Philosophical monograph published by Springer Verlag (Singapore), June 21st 2022, as e-book (printed version available from July; chapters available as downloads). This book provides a comprehensive philosophical account of the normative status of killing in Buddhism. Its argument theorises on relevant Buddhist philosophical grounds the metaphysical, phenomenological and ethical dimensions of the distinct intentional classes of killing, in dialogue with some elements of Western philosophical thought. In doing so, it aims to provide a descriptive account of the causal bases of intentional killing, a global justification and elucidation of Buddhist norms regarding killing, and an intellectual response to and critique of alternative conceptions of such norms presented in recent Buddhist Studies scholarship. It examines early and classical Buddhist accounts of the evaluation of killing, systematising and rationally assessing these claims on both Buddhist and contemporary Western philosophical grounds. The book provides the conceptual foundation for the discussion, engaging original reconstructive philosophical analyses to both bolster and critique classical Indian Buddhist positions on killing and its evaluation, as well as contemporary Buddhist Studies scholarship concerning these positions. In doing so, it provides a systematic and critical account of the subject hitherto absent in the field. Engaging Buddhist philosophy from scholastic dogmatics to epistemology and metaphysics, this book is relevant to advanced students and scholars in philosophy and religious studies: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-19-2441-5?noAccess=true
Posts Tagged ‘metaphysics of the person’
A Buddhist Theory of Killing: a philosophical exposition
Posted in book, Buddhist philosophical, philosophy, tagged bodhisattva ethics, Buddhism and violence, Buddhist ethics and philosophy, capital punishment, counter-terrorism, ethics and philosophy of killing, euthanasia, Mahayana auspicious killing, mental causation, metaphysics of the person, political terrorism, protest suicide, religious lethality, suicide and assisted suicide, Theravada Buddhism on June 27, 2022| Leave a Comment »
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