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- S. R. Bhatt (2000). Buddhist Epistemology. Greenwood Press.
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This book is a philosophical critique of the Buddhist tradition (not a scholarly work about the Buddhist tradition), applying the standards of judgement developed in 'A Theory of Moral Objectivity'. It is argued that although the Buddhist tradition provides access to the insights of the Middle Way, many other aspects of Buddhist tradition are inconsistent with this central insight. The sources of justified belief in Buddhism, karma, conditionality, concepts of reality, monasticism and Buddhist ethics are all subjected to the same critique.
Methodological and metatheoretical considerations -- Sensation and the empirical consciousness -- Perception, conception, and language -- An encyclopaedic and compassionate setting for Buddhist epistemology -- Perception as an epistemic modality -- Foundationalism and the phenomenology of perception -- In defense of epistemological optimism.
Epistemology – the study of the nature and scope of knowledge – has been an integral topic in Indian and Tibetan Buddhist scholastic communities for the past 1500 years. This article provides an overview of the Buddhist epistemological tradition, emphasizing the central role that the concept of pramana plays in Indian theories of knowledge. After elucidating the two pramanas accepted by the Buddhist epistemological tradition, the article concludes by discussing the relationship between Buddhist epistemology and Buddhist soteriology.
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