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Dharmakirti's Hetubindu
Contributor(s): Steinkellner, Ernst (Editor)
ISBN: 370017960X     ISBN-13: 9783700179603
Publisher: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press
OUR PRICE:   $35.15  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: December 2016
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Religion | Buddhism - Sacred Writings
Series: Sanskrit Texts from the Tibetan Autonomous Region
Physical Information: 0.4" H x 6.1" W x 9.3" (0.57 lbs) 123 pages
Themes:
- Religious Orientation - Buddhist
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The Hetubindu, composed by the Buddhist philosopher and logician Dharmakirti during his middle period (around 600 CE), develops further, with succinct formulations and elaborations on the formal structures and essential elements, his theory of logical reason and inference as he had presented it in the work of his youth, which later became the first chapter, on inference, of the Pramanavarttika together with an explanatory Vrtti, and was refined in the second chapter of his Pramanaviniscaya. In the Hetubindu, a treatise of pure logic, he further enriched his ideas in three digressions: an analysis of his teacher Isvarasenas theorem of the reason with six characteristics, an epistemological examination of negative cognition and a demonstration of its applicability as a logical reason, and an extensive presentation of the possibilities, by investigating causality, for determining the nexus in the case of the proof of the momentariness of all entities. The original Sanskrit text of the Hetubindu was still considered lost when, in 1967, Ernst Steinkellner critically edited its Tibetan translation, reconstructed a Sanskrit text on the basis of fragments, various testimonies and Arcatas commentary extant in Sanskrit, and prepared an annotated German translation. But nearly two decades later, in 1985, a unique Sanskrit manuscript of the text was discovered by Luo Zhao at the Potala in Lhasa. After almost another two decades, through a cooperation agreement between the Austrian Academy of Sciences and the China Tibetology Research Center, Beijing, a photographic copy of this manuscript could finally be accessed in 2004. The editorial work of this Sanskrit manuscript was entrusted to Helmut Krasser, who prepared a first transliteration and a preliminary critical edition. Regrettably he was unable to finish the task due to a lengthy grave illness; he passed away in March 2014. Steinkellner subsequently revised Krassers work, provided an analytical survey and an introduction. Thanks to Klaus Wille he was also able to add, together with the latters transliteration, photos of the Gilgit fragment, the oldest testimony of this jewel of Indian logical thought.