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BUDDHIST ILLOGIC:
A
Critical Analysis of Nagarjuna’s Arguments © Copyright Avi Sion, 2002. All rights reserved.
Abstract
The 2nd Century CE Indian philosopher
Nagarjuna founded the Madhyamika (Middle Way) school of Mahayana Buddhism, which
strongly influenced Chinese, Korean and Japanese (Ch’an or Zen) Buddhism, as
well as Tibetan Buddhism. Nagarjuna is regarded by many Buddhist writers to this
day as a very important philosopher, who they claim definitively proved the
futility of ordinary human cognitive means. His writings include a series of arguments purporting
to show the illogic of logic, the absurdity of reason. He considers this the way
to verbalize and justify the Buddhist doctrine of “emptiness” (Shunyata).
These arguments attack some of the basic tenets and techniques of reasoning,
such as the laws of thought (identity, non-contradiction and the excluded
middle), conceptualization and predication, our common assumptions of self,
entities and essences, as well as our beliefs in motion and causation. The present essay demonstrates the many sophistries
involved in Nagarjuna’s arguments. He uses double standards, applying or
ignoring the laws of thought and other norms as convenient to his goals; he
manipulates his readers, by giving seemingly logical form (like the dilemma) to
his discourse, while in fact engaged in non-sequiturs or appealing to
doubtful premises; he plays with words, relying on unclear terminology,
misleading equivocations and unfair fixations of meaning; and he ‘steals
concepts’, using them to deny the very percepts on which they are based. Although a critique of the Madhyamika philosophical
interpretation and defense of “emptiness”, Buddhist Illogic is not
intended to dissuade readers from Buddhism. On the contrary, its aim to enhance
personal awareness of actual cognitive processes, and so improve meditation. It
is also an excellent primer on phenomenological epistemology.
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