ARGUMENT
The Middle Way

The entire structure of Buddhist thought can be seen as a response to one fundamental question: what is the nature of reality? The Buddha’s own path was called the Middle Way, a path between the extremes of eternalism (the belief in a permanent, unchanging self or soul) and annihilationism (the belief that the self is utterly destroyed at death).
Acharya Nagarjun, centuries after the Buddha, saw that these philosophical extremes had re-emerged within the discourse. He established the Madhyamak, or “Middle Way” school, to clarify the Buddha’s original intention. His work is a rigorous, logical excavation of this central principle.
Nagarjun’s purpose was to dismantle the conceptual structures that we mistake for reality. He showed that our understanding of the world is built on dependent relationships. Nothing possesses an intrinsic, independent existence, what the Hindu schools might call a svabhav.
This is the starting point for his entire philosophy. It is a radical claim that unwinds most of what we take for granted about ourselves and the world.
SOURCE
The Mulamadhyamakakarika

Nagarjun’s masterwork is the Mulamadhyamakakarika (Fundamental Verses on the Middle Way), often abbreviated as MMK. It is not a book of doctrines to be memorized, but a tool for deconstruction. In it, Nagarjun uses the opponent’s own logic to reveal its inherent contradictions. He examines concepts like causation, motion, self, and even the Buddha himself, and demonstrates their emptiness of inherent existence.
The Four-Fold Negation
A key method Nagarjun employs is the catuskoti, or four-fold logic. He demonstrates that for any given phenomenon, it cannot be said to:
1. Exist
2. Not exist
3. Both exist and not exist
4. Neither exist nor not exist
This is not a nihilistic denial of reality. It is a denial of our ability to capture reality in fixed, conceptual categories. For example, when examining causation, Nagarjun argues that an effect cannot arise from itself, from something other than itself, from both, or from neither.
Na svato nāpi parato na dvābhyāṃ nāpy ahetutaḥ |
utpannā jātu vidyante bhāvāḥ kvacana kecana ||
This verse, the very first of his work, sets the stage. “Never, nowhere, do any entities whatsoever exist that have arisen from themselves, from another, from both, or without a cause.” This dismantles the very idea of independent arising.
Dependent Origination
If nothing arises independently, how does anything happen? Nagarjun’s answer is the core of Buddhist thought: Pratityasamutpad, or Dependent Origination. Everything arises in dependence upon other things. A flame depends on fuel, oxygen, and heat. A self depends on a body, feelings, perceptions, and consciousness. Remove the components, and the thing itself vanishes.
This is the “middle way” in practice. Things are not eternal and unchanging (eternalism), nor are they nothing at all (annihilationism). They are dependently arisen.
The central concept in Nagarjun’s philosophy. It does not mean “nothingness.” It refers to the fact that all phenomena are “empty” of a separate, independent, or intrinsic nature (svabhav). Their existence is purely relational and interdependent.
ARGUMENT
Sunyata: The Doctrine of Emptiness

Sunyata, or emptiness, is the most misunderstood concept in Nagarjun’s philosophy. It is the natural conclusion of Dependent Origination. If everything is dependently arisen, then nothing has a standalone, essential nature. This lack of an essential nature is its “emptiness.”
I believe this is a liberating insight. It means that reality is not fixed, static, or predetermined. Because things are empty of an inherent nature, they are full of potential for change. Emptiness is not a void; it is the ground of possibility.
Emptiness and Form
The later Heart Sutra would famously state: “Form is emptiness; emptiness is form.” Nagarjun lays the logical groundwork for this. The world of form—the things we see, touch, and experience—is not a separate reality from emptiness. The very nature of form is its emptiness.
Consider a wave on the ocean. Does the wave have an independent existence from the water? No. Is it just water? No, it is a wave, a form the water has taken. The wave is empty of “wave-ness” apart from the water, and the water is what allows the wave to be.
yaḥ pratītyasamutpādaḥ śūnyatāṃ tāṃ pracakṣmahe |
sā prajñaptir upādāya pratipat saiva madhyamā ||
“That which is dependently arisen, we call that emptiness. That is a dependent designation; it is the middle way.” Here, Nagarjun explicitly equates Dependent Origination with Emptiness. They are two ways of describing the same reality.
The Two Truths
To navigate this, Nagarjun articulates a doctrine of Two Truths.
1. Conventional Truth (Samvriti Satya): This is the truth of our everyday world. Cars exist, trees exist, we have names and identities. This is the world of language, concepts, and practical reality. It is necessary for functioning in the world.
2. Ultimate Truth (Paramarth Satya): This is the truth that all these conventionally existing things are empty of intrinsic existence (svabhav). They are dependently arisen.
The Ultimate Truth does not invalidate the Conventional Truth. It reveals its true nature. A chariot is a real object on the conventional level, but on the ultimate level, it is a collection of parts—wheels, axle, frame—that has no “chariot-ness” of its own.
CONTEXT
Dialogue with Hindu Schools

Nagarjun’s work was not created in a vacuum. It was part of a rich, pan-Indian philosophical dialogue. His primary intellectual counterparts were the Hindu schools of thought, particularly the Nyaya school, which specialized in logic and epistemology.
Atman vs. Anatman
The most significant point of divergence is the concept of the self. The Upanishadic tradition posits the existence of Atman, a permanent, unchanging, essential self, which is ultimately identical with the universal ground of being, Brahm.
Nagarjun, following the Buddha’s teaching of anatman (no-self), applies his Madhyamak analysis to the self. He argues that what we call the “self” is, like the chariot, a convenient designation for a collection of interacting components: the five aggregates (skandhas) of form, feeling, perception, mental formations, and consciousness. There is no permanent “I” to be found behind these processes.
Causality and Substance
The Nyaya-Vaisheshik schools had developed sophisticated theories of causality and a metaphysics based on permanent, atomic substances. They believed the world was built from indivisible atoms that possessed inherent qualities.
Nagarjun’s critique of svabhav is a direct response to this. By showing that nothing has an inherent nature, he dismantles the very foundation of substance-based metaphysics. For Nagarjun, reality is not made of “things” but of processes and relationships.
This dialogue was not hostile; it was the engine of philosophical progress in ancient India. Each school sharpened its arguments on the whetstone of the others, leading to centuries of profound intellectual development.
TRADITION
Nagarjun’s Legacy

The influence of Nagarjun on the development of Mahayana Buddhism is immeasurable. He is often called the “Second Buddha” because he is credited with retrieving and clarifying the Buddha’s deepest teachings on emptiness.
Tibetan Buddhism
In Tibet, Nagarjun’s philosophy is the bedrock of all major schools of thought. The study of the Mulamadhyamakakarika and its commentaries is a cornerstone of monastic education. Figures like Tsongkhapa, founder of the Gelug school, wrote extensive commentaries on Nagarjun’s work, integrating his Madhyamak view with practices of tantra. The Dalai Lamas are spiritual descendants of this lineage.
East Asian Buddhism
Nagarjun’s thought traveled along the Silk Road to China, where it became foundational for the Sanlun (Three Treatise) school, based on Nagarjun’s works. More profoundly, his concept of Sunyata was absorbed and adapted by other schools, influencing the development of Chan (Zen) Buddhism. The Zen emphasis on direct experience and the transcendence of dualistic thought resonates deeply with Nagarjun’s project of dismantling conceptual fixation.
The Alchemist Nagarjun?
Tradition often conflates the philosopher Nagarjun with a later tantric siddha and alchemist of the same name. This second Nagarjun is associated with esoteric chemistry (rasayan), the search for elixirs of immortality, and is a major figure in the Naths tradition. While modern scholarship separates the two figures, the traditional hagiographies blend them, creating a composite figure who is both a master of pristine logic and a master of esoteric power. My own view is that these are likely distinct individuals whose legends merged over time.
His philosophy is ultimately soteriological—it is aimed at liberation. By seeing the world as empty of fixed essences, one is freed from the attachments and aversions that cause suffering. The clinging mind has nothing to cling to. This, for Nagarjun, is the ultimate freedom. His work remains a living tradition, a sharp and brilliant tool for anyone who seeks to understand the nature of reality.
Written by
Aditya Gupta
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