
Published online:
01 May 2009
Published in print:
19 February 2009
Online ISBN:
9780199871360
Print ISBN:
9780195375213
Contents
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5.1. Causation: Preliminary Remarks 5.1. Causation: Preliminary Remarks
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5.2. Interdependence of Cause and Effect 5.2. Interdependence of Cause and Effect
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5.3. The Four Ways of Causal Production 5.3. The Four Ways of Causal Production
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5.3.1. Self-causation 5.3.1. Self-causation
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Identity of cause and effect. Identity of cause and effect.
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Cause and effect related as part and whole. Cause and effect related as part and whole.
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5.3.2. Causation by Another Object 5.3.2. Causation by Another Object
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5.3.3. Causation by Itself and Another Object 5.3.3. Causation by Itself and Another Object
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5.3.4. Absence of Causation 5.3.4. Absence of Causation
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5.3.5. Identity, Difference, and Svabhāva 5.3.5. Identity, Difference, and Svabhāva
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5.4. Temporal Relations between Cause and Effect 5.4. Temporal Relations between Cause and Effect
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5.4.1. Cause and Effect as Successive 5.4.1. Cause and Effect as Successive
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5.4.2. Cause and Effect as Overlapping 5.4.2. Cause and Effect as Overlapping
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5.4.3 Cause and Effect as Simultaneous 5.4.3 Cause and Effect as Simultaneous
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5.4.4. Cause and Effect as One Event 5.4.4. Cause and Effect as One Event
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5.4.5. Temporal Relations and Svabhāva 5.4.5. Temporal Relations and Svabhāva
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5.5. Analysis of Time 5.5. Analysis of Time
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Cite
Westerhoff, Jan, 'Causation', Nagarjuna's Madhyamaka: A Philosophical Introduction (New York , 2009; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 May 2009), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195375213.003.0005, accessed 8 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter deals with Nāgārjuna’s critique of the notion of causation. It first discusses the interdependence of cause and effect, followed by an analysis of the critique of the four ways of causal production: self-production, production from another object, production from itself and another object, and causeless production. A second set of arguments Nāgārjuna presents against causation deal with the possible relations between cause and effect: cause and effect being successive, overlapping or simultaneous. The chapter concludes with a brief discussion of Nāgārjuna’s thought on time.
Keywords:
causation, cause, effect, self-causation, temporal relations, absence of causation, simultaneous causation, time
Subject
Buddhism
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
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