Dear colleagues,
It is our great pleasure to announce the publication of the following two 
volumes of homage to our friend and colleague the late, and much missed, Helmut 
Krasser (1956-2014) :

Vincent Eltschinger, Jowita Kramer, Parimal Patil, Chizuko Yoshimizu (eds.): 
Burlesque of the Philosophers. Indian and Buddhist Studies in Memory of Helmut 
Krasser, 2 vols., 918 pp., Hamburg, Numata Center for Buddhist Studies (Hamburg 
Buddhist Studies 19).

For details, see the forthcoming announcement at:
https://www.buddhismuskunde.uni-hamburg.de/en/publikationen/hamburg-buddhist-studies.html


Contents

Part I

Forewordxiii

Michael Zimmermann / Steffen Döll

Preface and Acknowledgments xv

Helmut Krasser xvii

Vincent Eltschinger

Publications of Helmut Krasser xxxv

A study on an unknown and unusual commentary on the Viniścayasaṃgrahaṇī, by 
Jinkyoung Choi, p. 1

A Buddhist refutation of the existence of a creator God: Śubhagupta’s 
Īśvarabhaṅgakārikā, by Vincent Eltschinger & Isabelle Ratié, p. 29

Reconsidering the phrase na kvacit pratiṣṭhitaṃ cittam utpādayitavyam in the 
Vajracchedikā, with special reference to the Chinese translations, by Toru 
Funayama, p. 73

Anthologizing the Great Way: Remarks on the Sūtrasamuccaya attributed to 
Nāgārjuna and its congeners, by Paul Harrison, p. 89

One or many? The commentaries on the Bhadracaryāpraṇidhāna, by Jens-Uwe 
Hartmann, p. 129

Who is the proponent of Candrakīrti portrayed by Phya pa Chos kyi seng ge in 
the sNying po?, by Pascale Hugon, p. 153

A further folio from Śākyabuddhi’s Pramāṇavārttikaṭīkā ad II.119–135, Göttingen 
Collection Xc 14/57, by Kazuo Kano, p. 201

Three controversies concerning aggregation (saṃghāta/samūha) in the 
Abhidharmakośabhāṣya, by Kyo Kano, p. 231

Is God just like a potter? The logical fallacy viśeṣaviruddhatva in a proof for 
the existence of God, by Kei Kataoka, p. 271

The Dharmakīrtian path to liberation, by Shoryu Katsura, p. 291

Worms in Saddharmasmṛtyupasthānasūtra, by Robert Kritzer, p. 309

Notes on Jñānaśrīmitra’s Bhedābhedaparīkṣā, by Taiken Kyuma, p. 349

Mandalas intertwined: Why minor goddesses in the Tabo Main Temple matter, by 
Christian Luczanits, p. 363

’Gos Lo tsā ba gZhon nu dpal’s momentariness of unconditioned buddhahood, by 
Klaus-Dieter Mathes, p. 395

Perceived but not known: gṛhītagrahaṇa and Prajñākaragupta’s criticism of 
Dharmottara, by Patrick McAllister, p. 411

Prajñākaragupta on sattvam upalabdhir eva or an Indian version of “esse est 
percipi” , by Shinya Moriyama, p. 447

Part II

A fragmentary manuscript of Dharmottara’s Kṣaṇabhaṅgasiddhi, by Yasutaka 
Muroya, p. 471

An attempt to reconstruct the Sanskrit of the verses in the Nyāyamukha’s jāti 
section, by Motoi Ono, p. 505

On the history of branding (tāpa) in the tradition of Pāñcarātra, by Marion 
Rastelli, p. 529

Apology for omniscience: An eighth-century demonstration of the Buddha’s 
sarvajñatva Margherita, by Serena Saccone, p. 571

On the problem of identity between vināśa and bhāva in the Buddhist theory of 
momentariness: The view of Dharmottara and Prajñākaragupta, by Masamichi Sakai

Materials for the study of the Pudgalavāda and its 625 criticism: Critical 
edition and English translation of the Vātsīputrīyaparikalpitātmaparīkṣā, by 
Francesco Sferra, p. 595

Digesting Dharmakīrti: Two notes, by Péter-Dániel Szántó, p. 679

Dignāga and Kumārila on apoha and the hierarchy of concepts, by John Taber, p. 
693

Chinese whispers? Transmitting, transferring and translating Buddhist 
literature, by Helmut Tauscher, p. 719

Beauty, by Raffaele Torella, p. 755

Inscription 2 in the entrance area of the Lha khang chen mo at ’Khor chags 
Monastery: Edition and annotated translation, by Kurt Tropper, p. 781

Bhāviveka, Dharmapāla and Dharmakīrti and their criticism of a Sāṅkhya theory, 
by Toshikazu Watanabe, p. 797

Reconsidering the characterization of the Bhagavant Buddha as pramāṇabhūta by 
Dignāga in the ārambhaśloka of his Pramāṇasamuccaya: An overweening 
Indologist’s attempt to intrude into hereditary Buddhological territory, by 
Albrecht Wezler † , p. 819

The negation of arising from other in the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā and beyond, by 
Chizuko Yoshimizu, p. 861

Differences in the exegetic attitude to scriptures between Mīmāṃsā and Vedānta, 
by Kiyotaka Yoshimizu, p. 895


Helmut Krasser, despite tragically passing away much too early in 2014, left 
his mark on more than one generation of scholars of Indian and Buddhist 
philosophy. An eminent specialist on the so-called “logico-epistemological 
tradition,” he devoted his Viennese dissertation and early work to the Buddhist 
philosopher Dharmottara, before broadening the scope of his research to Dignāga 
and Dharmakīrti, the tradition’s historical founders. In particular, he 
examined their ideas on the relationship between logic and soteriology. He also 
considered the very nature of their texts. Should they be understood as 
authored philosophical works? Or rather as edited lecture notes of students? 
Director from 2007 to 2014 of the Institute for the Cultural and Intellectual 
History of Asia at the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Helmut Krasser left behind 
a multi-faceted body of work, including editions of ancient Sanskrit 
manuscripts today found in the Tibetan Autonomous Region that had never before 
been published. This commemorative volume with more than thirty contributions 
not only reflects the multiplicity of his interests, it is also evidence of the 
deep impression he left on all those who met him. It is a document to the 
faithful friendship and highest respect still held by his friends and 
colleagues almost ten years after his death.

Vincent Eltschinger, and the editors



Vincent Eltschinger
Directeur d'études
École Pratique des Hautes Études, Section des sciences religieuses
Korrespondierendes Mitglied der ÖAW
Patios Saint-Jacques, 4-14 rue Ferrus - 75014 Paris
[email protected]
0033 1 56 61 17 34 / 0033 7 85 86 84 05
_______________________________________________
INDOLOGY mailing list
[email protected]
https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology

Reply via email to