Buddhist Studies

Expistemology of the Pali Nikāyas:

"Doubting the Kālāma-Sutta: Epistemology, Ethics and the 'Sacred'" (Attached below)

Buddhist Studies Review, 24(1), (2007) pp. 91-107


"Pāyāsi as Scientist: A Nikāyan Critique of Scientific Method" (Attached below)

Mahachulalongkorn Journal of Buddhist Studies 1(1) (2008)


"Epistemology of the Bramajāla Sutta" (Attached below)

Buddhist Studies Review, 26(1), (2009) pp. 67-84


"Epistemological Parallels between the Nikāyas and the Upaniṣads" (Attached below)

Buddhist Studies Review, 29(1), (2012) pp. 131-137

Ethics:

"Ethical Confusion: Possible Misunderstandings in Buddhist Ethics" (Click link)

Journal of Buddhist Ethics 19 (2012) http://blogs.dickinson.edu/buddhistethics/files/2012/09/Evans-Ethical-Confusion-II-3Aug2012-final.pdf

"Act and Result in Nikāyan Ethics" (Click link)

Journal of Buddhist Ethics 21(2014) http://blogs.dickinson.edu/buddhistethics/files/2014/03/Evans-Nikaayan-Ethics-final.pdf

"Buddhist Resignation and Human Rights (Freedom is What I Am)".

Journal of Buddhist Ethics, October 1995 Conference on Buddhism and Human Rights. Curson Press, Buddhism and Human Rights

Other:

"Buddhist Storytelling in Thailand and Laos" (Attached below)

A substantial review of the book by Leedom Lefferts and Sandra Cate re Vessantra festivels. (Attached below)

"Ñāṇananda’s Concept and Reality: An Assessment " (Attached below)

Buddhist Studies Review 34.1 (2017) An assessment of Ñāṇananda’s influential book.

Scroll down for attachments

Doubting The Kālāmasutta
Pāyāsi as Scientist

Doubting the Kālāma-Sutta

Pāyāsi as Scientist: A Nikāyan Critique

Epistemology of the Brahmajāla Sutta
Epistemological Parallels-Nikayas Upanisads Abstract.pdf

Epistemology of the Bramajāla Sutta

Epistemological Parallels

Buddhist Resignation and Human Rights.pdf

Buddhist Resignation and Human Rights


Buddhist Storytelling in Thailand and Laos-Review.pdf
Concept and Reality Offprint.pdf

Buddhist Storytelling in Thailand and Laos: Book review

Ñāṇananda’s Concept and Reality: An Assessment