
Published online:
17 September 2015
Published in print:
01 December 2015
Online ISBN:
9780190260538
Print ISBN:
9780190260507
Contents
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Introduction: Whence Compassion? Introduction: Whence Compassion?
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Metaphysical Background Metaphysical Background
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Śāntideva’s Argument Śāntideva’s Argument
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Interconnectedness Interconnectedness
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From Emptiness to Compassion From Emptiness to Compassion
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The Import of Metaphysics The Import of Metaphysics
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Making Others Suffer Making Others Suffer
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Implications of the Net Implications of the Net
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Phronesis and Compassion Phronesis and Compassion
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Conclusion: Why Be Moral? Conclusion: Why Be Moral?
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Chapter
12 Compassion and the Net of Indra
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Pages
221–240
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Published:September 2015
Cite
Priest, Graham, 'Compassion and the Net of Indra', Moonpaths: Ethics and Emptiness (New York , 2015; online edn, Oxford Academic, 17 Sept. 2015), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190260507.003.0013, accessed 8 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter addresses the question of why compassion (karuṇā) is a central moral virtue of Buddhism. It considers the Madhyamaka tradition, as well as later Buddhist traditions that have endorsed its core metaphysical notion of emptiness (śūnyatā), a notion closely connected with conventional reality as conceived in these traditions. It argues for an account of compassion based on the Net of Indra and considers some of the consequences (and non-consequences) of such an account.
Subject
Buddhism
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
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