The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (1409 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
4.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
tman) and render change impossible. What already substantially exists, they argued, would not need to be produced; and what does not substantially exist already could never come into being from a state of non-existence. Thus real existence cannot be predicated of dharmas, but neither can non-existence, since they clearly present themselves as having a mode of being of some kind. The conclusion of the M
dhyamaka was that the true nature of phenomena can only be described as an ‘emptiness’ or ‘voidness’ (
dharma-
nyat
, i.e. ‘emptiness of self’); and that this emptiness of self-nature is synonymous with the principle of dependent origination (see
PATICCA-SAMUPP
DA
) as taught by the Buddha. This process of reasoning is fully set out in N
g
rjuna's concise verses in the
M
la-M
dhyamaka-K
rik
, the root text of the system.
There were implications also for
soteriology
: since emptiness is the true nature of what exists there can be no
ontological
basis for a differentiation between
nirv
na
and
sa
s
ra

Other books

Blackout by Thurman, Rob
The Lazarus Secrets by Beryl Coverdale
Lucifer's Tears by James Thompson
The Unwanted Earl by Ruth J. Hartman
Anonymously Yours by Shirley McCann
How to Fall in Love by Bella Jewel
A Song to Die For by Mike Blakely
The White Bull by Fred Saberhagen