Yamaka

Description

The Yamaka consists of ten chapters, each dealing with a particular topic of Buddhist doctrine: roots (mula), aggregates, elements (dhatu), and so on.[1] Its title ('pairs') stems from its treatment of topics by way of a thesis and antithesis: Is all X Y? Does this imply that all Y is X?

The text's commentary treats the ten chapter headings as a mātikā, though no explicit matrix is presented in the text.[1]. A. K. Warder suggested that the text was a late addition to the Abhidhamma Pitaka, and represented an advanced text in applied logic meant to refine the knowledge of scholars already familiar with the Thervada abhidhamma system. In many places, the text considers the question of where and under what circumstances a being will be reborn given certain circumstances and levels of understanding.[1]

gollark: Solution: C++, but it's actually lisp.
gollark: I am not convinced that glvalue lambda expressions or whatever accursion C++ contains is worth it.
gollark: There's nothing wrong with a language being easier as long as you don't lose out on important things due to it.
gollark: What does the horrendous complexity actually *get* you over Rust?
gollark: Why learn modern C++ when you could just not do that?

References

  1. Norman, Kenneth Roy (1983). Pali Literature. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz. pp. 105–06. ISBN 3-447-02285-X.
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