•  26
    In The Fundamental Verses on the Middle Way (Mūlamadhyamakakārikā), Nāgārjuna argues that time is ultimately empty of any intrinsic existence, but exists conventionally, as a set of relations, and so it is interdependent with temporal phenomena. This chapter places his analysis of time and of temporality in the context of his analysis of motion and change, and it explains how the ultimate emptiness of time is consistent with its empirical reality. It also addresses Nāgārjuna's Tibetan commentato…Read more
  •  2
    ‘To Pee and not to Pee?’ Could That Be the Question? (Further Reflections of The Dog)
    In Graham Priest, Jc Beall & Bradley P. Armour-Garb (eds.), The Law of Non-Contradiction: New Philosophical Essays, Oxford University Press. pp. 235-244. 2004.
    Priest's LP is formulated with truth value gaps, but no gluts. The Dog argues on epistemological grounds that a paraconsistent logic with truth value gaps as well as gluts is better than one with gluts alone, and shows how this can be achieved with minimal fuss.
  • To Pee and not to Pee? Could That Be the Question? (Further Reflections of the Dog)
    In Graham Priest, Jc Beall & Bradley P. Armour-Garb (eds.), The Law of Non-Contradiction: New Philosophical Essays, Oxford University Press. 2004.
  • To Pee and not to Pee? Could That Be the Question? (Further Reflections of the Dog)
    In Graham Priest, Jc Beall & Bradley P. Armour-Garb (eds.), The Law of Non-Contradiction: New Philosophical Essays, Oxford University Press. 2004.
  •  33
    This is a book about what it is to be human in the full sense of that term: to be an organism that only comes to self-consciousness in virtue of being thrown into a world already pregnant with meaning—meaning that can only be constituted collectively. To be human to be one whose very being is constituted both by the web of customs into which we are born. This investigation shows how much of our existence as persons depends upon a set of interlocking virtuous spirals that enable the development o…Read more
  •  94
    Indian Philosophers
    with Ashok Aklujkar, David E. Cooper, Peter Harvey, Jonardon Ganeri, Bhikhu Parekh, Karl H. Potter, John Grimes, John A. Taber, Indira Mahalingam Carr, Brian Carr, Jayandra Soni, Bina Gupta, Mark B. Woodhouse, Kalyan Sengupta, and Tapan Kumar Chakrabarti
    In Robert L. Arrington (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophers, Wiley-blackwell. 2008.
    As is the case with most pre‐modern philosophers of India, very little historical information is available about Bhartṛ‐hari. There are many interesting legends, some turned into extensive plays and poems, current about him. However, it is impossible to determine on their basis even whether there was only one philosopher called Bhartṛ‐hari. The appellation “philosopher” could unquestionably be applied to the author or authors of at least two Sanskrit works that are commonly ascribed to Bhartṛ‐ha…Read more
  • To Pee and not to Pee? Could That Be the Question? (Further Reflections of the Dog)
    In Graham Priest, Jc Beall & Bradley P. Armour-Garb (eds.), The Law of Non-Contradiction: New Philosophical Essays, Oxford University Press. 2004.
  • To Pee and not to Pee? Could That Be the Question? (Further Reflections of the Dog)
    In Graham Priest, Jc Beall & Bradley P. Armour-Garb (eds.), The Law of Non-Contradiction: New Philosophical Essays, Oxford University Press. 2004.
  •  4
    Sweet Reason: A Field Guide to Modern Logic
    with James M. Henle and Thomas Tymoczko
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2011.
    _Sweet Reason: A Field Guide to Modern Logic, 2nd Edition_ offers an innovative, friendly, and effective introduction to logic. It integrates formal first order, modal, and non-classical logic with natural language reasoning, analytical writing, critical thinking, set theory, and the philosophy of logic and mathematics. An innovative introduction to the field of logic designed to entertain as it informs Integrates formal first order, modal, and non-classical logic with natural language reasoning…Read more
  •  8
    Taking Back Philosophy: A Multicultural Manifesto
    Columbia University Press. 2017.
  •  19
    Contributors
    with Roger T. Ames, Peter D. Hershock, Thomas P. Kasulis, Meera Sushila Viswanathan, James McRae, Heidi M. Hurd, Jin Y. Park, James Peterman, Yang Liuxin, Baoyan Cheng, Xu Di, Kathleen M. Higgins, Purushottama Bilimoria, Kenneth W. Stikkers, Larry A. Hickman, Robert Smid, Nalini Bhushan, Oliver Leaman, James Behuniak Jr, Gordon Davis, Naoko Saito, Paul Standish, T. Yamauchi, Workineh Kelbessa, Karsten J. Struhl, Steven Burik, Amita Chatterjee, Steve Bein, May Sim, Wu Shiu-Ching, Steven F. Geisz, and Lori Keleher
    In Roger T. Ames Peter D. Hershock (ed.), Value and Values: Economics and Justice in an Age of Global Interdependence, University of Hawaii Press. pp. 539-550. 2015.
  •  21
    Index
    with Roger T. Ames, Peter D. Hershock, Thomas P. Kasulis, Meera Sushila Viswanathan, James McRae, Heidi M. Hurd, Jin Y. Park, James Peterman, Yang Liuxin, Baoyan Cheng, Xu Di, Kathleen M. Higgins, Purushottama Bilimoria, Kenneth W. Stikkers, Larry A. Hickman, Robert Smid, Nalini Bhushan, Oliver Leaman, James Behuniak Jr, Gordon Davis, Naoko Saito, Paul Standish, T. Yamauchi, Workineh Kelbessa, Karsten J. Struhl, Steven Burik, Amita Chatterjee, Steve Bein, May Sim, Wu Shiu-Ching, Steven F. Geisz, and Lori Keleher
    In Roger T. Ames Peter D. Hershock (ed.), Value and Values: Economics and Justice in an Age of Global Interdependence, University of Hawaii Press. pp. 551-556. 2015.
  •  14
    Thought as Language
    ProtoSociology 14 85-101. 2000.
    Language has often served both as a metaphor for thought. It is highly plausible that language serves as an epistemic entre into thought and that language structures adult human thought to a considerable degree. The language metaphor is, however, uncritically extended as a literal model of thought.This paper criticizes this extension, arguing that thought is not literally implemented in language and distinguishing legitimate from illegitimate uses of language as a device for understanding though…Read more
  •  33
    The Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy provides the advanced student or scholar a set of introductions to each of the world's major non-European philosophical traditions. It offers the non-specialist a way in to unfamiliar philosophical texts and methods and the opportunity to explore non-European philosophical terrain and to connect her work in one tradition to philosophical ideas or texts from another. This volume is an invaluable aid to those who would like to pursue philosophy in a global c…Read more
  •  29
    A Miller’s Tale (review)
    with Janusz Sysak, John Sutton, Tim Sprod, Michael Shortland, Libby Robin, Nathan Reingold, Nicolas Rasmussen, Brian Martin, Bronwyn Maelzer, Yvonne Luxford, C. A. Hooker, Phillip Hart, Andrew Grout, Honor Godfrey, David Frankel, Peter Forrest, Andrew Dowling, Wendy Riemens, John Dargavel, I. J. Crozier, Alan Chalmers, Geoffrey C. Bowker, Alison Bashford, Adrian Mackenzie, Phil Dowe, and David Oldroyd
    Metascience 6 (1): 105-184. 1997.
  •  162
    This volume of essays offers direct comparisons of historic Western and Buddhist perspectives on ethics and metaphysics, tracing parallels and contrasts all the way from Plato to the Stoics, Spinoza to Hume, and Schopenhauer through to contemporary ethicists such as Arne Naess, Charles Taylor and Derek Parfit. It compares and contrasts each Western philosopher with a particular strand in the Buddhist tradition, in some chapters represented by individual writers such as Nagarjuna, Vasubandhu, San…Read more
  •  34
    Hume as a Western Mādhyamika: The Case from Ethics
    In Gordon F. Davis, Michael Griffin, Emily McRae, Ethan Mills, Mary D. Renaud, Jay L. Garfield, Emer O’Hagan, Douglas L. Berger, Sonia Sikka, Nalini Ramlakhan, Stephen Harris, Ashwani Peetush & Pragati Sahni (eds.), Ethics without Self, Dharma without Atman: Western and Buddhist Philosophical Traditions in Dialogue, Springer. pp. 131-143. 2018.
    There are obvious homologies between Hume’s metaphysics and the commitments of Madhyamaka Buddhism, to be found in his treatment of personal identity, the status of the external world and causality. But few have noticed that these homologies extend to ethics. In this essay I argue that Hume’s account of the relation between the metaphysics of the person and ethics, as well as his account of the basis of ethics in natural sympathy (extended through the power of the moral imagination to transform …Read more
  •  42
    The Meyer-Dunn semantics for First Degree Entailment and the Belnap four-valued data base logic are strikingly similar to the Buddhist catuṣkoṭi, or four-cornered logic deployed by Nāgārjuna. I show that we can exploit this similarity to better understand the nature of truth.
  •  209
    What Can't Be Said: Paradox and Contradiction in East Asian Thought
    with Yasuo Deguchi, Graham Priest, and Robert H. Sharf
    Oxford University Press. 2021.
    "Paradox drives a good deal of philosophy in every tradition. In the Indian and Western traditions, there is a tendency among many philosophers to run from contradiction and paradox. If and when a contradiction appears in a theory, it is regarded as a sure sign that something has gone amiss. This aversion to paradox commits them, knowingly or not, to the view that reality must be consistent. In East Asia, however, philosophers have reacted to paradox differently. Many East Asian philosophers-bot…Read more
  •  105
    Abstract:Subject As Freedom (1930) is correctly regarded as Krishnachandra Bhattacharyya's magnum opus. But this text relies on a set of ideas and develops from a set of concerns that KCB develops more explicitly in essays written both before and after that text, which might be regarded as its intellectual bookends. These ideas are important and fascinating in their own right. They also illuminate KCB's engagement with Kant and with the Vedānta tradition as well as his understanding of freedom i…Read more
  •  104
    Can't Find the Time: Temporality in Madhyamaka
    Philosophy East and West 73 (4): 877-897. 2023.
    The relation between Prāsaṅgika-Madhyamaka accounts of time and contemporary physical accounts of time are considered. Caution is urged in assimilating them too quickly, and caution that there are many differences in detail. Nonetheless, it is shown that if we follow carefully a philosophical arc from Nāgārjuna through Tsongkhapa and Dōgen, we encounter a relational account of time and of our experience of temporality that can inform thought about the ontological status of time in contemporary p…Read more
  • [No title] (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2010.
  •  51
    Madhyamaka and Yogācāra: allies or rivals? (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2015.
    Madhyamaka and Yogacara are the two principal schools of Mahayana Buddhist philosophy. While Madhyamaka asserts the ultimate emptiness and conventional reality of all phenomena, Yogacara is usually considered to be idealistic. This collection of essays addresses the degree to which these philosophical approaches are consistent or complementary. Indian and Tibetan doxographies often take these two schools to be philosophical rivals. They are grounded in distinct bodies of sutra literature and ado…Read more
  •  24
    16. David Foster Wallace as Student: A Memoir
    In David FosterHG Wallace (ed.), Fate, Time, and Language: An Essay on Free Will, Columbia University Press. pp. 219-222. 2010.
  •  215
    We discuss the structure of Buddhist theory, showing that it is a kind of moral phenomenology directed to the elimination of egoism through the elimination of a sense of self. We then ask whether being raised in a Buddhist culture in which the values of selflessness and the sense of non-self are so deeply embedded transforms one’s sense of who one is, one’s ethical attitudes and one’s attitude towards death, and in particular whether those transformations are consistent with the predictions that…Read more
  •  71
    Book reviews (review)
    with W. F. G. Haselager, Andy Clark, Carol W. Slater, Louis C. Charland, Charles Siewert, and Mark L. Johnson
    Philosophical Psychology 9 (3): 391-410. 1996.
    The engine of reason, the seat of the soul: a philosophical journey into the brain, Paul M. Churchland. Cambridge: Bradford Books, MIT Press, 1995 ISBN: 0–262–03244–4Cognition in the wild, Edwin Hutchins. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1995. ISBN: 0–262–08231–4Dimensions of creativity, Margaret A. Boden, (Ed.) Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1994 ISBN 0–262–02368–7Contemplating minds: a forum for Artificial Intelligence, William J. Clancey, Stephen W. Smoliar & Mark J. Stefik (Eds) Cambridge: Bradford Book…Read more
  •  52
    The Moon Points Back (edited book)
    Oxford University Press USA. 2015.
    The Moon Points Back comprises essays by both established scholars in Buddhist and Western philosophy and young scholars contributing to cross-cultural philosophy. It continues the program of Pointing at the Moon (Oxford University Press, 2009), integrating the approaches and insights of contemporary logic and analytic philosophy along with those of Buddhist Studies in order to engage with Buddhist ideas in a contemporary voice.The essays in the volume focus on the Buddhist notion of emptiness (…Read more