Cobb, John B., Jr. and Ryusei Takeda.  "'Mosa-Dharma' and Prehension: Nagarjuna and Whitehead Compared."  Process Studies 4, no. 1 (Spring 1974): 26-36.

Abstract

Nagarjuna and Whitehead are in extensive agreement in their rejection of substantial existence, yet the religious or existential meaning they draw from this agreement is quite different.  One reason for this lies in the fact that Nagarjuna understands the act of appropriation from antecedents by which the process advances as 'mosa-dharma', a term associated with stealing and deception.  Whitehead also recognizes that prehension involves abstraction and is vulnerable to distortion, but he affirms faith in a basic truthfulness sustained by the primordial nature of God that grounds concern for the particularities of the process.  [Abstract from The Philosopher's Index]