Visions of Unity

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***{{i|''Does True Existence Have to Be Negated in Order to Abandon Grasping at It?'' |223}}
***{{i|''Does True Existence Have to Be Negated in Order to Abandon Grasping at It?'' |223}}
**{{i|2. Primordial Mind as an Impermanent Phenomenon |228}}
**{{i|2. Primordial Mind as an Impermanent Phenomenon |228}}
**{{i|3. (Un)linking the Self-Cognizing Primordial Mind and Dualistic Consciousness |238}}
**{{i|3. (Un)linking the Self-Cognizing Primordial Mind and Dualistic<br>Consciousness |238}}
**{{i|4. Does Self-Cognition Cognize Itself? |242}}
**{{i|4. Does Self-Cognition Cognize Itself? |242}}
**{{i|5. Primordial Mind as the Bridge between Yogācāra and Tantra |249}}
**{{i|5. Primordial Mind as the Bridge between Yogācāra and Tantra |249}}

Revision as of 16:33, 24 July 2020

Visions of Unity
Book
Book

A detailed study of controversial Tibetan Buddhist thinker Śākya Chokden, a fifteenth-century Sakya philosopher who wrote extensively on Yogācāra and Madhyamaka in an attempt to synthesize the two, this book presents Yaroslav Komarovski's dissertation research. Komarovski skillfully places Śākya Chokden in a long history of Yogācāra-Madhyamaka syntheses, a tradition that Śākya Chokden accused Tsongkhapa of abandoning in his radical interpretation of Candrakīrti and rejection of all positive-language doctrine. Although his writings were recognized for their brilliance, his criticisms of Tsongkhapa and Sakya Paṇḍita, and his qualified acceptance of "other-emptiness" (gzhan stong), meant that he was almost entirely rejected by his peers. In dense but readable prose Komarovski explains how Śākya Chokden reclassified elements of each (the Satyākāravāda doctrine of the Yogācāra, and the Prasaṅgika branch of the Madhyamaka) as true Madhyamaka; each was capable of bringing people to a realization of the ultimate, one with positive language and the other with negative.

Citation Komarovski, Yaroslav. Visions of Unity: The Golden Paṇḍita Shakya Chokden's New Interpretation of Yogācāra and Madhyamaka. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2011.