The Middle Way school
A second-century monk found a way to say everything is real enough to matter, yet empty of any fixed essence — without contradiction.
Madhyamaka (Sanskrit, "the Middle Way [school]") is one of the most influential schools of Buddhist philosophy, founded by the monk Nāgārjuna around the 2nd century CE within the Mahāyāna — the broad later movement of Buddhism aimed at awakening for the benefit of all beings. Its name signals a balancing act between two errors: the error of saying things truly and independently exist (eternalism), and the error of saying they are utterly nothing (nihilism). Madhyamaka walks the middle.
Its central idea is "emptiness" (śūnyatā): the claim that no thing has an intrinsic, independent essence of its own. Nāgārjuna drew this directly from the Buddha's early teaching of dependent origination — that everything arises only through conditions. If a thing exists only by depending on causes, parts, and contrasts, then it has no self-contained, fixed nature; it is "empty" of that. Crucially, this is not the gloomy claim that nothing exists. Things function, appear, and matter perfectly well; they just don't exist in the solid, standalone way we unreflectively assume.
Nāgārjuna argued this with rigorous logic, often by taking an opponent's view and showing that it collapses into contradiction. Emptiness, in his hands, is liberating rather than bleak: by loosening the false sense that we and the world are fixed, separate, graspable things, it undercuts the clinging that drives suffering. Madhyamaka became foundational across later Buddhism, especially in Tibet, and remains a touchstone wherever Buddhist philosophy is studied.
Key passages(20)
The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism: Its Fundamentals and History · Dudjom Rinpoche (Jigdral Yeshe Dorje)
太虛大師全書.第五編 法性空慧學(第1卷-第8卷) · The Chinese Buddhist Canon (大藏經)