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  • Are convenient fictions harmful to your health?

    our indisputable aversion to falsehood does not lead Plato to impose a total ban on lies. ...of this ruse; "otherwise," he says, "our herd of Guardians [the Auxiliaries] may become ...

    Garner, Richard

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/21382871909.html
  • Candrakiirtis denial of the self

    existent in this limited way is not the inborn misconception which contaminates our actions and thereby perpetuates our rebirth in the worlds of suffering. He argues ...

    James Duerlinger

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06070072018.html
  • Skepticism, ordinary language and Zen Buddhism

    follow without any strong impulse or inclination." When this happens "our belief is a matter of ...have being as holding, in a dogmatic way, that the objects of our experience, their causes, or their...

    Dick Garner

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06090672104.html
  • Mu and Its Implications

    nonduality is so central, some more elaboration is needed here. Our usual understanding of experience is ...problem, the delusion which mediates to cause our sense of duality. But the Mahāyāna distinction between ...

    David Loy

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06154572328.html
  • Nāgārjunas theory of causality

    Nāgārjuna argues for the fundamental importance of causality, and dependence more generally, to our...our understanding of reality and of human life but also that his own account of these matters is ...

    Jay L Garfield

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06161172348.html
  • On the Buddhas Answer to the Silence of God

    to be taken seriously in our time. He then, in the second part of the book, undertakes careful ...sophistication. Interpretive matters aside, what has Buddhism to offer to our present situation ...

    Robert C. Neville

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06172872392.html
  • The Buddha and the Whiteheadian God

    Methodist Theological Seminary for our evening meal. The dishes were displayed before us in a wonderful variety of color, kind, size, taste, and consistency. We used our chopsticks to dip now into ...

    Marjorie Hewitt Suchocki

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06205972531.html
  • The Crisis of Maadhyamika and Indian Philosophy Today

    the philosophy of our times is more important than a philosophical self-examination, than making ...philosophy at stake. This point will be dealt with along with our second remark. The first step ...

    Panikkar, Raymond

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06244272638.html
  • The Naturalistic Principle of Karma

    the sense of guiding our future inquiries. Far from detracting from the importance of the ...are committed to the causal principle indicates our basic desire for explanations of physical ...

    Karl H. Potter

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06274072740.html
  • Two Strains in Buddhist Causality

    understood properly without examining the full dimension of our ordinary experience. Such an examination...sense. But in our experiential events, we are usually caught up with the elements, i.e., the observable...

    Kenneth K. Inada

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06322672912.html