Buddhist Teaching in India

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“A most welcome addition to the growing literature on early Indian Buddhism.”—Charles Prebish, Redd Chair in Religious Studies, Utah State University

BUDDHIST TEACHING IN INDIA

Johannes Bronkhorst

The earliest records we have today of what the Buddha said were written down several centuries after his death, and the body of teachings attributed to him continued to evolve in India for centuries afterward across a shifting cultural and political landscape. As one tradition within a diverse religious milieu that included even the Greek kingdoms of northwestern India, Buddhism had many opportunities to both influence and be influenced by competing schools of thought. Even within Buddhism, a proliferation of interpretive traditions produced a dynamic intellectual climate. Johannes Bronkhorst here tracks the development of Buddhist teachings both within the larger Indian context and among Buddhism’s many schools, shedding light on the sources and trajectory of such ideas as dharma theory, emptiness, the bodhisattva ideal, buddha nature, formal logic, and idealism. In these pages, we discover the roots of the doctrinal debates that have animated the Buddhist tradition up until the present day.

Learn more about the Studies in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism series.

book information
  • Paperback
  • 264 pages, 6.00 x 9.00 inches
  • $28.95
  • ISBN 9780861715664
  • ebook
  • 264 pages
  • $19.99
  • ISBN 9780861718115
about the author
Buddhist Teaching in India

After initial studies of Mathematics and Physics with Astronomy at the Free University in Amsterdam (Kandidaats/B.Sc. in 1968), Johannes Bronkhorst took up the study of Sanskrit and Pali, first at the University of Rajasthan (Jaipur, India), then at the University of Pune (India). In Pune he obtained an M.A. in 1976 and a Ph.D. in 1979. After his return to the Netherlands he obtained a second doctorate from the University of Leiden in 1980 (with the highest distinction). He remained attached to the University of Leiden as a researcher until 1987, in which year he was appointed full professor of Sanskrit & Indian Studies at the University of Lausanne (Switzerland). He remained at the University of Lausanne until his (mandatory) retirement in 2011. He has published some two hundred and thirty research papers, all in specialized
journals, some twenty books, besides numerous reviews. His most recent books are:
Greater Magadha (2007), Aux origines de la philosophie indienne (2008), Buddhist
Teaching in India (2009), Language and Reality (2011), Buddhism in the Shadow
of Brahmanism (2011), Karma (2011), Absorption: Human Nature and Buddhist
Liberation (2012), How the Brahmins Won: From Alexander to the Guptas (2016),
A Śabda Reader: Language in Classical Indian Thought (2019), and Compendium of
All Philosophies: Sarvadarśanasaṃgraha (in press).

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