Location: Seminar Room 3 (room 112), Alan Walters Building, University of Birmingham
UPDATE: A recording of this lecture is now available.
Monima Chadha (University of Oxford) will deliver our first public lecture. Details are below, and please click to register at our eventbrite page.
Title: The Soundness of the Buddhist Project
Time: 4pm, 27th March 2025
Location: Seminar Room 3 (room 112), Alan Walters Building, University of Birmingham.
Abstract:
Christine Korsgaard famously argued that even if we accept the metaphysical theory that there are no selves or persons, the practical standpoint requires us to think of ourselves as unified over time. It is the ability to choose and deliberate, make plans and act that requires me to construct an identity for myself. This practical requirement is antithetical to the Buddhist no-self view. Buddhists argue that it is primarily ignorance about our identity that is responsible for suffering, and that this ignorance consists not just in having a false belief in a metaphysical self but also our ordinary self-conception as being unified across time: our ‘I’-sense, so to say. Buddhists claim that this ‘I’-sense is the real culprit and the source of existential suffering. The Buddhist project of eliminating, or at least reducing, suffering is concerned with arguments to show that there is no metaphysical self and that 'I'-sense is an illusion that we must get rid of. If Korsgaard is right, it seems that the Buddhist project is in deep trouble. I shall argue that Korsgaard's requirement is too strong. The Buddhist project is sound and Buddhists at all stages of their practice can continue to choose and deliberate, make plans and act.
All are welcome!
Department of Philosophy
ERI Building
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham B15 2TT
United Kingdom