000 | 00402nam a2200145Ia 4500 | ||
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999 |
_c175072 _d175072 |
||
020 | _a9780231153614 | ||
040 | _cCUS | ||
082 |
_a181.043 _bSID/A |
||
245 | 0 |
_aAPOHA/ _bbuddhist nominalism and human cognition _cSiderits,Mark [ed.] |
|
250 | _a1st.ed. | ||
260 |
_aNew York: _bColumbia university press, _c2011. |
||
300 |
_a333 p. _bPB |
||
505 | _a1. How to Talk About Inettable I hings: Dignaga and DharmakTrti on Apoha • TOM TILLEMANS 2. Dignaga's Apoha Theory: Its Presuppositions and Main Theoretical Implications • OLE FIND 3. Key Features of DharmakTrti's Apoha Theory • JOHN D. DUNNE 4. DharmakTrti's Discussion of Circularity • PASCALE HUGON 5. Apoha Theory as an Approach to Understanding Human Cognition • shoryO katsura 6. The Apoha Theory as Referred to in the Nydyamanjarl • MASAAKI HATTORI 7. Constructing the Content of Awareness Events • PARIMAL G. PATIL 8. The Apoha Theory of Meaning: A Critical Account • PRABAL KUMAR SEN 9. Apoha as a Naturalized Account of Concept Formation • GEORGES DREYFUS 10. Apoha, Feature-Placing, and Sensoiy Content • JONARDON GANERl 11. Funes and Categorization in an Abstraction-Free World • AMITA CHATTERJEE 12. Apoha Semantics: Some Simpleminded Questions and Doubts • BOB HALE 13. Classical Semantics and Apoha Semantics • BRENDAN S. G1LL0N 14. Srughna by Dusk • MARK SIDERITS | ||
942 | _cWB16 |