Book contents
- Schopenhauer’s The World as Will and Representation
- Cambridge Critical Guides
- Schopenhauer’s The World as Will and Representation
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Texts, Translations, and Abbreviations
- Introduction: Schopenhauer in the Time of Pandemic
- Chapter 1 Different Kinds of Willing in Schopenhauer
- Chapter 2 Resignation
- Chapter 3 Appreciating Nature Aesthetically in The World as Will and Representation: Between Kant and Hegel
- Chapter 4 The Hour of Consecration: Inspiration and Cognition in Schopenhauer’s Genius
- Chapter 5 Experiencing Character as a Key for a Present-Day Interpretation of Schopenhauer
- Chapter 6 Schopenhauer in Dialogue with Fichte and Schelling: Schopenhauer’s Critique of Moral Fatalism and His Turn to Freedom from Willing
- Chapter 7 Schopenhauer’s Philosophy of Religion: (Hopeless) Romanticism?
- Chapter 8 Maja and Nieban in The World as Will and Representation
- Chapter 9 Schopenhauer, Universal Guilt, and Asceticism as the Expression of Universal Compassion
- Chapter 10 Seeing Things: Schopenhauer’s Kant Critique and Direct Realism
- Chapter 11 The Sciences in The World as Will and Representation
- Chapter 12 Pushing Back: Reading The World as Will and Representation as a Woman
- References
- Index
- Cambridge Critical Guides
Chapter 8 - Maja and Nieban in The World as Will and Representation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 December 2022
- Schopenhauer’s The World as Will and Representation
- Cambridge Critical Guides
- Schopenhauer’s The World as Will and Representation
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Texts, Translations, and Abbreviations
- Introduction: Schopenhauer in the Time of Pandemic
- Chapter 1 Different Kinds of Willing in Schopenhauer
- Chapter 2 Resignation
- Chapter 3 Appreciating Nature Aesthetically in The World as Will and Representation: Between Kant and Hegel
- Chapter 4 The Hour of Consecration: Inspiration and Cognition in Schopenhauer’s Genius
- Chapter 5 Experiencing Character as a Key for a Present-Day Interpretation of Schopenhauer
- Chapter 6 Schopenhauer in Dialogue with Fichte and Schelling: Schopenhauer’s Critique of Moral Fatalism and His Turn to Freedom from Willing
- Chapter 7 Schopenhauer’s Philosophy of Religion: (Hopeless) Romanticism?
- Chapter 8 Maja and Nieban in The World as Will and Representation
- Chapter 9 Schopenhauer, Universal Guilt, and Asceticism as the Expression of Universal Compassion
- Chapter 10 Seeing Things: Schopenhauer’s Kant Critique and Direct Realism
- Chapter 11 The Sciences in The World as Will and Representation
- Chapter 12 Pushing Back: Reading The World as Will and Representation as a Woman
- References
- Index
- Cambridge Critical Guides
Summary
Stephan Atzert looks at the Asian traditions from which Schopenhauer drew two of his central ideas – Nieban (Nirvana) and Maja (Maya). Although Schopenhauer connected these ideas systematically in his philosophy, the concepts themselves emerge from quite distinct traditions: Maya is central to the Vendanta schools in India, while Nirvana is Buddhist. The two traditions use the concepts almost independently, though Schopenhauer blends them into a whole. Schopenhauer's source for his concept of Maja is the Oupnek'hat, which presents a quite specific interpretation of Maya as not only a passive source of delusion, but an active life force. Schopenhauer's access to the Buddhist conception of Nieban was also circuitous, and he doesn't use the term (Nirvana) with anything like the frequency that he uses Maya; and when he does use it, he sometimes treats it as an unhelpful euphemism for “nothingness.” Aztert argues that this philosophical ontologization of Nieban is misleading. Schopenhauer's sources in fact reject the identification of Nieban with nothingness as well as its identification with divinity (Brahmen). What is most basic both to his sources and to Schopenhauer's own account is Nirvana as release from suffering.
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- Information
- Schopenhauer's 'The World as Will and Representation'A Critical Guide, pp. 160 - 178Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022