[MD] a mirage

MarshaV valkyr at att.net
Tue Feb 19 21:59:49 PST 2013


x-man,

Since there is no question to be accused of avoiding, let me remind you everything is an analogy.  If you expect _real_ and _certainty_ from simile and metaphor, you have my sympathy.
 
 
Marsha 




On Feb 19, 2013, at 9:58 PM, X Acto <xacto at rocketmail.com> wrote:

> 
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> ________________________________
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> [But knowing real water causes one to be decieved in the first place]
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> "The analogy must be spelled out with care to avoid the extreme of nihilism." 
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> We must first be aware what the deception is based on, a real verifyable experience.
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> The simile is inaccurate and misleading.
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> real mirage
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> as opposed to a fake mirage?
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> 
> ..Mirages for Mådhyamikas 
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> "Among the many similes for conventional truth that litter Madhyamaka texts, the most fruitful is that of the mirage. Conventional truth is false, Candrakirti tells us, because it is deceptive.  Candrakirti spells this out in terms of a mirage. A mirage appears to be water, but is in fact empty of water—it is deceptive, and in that sense, a false appearance. On the other hand, a mirage is not nothing: it is a real mirage, just not real water. 
> 
 
 




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