Selfless Persons

From Buddha-Nature
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|BookToc=***{{i|''Preface''|''page'' ix}}
***{{i|Introduction|1}}
*{{i|'''Part 1 The cultural and social setting of Buddhist thought'''|27}}
**{{i|1 The origins of rebirth|29}}
**{{i|1.1 Buddhism and early Indian religion|29}}
1.2 Time: samsdra 41
1.3 Action and the person: karma 53
1.4 Timelessness: moksa (nirvana) 58
2 Varieties of Buddhist discourse 65
2.1 Buddhist thought in context 65
2.2 Different ways of talking about 'self and 'person' 71
2.3 Elements of personality and (not-)self 78
Part II The doctrine of not-self 85
3 The denial of self as 'right view' 87
3.1 Different kinds of 'right view' 87
3.2 Arguments in support of anattd 95
3.3 The denial of self as a strategy in 'mental culture' in
4 Views, attachment, and 'emptiness' 116
4.1 Views and attachment 117
4.2 The Unanswered Questions 131
4.3 Quietism and careful attention 138
Part III Personality and rebirth 145
5 The individual of 'conventional truth' 147
5.1 'Conventional' and 'ultimate truth' 147
5.2 Attabhdva 'individuality', puggala 'person' 156
5.3 House imagery 165
6 'Neither the same nor different' 177
6.1 'A person is not found' 178
6.2 Images of identity and difference 185
6.3 Self and other: compassion 188
Part IV Continuity 197
7 Conditioning and consciousness 199
7.1 The construction(s) of temporal existence 200
7.2 The stations of evolving consciousness 213
7.3 Vegetation imagery 218
8 Momentariness and the bhavahga-mmd 225
8.1 impermanent are conditioned things' 226
8.2 The 'ultimate' extent of a lifetime: momentariness 234
8.3 The bhavahga-mind 238
8.4 River imagery 247
Conclusion 262
Notes 267
Bibliography 310
Glossary and index of Pali and Sanskrit terms 318
General index 321
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Revision as of 14:32, 22 April 2020

Selfless Persons
Book
Book

This book seeks to explain carefully and sypathetically the Buddhist doctrine of anatta ('not-self'), which denies the existence of any self, soul or enduring essence in human beings. The author relates this doctrine to its cultural and historical context, particularly to its Brahmanical background, and shows how the Theravāda Buddhist tradition has constructed a philosophical and psychological account of personal identity and continuity on the apparently impossible basis of the denial of self. (Source: Cambridge University Press) For relevance to the concept of buddha-nature, see chapter 8, "Momentariness and the bhavaṅga-mind."

Citation Collins, Steven. Selfless Persons: Imagery and Thought in Theravāda Buddhism. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1982. https://archive.org/details/thervadaselflesspersonsimagerythoughtintheravadabuddhismstevencollinsoup_564_z/mode/2up.