- INTRODUCTION1
- Key non-Buddhist concepts1
- Key Buddhist concepts2
- 'Not-Self' and scholars7
- Sources9
- Methodology11
Part I Exploring the Notion of Selflessness
- 1. THE QUESTION OF SELF17
- Scholars who see a metaphysical Self in the 'early Suttas'17
- Uses of the word 'self' (atta) in the 'early Suttas'19
- Passages which might indicate the acceptance of a Self21
- Nibbāna as not-Self and not related to a Self23
- Self as 'not being apprehended'24
- A Self beyond 'existence' and 'non-existence'?28
- Proof of the impossibility of a Self31
- Buddhism and the Upaniṣads on Self33
- The status of the 'person'34
- Why is Self not denied?: the Buddha and the
Annihilationists38 - The 'I am' attitude: its cause, effect and its ending40
- 2 THE MEANING OF 'NOT-SELF'43
- The role of viewing phenomena as not-Self 43
- The criteria for Self-hood46
- Nibbāna and the Self-ideal51
- 3 DEVELOPING A SELF WITHOUT BOUNDARIES54
- Living with citta as an 'island'54
- Developing a 'great self'55
- 'One of developed self' 57
- The Arahat as self-contained and 'dwelling alone'58
- The Arahat's boundaryless citta60
- The Arahat's boundaryless, self-contained self62
- 4 PERSONAL CONTINUITY AND RESPONSIBILITY64
- The person as a continuity65
- Responsibility for actions66
- The stability of character traits over lives68
- What conserves character traits and the unity of the 'continuity'?72
- To what extent are 'continuities' isolated from each other and the world?74
- 5 MY WORLD AND ITS END78
- The Self-world link and the meaning of 'world' (loka)78
- The Buddhist perspective on the world79
- The undetermined questions83
- The undetermined questions on the world 84
- 6 THE LIFE-PRINCIPLE AND THE BETWEEN-LIVES STATE89
- The undetermined questions on the life-principle89
- The 'life-principle' accepted by early Buddhism91
- Discernment and rebirth95
- The question of the intermediary existence (antarā-bhava)98
- The nature of the intermediary existence102
- The gandhabba: spirit-being of the intermediary existence105
- Part II: Saṃsāric and Nibbānic Discernment109
- 7 THE CENTRALITY OF DISCERNMENT111
- The nature and centrality of citta111
- A person as discernment and the sentient body116
- The vortical interplay of discernment and the sentient body119
- 8 DISCERNMENT AND CONDmONED ARISING122
- The nature of the constructing activities122
- The conditioning of discernment by the constructing activities124
- The conditioning of discernment by nāma-rūpa127
- Discernment as conditioned by attention129
- The conditioning of the sentient body by discernment130
- Conditioned Arising as an analysis of the perceptual process134
9 DISCERNMENT AND THE PERCEPTUAL PROCESS 138 The perceptual process in the 'early Suttas' 138 The nature and functions of cognition (saiiiiii) 141 The activity of discernment (viiiiiiii}Q) 143 The functions of discernment in the Abhidhamma 'process of cittas' 145 The nature of viiiiiiii'Ja 148 The effect of karma on discernment in the perceptual process 151