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Nothingness and Emptiness: A Buddhist Engagement with the Ontology of Jean-Paul
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Nothingness and Emptiness: A Buddhist Engagement with the Ontology of Jean-Paul Sartre Hardcover - 2001

by Steven W. Laycock


From the publisher

This sustained and distinctively Buddhist challenge to the ontology of Jean-Paul Sartre's Being and Nothingness resolves the incoherence implicit in the Sartrean conception of nothingness by opening to a Buddhist vision of emptiness. Rooted in the insights of Madhyamika dialectic and an articulated meditative (zen) phenomenology, Nothingness and Emptiness uncovers and examines the assumptions that sustain Sartre's early phenomenological ontology and questions his theoretical elaboration of consciousness as "nothingness." Laycock demonstrates that, in addition to a "relative" nothingness (the for-itself) defined against the positivity and plenitude of the in-itself, Sartre's ontology requires, but also repudiates, a conception of "absolute" nothingness (the Buddhist "emptiness"), and is thus, as it stands, logically unstable, perhaps incoherent. The author is not simply critical; he reveals the junctures at which Sartrean ontology appeals for a Buddhist conception of emptiness and offers the needed supplement.

Details

  • Title Nothingness and Emptiness: A Buddhist Engagement with the Ontology of Jean-Paul Sartre
  • Author Steven W. Laycock
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Pages 223
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher State University of New York Press
  • Date April 2001
  • ISBN 9780791449097 / 0791449092
  • Weight 0.94 lbs (0.43 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.26 x 6.12 x 0.69 in (23.52 x 15.54 x 1.75 cm)
  • Themes
    • Religious Orientation: Buddhist
  • Library of Congress subjects Nothing (Philosophy), Sartre, Jean-Paul
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 00056275
  • Dewey Decimal Code 111.092

About the author

Steven W. Laycock is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toledo and the author of Mind as Mirror and the Mirroring of Mind: Buddhist Reflections on Western Phenomenology, coeditor (with James G. Hart) of Essays in Phenomenological Theology, also published by SUNY Press, and author of Foundations for a Phenomenological Theology.