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1. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Kevin Rose Introduction: Some Current Strategies for Research on Tibetan Madhyamaka
2. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Dale S. Wright Inaugural Reflections for the Journal of Buddhist Philosophy
3. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Jonathan Stoltz Gendun Chöpel on the Status of Madhyamaka: Knowledge, Truth, and Testimony
4. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Tom J. F. Tillemans What Happened to the Third and Fourth Lemmas in Tibet?
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The paper looks at how Tsong kha pa (1357–1419), mKhas grub (1385–1438), and Go rams pa (1429–1489) understood the third and fourth lemmas in the tetralemma (Tib. mu bzhi; Skt. catuṣkoṭi), “both A and B” and “neither A nor B,” respectively.
5. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Yael Bentor Meditation on Emptiness in the Context of Tantric Buddhism
6. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Kevin Vose Do Mādhyamikas See What the Rest of Us See?: Early bKa’ gdams pas on “Commonly Appearing Subjects” (chos can mthun snang ba)
7. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Pascale Hugon Proving Emptiness: The Epistemological Background for the “Neither One Nor Many” Argument and the Nature of Its Probandum in Phya pa Chos kyi seng ge’s Works
8. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Jongbok Yi Controversy among dGe lugs pa Scholars about What Is Negated in Emptiness According to the Svātantrika-Mādhyamika School
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This paper examines intrasectarian controversies among the colleges of the dGe lugs order of Tibetan Buddhism. dGe lugs pa is one of the four or five major orders that developed in the Tibetan cultural region; it was founded by Tsong kha pa (1357–1419) or, as some say, developed from his teachings. This paper looks specifically at Jam yang shay pa’s (1648–1721/22) Decisive Analysis of (Candrakīrti’s) “Entry to (Nāgārjuna’s) ‘Treatise on the Middle’”: Treasury of Scripture and Reasoning, Thoroughly Illuminating the Profound Meaning [of Emptiness], Entrance for the Fortunate.
9. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Shūdō ISHI Dōgen’s Views on Practice and Realization and His Dream Encounter with Damei Fachang
10. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Y. Karunadasa The Early Buddhist Psychology of Philosophical Views
11. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 1
Fumihiko SUEKI A New Worldview from the Standpoint of Buddhism: A Critique of Modern Reason
12. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
David Higgins On the rDzogs chen Distinction between Mind (sems) and Primordial Knowing (ye shes): Clarifications and Transcendental Arguments
13. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
Tsering Wangchuk Can We Speak of Kadam Gzhan Stong?: Tracing the Sources for Other-Emptiness in Early-Fourteenth-Century Tibet
14. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
Klaus-Dieter Mathes Introduction: The History of the Rang stong/Gzhan stong Distinction·from Its Beginning through the Ris-med Movement
15. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
Gereon Kopf Message from the Editor
16. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
Yaroslav Komarovski From the Three Natures to the Two Natures: On a Fluid Approach to the Two Versions of Other-Emptiness from Fifteenth-Century Tibet
17. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
Klaus-Dieter Mathes Presenting a Controversial Doctrine in a Conciliatory Way: Mkhan chen Gang shar dbang po’s (1925–1958/59?) Inclusion of Gzhan Stong (“Emptiness of Other”) within Prāsaṅgika
18. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
Anne Burchardi How Can a Momentary and Conditioned Mind Be Integral to Gzhan Stong?
19. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
Shi Huifeng Is “Illusion” a Prajñāpāramitā Creation?: The Birth and Death of a Buddhist Cognitive Metaphor
20. Journal of Buddhist Philosophy: Volume > 2
Edward Falls Tsong kha pa and the Myth of the Given