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The Lamp of Discernment

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The Lamp of Discernment Synopsis

The Buddhist thinkers of medieval India addressed many of the issues that are still central to Buddhist praxis in the present. One of the most important of those thinkers is Bh?viveka, author of the work known as the Prajñ?prad?pa. Over several years, William (Bill) Ames translated, carefully and precisely, the first twelve chapters of that work, which he has compiled and revised for consistency in this volume. The Prajñ?prad?pa is a commentary on Nag?rjuna’s famous, and in the view of many famously difficult, M?lamadhyamak?rik?—Root Verses on the Middle Way. Central to all Buddhist thought in one form or another is an understanding that the common entities of our experience are transitory and, therefore, unreliable as grounds upon which to base our own happiness, satisfaction, security, and even our own sense of self. As Ames explains in his Introduction, the Madhyamaka pursues this insight further, asserting that all existing entities are lacking in (empty of, ??nyat?) any "intrinsic nature (svabh?va)." As systematized by later Tibetan scholastics, the Madhyamaka school is understood to have developed into two different forms, the Sv?tantrika and the Pr?sa?gika, a textbook style simplification that has had lasting influence. In this intellectual historiography where movements require specific founders, Bh?viveka is identified as the founder of the Sv?tantrika. Part of the neo-Romantic rhetoric popular in the second half of the twentieth century was that meditation practice was by itself capable of leading to full awakening, or rather to an unimpeded, direct experience of the true and the real. That view has become increasingly untenable, as meditators have themselves attempted to understand the significance of their own experiences. Those who have turned to the teachings of the Buddhist tradition for that understanding are often confronted by the (only) apparent difficulty of understanding emptiness. Ames’ translation of this key work of the Madhyamaka school can contribute to untangling much of the confusion surrounding these ideas.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781886439696
Publication date: 30th December 2019
Author: William L. Ames
Publisher: Numata Center for Buddhist Translation & Research.
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 486 pages
Series: Contemporary Issues in Buddhist Studies
Genres: Buddhist sacred texts and revered writings
East Asian and Indian philosophy
Philosophy of religion