EXPERIENCE OF NOTHINGNESS

A FORM OF HUMANISTIC RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE

Authors

  • Menye Raymond

Keywords:

NOTHINGNESS, Nagarjuna, Dialectic, Causality, Satkaryavada, Asatkaryavada, Svabhavavada, Atma, Sunya, Absolute

Abstract

The "Experience of Nothingness" in human context is both frightening and fascinating. It is frightening because for many Westerners the idea of Nothingness suggests the notion of chaos, non-reality, or the opposite of anything positive, everything leading to despair and anguish ; it is more or less akin to Nihi/um and the atheistic philosophy of Heidegger or Sartre is the by-word of that position. In trying to understand the same notion in the thought and life of any Eastern people where Buddhism is a cultural force, we will soon discover that it is an invitation to transcendence, 'Absolute' or fulness of Reality as held by the Buddhist thinker Nagarjuna. When we go through the history of philosophy, we see how men of all ages have almost in the same sweeping vein dealt with some metaphysical problems such as Being and Non-Being. Man wants to know the Real. In all his endeavours to comprehend Reality, Man himself is in the centre of the eternal quest.

References

Margaret Chaterjee, 279, Contemporary Unwin Ltd. 1974), p. 279.

Madhyamika Karika, 1,1., trans. Frederick J. Streng, Emptiness — A Study in Religious meanning (New York : Abington Press. 1967).

T.R.V. Murti, The Central Philosophy of Buddhism (London : George Allen and Unwin Ltd., 1978), 135.

F. Tola, 'Nagarjuna's Conception of Voidness," Journal of Indian Philosophy (Dordretch : Reidel Publishing Company, vol. 9, No 2. 1981). P. 277.

William Barrett, Irrational Man (London : Mercury Books, 1958), p. 218,

Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness (New York : Philosophical Library, 1956) p. ixv.

Joseph Catalano, Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre's Being and Nothingness (Harper Torch Books, New York, 1974), p. 3.

I.M. Bochenski, Contemporary European Philosophy (U.S.A. California Press. 1961), p. 176.

Mary Warnock, Existentialism (New York : Oxford University Press. 1970), p. 100.

Colin Smith, Contemporary French Philosophy (London : Methuen Co. Ltd, 1964), p. 36

Stephan Evans, Existentialism, (Dallas : Zondervan Pub. House, 1984), p. 15.

Ramakant Sinari, Reason in Existentialism. (Bombay : Popular Prakeshan, 1966), P. 64-67.

Ramakant Sinari, Structure of Indian Thought, (Illinois Charles C. Thomas Pub. 1970),

Heinrich Zimmer, Philosophies of India (New York : Bollingen Foundation 1953), 523.

Albert Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus (France : Editions Galiinard, 1942), p. 22

Maurice Friedman: The Worlds of Existentialism New York : Random House, 1964), p. 155-56.

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Published

1989-06-30

How to Cite

Raymond, M. (1989). EXPERIENCE OF NOTHINGNESS: A FORM OF HUMANISTIC RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE. Journal of Dharma, 14(2), 173–189. Retrieved from https://dvkjournals.in/index.php/jd/article/view/1215