Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/57123
Title: To be Free from Suffering: Individual Consciousness, Societal Revolutions and the Power of Buddhism
Contributor(s): Dahanayake, Nishanathe (author); Lynch, Anthony  (supervisor)orcid ; McLean, Lesley  (supervisor)orcid 
Conferred Date: 2020-10-14
Copyright Date: 2020-02
Thesis Restriction Date until: 2022-10-14
Handle Link: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/57123
Related DOI: 10.1111/phin.12147
10.1111/phin.12176
Abstract: 

This dissertation proposes to clear the path for an activism aimed at alleviating suffering in the world by addressing and overcoming certain debilitating philosophical confusions that cloud our understanding of suffering, its causes and remedies, and that get in the way of developing a genuinely practical deliberative agency aimed at suffering alleviation. It centres on the question and challenges of non-theistic individualistic solutions to sufferings, with a focus on early Buddhism of the Pāli Canon, the earliest source for the Buddha’s teaching, and elaborations and elucidation of Buddhism by contemporary scholars. It argues that a fundamentally non-individualist, societal/structural, approach to alleviating suffering - as, paradigmatically, proposed in the Marxist tradition - is, by itself and removed from individualistic approaches, doomed to failure, though, in conjunction with a properly individualist understanding of suffering, it offers much to genuinely practical deliberation concerned with suffering alleviation.

Publication Type: Thesis Doctoral
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020: 500321 Social and political philosophy
500405 Religion, society and culture
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020: 130304 Social ethics
280119 Expanding knowledge in philosophy and religious studies
HERDC Category Description: T2 Thesis - Doctorate by Research
Description: Please contact rune@une.edu.au if you require access to this thesis for the purpose of research or study.
Appears in Collections:School of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Thesis Doctoral

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