Namaste Avinash,
thank you for the post.
Avinash said:
Namaskar Vajradhara,
So am I to conclude from the above that the whole creation is made up of Shunyata or Emptiness and would this be the same as calling the whole of creation false or illusory?
hmm.. this is a subtle question, to be sure.
not to put you off, however, this answer is dependent on one's philosophical outlook within the Buddhist paradigm.
there are 4 main schools of Buddhist philosophy which i hopefully haven't mangled too badly:
1.
Vaibhasika has been called "direct realism." It is similar to the first few of the Indian views that see the World of Experience as composed of various physical elements that interact with the components of beings.
2.
Sautrantika considers that awareness is merely representational. These first two schools consider that there are two kinds of interactors: Physical aspects, ie. skandhas of which one, rupa comprises the traditional elements, and the Mental aspects including consciousness (vijnana), sensation (vedana) which contributes to pain/pleasure, cognition (sanjna) and the impressions derived from experience (samskara.). The 12 Links of Causality go into this in more detail.
3.
Chittamatra/Yogachara sometimes referred to as the Knowledge Way or Vijnanavada. It has also been called Subjective Realism, acknowledging that individual factors including karma contribute to an experience of reality that must be different for every being. It mentions the idea of "Buddha nature." Vasubandha and Asanga finally adopted this position.
4.
Madhyamika basically holds that there is no ultimate reality in the sense that something exists apart from the experiencer, but that this does not mean that there is nothing at all. It turns around the definition of Shunyata and therefore has been called Sunyatavada. Nagarjuna and Aryadeva are the main proponents. Chandrakirti expounds upon Nagarjuna.
we've started a thread on this subject here:
http://www.comparative-religion.com/forum/showthread.php?t=719
there are two distinct views that are found in the Madhyamika school, the Savtantrika and Prasangika. i adhere to the Prasangika school, for reference.
in my view, the easist method of seeing the distinctions between these views is by understanding their conception of Emptiness, to wit:
Vaibhasika and Sautrantika:
selflessness asserted: selflessness of persons.
coarse: lack of being a permanent, partless, independent self.
subtle: lack of being a self-sufficient person.
Chittamatra:
selflessness asserted: selflessness of persons.
coarse: lack of being a permanent, partless, independent self.
subtle: lack of being a self-sufficient person.
selflessness of phenomena:
subtle: lack of a difference in entity between subject and object and lack of naturally being a base of a name.
Madhyamika (Savtantrika and Prasangika):
Savtantrika:
selflessness asserted: selflessness of persons.
coarse: lack of being a permanent, partless, independent self.
subtle: lack of being a self-sufficient person.
selflessness of phenomena:
coarse: lack of a difference in entity between subject and object (though this is properly
Yogachara)
subtle: lack of being an entity not posited through appearing to a non-defective consciousness.
Prasangika:
selflessness of persons.
coarse: lack of being a permanent self-sufficient entity.
subtle: lack of inherent existence of persons
selflessness of phenomena: subtle: lack of inherent existence of phenomena other than persons
hopefully, this answers your query to some degree