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| |ArticleLayout=Academic Layout | | |ArticleLayout=Academic Layout |
| |ArticleTitle=Other-Emptiness in the Jonang School: The Theo-logic of Buddhist Dualism | | |ArticleTitle=Other-Emptiness in the Jonang School: The Theo-logic of Buddhist Dualism |
− | |AuthorPage=Duckworth, D. | + | |AuthorPage=People/Duckworth, D. |
| |PubDate=2015 | | |PubDate=2015 |
− | |ArticleSummary=In this essay I aim to clarify the meaning of other-emptiness in the Jonang (''jo nang'') tradition of Buddhism of Tibet. It focuses on the writings of Dölpopa (''dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan'') (1292–1361), the renowned forefather of this tradition. Dölpopa famously differentiated two types of emptiness, or two ways of being empty—self-emptiness (''rang stong'') and other-emptiness (''gzhan stong'')—and proclaimed the superiority of the latter. | + | |ArticleSummary=In this essay I aim to clarify the meaning of other-emptiness in the Jonang (''jo nang'') tradition of Buddhism of Tibet. It focuses on the writings of Dölpopa (''dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan'') (1292–1361), the renowned forefather of this tradition. Dölpopa famously differentiated two types of emptiness, or two ways of being empty—self-emptiness (''rang stong'') and other-emptiness (''gzhan stong'')—and proclaimed the superiority of the latter. (Duckworth, introduction, 485) |
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| |ArticleReferences=* Dölpopa. [a] ''The 'Dzam-thang Edition of the Collected Works of Kun-mkhyen Dolpo-pa Shes-rab-rgyal-mtshan: Introduction and Catalogue''. By Matthew Kapstein. Delhi: Shedrup Books, 1992. | | |ArticleReferences=* Dölpopa. [a] ''The 'Dzam-thang Edition of the Collected Works of Kun-mkhyen Dolpo-pa Shes-rab-rgyal-mtshan: Introduction and Catalogue''. By Matthew Kapstein. Delhi: Shedrup Books, 1992. |
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