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Chandima Gangodawila

Ateneo de Manila University
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  •  Publications
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 More details
  • Ateneo de Manila University
    Department of Philosophy
    Assistant Professor
University of Sri Jayewardenepura
Alumnus, 2015
Email (login required)
Homepage
Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines
0000-0001-9411-7995
Areas of Specialization
Buddhist Ethics
Theravada Buddhist Philosophy
Mahayana Buddhist Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Buddhist Ethics
Theravada Buddhist Philosophy
Mahayana Buddhist Philosophy
  • All publications (8)
  •  105
    Dispositional Mindfulness and Eating Behaviours: Conceptual and Clinical Considerations
    Vidyodaya Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, 7 (1): 148-161. 2022.
    Dispositional mindfulness is "a non-judgmental state of purposeful awareness that brings attention to the present moment and allows for recognizing and considering internal and external experiences without the pressure to alter the moment or take action". Eating behaviors are classified as restrained, emotional, and external eating. External eating alludes to uncontrollable eating when food triggers such as favourite snacks or sweets are present. Emotional eating is when a person consumes an exc…Read more
    Dispositional mindfulness is "a non-judgmental state of purposeful awareness that brings attention to the present moment and allows for recognizing and considering internal and external experiences without the pressure to alter the moment or take action". Eating behaviors are classified as restrained, emotional, and external eating. External eating alludes to uncontrollable eating when food triggers such as favourite snacks or sweets are present. Emotional eating is when a person consumes an excessive amount of food in response to negative emotions or negative psychological moods. Restricted eating results in a person eating less food or feeling guilty after eating as a result of being overly concerned with their body weight or shape. In this review, a literature search was performed on PubMed with the keywords "Dispositional Mindfulness" and "eating". Six out of the sixteen papers met the selection criteria. The literature shows that high dispositional mindfulness levels are related to reduced emotional and uncontrolled external eating irrespective of the clinical variables put in place by each study. The negative psychological mood was associated with reduced dispositional mindfulness, which led to an increased emotional and external eating rate. Substance abuse is another factor that leads to low dispositional mindfulness levels. High levels of dispositional mindfulness are related to frequent exercise and high sleep quality. The review demonstrates that interventions that promote dispositional mindfulness can be utilized to treat persons who engage in negative eating behaviours.
    Philosophical Traditions, MiscEducationBuddhist EthicsHealth SciencesIndian Philosophy, Misc
  •  132
    Socrates and Early Buddhist Medical Ethics: Foundations of Moral Reasoning in the Care of Body and Mind
    Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 27 (3): 1-44. 2025.
    While Buddhist traditions articulate a parallel moral vision in the early discourses of the Pāli Canon, Western traditions usually locate the roots of ethical reasoning in Socratic inquiry. Especially in their approaches to bodily care, spiritual well - being, and moral responsibility, this article contends that both Socratic and Early Buddhist ideas converge on fundamental principles in medical ethics. Through a comparative textual and philosophical study, the paper examines how Socratic dialec…Read more
    While Buddhist traditions articulate a parallel moral vision in the early discourses of the Pāli Canon, Western traditions usually locate the roots of ethical reasoning in Socratic inquiry. Especially in their approaches to bodily care, spiritual well - being, and moral responsibility, this article contends that both Socratic and Early Buddhist ideas converge on fundamental principles in medical ethics. Through a comparative textual and philosophical study, the paper examines how Socratic dialectics and the Buddha's diagnostic approach to dissatisfa ction/ suffering (dukkha) both produce frameworks for ethical healthcare anchored in the development of virtue, wisdom, and care for the integrity of life. A more comprehensive understanding of cross-cultural medical humanities is facilitated by the comparison, which offers complementary insights into patient autonomy, ethical intervention, and the moral character of the physician. This comparative perspective expands our understanding of cross-cultural medical humanities, displaying how classical traditions provide complementary insights for revisiting both personal caregiving practices and larger systems in places like the Philippines where the politics of policy and institutional form also shape the very meaning of what it means to “care.”
    Asian Philosophy, MiscBuddhist EthicsPhilosophical Traditions, MiscIndian Philosophy, MiscPhilosophy…Read more
    Asian Philosophy, MiscBuddhist EthicsPhilosophical Traditions, MiscIndian Philosophy, MiscPhilosophy, General WorksBuddhism
  •  188
    The Psychology of Emotions and Humour in Buddhism, by Padmasiri de Silva (review)
    Reading Religion 7 (2). 2022.
    The Psychology of Emotions and Humor in Buddhism by Padmasiri de Silva, Palgrave Macmillan, 2018, 80 pp., EUR 54.99 (hardback), ISBN 9783319975139
    HumourAesthetics and EmotionsBuddhist EthicsPsychologyBuddhismTheravada Buddhist PhilosophyEmotions …Read more
    HumourAesthetics and EmotionsBuddhist EthicsPsychologyBuddhismTheravada Buddhist PhilosophyEmotions and Feelings
  •  189
    The Function and Contemporary Role of sikkhāpaccakkhāna (Abandoning the Training Rules) in the Pāli Canon
    Journal of Buddhist Ethics 30 315-353. 2023.
    This article examines the intricacies of abandoning the monastic training rules (sikkhāpaccakkhāna) in key Pāli sūtta and Vinaya texts to better understand how these textual sources, in addition to early modern Sri Lankan monastics as well as the contemporary saṅgha, have understood the abandonment of the training rules not as a spiritual failure, but rather as a set of pragmatic monastic principles that emphasize the retention of monkhood and the continuity of the Buddhasāsana. To demonstrate t…Read more
    This article examines the intricacies of abandoning the monastic training rules (sikkhāpaccakkhāna) in key Pāli sūtta and Vinaya texts to better understand how these textual sources, in addition to early modern Sri Lankan monastics as well as the contemporary saṅgha, have understood the abandonment of the training rules not as a spiritual failure, but rather as a set of pragmatic monastic principles that emphasize the retention of monkhood and the continuity of the Buddhasāsana. To demonstrate this, I propose an innovative approach to examining the first pārājika (concerning sexual intercourse) in relation to the sikkhāpaccakkhāna by considering Pāli sūttas, Vinaya texts, and the example of noncelibate seventeenth-century Laṅkān gaņinnānse (nonbhikkhu monks). I conclude by arguing that the contemporary Sri Lankan saṅgha can use sikkhāpaccakkhāna to avoid falling into the first pārājika, which provides a basis for reordination and thus a more human-centered framework for supporting the stability and duration of the Buddhasāsana.
    BuddhismBuddhist EthicsTheravada Buddhist PhilosophyNormative JurisprudenceAsian Philosophy, MiscInd…Read more
    BuddhismBuddhist EthicsTheravada Buddhist PhilosophyNormative JurisprudenceAsian Philosophy, MiscIndian Philosophy, Misc
  •  993
    Bloom: Buddhist Reflections on Serenity and Love by, Ajahn Sona
    Canadian Journal of Buddhist Studies 17 1-11. 2022.
    Ajahn Sona, Bloom: Buddhist Reflections on Serenity and Love. Ottawa, Ontario: Sumeru Press Inc, 2020. 144 pp. CAN $24.95 (pb). ISBN 978-1-89655-960-5
    Buddhist EthicsMahayana Buddhist PhilosophyChinese Buddhist Philosophy, MiscTheravada Buddhist Philo…Read more
    Buddhist EthicsMahayana Buddhist PhilosophyChinese Buddhist Philosophy, MiscTheravada Buddhist PhilosophyBuddhist Logic
  •  904
    Science and Religion in India Beyond Disenchantment, by Renny Thomas
    Reading Religion 7 (8). 2022.
    Science and religion in India: beyond disenchantment by Renny Thomas, New York, Routledge, 2022, 203 pp., $128CAD (hardback), ISBN 9781032073194
    HinduismScience and Religion
  •  1030
    The Employment and Significance of the Kauśīdyavīryotsāhanāvadāna ( The Indolent’s Valor and Courage) in Buddhist Traditions.” International Journal of Buddhist Thought & Culture
    International Journal of Buddhist Thought and Culture 32 (1). 2022.
    In this article, I argue that the Kauśīdyavīryotsāhanāvadāna of the Ratnamālāvadāna presents six key aspects of the development of Buddhist thought from the Pāli canon to the Sarvāstivāda tradition: childlessness, the arrival of a fetus through the propitiation of gods, presence of heretics, the impact of Buddha’s intervention and a child bodhisattva, soteriological elements of the story’s didactics, and the Buddha’s peculiar smile. These six key aspects were chosen to reflect and explore the co…Read more
    In this article, I argue that the Kauśīdyavīryotsāhanāvadāna of the Ratnamālāvadāna presents six key aspects of the development of Buddhist thought from the Pāli canon to the Sarvāstivāda tradition: childlessness, the arrival of a fetus through the propitiation of gods, presence of heretics, the impact of Buddha’s intervention and a child bodhisattva, soteriological elements of the story’s didactics, and the Buddha’s peculiar smile. These six key aspects were chosen to reflect and explore the content of Sarvāstivādin society and teachings concerning its source narratives of the Kusīdāvadāna of Avadānaśataka and the Pāli canon. This helps us to understand the composition of Sarvāstivāda doctrine as recounted in the Kauśīdyavīryotsāhanāvadāna, which varies from its source the Kusīdāvadāna of Avadānaśataka. It also aids in the identification of the avadāna and avadānamālā forms of Sarvāstivāda, as well as the impact of the Pāli canon and Brahmanical thought on them. The Kusīdāvadāna of Avadānaśataka, which is the source of the Kauśīdyavīryotsāhanāvadāna and the Pāli canon, will be utilized to examine the six aspects of the societal and doctrinal development of the Buddhist thought of Kauśīdyavīryotsāhanāvadāna. The final portion is the very first annotated translation of Kauśīdyavīryotsāhanāvadāna based on Takahata’s 1954 original version.
    BuddhismBuddhist LogicTheravada Buddhist PhilosophyChinese Buddhist Philosophy, MiscBuddhist EthicsJ…Read more
    BuddhismBuddhist LogicTheravada Buddhist PhilosophyChinese Buddhist Philosophy, MiscBuddhist EthicsJapanese Buddhist Philosophy, MiscMahayana Buddhist Philosophy
  •  1110
    Superiority Conceit in Buddhist Traditions: A Historical Perspective, by Bhikkhu Analayo
    Buddhist Studies Review 39 (1): 158-163. 2022.
    Superiority Conceit in Buddhist Traditions: A Historical Perspective, by Bhikkhu Analayo. Wisdom Publications, 2021. 184pp. Hb. $24.95, ISBN-13: 9781614297192; Ebook $12.99, ISBN-10:1614297193.
    Theravada Buddhist PhilosophyBuddhist EthicsMahayana Buddhist PhilosophyChinese Buddhist Philosophy,…Read more
    Theravada Buddhist PhilosophyBuddhist EthicsMahayana Buddhist PhilosophyChinese Buddhist Philosophy, Misc
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