Eun-su Cho
Eun-su Cho (Ph.D., Buddhist Studies, University of California, Berkeley) has been professor of Buddhist Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy at Seoul National University in Korea since 2004. She previously served as assistant professor in the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Michigan. Cho has published on a wide range of topics, from Indian Abhidharma Buddhism to Korean Buddhist thought and history, including “The Uses and Abuses of Wŏnhyo and the ‘T’ong Pulgyo’ Narrative,” “Wŏnhyo’s Theory of ‘One Mind’: A Korean Way of Interpreting Mind,” and “Repentance as a Bodhisattva Practice—Wŏnhyo on Guilt and Moral Responsibility.” She also co-translated Jikji: The Essential Passages Directly Pointing at the Essence of the Mind and edited an anthology on Korean Buddhist nuns, Korean Buddhist Nuns and Laywomen: Hidden Histories, Enduring Vitality (SUNY Press, 2011).
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Language and Meaning
Buddhist Interpretations of the “Buddha’s Word” in Indian and East Asian Perspectives
By Eun-su Cho
Institute of Buddhist Studies
- Copyright year: 2020
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