A History of Indian Philosophy, Volume 1University Press, 1963 - Hindu philosophy |
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Page 289
... inferences referred to are ( 1 ) inference of non - existence of some things from the existence of some things , ( 2 ) of the existence of some things from the non - existence of some things , ( 3 ) of the existence of some things from ...
... inferences referred to are ( 1 ) inference of non - existence of some things from the existence of some things , ( 2 ) of the existence of some things from the non - existence of some things , ( 3 ) of the existence of some things from ...
Page 389
... inference not only includes all cases of cause and effect , of genus and species but also all cases of coexistence as well . The question arises that if no inference is possible without a memory of the permanent relation , is not the ...
... inference not only includes all cases of cause and effect , of genus and species but also all cases of coexistence as well . The question arises that if no inference is possible without a memory of the permanent relation , is not the ...
Page 393
... inference . But this is not so , for the concomit- ance was seen only in individual cases , and from that came the inference that wherever there is smoke there is fire . It cannot be said that the concomitance perceived in individual ...
... inference . But this is not so , for the concomit- ance was seen only in individual cases , and from that came the inference that wherever there is smoke there is fire . It cannot be said that the concomitance perceived in individual ...
Contents
The Mīmāmsā Literature | 2 |
The Parataḥpramanya doctrine of Nyaya and the Svataḥprāmāṇya doctrine of Mimāmsā | 3 |
The place of Senseorgans in Perception Indeterminate and Determinate Perception | 4 |
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Common terms and phrases
according action admitted adṛṣṭa ahamkāra ajñāna ākāśa antaḥkaraṇa appearance associated ātman atoms attain avidyā bhāṣya body Brahman Brāhmaṇas buddhi Buddhist called Caraka cause citta cognition collocation colour commentary concomitance consciousness Devadatta dharma doctrine dravya effect elements entity essence existence experience external world fire guņas hetu Hindu illusion illusory Indian inference interpretation Isvara Jaina Jains jāti jīva kārikā karma kinds Kumārila later manas manifested māyā means meditation Mīmāmsā mind Nāgārjuna nature negation non-existence notion Nyāya Nyaya sutras object Pāli Patanjali perceived perception phenomena philosophy pleasure Prabhakara prakṛti pramāņa produced pure purușa qualities reality reference regarded relation right knowledge rūpa sacrifice Samkhya samsāra samskāras Śankara sankhāra Sanskrit sattva says sense separate skandhas smoke sorrow soul stage substance sūtras tanmātras things thought tion true truth upādāna Upanisads Vācaspati Vaiseṣika validity Vedanta Vedas Vedic Vijñāna vṛtti word world-appearance Yoga