A Mirror Is for Reflection
Understanding Buddhist Ethics
Edited by Jake H. Davis and Foreword by Owen Flanagan
Table of Contents
Foreword, Owen Flanagan
Introduction, Jake H. Davis
Part One: Buddhist Ethics and Western Categories
1:"It's ethics, Jim, but not as we know it": Reflections on the Absence of Moral Philosophy in Buddhism, Damien Keown
2:The Nature of a Buddhist Path, Bronwyn Finnigan
3:Buddhist Moral Thought and Western Moral Philosophy, Christopher W. Gowans
Part Two: Constructing Buddhist Ethics
4:Zen Buddhism and the Space of Ethics, Jin Y. Park
5:Buddhist Ethics: A Perspective, Graham Priest
6:Breaking Good: Moral Agency, Neuroethics, and the Spontaneity of Compassion, Christian Coseru
Part Three: Karma and Rebirth
7:Modern and Traditional Understandings of Karma, Charles Goodman
8:Buddhism without Reincarnation? Examining the Prospects of a "Naturalized" Buddhism, Jan Westerhoff
9:The Problems and Promise of Karma from an Engaged Buddhist Perspective, Sallie B. King
Part Four: Mindfulness, Memory, and Virtue
10:Ethical Reading and the Ethics of Forgetting and Remembering, Sara McClintock
11:Mindfulness and Ethics: Attention, Virtue, and Perfection, Jay L. Garfield
12:"When You Know for Yourselves": Mindfulness, Wisdom, and the Qualities of Heart, Jake H. Davis
Part Five: Intention and Action
13:The Dynamics of Intention, Freedom, and Habituation According to Vasubandhu's Abhidharmakosabhasya, Karin Meyers
14:What Do Buddhists Think about Free Will?, Riccardo Repetti
15:Buddhist Reductionist Action Theory, Mark Siderits
Part Six: Politics, Anger, and Equanimity
16:The Inherent Dignity of Empty Persons, Christopher Kelley
17:Ethics Without Justice: Eliminating The Roots Of Resentment, Amber Carpenter
18:Equanimity in Relationship: Responding to Moral Ugliness, Emily McRae
Index