"Necessity of a cause befits not the existent, ether and the like, for instance;
"No cause is efficacious of a non-existent effect, flowers of the sky and the like, for instance."
The two remaining alternatives, as self-contradictory, are inadmissible. It has accordingly been laid down by the venerated Buddha in the Alaṅkárávatára[34]—
"Of things discriminated by intellect, no nature is ascertained;[35]
"Those things are therefore shown to be inexplicable and natureless."
And again—
"This matter perforce results, which the wise declare, No sooner are objects thought than they are dissipated."
That is to say, the objects are not determined by any one of the four alternatives. Hence it is that it has been said—
"A religious mendicant, an amorous man, and a dog have three views of a woman's person, respectively that it is a carcass, that it is a mistress, and that it is a prey."
In consequence, then, of these four points of view, when all ideas are come to an end, final extinction, which is a void, will result. Accordingly we have overtaken our end, and there is nothing to be taught to us. There consequently remain only two duties to the student—interrogation and acceptance. Of these, interrogation is the putting of questions in order to attain knowledge not yet attained. Acceptance is assent to the matters stated by the sacred teacher. These (Bauddha nihilists) are excellent in assenting to that which the religious teacher enounces, and defective in interrogation, whence their conventional designation of Mádhyamikas (or mediocre).