Born in
Galle District, Southern
Sri Lanka, Kalupahana attended
Mahinda College,
Galle for his school education. He obtained his BA (Sri Lanka, 1959), Ph.D (London), and D. Litt (Hon.
Peradeniya, Sri Lanka). He was Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the
University of Hawaii. He was assistant lecturer in Pali and Buddhist Civilization at the
University of Ceylon, and studied Chinese and Tibetan at the
School of Oriental and African Studies at the
University of London where he completed a Ph.D. dissertation on the problem of causality in the Pali
Nikayas and Chinese
Agamas in 1966. He left the
University of Ceylon (1972) to join the
University of Hawaii, serving as the Chairman of the Department of Philosophy and Chairman of the Graduate Field in Philosophy (1974–80). He directed international intra-religious conferences on Buddhism, and on Buddhism and Peace. Many of his books are published and widely available in India (by Motilal Banarsidass and others), and therefore presumably have a fairly significant influence on the fields of Buddhism and Buddhist Studies in India and other nearby South Asian countries, such as his native Sri Lanka. ==Publications==