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Journal ArticleDOI

Medical Analogies in Buddhist and Hellenistic Thought: Tranquillity and Anger

01 Jul 2010-Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement (Cambridge University Press)-Vol. 66, Iss: 66, pp 11-33
TL;DR: Medical analogies are commonly invoked in both Indian Buddhist dharma and Hellenistic philosophy as discussed by the authors, and both renditions of the analogy may be said to declare that philosophy cures mental diseases and brings about psychological health.
Abstract: Medical analogies are commonly invoked in both Indian Buddhist dharma and Hellenistic philosophy. In the Pāli Canon, nirvana (or, in Pāli, nibbāna) is depicted as a form of health, and the Buddha is portrayed as a doctor who helps us attain it. Much later in the tradition, Śāntideva described the Buddha’s teaching as ‘the sole medicine for the ailments of the world, the mine of all success and happiness.’ Cicero expressed the view of many Hellenistic philosophers when he said that philosophy is ‘a medical science for the mind.’ He thought we should ‘hand ourselves over to philosophy, and let ourselves be healed.’ ‘For as long as these ills [of the mind] remain,’ he wrote, ‘we cannot attain to happiness.’ There are many different forms of medical analogy in these two traditions, but the most general form may be stated as follows: just as medicine cures bodily diseases and brings about physical health, so Buddhist dharma or Hellenistic philosophy cures mental diseases and brings about psychological health—where psychological health is understood as the highest form of happiness or well-being. Insofar as Buddhist dharma involves philosophy, as it does, both renditions of the analogy may be said to declare that philosophy cures mental diseases and brings about psychological health. This feature of the analogy—philosophy as analogous to medical treatment—has attracted considerable attention.

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Citations
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Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the old practical approaches to human miseries and confusion about purposes of life have to be recoursed to, and there is need to introduce this into the classrooms as a way of enlightening people and training practitioners.
Abstract: http://www.uam.es/ptcedh Departamento Interfacultativo de Psicología Evolutiva y de la Educación, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Abstract: Many of the miseries and confusions that besiege humans are sometimes beyond medications. Such are diseases of the soul that defy conventional medications. The old practical approaches to human miseries and confusion about purposes of life have to be recoursed to. This is the cogency for philosophical counselling. There is need to introduce this into the classrooms as a way of enlightening people and training practitioners in the mission of making lives more meaningful through a better appreciation of life and its course. This is more needed in the African setting where its introduction would be of great service.

1 citations


Cites background from "Medical Analogies in Buddhist and H..."

  • ...For Gowans (2010) philosophical therapy is analogous to medical treatment and important because it is able to modify a person’s beliefs so that he/she could overcome mental disease and attain psychological health....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors argued that the failure of recognition is a feature of alienation and that the object of struggle is not the recognition of identity, or even of difference, but recognition of non-identity.
Abstract: Many philosopers and social theorists pursue the notion that recognition is a fruitful framework for engaging with a social analysis of moral and political life, and – more critically – that the failure of recognition is a feature of alienation. This article argues that the thrust of these arguments can be properly attuned by deploying a dual model of recognition that draws especially on Sartre’s work. Where there is struggle for recognition between subjects, the object of struggle is not the recognition of identity, or even of difference, but the recognition of non-identity. The claim will be that this practical attitude of recognition designates inter-subjective attitudes that can institute normative practices whereby agents’ claims are motivated by the epistemic virtue of non-identity.

1 citations


Cites background from "Medical Analogies in Buddhist and H..."

  • ...…1995, 211). unhelpful belief states were combined with what Gowans describes as an array of exercises including: the close observation of mental states, modification of habits, anticipation, postponement, distractions, invocation of role-models, self-examination and confession (cf. Gowans 2010)....

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  • ...…medical practice and cure that is integral to Buddhist and non-Buddhist Indian philosophical traditions as well as ancient Greek philosophies (Gowans 2010, 14).2 Echoing across all these traditions, and more recently through Wittgensteinian and pragmatist philosophy, is the notion not only…...

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors consider how and why a pragmatist way of thinking is inferred in the Buddhist ethical discourse of curing the sick, where the Buddha as a medical doctor acts upon the sick.
Abstract: This article will consider how and why a pragmatist way of thinking is inferred in the Buddhist ethical discourse of curing the sick. This medical analogy, where the Buddha as a medical doctor acts upon the sick, contains a profound implication that the sick need not understand the reason for their sickness, insofar as they are cured or enlightened. What is taken to be pragmatism is critically clarified in this Buddhist context. There being a dissimilarity in terms of the respective ends (ultimate nirvāṇa vs. end as a means to further ends), the two types of moral discourse—Buddhist ethics and American pragmatism—have a common ground. That is, the human is receptive to the utility of a moral end, in which truth works regardless of one’s understanding of its absolute, abstruse reason.
References
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Book
05 Jun 2012
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the need and recognition of emotions as judgments of value, and the need for human beings to recognize their need for love and need to express it.
Abstract: Part I. Need and Recognition: 1. Emotions as judgments of value 2. Humans and other animals: the neo-stoic view revised 3. Emotions and human societies 4. Emotions and infancy Interlude: 'things such as might happen' 5. Music and emotion Part II. Compassion: 6. Tragic predicaments 7. Compassion: the philosophical debate 8. Compassion and public life Part III. Ascents of Love: 9. Ladders of love: an introduction 10. Contemplative creativity: Plato, Spinoza, Proust 11. The Christian ascent: Augustine 12. The Christian ascent: Dante 13. The Romantic ascent: Emily Bronte 14. The Romantic ascent: Mahler 15. Democratic desire: Walt Whitman 16. The transfiguration of everyday life: Joyce.

2,371 citations

Book
01 Jan 1994
TL;DR: The Therapy of Desire List of Philosophers and Schools Bibliography Index Locorum General Index Ch. 1Therapeutic Arguments Ch. 2Medical Dialectic: Aristotle on Theory and Practice Ch. 3Aristotle on Emotions and Ethical Health Ch. 4Epicurean Surgery: Argument and Empty Desire Ch. 5Beyond Obsession and Disgust: Lucretius on the Therapy of Love Ch. 6Mortal Immortals: Lucrekius on Death and the Voice of Nature Ch. 7"By Words, Not Arms":Lucretius
Abstract: Acknowledgments Ch. 1Therapeutic Arguments Ch. 2Medical Dialectic: Aristotle on Theory and Practice Ch. 3Aristotle on Emotions and Ethical Health Ch. 4Epicurean Surgery: Argument and Empty Desire Ch. 5Beyond Obsession and Disgust: Lucretius on the Therapy of Love Ch. 6Mortal Immortals: Lucretius on Death and the Voice of Nature Ch. 7"By Words, Not Arms": Lucretius on Anger and Aggression Ch. 8Skeptic Purgatives: Disturbance and the Life without Belief Ch. 9Stoic Tonics: Philosophy and the Self-Government of the Soul Ch. 10The Stoics on the Extirpation of the Passions Ch. 11Seneca on Anger in Public Life Ch. 12Serpents in the Soul: A Reading of Seneca's Medea Ch. 13The Therapy of Desire List of Philosophers and Schools Bibliography Index Locorum General Index

861 citations

Book
01 Jan 1987
TL;DR: Early Pyrrhonism: 1. Scepticism, tranquillity and virtue 2. Epicureanism: 3. Physics 4. Epistemology 5. Stoicism 6. Ontology logic and semantics 7. Ethics Part IV. Why to suspend judgement.
Abstract: Preface Introduction Part I. Early Pyrrhonism: 1. Scepticism, tranquillity and virtue 2. Timon's polemics Part II. Epicureanism: 3. Physics 4. Epistemology 5. Ethics Part III. Stoicism: 6. The philosophical curriculum 7. Ontology logic and semantics 8. Epistemology (stoics and academics) 9. Physics 10. Ethics Part IV. The Academics: 11. Methodology 12. Living without opinions 13. Contributions to philosophical debates 14. The Pyrrhonist revival 15. Why to suspend judgement 16. How to suspend judgement Bibliography.

560 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, Seneca's defence: Third Movements as Harmonizing Chrysippus and Zeno 4. Posidonius: Judgements Not Necessary for Emotion: Galen's Report 7. Exhaustion and Lack of Imagination 8. Disowned Judgements, Animals, and Music 9. Aspasius and Other Objections to Chrysippius 10. What is Missing from the Judgemental Analysis? Brain Research and Limitations on Stoic Cognitive Therapy 11. The ROLE OF ANALYTIC PHILOSOPHY in St
Abstract: Introduction 1. EMOTION AS COGNITIVE AND ITS THERAPY 2. The Emotions as Value Judgements in Chrysippus 3. Seneca's Defence: Third Movements as Harmonizing Chrysippus and Zeno 4. Seneca's Defence: First Movements as Answering Posidonius 5. The Arts: First Movements and Controversies on Drama and Music. Aristotle, Philodemus, and the Stoics 6. Posidonius on the Irrational Forces in Emotion: Galen's Report 7. Posidonius: Judgements Insufficient for Emotion. Exhaustion and Lack of Imagination 8. Posidonius: Judgements Not Necessary for Emotion. Disowned Judgements, Animals, and Music 9. Aspasius and Other Objections to Chrysippus 10. What is Missing from the Judgemental Analysis? Brain Research and Limitations on Stoic Cognitive Therapy 11. THE ROLE OF ANALYTIC PHILOSOPHY IN STOIC COGNITIVE THERAPY 12. Stoic Indifference: A Barrier to Therapy? 13. The Case for and against Eradication of Emotion 14. The Traditions of Moderation and Eradication 15. How the Ancient Exercises Work 16. Exercises Concerned with Time and the Self 17. Physiology and the Non-Cognitive: Galen's Alternative Approach to Emotion 18. Sex, Love, and Marriage in Pagan Philosophy and the Use of Catharsis 19. Catharsis and the Classification of Therapies 20. EMOTIONAL CONFLICT AND THE DIVIDED SELF 21. The Concept of Will 22. FIRST MOVEMENTS AS BAD THOUGHTS: ORIGEN AND HIS LEGACY 23. From First Movements to the Seven Cardinal Sins: Evagrius 24. First Movements in Augustine: Adaptation and Misunderstanding 25. Christians on Moderation versus Eradication 26. Augustine on Lust and the Will Bibliography of Secondary Sources Mentioned Index of Ancient Thinkers Index Locorum Subject and Name Index

258 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the relationship between Buddhism and society in ancient India and discuss the problem of the Gotama Buddha's Problem Situation, the Sangha's discipline, and the Accomodation between the Buddha and society.
Abstract: Acknowledgements and Recommendations for Further Reading 1. Introduction 2. Gotama Buddha's Problem Situation 3. The Buddha's Dhamma 4. The Sangha's Discipline 5. The Accomodation between Buddhism and Society in Ancient India 6. The Buddhist Tradition in Sri Lanka 7. Protestant Buddhism 8. Current Trends, New Problems Works cited, Abbreviations and Primary Sources References Index

215 citations