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Difference between revisions of "Two Models of the Two Truths: Ontological and Phenomenological Approaches"

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Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912), an architect of the Nyingma (rnying ma) tradition of Tibet in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, articulates two distinct models of the two truths that are respectively reflected in Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra Buddhist traditions. The way he positions  
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[[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912), an {{Wiki|architect}} of the [[Nyingma]] ([[rnying ma]]) [[tradition]] of [[Tibet]] in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, articulates two {{Wiki|distinct}} models of the [[two truths]] that are respectively reflected in [[Madhyamaka]] and Yoga¯ca¯ra [[Buddhist traditions]]. The way he positions  
  
these two models sheds light on how levels of description are at play in his integration of these traditions. Mipam positions one kind of two-truth model as the product of an ontological analysis while another model can be seen as resulting from a phenomenological reduction. He accommodates both models into  
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these two models sheds {{Wiki|light}} on how levels of description are at play in his {{Wiki|integration}} of these [[traditions]]. [[Mipam]] positions one kind of [[two-truth]] model as the product of an [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] analysis while another model can be seen as resulting from a {{Wiki|phenomenological}} reduction. He accommodates both models into  
  
his systematic interpretation, and for him, each one has an important role to play in coming to understand the nature of the Buddhist truths of emptiness and Buddha-nature. Since each model reflects a different style of analysis, or a different perspective on truth, his presentation reveals how neither model  
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his systematic [[interpretation]], and for him, each one has an important role to play in coming to understand the [[nature]] of the [[Buddhist]] [[truths]] of [[emptiness]] and [[Buddha-nature]]. Since each model reflects a different style of analysis, or a different {{Wiki|perspective}} on [[truth]], his presentation reveals how neither model  
  
alone has the last word on the nature of what is and how it is experienced. This paper analyzes the means by which he lays out these two models of the two truths, and explores the implications of their integration in his philosophical works. A primary concern for Mipam, and a factor that guides his attempt to  
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alone has the last [[word]] on the [[nature]] of what is and how it is [[experienced]]. This paper analyzes the means by which he lays out these two models of the [[two truths]], and explores the implications of their {{Wiki|integration}} in his [[philosophical works]]. A primary [[concern]] for [[Mipam]], and a factor that guides his attempt to  
  
integrate these two approaches to truth, is his aim to both induce authentic experience and true knowledge on the one hand, and represent reality and the experience of it on the other. These competing and complimentary objectives are a central focus around which both styles of critical reflection, and both  
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integrate these two approaches to [[truth]], is his aim to both induce [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] and true [[knowledge]] on the one hand, and represent [[reality]] and the [[experience]] of it on the other. These competing and complimentary objectives are a central focus around which both styles of critical reflection, and both  
models of the two truths, revolve.
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models of the [[two truths]], revolve.
  
  
Keywords: [[Madhyamaka]] [[Yoga¯caryar � Mipham Buddhism Phenomenology
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Keywords: [[Madhyamaka]] [[Yogacharya]]  [[Mipham]]  [[Buddhism]]  {{Wiki|Phenomenology}}
  
  
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Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912), an architect of the Nyingma (rnying ma) tradition of Tibet in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, articulates two distinct models of the two truths that are respectively reflected in Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra Buddhist traditions. The way he positions  
+
[[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912), an {{Wiki|architect}} of the [[Nyingma]] ([[rnying ma]]) [[tradition]] of [[Tibet]] in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, articulates two {{Wiki|distinct}} models of the [[two truths]] that are respectively reflected in [[Madhyamaka]] and Yoga¯ca¯ra [[Buddhist traditions]]. The way he positions  
  
these two models sheds light on how levels of description are at play in his integration of these traditions. Mipam positions one kind of two-truth model as the product of an ontological analysis while another model can be seen as resulting from a phenomenological reduction. He accommodates both models into  
+
these two models sheds {{Wiki|light}} on how levels of description are at play in his {{Wiki|integration}} of these [[traditions]]. [[Mipam]] positions one kind of [[two-truth]] model as the product of an [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] analysis while another model can be seen as resulting from a {{Wiki|phenomenological}} reduction. He accommodates both models into  
  
his systematic interpretation, and for him, each one has an important role to play in coming to understand the nature of the Buddhist truths of emptiness and Buddha-nature. Since each model reflects a different style of analysis, or a different perspective on truth, his presentation reveals how neither model alone has the last word on the nature of what is and how it is experienced. This paper analyzes the means by which he lays out these two models of the two truths, and explores the implications of their integration in his philosophical works.
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his systematic [[interpretation]], and for him, each one has an important role to play in coming to understand the [[nature]] of the [[Buddhist]] [[truths]] of [[emptiness]] and [[Buddha-nature]]. Since each model reflects a different style of analysis, or a different {{Wiki|perspective}} on [[truth]], his presentation reveals how neither model alone has the last [[word]] on the [[nature]] of what is and how it is [[experienced]]. This paper analyzes the means by which he lays out these two models of the [[two truths]], and explores the implications of their {{Wiki|integration}} in his [[philosophical works]].
  
  
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Mipam shows how the two truths should be understood in two distinct ways. In one model, he represents the two truths as appearance and emptiness; in his other model, he depicts the two truths as two modes of experience.1 In the first model, which I will call ‘‘the ontological model,’’ the ultimate truth of  
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[[Mipam]] shows how the [[two truths]] should be understood in two {{Wiki|distinct}} ways. In one model, he represents the [[two truths]] as [[appearance]] and [[emptiness]]; in his other model, he depicts the [[two truths]] as two modes of experience.1 In the first model, which I will call ‘‘the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model,’’ [[the ultimate truth]] of  
  
emptiness is not qualitatively different from the relative truth of appearance. He states:
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[[emptiness]] is not qualitatively different from the [[relative truth]] of [[appearance]]. He states:
The unreal appearances are called ‘relative’ and the emptiness that is the lack of intrinsic nature is called ‘ultimate.’ Without being regarded with a qualitative difference, both of these are equally applied [to all phenomena] from form to omniscience. If you know this, there is certainly nothing more important to know within the sphere of what can be known.2
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The unreal [[appearances]] are called ‘[[relative]]’ and the [[emptiness]] that is the lack of [[intrinsic nature]] is called ‘[[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]].’ Without being regarded with a qualitative difference, both of these are equally applied [to all [[phenomena]]] from [[form]] to [[omniscience]]. If you know this, there is certainly nothing more important to know within the [[sphere]] of what can be known.2
  
  
1 In his extended commentary on S ´a¯ntaraks :ita’s Madhyamaka ¯lam : ka ¯ra, Mipam states as follows: ‘‘There are two ways in which the two truths are stated within the [Buddha’s] Word and s ´a¯stras: (1) from the perspective of valid cognition analyzing the ultimate abiding reality, emptiness is called ‘ultimate’ and appearance is called ‘relative,’ and (2) from the perspective of conventional valid cognition analyzing the mode of appearance, the subjects  
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1 In his extended commentary on S ´a¯ntaraks :ita’s [[Madhyamaka]] ¯lam : ka ¯ra, [[Mipam]] states as follows: ‘‘There are two ways in which the [[two truths]] are stated within the [[[Buddha’s]]] [[Word]] and s ´a¯stras: (1) from the {{Wiki|perspective}} of valid [[cognition]] analyzing the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] abiding [[reality]], [[emptiness]] is called ‘[[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]’ and [[appearance]] is called ‘[[relative]],’ and (2) from the {{Wiki|perspective}} of [[conventional valid cognition]] analyzing the mode of [[appearance]], the [[subjects]]
  
and objects of the incontrovertible accordance between the modes of appearance and reality [i.e., authentic experience] are called ‘ultimate’ and the opposite [i.e., inauthentic experience] are called ‘relative.’’’ Mipam (1990, pp. 55–56): bka’ dang bstan bcos rnams na bden gnyis ’jog tshul gnyis su gnas te/ gnas lugs don dam la dpyod pa’i tshad ma’i dbang du byas de/ stong pa la don dam dang/ snang ba la kun rdzob ces bzhag pa dang/ snang tshul la dpyod pa  
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and [[objects]] of the incontrovertible accordance between the modes of [[appearance]] and [[reality]] [i.e., [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]]] are called ‘[[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]’ and the opposite [i.e., inauthentic [[experience]]] are called ‘[[relative]].’’’ [[Mipam]] (1990, pp. 55–56): bka’ dang [[bstan bcos]] [[rnams]] na [[bden]] [[gnyis]] ’jog tshul [[gnyis]] su [[gnas]] te/ [[gnas lugs]] [[don dam]] la dpyod pa’i [[tshad]] ma’i [[dbang]] du byas de/ [[stong pa]] la [[don dam]] dang/ [[snang ba]] la [[kun rdzob]] ces [[bzhag]] pa dang/ [[snang tshul]] la [[dpyod pa]]
  
kun tu tha snyad pa’i tshad ma’i dbang du byas te/ gnas snang mthun pa mi bslu ba’i yul dang yul can la don dam dang/ ldog phyogs la kun rdzob tu ’jog pa’i tshul gnyis. See also Mipam (1993c, pp. 304, 549). 2 Mipam (1990, pp. 57–58): mi bden pa’i snang ba la kun rdzob ces gdags shing/ rang bzhin ma grub pa’i stong pa la don dam zhes btags pa/ de gnyis po la rtsis che chung med par gzugs nas rnam mkhyen gyi bar du mgo snyoms su sbyor ba ’di shes na shes bya’i  
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kun tu [[tha snyad]] pa’i [[tshad]] ma’i [[dbang]] du byas te/ [[gnas]] [[snang]] mthun pa mi bslu ba’i yul dang [[yul can]] la [[don dam]] dang/ ldog [[phyogs]] la [[kun rdzob]] tu ’jog pa’i tshul [[gnyis]]. See also [[Mipam]] (1993c, pp. 304, 549). 2 [[Mipam]] (1990, pp. 57–58): mi [[bden]] pa’i [[snang ba]] la [[kun rdzob]] ces gdags [[shing]]/ [[rang bzhin]] [[ma grub]] pa’i [[stong pa]] la [[don dam]] zhes [[btags pa]]/ de [[gnyis]] po la [[rtsis]] che [[chung]] med par [[gzugs]] nas [[rnam mkhyen]] gyi bar du [[mgo]] snyoms su [[sbyor ba]] ’di shes na shes bya’i  
  
khong na de las shes rgyu gal che ba gcig kyang med par nges so.
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[[khong]] na de las shes rgyu gal che ba gcig [[kyang]] med par nges so.
  
  
In fact, the two truths are actually inseparable here; they are not really different, but are only conceptually distinct.3 An important feature of this model is the fact that the relationship is not hierarchical. There is no appearance-reality distinction such that ultimate truth is understood as hidden  
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In fact, the [[two truths]] are actually [[inseparable]] here; they are not really different, but are only conceptually distinct.3 An important feature of this model is the fact that the relationship is not hierarchical. There is no appearance-reality {{Wiki|distinction}} such that [[ultimate truth]] is understood as hidden  
  
behind the concealing veil of relative truth. In this ontological model, appearing phenomena are necessarily the relative truth in contrast to the ultimate truth, which is exclusively emptiness.4 Being empty and appearing are just two modes of what can otherwise be expressed as an inseparable unity in reality, and fully realizing this unity is the culminating insight of this model. According to Mipam, the dichotomy of appearance and emptiness unravels in  
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behind the concealing [[veil]] of [[relative truth]]. In this [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model, appearing [[phenomena]] are necessarily the [[relative truth]] in contrast to [[the ultimate truth]], which is exclusively emptiness.4 Being [[empty]] and appearing are just two modes of what can otherwise be expressed as an [[inseparable]] {{Wiki|unity}} in [[reality]], and fully [[realizing]] this {{Wiki|unity}} is the culminating [[insight]] of this model. According to [[Mipam]], the {{Wiki|dichotomy}} of [[appearance]] and [[emptiness]] unravels in  
  
authentic experience, where they are experienced as a unity. In the other model of the two truths, which I will call the ‘‘phenomenological model,’’ authentic experience is the ultimate truth. Here, Mipam represents the experiential unity of appearance and emptiness in a way that sustains an appearance-reality distinction. Here he represents the ultimate truth as authentic experience and the relative truth as inauthentic experience. In this model,  
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[[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]], where they are [[experienced]] as a {{Wiki|unity}}. In the other model of the [[two truths]], which I will call the ‘‘{{Wiki|phenomenological}} model,’’ [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] is [[the ultimate truth]]. Here, [[Mipam]] represents the experiential {{Wiki|unity}} of [[appearance]] and [[emptiness]] in a way that sustains an appearance-reality {{Wiki|distinction}}. Here he represents [[the ultimate truth]] as [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] and the [[relative truth]] as inauthentic [[experience]]. In this model,  
  
authentic experience—or more literally, perception that accords with reality (gnas snang mthun)5—is ultimate, and perceptions that do not accord with reality are relative. In this model, Mipam states that ‘‘it is suitable to posit that all phenomena of nirva ¯n :a, which are attained through the power of appearance in accord with reality, are ultimate; and that all phenomena of sam : sa ¯ra, which arise through the power of appearance that does not accord  
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[[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] experience—or more literally, [[perception]] that accords with [[reality]] ([[gnas]] [[snang]] mthun)5—is [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]], and [[perceptions]] that do not accord with [[reality]] are [[relative]]. In this model, [[Mipam]] states that ‘‘it is suitable to posit that all [[phenomena]] of nirva ¯n :a, which are [[attained]] through the power of [[appearance]] in accord with [[reality]], are [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]; and that all [[phenomena]] of sam : sa ¯ra, which arise through the power of [[appearance]] that does not accord  
  
with reality, are relative.’’6 Thus, the two truths in the phenomenological model are such that the ultimate truth is reality experienced without duality or reification, while the relative truth is the world experienced within a distorted framework. In contrast to the ontological model of the two truths as appearance and emptiness, the dichotomy of the two truths as authentic and inauthentic experience sustains a qualitative distinction between two truths (as  
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with [[reality]], are relative.’’6 Thus, the [[two truths]] in the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model are such that [[the ultimate truth]] is [[reality]] [[experienced]] without [[duality]] or reification, while the [[relative truth]] is the [[world]] [[experienced]] within a distorted framework. In contrast to the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model of the [[two truths]] as [[appearance]] and [[emptiness]], the {{Wiki|dichotomy}} of the [[two truths]] as [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] and inauthentic [[experience]] sustains a qualitative {{Wiki|distinction}} between [[two truths]] (as  
  
disparate modes of experience). We can see that the ultimate truth here is something positive and the relative truth is something negative; they are two qualitatively different ways of experiencing reality. In contrast to the ontological model, the ultimate truth in this context is not simply emptiness(thelackoftrueexistence inthings),becausehere theexperiential presence of reality, known as it is, is the ultimate. Thus, the two truths in this  
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disparate modes of [[experience]]). We can see that [[the ultimate truth]] here is something positive and the [[relative truth]] is something negative; they are two qualitatively different ways of experiencing [[reality]]. In contrast to the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model, [[the ultimate truth]] in this context is not simply emptiness(thelackoftrueexistence inthings),becausehere theexperiential presence of [[reality]], known as it is, is the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]. Thus, the [[two truths]] in this  
  
latter model are distinguished based on the way the world is present in experience (phenomenologically) rather than the way it is absent (ontologically). Here, ultimate truth is authentic experience (e.g., the unity of appearance and emptiness not bifurcated into a
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[[latter]] model are {{Wiki|distinguished}} based on the way the [[world]] is {{Wiki|present}} in [[experience]] ([[phenomenologically]]) rather than the way it is absent ([[ontologically]]). Here, [[ultimate truth]] is [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] (e.g., the {{Wiki|unity}} of [[appearance]] and [[emptiness]] not bifurcated into a
3 Mipam (1997, p. 27): ‘‘From the perspective of insight’s analysis of what is authentic, both appearance and emptiness—together present, together absent—
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3 [[Mipam]] (1997, p. 27): ‘‘From the {{Wiki|perspective}} of insight’s analysis of what is [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]], both [[appearance]] and emptiness—together {{Wiki|present}}, together absent—
  
are asserted as essentially the same, and divisible into different contradistinctions.’’ (yang dag dpyod pa’i shes rab ngor/ /snang dang stong pa ’di gnyis po/ /yod mnyam med mnyam ngo bo gcig/ /ldog pa tha dad dbye bar ’dod). 4 See, for instance, Mipam (1993a, p. 6). 5 This Tibetan word for ‘‘perception’’ (snang ba) also means ‘‘appearance.’’ ‘‘Appearance’’ connotes an objective aspect and ‘‘perception’’ connotes a subjective aspect of ‘‘perceived
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are asserted as [[essentially]] the same, and divisible into different contradistinctions.’’ ([[yang dag]] dpyod pa’i [[shes rab]] [[ngor]]/ /[[snang]] dang [[stong pa]] ’di [[gnyis]] po/ /[[yod]] [[mnyam]] med [[mnyam]] [[ngo bo gcig]]/ /[[ldog pa]] [[tha dad]] dbye bar [[’dod]]). 4 See, for instance, [[Mipam]] (1993a, p. 6). 5 This [[Tibetan]] [[word]] for ‘‘[[perception]]’’ ([[snang ba]]) also means ‘‘[[appearance]].’’ ‘‘[[Appearance]]’’ connotes an [[objective aspect]] and ‘‘[[perception]]’’ connotes a [[subjective aspect]] of ‘‘[[perceived]]
  
appearance.’’ In attempt to convey both aspects of ‘‘perceived-appearance,’’ and translate the import of its meaning here, I use the word ‘‘experience.’’ 6 Mipam (1987b, p. 466): gnas snang mthun pa’i stobs kyis thob pa’i myang ’das kyi chos thams cad don dam yin la/ mi mthun pa’i stobs kyi byung ba’i chos thams cad kun rdzob tu bzhag rung.
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[[appearance]].’’ In attempt to convey both aspects of ‘‘perceived-appearance,’’ and translate the import of its meaning here, I use the [[word]] ‘‘[[experience]].’’ 6 [[Mipam]] (1987b, p. 466): [[gnas]] [[snang]] mthun pa’i [[stobs]] [[kyis]] thob pa’i myang [[’das]] kyi [[chos thams cad]] [[don dam]] [[yin]] la/ mi mthun pa’i [[stobs]] kyi byung ba’i [[chos thams cad]] [[kun rdzob]] tu [[bzhag]] rung.
  
  
dichotomous structure), whereas inauthentic experience (i.e., distorted, dualistic modes of thought and existence) is the relative truth. Moreover, the relative truth as inauthentic experience conveys the meaning of the relative (sam : vr :ti) as that which is concealing, whereas in the ontological model,  
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{{Wiki|dichotomous}} {{Wiki|structure}}), whereas inauthentic [[experience]] (i.e., distorted, [[dualistic]] modes of [[thought]] and [[existence]]) is the [[relative truth]]. Moreover, the [[relative truth]] as inauthentic [[experience]] conveys the meaning of the [[relative]] (sam : vr :ti) as that which is concealing, whereas in the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model,  
  
the relative truth of appearance reflects the meaning of sam : vr :ti as conventional (interchangeable with vyavaha ¯ra), as opposed to the negative connotation of something that conceals the ultimate. According to Mipam, these two models of the two truths need not conflict, but represent different contexts or perspectives for relating to the two truths:
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the [[relative truth]] of [[appearance]] reflects the meaning of sam : vr :ti as [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]] (interchangeable with vyavaha ¯ra), as opposed to the negative connotation of something that conceals the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]. According to [[Mipam]], these two models of the [[two truths]] need not conflict, but represent different contexts or perspectives for relating to the [[two truths]]:
  
  
In the great scriptures there are two ways in which the two truths are posited: (1) the term ‘ultimate’ designates reality as non-arising and the term ‘relative’ designates the conventional mode of appearance, and (2) in terms of conventional apprehension, the term ‘ultimate’ designates both the subject and object of authentic experience and the term ‘relative’ designates both the subject and object of inauthentic experience. In this way, whether in su  
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In the great [[scriptures]] there are two ways in which the [[two truths]] are posited: (1) the term ‘[[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]’ designates [[reality]] as [[non-arising]] and the term ‘[[relative]]’ designates the [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]] mode of [[appearance]], and (2) in terms of [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]] apprehension, the term ‘[[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]’ designates both the [[subject]] and [[object]] of [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] and the term ‘[[relative]]’ designates both the [[subject]] and [[object]] of inauthentic [[experience]]. In this way, whether in su  
  
¯tra or mantra, the term ‘ultimate’ also applies to the subject...although the terms ‘ultimate’ and ‘relative’ are the same in these two systems, the way of presenting the meaning is different. Therefore, if one does not know how to explain having made the distinction between the viewpoints of each respective system, the hope of fathoming the great scriptures will be dashed—like a mind as narrow as the eye of a needle measuring space.7
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¯tra or [[mantra]], the term ‘[[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]’ also applies to the subject...although the terms ‘[[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]’ and ‘[[relative]]’ are the same in these two systems, the way of presenting the meaning is different. Therefore, if one does not know how to explain having made the {{Wiki|distinction}} between the viewpoints of each respective system, the {{Wiki|hope}} of fathoming the great [[scriptures]] will be dashed—like a [[mind]] as narrow as the [[eye]] of a needle [[measuring]] space.7
  
  
Mipam consistently points out the importance of identifying context: particularly, whether the context is an analysis of two separate truths or represents the indivisible unity of authentic experience in which there is no distinction between two truths. Thereby, he integrates these two models into a dialectical unity.
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[[Mipam]] consistently points out the importance of identifying context: particularly, whether the context is an analysis of two separate [[truths]] or represents the indivisible {{Wiki|unity}} of [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] in which there is no {{Wiki|distinction}} between [[two truths]]. Thereby, he integrates these two models into a [[dialectical]] {{Wiki|unity}}.
  
  
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Mipam’s two models reflect two styles of analysis. The first model—in which emptiness is the ultimate truth and appearance is the relative truth—is a product of an analysis into the ontological status of appearances, whereby the nature or essence of an apparent phenomenon has been determined to be indeterminate or nonexistent. The second two-truth model is the product of another kind of inquiry, an inquiry into ‘‘the mode of appearance’’ (snang tshul), or in other  
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[[Mipam’s]] two models reflect two styles of analysis. The first model—in which [[emptiness]] is [[the ultimate truth]] and [[appearance]] is the [[relative]] truth—is a product of an analysis into the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] {{Wiki|status}} of [[appearances]], whereby the [[nature]] or [[essence]] of an apparent [[phenomenon]] has been determined to be {{Wiki|indeterminate}} or [[Wikipedia:Nothing|nonexistent]]. The second [[two-truth]] model is the product of another kind of inquiry, an inquiry into ‘‘the mode of [[appearance]]’’ ([[snang tshul]]), or in other  
  
words, the process of experience itself. The means to arrive at truth in Mipam’s first model involves an analysis of a phenomenon’s ontological status in which no real essence of anything is found. What is negated by this analysis is inherent existence (svabha ¯va). That lack (or
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words, the process of [[experience]] itself. The means to arrive at [[truth]] in [[Mipam’s]] first model involves an analysis of a phenomenon’s [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] {{Wiki|status}} in which no real [[essence]] of anything is found. What is negated by this analysis is [[inherent existence]] ([[svabha]] ¯va). That lack (or
  
7 Mipam (1993b, p. 304): gzhung chen po rnams su bden pa gnyis kyi ’jog tshul mi ’dra ba gnyis bshad pa’i dang po gnas tshul skye med la don dam dang/ snang tshul tha snyad la kun rdzob kyi ming gis bstan pa de yin la/ gnyis pa gnas snang mthun par gyur pa’i yul dang yul can gnyis ka la don dam dang/ mi  
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7 [[Mipam]] (1993b, p. 304): gzhung [[chen po]] [[rnams]] su [[bden pa gnyis]] kyi ’jog tshul mi ’[[dra ba]] [[gnyis]] bshad pa’i dang po [[gnas tshul]] [[skye med]] la [[don dam]] dang/ [[snang tshul]] [[tha snyad]] la [[kun rdzob]] kyi [[ming]] gis [[bstan pa]] de [[yin]] la/ [[gnyis]] pa [[gnas]] [[snang]] mthun par gyur pa’i yul dang [[yul can]] [[gnyis ka]] la [[don dam]] dang/ mi  
  
mthun par gyur pa’i yul dang yul can gnyis ka la kun rdzob kyi ming gis bstan pa ni tha snyad nye bar bzung ba’i dbang du yin la/ lugs ’di’i dbang du byas na mdo sngags gang yin kyang yul can la’ang don dam gyi ming ’jug pa dang...lugs de gnyis kun rdzob dang don dam zhes ming mthun yang don gyi rnam gzhag byed tshul mi ’dra bas so so’i lugs kyi dgongs pa phye nas ’chad ma shes na gzhung chen po rnams khab mig ltar dog pa’i blos nam mkha’ gzhal bas ’jal re zad par ’gyur ro.
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mthun par gyur pa’i yul dang [[yul can]] [[gnyis ka]] la [[kun rdzob]] kyi [[ming]] gis [[bstan pa]] ni [[tha snyad]] nye bar bzung ba’i [[dbang]] du [[yin]] la/ [[lugs]] ’di’i [[dbang]] du byas na mdo [[sngags]] gang [[yin]] [[kyang]] [[yul can]] la’ang [[don dam]] gyi [[ming]] ’[[jug pa]] dang...lugs de [[gnyis]] [[kun rdzob]] dang [[don dam]] zhes [[ming]] mthun [[yang]] don gyi [[rnam]] gzhag [[byed]] tshul mi ’dra bas so so’i [[lugs]] kyi [[dgongs pa]] phye nas ’chad ma shes na gzhung [[chen po]] [[rnams]] [[khab]] mig ltar {{Wiki|dog}} pa’i blos [[nam mkha]]’ gzhal bas ’jal re [[zad]] par ’gyur ro.
  
  
emptiness) is the ultimate truth, and the analytic ‘‘object’’ of that analysis (i.e., any phenomenon) is the relative truth. Thus, this model primarily reflects the domain of deconstructive analysis, that is, a reductive analysis that seeks to pin down the essence of things, the true nature of reality. When the nature of a phenomenon is analyzed in terms of its ultimate status, how it really is, nothing whatsoever is found. This is the ultimate truth. In  
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[[emptiness]]) is [[the ultimate truth]], and the analytic ‘‘[[object]]’’ of that analysis (i.e., any [[phenomenon]]) is the [[relative truth]]. Thus, this model primarily reflects the domain of deconstructive analysis, that is, a {{Wiki|reductive}} analysis that seeks to pin down the [[essence of things]], the [[true nature of reality]]. When the [[nature]] of a [[phenomenon]] is analyzed in terms of its [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] {{Wiki|status}}, how it really is, nothing whatsoever is found. This is [[the ultimate truth]]. In  
  
contrast, the appearance of things, anything that may appear, is the relative truth. In contrast to the ontological model, Mipam’s other model of the two truths is not based on this kind of object-ifying analysis, but on a phenomenological reduction. In his phenomenological model, the ultimate truth as  
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contrast, the [[appearance]] of things, anything that may appear, is the [[relative truth]]. In contrast to the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model, [[Mipam’s]] other model of the [[two truths]] is not based on this kind of object-ifying analysis, but on a {{Wiki|phenomenological}} reduction. In his {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model, [[the ultimate truth]] as  
authentic experience is not a byproduct of a subject’s false construction of a distinct ‘‘object’’ (imposing such a duality is an unwarranted presumption of a phenomenological inquiry). Rather, according to Mipam, for authentic experience to fully unfold, as it is, the field of inquiry cannot be thematized by  
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[[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] is not a byproduct of a subject’s [[false construction]] of a {{Wiki|distinct}} ‘‘[[object]]’’ (imposing such a [[duality]] is an unwarranted presumption of a {{Wiki|phenomenological}} inquiry). Rather, according to [[Mipam]], for [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] to fully unfold, as it is, the field of inquiry cannot be thematized by  
  
dichotomous thought, and what is to be overcome is not simply the grasp of some separate svabha ¯va, but duality (i.e., the distorted structure of experience). Therefore, in contrast to the process of negating a falsely constructed svabha ¯va, deconstructing duality does not presume any object in the  
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{{Wiki|dichotomous}} [[thought]], and what is to be overcome is not simply the [[grasp]] of some separate [[svabha]] ¯va, but [[duality]] (i.e., the distorted {{Wiki|structure}} of [[experience]]). Therefore, in contrast to the process of negating a falsely [[constructed]] [[svabha]] ¯va, deconstructing [[duality]] does not presume any [[object]] in the  
  
mind, since an object entails a (subject-object) duality. Since the intentional structure of an analysis of objects is hinged upon a dichotomy, to expunge this structure calls for another means, a phenomenological reduction that suspends the metaphysical presumptions of dualism (and the byproducts of dualism such as idealism and materialism, mentalism and physicalism). In light of this kind of phenomenological inquiry, we can see how in the ontological model of  
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[[mind]], since an [[object]] entails a (subject-object) [[duality]]. Since the intentional {{Wiki|structure}} of an analysis of [[objects]] is hinged upon a {{Wiki|dichotomy}}, to expunge this {{Wiki|structure}} calls for another means, a {{Wiki|phenomenological}} reduction that suspends the [[metaphysical]] presumptions of [[dualism]] (and the byproducts of [[dualism]] such as [[idealism]] and {{Wiki|materialism}}, mentalism and {{Wiki|physicalism}}). In {{Wiki|light}} of this kind of {{Wiki|phenomenological}} inquiry, we can see how in the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model of  
the two truths what is negated is an object, like an inherently existing table (a table that is held to be truly real), and how the negation takes place with reference to that object. The process to arrive at ultimate truth is for a subject to negate an object. That is, reason takes an object of (deconstructive) analysis, and while doing so, presumes a subject-object structure as the starting point through which the analysis necessarily takes  
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the [[two truths]] what is negated is an [[object]], like an [[inherently existing]] table (a table that is held to be truly real), and how the {{Wiki|negation}} takes place with reference to that [[object]]. The process to arrive at [[ultimate truth]] is for a [[subject]] to negate an [[object]]. That is, [[reason]] takes an [[object]] of (deconstructive) analysis, and while doing so, presumes a subject-object {{Wiki|structure}} as the starting point through which the analysis necessarily takes  
  
place. In the case of the phenomenological two-truth model, however, unlike in the ontological model, there is technically no ‘‘object’’ of negation in the disclosure of ultimate truth. This is because such an object of analysis presumes a subject-object structure and a phenomenal ‘‘object’’ abstracted from the lived-world of experience. Thus, rather than engaging an ontological analysis to come to an understanding that phenomena are empty, this latter model  
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place. In the case of the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} [[two-truth]] model, however, unlike in the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model, there is technically no ‘‘[[object]]’’ of {{Wiki|negation}} in the disclosure of [[ultimate truth]]. This is because such an [[object]] of analysis presumes a subject-object {{Wiki|structure}} and a [[phenomenal]] ‘‘[[object]]’’ abstracted from the lived-world of [[experience]]. Thus, rather than engaging an [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] analysis to come to an [[understanding]] that [[phenomena]] are [[empty]], this [[latter]] model  
  
is rooted in phenomenology;8 it results from a procedure that seeks to suspend distorted presumptions to access the fundamental structure of experience, which in Mipam’s case is the unity of appearance and emptiness.
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is rooted in phenomenology;8 it results from a procedure that seeks to suspend distorted presumptions to access the fundamental {{Wiki|structure}} of [[experience]], which in [[Mipam’s]] case is the {{Wiki|unity}} of [[appearance]] and [[emptiness]].
8 I am using the term ‘‘phenomenology’’ in a way that reflects important elements of Merleau-Ponty’s characterization of phenomenology in the opening page  
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8 I am using the term ‘‘[[Wikipedia:Phenomenology (philosophy)|phenomenology]]’’ in a way that reflects important [[elements]] of Merleau-Ponty’s characterization of [[Wikipedia:Phenomenology (philosophy)|phenomenology]] in the opening page  
  
of his preface to Phenomenology of Perception: ‘‘Phenomenology...does not expect to arrive at an understanding of man and the world from any starting point other than that of their ‘facticity’. It is a transcendental philosophy which places in abeyance the assertions arising out of the natural attitude, the better to understand them; but it is also a philosophy for which the world is always ‘already there’ before reflection begins—as ‘an inalienable presence’;  
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of his preface to {{Wiki|Phenomenology}} of [[Perception]]: ‘‘Phenomenology...does not expect to arrive at an [[understanding]] of man and the [[world]] from any starting point other than that of their ‘facticity’. It is a [[transcendental]] [[philosophy]] which places in abeyance the assertions [[arising]] out of the natural [[attitude]], the better to understand them; but it is also a [[philosophy]] for which the [[world]] is always ‘already there’ before reflection begins—as ‘an inalienable presence’;  
  
and all its efforts are concentrated upon re-achieving a direct and primitive contact with the world, and endowing that contact with a philosophical status.’’ Merleau-Ponty (1962, p. vii).
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and all its efforts are [[concentrated]] upon re-achieving a direct and primitive [[contact]] with the [[world]], and endowing that [[contact]] with a [[philosophical]] {{Wiki|status}}.’’ {{Wiki|Merleau-Ponty}} (1962, p. vii).
  
  
Whereas one arrives at the ultimate truth in the appearance/emptiness model of two truths when a falsely imputed svabha ¯va is negated through deconstructive analysis, the false presumption of duality cannot be negated by this kind of reason alone, but involves a restructuring, or destructuring,  
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Whereas one arrives at [[the ultimate truth]] in the appearance/emptiness model of [[two truths]] when a falsely [[imputed]] [[svabha]] ¯va is negated through deconstructive analysis, the false presumption of [[duality]] cannot be negated by this kind of [[reason]] alone, but involves a restructuring, or destructuring,  
  
of the way of relating to the lived-world, in which duality no longer structures experience and there is no longer a provisional division between two separate truths. This style of inquiry calls for a participatory process that is distinctively meditative, or in other words, it calls for a uniquely phenomenological inquiry. While in Mipam’s presentation, the absence of both svabha ¯va and duality can be understood to various degrees in study,  
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of the way of relating to the lived-world, in which [[duality]] no longer structures [[experience]] and there is no longer a provisional [[division]] between two separate [[truths]]. This style of inquiry calls for a participatory process that is distinctively [[meditative]], or in other words, it calls for a uniquely {{Wiki|phenomenological}} inquiry. While in [[Mipam’s]] presentation, the absence of both [[svabha]] ¯va and [[duality]] can be understood to various degrees in study,  
  
contemplation, and meditation, we can see how the lack of svabha ¯va is derived from analytic meditation (dpyad sgom), whereas the lack of duality is rooted in a distinctive form of resting meditation (‘jog sgom). Analytic meditation involves object-oriented reasoning and analysis. In contrast, resting meditation is a contemplative practice that carries out focused attention on an object or sustained awareness without an object. Significantly, for  
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contemplation, and [[meditation]], we can see how the lack of [[svabha]] ¯va is derived from analytic [[meditation]] ([[dpyad sgom]]), whereas the lack of [[duality]] is rooted in a {{Wiki|distinctive}} [[form]] of resting [[meditation]] (‘jog [[sgom]]). Analytic [[meditation]] involves object-oriented {{Wiki|reasoning}} and analysis. In contrast, resting [[meditation]] is a {{Wiki|contemplative}} practice that carries out focused [[attention]] on an [[object]] or sustained [[awareness]] without an [[object]]. Significantly, for  
  
Buddhists like Mipam, meditating on an object (like an image, a sound, or the sensation of one’s breath) may lead topeaceful states andstability ofattention(ins ´amatha),yetitisonly within the unthematized space of objectless awareness where the nature of perception can be completely seen (in vipas ´yana ¯). Such object-less awareness is not intentional in an ordinary sense and is devoid of representational thought. Unlike the contentless ultimate of  
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[[Buddhists]] like [[Mipam]], [[meditating]] on an [[object]] (like an image, a [[sound]], or the [[sensation]] of one’s [[breath]]) may lead topeaceful states andstability ofattention(ins ´amatha),yetitisonly within the unthematized [[space]] of objectless [[awareness]] where the [[nature]] of [[perception]] can be completely seen (in vipas ´[[yana]] ¯). Such object-less [[awareness]] is not intentional in an ordinary [[sense]] and is devoid of representational [[thought]]. Unlike the contentless [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] of  
  
the lack of svabha ¯va (in the sense of an emptyor null-set),the phenomenological ultimate is content-less only in the sense that there is no representational content. Accessing this content calls for a participatory orientation with and in the life-world, a radical shift from ordinary modes of relating to the world. Thus, rather than simply an abstract truth, the phenomenological ultimate represents truth that must be embodied—or rather,  
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the lack of [[svabha]] ¯va (in the [[sense]] of an emptyor null-set),the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] is content-less only in the [[sense]] that there is no representational content. Accessing this content calls for a participatory orientation with and in the life-world, a radical shift from ordinary modes of relating to the [[world]]. Thus, rather than simply an [[abstract truth]], the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] represents [[truth]] that must be embodied—or rather,  
  
enminded. For this reason, coming to know it entails more than simply unmasking the agents of inherent existence, but calls for something akin to closing the curtains on the ‘‘Cartesian theatre.’’9
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enminded. For this [[reason]], coming to know it entails more than simply unmasking the agents of [[inherent existence]], but calls for something akin to closing the curtains on the ‘‘[[Cartesian]] theatre.’’9
  
  
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We have seen in these two models of truth how the way emptiness (of svabha ¯va) is understood analytically contrasts with the way emptiness (of duality) must be experienced phenomenologically. These two modes of analysis, ontological and phenomenological, undoubtedly reflect two main schools of Maha¯ya¯na  
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We have seen in these two models of [[truth]] how the way [[emptiness]] (of [[svabha]] ¯va) is understood analytically contrasts with the way [[emptiness]] (of [[duality]]) must be [[experienced]] [[phenomenologically]]. These two modes of analysis, [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] and {{Wiki|phenomenological}}, undoubtedly reflect two main schools of [[Maha¯ya¯na]]
  
thought, Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra. According to Mipam, the culminating insight of Madhyamaka is perfectly compatible with the Yoga¯ca¯ra insight of nonduality. Mipam’s synthesizes Yoga¯ca¯ra and Madhyamaka in a way that each supplements the other. In Yoga¯ca¯ra, negating svabha ¯va can be seen as going too far, particularly if the facticity of authentic experience is negated by a reductive, object-ifying analysis. However, for a Madhyamaka approach,  
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[[thought]], [[Madhyamaka]] and Yoga¯ca¯ra. According to [[Mipam]], the culminating [[insight]] of [[Madhyamaka]] is perfectly compatible with the Yoga¯ca¯ra [[insight]] of [[nonduality]]. [[Mipam’s]] synthesizes Yoga¯ca¯ra and [[Madhyamaka]] in a way that each supplements the other. In Yoga¯ca¯ra, negating [[svabha]] ¯va can be seen as going too far, particularly if the facticity of [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] is negated by a {{Wiki|reductive}}, object-ifying analysis. However, for a [[Madhyamaka]] approach,  
  
negating duality has not necessarily gone
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negating [[duality]] has not necessarily gone
9 I borrow this apt metaphor from Daniel Dennett. See, for instance, Dennett (1991, p. 107).
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9 I borrow this apt {{Wiki|metaphor}} from {{Wiki|Daniel Dennett}}. See, for instance, Dennett (1991, p. 107).
  
  
far enough. In Madhyamaka, one must negate the realism of svabha ¯va globally, so even an appeal to a nondual experience is subject to its uncompromising critique. The dialectic interplay between these two models steers the middle way for Mipam. Thus, neither model of the two truths is complete on its own;  
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far enough. In [[Madhyamaka]], one must negate the [[realism]] of [[svabha]] ¯va globally, so even an appeal to a [[nondual]] [[experience]] is [[subject]] to its uncompromising critique. The [[dialectic]] interplay between these two models steers the [[middle way]] for [[Mipam]]. Thus, neither model of the [[two truths]] is complete on its [[own]];  
  
or rather, each model entails the other. The ontological model by itself, with solely an absence as the ultimate truth that ignores the phenomenological experience of unity, is simply an abstraction. Emptiness, understood as solely an absence, reflects a description divorced from the event of understanding; on its own it represents a sterile view of metaphysical absence, isolated from the dynamic reality of a lived-world. In other words, it is a view of  
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or rather, each model entails the other. The [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model by itself, with solely an absence as [[the ultimate truth]] that ignores the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} [[experience]] of {{Wiki|unity}}, is simply an {{Wiki|abstraction}}. [[Emptiness]], understood as solely an absence, reflects a description divorced from the event of [[understanding]]; on its [[own]] it represents a sterile view of [[metaphysical]] absence, isolated from the dynamic [[reality]] of a lived-world. In other words, it is a view of  
  
nihilism. Yet the phenomenological model alone is not sufficient either. Its appeal to the ultimate truth of an experiential unity that dispenses with analysis and ontological critique tends toward reification. Without being curtailed by the negative dialectic of emptiness, the ultimate truth of authentic experience easily congeals into a naı ¨ve, mystical realism, otherwise known as ‘‘the extreme of eternalism.’’ It is in and through both models of the two  
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[[nihilism]]. Yet the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model alone is not sufficient either. Its appeal to [[the ultimate truth]] of an experiential {{Wiki|unity}} that dispenses with analysis and [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] critique tends toward reification. Without being curtailed by the negative [[dialectic]] of [[emptiness]], [[the ultimate truth]] of [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] easily congeals into a naı ¨ve, [[mystical]] [[realism]], otherwise known as ‘‘the extreme of {{Wiki|eternalism}}.’’ It is in and through both models of the [[two truths]] through which [[Mipam]] forges his ‘‘[[middle way]]’’ view. We can see an extreme of {{Wiki|eternalism}} at play when the two models of [[truth]] get conflated and the [[boundaries]] of [[Wikipedia:Phenomenology (philosophy)|phenomenology]] stray into the [[realm]] of [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] claims. For instance, in the case of the Yoga¯ca¯ra [[idealism]] represented in the [[philosophical]] system known [[in Tibet]] as ‘‘[[Mind-Only]]’’: To claim that the [[mind]] alone is ([[ontologically]]) real in the wake of a {{Wiki|phenomenological}} discovery that
  
truths through which Mipam forges his ‘‘middle way’’ view. We can see an extreme of eternalism at play when the two models of truth get conflated and the boundaries of phenomenology stray into the realm of ontological claims. For instance, in the case of the Yoga¯ca¯ra idealism represented in the philosophical system known in Tibet as ‘‘Mind-Only’’: To claim that the mind alone is (ontologically) real in the wake of a phenomenological discovery that
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the [[mind]] is constitutive of any [[experience]] of [[phenomena]] is to confuse levels of [[discourse]]; it is akin to making a category mistake. Yet the central [[insight]] of ‘‘[[Mind-Only]],’’ or rather, Yoga¯ca¯ra—that [[mind]] is integral to all experience—when not ontologized is [[essential]] to a proper [[understanding]] of [[Madhyamaka]] in [[Mipam’s]] view.10
  
the mind is constitutive of any experience of phenomena is to confuse levels of discourse; it is akin to making a category mistake. Yet the central insight of ‘‘Mind-Only,’’ or rather, Yoga¯ca¯ra—that mind is integral to all experience—when not ontologized is essential to a proper understanding of Madhyamaka in Mipam’s view.10
 
  
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10 [[Mipam]] states as follows in his commentary on the Dharmadharmata ¯[[vibha]] ¯ga: ‘‘When the [[appearance]] of apprehended [[[objects]]] is established to not have an [[essence]] that is separate from the apprehending [[[subject]]], the [[appearance]] of the apprehending [[subject]] is also established as [[Wikipedia:Nothing|nonexistent]]. If [one wonders] why, it is because the apprehending [[[subject]]] is established in [[dependence]] upon the apprehended [[[object]]]; it is never established on its [[own]]. In this way,
  
10 Mipam states as follows in his commentary on the Dharmadharmata ¯vibha ¯ga: ‘‘When the appearance of apprehended [objects] is established to not have an essence that is separate from the apprehending [subject], the appearance of the apprehending subject is also established as nonexistent. If [one wonders] why, it is because the apprehending [subject] is established in dependence upon the apprehended [object]; it is never established on its own. In this way,
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if proponents of [[Mind-Only]] have to realize the lack of all [[duality]], the [[awareness]] free from [[subject]] and [[object]], naturally {{Wiki|luminous}} and clear, inexpressible and nondistinct from the [[nature]] of the thoroughly established [[nature]] ([[yongs grub]], parinis :[[panna]]) free from the twofold [[self]], then it is needless to mention that the proponents of [[Madhyamaka]] realize this!...Merely the slight [[philosophical]] [[assertion]] that posits the [[essence]] of {{Wiki|ineffable}} [[cognition]] as truly established remains to be negated; [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] proponents of [[Madhyamaka]] assert the {{Wiki|unity}} of the [[primordially pure]] [[luminous clarity]] of one’s [[mind]] and the
  
if proponents of Mind-Only have to realize the lack of all duality, the awareness free from subject and object, naturally luminous and clear, inexpressible and nondistinct from the nature of the thoroughly established nature (yongs grub, parinis :panna) free from the twofold self, then it is needless to mention that the proponents of Madhyamaka realize this!...Merely the slight philosophical assertion that posits the essence of ineffable cognition as truly established remains to be negated; authentic proponents of Madhyamaka assert the unity of the primordially pure luminous clarity of one’s mind and the  
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[[emptiness]] of that [[nondual cognition]]. Therefore, other than the {{Wiki|distinction}} of whether this slight fixation is eliminated or not, [[Madhyamaka]] and [[Mind-Only]] are mostly the same in terms of the practices of [[meditative equipoise]] and postmeditation.’’ [[Mipam]] (1987C, pp. 626.2–627.2): de ltar gzung bar [[snang ba]] de ni rang gi ngo bos ’[[dzin pa]] las [[gzhan]] du med par grub na/ ’[[dzin]] par [[snang ba]] de [[yang]] med par grub bo/ /de [[ci’i phyir]] na ’[[dzin pa]] ni gzung ba la ltos te grub kyi yan gar du nam [[yang]] mi grub po/ de ltar na gzung ba dang ’[[dzin pa]] [[gnyis]] kyi [[rnam pa]] thams cad dang bral te yul dang [[yul can]] med pa’i [[rig pa]] [[rang bzhin]] gyis ’[[od gsal ba]] brjod du [[med pa]] tsam ni [[bdag]] [[gnyis]] [[kyis]] stong pa’i [[yongs grub]] [[de bzhin nyid]] dang tha mi [[dad pa]] de ni [[sems tsam]] pas [[kyang]] rtogs dgos na [[dbu ma]] pas lta ci smos so...brjod med kyi [[shes pa]] de yi [[ngo bo]] la [[bden grub]] du ’jog tshul gyi [[grub mtha]]’ [[phra]] mo tsam [[zhig]] [[lhag]] mar lus pa [[de nyid]] [[rigs]] pas {{Wiki|sun}} phyungs te [[gzung ’dzin med]] pa’i [[shes pa]] [[nyid]] [[kyang]] [[bden pa]] med pa’i [[stong pa]] dang [[zung]] du [[zhugs]] pa’i [[rang sems]] gdod nas dag pa’i ’[[od gsal]] [[nyid]] du [[’dod]] na [[dbu ma]] [[yang dag]] pa [[yin]] te/ des na [[theg chen]] dbu [[sems]] ’di [[gnyis]] [[zhen]] pa’i gnad [[phra]] mo [[zhig]] [[chod]] ma [[chod]] kyi [[khyad par]] las/ [[mnyam rjes]] kyi [[nyams]] len
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[[phyogs]] ’[[dra ba]] lta bur ’ong bas. See also Duckworth (2008, pp. 46–48).
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Two Models of the [[Two Truths]]
  
emptiness of that nondual cognition. Therefore, other than the distinction of whether this slight fixation is eliminated or not, Madhyamaka and Mind-Only are mostly the same in terms of the practices of meditative equipoise and postmeditation.’’ Mipam (1987C, pp. 626.2–627.2): de ltar gzung bar snang ba de ni rang gi ngo bos ’dzin pa las gzhan du med par grub na/ ’dzin par snang ba de yang med par grub bo/ /de ci’i phyir na ’dzin pa ni gzung ba la ltos te grub kyi yan gar du nam yang mi grub po/ de ltar na gzung ba dang ’dzin pa gnyis kyi rnam pa thams cad dang bral te yul dang yul can med pa’i rig pa rang
 
  
bzhin gyis ’od gsal ba brjod du med pa tsam ni bdag gnyis kyis stong pa’i yongs grub de bzhin nyid dang tha mi dad pa de ni sems tsam pas kyang rtogs dgos na dbu ma pas lta ci smos so...brjod med kyi shes pa de yi ngo bo la bden grub du ’jog tshul gyi grub mtha’ phra mo tsam zhig lhag mar lus pa de nyid rigs pas sun phyungs te gzung ’dzin med pa’i shes pa nyid kyang bden pa med pa’i stong pa dang zung du zhugs pa’i rang sems gdod nas dag pa’i ’od gsal nyid du ’dod na dbu ma yang dag pa yin te/ des na theg chen dbu sems ’di gnyis zhen pa’i gnad phra mo zhig chod ma chod kyi khyad par las/ mnyam rjes kyi nyams len
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Monological interpretations of the [[two truths]], fed by the polemic [[rhetoric]] between Yoga¯ca¯ra and [[Madhyamaka]], only lend credibility to one model or the other.11 In the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model, if it is the case that ‘‘[[the ultimate truth]] is that there is no [[ultimate truth]],’’ as [[Mark Siderits]] has said,12 then we
phyogs ’dra ba lta bur ’ong bas. See also Duckworth (2008, pp. 46–48).
 
Two Models of the Two Truths
 
  
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can see that there is only one [[truth]], the [[relative]] (or [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]]) [[truth]]. In the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model, too, there is only one truth—yet in this case, the one [[truth]] is not the [[relative]], but the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] truth—because inauthentic modes of being are unreal in contrast to the [[reality]] of [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]]. In contrast to these monological interpretations of the [[two truths]], in [[Mipam’s]] [[dialectical]] [[interpretation]] neither one of the [[two-truth]] models is held above
  
Monological interpretations of the two truths, fed by the polemic rhetoric between Yoga¯ca¯ra and Madhyamaka, only lend credibility to one model or the other.11 In the ontological model, if it is the case that ‘‘the ultimate truth is that there is no ultimate truth,’’ as Mark Siderits has said,12 then we
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the other. [[Mipam]] does not hold the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model of the [[two truths]], with [[emptiness]] as [[the ultimate truth]], in a privileged place. Nor does he privilege the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model of authentic/inauthentic [[experience]]. Each model is simply one account of [[knowledge]]. {{Wiki|Ontology}} is not primary because [[emptiness]] alone, as a lack of [[true existence]], is an {{Wiki|abstraction}} from the [[reality]] of {{Wiki|unity}}, [[empty]] [[appearance]]. This {{Wiki|unity}} must be [[experienced]] [[phenomenologically]], which
  
can see that there is only one truth, the relative (or conventional) truth. In the phenomenological model, too, there is only one truth—yet in this case, the one truth is not the relative, but the ultimate truth—because inauthentic modes of being are unreal in contrast to the reality of authentic experience. In contrast to these monological interpretations of the two truths, in Mipam’s dialectical interpretation neither one of the two-truth models is held above
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is the meaning of [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]]. Given this to be the case, we may be led to believe that for [[Mipam]], [[Wikipedia:Phenomenology (philosophy)|phenomenology]] trumps {{Wiki|ontology}}. Yet we can see that [[Wikipedia:Phenomenology (philosophy)|phenomenology]] is not the primary [[foundation of knowledge]] for him, either, as it appears to be the case for the proponents of Yoga¯ca¯ra [[idealism]] represented in the [[philosophical]] system called ‘‘[[Mind-Only]].’’ Rather, for [[Mipam]], the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model is no more legitimate than the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] one,
  
the other. Mipam does not hold the ontological model of the two truths, with emptiness as the ultimate truth, in a privileged place. Nor does he privilege the phenomenological model of authentic/inauthentic experience. Each model is simply one account of knowledge. Ontology is not primary because emptiness alone, as a lack of true existence, is an abstraction from the reality of unity, empty appearance. This unity must be experienced phenomenologically, which
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but represents simply another [[form]] of inquiry and another account of [[truth]]. {{Wiki|Phenomenology}} is not primary for him because he [[subjects]] the [[insights]] of [[Wikipedia:Phenomenology (philosophy)|phenomenology]] to [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] critiques.13 The [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] of [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] in the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model is, from the aspect of [[appearance]], the [[relative truth]] in the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model; when analyzed in terms of its true [[essence]], [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]], like everything else, lacks [[true existence]] and
  
is the meaning of authentic experience. Given this to be the case, we may be led to believe that for Mipam, phenomenology trumps ontology. Yet we can see that phenomenology is not the primary foundation of knowledge for him, either, as it appears to be the case for the proponents of Yoga¯ca¯ra idealism represented in the philosophical system called ‘‘Mind-Only.’’ Rather, for Mipam, the phenomenological model is no more legitimate than the ontological one,  
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so is [[empty]]. On the other hand, emptiness—simply the lack of [[true existence]] that is the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] of the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model—is merely the [[relative truth]] in the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model, because, as a product of abstract, distorted [[thought]], it is unreal, inauthentic [[experience]]. In this way, [[Mipam]] synthesizes these two models of [[truth]] as a [[dialectical]] {{Wiki|unity}}. He forges this ‘‘[[middle way]]’’ of ([[nonconceptual]]) {{Wiki|unity}} as his [[Nyingma]] view.14
  
but represents simply another form of inquiry and another account of truth. Phenomenology is not primary for him because he subjects the insights of phenomenology to ontological critiques.13 The ultimate of authentic experience in the phenomenological model is, from the aspect of appearance, the relative truth in the ontological model; when analyzed in terms of its true essence, authentic experience, like everything else, lacks true existence and
 
  
so is empty. On the other hand, emptiness—simply the lack of true existence that is the ultimate of the ontological model—is merely the relative truth in the phenomenological model, because, as a product of abstract, distorted thought, it is unreal, inauthentic experience. In this way, Mipam synthesizes these two models of truth as a dialectical unity. He forges this ‘‘middle way’’ of (nonconceptual) unity as his Nyingma view.14
+
11 For instance, we can see how the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model alone is prominent in the [[Geluk]] ([[dge lugs]]) school following after [[Tsongkhapa]] ([[tsong kha pa blo bzang grags pa]], 1357–1419) and only the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model is dominant in the [[Jonang]] ([[jo nang]]) school stemming from Do ¨lpopa ([[dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan]], 1292–1361). 12 [[Siderits]] (2003, p. 133). 13 For instance, [[Mipam]] states in his commentary on the [[Madhyamaka]] ¯lam : ka ¯ra, ‘‘The [[latter]] [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]]
  
 +
[[[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]]] also is [[empty]] of [[essence]].’’ [[Mipam]] (1990, p. 56): phyi ma’i [[don dam]] [[yin]] [[kyang]] [[ngo bo stong pa]] [[yin]] la. 14 For more on [[Mipam’s]] {{Wiki|synthesis}} of (Pra¯sas :gika-)Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra, see Duckworth, ‘‘[[Mipam’s]] [[Middle Way]] Through Pra¯sas :gika and Yoga¯ca¯ra’’ (2010a). For the way that [[Mipam]] forges his distinctively [[Nyingma]] view of [[emptiness]] (as [[nonconceptual]] {{Wiki|unity}}) in contrast to the way that [[emptiness]] is represented in the [[Jonang]] and [[Geluk traditions]], see Duckworth, ‘‘De/Limiting [[Emptiness]] and the [[Boundaries]] of the {{Wiki|Ineffable}}’’ (2010b).
  
11 For instance, we can see how the ontological model alone is prominent in the Geluk (dge lugs) school following after Tsongkhapa (tsong kha pa blo bzang grags pa, 1357–1419) and only the phenomenological model is dominant in the Jonang (jo nang) school stemming from Do ¨lpopa (dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan, 1292–1361). 12 Siderits (2003, p. 133). 13 For instance, Mipam states in his commentary on the Madhyamaka ¯lam : ka ¯ra, ‘‘The latter ultimate
 
  
[authentic experience] also is empty of essence.’’ Mipam (1990, p. 56): phyi ma’i don dam yin kyang ngo bo stong pa yin la. 14 For more on Mipam’s synthesis of (Pra¯sas :gika-)Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra, see Duckworth, ‘‘Mipam’s Middle Way Through Pra¯sas :gika and Yoga¯ca¯ra’’ (2010a). For the way that Mipam forges his distinctively Nyingma view of emptiness (as nonconceptual unity) in contrast to the way that emptiness is represented in the Jonang and Geluk traditions, see Duckworth, ‘‘De/Limiting Emptiness and the Boundaries of the Ineffable’’ (2010b).
+
We have seen how [[Mipam]] lays out two models of the [[two truths]] based on different ways to arrive at [[the ultimate truth]] in two prominent schools of [[Maha¯ya¯na]] [[thought]]. We can appreciate the different functions played by these [[discourses]] on [[truth]] when we consider how they respectively function to represent the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] or evoke it. The [[discourse]] of [[ultimate truth]] in the {{Wiki|phenomenological}} model systematically re-presents the [[experience]] of {{Wiki|unity}} in [[meditative equipoise]], that is, [[the ultimate truth]] of {{Wiki|unity}}, after it has been [[experienced]]. In contrast, the [[discourse]] of [[emptiness]], [[the ultimate truth]] in the [[Wikipedia:Ontology|ontological]] model, has another function: to evoke the experiential [[insight]] by pulling the rug out on any attempt to pin down [[reality]] and determine its [[essence]]. Thus, rather than simply distinguishing between levels of description, we also need to take into account the difference between the descriptive
  
 
+
and performative functions of [[language]]. A primary [[concern]] for [[Mipam]], and a factor that guides his attempt to integrate these two approaches to [[truth]], is his aim to both induce [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[experience]] and true [[knowledge]] on the one hand, and represent [[reality]] and the [[experience]] of it on the other. These competing and complimentary objectives are a central focus around which both styles of critical reflection, and both models of the [[two truths]], revolve.
We have seen how Mipam lays out two models of the two truths based on different ways to arrive at the ultimate truth in two prominent schools of Maha¯ya¯na thought. We can appreciate the different functions played by these discourses on truth when we consider how they respectively function to represent the ultimate or evoke it. The discourse of ultimate truth in the phenomenological model systematically re-presents the experience of unity in meditative
 
 
 
equipoise, that is, the ultimate truth of unity, after it has been experienced. In contrast, the discourse of emptiness, the ultimate truth in the ontological model, has another function: to evoke the experiential insight by pulling the rug out on any attempt to pin down reality and determine its essence. Thus, rather than simply distinguishing between levels of description, we also need to take into account the difference between the descriptive
 
 
 
and performative functions of language. A primary concern for Mipam, and a factor that guides his attempt to integrate these two approaches to truth, is his aim to both induce authentic experience and true knowledge on the one hand, and represent reality and the experience of it on the other. These competing and complimentary objectives are a central focus around which both styles of critical reflection, and both models of the two truths, revolve.
 
  
  
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Dennett, D. (1991). Consciousness explained. Boston: Little Brown and Co. Duckworth, D. (2008). Mipam on Buddha-nature. Albany: SUNY Press. Duckworth, D. (2010a). Mipam’s middle way through Pra¯sas :gika and Yoga¯ca¯ra. Journal of Indian Philosophy. (forthcoming). Duckworth, D. (2010b). De/limiting emptiness  
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Dennett, D. (1991). [[Consciousness]] explained. [[Boston]]: Little Brown and Co. Duckworth, D. (2008). [[Mipam]] on [[Buddha-nature]]. [[Albany]]: SUNY Press. Duckworth, D. (2010a). [[Mipam’s]] [[middle way]] through Pra¯sas :gika and Yoga¯ca¯ra. [[Journal of Indian Philosophy]]. (forthcoming). Duckworth, D. (2010b). De/limiting [[emptiness]]
 
 
and the boundaries of the ineffable. Journal of Indian Philosophy, 38(1), 97–105. Merleau-Ponty, M. (1962). Phenomenology of perception. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912). (1987a) Collected works (Dilgo Khyentse ´’s expanded redaction of sde dge edition). Kathmandu:
 
  
Zhechen Monastery. Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912). (1987b). Difficult points of scriptures in general (dbu ma sogs gzhung spyi’i dka’ gnad skor gyi gsung sgros sna tshogs phyogs gcig tu bsdus pa rin po che’i za ma tog). Mipam’s Collected Works (Vol. 22, pp. 427–710). Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho,
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and the [[boundaries]] of the {{Wiki|ineffable}}. [[Journal of Indian Philosophy]], 38(1), 97–105. {{Wiki|Merleau-Ponty}}, M. (1962). {{Wiki|Phenomenology}} of [[perception]]. [[London]]: Routledge and Kegan Paul. [[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912). (1987a) Collected works ([[Dilgo Khyentse]] ´’s expanded redaction of [[sde dge]] edition). [[Kathmandu]]:
  
1846–1912). (1987c) Light of wisdom: Commentary on the Dharmadharmata ¯vibha ¯ga (chos dang chos nyid rnam ‘byed ‘grel pa ye shes snang ba). Mipam’s Collected Works (Vol. 4 (pa), pp. 609–658). Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912). (1990). Words that delight guru Mañjughos :a: Commentary on the
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[[Zhechen Monastery]]. [[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912). (1987b). Difficult points of [[scriptures]] in general ([[dbu ma]] [[sogs]] gzhung spyi’i dka’ gnad skor gyi [[gsung]] sgros [[sna tshogs]] [[phyogs]] [[gcig tu]] bsdus pa rin po che’i [[za ma tog]]). [[Mipam’s]] Collected Works (Vol. 22, pp. 427–710). [[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]],  
  
Madhyamaka ¯lam : ka ¯ra (dbu ma rgyan gyi rnam bshad ‘jam byangs bla ma dgyes pa’i zhal lung). Published in dbu ma rgyan rtsa ‘grel. Sichuan: Nationalities Press. Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912). (1993a). Commentary on the wisdom chapter of the Bodhicarya ¯vata ¯ra (spyod ‘jug sher
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1846–1912). (1987c) [[Light of wisdom]]: Commentary on the Dharmadharmata ¯[[vibha]] ¯ga ([[chos dang chos nyid rnam ‘byed]] ‘grel pa [[ye shes snang ba]]). [[Mipam’s]] Collected Works (Vol. 4 (pa), pp. 609–658). [[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912). (1990). Words that [[delight]] [[guru]] Mañjughos :a: Commentary on the  
  
‘grel ke ta ka). Sichuan: Nationalities Press. Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912). (1993b). Shedding light on thusness (gzhan gyis brtsad pa’i lan mdor bsdus pa rigs lam rab gsal de nyid snang byed). Published in spyod ‘jug sher ‘grel ke ta ka (pp. 133–463). Sichuan: Nationalities Press. Mipam (‘ju mi
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[[Madhyamaka]] ¯lam : ka ¯ra ([[dbu ma rgyan]] gyi [[rnam]] bshad ‘jam byangs [[bla ma]] dgyes pa’i zhal lung). Published in [[dbu ma rgyan]] rtsa ‘grel. [[Sichuan]]: Nationalities Press. [[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912). (1993a). Commentary on the [[wisdom]] [[chapter]] of the Bodhicarya ¯vata ¯ra ([[spyod ‘jug]] sher  
  
pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912). (1993c). Light of the Sun (brgal lan nyin byed snang ba). Published in spyod ‘jug sher ‘grel ke ta ka (pp. 465–579). Sichuan: Nationalities Press. Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912) (1997). Beacon of certainty (nges shes sgron me). Published in nges shes sgron me rtsa ‘grel (pp. 1–54). Sichuan: Nationalities Press. Siderits, M. (2003). Personal identity and Buddhist philosophy. Aldershot and Burlington: Ashgate.
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‘grel [[ke]] ta ka). [[Sichuan]]: Nationalities Press. [[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912). (1993b). Shedding {{Wiki|light}} on [[thusness]] ([[gzhan]] gyis brtsad pa’i lan mdor bsdus pa [[rigs lam rab gsal de nyid snang byed]]). Published in [[spyod ‘jug]] sher ‘grel [[ke]] ta ka (pp. 133–463). [[Sichuan]]: Nationalities Press. [[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912). (1993c). Light of the {{Wiki|Sun}} (brgal lan nyin [[byed]] [[snang ba]]). Published in [[spyod ‘jug]] sher ‘grel [[ke]] ta ka (pp. 465–579). [[Sichuan]]: Nationalities Press. [[Mipam]] (‘[[ju mi pham rgya mtsho]], 1846–1912) (1997). [[Beacon of certainty]] ([[nges shes sgron me]]). Published in [[nges shes sgron me]] rtsa ‘grel (pp. 1–54). [[Sichuan]]: Nationalities Press. [[Siderits]], M. (2003). Personal [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]] and [[Buddhist philosophy]]. Aldershot and Burlington: Ashgate.
  
  

Latest revision as of 04:56, 1 February 2020



by Douglas S. Duckworth



Abstract



Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912), an architect of the Nyingma (rnying ma) tradition of Tibet in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, articulates two distinct models of the two truths that are respectively reflected in Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra Buddhist traditions. The way he positions

these two models sheds light on how levels of description are at play in his integration of these traditions. Mipam positions one kind of two-truth model as the product of an ontological analysis while another model can be seen as resulting from a phenomenological reduction. He accommodates both models into

his systematic interpretation, and for him, each one has an important role to play in coming to understand the nature of the Buddhist truths of emptiness and Buddha-nature. Since each model reflects a different style of analysis, or a different perspective on truth, his presentation reveals how neither model

alone has the last word on the nature of what is and how it is experienced. This paper analyzes the means by which he lays out these two models of the two truths, and explores the implications of their integration in his philosophical works. A primary concern for Mipam, and a factor that guides his attempt to

integrate these two approaches to truth, is his aim to both induce authentic experience and true knowledge on the one hand, and represent reality and the experience of it on the other. These competing and complimentary objectives are a central focus around which both styles of critical reflection, and both models of the two truths, revolve.


Keywords: Madhyamaka Yogacharya Mipham Buddhism Phenomenology




Introduction


Mipam (‘ju mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912), an architect of the Nyingma (rnying ma) tradition of Tibet in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, articulates two distinct models of the two truths that are respectively reflected in Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra Buddhist traditions. The way he positions

these two models sheds light on how levels of description are at play in his integration of these traditions. Mipam positions one kind of two-truth model as the product of an ontological analysis while another model can be seen as resulting from a phenomenological reduction. He accommodates both models into

his systematic interpretation, and for him, each one has an important role to play in coming to understand the nature of the Buddhist truths of emptiness and Buddha-nature. Since each model reflects a different style of analysis, or a different perspective on truth, his presentation reveals how neither model alone has the last word on the nature of what is and how it is experienced. This paper analyzes the means by which he lays out these two models of the two truths, and explores the implications of their integration in his philosophical works.


Two Models


Mipam shows how the two truths should be understood in two distinct ways. In one model, he represents the two truths as appearance and emptiness; in his other model, he depicts the two truths as two modes of experience.1 In the first model, which I will call ‘‘the ontological model,’’ the ultimate truth of

emptiness is not qualitatively different from the relative truth of appearance. He states: The unreal appearances are called ‘relative’ and the emptiness that is the lack of intrinsic nature is called ‘ultimate.’ Without being regarded with a qualitative difference, both of these are equally applied [to all phenomena] from form to omniscience. If you know this, there is certainly nothing more important to know within the sphere of what can be known.2


1 In his extended commentary on S ´a¯ntaraks :ita’s Madhyamaka ¯lam : ka ¯ra, Mipam states as follows: ‘‘There are two ways in which the two truths are stated within the [[[Buddha’s]]] Word and s ´a¯stras: (1) from the perspective of valid cognition analyzing the ultimate abiding reality, emptiness is called ‘ultimate’ and appearance is called ‘relative,’ and (2) from the perspective of conventional valid cognition analyzing the mode of appearance, the subjects

and objects of the incontrovertible accordance between the modes of appearance and reality [i.e., authentic experience] are called ‘ultimate’ and the opposite [i.e., inauthentic experience] are called ‘relative.’’’ Mipam (1990, pp. 55–56): bka’ dang bstan bcos rnams na bden gnyis ’jog tshul gnyis su gnas te/ gnas lugs don dam la dpyod pa’i tshad ma’i dbang du byas de/ stong pa la don dam dang/ snang ba la kun rdzob ces bzhag pa dang/ snang tshul la dpyod pa

kun tu tha snyad pa’i tshad ma’i dbang du byas te/ gnas snang mthun pa mi bslu ba’i yul dang yul can la don dam dang/ ldog phyogs la kun rdzob tu ’jog pa’i tshul gnyis. See also Mipam (1993c, pp. 304, 549). 2 Mipam (1990, pp. 57–58): mi bden pa’i snang ba la kun rdzob ces gdags shing/ rang bzhin ma grub pa’i stong pa la don dam zhes btags pa/ de gnyis po la rtsis che chung med par gzugs nas rnam mkhyen gyi bar du mgo snyoms su sbyor ba ’di shes na shes bya’i

khong na de las shes rgyu gal che ba gcig kyang med par nges so.


In fact, the two truths are actually inseparable here; they are not really different, but are only conceptually distinct.3 An important feature of this model is the fact that the relationship is not hierarchical. There is no appearance-reality distinction such that ultimate truth is understood as hidden

behind the concealing veil of relative truth. In this ontological model, appearing phenomena are necessarily the relative truth in contrast to the ultimate truth, which is exclusively emptiness.4 Being empty and appearing are just two modes of what can otherwise be expressed as an inseparable unity in reality, and fully realizing this unity is the culminating insight of this model. According to Mipam, the dichotomy of appearance and emptiness unravels in

authentic experience, where they are experienced as a unity. In the other model of the two truths, which I will call the ‘‘phenomenological model,’’ authentic experience is the ultimate truth. Here, Mipam represents the experiential unity of appearance and emptiness in a way that sustains an appearance-reality distinction. Here he represents the ultimate truth as authentic experience and the relative truth as inauthentic experience. In this model,

authentic experience—or more literally, perception that accords with reality (gnas snang mthun)5—is ultimate, and perceptions that do not accord with reality are relative. In this model, Mipam states that ‘‘it is suitable to posit that all phenomena of nirva ¯n :a, which are attained through the power of appearance in accord with reality, are ultimate; and that all phenomena of sam : sa ¯ra, which arise through the power of appearance that does not accord

with reality, are relative.’’6 Thus, the two truths in the phenomenological model are such that the ultimate truth is reality experienced without duality or reification, while the relative truth is the world experienced within a distorted framework. In contrast to the ontological model of the two truths as appearance and emptiness, the dichotomy of the two truths as authentic and inauthentic experience sustains a qualitative distinction between two truths (as

disparate modes of experience). We can see that the ultimate truth here is something positive and the relative truth is something negative; they are two qualitatively different ways of experiencing reality. In contrast to the ontological model, the ultimate truth in this context is not simply emptiness(thelackoftrueexistence inthings),becausehere theexperiential presence of reality, known as it is, is the ultimate. Thus, the two truths in this

latter model are distinguished based on the way the world is present in experience (phenomenologically) rather than the way it is absent (ontologically). Here, ultimate truth is authentic experience (e.g., the unity of appearance and emptiness not bifurcated into a 3 Mipam (1997, p. 27): ‘‘From the perspective of insight’s analysis of what is authentic, both appearance and emptiness—together present, together absent—

are asserted as essentially the same, and divisible into different contradistinctions.’’ (yang dag dpyod pa’i shes rab ngor/ /snang dang stong pa ’di gnyis po/ /yod mnyam med mnyam ngo bo gcig/ /ldog pa tha dad dbye bar ’dod). 4 See, for instance, Mipam (1993a, p. 6). 5 This Tibetan word for ‘‘perception’’ (snang ba) also means ‘‘appearance.’’ ‘‘Appearance’’ connotes an objective aspect and ‘‘perception’’ connotes a subjective aspect of ‘‘perceived

appearance.’’ In attempt to convey both aspects of ‘‘perceived-appearance,’’ and translate the import of its meaning here, I use the word ‘‘experience.’’ 6 Mipam (1987b, p. 466): gnas snang mthun pa’i stobs kyis thob pa’i myang ’das kyi chos thams cad don dam yin la/ mi mthun pa’i stobs kyi byung ba’i chos thams cad kun rdzob tu bzhag rung.


dichotomous structure), whereas inauthentic experience (i.e., distorted, dualistic modes of thought and existence) is the relative truth. Moreover, the relative truth as inauthentic experience conveys the meaning of the relative (sam : vr :ti) as that which is concealing, whereas in the ontological model,

the relative truth of appearance reflects the meaning of sam : vr :ti as conventional (interchangeable with vyavaha ¯ra), as opposed to the negative connotation of something that conceals the ultimate. According to Mipam, these two models of the two truths need not conflict, but represent different contexts or perspectives for relating to the two truths:


In the great scriptures there are two ways in which the two truths are posited: (1) the term ‘ultimate’ designates reality as non-arising and the term ‘relative’ designates the conventional mode of appearance, and (2) in terms of conventional apprehension, the term ‘ultimate’ designates both the subject and object of authentic experience and the term ‘relative’ designates both the subject and object of inauthentic experience. In this way, whether in su

¯tra or mantra, the term ‘ultimate’ also applies to the subject...although the terms ‘ultimate’ and ‘relative’ are the same in these two systems, the way of presenting the meaning is different. Therefore, if one does not know how to explain having made the distinction between the viewpoints of each respective system, the hope of fathoming the great scriptures will be dashed—like a mind as narrow as the eye of a needle measuring space.7


Mipam consistently points out the importance of identifying context: particularly, whether the context is an analysis of two separate truths or represents the indivisible unity of authentic experience in which there is no distinction between two truths. Thereby, he integrates these two models into a dialectical unity.


Two Approaches


Mipam’s two models reflect two styles of analysis. The first model—in which emptiness is the ultimate truth and appearance is the relative truth—is a product of an analysis into the ontological status of appearances, whereby the nature or essence of an apparent phenomenon has been determined to be indeterminate or nonexistent. The second two-truth model is the product of another kind of inquiry, an inquiry into ‘‘the mode of appearance’’ (snang tshul), or in other

words, the process of experience itself. The means to arrive at truth in Mipam’s first model involves an analysis of a phenomenon’s ontological status in which no real essence of anything is found. What is negated by this analysis is inherent existence (svabha ¯va). That lack (or

7 Mipam (1993b, p. 304): gzhung chen po rnams su bden pa gnyis kyi ’jog tshul mi ’dra ba gnyis bshad pa’i dang po gnas tshul skye med la don dam dang/ snang tshul tha snyad la kun rdzob kyi ming gis bstan pa de yin la/ gnyis pa gnas snang mthun par gyur pa’i yul dang yul can gnyis ka la don dam dang/ mi

mthun par gyur pa’i yul dang yul can gnyis ka la kun rdzob kyi ming gis bstan pa ni tha snyad nye bar bzung ba’i dbang du yin la/ lugs ’di’i dbang du byas na mdo sngags gang yin kyang yul can la’ang don dam gyi mingjug pa dang...lugs de gnyis kun rdzob dang don dam zhes ming mthun yang don gyi rnam gzhag byed tshul mi ’dra bas so so’i lugs kyi dgongs pa phye nas ’chad ma shes na gzhung chen po rnams khab mig ltar dog pa’i blos nam mkha’ gzhal bas ’jal re zad par ’gyur ro.


emptiness) is the ultimate truth, and the analytic ‘‘object’’ of that analysis (i.e., any phenomenon) is the relative truth. Thus, this model primarily reflects the domain of deconstructive analysis, that is, a reductive analysis that seeks to pin down the essence of things, the true nature of reality. When the nature of a phenomenon is analyzed in terms of its ultimate status, how it really is, nothing whatsoever is found. This is the ultimate truth. In

contrast, the appearance of things, anything that may appear, is the relative truth. In contrast to the ontological model, Mipam’s other model of the two truths is not based on this kind of object-ifying analysis, but on a phenomenological reduction. In his phenomenological model, the ultimate truth as authentic experience is not a byproduct of a subject’s false construction of a distinct ‘‘object’’ (imposing such a duality is an unwarranted presumption of a phenomenological inquiry). Rather, according to Mipam, for authentic experience to fully unfold, as it is, the field of inquiry cannot be thematized by

dichotomous thought, and what is to be overcome is not simply the grasp of some separate svabha ¯va, but duality (i.e., the distorted structure of experience). Therefore, in contrast to the process of negating a falsely constructed svabha ¯va, deconstructing duality does not presume any object in the

mind, since an object entails a (subject-object) duality. Since the intentional structure of an analysis of objects is hinged upon a dichotomy, to expunge this structure calls for another means, a phenomenological reduction that suspends the metaphysical presumptions of dualism (and the byproducts of dualism such as idealism and materialism, mentalism and physicalism). In light of this kind of phenomenological inquiry, we can see how in the ontological model of the two truths what is negated is an object, like an inherently existing table (a table that is held to be truly real), and how the negation takes place with reference to that object. The process to arrive at ultimate truth is for a subject to negate an object. That is, reason takes an object of (deconstructive) analysis, and while doing so, presumes a subject-object structure as the starting point through which the analysis necessarily takes

place. In the case of the phenomenological two-truth model, however, unlike in the ontological model, there is technically no ‘‘object’’ of negation in the disclosure of ultimate truth. This is because such an object of analysis presumes a subject-object structure and a phenomenal ‘‘object’’ abstracted from the lived-world of experience. Thus, rather than engaging an ontological analysis to come to an understanding that phenomena are empty, this latter model

is rooted in phenomenology;8 it results from a procedure that seeks to suspend distorted presumptions to access the fundamental structure of experience, which in Mipam’s case is the unity of appearance and emptiness. 8 I am using the term ‘‘phenomenology’’ in a way that reflects important elements of Merleau-Ponty’s characterization of phenomenology in the opening page

of his preface to Phenomenology of Perception: ‘‘Phenomenology...does not expect to arrive at an understanding of man and the world from any starting point other than that of their ‘facticity’. It is a transcendental philosophy which places in abeyance the assertions arising out of the natural attitude, the better to understand them; but it is also a philosophy for which the world is always ‘already there’ before reflection begins—as ‘an inalienable presence’;

and all its efforts are concentrated upon re-achieving a direct and primitive contact with the world, and endowing that contact with a philosophical status.’’ Merleau-Ponty (1962, p. vii).


Whereas one arrives at the ultimate truth in the appearance/emptiness model of two truths when a falsely imputed svabha ¯va is negated through deconstructive analysis, the false presumption of duality cannot be negated by this kind of reason alone, but involves a restructuring, or destructuring,

of the way of relating to the lived-world, in which duality no longer structures experience and there is no longer a provisional division between two separate truths. This style of inquiry calls for a participatory process that is distinctively meditative, or in other words, it calls for a uniquely phenomenological inquiry. While in Mipam’s presentation, the absence of both svabha ¯va and duality can be understood to various degrees in study,

contemplation, and meditation, we can see how the lack of svabha ¯va is derived from analytic meditation (dpyad sgom), whereas the lack of duality is rooted in a distinctive form of resting meditation (‘jog sgom). Analytic meditation involves object-oriented reasoning and analysis. In contrast, resting meditation is a contemplative practice that carries out focused attention on an object or sustained awareness without an object. Significantly, for

Buddhists like Mipam, meditating on an object (like an image, a sound, or the sensation of one’s breath) may lead topeaceful states andstability ofattention(ins ´amatha),yetitisonly within the unthematized space of objectless awareness where the nature of perception can be completely seen (in vipas ´yana ¯). Such object-less awareness is not intentional in an ordinary sense and is devoid of representational thought. Unlike the contentless ultimate of

the lack of svabha ¯va (in the sense of an emptyor null-set),the phenomenological ultimate is content-less only in the sense that there is no representational content. Accessing this content calls for a participatory orientation with and in the life-world, a radical shift from ordinary modes of relating to the world. Thus, rather than simply an abstract truth, the phenomenological ultimate represents truth that must be embodied—or rather,

enminded. For this reason, coming to know it entails more than simply unmasking the agents of inherent existence, but calls for something akin to closing the curtains on the ‘‘Cartesian theatre.’’9


Conclusion


We have seen in these two models of truth how the way emptiness (of svabha ¯va) is understood analytically contrasts with the way emptiness (of duality) must be experienced phenomenologically. These two modes of analysis, ontological and phenomenological, undoubtedly reflect two main schools of Maha¯ya¯na

thought, Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra. According to Mipam, the culminating insight of Madhyamaka is perfectly compatible with the Yoga¯ca¯ra insight of nonduality. Mipam’s synthesizes Yoga¯ca¯ra and Madhyamaka in a way that each supplements the other. In Yoga¯ca¯ra, negating svabha ¯va can be seen as going too far, particularly if the facticity of authentic experience is negated by a reductive, object-ifying analysis. However, for a Madhyamaka approach,

negating duality has not necessarily gone 9 I borrow this apt metaphor from Daniel Dennett. See, for instance, Dennett (1991, p. 107).


far enough. In Madhyamaka, one must negate the realism of svabha ¯va globally, so even an appeal to a nondual experience is subject to its uncompromising critique. The dialectic interplay between these two models steers the middle way for Mipam. Thus, neither model of the two truths is complete on its own;

or rather, each model entails the other. The ontological model by itself, with solely an absence as the ultimate truth that ignores the phenomenological experience of unity, is simply an abstraction. Emptiness, understood as solely an absence, reflects a description divorced from the event of understanding; on its own it represents a sterile view of metaphysical absence, isolated from the dynamic reality of a lived-world. In other words, it is a view of

nihilism. Yet the phenomenological model alone is not sufficient either. Its appeal to the ultimate truth of an experiential unity that dispenses with analysis and ontological critique tends toward reification. Without being curtailed by the negative dialectic of emptiness, the ultimate truth of authentic experience easily congeals into a naı ¨ve, mystical realism, otherwise known as ‘‘the extreme of eternalism.’’ It is in and through both models of the two truths through which Mipam forges his ‘‘middle way’’ view. We can see an extreme of eternalism at play when the two models of truth get conflated and the boundaries of phenomenology stray into the realm of ontological claims. For instance, in the case of the Yoga¯ca¯ra idealism represented in the philosophical system known in Tibet as ‘‘Mind-Only’’: To claim that the mind alone is (ontologically) real in the wake of a phenomenological discovery that

the mind is constitutive of any experience of phenomena is to confuse levels of discourse; it is akin to making a category mistake. Yet the central insight of ‘‘Mind-Only,’’ or rather, Yoga¯ca¯ra—that mind is integral to all experience—when not ontologized is essential to a proper understanding of Madhyamaka in Mipam’s view.10


10 Mipam states as follows in his commentary on the Dharmadharmata ¯vibha ¯ga: ‘‘When the appearance of apprehended [[[objects]]] is established to not have an essence that is separate from the apprehending [[[subject]]], the appearance of the apprehending subject is also established as nonexistent. If [one wonders] why, it is because the apprehending [[[subject]]] is established in dependence upon the apprehended [[[object]]]; it is never established on its own. In this way,

if proponents of Mind-Only have to realize the lack of all duality, the awareness free from subject and object, naturally luminous and clear, inexpressible and nondistinct from the nature of the thoroughly established nature (yongs grub, parinis :panna) free from the twofold self, then it is needless to mention that the proponents of Madhyamaka realize this!...Merely the slight philosophical assertion that posits the essence of ineffable cognition as truly established remains to be negated; authentic proponents of Madhyamaka assert the unity of the primordially pure luminous clarity of one’s mind and the

emptiness of that nondual cognition. Therefore, other than the distinction of whether this slight fixation is eliminated or not, Madhyamaka and Mind-Only are mostly the same in terms of the practices of meditative equipoise and postmeditation.’’ Mipam (1987C, pp. 626.2–627.2): de ltar gzung bar snang ba de ni rang gi ngo bos ’dzin pa las gzhan du med par grub na/ ’dzin par snang ba de yang med par grub bo/ /de ci’i phyir na ’dzin pa ni gzung ba la ltos te grub kyi yan gar du nam yang mi grub po/ de ltar na gzung ba dang ’dzin pa gnyis kyi rnam pa thams cad dang bral te yul dang yul can med pa’i rig pa rang bzhin gyis ’od gsal ba brjod du med pa tsam ni bdag gnyis kyis stong pa’i yongs grub de bzhin nyid dang tha mi dad pa de ni sems tsam pas kyang rtogs dgos na dbu ma pas lta ci smos so...brjod med kyi shes pa de yi ngo bo la bden grub du ’jog tshul gyi grub mthaphra mo tsam zhig lhag mar lus pa de nyid rigs pas sun phyungs te gzung ’dzin med pa’i shes pa nyid kyang bden pa med pa’i stong pa dang zung du zhugs pa’i rang sems gdod nas dag pa’i ’od gsal nyid du ’dod na dbu ma yang dag pa yin te/ des na theg chen dbu sems ’di gnyis zhen pa’i gnad phra mo zhig chod ma chod kyi khyad par las/ mnyam rjes kyi nyams len phyogsdra ba lta bur ’ong bas. See also Duckworth (2008, pp. 46–48). Two Models of the Two Truths


Monological interpretations of the two truths, fed by the polemic rhetoric between Yoga¯ca¯ra and Madhyamaka, only lend credibility to one model or the other.11 In the ontological model, if it is the case that ‘‘the ultimate truth is that there is no ultimate truth,’’ as Mark Siderits has said,12 then we

can see that there is only one truth, the relative (or conventional) truth. In the phenomenological model, too, there is only one truth—yet in this case, the one truth is not the relative, but the ultimate truth—because inauthentic modes of being are unreal in contrast to the reality of authentic experience. In contrast to these monological interpretations of the two truths, in Mipam’s dialectical interpretation neither one of the two-truth models is held above

the other. Mipam does not hold the ontological model of the two truths, with emptiness as the ultimate truth, in a privileged place. Nor does he privilege the phenomenological model of authentic/inauthentic experience. Each model is simply one account of knowledge. Ontology is not primary because emptiness alone, as a lack of true existence, is an abstraction from the reality of unity, empty appearance. This unity must be experienced phenomenologically, which

is the meaning of authentic experience. Given this to be the case, we may be led to believe that for Mipam, phenomenology trumps ontology. Yet we can see that phenomenology is not the primary foundation of knowledge for him, either, as it appears to be the case for the proponents of Yoga¯ca¯ra idealism represented in the philosophical system called ‘‘Mind-Only.’’ Rather, for Mipam, the phenomenological model is no more legitimate than the ontological one,

but represents simply another form of inquiry and another account of truth. Phenomenology is not primary for him because he subjects the insights of phenomenology to ontological critiques.13 The ultimate of authentic experience in the phenomenological model is, from the aspect of appearance, the relative truth in the ontological model; when analyzed in terms of its true essence, authentic experience, like everything else, lacks true existence and

so is empty. On the other hand, emptiness—simply the lack of true existence that is the ultimate of the ontological model—is merely the relative truth in the phenomenological model, because, as a product of abstract, distorted thought, it is unreal, inauthentic experience. In this way, Mipam synthesizes these two models of truth as a dialectical unity. He forges this ‘‘middle way’’ of (nonconceptual) unity as his Nyingma view.14


11 For instance, we can see how the ontological model alone is prominent in the Geluk (dge lugs) school following after Tsongkhapa (tsong kha pa blo bzang grags pa, 1357–1419) and only the phenomenological model is dominant in the Jonang (jo nang) school stemming from Do ¨lpopa (dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan, 1292–1361). 12 Siderits (2003, p. 133). 13 For instance, Mipam states in his commentary on the Madhyamaka ¯lam : ka ¯ra, ‘‘The latter ultimate

[[[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] experience] also is empty of essence.’’ Mipam (1990, p. 56): phyi ma’i don dam yin kyang ngo bo stong pa yin la. 14 For more on Mipam’s synthesis of (Pra¯sas :gika-)Madhyamaka and Yoga¯ca¯ra, see Duckworth, ‘‘Mipam’s Middle Way Through Pra¯sas :gika and Yoga¯ca¯ra’’ (2010a). For the way that Mipam forges his distinctively Nyingma view of emptiness (as nonconceptual unity) in contrast to the way that emptiness is represented in the Jonang and Geluk traditions, see Duckworth, ‘‘De/Limiting Emptiness and the Boundaries of the Ineffable’’ (2010b).


We have seen how Mipam lays out two models of the two truths based on different ways to arrive at the ultimate truth in two prominent schools of Maha¯ya¯na thought. We can appreciate the different functions played by these discourses on truth when we consider how they respectively function to represent the ultimate or evoke it. The discourse of ultimate truth in the phenomenological model systematically re-presents the experience of unity in meditative equipoise, that is, the ultimate truth of unity, after it has been experienced. In contrast, the discourse of emptiness, the ultimate truth in the ontological model, has another function: to evoke the experiential insight by pulling the rug out on any attempt to pin down reality and determine its essence. Thus, rather than simply distinguishing between levels of description, we also need to take into account the difference between the descriptive

and performative functions of language. A primary concern for Mipam, and a factor that guides his attempt to integrate these two approaches to truth, is his aim to both induce authentic experience and true knowledge on the one hand, and represent reality and the experience of it on the other. These competing and complimentary objectives are a central focus around which both styles of critical reflection, and both models of the two truths, revolve.


References


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