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Full Description
This is a semiotic study of a corpus of texts that Kumârajîva (344-413 CE), Paramârtha (499‾569 CE) and Xuanzang (599‾664 CE) transmitted from India to China, featuring a critical reading of the Dazhidu Lun (T1509, Mahâ-Prajñâpâramitâ-upadeúa-Úâstra), San Wuxing Lun (T1617, Try-asvabhâva-prakara.na), and Guangbai Lun (T1571, Catu.húataka-úâstra-kârika). Focusing its attention on the Mahâyâna Buddhist notion of samatâ, it identifies a Buddhist semiotics which anticipates Derrida's invocation of the notion of the Same in his deconstruction of binary oppositions.
Contents
Introduction: The pursuit of signs; Chapter 1 Three grades of understanding in the H?nay?na analytic system: A structural study of the list of seventy-five factors; Chapter 2 Undoing the H?nay?na Onto-epistemological categories: A semiotic approach to the list of eighteen points about emptiness; Chapter 3 Three ways of looking at the un-arisen: The Same in Kum?raj?va's Madhyamaka system; Chapter 4 Dialectic of construction and de-construction in the Vijñ?nav?da system: The Same in Param?rtha's Shèlùn system; Chapter 5 Deconstruction of time in Dharmap?la's commentary on ?ryadeva's Treatise in Four Hundred Verses: The Same in Xuánzàng's F?xiàng system; Chapter 6 Three ways of looking at the un-arisen in French deconstruction: Derrida's conception of the Same; Chapter 7 Afterword: Three semiotic models;