Nagarjuna's Twelve Gate Treatise: Translated with Introductory Essays, Comments, and Notes

Hsueh-li Cheng

Nagarjuna's Twelve Gate Treatise: Translated with Introductory Essays, Comments, and Notes
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Springer
Country
NL
Published
31 July 1982
Pages
152
ISBN
9789027713803

Nagarjuna’s Twelve Gate Treatise: Translated with Introductory Essays, Comments, and Notes

Hsueh-li Cheng

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MADHYAMIKA The hallmark of Miidhyamika philosophy is ‘Emptiness’, sunyata. This is not a view of reality. In fact it is emphatically denied that sunyata is a view of reality. If anybody falls into such an error as to construe emptiness as reality (or as a view, even the right view, of reality), he is only grasping the snake at the wrong end (Mk, 24.1 I)! Nftgfujuna in Mk, 24.18, has referred to at least four ways by which the same truth is conveyed: Whatever is dependent origination, we call it emptiness. That is (also) dependent conceptualization; that is, to be sure, the Middle Way. The two terms, pratitya samutpiida and upiidiiya prajnapti, which I have translated here- as ‘dependent origination’ and ‘dependent conceptualization’ need to be explained. The interdependence of everything (and under ‘everything’ we may include, following the Mftdhyamika, all items, ontological concepts, entities, theories, views, theses and even relative truths), i.e., the essential lack of independence of the origin (cf. utpiida) of everything proves or shows that everything is essentially devoid of its assumed essence or its independent ‘own nature’ or its ‘self-existence’ (cf. svabhiiva). Besides, our cognition of anything lacks independence in the same way. Our conception (cf. prajnapti) of something a essentially depends upon something b, and so on for everything ad infinitum.

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