Puṣpikā: Tracing Ancient India Through Texts and Traditions
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Puṣpikā: Tracing Ancient India Through Texts and Traditions

Contributions to Current Research in Indology Volume 3

Robert Leach, Jessie Pons, Jessie Pons

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eBook - ePub

Puṣpikā: Tracing Ancient India Through Texts and Traditions

Contributions to Current Research in Indology Volume 3

Robert Leach, Jessie Pons, Jessie Pons

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Pu?pik? 3 is the outcome of the third and fourth International Indology Graduate Research Symposiums held in Paris and Edinburgh in 2011 and 2012. This volume presents the results of recent research by early-career scholars into the texts, languages and literary, philosophical and religious traditions of South Asia. The articles offer a broad range of disciplinary perspectives on a wide array of subjects including classical and medieval philosophy, esoteric knowledge and practices in the Vedas, K?lid?sa's great poem Meghad?ta ('The Cloud Messenger'), soteriology in a 17th century Jain text, identity, orality and the songs of the Bauls in 20th century Bengal, and Sanskrit pedagogy.

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Información

Editorial
Oxbow Books
Año
2015
ISBN
9781782979401
Categoría
Social Sciences
Categoría
Archaeology
One
Is inference a cognitive or a linguistic process? A line of divergence between Jain and Buddhist classifications
Marie-Hélène Gorisse
Abstract
Theories of inference mainly consist of the study of persuasive reasoning as a reliable source of knowledge. In classical India, investigations of inference (anumāna) are traditionally referred to as “Indian logic” (nyāya) and are performed as part of the treatises on the means to acquire knowledge (pramāa). As such, they lie at the junction between theories of knowledge, theories of argumentation and theories of meaning.
While Buddhist and Naiyāyika theories of inference are well documented, those of the Jains still call for further study. In Jainism, the founding teachings of the Digambara master Akalaka (640–680) are partly devoted to drawing a clear distinction between Dharmakīrti’s conceptions and those of the Jains. These teachings have been succeeded by those of Māikyanandi and a tradition ranging from Prabhācandra to Vādi Devasūri.
The objective of this paper is, from a study of the texts of this tradition, to understand the specificities of the Jain theory of inference, especially in relation with those of the Buddhists, which are very close. Within the framework of this paper, I will focus on the following issue: in the study of inference in both traditions, what is conceived as a cognitive process, and what as a linguistic one? This, in turn, will lead us to investigate different conceptions concerning the natural relations ensuring certainty, as well as different forms of inference.
1. The cognitive process of inference
1.1. Historic presentation
Around the 2nd century BCE, the emergence of rival philosophical schools in India, and the need to preserve and strengthen their respective positions, led to the development of the genre of sūtra, along with its commentarial traditions.1 Already, at an early stage, this style of philosophical systematisation included refutations of rival theses, as well as refutations of attacks, or potential attacks, towards one’s own theses. This tradition of debate evolved in such a way that around the 6th century CE, a pan-Indian inter-doctrinal consensus on what constitutes a satisfactory justification (a canonical presentation of a correct inference) was achieved. I will refer to this rich period of philosophical dialogue that occurred especially between Hindu, Buddhist and Jain schools, as the “classical” period of Indian philosophy. This period extends from the composition of the above-mentioned sūtra texts (2nd century BCE) to the Muslim invasions that mark a clear interruption to the Indian philosophical tradition around the 12th century CE.
The present study is more precisely concerned with the theorising on inference by Jain philosophers. Jain philosophy is often marginalised, and a proper reintroduction of Jain philosophical ideas within the broader framework of Indian philosophy is a desideratum in scholarship. I will focus on the period following Dharmakīrti (7th c.), a Buddhist philosopher who made breakthroughs in philosophy, especially in relation with the conception of necessity, and who addressed some virulent criticisms against Jain philosophy of knowledge.2 At that time, the biggest challenge for Jain philosophers was to distinguish their conceptions from the conceptions of Dharmakīrti.
The milestone for such a challenge is Akalaka’s teachings (640–680). Akalaka founded a systematic Jain theory of knowledge, and part of this theory is devoted to the study of inference and other logical considerations. After him, the Jain Māikyanandi (9th c.) organised Akalaka’s mature philosophy into a concise treatise, the Parīkāmukham (henceforth PM), the Introduction to philosophical investigation. This work has itself been commented on by the Jain Prabhācandra (980–1065) in his Prameyakamalamārtaa (PKM), the Sun that grows the lotus of the knowable. The PKM is of particular importance, first because it presents Akalaka’s influential teachings in a more organised and a more detailed way than his predecessors. Second, because it draws special attention to dialogues with other schools.3 The reception of the PKM exemplifies the marginalisation of Jain philosophy, because although it is an important text in the classical Indian tradition, only very small parts of it have been translated. A last name of importance is Vādi Devasūri (12th c.), who wrote a commentary to the PKM, namely the Pramāanayatattvālokālakāra (PNT), the Commentary on the explanation of the nature of universal and contextual knowledge. These three works constitute a lineage of commentaries, and each of them shares the same conception of inference, which I will refer to as “the tradition of Akalaka”. Since the PM is the first work in this line of tradition, I will mainly refer to this text, and will quote from the PKM and the PNT only when considering matters which are absent from earlier works.
This Jaina tradition is very close to the Buddhist tradition as initiated by Dharmakīrti in his comments on Dignāga. Therefore, I will focus on the differences between the two conceptions, and ask the following question: “in what sense can we say that the presentation at stake is specifically Jain?”
1.2. General presentation
Inference is the cognitive process by which a given subject acquires new knowledge using reasoning, in contrast with direct cognitive processes such as perception. This reasoning consists of finding which certainties one can acquire from the observation of a given phenomenon. Therefore, it lies at a junction between theories of knowledge, since investigations on inference (anumāna) are performed as part of the treatises on the means to acquire knowledge (pramāa), and theories of argumentation, since investigations on inference mainly consist of the study of persuasive reasoning as a reliable source of knowledge. What is more, this field of expertise traditionally referred to as Indian “logic” (nyāya), is concerned with theories of meaning as well, since one of its core issues is the question of the extension of predicates. More precisely, an inference is usually based on a relationship of inclusion between the range of two properties, although in section 2.2, we will see that Jain philosophers try to extend this conception. The example of inference provided by Māikyanandi is that one can acquire the knowledge that sound is subject to change as a result of one’s previous knowledge that so...

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