same contents as stated by the commentators of the SK. There seems nothing

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "same contents as stated by the commentators of the SK. There seems nothing"

Transcription

1 On tanmatra Shujun Motegi I. In the evolution theory of the classical Samkhya system of thought as laid down in the Saynkhyakarika (SK), the nature and the role of tanmatra is not quite clear. The SK tells us that five tanmatras are produced from ahamkara and from them are issued five bhutas (material elements). The tanmatras and the bhutas are characterized respectively as avisesa and visesal). Nothing more is stated in the SK itself. The commentaries of the SK explain that tanmatra consists of sabda, rasa, sparsa, rupa and gandha which are attributes of material elements. Following the commentaries, we will start our discussion with the supposition that tanmatras are five in number and stand for sabda, etc2).. The first question about tanmatra is concerning the meaning of its first member tad-. The word tanmatra means that only' or something consisted of that only'. What, then, is denoted by tad- (that)? All the commentaries of the SK are silent on this point, which leaves the meaning of the word unclear. The second question is about the role of tanmatra played in the system of the SK. All the commentaries of the SK interprete suksma in the SK v.,40 as tanmatra and give it the role of making material basis for suksmasarira, a tranmigrating subtle entiny. But, as remarked by Frauwallner3), to make material basis, it is much more suitable to use material element (bhuta) than attribute (tanmatra). We, therefore, can guess that this role of making material basis is conceived later by the SK commentators to give tanmatra a reason of existence in the system of the SK. No other role of tanmatra is mentioned in the SK and its commentaries. As the result, the role of tanmatra remains unclear. The position taken by tanmatra in the 25 tattvas raises the third question. 7 anmatra is placed between ahamkara and bhuta in the evolution theory of the SK which explains the formation of the world cosmologically and metaphi

2 (2) On tanmatra (S. Motegi) sically. Tanmatras are sabda, etc., which are attributes belonging to materials. It is, therefore, natural that tanmatra is supposed to be subject to material element. But, in the evolution theory of the SK, a material element is subject to attribute, giving the impression that the position of both is upset. On these three questions mentioned above the SK and its commentaries not give us an apprehensible explanation. To get a clearer understanding of tanmatra, II. we should consult other literatures than the SK and its commentaries. It has been often pointed out that the word tanmatra occurs first in the Maitrayant Upanisad 3-2. The topic discussed there is the bhatatman, the lower sort of atman that is involved in the transmigration. of bhatatman, the following interpretation is made4): asyopavyakhyanam...pancatanmatra* bhutasabdenocyante/atha bhutasabdenocyante/atha tesam yat samudayam tac charirain ity uktam/ *tanmatrani5) From this passage we notice that there is a word tanmatra as well as tanmatra. Since the term matra is widely used, the examination do On the word bhuta pancamahabhutani of its usage may give us a hint for grasping the meaning of tanmatra. The Prasna Upanisad 4-8 gives an important example of the usage of matra, which is as follows6): Prthivi ca prthivimatra cal apas capomatra cal tejas ca tejomatra cal vayus ca vayumatra cal akasamatra cal... The word matra in this passage signifies a material element. Taking it into consideration that prthivimatra can be expressedd tanmatra to avoid the repetition of prthivi, we may safely to assume that tanmatra was originally used in this sense, i. e. a material element7) and that it was changed into tanmatra in the course of time, though what is indicated by tad remains still unclear. We, therefore, cannot believe that tanmatra used in the Mait Upa has the same contents as stated by the commentators of the SK. There seems nothing to support that tanmatra is used in the meaning of sabda, etc. in the Mait Upa. Rather, from the above mentioned, the following explanation is cogent: in the Mait Upa, tanmatra is used for interpretation of the word bhuta, a material being, and means something material. Hence tanmatra has nearly the same meaning as mahabhuta, though there may be a difference that one is -957-

3 On tanmatra (S. Motegi) (3) subtle and the other is gloss8). It must mean a material element, not sabda, etc. This is all that can be got from this passage. III. Another source for tanmatra is the Mahabhatata (Mbh). We see tanmatra several times in the Anus" asanaparvan and the Moksadharmaparvan (Mdh). But all the passages in which tanmatra occurs are considered to be the later addition by the editor of The Critical Edition of the Mbh, and they are printed not in the main text but in the Appendix. The term tanmatra in the Mdh occurs only in the context of enumerating the 25 tattvas of the Samkhya system to explain the world created by Siva or Visnu. It is clear that the SSaiva or the Vaisnava sect adopted the Samkhya thought after tanmatra had already been introduced into the system9).these passages, therefore, don't give us anything new concerning a necessity of tanmatra for the Samkhya thought or its contents before accepted by the Samkhya thinkers'0). In the Mdh of The Critical Edition, the word tanmatra is absent, though the Mdh refers many times to the Samkhya thoughts in various stages of development. The enumeration of the 25 tattvas which is one of the characteristic theories of the Samkhya is already found in some places of the Mdh and members of the 25 tattvas found in the Mdh are nearly the same as those of the SK. Hence some of the Samkhya thoughts in the Mdh can be said to be very close to those in the SK regarding the emmuration of tattvas or the evolution theory. Inspite of this, tanmatra is not seen in the Mdh. Sabd a, etc. are enumerated as one of the 25 tattvas even in the Mdh without being called tanmatra. We accordingly have to suppose that the conception of tanmatra is not needed in the evolution theories in the Mdh. VI. The evolution theory seems to be a key to understand the necessity of tanmatra for the Samkhya system. We shall compare the evolution theory of the SK with those found in the Mdh. One of the characteristics of the evolution theory of the SK consists in giving a faculty of producing material to ahamkara. Hence, as the evolution theory to be compared with that of the SK, we have only to play attention to the ones in which the same function is attributed to ahamkara. In the Mdh, some evolution theories are noticed to have ahamkara as a member"), and as the -956-

4 (4) On tanmatra (S. Motegi) common characteristics of them the following two may be pointed out: (1) material elements are produced from ahamkara (2) attribute is treated as subject to material element Let us take the evolution theory in the Mdh 294(A) as an example of such evolution theory and compare it with that of the SK(B). -5 indriya (A) prakrti...mahat...ahamkara...5 bhata -5 visesa -11 indriya (B) prakrti...mahat...ahamkara... 5 tanmatra...5 bhata A comparison shows that both A and B are very similar in members and their order of evolution. We may assume that the evolution theory of the SK is the developed one of this sort of evolution theory of the Mdh. At the same time the changed position of indriya (sense organ) attracts our notice. In A, indriyas are produced from bhutas, while, in B, they are produced from ahamkara. Since the function or the role of each member doesn't seem to differ much in A and B, this change of position of indriya must have been caused for some reasons in the process of the development of the Samkhya thought. In the philosophical system of the Samkhya school, indriya, especially buddhi-indriya, plays the main role in pratyaksa (direct perception) which is admitted as one of the three means of valid knowledge. In an old treatise of this school, pratyaksa is defined as frotradivrtti' (vrtti of ear, etc.)12). In this definition vrtti is explained in a commentary as follows13): direct perception means that an indriya, for example, ear, reaches an object and comes to be modified into its form, i. e. sound. This function cannot be attributed to a material indriya, because it cannot move towards an object. They must not be produced from material. Therefore, indriya is considered to be produced from ahamkara, an internal organ which is not made of material elements. As the result of this, indriya can perform the above mentioned function in pratyaksa. Concerning the evolution theory, ahamkara comes to make two beings: ma

5 On tanmatra (S. Motegi) (5) terial element and sense organ. Attribute of material element is, in other point of view, an object of perception. The evolution scheme now comes to be explained as follows: ahamkara makes material elements and then objects of perception on the one hand, and indriyas on the other hand. In this order of evolution, indriya and its object are not on the same stage. The object of indriya comes into existence at the next stage of indriya, which does not seem balanced. To make the whole scheme well balanced, it might be better that both indriya and its object are on the same stage of evolution. If indriya and its object are to be put on the same stage, bhuta is required to change its position and come lower than objects of indriya, as seen in B. This process must have taken place in the systematization of the Samkhya thought. I believe that this is the time when the word tanmatra is needed by Samkhya thinkers. S"abda, etc. are now placed above bhuta. Then there arose a necessity to get a word by which sabda, etc. are expressed as a group. For it sounds strange if the elements in the upper stage of evolution are called one by one, while those in the lower stage are grouped together and represented by a single word. The term of tanmatra is thus adopted as the word which can represent the group of attributes that are now placed upper than bhuta. As the result of this, tanmatra has its position in the evolution scheme of the SK without any other function than representing sabda, etc. as a group. V. As has been pointed out, there are many types of evolution theory in Chinese Buddhist texts14). Some of them have an appearence contradictory what I have mentioned in the previous section. As an example of this kind of theory, we must take the following two points into consideration. (1) In the Yoga school which holds a theory close to that of the Samkhya, indriya can to propounded by the SK commentators. It may mean a subtle material element remain lower tha bhuta, because it is supposed to be made of material ele

6 (6) On tanmatra (S. Motegi) like anu. With these two points in view, we may guess that this kind of evolution theory belongs to the Yoga school, in which tanmatra was adopted but indriya was left lower than bhuta, or that this evolution scheme is formed by the confusion of the Samkhya and Yoga thoughts. The second possibility which seems true is that Mstands for a subtle material element. In this case, the problem takes a quite different appearance. This possibility suggests that there was a theory which admitted two kinds of material element, subtle and sabd a, etc., it is not necessary to deal with it here. VI. From what has been discussed above, I draw a conclusion as follows: The term tanmatra was derived from tanmatra and originally meant a material element like anu. This concept was introduced into the Samkhya system of thought at certain stage of its development to represent all the attributes of material elements as a group, with the intention to formulate a well balanced evolution scheme. p. 91, all the Samkhya teachers, including Varsaganya and Vindhyavasin, accepted tanmatra, though there were different opinions about it among them. 11) Cf. Mdh 291, 198 etc. 12) Yuktidipika, p. 3, ) Yuktidipika, p. 103, 26. kyo, 1980), pp ) Taisho. vol. 30, p. 170c. 16) Nyayavartika ad Nyayasutra Pan"cadhikarana, one of the Samkhya teachers, holds that indriya is bhautika. (Yuktidzpika, p. 91) (Lecturer, Shinshu University) 1) SK v22, 24, and 38. 2) The same idea as this supposition is referred to in the Ta chih to lun (Taisho vol. 25, p. 546c). 3) Frauwallner, E., Geshichte der Indischen Philosophie, 1 Band, (Wien, 1953) p ) Eighteen Principal Upanisads, vol. 1 (Poona, 1958) p ) Van Buitenen, J. A. B. reads tanmatrapi in The Maitrayaniya Upanisad (Hague, 1962), p ) Eighteen Principal Upanisads, p ) This usage of matra is found in the Brhadaranyaka Upanisad, And matrasparsa in the Bhagavad Gita, 2-14 can be included in the same usage of matra. 8) Cf. Johnston, E. H., Early Samkhya (London, 1937), p. 59 note 1. 9) Nearly the same usage of tanmatra in the Purana litaratures is collected by Ramsuresh Pandey in the Mahabharat our Pranon men Samkhya Darshan (Delhi, 1972), pp ) According to the Yuktidipika (ed. R. C. Pandey, Delhi-Varanasi-Patna, 1967), -953-

Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras

Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras Module No. # 03 Lecture No. # 09 The Sāmkhya Philosophy Welcome viewers. Today,

More information

Ayurveda & Yoga. Mastery of Life

Ayurveda & Yoga. Mastery of Life Ayurveda & Yoga Mastery of Life Ayurveda Know Thyself Ayurveda Is the wisdom of this conscious universe knowable within ourselves and in our own lives. Its aim is the integration of human knowledge towards

More information

Further Evolution. Lecture by Shyam Sundar Goswami (I.24)

Further Evolution. Lecture by Shyam Sundar Goswami (I.24) 1 The lecture below is part of a series of lectures delivered by Sri Shyam Sundar Goswami (recorded verbatim by the late Gertrud Lundén). It is dedicated to the riddle of life and consciousness, with particular

More information

A (Very) Brief Introduction to Epistemology Lecture 2. Palash Sarkar

A (Very) Brief Introduction to Epistemology Lecture 2. Palash Sarkar A (Very) Brief Introduction to Epistemology Lecture 2 Palash Sarkar Applied Statistics Unit Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata India palash@isical.ac.in Palash Sarkar (ISI, Kolkata) Epistemology 1 /

More information

Keywords: Self-consciousness, Self-reflections, Atman, Brahman, Pure Consciousness, Saccidananda, Adhyasā, Māyā, Transcendental Mind.

Keywords: Self-consciousness, Self-reflections, Atman, Brahman, Pure Consciousness, Saccidananda, Adhyasā, Māyā, Transcendental Mind. Lecture 6 The Concept of Mind in Upanisads About the Lecture: The Vedas and the Upanisads were fundamental sources of philosophical knowledge. The concept of transcendental consciousness/ the mind is the

More information

This Week. Loose-end: Williams on Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad Intro to Sāṅkhya & Yoga

This Week. Loose-end: Williams on Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad Intro to Sāṅkhya & Yoga Wk05 Wednesday, Apr 25 Today: This Week Loose-end: Williams on Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad Intro to Sāṅkhya & Yoga Monday YS 1, 2.1-27 Kesarcodi-Watson 1982. "Samādhi in Patañjali's Yoga Sūtras." Carpenter 2003.

More information

McTaggart s Proof of the Unreality of Time

McTaggart s Proof of the Unreality of Time McTaggart s Proof of the Unreality of Time Jeff Speaks September 3, 2004 1 The A series and the B series............................ 1 2 Why time is contradictory.............................. 2 2.1 The

More information

The Logic of Uddyotakara The conflict with Buddhist logic and his achievement

The Logic of Uddyotakara The conflict with Buddhist logic and his achievement 1 The Logic of Uddyotakara The conflict with Buddhist logic and his achievement 0 Introduction 1 The Framework of Uddyotakara s Logic 1.1 Nyāya system and Uddyotakara 1.2 The Framework of Uddyotakara s

More information

The Problem of Dharma in Buddhism and the Dharma- by Esho Yamaguchi

The Problem of Dharma in Buddhism and the Dharma- by Esho Yamaguchi The Problem of Dharma in Buddhism and the Dharma- Adharma in Sthkhya a by Esho Yamaguchi In this paper we shall consider the problem of dharma first as it is used in Buddhism. Various connotations of dharma

More information

Samkhya Philosophy. Yoga Veda Institute

Samkhya Philosophy. Yoga Veda Institute Yoga Veda Institute Introduction to Samkhya Äyurveda is literally translated as Knowledge of Life. So, even though this knowledge may be scientific, it is also very much a philosophical view of life. There

More information

Introduction to Hinduism

Introduction to Hinduism Introduction to Hinduism RELG 210 Spring 2015 Mondays & Wednesdays 2:20-3:35 Location TBA Professor Mari Jyväsjärvi Stuart Office: Rutledge 327 Office hours: Mon 11-12:30 and by appointment Email: stuartmj@sc.edu

More information

Constructing A Biblical Message

Constructing A Biblical Message Constructing A Biblical Message EXALTING CHRIST PUBLISHING 710 BROADWAY STREET VALLEJO, CA 94590 707-553-8780 www.cbcvallejo.org email: publications@cbcvallejo.org Copyright 2001 Printed By Permission

More information

Now is Āyurveda explained: the expression of the five elements, and the three principles most fundamental to life.

Now is Āyurveda explained: the expression of the five elements, and the three principles most fundamental to life. Āyurveda & Yoga - A Series on Āyurveda by Paul Harvey Part Three of Twelve Now is Āyurveda explained: the expression of the five elements, and the three principles most fundamental to life. So far in this

More information

Personality and Puranas

Personality and Puranas Datar, Shilpa. (2016). Personality and Puranas. In, Ranganath, S. (Ed.). Message of Mahapuranas. A unique five-day National conference on the Message of Mahapuranas, June 23rd 27th, 2015. Conference proceedings.

More information

In Search of the Origins of the Five-Gotra System

In Search of the Origins of the Five-Gotra System (84) Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies Vol. 55, No. 3, March 2007 In Search of the Origins of the Five-Gotra System SAKUMA Hidenori tively. Prior to Xuanzang's translations, Consciousness-only thought

More information

On Understanding Rasa in the Tradition of Advaita Vedanta

On Understanding Rasa in the Tradition of Advaita Vedanta International Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences. ISSN 2250-3226 Volume 7, Number 1 (2017), pp. 1-5 Research India Publications http://www.ripublication.com On Understanding Rasa in the Tradition

More information

Kimball, James (2011) The Soteriological Role of the rì sì Ä«Kapila in the YuktidÄ«pikÄ: The Production and Transmission of Liberating Knowledge in Classical SÄmkhya. PhD Thesis, SOAS (School of Oriental

More information

SOVIET RUSSIAN DIALECTICAL MA TERIALISM [DIAMAT]

SOVIET RUSSIAN DIALECTICAL MA TERIALISM [DIAMAT] SOVIET RUSSIAN DIALECTICAL MA TERIALISM [DIAMAT] J. M. BOCHENSKI SOVIET RUSSIAN DIALECTICAL MATERIALISM [DIAMAT] D. REIDEL PUBLISHING COMPANY DORDRECHT-HOLLAND Der Sowjet-Russische Dialektische Materialismus

More information

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies

Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies Contemporary Theology I: Hegel to Death of God Theologies ST503 LESSON 19 of 24 John S. Feinberg, Ph.D. Experience: Professor of Biblical and Systematic Theology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. In

More information

The City, the River, the Sacred

The City, the River, the Sacred The City, the River, the Sacred CLTR 280: Culture in Practice - Yoga & Yoga Theory Course Description Praised as the city of Enlightenment, Varanasi represents a perfect traditional context in which to

More information

Anumāna as Analogical Reasoning A Critical Analysis

Anumāna as Analogical Reasoning A Critical Analysis Anumāna as Analogical Reasoning A Critical Analysis HIMANSU SEKHAR SAMAL (Ravenshaw University, Odisha, India) E- Mail: drhimansusekharsamal@gmail.com Abstract: Like most other branches of knowledge, philosophy

More information

Dr Godavarisha Mishra Shivdasani Visiting Fellow

Dr Godavarisha Mishra Shivdasani Visiting Fellow ADVAITA EPISTEMOLOGY Dr Godavarisha Mishra Shivdasani Visiting Fellow Lecture Three These lectures were delivered in Michaelmas Term (Oct.-Dec. 2003). They are intended to introduce the basic tenets of

More information

Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras

Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras Module No. # 05 Lecture No. # 15 The Nyāya Philosophy Welcome viewers to this

More information

AMONG THE HINDU THEORIES OF ILLUSION BY RASVIHARY DAS. phenomenon of illusion. from man\- contemporary

AMONG THE HINDU THEORIES OF ILLUSION BY RASVIHARY DAS. phenomenon of illusion. from man\- contemporary AMONG THE HINDU THEORIES OF ILLUSION BY RASVIHARY DAS the many contributions of the Hindus to Logic and Epistemology, their discussions on the problem of iuusion have got an importance of their own. They

More information

The Background of Indian Philosophy

The Background of Indian Philosophy The Background of Indian Philosophy Vedic Period Śramaṇa Hinduism -2000-1500 1000-500 0 500 1000 1500 2000 Indian philosophy can be divided as three stages. 1. Vedic period. Indian culture and civilization

More information

Philosophy of Religion: Hume on Natural Religion. Phil 255 Dr Christian Coseru Wednesday, April 12

Philosophy of Religion: Hume on Natural Religion. Phil 255 Dr Christian Coseru Wednesday, April 12 Philosophy of Religion: Hume on Natural Religion Phil 255 Dr Christian Coseru Wednesday, April 12 David Hume (1711-1776) Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion (1779) Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural

More information

Pancdhikarana, a Sainkhya teacher

Pancdhikarana, a Sainkhya teacher Pancdhikarana, a Sainkhya teacher Megumu Honda The Yuktidipikal) presents to us a new parampara of Samkhya teachers;... Harita-Varddhali-Kairata-Paurika-Rsabhesvara-Pancadhikarana-Patan jali- Varsaganya-Kaundinya-Muka-'dika...(p.

More information

Syllabus. General Certificate of Education (International) Advanced Level HINDUISM For examination in November

Syllabus. General Certificate of Education (International) Advanced Level HINDUISM For examination in November General Certificate of Education (International) Advanced Level Syllabus HINDUISM 9014 For examination in November 2011 CIE provides syllabuses, past papers, examiner reports, mark schemes and more on

More information

Lecture 8 Keynes s Response to the Contradictions

Lecture 8 Keynes s Response to the Contradictions Lecture 8 Keynes s Response to the Contradictions Patrick Maher Scientific Thought II Spring 2010 Introduction The Principle of Indifference is usually understood as saying: If there is no known reason

More information

Introductory Kant Seminar Lecture

Introductory Kant Seminar Lecture Introductory Kant Seminar Lecture Intentionality It is not unusual to begin a discussion of Kant with a brief review of some history of philosophy. What is perhaps less usual is to start with a review

More information

Study Programme Modules: The Significance, Path and Goal of the Vedas from the viewpoint of the Upanishads

Study Programme Modules: The Significance, Path and Goal of the Vedas from the viewpoint of the Upanishads Study Programme Modules: The Significance, Path and Goal of the Vedas from the viewpoint of the Upanishads In this study program we will study the Significance, Path and Goal of the Vedas from the viewpoint

More information

SYSTEMATIC RESEARCH IN PHILOSOPHY. Contents

SYSTEMATIC RESEARCH IN PHILOSOPHY. Contents UNIT 1 SYSTEMATIC RESEARCH IN PHILOSOPHY Contents 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Research in Philosophy 1.3 Philosophical Method 1.4 Tools of Research 1.5 Choosing a Topic 1.1 INTRODUCTION Everyone who seeks knowledge

More information

Spinoza s Modal-Ontological Argument for Monism

Spinoza s Modal-Ontological Argument for Monism Spinoza s Modal-Ontological Argument for Monism One of Spinoza s clearest expressions of his monism is Ethics I P14, and its corollary 1. 1 The proposition reads: Except God, no substance can be or be

More information

THE VALUE OF UNCERTAINTY

THE VALUE OF UNCERTAINTY Published in The American Theosophist, January 1979 THE VALUE OF UNCERTAINTY Sri Madhava Ashish We journey into the unknown through a trackless jungle. If we are truthful to ourselves, we must admit that

More information

Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras

Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras Indian Philosophy Prof. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras Module No. # 05 Lecture No. # 20 The Nyaya Philosophy Hi, today we will be

More information

MEDITATIONS ON THE FIRST PHILOSOPHY: THE ONTOLOGICAL ARGUMENT

MEDITATIONS ON THE FIRST PHILOSOPHY: THE ONTOLOGICAL ARGUMENT MEDITATIONS ON THE FIRST PHILOSOPHY: THE ONTOLOGICAL ARGUMENT René Descartes Introduction, Donald M. Borchert DESCARTES WAS BORN IN FRANCE in 1596 and died in Sweden in 1650. His formal education from

More information

INTUITIVE UNDERSTANDING. Let me, if you please, begin with a quotation from Ramakrishna Puligandla on Indian Philosophy:

INTUITIVE UNDERSTANDING. Let me, if you please, begin with a quotation from Ramakrishna Puligandla on Indian Philosophy: INTUITIVE UNDERSTANDING James W. Kidd Let me, if you please, begin with a quotation from Ramakrishna Puligandla on Indian Philosophy: All the systems hold that ultimate reality cannot be grasped through

More information

Past Lives - How To Prove Them

Past Lives - How To Prove Them Past Lives - How To Prove Them by Ven Fedor Stracke Happy Monks Publication Happy Monks Publication Compiled by Fedor Stracke based on various sources. Fedor Stracke Table of Contents Past Lives - How

More information

CONTENTS A SYSTEM OF LOGIC

CONTENTS A SYSTEM OF LOGIC EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION NOTE ON THE TEXT. SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY XV xlix I /' ~, r ' o>

More information

Philosophy Courses-1

Philosophy Courses-1 Philosophy Courses-1 PHL 100/Introduction to Philosophy A course that examines the fundamentals of philosophical argument, analysis and reasoning, as applied to a series of issues in logic, epistemology,

More information

MIND IN NYĀYA VAIŚEṢIKA WITH A COMPARISON TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI)

MIND IN NYĀYA VAIŚEṢIKA WITH A COMPARISON TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI) MIND IN NYĀYA VAIŚEṢIKA WITH A COMPARISON TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI) ABSTRACT Vandana Upadhyay M.Phil. Special Centre for Sanskrit Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, 110067. E-mail.

More information

Philosophy on the Battlefield: The Bhagavad Gita V. Jnana-yoga: The Yoga of Spiritual Knowledge

Philosophy on the Battlefield: The Bhagavad Gita V. Jnana-yoga: The Yoga of Spiritual Knowledge Philosophy on the Battlefield: The Bhagavad Gita V. Jnana-yoga: The Yoga of Spiritual Knowledge Prof. K. S. Arjunwadkar (Figures in brackets refer to chapters and verses in the Bhagavad Gita unless stated

More information

The Samkhya system of the Bhagavata Purana

The Samkhya system of the Bhagavata Purana University of Iowa Iowa Research Online Theses and Dissertations Summer 2012 The Samkhya system of the Bhagavata Purana Peter Charles Basel University of Iowa Copyright 2012 Peter Charles Basel This thesis

More information

An insight on Parinamas mentioned in the Patanjala Yoga Sutras

An insight on Parinamas mentioned in the Patanjala Yoga Sutras An insight on Parinamas mentioned in the Patanjala Yoga Sutras Bhivandker Mayur Pratap A.C.A., M.A. (Yogashastra) 1501, Chaitra Heritage, Plot no 550, 11th road, Chembur, Mumbai 400 071 E mail: mayur.bhivandker@gmail.com

More information

Materialist Philosophy in Ancient India Part II

Materialist Philosophy in Ancient India Part II Materialist Philosophy in Ancient India Part II Subrata Gouri The Samkhya System The Samkhya ideas were very old and their influence quite extensive. It is believed to be as old as the Vedas, may be even

More information

Dialogue and Cultural Consciousness, Yinchuan, China, November 19, 2005.

Dialogue and Cultural Consciousness, Yinchuan, China, November 19, 2005. 1 The Place of T ien-fang hsing-li in the Islamic Tradition 1 William C. Chittick Liu Chih s T ien-fang hsing-li was one of the most widely read books among Chinese Muslims during the 18 th and 19 th centuries,

More information

Comparative Political Philosophy: Islam and the West Political Science (intermediate-level seminar)

Comparative Political Philosophy: Islam and the West Political Science (intermediate-level seminar) Comparative Political Philosophy: Islam and the West Political Science (intermediate-level seminar) It is a little-known story that many of the classical texts of ancient Greece, texts that make up the

More information

Philosophy. Aim of the subject

Philosophy. Aim of the subject Philosophy FIO Philosophy Philosophy is a humanistic subject with ramifications in all areas of human knowledge and activity, since it covers fundamental issues concerning the nature of reality, the possibility

More information

Symbolic Logic Prof. Chhanda Chakraborti Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur

Symbolic Logic Prof. Chhanda Chakraborti Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur Symbolic Logic Prof. Chhanda Chakraborti Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur Lecture - 01 Introduction: What Logic is Kinds of Logic Western and Indian

More information

The Social Construction Of Reality: A Treatise In The Sociology Of Knowledge By Peter L. Berger, Thomas Luckmann

The Social Construction Of Reality: A Treatise In The Sociology Of Knowledge By Peter L. Berger, Thomas Luckmann The Social Construction Of Reality: A Treatise In The Sociology Of Knowledge By Peter L. Berger, Thomas Luckmann If you are searching for the ebook by Peter L. Berger, Thomas Luckmann The Social Construction

More information

Chapter 5. Kāma animal soul sexual desire desire passion sensory pleasure animal desire fourth Principle

Chapter 5. Kāma animal soul sexual desire desire passion sensory pleasure animal desire fourth Principle EVOLUTION OF THE HIGHER CONSCIOUSNESS STUDY GUIDE Chapter 5 KAMA THE ANIMAL SOUL Words to Know kāma selfish desire, lust, volition; the cleaving to existence. kāma-rūpa rūpa means body or form; kāma-rūpa

More information

Chapter 16 George Berkeley s Immaterialism and Subjective Idealism

Chapter 16 George Berkeley s Immaterialism and Subjective Idealism Chapter 16 George Berkeley s Immaterialism and Subjective Idealism Key Words Immaterialism, esse est percipi, material substance, sense data, skepticism, primary quality, secondary quality, substratum

More information

arxiv:physics/ v1 [physics.hist-ph] 30 Sep 2003

arxiv:physics/ v1 [physics.hist-ph] 30 Sep 2003 arxiv:physics/0310001v1 [physics.hist-ph] 30 Sep 2003 Indian Physics: Outline of Early History 1 Introduction Subhash Kak February 2, 2008 Historians of science are generally unaware of the contributions

More information

Interview. with Ravi Ravindra. Can science help us know the nature of God through his creation?

Interview. with Ravi Ravindra. Can science help us know the nature of God through his creation? Interview Buddhist monk meditating: Traditional Chinese painting with Ravi Ravindra Can science help us know the nature of God through his creation? So much depends on what one thinks or imagines God is.

More information

Health is a choice! Rasa Yoga Master s Path. ~ Ayurveda Training~ Fall 2017

Health is a choice! Rasa Yoga Master s Path. ~ Ayurveda Training~ Fall 2017 Rasa Yoga Master s Path ~ Ayurveda Training~ Fall 2017 Health is a choice! When health is absent, wisdom cannot reveal itself, art cannot manifest, strength cannot fight, wealth becomes useless, and intelligence

More information

Richard L. W. Clarke, Notes REASONING

Richard L. W. Clarke, Notes REASONING 1 REASONING Reasoning is, broadly speaking, the cognitive process of establishing reasons to justify beliefs, conclusions, actions or feelings. It also refers, more specifically, to the act or process

More information

Locating Philosophy in the Mahābhārata

Locating Philosophy in the Mahābhārata J Indian Philos (2017) 45:569 574 DOI 10.1007/s10781-017-9324-4 Locating Philosophy in the Mahābhārata James L. Fitzgerald 1 Published online: 12 August 2017 Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2017 The

More information

HINDUISM REL W61

HINDUISM REL W61 HINDUISM REL 3333-0W61 Dr. Ann Gleig Office: PSY 226 (the Philosophy Department is on the second floor of the Psychology Building) Office Hours: Tuesday 2-3pm (or by appointment) Email: Ann.Gleig@ucf.edu

More information

In Search of the Ontological Argument. Richard Oxenberg

In Search of the Ontological Argument. Richard Oxenberg 1 In Search of the Ontological Argument Richard Oxenberg Abstract We can attend to the logic of Anselm's ontological argument, and amuse ourselves for a few hours unraveling its convoluted word-play, or

More information

Indian Philosophy. Prof. Dr. Satya Sundar Sethy. Department of Humanities and Social Sciences. Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. Module No.

Indian Philosophy. Prof. Dr. Satya Sundar Sethy. Department of Humanities and Social Sciences. Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. Module No. Indian Philosophy Prof. Dr. Satya Sundar Sethy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras Module No. # 05 Lecture No. # 19 The Nyāya Philosophy. Welcome to the

More information

Asian Religions and Islam

Asian Religions and Islam Asian Religions and Islam RELIGIOUS STUDIES 199, FALL 2016, Meeting Time: WF 2-3:15 Professor Todd T. Lewis Office Hours: Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays 1-2; and by appointment SMITH 425 Office Phone:

More information

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES Philosophy SECTION I: Program objectives and outcomes Philosophy Educational Objectives: The objectives of programs in philosophy are to: 1. develop in majors the ability

More information

6AANA016 Indian Philosophy: The Orthodox Schools Syllabus Academic year 2012/3

6AANA016 Indian Philosophy: The Orthodox Schools Syllabus Academic year 2012/3 School of Arts & Humanities Department of Philosophy 6AANA016 Indian Philosophy: The Orthodox Schools Syllabus Academic year 2012/3 Basic information Credits: 15 Module Tutor: Dr Will Rasmussen Office:

More information

Some remarks regarding the regularity model of cause in Hume and Kant

Some remarks regarding the regularity model of cause in Hume and Kant Andrea Faggion* Some remarks regarding the regularity model of cause in Hume and Kant Abstract At first, I intend to discuss summarily the role of propensities of human nature in Hume s theory of causality.

More information

Testimony and Moral Understanding Anthony T. Flood, Ph.D. Introduction

Testimony and Moral Understanding Anthony T. Flood, Ph.D. Introduction 24 Testimony and Moral Understanding Anthony T. Flood, Ph.D. Abstract: In this paper, I address Linda Zagzebski s analysis of the relation between moral testimony and understanding arguing that Aquinas

More information

LESSON PLAN EVEN SEMESTER 2018 Session: 2 nd January, 2018 to 20 th April, 2018 PHIL 402: Indian Logic (Tarkasaṁgraha); UG, 4 th Semester

LESSON PLAN EVEN SEMESTER 2018 Session: 2 nd January, 2018 to 20 th April, 2018 PHIL 402: Indian Logic (Tarkasaṁgraha); UG, 4 th Semester LESSON PLAN EVEN SEMESTER 2018 Session: 2 nd January, 2018 to 20 th April, 2018 PHIL 402: Indian Logic (Tarkasaṁgraha); UG, 4 th Semester Dr. Mainak Pal Assistant Professor Department of Philosophy Sl.

More information

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS PHIL SOUTH ASIAN PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION. Dr. George James

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS PHIL SOUTH ASIAN PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION. Dr. George James UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS PHIL 3620.001 SOUTH ASIAN PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION 1 Fall 2012 Dr. George James (James@unt.edu) TuTh 11:00am -12:20pm Office: EESAT (ENV) 225E WH 312 (940)565-4791 Hours: TuTh

More information

Jnâna Yoga Part II i

Jnâna Yoga Part II i Jnâna Yoga Part II i Jnâna Yoga Writings Address by Swami Vivekananda on The Ideal of a Universal Religion Vedanta Philosophy: Lectures by the Swami Vivekananda on The Cosmos Vedanta Philosophy: Lecture

More information

Wisdom in Aristotle and Aquinas From Metaphysics to Mysticism Edmond Eh University of Saint Joseph, Macau

Wisdom in Aristotle and Aquinas From Metaphysics to Mysticism Edmond Eh University of Saint Joseph, Macau Volume 12, No 2, Fall 2017 ISSN 1932-1066 Wisdom in Aristotle and Aquinas From Metaphysics to Mysticism Edmond Eh University of Saint Joseph, Macau edmond_eh@usj.edu.mo Abstract: This essay contains an

More information

Chapter I INTRODUCTION

Chapter I INTRODUCTION Chapter I INTRODUCTION I.1. Significance and Relevance of Research on the Topic Buddhism was founded in the sixth century B.C. by the Buddha Śākyamuni. According to the Buddhist history, after leaving

More information

Samapatti & Knowing without Mind: Explanation by Vedanta

Samapatti & Knowing without Mind: Explanation by Vedanta December 2015 Volume 6 Issue 11 pp. 662-675 662 Samapatti & Knowing without Mind: Explanation by Vedanta Alan J. Oliver & Syamala Hari * ABSTRACT Article Sampatti is a state of consciousness without or

More information

Is Love a Reason for a Trinity?

Is Love a Reason for a Trinity? Is Love a Reason for a Trinity? By Rodney Shaw 2008 Rodney Shaw This article originally appeared in the September-October 2008 issue of the Forward. One of the arguments used to support a trinitarian view

More information

BUDDHA S CRITIQUE OF TRADITIONAL THEORIES OF CAUSATION

BUDDHA S CRITIQUE OF TRADITIONAL THEORIES OF CAUSATION Chapter IV BUDDHA S CRITIQUE OF TRADITIONAL THEORIES OF CAUSATION 76 CHAPTER IV BUDDHA S CRITIQUE OF TRADITIONAL THEORIES OF CAUSATION Buddha had to abandon most of the explanation of reality introduced

More information

There are three tools you can use:

There are three tools you can use: Slide 1: What the Buddha Thought How can we know if something we read or hear about Buddhism really reflects the Buddha s own teachings? There are three tools you can use: Slide 2: 1. When delivering his

More information

Ramanuja. whose ideas and writings have had a lasting impact on Indian religious practices.

Ramanuja. whose ideas and writings have had a lasting impact on Indian religious practices. Ramanuja Born and raised in South India in 1017 CE, Ramanuja was a philosopher and a theologian whose ideas and writings have had a lasting impact on Indian religious practices. Ramanuja is attributed

More information

Buzzard writes about Titus 2:13, also supposedly an example of the Granville Sharp rule:

Buzzard writes about Titus 2:13, also supposedly an example of the Granville Sharp rule: Ephesians 5:5 For of this you can be sure: No immoral, impure or greedy person such a man is an idolater has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God. (NIV) 1. Using this verse, some Trinitarians

More information

Empty Words: Buddhist Philosophy and Cross-Cultural Interpretation (review)

Empty Words: Buddhist Philosophy and Cross-Cultural Interpretation (review) Empty Words: Buddhist Philosophy and Cross-Cultural Interpretation (review) Mario D'Amato Philosophy East and West, Volume 53, Number 1, January 2003, pp. 136-139 (Review) Published by University of Hawai'i

More information

The Art of Spiritual Transformation. RELG 351 * Fall 2015

The Art of Spiritual Transformation. RELG 351 * Fall 2015 YOGA The Art of Spiritual Transformation RELG 351 * Fall 2015 Instructor: Mari Jyväsjärvi Stuart MW 3:55 5:10 Yoga has become a mainstream cultural phenomenon in affluent Western societies. Yoga studios,

More information

Epistemic Reduction: The Case of Arthāpatti

Epistemic Reduction: The Case of Arthāpatti Epistemic Reduction: The Case of Arthāpatti Dr. Sara L. Uckelman s.l.uckelman@durham.ac.uk @SaraLUckelman PhilSoc 30 Oct 18 Dr. Sara L. Uckelman Epistemic Reduction 30 Oct 18 1 / 31 An introduction into

More information

Aquinas' Third Way Modalized

Aquinas' Third Way Modalized Philosophy of Religion Aquinas' Third Way Modalized Robert E. Maydole Davidson College bomaydole@davidson.edu ABSTRACT: The Third Way is the most interesting and insightful of Aquinas' five arguments for

More information

B.A (Hons) Indian Philosophy GI322 (Under Review)

B.A (Hons) Indian Philosophy GI322 (Under Review) B.A (Hons) Indian Philosophy GI22 (Under Review) 1. Objectives a) To provide opportunities to Diploma holders to deepen their knowledge of Indian Philosophy through a systematic exposure to primary texts

More information

SYNOPSIS OF THE THESIS "CULTURAL HISTORY FROM THE MATSYA-PURANA" STATEMENT No. 1 HOW THE PRESENT WORK TENDS TO THE GENERAL ADVANCEMENT KNOWLEDGE:

SYNOPSIS OF THE THESIS CULTURAL HISTORY FROM THE MATSYA-PURANA STATEMENT No. 1 HOW THE PRESENT WORK TENDS TO THE GENERAL ADVANCEMENT KNOWLEDGE: SYNOPSIS OF THE THESIS "CULTURAL HISTORY FROM THE MATSYA-PURANA" STATEMENT No. 1 HOW THE PRESENT WORK TENDS TO THE GENERAL ADVANCEMENT KNOWLEDGE: "The Puranas occupy a unique position in Indian literature

More information

Ancient and Medieval. Studies 165, Fall 2013

Ancient and Medieval. Studies 165, Fall 2013 Ancient and Medieval Hinduism Religious Studies 165, Fall 2013 Professor Todd Lewis 425 Smith Office Hours: Tuesdays, Thursdays 2 3; Wed 1 2, and by appointment Office Extension: 793 3436 E mail: tlewis@holycross.edu

More information

Two Approaches to Natural Law;Note

Two Approaches to Natural Law;Note Notre Dame Law School NDLScholarship Natural Law Forum 1-1-1956 Two Approaches to Natural Law;Note Vernon J. Bourke Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.nd.edu/nd_naturallaw_forum

More information

Chapter Six. Aristotle s Theory of Causation and the Ideas of Potentiality and Actuality

Chapter Six. Aristotle s Theory of Causation and the Ideas of Potentiality and Actuality Chapter Six Aristotle s Theory of Causation and the Ideas of Potentiality and Actuality Key Words: Form and matter, potentiality and actuality, teleological, change, evolution. Formal cause, material cause,

More information

World without Design: The Ontological Consequences of Natural- ism , by Michael C. Rea.

World without Design: The Ontological Consequences of Natural- ism , by Michael C. Rea. Book reviews World without Design: The Ontological Consequences of Naturalism, by Michael C. Rea. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2004, viii + 245 pp., $24.95. This is a splendid book. Its ideas are bold and

More information

PHILOSOPHIES OF INDIA: LIBERATING KNOWLEDGE

PHILOSOPHIES OF INDIA: LIBERATING KNOWLEDGE PHILOSOPHIES OF INDIA: LIBERATING KNOWLEDGE Philosophy Senior Seminar, PH375 Spring 2013 Dr. Joel R. Smith Skidmore College This senior seminar explores the major classical philosophies of India. We begin

More information

LEIBNITZ. Monadology

LEIBNITZ. Monadology LEIBNITZ Explain and discuss Leibnitz s Theory of Monads. Discuss Leibnitz s Theory of Monads. How are the Monads related to each other? What does Leibnitz understand by monad? Explain his theory of monadology.

More information

Projection in Hume. P J E Kail. St. Peter s College, Oxford.

Projection in Hume. P J E Kail. St. Peter s College, Oxford. Projection in Hume P J E Kail St. Peter s College, Oxford Peter.kail@spc.ox.ac.uk A while ago now (2007) I published my Projection and Realism in Hume s Philosophy (Oxford University Press henceforth abbreviated

More information

Mind in the Indian Perspective by Nitya Chaitanya Yati

Mind in the Indian Perspective by Nitya Chaitanya Yati Mind in the Indian Perspective by Nitya Chaitanya Yati Everything is said to be in the mind. But there is no mind to be seen anywhere. There are people who do not believe in God or soul or spirit, but

More information

Figure 1 Figure 2 U S S. non-p P P

Figure 1 Figure 2 U S S. non-p P P 1 Depicting negation in diagrammatic logic: legacy and prospects Fabien Schang, Amirouche Moktefi schang.fabien@voila.fr amirouche.moktefi@gersulp.u-strasbg.fr Abstract Here are considered the conditions

More information

WHAT ARISTOTLE TAUGHT

WHAT ARISTOTLE TAUGHT WHAT ARISTOTLE TAUGHT Aristotle was, perhaps, the greatest original thinker who ever lived. Historian H J A Sire has put the issue well: All other thinkers have begun with a theory and sought to fit reality

More information

Broad on Theological Arguments. I. The Ontological Argument

Broad on Theological Arguments. I. The Ontological Argument Broad on God Broad on Theological Arguments I. The Ontological Argument Sample Ontological Argument: Suppose that God is the most perfect or most excellent being. Consider two things: (1)An entity that

More information

COPYRIGHT NOTICE Tilakaratne/Theravada Buddhism

COPYRIGHT NOTICE Tilakaratne/Theravada Buddhism COPYRIGHT NOTICE Tilakaratne/Theravada Buddhism is published by University of Hawai i Press and copyrighted, 2012, by University of Hawai i Press. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced

More information

The Creation Story and Maya A viewpoint of how we came to be

The Creation Story and Maya A viewpoint of how we came to be The Creation Story and Maya A viewpoint of how we came to be I. Introduction: We ve previously talked about how Kashmir Shaivism, somewhere around 1000 CE, concluded that the world is so wondrous that

More information

THE FORM OF REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM J. M. LEE. A recent discussion of this topic by Donald Scherer in [6], pp , begins thus:

THE FORM OF REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM J. M. LEE. A recent discussion of this topic by Donald Scherer in [6], pp , begins thus: Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic Volume XIV, Number 3, July 1973 NDJFAM 381 THE FORM OF REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM J. M. LEE A recent discussion of this topic by Donald Scherer in [6], pp. 247-252, begins

More information

CONCEPT OF ATMA (SOUL) IN AYURVEDA: A REVIEW

CONCEPT OF ATMA (SOUL) IN AYURVEDA: A REVIEW Review Article International Ayurvedic Medical Journal ISSN:2320 5091 CONCEPT OF ATMA (SOUL) IN AYURVEDA: A REVIEW Kamath Nagaraj 1, Patel Yasesh 2, Rateesh C T 3, Kulkarni Pratibha 4 1,2,3 P.G.Scholar,

More information

Workshop on the Textual Study of Kathāvatthu

Workshop on the Textual Study of Kathāvatthu Workshop on the Textual Study of Kathāvatthu Kathāvatthu, one of the earliest works of the Buddhist Tradition, forms a part of the Abhidhamma Pitaka (composed during 3 rd BC). It is a text that depicts

More information

How Subjective Fact Ties Language to Reality

How Subjective Fact Ties Language to Reality How Subjective Fact Ties Language to Reality Mark F. Sharlow URL: http://www.eskimo.com/~msharlow ABSTRACT In this note, I point out some implications of the experiential principle* for the nature of the

More information

Philosophy 305 Introduction to Philosophy of Religion Fall 2016 (also listed as CTI 310, RS 305) 42270; 33770; WAG 302 MWF 2-3

Philosophy 305 Introduction to Philosophy of Religion Fall 2016 (also listed as CTI 310, RS 305) 42270; 33770; WAG 302 MWF 2-3 Philosophy 305 Introduction to Philosophy of Religion Fall 2016 (also listed as CTI 310, RS 305) 42270; 33770; 43535 WAG 302 MWF 2-3 Stephen Phillips WAG 301 Fall Office Hours: M & F 3-4 & by appointment

More information