Greek Buddha:
Pyrrho's Encounter With Early Buddhism in Central Asia
di Christopher I. Beckwith
Pyrrho of Elis went with Alexander the Great to
Central Asia and India during the Greek invasion and conquest of the Persian
Empire in 334-324 BC. There he met with early Buddhist masters. Greek Buddha
shows how their Early Buddhism shaped the philosophy of Pyrrho, the famous
founder of Pyrrhonian scepticism in ancient Greece. Christopher I. Beckwith
traces the origins of a major tradition in Western philosophy to Gandhara, a
country in Central Asia and northwestern India. He systematically examines the
teachings and practices of Pyrrho and of Early Buddhism, including those
preserved in testimonies by and about Pyrrho, in the report on Indian
philosophy two decades later by the Seleucid ambassador Megasthenes, in the
first-person edicts by the Indian king Devanampriya Priyadarsi referring to a
popular variety of the Dharma in the early third century BC, and in Taoist echoes
of Gautama's Dharma in Warring States China. Beckwith demonstrates how the
teachings of Pyrrho agree closely with those of the Buddha Sakyamuni, "the
Scythian Sage." In the process, he identifies eight distinct philosophical
schools in ancient northwestern India and Central Asia, including Early
Zoroastrianism, Early Brahmanism, and several forms of Early Buddhism. He then
shows the influence that Pyrrho's brand of scepticism had on the evolution of
Western thought, first in Antiquity, and later, during the Enlightenment, on
the great philosopher and self-proclaimed Pyrrhonian, David Hume. Greek Buddha
demonstrates that through Pyrrho, Early Buddhist thought had a major impact on
Western philosophy.