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by Carl Olson
"This study is a welcome addition to the discipline of comparative philosophy. In a unique scholarly undertaking, classical as well as contemporary Indian philosophies and their authors engage in a hermeneutical dialogue with western postmodernism." "The book takes as its central theme the cornerstone of postmodern thought: its attack on rationality and representational modes of thinking, and its radical questioning of the place of reason in philosophy. The theme is informed and developed through a cross-cultural exchange on a number of subjects. These range from desire, suffering, abjection, and death to the nature of being and the self, and the nature of language and writing. Thus, on the subject of desire for example, the Upanisads and Nikaya Buddhism come into contact with Deleuze and Guattari, while the discussion of language and writing sets Derrida against early Buddhism and Abhinavagupta." "Carl Olson brings a variety of thinkers and divergent traditions of thought into a debat
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Terry Barrett
Paul Coates