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Thesis

Freedom and ethics in Madhyamaka Buddhism

Abstract:

This research project articulates the relationship between freedom and ethics in Indian Madhyamaka. Chapter 1 provides a defence of anti-realist interpretations of Madhyamaka, the ramifications of which are felt throughout the remainder of the investigation. Chapter 2 introduces the reconstructive, cross-cultural and, at times, a-historical methodology used to explicate Madhyamaka’s implied stance on issues such as free will and the naturalistic fallacy. Chapter 3 examines the suitability of ‘paleo-compatibilism’ as a potential solution to the Buddhist free will problem, arguing that, with some modifications, it could be viable in a Madhyamaka context. Chapter 4 investigates the similarities and differences between the Western theory of causal determinism and the Madhyamaka doctrine of dependent origination: dependency relations encompass but are not coterminous with causal relations. Chapter 5 examines ‘perspectivalism,’ another proposed solution to the Buddhist free will problem, but contends that it is better conceived of as a meta-theory about free will rather than as simply another theory. From chapter 6 onwards, the focus moves from ‘free will’ to ‘freedom’ of a spiritual kind. Chapter 6 seeks to negotiate the tension in Madhyamaka’s conception of karma as both that which binds beings to saṃsāra and, through the accumulation of merit, as a facilitator of liberation. Chapter 7 introduces the ethical ideal of the bodhisattva figure and considers the coherence of Madhyamaka’s conception of a Buddha’s non-karmic moral action. Chapters 8 and 9 articulate the implied Madhyamaka view on a range of meta-ethical questions, such as whether moral sentences can be truth-apt and whether Madhyamaka can respond to accusations that it commits the naturalistic fallacy. Chapter 10 offers some concluding remarks on the value of cross-cultural philosophical engagement and summarizes this project’s key findings.

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Division:
HUMS
Department:
Theology Faculty
Role:
Author

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Role:
Supervisor


DOI:
Type of award:
DPhil
Level of award:
Doctoral
Awarding institution:
University of Oxford


Language:
English
Keywords:
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UUID:
uuid:4f234fd0-f281-413c-a21b-2ea723e474cf
Deposit date:
2019-08-05

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