Nonimplicative negation: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
[[Category:Pramana]] | [[Category:Pramana]] | ||
[[Category: Madhyamika]] | |||
[[Category:Philosophical Tenets]] | [[Category:Philosophical Tenets]] |
Revision as of 10:22, 9 July 2017
Nonimplicative negation (Skt. prasajyapratiṣedha or niṣedha; Tib. མེད་དགག་; Wyl. med dgag) is a negation of existence, as in the statement "there is no cat", and is contrasted with an implicative negation, as in the statement "that is not a cat" which implies the presence of something other than a cat.
Its definition is: "realizing through mere preclusion by eliminating the object of negation using the conceptual mind" (རྟོག་བློས་དགག་བྱ་སྒྲུབ་པ་རྣམ་པར་བཅད་ནས་རྣམ་བཅད་ཙམ་དུ་རྟོགས་པར་བྱ་བ་, rtog blos dgag bya sgrub pa rnam par bcad nas rnam bcad tsam du rtogs par bya ba).
Alternative Translations
- Absolute negation
- External negation (Samten & Garfield)
- Negation of existence
- Simple negation
- Unqualified negation (LCN)
- Verbally bound negation