Title: Apoha: Buddhist Nominalism and Human Cognition
Abstract:PrefaceIntroduction, by Arindam Chakrabarti and Mark Siderits1. How to Talk About Ineffable Things: Dignaga and Dharmakirti on Apoha, by Tom Tillemans2. Dignaga's Apoha Theory: Its Presuppositions and...PrefaceIntroduction, by Arindam Chakrabarti and Mark Siderits1. How to Talk About Ineffable Things: Dignaga and Dharmakirti on Apoha, by Tom Tillemans2. Dignaga's Apoha Theory: Its Presuppositions and Main Theoretical Implications, by Ole Pind3. Key Features of Dharmakirti's Apoha Theory, by John D. Dunne4. Dharmakirti's Discussion of Circularity, by Pascale Hugon5. Apoha Theory as an Approach to Understanding Human Cognition, by Shoryu Katsura6. The Apoha Theory as Referred to in the Nyayama jari, by Masaaki Hattori7. Constructing the Content of Awareness Events, by Parimal G. Patil8. The Apoha Theory of Meaning: A Critical Account, by Prabal Kumar Sen9. Apoha as a Naturalized Account of Concept Formation, by Georges Dreyfus10. Apoha, Feature-Placing, and Sensory Content, by Jonardon Ganeri11. Funes and Categorization in an Abstraction-Free World, by Amita Chatterjee12. Apoha Semantics: Some Simpleminded Questions and Doubts, by Bob Hale13. Classical Semantics and Apoha Semantics, by Brendan S. Gillon14. Srughna by Dusk, by Mark SideritsBibliographyList of ContributorsIndexRead More
Publication Year: 2011
Publication Date: 2011-01-01
Language: en
Type: book
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Cited By Count: 136
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