TY - JOUR
T1 - Sakya Paita's anti-realism as a return to the mainstream
AU - Gold, Jonathan C.
PY - 2014/4
Y1 - 2014/4
N2 - Sakya Pa{ncombining dot below}{dcombining dot below}ita (Sa-pa{ncombining dot below}) (1182-1251), one of Tibet's most revered and influential philosophers, often complained about the inadequacies of his Tibetan rivals. This essay analyzes two passages from Sa-pa{ncombining dot below}'s Treasury of Reasoning (Tshad ma rigs pa'i gter) to display his belief that his contemporaries had adopted non-Buddhist approaches to the philosophy of language, and to explicate his attempts to return Tibetans to positions more reminiscent of Vasubandhu and Dharmak̄rti. The first passage treated is Sa-pan. 's discussion of "appearance" (snang ba), in which he critiques the idea of granting "perceptual" status to what he deems conceptual constructions. The second passage contains Sa-pa{ncombining dot below}'s own view of the linguistic "signified" (brjod bya) and his karmically grounded causal theory of linguistic signification. Sa-pa{ncombining dot below}'s analyses help to illuminate the depths of a traditional Buddhist approach to language by refusing to cede its core assumptions in the face of more moderate, commonsense views.
AB - Sakya Pa{ncombining dot below}{dcombining dot below}ita (Sa-pa{ncombining dot below}) (1182-1251), one of Tibet's most revered and influential philosophers, often complained about the inadequacies of his Tibetan rivals. This essay analyzes two passages from Sa-pa{ncombining dot below}'s Treasury of Reasoning (Tshad ma rigs pa'i gter) to display his belief that his contemporaries had adopted non-Buddhist approaches to the philosophy of language, and to explicate his attempts to return Tibetans to positions more reminiscent of Vasubandhu and Dharmak̄rti. The first passage treated is Sa-pan. 's discussion of "appearance" (snang ba), in which he critiques the idea of granting "perceptual" status to what he deems conceptual constructions. The second passage contains Sa-pa{ncombining dot below}'s own view of the linguistic "signified" (brjod bya) and his karmically grounded causal theory of linguistic signification. Sa-pa{ncombining dot below}'s analyses help to illuminate the depths of a traditional Buddhist approach to language by refusing to cede its core assumptions in the face of more moderate, commonsense views.
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U2 - 10.1353/pew.2014.0027
DO - 10.1353/pew.2014.0027
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84899837695
SN - 0031-8221
VL - 64
SP - 360
EP - 374
JO - Philosophy East and West
JF - Philosophy East and West
IS - 2
ER -