Why is there nothing rather than something? An essay in the comparative metaphysics of nonbeing


Autoria(s): Bilimoria, Purushottama
Data(s)

01/01/2013

Resumo

The paper is an essay in the comparative metaphysics of nothingness that begins by pondering why Leibniz thought of the opposite question as the preeminent one. In Eastern philosophical thought, like the numeral ‘zero’ (śānya) that Indian mathematicians first discovered, nothingness as non-being looms large and serves as the first quiver on the imponderables they seem to have encountered (e.g. ‘In the beginning was neither non-being nor being’ RgVeda X.129). The concept of non-being and its permutations of nothing, negation, nullity, receive more sophisticated treatment in the works of grammarians, ritual hermeneuticians, logicians, and their dialectical adversaries, variously across Jaina and Buddhist schools, in respect of the function of negation /the negative copula, nãn, fraying into ontologies of non-existence and extinction; not least also the suggestive tropes that tend to arrest rather than affirm the inexorable being-there of something. After some passing references to interests in non-being and nothingness in contemporary (Western) thinking, the paper dwells at some length on Heidegger’s extensive treatment of nothingness in his 1927 inaugural lecture ‘Was ist Metaphysik?’, published later as What is Metaphysics? The essay however distances itself from any pretensions toward a doctrine of Nihilism.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30057305

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer Science & Business Media

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30057305/bilimoria-whyisthernothing-2012.pdf

http://doi.org/10.1007/s11841-012-0348-7

Direitos

2013, Springer

Palavras-Chave #nothingess #god #buddhist #hindu #Heidegger #logic #Matilal #Nagarjuna #Mimamsa #emptiness #non-being #Leibniz #Jaina #sylvan #noneism #nyaya
Tipo

Journal Article