Nāgārjuna and Zeno on motion
Philosophy East and West 34 (4):401-420 (1984)
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Constantin Antonopoulos (2004). Moving Without Being Where You're Not; a Non-Bivalent Way. Journal for General Philosophy of Science 35 (2):235 - 259.
Nicholas Huggett (forthcoming). Zeno's Paradoxes. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Edward N. Zalta (Ed.).
Craig Harrison (1996). The Three Arrows of Zeno. Synthese 107 (2):271 - 292.
Adolf Grünbaum (1970). Modern Science and Zeno's Paradoxes of Motion. In Wesley C. Salmon (ed.), Zeno’s Paradoxes. Bobbs-Merrill.
William I. McLaughlin & Sylvia L. Miller (1992). An Epistemological Use of Nonstandard Analysis to Answer Zeno's Objections Against Motion. Synthese 92 (3):371 - 384.
Alba Papa-Grimaldi (1996). Why Mathematical Solutions of Zeno's Paradoxes Miss the Point: Zeno's One and Many Relation and Parmenides' Prohibition. The Review of Metaphysics 50 (2):299 - 314.
Mark Siderits & J. Dervin O'Brien (1976). Zeno and Nāgārjuna on Motion. Philosophy East and West 26 (3):281-299.
Jan Westerhoff (2008). Nāgārjuna's Arguments on Motion Revisited. Journal of Indian Philosophy 36 (4).
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