- Bhaaviveka and the Early Maadhyamika
Theories of Language
- By Malcolm D. Eckel
In the last fifty years, Western interpreters of Maadhyamika
Buddhist philosophy have
worked diligently to devise a philosophical vocabulary in
which the insights and techniques of the Maadhyamika, dialecticians can be accurately and intelligibly
expressed to Western
readers.[1] This is not an easy task, but it has sometimes
been done quite effectively.[2] Even in the most
successful studies, however, one element is
often conspicuously lacking. Scholars have
compared the work of early Maadhyamika
philosophers with similar work in the West, but they have been
reluctant for various reasons to
compare the
early Maadhyamika philosophers
with each
other.[3] This, of course, has
led to a certain
admirable simplicity in the results
of their
comparison, but it has sacrificed
a degree of
sophistication and philosophical accuracy that would enrich their
results. In this article I would like to redress the
balance in one small area by considering the development of the theory or theories of
language in the works of Naagaarjuna,
Bhaavaviveka, and Candrakiirti. By so doing, I hope to demonstrate
that a sure way to promote conceptual accuracy in
the comparative enterprise
is to understand
how individual philosophers
in the Maadhyamika tradition chose to develop
and differentiate themselves from the work of their predecessors.
The
comparison of early Maadhyamika philosophers
with each other has been hindered in recent
years by the relative scarcity of major texts translated
into Western languages. We are fortunate
to have translations of the basic
works of Naagaarjuna and Candrakiirti,
but we only have fragments of the works of other authors like Buddhapaalita and
Bhaavaviveka, and original Tibetan works on Maadhyamika
philosophy are almost unknown in Western languages.[4]
This imbalance has led, perhaps inevitably,
to the notion that early Maadhyamika philosophy was
considerably more homogeneous than it actually was. What is
necessary now to expand our understanding of this school is greater familiarity with
the lesser known authors, like Bhaavaviveka, and with the great
Tibetan scholars like Tso^n-kha-pa, who
wrestled in their own works with the diversity of the early
philosophy. Such familiarity would show that the
homogeneity of the early tradition
is merely apparent. In
fact, Bhaavaviveka distinguished himself quite sharply from the earlier tradition on
certain points, and Candrakiirti,
in turn, distinguished himself from Bhaavaviveka. Tso^n-kha-pa
and his successors recognized this and, in their own efforts to harmonize the differences, gave
a very useful account of the
ways in which the two disagreed.
Theories of language
play an important part in the
Maadhyamika philosophy of the early period, not primarily because the individual philosophers
were interested in constructing
a positive semantic theory, although that interest
did impinge somewhat on the works of Bhaavaviveka and Candrakiirti, but Malcolm D.
Eckel is Instructor,
Religion Department, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio. Philosophy East and West 28, no. 3,
July 1978. reserved.Because the disputes between Maadhyamika and
rival Indian schools were often, at bottom, cast in terms of
disagreements over the use of language. This is perhaps
a natural consequence of the Maadhyamika critical method.
Maadhyamika philosophers were interested more in devising
a critical scheme for removing
their opponents' misconceptions than they were in building their own positive
theory. In the absence of shared metaphysical
assumptions, their criticism often took the form of objections to
certain uses of language. The Maadhyamika
account of language is thus useful,
in the first
case, as a mirror of the relationship between
Maadhyamika philosophers and their Indian opponents, but
its importance is not limited
just to this. The account of language is also
closely related to a central Maadhyamika notion, the two levels
of truth.
Maadhyamika philosophers recognized
this as a distinction between
a level
of nonconceptual, ultimate truth (paramaartha)
and a level
of truth that lay within the domain of
concepts and
words (vyavahaara). The two were distinct, but the second was understood to function in
some way as a vehicle for the first.[5] The account of
language given
by any particular Maadhyamika philosopher necessarily
affected his notion both of the exact nature of the distinction
between the two truths and of the way one served
indirectly to express
the other. An understanding of the development of Maadhyamika accounts of language is thus useful to
us in a number of ways, both in describing the Maadhyamika
response to other Indian schools and
in following internal differences on certain fundamental points. It
also has the advantage,
as will
be evident later, of sharply
delineating basic differences
between Bhaavaviveka and Candrakiirti.
Naagaarjuna laid
the groundwork for later
Maadhyamika accounts of language in the second century A.D., at a time when Indian
philosophers were becoming conscious in a
rudimentary way of the need to formulate
rules for debate between opposing philosophical schools.
Sanskrit was being used
increasingly as a tool for learned discourse, and the Hindu logicians were attempting
to develop a theory of semantics and syllogistic reasoning on which philosophical argument could be based. Naagaarjuna's
position
in this philosophical
environment was
necessarily rather ambiguous. He was
committed, as a Sanskrit dialectician, to the
process of discussion and debate facilitated by the developments
in Hindu logic, but he could not, as a Buddhist, accept the ontology
on which the theories were based. In particular, he could not accept the notion advanced
by the Hindu logicians that the meaning of a term was the
substantial entity to which it referred.
He appeared, in fact, to assert exactly
the opposite,
namely, that all things are empty of
substantial reality, and terms which refer to
such things are equally empty of
reality, since there is no real
substance to which they refer. In the
terminology of the Sanskrit philosophical schools this was expressed in the following words:
"Nothing at all possesses intrinsic
nature" (sarve.saa.m bhaavaanaa.m sarvatra na vidyate svabhaava.h).[6] For Naagaarjuna this
quasi-assertion posed a basic problem concerning the function of language. The problem is
simply this: if all things are empty (`suunya) of intrinsic nature (svabhaava), then terms
that refer to them are similarly empty. In the semantic theory of the Hindu logicians, an empty term, that is, one with no reference, is meaningless. So to say "all things are empty of intrinsic nature"
is to say that all terms are meaningless,
including those in the assertion
itself. The assertion is thus useless as a means of argument.
Naagaarjuna formulated this
problem for himself in the first part of the Vigrahavyaavartani. Here an objector says: [Vs. 1] If nothing at all
possesses an intrinsic nature, then your
statement [that nothing possesses an intrinsic
nature] itself possesses no
intrinsic nature, and it cannot refute intrinsic nature.[7]
[Vs. 9] If there is no intrinsic nature then
even the word
"no intrinsic nature" (ni.hsvabhaava) is
impossible, because there can be no word without an object [to which it
refers] (naama hi nirvastuka.m naasti).[8] In the second part of the work, Naagaarjuna formulates his
reply largely
in terms of examples.
[Commentary on verse 223 You have not understood the
emptiness of things. ...lf things existed by
virtue of their own intrinsic nature. they would
exist even without causes and conditions. But they do not.
Therefore they have no intrinsic
nature, and they are called empty. Similarly, because
it is dependently produced, my statement has no intrinsic nature, and because it has no
intrinsic nature, it is reasonable to call it empty. Now, things like a cart, a pot, or a
cloth, though they are empty of intrinsic nature because
they are dependently produced, serve
their various
functions. For example, they
carry wood, grass, or dirt, they contain honey, water, or milk, or they protect from cold,
wind, or
heat.
Similarly, my
statement serves to establish the fact that things have
no intrinsic nature, even though, because it is dependently
produced, it has no
intrinsic nature.[9]
Naagaarjuna shows a number of the important
characteristics of his method in these passages. The
first point
to note is that he works out
his own account of words and
their function
primarily in response to the challenge
of a Hindu logician, who wants
to force him to say more than he is willing to say. The response
he gives is largely negative. He
refused to be pushed by the logician into admitting that either his words or
the things to which they refer
exist by virtue of their intrinsic nature
(svabhaava). The second point has to do with
the way words actually function, even though they are empty of intrinsic nature. In
fact, Naagaarjuna does not present a positive
theory of language to account for the
effectiveness of his sentence: he simply makes an appeal
to conventional usage, His
words admittedly have no
intrinsic nature, but
they work
conventionally as well as does a cart. The cart, when we examine it, has no nature
which we can designate as its "cartness," but it still manages to carry out its function effectively. We cannot
actually say that Naagaarjuna presents a coherent theory in these lines.
In his
appeal to ordinary usage, however, Naagaarjuna suggests the direction in
which some future Maadhyamika philosopher
might go in developing a theory based on pure convention.
If this were
all Naagaarjuna had to say about his philosophical
statements, our problem
would be greatly simplified; but Naagaarjuna
recognized that the statement "All things are empty of
intrinsic nature" contains an added
element of complexity. It purports to convey a general
truth about the nature of things: all entities, without exception, are empty of
intrinsic nature. If the statement functions
this way, however, it raises a number of new difficulties.
We might ask, in particular, whether the truth
conveyed in
this statement has, in Naagaarjuna's
terminology, an intrinsic nature. If it does,
it renders the statement itself false. If it does not, it is not clear what the
statement is meant to convey or how it is meant to convey it. Naagaarjuna actually poses this question for himself in a somewhat different
form. He asks whether the
statement "All things are empty of intrinsic nature"
asserts anything, and if
not, what it is understood to do. His
explanation is the following:
[Vs. 29] If I made any assertion (pratij~naa), I
would be in error. But I make no assertion, thus I am not in error, [Commentary] If I made any
assertion, then the error you describe
would be mine. But I
make no assertion. How can there
be any assertion when all
things are empty, completely at peace and isolated by nature.[10]
[Vs. 63] I do not negate anything, nor is there anything to be negated.
Therefore you slander me when you say that I negate something. [Commentary]
If I negated something, what you say would be correct. But I do not negate anything
at all, for there is nothing to be negated. Therefore,
when all things are empty and there are no negation
and thing to be negated, your
statement is slanderous.
[Vs. 64] You
may say that something that does not exist can be negated without words. But in this case [in our statement] speech simply makes known that it does not exist;
it does not negate it.
[Commentary] You may say, "Something that does
not exist can be negated without words; then what point is there in your statement that
all things lack intrinsic nature?" We
reply that our statement that all things
lack intrinsic nature does not cause all things to have no intrinsic nature; it
simply makes known that things lack intrinsic nature. For example, when Devadatta is
not in the house, someone might say, "Devadatta is in the house." Someone else might then say
to him, "He is not." That statement does not create Devadatta's absence in the house,
but only makes known his absence in the house. Similarly,
the statement, "Things have no intrinsic nature"
does not create the absence of intrinsic
nature; it only makes known the
absence of intrinsic nature.[11]
Naagaarjuna makes it quite
clear here that his statement should not be understood
either as an assertion
(pratij~naa) or negation of any positive entity.
When pressed to give a positive account of the function of his words,
he again appeals to a conventional
example to show that, while they do not assert anything, they still have
significant effect.
The account
of the function of language presented in these passages
is, of course only a small part of Naagaarjuna's philosophy, but it can serve to
call attention to some of
the basic
features of his method. First, we have noted that he proceeds
only in response to claims made by his opponents, and he refuses to be drawn
by their arguments into making
positive assertions. In particular, he
refuses to accept the notion that the
statement "All things are empty of
intrinsic nature" functions as an
assertion of any positive entity. Second, on the positive side, he argues from
conventional usage that the refusal to accept either
the intrinsic nature or the assertive value
of the statement in no way impairs its
ability to function effectively. His words do not assert
anything, but they do make known the absence of intrinsic nature. In this way, Naagaarjuna drew the outline of a Maadhyamika account of the function of language.
We will see that his successors had
great difficulty staying within its limits.
In the four centuries that intervened between
Naagaarjuna (circa 150 A.D.) and the next Maadhyamika philosopher we will consider, Bhaavaviveka (500-570 A.D.) ,
Indian philosophy underwent a remarkable expansion. The basic texts of the Hindu schools were settled and provided with commentaries, and the
earlier dominance of Maadhyamika among the Mahayana Buddhist schools came to be
challenged by a school of Buddhist idealists and logicians. In the face of this widening
doctrinal diversity, Bhaavaviveka seems to have
been by temperament and
training particularly prey to the attraction
of other philosophical opinions. He was apparently a brahman and retained a
fondness for the diversity of brahmanical learning, from alchemy and palmistry to Advaita Vedaanta, long after his
conversion to Buddhism
and the
philosophical method of Naagaarjuna.[12] A basic
motivating impulse in his philosophy, in
fact, seems to be the need he felt to
reestablish Maadhyamika philosophy in a form that would allow room
for the variety of conventional learning. Apart
from matters of temperament, however, there
were good logical reasons to reassess Naagaarjuna's handling of some basic questions. The rules of logical
debate recorded in the Nyaaya-suutras seem to
have evolved
after Naagaarjuna and partly in response to
his methods. This seems particularly evident
in the definition of an unacceptable form of reasoning known as vita.n.daa or
"cavilling." Nyaaya-suutra 1.2.3 defines this as "that [sophistry
(jaati) ] which
lacks the
establishment of a
counter-position."[13] Naagaarjuna, as we have seen, avoided making a positive assertion of anything and did not seem
to be concerned that this would violate the rules of
debate. Bhaavaviveka, on the other hand, makes a
conscious effort in at least two places in his work to meet the
objection that he is guilty of vita.n.daa and
show that it does not apply.[14] In chapter 3
of the Tarkajvaalaa, for instance, he raises it as an objection.
[Objection:]
Because you
do not establish your own position (svapak.sa)
, but only refute your
opponent's position (parapak.sa), are you not
guilty of vita.n.daa? [Reply:] Our position is "emptiness of intrinsic nature"
(svabhaava-`suunyataa); since this is the nature of things,
we are not guilty of
vita.n.daa.[15]
Bhaavaviveka manages to
deal with the objection but only at serious cost to
the integrity of Naagaarjuna's method. He is now willing to admit something
Naagarjuna fought hard to resist: he
accepts "emptiness of intrinsic nature" as a positive philosophical assertion. This
change has formidable significance for the development of the Maadhyamika
accounts of language.
Bhaavaviveka's reasons for making this move deserve
careful scrutiny.
Before we consider Bhaavaviveka's reasons, however, we need to look again at
another aspect
of Naagaarjuna's argument.
We saw earlier
that Naagaarjuna took
some pains to account for the way the words of the sentence "All things
are empty of intrinsic nature" could express a significant truth about the
nature of things, even though the
words themselves were empty and
the truth was
not the object of an assertion.
Those familiar with Maadhyamika philosophy will
recognize this
distinction as the verbal form of
the distinction between two levels of truth. Naagaarjuna says
more about this distinction in his commentary
on verse 28 of the Vigrahavyaavartani.
We do not
say, "All things are empty,"
without resorting to conventional truth (vyavahaara-satya) or by rejecting conventional
truth. For it is impossible to teach the Dharma without recourse to conventional truth. As we
said [in
the Maadhyamakakaarikaas]:
"Ultimate truth (paramaartha)
cannot be taught without
resorting to conventional
expressions (vyavahaara) ; nirvana cannot be reached without
recourse to ultimate truth."[16]
The
distinction between ultimate and conventional truth has many implications
for Naagaarjuna, particularly in the realm of practical behavior (as might be inferred from the conventional orientation of a work like Naagaarjuna's Ratnaavali).[17] But in the philosophical works,
like his Vigrahavyaavartani, Naagaarjuna develops the distinction in only a limited way. We might understand
ultimate and conventional truth here
simply as two sides of the same verbal strategy. Ultimate truth (paramartha)
might be understood as that which the
statement "All things are empty,"
acting as a verbal expedient, is meant to convey; but we must remember,
of course, that Naagaarjuna resisted any
formulation that would turn ultimate truth into
the object of a positive assertion. This account of the relation between
ultimate and conventional truth is simple and seems to stay close to
Naagaarjuna's didactic intent, which was to call attention to the inadequacies
and misconceptions hidden in conventional expressions and use them as a vehicle
to realize the emptiness of things. Bhaavaviveka took a somewhat more
complicated view of the matter.
As we have seen, Bhaavaviveka was inclined
temperamentally to include
a large variety of
contemporary views and
practices into `his
Maadhyamika system; he
also wanted to make room for the possibility of positive philosophical assertions. Both
these goals would have been hard to realize if he had closely
followed Naagaarjuna's method, with its concentration on conventional
truth only as a vehicle
for the expression
of ultimate truth. Bhaavaviveka needed a new form of
interpretation, and he found it in a new grammatical analysis of the term paramaartha, "ultimate truth."
He interpreted
paramaartha not as ultimate truth itself but as knowledge
of ultimate truth.[18] In is way he
was able to
change paramaartha from the content of
teaching, which Naagaarjuna discussed purely
in linguistic terms, to a realm of experience that could be severed from
vyavahaara, conventional
truth. Paramaartha and vyavahaara could thus
be separated into two realms of existence,
each of which had practices and doctrines appropriate only to it. The two were still connected, but less in the
lingustic way
that Naagaarjuna outlined
in the Vigrahavyaavartanii than in
a temporal and causal way, representing a slow progression
from one level to another along the stages of the bodhisattva path. Bhaavaviveka
explains this process in the third
chapter of the Tarkajvaalaa.
[Vss. 10-11] Ultimate wisdom effects
the complete negation of the network of conceptual thought and is motionless moving in the clear sky of ultimate truth
(tattva), which is peaceful, directly
experienced, without concepts or
letters, and free from unity and diversity.
[Vss. 12-13] It is impossible to mount the pinnacle of the palace of truth without
the ladder of conventional
truth. For this reason, the mind,
isolated in conventional truth, should become clear about the particular and general characteristics of things.[19]
Bhaavaviveka did not
consider the
process of climbing through
conventional truth to be either easy or quick,
as he says in
his commentary on these
verses. "It is impossible to climb this palace
suddenly. For without ascending the ladder of conventional
knowledge for seven countless eons, the completion of
the perfections, powers,
and
super-knowledges is impossible."[20] Progress along the path could be quite leisurely and there was much time along the
way to enjoy the subtleties of the conventional world.[21]
By separating
paramaartha and vyavahaara into two different realms of experience
in this way, linked only by a gradual progress
along the path to
perfection, Bhaavaviveka succeeded in the
first part of his program. He created a
realm of experience in which he could concentrate on the subjects
of the conventional world that
caught his interest, without having to worry at every moment about applying
Naagaarjuna's critique. That part of the
Maadhyamika method belonged to the realm of ultimate truth and could be postponed indefinitely while one considered problems in the mundane
realm. Bhaavaviveka's
fascination with this
realm had important consequences for historians of
Indian philosophy; his diligence in collecting
the details of other
philosophical systems provided important evidence for the development of some of
the Indian schools.[22] But what was
the cost
of this rehabilitation of conventional
truth? Naagaarjuna achieved great power and
simplicity in his philosophical method
by treating every question
rigorously, as if it were an ultimate question. In doing this he showed that there were no
areas of existence that were not subject to the corrosive effect of his critique. By
separating a particular realm in which this critique, for practical purposes,
did not apply, Bhaavaviveka
appears to have damaged the unity of
Naagaarjuna's method and engaged in a subtle
absolutizing process in which conventional
truths are again established in their own right, The full consequences of this
process will not be seen until we consider the
efforts by Tso^n-kha-pa
and
Candrakiirti to explore its
im- plications, but at least one problem will
be apparent when we examine Bh~vavi-veka's
treatment of his second philosophical concern, the fashioning of positive philosophical assertions.
We saw
earlier that Bhaavaviveka was troubled by the
accusation that he, as a Maadhyamika philosopher, was
guilty of vita.n.daa. Now that we have seen
Bhaavaviveka's method for separating the two levels of
truth, we are in a position to examine the
justification for his peculiar response to this charge.
As we saw, Bhaavaviveka responded
by saying that he, in fact, did maintain a positive position of his own, namely, the
emptiness of all things. In the scheme of
Bhaavaviveka's separation of the two levels of truth, this claim would be
quite reasonable if confined only
to the first level; for it was on the
conventional level that Bhaavaviveka permitted himself the liberty of
investigation into the maze of worldly knowledge. The
difficulty is, however, that Bhaavaviveka eventually must bring himself,
as a Maadhyamika philosopher, to discuss ultimate truth. This presents him with a dilemma. Does he
continue to make his positive assertions into the realm of
ultimate, nonconceptual knowledge, or does he confine his assertions to the conventional
realm and again risk the charge of being guilty
of vita.n.daa--this time on the
matters of greatest importance to
his philosophical school? If we look in both of
Bhaavaviveka's major works, the Tarkajvaalaa
and Praj~naapradiipa, we find that he
takes a
rather ambivalent position on this question.
In the Praj~naapradiipa, he was writing
a commentary on Naagaarjuna's root
text, and this fact alone seems to have
restrained Bhaavaviveka in his treatment
of assertions at the ultimate
level. The particular passage of interest
on this point is the commentary on verse 18:
9 in which Naagaarjuna purports to give a "definition" of ultimate truth. Bhaavaviveka uses this as an
opportunity to deal again with the question
of vita.n.daa.
[Objection:]
If you think
that ultimate truth (tattva) can be realized by completely rejecting the intrinsic nature of things which others conceptually
construct, then you must state a definition
of it. Otherwise you are refuting someone's position without establishing your own;
and that is vita.n.daa.
[Reply:] If
the definition of ultimate truth can be
expressed, it should be expressed. But it is not an object to be expressed
(abhidheya). However, in order to give confidence to those who are just beginning,
the following is said in terms of conceptual, discriminative knowledge.
[Vs. 18: 9] Not caused by anything else, peaceful, not expressed by
verbal diversity,
non-conceptual, not diverse in meaning this is the definition of ultimate truth (tattva).
[Commentary] Since it is non-conceptual, it is not expressed by
verbal diversity. Since it not expressed by verbal diversity, it is in the
sphere of non-conceptual knowledge. Since it is in the sphere of non-conceptual
knowledge, it is not known by means of anything else. Words do
not apply to something that is not known by
means of anything else. For this reason, the nature of ultimate truth completely surpasses words. It
cannot be an object to be
expressed, but the statement which negates both the intrinsic nature and the specific
characteristics of all things can make known
the nature of ultimate truth. It [the statement] is produced by a
superimposition of syllables which conform to the nonconceptual knowledge produced by the method
of non-production. Therefore, since ultimate truth which is
actually directly known (svasamvedya), is taught here
in an expedient way
way (upaaya-dvaare.na) , we do, in fact, express a definition
of ultimate truth. Thus we
are not guilty
of vita.n.daa, and your criticism does not
apply.[23]
Here, with
some equivocation, Bhaavaviveka manages to stay close to
Naagaarjuna. He admits that ultimate truth
(tattva) cannot be directly expressed, but he says that one can, as an expedient, appear
to give a definition of it. This,
in his opinion, is enough to rebut the charge
of vita.n.daa.
In the third chapter of
the Tarkajvaalaa, where he lays out his own independent philosophical position, Bhaavaviveka allows himself more liberty with
Naagaarjuna's method. In this chapter he
formulates some of the more characteristic elements of his own technique by considering
a series of objections to
a syllogism of
the type
(svarantra-anuma~na) for which
his school of Maadhyamika Svaatantrika
is named. The example he uses is a syllogism denying the intrinsic nature of the gross elements. We can formulate the
syllogism in four steps:
-
(1) earth, and so on.
-
(2) do not have the intrinsic nature of elements, from the point of view of ultimate truth (paramaarthata.h),
-
(3) because they are produced,
-
(4) like consciousness.
Steps 1 and 2
constitute the assertion (pratij~na) which Bhaavaviveka uses to deal with the accusation that he is guilty
of vita.n.da. Step 2, however,
raises another difficult question. As
the syllogism is formulated in this example,
the conclusion
belongs not to the realm of conventional truth, where words and concepts
are appropriate, but to the realm of
ultimate truth. How, then, can Bhaavaviveka allow himself to carry on
conceptual thought in the ultimate realm? He deals
with this problem in the
following surprising way:
[Objection: ] Paramaartha transcends all [conceptual] thought. and a
negation of the intrinsic nature of things is
in the domain of language. For this reason your negation fails.
[Reply:]
Paramaartha occurs in two forms. One of them
is free from
volition, transcendent, pure, and free from verbal diversity. The other is volitional, accords with the
accumulation of knowledge and merit, clear, and possessed of the verbal diversity known as
"worldly knowledge."[24]
Bhaavaviveka's interpretation of
the word
paramaartha allows him to do something that he did not
permit himself with the word tattva in the
passage
just quoted from the Praj~naapradiipa. He interprets
paramaartha as a compound meaning "knowledge of ultimate truth."
This allowed him earlier to separate it from the experience
of conventional truth; here it allows him to separate it into two
different levels of experience of the same thing.
One level is free from verbal diversity;
the other is not. In this way, Bhaavaviveka can maintain that, while ultimate truth (tattva)
is one,
the knowledge of ultimate truth (paramaartha) is not. The resulting
distinction in levels of experience allows
him to carry on positive philosophical activity at
the "ultimate" level without being concerned
about the fact that such activity involves words and
concepts. Bhaavaviveka's analysis
of the
word paramaartha is thus a powerful tool in allowing him to carry out his philosophical program. He can maintain
nominal adherence to the written
text of Naagaarjuna's Kaarikaas and still permit himself to make positive philosophical
assertions
up to and within the realm of ultimate truth.
Bhaavaviveka can claim a certain amount of
success in
adapting Naagaarjuna's method to the requirements
of his own philosophical milieu. He gave up Naagaarjuna's prohibition
against positive
assertions, but he might well claim that this was a minor sacrifice
made to keep the rest
of Naagaarjuna's critique intact. A more damaging charge against Bhaavaviveka.
however, might be that he violated the serious and fundamental prohibition
against attributing intrinsic nature
either to the words of a statement or to the
things to which they refer. Bhaavaviveka
did not
discuss this point explicitly
in either the Tarkajvaalaa or the
Praj~naapradiipa on anything other than the
ultimate level; perhaps he was not aware that it would be an issue. In any
case, it is sufficient for our purposes in tracing the development of the early theories of language to
know that a substantial portion of the Maadhyamika
tradition did consider Bhaavaviveka
guilty of this more serious charge. Candrakiirti
and
Tso^n-kha-pa both
felt that, by establishing
conventional truth as
an independent realm, Bhaavaviveka had violated the most fundamental point of
Naagaarjuna's method he had refuted intrinsic nature
on the ultimate level, only to
let it back into his account of
language on the conventional level.
In sorting
out Candrakiirti's arguments against Bhaavaviveka's view of
language, we are critically dependent on Tso^n-kha-pa's
analysis of the issues between them.
In the key
passage in the Prasannapadaa, where he attacks
the use of svalak.sa.na or
"intrinsic identity" on