Free Will, Agency, and Selfhood in Indian Philosophy by Edwin F. Bryant
English | 26 Dec. 2013 | ISBN: 0199922756, 019992273X | 336 Pages | PDF | 1.48 MB
English | 26 Dec. 2013 | ISBN: 0199922756, 019992273X | 336 Pages | PDF | 1.48 MB
Led by Buddhists and the yoga traditions of Hinduism and Jainism, Indian thinkers have long engaged in a rigorous analysis and reconceptualization of our common notion of self. Less understood is the way in which such theories of self intersect with issues involving agency and free will; yet such intersections are profoundly important, as all major schools of Indian thought recognize that moral goodness and religious fulfillment depend on the proper understanding of personal agency. Moreover, their individual conceptions of agency and freedom are typically nodes by which an entire school's epistemological, ethical, and metaphysical perspectives come together as a systematic whole.