .........................171 9. Is Buddhist Logic Non-classical or Deviant?.........................18710. On the So-called Difficult Point of the Apoha Theory . . .209 11. What Can One Reasonably Say about Nonexistence? Co-authored by Donald S. Lopez, Jr. .......................................247 Bibliography .......................................................................................285 In d e x ...................................................................................................... 301en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherW i s d o m P u b l ic a t io n s • B o s t o nen_US
dc.subjectKinh điển và triết học phật giáoen_US
dc.subjectLịch sử và văn hóa phật giáoen_US
dc.subjectPhật giáo nhập thế và các vấn đề xã hội đương đạien_US
dc.titleScripture, Logic, Language_ Essays on Dharmakirti and his Tibetan Successorsen_US
dc.typeBooken_US
Appears in Collections:CSDL Phật giáo

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