{{Book |FullTextRead=No |BookToc=* PrefaceV
- List or Sources and AbbreviationsXI
- Introduction1
- Part One: The Existential Self
- 1. Preliminary Remarks7
- How to translate the term attā7
- Has the term attā a mere conventional sense in the Nikāyas?10
- The Nikayan approach to the term attā17
- 1. Preliminary Remarks7
- 2. Attā as Man's Highest Value20
- The self as refuge20
- The self is best26
- In love with the self34
- Look for the self37
- Paccattaṁ40
- Ajjhattaṁ43
- 2. Attā as Man's Highest Value20
- 3. The Self as the Moral Agent49
- Moral energy of the self50
- Salvation in general and the self56
- The chariot and the charioteer57
- Knowledge of the self63
- Manifestation of the self67
- 3. The Self as the Moral Agent49
- 4. The Self and Moral Evil77
- The metaphysical self, as such, is above moral good and evil77
- The moral self as the cause of moral evil80
- The moral self under the influence of moral shortcomings82
- The moral self 'wounded and killed' by evil83
- Asmimāna as the root of all moral evil85
- 4. The Self and Moral Evil77
- 5. Towards Perfection90
- The self as related to moral good90
- Self-exertion94
- Self-control98
- Purification of the self104
- 5. Towards Perfection90
- 6. The Self and Perfection108
- Perfection of the self108
- Self-stability109
- 'He dwells with a self brahma-become'113
- Full blossoming of the self118
- The self and nibbāna122
- Nibbutatto129
- 6. The Self and Perfection108
- 7. The Self as Related to Kamma and Rebirth131
- The self and kamma131
- The self and rebirth143
- 7. The Self as Related to Kamma and Rebirth131
- 8. A Brief General Assessment of the First Part148
- Part Two: The Metaphysical Self
- 9. The Doctrine of Anattā can co-exist with the Reality of Attā153
- 10. The Doctrine of Non-self Taught Through
- the Denial of Positive Terms158
- This is not my self158
- He does not regard the khandas, etc., either as the self or the self as qualified by them173
- Void of the self or belongs to the self183
- What is not your own186
- Permanence, happiness, self vs. impermanence, pain, non-self189
- As alien, not as the self190
- 10. The Doctrine of Non-self Taught Through
- 11. The Doctrine of the Non-Self Taught Through the Predication of the Negative Term Anattā.195
- Connection with the preceding chapter196
- Scope of the' annattā statements'198
- Intimate relationship between anattā' and dukkha204
- The awareness of non-self205
- Anattā proclaimed by means of universal statements208
- Reasons given to assert that something is annattā222
- 11. The Doctrine of the Non-Self Taught Through the Predication of the Negative Term Anattā.195
- 12. Asmimāna, Sakkāyadiṭṭhi, Sassatavāda and Ucchedavāda227
- 13. Self and Non-Self After Liberation268
- Buddha was not a nihilist269
- Transcendence of the self276
- Moral transcendence of the self278
- Metaphysical transcendence of the self280
- The abyākatā pañhā and the sakkāyaddiṭṭi unanswered294
- Reasons for keeping the abyākatā pañhā unanswered294
- 13. Self and Non-Self After Liberation268
- 14. Recapitulation301
- Notes306
- Selected Bibliography384
- Glossary of Terms388
- Table of Scriptural Passages Commented or Quoted393
- Index of Names and Subjects401