Abstract
In this essay, which draws on a set of interrelated issues in the phenomenology of
perception, I call into question the assumption that Buddhist philosophers of the
Dignāga-Dharmakīrti tradition pursue a kind of epistemic foundationalism.
I argue that the embodied cognition paradigm, which informs recent efforts within the
Western philosophical tradition to overcome the Cartesian legacy, can be also found–
albeit in a modified form–in the Buddhist epistemological tradition. In seeking to ground
epistemology in the phenomenology of cognition, the Buddhist epistemologist, I claim, is
operating on principles similar to those found in Husserl’s phenomenological tradition.