- Forewordxiii
- Prefacexv
- 0.1. The Purpose of the Study, and the Significance of the
Laṅkāvatāra-sūtra within Buddhist Doctrinal History1 - 0.2. Dating the Text: Problems of Form and Interpretation13
- 0.3. Methodology and Outline of the Study23
- 1.0. The Nature of Buddhist Ontology39
- General considerations * The practical aim of the Yogācāra Philosophy
- 1.1. The Threefold Meaning of Tathāgata-garbha and its
Relation to Ālaya-vijñāna: the Essence of Being51 - Preliminary considerations * Tathagāta-garbha as essential, supramundane,
pure dharma, and its contrast with the Hindu Ātman * Tathagata-garbha
as embryo, and the dynamics of Buddhahood * Tathāgata-garbha
as womb or matrix of Buddhahood * Conclusion - 1.2. The Five Skandhas: the Temporal Manifestation of Being79
Introduction * Brief overview of the Ātman controversy prior to the
Laṅkāvatāra-sūtra * Rūpa, or the formative elements of the five Skandhas
* Nāma, or the formless elements of the five Skandhas * The Skandhas and
the empirical self, or personality * The Skandhas and the trans-empirical
Self, the Tathāgata * The five Skandhas and the denial of metaphysical
dualities * Concluding remarks on the notion of Self and its varieties - 1.3. Dharmadhātu: the Spatial or Cosmic Dimension of Being117
Introductory remarks * Dharmādhatu as cosmic Law: the fundamental
structure of the universe * Dharmādhatu as universal Void: the ground
of Being * Concluding observations
- 2.0. Buddhist Epistemology, Buddhist Dialectics135
Truth, untruth, half-truth, "the truth" * The tetralemma logic: a thousand
years of Buddhist dialectics * The early use of the tetralemma in the
Pāli canon * Rationality and irrationality in Nāgārjuna's relativistic logic
* Epistemology in the Laṅkāvatāra-sūtra: a radical critique of language,
logic, and knowledge * Conclusions and preview of part two - 2.1. The Epistemological Reduction of the Citta-mātra (Mind-only) Doctrine169
- Preliminary considerations * Citta as the empirical mind
* Citta as the transcendental Mind * Citta-mātra as explanation for the
triple world (Tribhava) * Concluding words and the connection between
Laṅkāvatāra and Zen
- 2.2. From Mind to No-mind: the Transcendental Leap beyond Empirical
Cognition209
* Introduction * The five Dharmas or epistemic categories * The three
Svabhāvas or modes of cognition * The attainment of Āryajñāna:
transcendental Wisdom or Gnosis * Concluding remarks - 2.3. The Conjunctive System of the Eight Vijñānas: the Integration of Both Mind
and No-mind States of Consciousness237
* Introductory remarks * Jñāna and Vijñāna: abstract intuition versus
concrete knowledge * Khyāti- and Vastuprativikalpa-vijñāna:
the perceptual and the object discriminating knowledge * The inner
revolution (Parāvṛtti): the return to the tranquil state of
pure consciousness (Ālaya-vijñāna) * Conclusion - The Disjunctive Theory of Causation: Things are Neither this, Nor that,
for They Are All Subject to Causes and Conditions (Hetu-pratyaya)261
Introduction .. The expansion of the relevance of causation: from the psychological to the cosmicphilosophical principle .. Causation as a possible theoretical basis for a monistic view of the world It Causation as a teaching device .. Excursus: highlighting Nagarjuna's thought in respect to causation .. The soteriological value of the theory of causation .. Concluding observations
Final Overview Appendix Notes Bibliography Index 261 287 295 323 357 365
