Litcius/Paper detail

Buddhist Ethics

Jay L. Garfield

2021Oxford University Press eBooks42 citationsDOI

Abstract

This volume is one of a series of monographs on Buddhist philosophy for philosophers. It presents an outline of Buddhist ethical thought, presenting Buddhist ethical reflection as a distinct approach, or rather set of approaches, to moral philosophy. The book draws on a range of Buddhist philosophers to exhibit the internal diversity of the tradition as well as the lineaments that demonstrate its overarching integrity. This includes early Pāli texts, medieval Indian commentarial literature and philosophical treatises, Tibetan commentaries and treatises, and contemporary Buddhist literature. It argues that Buddhist ethics is best understood not as a species of any Western ethical tradition, but instead as a kind of moral phenomenology, and that it is particularist in its orientation. The book addresses both methodological and doctrinal issues and concludes with a study of the way that Buddhist ethical thought is relevant in the contemporary world.

Topics & Concepts

BuddhismBuddhist philosophyPhilosophyPhenomenology (philosophy)EpistemologyEthical theoriesEthical theoryEnvironmental ethicsTheologyEthics in medical practiceIndian and Buddhist StudiesWar, Ethics, and Justification