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      The Splendour of Negation: R. S. Bhatnagar Revisited with a Buddhist Tinge

      research-article
      Journal of Indian Council of Philosophical Research
      Springer India
      Bhatnagar, Buddhism, Death, Dialectics, Mādhyamika, Negation

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          Abstract

          Negation has occupied a unique place in the history of ideas. Negation as opposed to truth-conditional affirmation has been very much present in Indian and Western thought from very early times. R. S. Bhatnagar of happy memory (1933–2019) in his “Many Splendoured Negation” (Bhatnagar in J Indian Counc Philos Res XXII(3):83–906, 2006) had shown many a facet that could be construed in “negation”. This paper is an attempt to revisit the notion of negation that R. S. Bhatnagar brought to light and to further the germane thought that he had outlined in his concise exposé. Though Bhatnagar had stated that there could be negative and positive functions of negations, a vigilant reading of his article shows that the primary import of Bhatnagar is to examine the positive function of negation. According to R. S. Bhatnagar, even death, which could be the negative in its most feared form, the reality of which, has the positive effect on the soul force in its commitment to live well and die well. R. S. Bhatnagar’s engagement with negation is not complete unless one takes into consideration “negation” as an integral part of philosophizing in India, whether it is the Buddhist tradition or any other tradition. One encounters the philosophical “exercise” on negation enormously in Buddhist thought. The first part of the paper is a brief discussion on the views of Bhatnagar in his essay mentioned with the author’s considerable add-on, while the second part brings home the Buddhist facet and paradigm of negation, the missing link in Bhatnagar. The third part of the paper is an unveilment of the cogitation of R. S. Bhatnagar on “death” in terms of negation.

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          Most cited references28

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              Finitude

              J. Bishop (2015)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Sebastian@iitb.ac.in
                Journal
                J. Indian Counc. Philos. Res.
                Journal of Indian Council of Philosophical Research
                Springer India (New Delhi )
                0970-7794
                2363-9962
                25 July 2020
                : 1-18
                Affiliations
                GRID grid.417971.d, ISNI 0000 0001 2198 7527, Philosophy Group, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, , Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, ; Mumbai, 400076 India
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8916-6028
                Article
                214
                10.1007/s40961-020-00214-6
                7382565
                76d300ae-c08c-4162-912b-d292d03765c5
                © ICPR 2020

                This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.

                History
                : 4 April 2019
                : 24 April 2020
                : 13 July 2020
                Categories
                Article

                bhatnagar,buddhism,death,dialectics,mādhyamika,negation
                bhatnagar, buddhism, death, dialectics, mādhyamika, negation

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