Candrakīrti
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Candrakīrti (600–c. 650), (Devanagari: चन्द्रकीर्ति, Tib. Dawa Drakpa) was abbot of Nalanda University and a disciple of Nāgārjuna and a commentator on his works. Candrakīrti was the most famous member of what the Tibetans came to call the Prasaṅgika school of Madhyamaka. Chandrakirti [zla ba grags pa] http://www.thdl.org/collections/langling/ewts/ewts.php?m=intro (Wylie transliterized) Candrakirti (Sanskrit) This 7th century Indian scholar of the Madhyamaka school of thought, defended Buddhapalita against Bhavaviveka and the consequent strong criticism of the latter’s acceptance of autonomous syllogism. As a result of Candrakīrti's interpretation of Nagarjuna's view, a new school of Madhyamaka known as Prasangika (‘Consequentialist’). Chandrakirti’s works include the Prasannapada - a Sanskrit term, meaning Clear Words' - the highly acclaimed commentary on Nagarjuna’s Mulamadhyamakakarika and the Madhyamakavatara (his supplement to Nagarjuna’s text) and its auto-commentary. The Madhyamakavatara is used as the main sourcebook by most of the Tibetan monastic colleges in their studies of 'emptiness' (Sanskrit: shunyata) and the philosophy of the Madhyamaka school. Fenner (1983: p.251) states that:
The Tibetan translation of Charyapada provided the name of its compiler as Munidatta, that its Sanskrit commentary is Charyageetikoshavritti, and that its Tibetan 'translator' (Tibetan: Lotsawa) was Chandrakirti.
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MADHYAMIKA-AVATARA See alsoNotes
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