The concept of “self-awareness” (svasaṃvedana) enters Buddhist epistemological discourse in the Pramāṇasamuccaya and -vṛtti by Dignāga (ca. 480–540), the founder of the Buddhist logico-epistemological tradition. Though some of the key passages have
already been dealt with in various publications, no attempt has been made to comprehensively examine all of them as a whole.
A close reading is here proposed to make up for this deficit. In connection with a particularly difficult passage (PS(V) 1.8cd-10)
that presents the means of valid cognition and its result (pramāṇa/pramāṇaphala), a new interpretation is suggested, inspired by the commentary of Jinendrabuddhi. This interpretation highlights an aspect
of selfawareness that has hitherto not been claimed for Dignāga: self-awareness offers essentially subjective access to one’s
own mental states and factors.
Keywords
Svasaṃvitti
- Self-awareness - Dignāga - Dharmakīrti