A Distant Mirror

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Michael Zimmermann
Acknowledgements 13
Introduction 15
Michael Radich and Chen-kuo Lin
Chinese Translations of Pratyakṣa 33
Funayama Toru
Epistemology and Cultivation in Jingying
Huiyuan’s Essay on the Three Means of Valid Cognition
63
Chen-kuo Lin
The Theory of Apoha in Kuiji’s Cheng weishi lun Shuji 101
Shoryu Katsura
A Comparison between the Indian and Chinese
Interpretations of the Antinomic Reason
(Viruddhāvyabhicārin)
121
Shinya Moriyama
 
The Problem of Self-Refuting Statements in
Chinese Buddhist Logic
151
Jakub Zamorski
A Re-examination of the Relationship between the
Awakening of Faith and Dilun School Thought,
Focusing on the Works of Huiyuan
183
Ching Keng
A Pivotal Text for the Definition of the Two
Hindrances in East Asia: Huiyuan’s “Erzhang yi”
Chapter
217
A. Charles Muller
On the Notion of Kaidaoyi (*Avakāśadānāśraya) as
Discussed in Xuanzang’s Cheng weishi lun
271
Junjie Chu
Yogācāra Critiques of the Two Truths 313
Zhihua Yao
Philosophical Aspects of Sixth-Century Chinese
Buddhist Debates on “Mind and Consciousness”
337
Hans-Rudolf Kantor
The Way of Nonacquisition: Jizang’s Philosophy of
Ontic Indeterminacy
397
Chien-hsing Ho
 
Divided Opinion among Chinese Commentators on
Indian Interpretations of the Parable of the Raft in
the Vajracchedikā
419
Yoke Meei Choong
Ideas about “Consciousness” in Fifth and Sixth
Century Chinese Buddhist Debates on the Survival
of Death by the Spirit, and the Chinese
Background to *Amalavijñāna
471
Michael Radich
The Process of Awakening in Early Texts on
Buddha-Nature in India
513
Michael Zimmermann
About the Authors 529
Index 535
 
 
 
 
 
 
Foreword
(Zimmermann, Michael)
(Zimmermann, Michael)
HamburgUP_HBS03_Zimmermann_Foreword_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf
HamburgUP_HBS03_Zimmermann_Foreword_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Revision as of 16:20, 29 June 2020



A Distant Mirror
Book
Book

In this book, an international team of fourteen scholars investigates the Chinese reception of Indian Buddhist ideas, especially in the sixth and seventh centuries. Topics include Buddhist logic and epistemology (pramāṇa, yinming); commentaries on Indian Buddhist texts; Chinese readings of systems as diverse as Madhyamaka, Yogācāra and tathāgatagarbha; the working out of Indian concepts and problematics in new Chinese works; and previously under-studied Chinese evidence for developments in India. The authors aim to consider the ways that these Chinese materials might furnish evidence of broader Buddhist trends, thereby problematizing a prevalent notion of “sinification”, which has led scholars to consider such materials predominantly in terms of trends ostensibly distinctive to China. The volume also tries to go beyond seeing sixth- and seventh-century China primarily as the age of the formation and establishment of the Chinese Buddhist “schools”. The authors attempt to view the ideas under study on their own terms, as valid Buddhist ideas engendered in a rich, “liminal” space of interchange between two large traditions. (Source: Hamburg University Press)

Citation Lin, Chen-kuo, and Michael Radich, eds. A Distant Mirror: Articulating Indic Ideas in Sixth and Seventh Century Chinese Buddhism. Hamburg Buddhist Studies 3. Hamburg: Hamburg University Press, 2014. https://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/volltexte/2014/146/pdf/HamburgUP_HBS03_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf.


Foreword 9 Michael Zimmermann Acknowledgements 13 Introduction 15 Michael Radich and Chen-kuo Lin Chinese Translations of Pratyakṣa 33 Funayama Toru Epistemology and Cultivation in Jingying Huiyuan’s Essay on the Three Means of Valid Cognition 63 Chen-kuo Lin The Theory of Apoha in Kuiji’s Cheng weishi lun Shuji 101 Shoryu Katsura A Comparison between the Indian and Chinese Interpretations of the Antinomic Reason (Viruddhāvyabhicārin) 121 Shinya Moriyama

The Problem of Self-Refuting Statements in Chinese Buddhist Logic 151 Jakub Zamorski A Re-examination of the Relationship between the Awakening of Faith and Dilun School Thought, Focusing on the Works of Huiyuan 183 Ching Keng A Pivotal Text for the Definition of the Two Hindrances in East Asia: Huiyuan’s “Erzhang yi” Chapter 217 A. Charles Muller On the Notion of Kaidaoyi (*Avakāśadānāśraya) as Discussed in Xuanzang’s Cheng weishi lun 271 Junjie Chu Yogācāra Critiques of the Two Truths 313 Zhihua Yao Philosophical Aspects of Sixth-Century Chinese Buddhist Debates on “Mind and Consciousness” 337 Hans-Rudolf Kantor The Way of Nonacquisition: Jizang’s Philosophy of Ontic Indeterminacy 397 Chien-hsing Ho

Divided Opinion among Chinese Commentators on Indian Interpretations of the Parable of the Raft in the Vajracchedikā 419 Yoke Meei Choong Ideas about “Consciousness” in Fifth and Sixth Century Chinese Buddhist Debates on the Survival of Death by the Spirit, and the Chinese Background to *Amalavijñāna 471 Michael Radich The Process of Awakening in Early Texts on Buddha-Nature in India 513 Michael Zimmermann About the Authors 529 Index 535




Foreword (Zimmermann, Michael) HamburgUP_HBS03_Zimmermann_Foreword_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Acknowledgements HamburgUP_HBS03_Acknowledgement_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Introduction (Radich, Michael; Lin, Chen-kuo) HamburgUP_HBS03_RadichLin_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Chinese Translations of Pratyakṣa (Funayama, Toru) HamburgUP_HBS03_Funayama_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Epistemology and Cultivation in Jingying Huiyuan’s "Essay on the Three Means of Valid Cognition" (Lin, Chen-kuo) HamburgUP_HBS03_Lin_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

The Theory of Apoha in Kuiji’s "Cheng weishi lun Shuji" (Katsura, Shoryu) HamburgUP_HBS03_Katsura_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

A Comparison between the Indian and Chinese Interpretations of the Antinomic Reason (Viruddhāvyabhicārin) (Moriyama, Shinya) HamburgUP_HBS03_Moriyama_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

The Problem of Self-Refuting Statements in Chinese Buddhist Logic (Zamorski, Jakub) HamburgUP_HBS03_Zamorski_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

A Re-examination of the Relationship between the Awakening of Faith and Dilun School Thought, Focusing on the Works of Huiyuan (Keng, Ching) HamburgUP_HBS03_Keng_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

A Pivotal Text for the Definition of the Two Hindrances in East Asia: Huiyuan’s “Erzhang yi” Chapter (Muller, A. Charles) HamburgUP_HBS03_Muller_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

On the Notion of Kaidaoyi (*Avakāśadānāśraya) as Discussed in Xuanzang’s "Cheng weishi lun" (Chu, Junjie) HamburgUP_HBS03_Chu_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Yogācāra Critiques of the Two Truths (Yao, Zhihua) HamburgUP_HBS03_Yao_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Philosophical Aspects of Sixth-Century Chinese Buddhist Debates on “Mind and Consciousness” (Kantor, Hans-Rudolf) HamburgUP_HBS03_Kantor_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

The Way of Nonacquisition: Jizang’s Philosophy of Ontic Indeterminacy (Ho, Chien-hsing) HamburgUP_HBS03_Ho_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Divided Opinion among Chinese Commentators on Indian Interpretations of the Parable of the Raft in the Vajracchedikā (Choong, Yoke Meei) HamburgUP_HBS03_Choong_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Ideas about “Consciousness” in Fifth and Sixth Century Chinese Buddhist Debates on the Survival of Death by the Spirit, and the Chinese Background to *Amalavijñāna (Radich, Michael) HamburgUP_HBS03_Radich_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

The Process of Awakening in Early Texts on Buddha-Nature in India (Zimmermann, Michael) HamburgUP_HWS03_Zimmermann_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

About the Authors HamburgUP_HBS03_Authors_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf

Index HamburgUP_HBS03_Index_LinRadich_Mirror.pdf