Semantic search
From Research Library
The part "%" of the query was not understood.
Results might not be as expected.
Debug output SQLStore
ASK Query
[[:Lying to Tell the Truth-Upaya in Mahayana Buddhism and Oikonomia in Alexandrian Christianity]]
SQL Query
SELECT DISTINCT
t0.smw_id AS id,
t0.smw_title AS t,
t0.smw_namespace AS ns,
t0.smw_iw AS iw,
t0.smw_subobject AS so,
t0.smw_sortkey AS sortkey, t0.smw_sort
FROM
`tsd_smw_object_ids` AS t0
WHERE
t0.smw_id=2636966
AND t0.smw_iw!=':smw'
AND t0.smw_iw!=':smw-delete'
AND t0.smw_iw!=':smw-redi'
ORDER BY
t0.smw_sort ASC
LIMIT
255
OFFSET
0
t0.smw_id AS id,
t0.smw_title AS t,
t0.smw_namespace AS ns,
t0.smw_iw AS iw,
t0.smw_subobject AS so,
t0.smw_sortkey AS sortkey, t0.smw_sort
FROM
`tsd_smw_object_ids` AS t0
WHERE
t0.smw_id=2636966
AND t0.smw_iw!=':smw'
AND t0.smw_iw!=':smw-delete'
AND t0.smw_iw!=':smw-redi'
ORDER BY
t0.smw_sort ASC
LIMIT
255
OFFSET
0
SQL Explain
ID | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | filtered | Extra |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | SIMPLE | t0 | const | PRIMARY, smw_id, smw_iw, smw_iw_2 | PRIMARY | 4 | const | 1 |
Auxilliary Tables
No auxilliary tables used.Query Metrics
Query-Size:1Query-Depth:0
Errors and Warnings
The part "%" of the query was not understood.
Results might not be as expected.Abstract | Citation | Subclass | BuNayFeatured | BuNayTitle | BuNayPageType | BuNayRelevance | BuNayLevel | BuNayApproach | BuNayKarlDescription | BuNaySourceInfo | BuNayRating | BuNayMediaQual | BuNayInteractive | BuNayCopyright | BuNayNotes | BuNayKanoAvailable | BuNayKanoCitation | Fulltitle | PosBuNayDefProv | PosBuNayDefProvNotes | PosDefProv | PosDefProvNotes | PosAllBuddha | PosAllBuddhaNote | PosAllBuddhaMoreNotes | PosWheelTurn | PosWheelTurnNotes | PosYogaMadhya | PosYogaMadhyaNotes | PosZhenRang | PosZhenRangNotes | PosVehicles | PosVehiclesNotes | PosAnalyticMedit | PosAnalyticMeditNotes | PosEmptyLumin | PosEmptyLuminNotes | PosSvataPrasa | PosSvataPrasaNotes | PosVajrapada | DrlPublisher | BuNayGrade | Frontcoverimg | Periodical | Istranslation | BuNayTopicTags | DrlAuthor | Authorlibwiki | Description | Citationofsourcetexts | Sourcetitle | PerformerRaw | Translatorlibwiki | TibetanTitle | TibetanDescription | DrlContributors | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lying to Tell the Truth-Upaya in Mahayana Buddhism and Oikonomia in Alexandrian Christianity | Corless, Roger Gregory-Tashi. "Lying to Tell the Truth—Upāya in Mahāyāna Buddhism and Oikonomia in Alexandrian Christianity." In Buddha Nature: A Festschrift in Honor of Minoru Kiyota, edited by Paul J. Griffiths and John P. Keenan, 27–40. Tokyo: Buddhist Books International, 1990. | Chapters in a Book | true | Lying to Tell the Truth-Upaya in Mahayana Buddhism and Oikonomia in Alexandrian Christianity | Article | Academic | false | Lying to Tell the Truth—Upāya in Mahāyāna Buddhism and Oikonomia in Alexandrian Christianity | false | Christian thought and Buddha-Nature | Corless, R. | Corless, R. | Roger Gregory-Tashi Corless, in his essay "Lying to Tell the Truth", explores the use of intentional vagueness and obscurity in the texts of Clement of Alexandria and Origen, and relates this to the intentional use of falsehood (or, perhaps better, nontruth) in the Saddharmapuṇḍarīkasūtra. Both in second century Alexandria and in third century India, he suggests, one finds a self-conscious use of graded, hierarchically ordered sets of "false truths" as pedagogical devices. For the Lotus, Corless suggests, the "true truth" is that all living beings are in fact possessors of Buddha Nature; it is this toward which the pedagogically useful though partial truths (upāya) found in other assertions point. This position is illustrated with extensive quotations from Kūkai, and is compared with positions taken by a series of Christian thinkers from Nicholas of Cusa to John Henry Newman. (Griffiths and Keenan, introduction to Buddha Nature, 3–4) |