ABSTRACT

The notion of 'view' or 'opinion' (ditthi) as an obstacle to 'seeing things as they are' is a central concept in Buddhist thought. This book considers the two ways in which the notion of views are usually understood. Are we to understand right-view as a correction of wrong-views (the opposition understanding) or is the aim of the Buddhist path the overcoming of all views, even right-view (the no-views understanding)? The author argues that neither approach is correct. Instead he suggests that the early texts do not understand right-view as a correction of wrong-view, but as a detached order of seeing, completely different from the attitude of holding to any view, wrong or right.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|27 pages

The Content of Wrong-View

chapter 2|37 pages

The Content of Right-View

chapter 3|14 pages

The Way Wrong-View Functions

chapter 4|20 pages

The Way Right-View Functions

chapter 5|33 pages

The Transcendence of Views

chapter 6|12 pages

Views and Non-attachment

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion