Reed College, 1994
- Section one--Causation, and some Initial Problems
- Section two--The Relationship between Nominal and Verbal Subjects
- Sections three through six--Factors of Personal Existence: Elements and Passions
- Section seven--Cohesion of Disparate Elements (Samskrta)
- Sections eight through eleven--The Ontological Status of the Individual
- Sections twelve and thirteen--Suffering and its Cause
- Sections fourteen and fifteen--Identity/Difference: Self-nature vs.
- Sections sixteen and seventeen--Bondage and its Cause
- Section eighteen--Self-hood and its Consequences
- Sections nineteen through twenty-one--Associative Composition of and Occurrence of Phenomena in Time
- Section twenty-two--The Meaning and Ontological Status of the Enlightened One
- Sections twenty-three and twenty-four--Error and Truth: the Perversions and the Four Noble Truths
- Section twenty-five--The Ultimate Goal: Enlightenment
- Section twenty-six--Dependent arising, the Buddha's Positive Ontology
- Section twenty-seven--Conclusion: Right and Wrong Views
- The Dedicatory Verses
- Self-Nature Theories
- Non-Buddhist Notions of Self-nature and the Soul
- The Buddha's Theory of Soullessness
- Nagarjuna's Response
- Dependent Arising as a Central Notion in Buddhism
- The Meaning of Dependent arising
- Madhyamika Interpretations and Re-interpretations
- Pre-Madhyamika Use of the Concept
- Emptiness as a Via Negativa, a Way of Negation
- Emptiness is Perceived, not Invented
- Dependent Arising + No Self-nature = Emptiness
- Emptiness is a Theory of No-Theory
- Emptiness Is Freedom Itself
Finally, two processing errors must be explained. The occasional appearance of an extra space in hyphenated words, such as "self- nature," is due to an unavoidable conflict between two processing programs used in formatting this document. The extra spaces are not due to poor typing or incomplete proofreading. Second, the reversed opening quotation marks were not fixable.
"Misery only doth exist, none miserable,
No doer is there; naught save the deed is found.
Nirvana is, but not the man who seeks it.
The Path exists, but not the traveler on it."
- -The Visuddhimagga