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Tsong Khapa's Speech of Gold

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Extract

The greatness of Tsong Khapa as a Mādhyamika philosopher lay in his daring originality (which, to the chagrin of his opponents, he traced to a revelation from Mañjuśrī, the bodhisattva of wisdom) and his stress on human reason as an integral factor in the path to enlightenment, a stress which made him value above all a form of Madhyamaka which was systematically coherent. Tsong Khapa's interpretation of Madhyamaka ranges across the entire Madhyamaka corpus, organizes, clarifies obscurities and, above all, makes sense (which is not the same thing as saying that it is true). Madhyamaka thought can be difficult, and in the hands of a scholastic thinker whose temperament and outlook was akin, I suspect, to Aquinas, so Madhyamaka thought becomes extremely difficult. Tsong Khapa moulded Tibetan into a language of considerable philosophical subtlety and sophistication. His writings are renowned for their difficulty among Tibetans, and they are despairingly difficult to translate.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 1986

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References

1 Thurman, Robert A. F.: Tsong Khapa's Speech of Gold in the Essence of True Eloquence: reason and enlightenment in the central philosophy of Tibet. (Princeton Library of Asian Translations.) xviii, 442 pp. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1984.Google Scholar