Nagarjuna (approximately 150-250 CE) was an Indian Buddhist philosopher, widely considered one of the most important and influential thinkers in the entire history of Asian philosophy. He was born in South India, probably in what is now Andhra Pradesh, and became a Buddhist monk and teacher. He is the founder of the Madhyamaka school of Buddhist philosophy, which became one of the dominant schools of Buddhist thought across India, Tibet, China, Korea, Japan, and Southeast Asia. Very little is known about his life as a historical person: later tradition attributed extraordinary feats and a legendary biography to him, making it difficult to separate fact from story. What we do have are his philosophical texts, above all the Mulamadhyamakakarika, the Fundamental Verses on the Middle Way, a short but extraordinarily dense philosophical work in verse form that argues for one of the most radical positions in the history of philosophy: that nothing whatsoever has fixed, independent existence. He died sometime in the second or third century CE, but his ideas have continued to shape Buddhist philosophy and practice across Asia for nearly two thousand years.
Nagarjuna matters because he developed one of the most challenging and most influential philosophical ideas in human history: sunyata, usually translated as emptiness or voidness. This is not the emptiness of nothing mattering or nothing existing. It is the emptiness of fixed, independent, permanent existence. Nagarjuna argues that everything that exists, including people, objects, ideas, and even the concept of emptiness itself, exists only in relation to other things and through processes of change. Nothing has a fixed, permanent, independent self-nature. This sounds abstract, but it has profound practical implications: if there is no fixed self, then clinging to identity is a mistake that produces suffering. If all things arise through interdependence, then our actions always affect others and nothing can be fully understood in isolation. Nagarjuna is important for a global curriculum because he represents one of the most sophisticated philosophical traditions outside the Western canon, and because his ideas about identity, interdependence, and the nature of reality engage directly with questions that are alive in contemporary philosophy, science, and ethics.
The best starting point is Jay Garfield's translation of The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way (1995, Oxford University Press), which provides Nagarjuna's root text alongside a clear philosophical commentary. For a short overview: the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has a freely available article on Nagarjuna. For a broader introduction to Buddhist philosophy: Mark Siderits's Buddhism as Philosophy (2007, Hackett) is the most accessible scholarly introduction.
Buddhist Philosophy and Cross-Cultural Interpretation (2002, Oxford University Press) engages with Nagarjuna's arguments from the perspective of analytic philosophy and is accessible to non-specialists. Thich Nhat Hanh's The Heart of Understanding (1988, Parallax) offers a more accessible and practice-oriented introduction to Nagarjuna's ideas through the Heart Sutra.
Thomas McEvilley's The Shape of Ancient Thought (2002, Allworth Press) explores the parallel development of Indian and Greek philosophy.
Nagarjuna's emptiness means that nothing exists and nothing matters.
This is exactly the nihilism that Nagarjuna explicitly argues against. Emptiness does not mean non-existence: it means the absence of fixed, permanent, independent existence. Things exist, but they exist through interdependence and process rather than as fixed, isolated objects. Actions matter: Nagarjuna's ethics and his practical teaching on compassion depend on the fact that actions have consequences, that suffering is real, and that liberation is genuinely possible. Emptiness is what makes change, growth, and liberation possible, not what undermines them.
Nagarjuna's philosophy is only about religious practice and is not serious philosophy.
Nagarjuna's work is recognised by academic philosophers worldwide as one of the most rigorous and sophisticated philosophical projects in human history. His logical analysis of causation, identity, motion, and knowledge has been compared to the work of Wittgenstein and Hegel in Western philosophy. Contemporary analytic philosophers including Graham Priest and Jay Garfield have engaged seriously with his arguments as contributions to formal logic and philosophy of language. His work is studied in philosophy departments alongside Aristotle and Kant.
The idea that the self is not fixed means we have no responsibility for our actions.
Nagarjuna explicitly maintains conventional truth alongside ultimate truth. At the conventional level, where we live and act, persons exist, actions have consequences, and responsibility is real. The insight that there is no fixed, permanent self does not dissolve moral responsibility: it actually deepens it, by loosening the self-centred clinging that leads us to prioritise our own interests at the expense of others. Understanding interdependence, in Nagarjuna's framework, produces greater compassion and responsibility, not less.
Nagarjuna's ideas are unique to Buddhism and have no relevance outside that tradition.
While Nagarjuna developed his ideas within the Buddhist tradition, the questions he addresses are universal: what is the nature of the self? how do things exist? what is the relationship between language and reality? These questions are central to philosophy in every tradition. His ideas have been engaged seriously by Western philosophers, cognitive scientists, and ecologists. His analysis of interdependence resonates with systems thinking, ecological science, and relational philosophy developed in entirely different cultural contexts.
Graham Priest, Jay Garfield, and Koji Tanaka's Two Truths in Different Buddhist Traditions (2011) examines Nagarjuna's logic from a contemporary formal logic perspective. Candrakirti's Madhyamakavatara, available in translation, is the most important commentary on Nagarjuna in the Tibetan tradition.
Evan Thompson's Mind in Life (2007, Harvard University Press) draws on Nagarjuna in developing a philosophy of mind that bridges Buddhist philosophy and cognitive science.
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