
The Origins of Philosophy in Ancient Greece and Ancient India
A Historical Comparison
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The Origins of Philosophy in Ancient Greece and Ancient India
A Historical Comparison
About this book
Why did Greek philosophy begin in the sixth century BCE? Why did Indian philosophy begin at about the same time? Why did the earliest philosophy take the form that it did? Why was this form so similar in Greece and India? And how do we explain the differences between them? These questions can only be answered by locating the philosophical intellect within its entire societal context, ignoring neither ritual nor economy. The cities of Greece and northern India were in this period distinctive also by virtue of being pervasively monetised. The metaphysics of both cultures is marked by the projection (onto the cosmos) and the introjection (into the inner self) of the abstract, all-pervasive, quasi-omnipotent, impersonal substance embodied in money (especially coinage). And in both cultures this development accompanied the interiorisation of the cosmic rite of passage (in India sacrifice, in Greece mystic initiation).
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-title page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- The Ancient Texts
- Translations
- Anglicisation of Sanskrit
- List of Abbreviations
- Part A Introductory
- Part B The Earliest Texts
- Part C Unified Self, Monism and Cosmic Cycle in India
- Part D Unified Self, Monism and Cosmic Cycle in Greece
- Part E Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index of Principal Ancient Passages
- Index