•  15
    How Things Are: An Introduction to Buddhist Metaphysics by Mark Siderits is truly a masterly contribution, written by a scholar who has spent his life engaging with the philosophical arguments of S...
  •  7
    This paper explores the coexistence of more apologetic and of more systematic considerations in the _Āpta-mīmāṁsā_ (ĀMī), _Investigation on authority_, of the Jain author Samantabhadra (530–590). First, this treatise offers a relevant case study to investigate the transition from a conception in which the reliability criterion of an authoritative discourse is the authoritative character of its utterer, to a conception in which the criteria of validity and soundness of the discourse itself are fo…Read more
  •  26
    Jain Philosophers in the Debating Hall of Classical India
    Argumentation 35 (1): 35-49. 2020.
    The practice of rational debate between philosophers from different traditions, especially between Hindu—Naiyāyika and Mīmāṃsaka—, Buddhist and Jain philosophers, is unique in classical India. Around the 7th c., a pan-Indian consensus was achieved on what counts as a satisfactory justification. The core of such discussions is an inferential reasoning whose structure is such that it ensures that its conclusions are recognised as knowledge statements, irrespective of the obedience of the interlocu…Read more