Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Zen and the Unsayable
- 2 Wittgenstein and Zen Buddhism: One Practice, No Dogma
- 3 The No-Thesis View: Making Sense of Verse 29 of Nāgārjuna’s <i>Vigrahavyāvartanī</i>
- 4 Why the Buddha Never Uttered a Word
- 5 Is Reductionism Expressible?
- 6 Mountains Are Just Mountains
- 7 How Do Mādhyamikas Think?: Notes on Jay Garfield, Graham Priest, and Paraconsistency
- 8 A Dharmakīrtian Critique of Nāgārjunians
- 9 Would It Matter All That Much if There Were No Selves?
- 10 <i>Svasaṃvitti</i> as Methodological Solipsism: “Narrow Content” and the Problem of Intentionality in Buddhist Philosophy of Mind
- Bibliography
- Index
Title Pages
Title Pages
- Source:
- Pointing at the Moon
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Zen and the Unsayable
- 2 Wittgenstein and Zen Buddhism: One Practice, No Dogma
- 3 The No-Thesis View: Making Sense of Verse 29 of Nāgārjuna’s <i>Vigrahavyāvartanī</i>
- 4 Why the Buddha Never Uttered a Word
- 5 Is Reductionism Expressible?
- 6 Mountains Are Just Mountains
- 7 How Do Mādhyamikas Think?: Notes on Jay Garfield, Graham Priest, and Paraconsistency
- 8 A Dharmakīrtian Critique of Nāgārjunians
- 9 Would It Matter All That Much if There Were No Selves?
- 10 <i>Svasaṃvitti</i> as Methodological Solipsism: “Narrow Content” and the Problem of Intentionality in Buddhist Philosophy of Mind
- Bibliography
- Index