Description |
1 online resource (436 pages) |
Series |
Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy Ser. ; v. 9 |
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Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy Ser
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Contents |
880-01 Intro; Dedication; Acknowledgments; Contents; Contributors; Abbreviations; Chapter 1: Introduction: Chinese Buddhist Philosophy and Its "Other"; 1 Chinese Buddhist Philosophy and Its "Other"; 1.1 Something Neither "Originally Indian" nor "Originally Chinese"; 1.2 How Chan Buddhists Assimilate Daoist Ideas-A Case Study for the Process of Hermeneutic Selection; 1.3 Ways of Responding to Otherness: Chinese Buddhist Philosophy and Modern Western Philosophy; 2 Survey of Chapters; References; Part I: Intersections: Assimilating and Appropriating Buddhism |
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880-01/$1 2.1 Ethics of Generosity in Indian Buddhism2.2 Generosity in The Awakening of Faith; 2.3 Ontological Foundation of Buddhist Ethics of Generosity; 2.4 Metaphors for the Relation Between One Mind and Individual Beings; 3 Part II -- The Buddhist Ideas of Strangification and Generosity; 3.1 Some Critical Reflections on The Awakening of Faith; 3.2 The Concept of huixiang 向 as a Buddhist Idea of Strangification; 3.3 Turning Upwards to bodhi as Transformation of Consciousness Into Wisdom; 3.4 Turning to Many Others as Act of Strangification and Generosity; 4 Conclusions; References |
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Chapter 4: Wholesome Remembrance and the Critique of Memory-From Indian Buddhist Context to Chinese Chan Appropriation1 The Traditional Indian Buddhist Context of Remembering and the Critique of Memory; 2 A Rediscovery of Chan Teachings on Remembrance and Critique of Memory; 2.1 Daoxin and Shenxiu; 2.2 Shenhui and the Platform Sūtra; 2.3 Wuxiang and Wuzhu; 2.4 The Hongzhou School and Afterwards; 3 Summary and Reflections; 3.1 Indian Buddhist Context; 3.2 Chinese Chan Appropriation; 3.3 A Unique Mode of Chan Remembering |
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3.4 The Ethical Dimension of Chan Remembering (A Brief Comparison with Ricoeur's Ethics of Memory)3.5 Forgetting: the Other Side of Chan Remembering; References; Part II: Intersections: Interacting with Indigenous Traditions; Chapter 5: The Daoist-Buddhist Discourse(s) on Things, Names, and Knowing in China's Wei Jin Period; 1 Introduction; 2 Buddhist and Daoist Notions of the Indeterminable; 3 A Daoist View on the Nature of Things; 4 A Daoist Observation of Knowing; 5 The Madhyamaka Discourse on the Nature of Things; 6 Sengzhao's Reflection on Names, Things, and Knowing |
Notes |
7 A Chinese Madhyamaka Understanding of Liberation |
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Print version record |
Subject |
Buddhism -- Philosophy
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Buddhism -- Philosophy.
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9789048129393 |
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9048129397 |
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