Dr. Douglas Duckworth - "Buddha-Nature in Tibet: Transformations of the Ground" by Rangjung Yeshe Institute published on 2016-10-25T04:04:18Z Douglas Duckworth earned a PhD in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism from the University of Virginia in 2005. Currently he holds a position as Associate Professor of Religion at Temple University. This talk will address syntheses forged in Tibet among the doctrines of Madhyamaka, Yogācāra, and buddha-nature (tathāgatagarbha). Buddha-nature is a distinctively Mahāyāna Buddhist doctrine, taking a place along side of the Yogācāra doctrine of the basic consciousness (ālayavijñāna) and the universal emptiness (śūnyatā) of Madhyamaka. In Tibet we see buddha-nature converge with and transform these central Mahāyāna doctrines. Paired with buddha-nature, the doctrine of emptiness in Madhyamaka pivots from a “self-empty” lack of intrinsic nature to an “other-empty,” pure ground that remains. In narratives of disclosure characteristic of the doctrine of buddha-nature, we see parallel shifts in the foundations of Yogācāra, as grounds of distortion like the basic consciousness, the dependent nature, and self-awareness are reinscribed into a causal story that takes place within a pure, gnostic ground. Comment by Brigid Ryan-Hildeburn Congratulations Doug! 2016-11-03T16:16:42Z