Abstract
In recent scholarship there has been a persistent tendency, especially among North-American scholars, to deny that Indian Yogācāra philosophy is a form of idealism. The discussion has naturally focused on the interpretation of Vasubandhu's Viṃśikā, a foundational text of the school, as well as one of the most accessible, which other researchers have taken to be denying the existence of a material world external to consciousness.
In this article, after noting some of the points in favor of a non-idealist reading of the Viṃśikā, we shall offer a new reading that supports the old “standard”, but still widespread, interpretation that it indeed intends to deny the existence of physical objects outside of consciousness. We suggest that Vasubandhu develops in the Viṃśikā an extended argumentum ad ignorantiam where the absence of external objects is derived from the absence of evidence for their existence. This reading is the result of examining argumentation strategy rather than investigating the logical structure of individual proofs in isolation, and it takes cues from Vasubandhu's strategy for refuting the existence of a self in Abhidharmakośabhāṣya IX. In addition, our reading looks at the entire Viṃśikā, rather than isolating a purported argumentative “core” (vv. 11–15), and draws attention to the relevance of some of its subtleties. Finally, we also suggest that Vasubandhu might have opted for a less direct argumentation strategy to prove the non-existence of the external world because of specific soteriological aspects of the doctrine of vijñaptimātratā.
©2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Munich/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Aufsätze – Articles – Articles
- Dial M for Murder: A case of passion killing, criminal evidence and sultanic power in Medieval India
- La Sarvāṅgayogapradīpikā de Sundardās : une classification des chemins de yoga au 17e siècle
- Studies in Yogācāra-Vijñānavāda idealism I: The interpretation of Vasubandhu's Viṃśikā
- “Following one's desire” (kāmacāra): On a Characterisation of Freedom in Vedic Literature and the Mahābhārata
- The Persian translation of the tridoṣa: lexical analogies and conceptual incongruities
- Looking into water-pots and over a Buddhist scribe's shoulder – On the deposition and the use of manuscripts in early Buddhism
- On the composition of parallel versions of the story “The appearance of the liṅga” (liṅgodbhava) in the Purāṇas
- Rezensionen – Comptes rendus – Reviews
- Recent textbooks on religions in South Asia
- Rezensionen – Comptes rendus – Reviews
- Rezensionen – Comptes rendus – Reviews
- Rezensionen – Comptes rendus – Reviews
- Rezensionen – Comptes rendus – Reviews
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