Partless particle: Difference between revisions
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'''Partless particle''' ([[Wyl.]] ''rdul phran cha med'') - the indivisible particle of matter asserted by the [[Vaibhashika]] and [[Sautrantika]] schools. ''See also'' [[indivisible moment of consciousness]]. | '''Partless particle''' (Tib. dultren chamé; [[Wyl.]] ''rdul phran cha med'') - the indivisible particle of matter asserted by the [[Vaibhashika]] and [[Sautrantika]] schools. ''See also'' [[indivisible moment of consciousness]]. | ||
==Refutation== | ==Refutation== |
Revision as of 15:21, 20 July 2008
Partless particle (Tib. dultren chamé; Wyl. rdul phran cha med) - the indivisible particle of matter asserted by the Vaibhashika and Sautrantika schools. See also indivisible moment of consciousness.
Refutation
The partless particle is refuted by the Chittamatra school using the logic expressed in this famous verse from Vasubandhu's Twenty Verses:
- When six other particles are joined to it,
- The subtle particle will have six parts.
- If the six all simply converge together,
- Then even compounds will be infinitesimal.