of the illusions subjective or objective which could make any knowledge, action, or feeling possible for him. Such a man is called jīvanmukta, i.e. emancipated while living. For him all world-appearance has ceased. He is the one light burning alone in himself where everything else has vanished for ever from the stage1. Vedanta and other Indian Systems. Vedanta is distinctly antagonistic to Nyāya, and most of its powerful dialectic criticism is generally directed against it. Śankara himself had begun it by showing contradictions and inconsistencies in many of the Nyāya conceptions, such as the theory of causation, conception of the atom, the relation of samavāya, the conception of jāti, etc. His followers carried it to still greater lengths as is fully demonstrated by the labours of Śrīharsa, Citsukha, Madhusudana, etc. It was opposed to Mīmāmsā so far as this admitted the Nyāya-Vaiśeşika categories, but agreed with it generally as regards the pramāņas of anumāna, upamiti, arthāpatti, sabda, and anupalabdhi. It also found a great supporter in Mīmāmsā with its doctrine of the self-validity and selfmanifesting power of knowledge. But it differed from Mīmāmsā in the field of practical duties and entered into many elaborate discussions to prove that the duties of the Vedas referred only to ordinary men, whereas men of higher order had no Vedic duties to perform but were to rise above them and attain the highest knowledge, and that a man should perform the Vedic duties only so long as he was not fit for Vedānta instruction and studies. With Samkhya and Yoga the relation of Vedānta seems to be very close. We have already seen that Vedānta had accepted all the special means of self-purification, meditation, etc., that were advocated by Yoga. The main difference between Vedānta and Samkhya was this that Samkhya believed that the stuff of which the world consisted was a reality side by side with the purusas. In later times Vedanta had compromised so far with Samkhya that it also sometimes described māyā as being made up of sattva, rajas, and tamas. Vedānta also held that according to these three characteristics were formed diverse modifications 1 See Pancadaśī. 2 See Sankara's refutation of Nyaya, Śankara-bhāṣya, 11. ii. of the māyā. Thus Isvara is believed to possess a mind of pure sattva alone. But sattva, rajas and tamas were accepted in Vedanta in the sense of tendencies and not as reals as Sāmkhya held it. Moreover, in spite of all modifications that māyā was believed to pass through as the stuff of the world-appearance, it was indefinable and indefinite, and in its nature different from what we understand as positive or negative. It was an unsubstantial nothing, a magic entity which had its being only so long as it appeared. Prakṛti also was indefinable or rather undemonstrable as regards its own essential nature apart from its manifestation, but even then it was believed to be a combination of positive reals. It was undefinable because so long as the reals composing it did not combine, no demonstrable qualities belonged to it with which it could be defined. Māyā however was undemonstrable, indefinite, and indefinable in all forms; it was a separate category of the indefinite. Samkhya believed in the personal individuality of souls, while for Vedānta there was only one soul or self, which appeared as many by virtue of the māyā transformations. There was an adhyāsa or illusion in Sāmkhya as well as in Vedānta; but in the former the illusion was due to a mere non-distinction between prakṛti and purușa or mere misattribution of characters or identities, but in Vedanta there was not only misattribution, but a false and altogether indefinable creation. Causation with Samkhya meant real transformation, but with Vedānta all transformation was mere appearance. Though there were so many differences, it is however easy to see that probably at the time of the origin of the two systems during the Upanisad period each was built up from very similar ideas which differed only in tendencies that gradually manifested themselves into the present divergences of the two systems. Though Sankara laboured hard to prove that the Samkhya view could not be found in the Upanisads, we can hardly be convinced by his interpretations and arguments. The more he argues, the more we are led to suspect that the Samkhya thought had its origin in the Upaniṣads. Sankara and his followers borrowed much of their dialectic form of criticism from the Buddhists. His Brahman was very much like the śūnya of Nāgārjuna. It is difficult indeed to distinguish between pure being and pure non-being as a category. The debts of Śankara to the self-luminosity of the Vijñānavāda Buddhism can hardly be overestimated. There seems to be much truth in the accusations against Śankara by Vijñāna Bhikṣu and others that he was a hidden Buddhist himself. I am led to think that Sankara's philosophy is largely a compound of Vijñānavāda and Śūnyavāda Buddhism with the Upanisad notion of the permanence of self superadded. 1 The words are arranged in the order of the English alphabet. Sanskrit and Pāli 471, 492 anupalambhaḥ, 359 angas, 171 Anguttara Nikāya, 83, in anuparimāṇa, 314 n., 316 anusandhāna, 350 anusmrti nirdeśa, 124 anussati, 102 anusthiti, 163 n. anuşṭubh, 218 n. anuttamāmbhas, 220 n. Anuttaraupapātikadaśās, 171 anuvyavasaya, 343 Anuyogadvāra, 171 anvaya, 353 anvaya-vyatireka, 347 anvayavyatireki, 353 anvayavyapti, 158, 346 anvitābhidhānavāda, 396 anyathākhyāti, 261, 384, 385, 488, 489 anyathasiddhi, 322 n. anyathāsiddhiśünyasya, 320 |