Nargajunas 8 Negations
Nargajunas 8 Negations
Nargajunas 8 Negations
>
>
as'aas'vatam: Again, no surprises. Just as the standard interpretation of
dependent origination shows there is no self that undergoes discontinuation,
it also shows that there is no self that undergoes perpetual continuation
(s'aas'vatam). It is no paradox to say that the self neither comes to an end
nor continues to exist. Neither predicate can be applied when there is no
subject to which to apply them. If there is, and never has been a self, then
there can be no predicates applied to a self. So here, Nagarjuna is giving us
very standard Buddhist doctrine, with no shocks and no new twists.
> Conclusion:
>
Each one of these predicates in their positive forms can sensibly be applied
only of an existing subject. But once it is denied that a subject exists (and
making such a denial is what the doctrine of dependent origination is all
about), then no predicate can be applied. This is shown by putting all
possible predicates in the negative. This negation is not the type that
implies that the opposite is true; rather, it is a simple, non-implicative
negation that simply denies that the positive form of the predicate applies.
Once dependent origination is properly grasped, it is understood that there
never has been a subject, not only a perceiving subject worthy of being called
one's personal self (aatman), but no subject of any kind anywhere. Since all
thinking and speaking is founded on the presupposition that there are