- Prefacepage ix
- Introduction1
- Part 1 The cultural and social setting of Buddhist thought27
- 1 The origins of rebirth29
- 1.1 Buddhism and early Indian religion29
1.2 Time: samsdra 41 1.3 Action and the person: karma 53 1.4 Timelessness: moksa (nirvana) 58 2 Varieties of Buddhist discourse 65 2.1 Buddhist thought in context 65 2.2 Different ways of talking about 'self and 'person' 71 2.3 Elements of personality and (not-)self 78 Part II The doctrine of not-self 85 3 The denial of self as 'right view' 87 3.1 Different kinds of 'right view' 87 3.2 Arguments in support of anattd 95 3.3 The denial of self as a strategy in 'mental culture' in 4 Views, attachment, and 'emptiness' 116 4.1 Views and attachment 117 4.2 The Unanswered Questions 131 4.3 Quietism and careful attention 138 Part III Personality and rebirth 145 5 The individual of 'conventional truth' 147 5.1 'Conventional' and 'ultimate truth' 147 5.2 Attabhdva 'individuality', puggala 'person' 156 5.3 House imagery 165
6 'Neither the same nor different' 177 6.1 'A person is not found' 178 6.2 Images of identity and difference 185 6.3 Self and other: compassion 188 Part IV Continuity 197 7 Conditioning and consciousness 199 7.1 The construction(s) of temporal existence 200 7.2 The stations of evolving consciousness 213 7.3 Vegetation imagery 218 8 Momentariness and the bhavahga-mmd 225 8.1 impermanent are conditioned things' 226 8.2 The 'ultimate' extent of a lifetime: momentariness 234 8.3 The bhavahga-mind 238 8.4 River imagery 247 Conclusion 262 Notes 267 Bibliography 310 Glossary and index of Pali and Sanskrit terms 318 General index 321