2,018 research outputs found

    Classical advaitic definitions of 'substance' and the unreality of the world

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    A central theme that structured Vedāntic–Buddhist dialectics was the definition of ‘substance’. We shall argue that while certain forms of Vedānta and Madhyamaka Buddhism are shaped by the same set of presuppositions regarding ‘substance’, they derive opposed conclusions from this point of departure as they elaborate their conceptual universes. Further, while both Advaita and Viśiṣṭādvaita Vedānta seek to defend against their Buddhist rivals the thesis that the phenomenal world is a ‘dependent substance’, in the sense that it derives its empirical being from the foundational Ground of Brahman, they disagree over this crucial question: ‘precisely how real is this dependent substance?’ Consequently, some of the central disputes between Advaita and Viśiṣṭādvaita can be traced to a basic divergence in their conceptualisations of ‘substance’, which informs their responses to questions such as whether the postulation of a plurality of metaphysically real substances can be logically defended, whether the concept of a ‘dependent substance’ is coherent, whether real relations between the ultimate substance and dependent substances can be explicated without inconsistency, and so on.This is the author accepted manuscript. It first appeared at http://jhs.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/03/22/jhs.hiv010

    Interreligious dialogue, comparative theology and the alterity of hindu thought

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    A key question at the heart of contemporary debates over interreligious dialogue is whether the Christian partner in such conversations should view her interlocutors through the lens of Christian descriptions or whether any such imaging amounts to a form of Christian imperialism. We look at the responses to this question from certain contemporary forms of ‘particularism’ which regard religious universes as densely knit, and sometimes incommensurable, systems of meanings, so that they usually deny the significance, or even the possibility, of modes of bible preaching such as apologetics. While these concerns over the alterity of other religious traditions are often viewed as specifically postmodern, two Scotsmen in British India, J. N. Farquhar (1861–1929) and A. G. Hogg (1875–1954), struggled exactly a hundred years ago with a version of this question vis-à-vis the religious universe of Vedāntic Hinduism and responded to it in a manner that has striking resemblances to ‘particularism’. We shall argue that Hogg can be seen as an early practitioner of a form of ‘comparative theology’ which emerges in his case, on the one hand, through a textual engagement with specific problems thrown up in interreligious spaces but, on the other hand, also seeks to present a reasoned defence of Christian doctrinal statements. We shall note a crucial difference between his comparative theological encounters and contemporary practitioners of the same – while the latter are usually wary of speaking of any ‘common ground’ in interreligious encounters, Hogg regarded the presuppositions of the Christian faith as the basis of such encounters. The writings of both groups of theologians are structured by certain ‘dilemmas of difference’ that we explore. This is the accepted manuscript. The final version is available at http://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/swc.2014.0093

    The God of the oppressed and the politics of resistance: Black and Dalit theologies of liberation

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    Theologians from the Black communities in the USA, South Africa and other places, and Dalit groups in India have struggled with a dialectic between the retrieval of subjectivity within political spaces inflected by ‘race’ and ‘caste’ and the opposition to these essentialist categorisations. On the one hand, their politics of resistance has been predicated on their specific Black or Dalit identities, while, on the other hand, the postulation of such identities has often been criticised for being essentialist and homogenising. It would seem, therefore, that such patterns of ‘theologies of liberation’ have to steer clear of the Scylla of a postmodern-style dissolution of subjectivities in which the Black or Dalit identities are effaced in a ‘raceless’ or ‘casteless’ amorphousness, and the Charybdis of ‘ontologizing’ the experiences of Blackness or Dalitness in a manner that may re-entrench these binaries that arguably cannot be fitted into the Christian eschatological vision of the reconciliation of humanity. In our analysis of some Black and Dalit theologies, we shall seek to illuminate the distinctive ways in which they assert hitherto repressed subjectivities, while seeking at the same time to avoid ontological dualisms between sections of humanity, now fractured along the lines of race and caste.This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Culture and Religion on 31 Jan 2014, available online: http://wwww.tandfonline.com/10.1080/14755610.2014.882852

    The reality and the verifiability of reincarnation

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    © 2017 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. We investigate the topic of reincarnation by revisiting a recent debate from the pages of the journal Philosophy East and West between Whitley Kaufman, who presents five moral objections to karma and reincarnation as an explanation for human suffering, and Monima Chadha and Nick Trakakis, who seek to respond to Kaufman’s critiques. Our discussion of four of the problems analysed in their exchange will suggest that while the rejoinders of Chadha and Trakakis to Kaufman consist of plausible logical possibilities which successfully rebut some of his criticisms, the scenarios that they sketch are grounded in specific metaphysical theses about the nature of the human person and the structure of reality. The cogency of the responses that Chadha and Trakakis formulate is integrally related to the acceptance of these metaphysical presuppositions which need to be highlighted more clearly as we seek to understand what is at stake in the dispute

    Christian visions of Vedānta: The spiritual exercises of Bede Griffiths and Henri Le Saux

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    Returning home to the advaitic self: Svāmī Rāma Tīrtha and his American audiences

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    © 2016 by the author; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. A recurring theme in the Advaita Vedanta traditions is the necessity of empirical purification through means such as the cultivation of virtues, the study of the Vedas, and so on, even though the transcendental self has never been subject to any form of bondage. The traditions seek to mitigate this paradox by employing the vocabulary of a shift across the ‘levels’ of truth-while the worldly self is, empirically speaking, moving towards the goal of realization, from the transcendental perspective, the self never loses its eternal nature. We will explore how SvamI Rama Tirtha (1873-1906) addressed this theme of the recovery of one’s essential self in his lectures to some American audiences between 1902 and 1904. Drawing on some of the vocabularies of Swami Vivekananda, who had presented a ‘Practical Vedanta’ to Western audiences in the late 1890s, Rama Tlrtha developed an Advaitic form of self-realization that is practically engaged with the world and, according to him, is the spiritual quest of humanity across all boundaries
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