Manheim, J.: Difference between revisions
Manheim, J.
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|PersonType=Authors of English Works; Translators | |PersonType=Authors of English Works; Translators | ||
|bio=Before starting his PhD at UW Madison in 2017 under John Dunne, Jeremy spent nine years studying | |bio=Before starting his PhD at UW Madison in 2017 under John Dunne, Jeremy spent nine years studying at the Institute of Buddhist Dialectics in Dharamsala, India. Before that, he completed a masters of theological studies at Harvard Divinity school. He says: "After spending nine years in a Tibetan monastic college in India, I came to UW-Madison to focus on analytic philosophy. Moving between these frameworks forced me to rethink which aspects of Buddhist philosophy required what sort of arguments. These questions eventually led to my dissertation research on Buddhist soteriological concepts. Recently, there has been considerable interest in presenting a scientifically credible “Buddhism 2.0”—an idea which hinges on naturalizing nirvāṇa into a psychological state. The question of whether this makes sense is the entry point for my analysis of Buddhist arguments about nirvāṇa, from Vasubandhu and Candrakīrti to Sakya reflections on the unity of saṃsāra and nirvāṇa." (Jeremy Manheim. Personal Communication. February 3, 2023.) | ||
|images=File:Manheim Jeremy UW-Madison.jpg | |images=File:Manheim-Jeremi-Official-reduced.jpg; File:Manheim Jeremy UW-Madison.jpg | ||
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Revision as of 11:26, 3 February 2023
PersonType | Category:Authors of English Works Category:Translators |
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FirstName / namefirst | Jeremy |
LastName / namelast | Manheim |
namemiddle | S. |
MainNamePhon | Jeremy Manheim |
SortName | Manheim, Jeremy |
bio | Before starting his PhD at UW Madison in 2017 under John Dunne, Jeremy spent nine years studying at the Institute of Buddhist Dialectics in Dharamsala, India. Before that, he completed a masters of theological studies at Harvard Divinity school. He says: "After spending nine years in a Tibetan monastic college in India, I came to UW-Madison to focus on analytic philosophy. Moving between these frameworks forced me to rethink which aspects of Buddhist philosophy required what sort of arguments. These questions eventually led to my dissertation research on Buddhist soteriological concepts. Recently, there has been considerable interest in presenting a scientifically credible “Buddhism 2.0”—an idea which hinges on naturalizing nirvāṇa into a psychological state. The question of whether this makes sense is the entry point for my analysis of Buddhist arguments about nirvāṇa, from Vasubandhu and Candrakīrti to Sakya reflections on the unity of saṃsāra and nirvāṇa." (Jeremy Manheim. Personal Communication. February 3, 2023.) |
languagetranslation | Tibetan |
languagetarget | English |
affiliation | University of Wisconsin-Madison |
publications |
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IsInGyatsa | No |
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