This book contains the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā (Root Verses of the Middle Way), the central work of the great Indian philosopher Nāgārjuna. Accompanied by thought-provoking philosophical commentary, this book invites us to delve into the most subtle core of Buddhist thought: the doctrine of emptiness (śūnyatā). In critical dialogue with the personalist and essentialist currents of ancient Buddhism, these verses do not deny the world, but reveal the radical interdependence of all phenomena. Reality is not a thing in itself, but neither can it be reduced to nothingness. Everything arises in interdependence (pratītyasamutpāda), without a fixed essence, even though it manifests itself as it is (tathatā). The middle way teaches that there is nothing to cling to, and yet there is appearance, relationship, becoming. The wheel of suffering (saṃsāra) and the cessation of suffering (nirvāṇa) are not two opposing worlds, but aspects intertwined in a reality without ultimate foundation. Nāgārjuna dismantles traditional ontological and epistemological categories one by one through precise dialectics, leading not to nihilism but to a radical openness: the recognition that everything breathes with everything else in the fabric of emptiness--where there is no essence, but there is meaning. This edition offers a new translation from Sanskrit, accompanied by a philosophical commentary that restores the speculative and meditative spirit of the work. Its pages unfold a non-substantial ontology that conceives reality as flow, as relationship, as rhythm... as if it were a web of air.
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