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Nyāya Sūtras

The Nyāya Sūtras is an ancient Indian Sanskrit text composed by Akṣapāda Gautama, and the foundational text of the Nyaya school of Hindu philosophy.[1][2] The date when the text was composed, and the biography of its author is unknown, but variously estimated between 6th-century BCE and 2nd-century CE.[3][4] The text may have been composed by more than one author, over a period of time.[3] The text consists of five books, with two chapters in each book, with a cumulative total of 528 aphoristic sutras, about rules of reason, logic, epistemology and metaphysics.[5][6][7]

The means to correct knowledge, according to ancient Nyayasutras.

The Nyāya Sūtras is a Hindu text,[note 1] notable for focusing on knowledge and logic, and making no mention of Vedic rituals.[9] The first book is structured as a general introduction and table of contents of sixteen categories of knowledge.[3] Book two is about pramana (epistemology), book three is about prameya or the objects of knowledge, and the text discusses the nature of knowledge in remaining books.[3] It set the foundation for Nyaya tradition of the empirical theory of validity and truth, opposing uncritical appeals to intuition or scriptural authority.[10]

The Nyaya sutras cover a wide range of topics, including Tarka-Vidyā, the science of debate or Vāda-Vidyā, the science of discussion.[11] The Nyāya Sutras are related to but extend the Vaiśeṣika epistemological and metaphysical system.[12] Later commentaries expanded, expounded and discussed Nyaya sutras, the earlier surviving commentaries being by Pakṣilasvāmin Vātsyāyana (5th-6th Century CE), followed by the Nyāyavārttika of Uddyotakāra (6th–7th Century CE), Vācaspati Miśra's Tātparyatīkā (9th Century CE), Udayana's Tātparyapariśuddhi (10th Century CE), and Jayanta's Nyāyamañjarī (10th Century CE).[13][14][15]

Author and chronology

The Nyaya-sutras is attributed to Gautama, who was at least the principal author.[3] According to Karl Potter, this name has been a very common Indian name,[16] and the author is also reverentially referred to as Gotama, Dirghatapas and Aksapada Gautama.[3] Little is known about Gautama, or which century he lived in. Scholarly estimates, based on textual analysis, vary from the 6th century BCE, making him a contemporary of Gautama Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama) and Mahavira, to as late as the 2nd century CE.[3] Some scholars favor the theory that the cryptic text Nyaya-sutras was expanded over time by multiple authors,[3] with the earliest layer from about mid-first millennium BCE that was composed by Gautama.[16] The earliest layer is likely to be Book 1 and 5 of the text, while Book 3 and 4 may have been added last, but this is not certain.[16]

One may sum up the situation pretty safely by saying that we have not the vaguest idea who wrote the Nyayasutras or when he lived.

— Karl Potter, The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies[16]

It is likely, states Jeaneane Fowler, that Nyaya and the science of reason stretch back into the Vedic era; it developed in the ancient Indian tradition that involved "dialectical tournaments, in the halls of kings and schools of Vedic philosophers", and Gautama was the one who distilled and systematized this pre-existing knowledge into sutras, or aphoristic compilations called nyayasutras.[17]

The Nyaya school of Hinduism influenced all other schools of Hindu philosophy, as well as Buddhism. Despite their differences, these scholars studied with each other and debated ideas, with Tibetan records suggesting that Buddhist scholars spent years residing with Hindu Nyaya scholars to master the art of reasoning and logic.[5] This cooperation has enabled scholars to place the currently surviving version of the Nyayasutras, to a terminus ante quem (completed before) date of about the 2nd century CE, because one of the most famous and established Buddhist scholars of that era, Nagarjuna, explicitly states, "sutra 4.2.25 is addressed against the Madhyamika system" of Buddhism.[16] Other ancient Buddhist texts confirm that Nyayasutras existed before them, and the text is considered the primary text of old Nyaya school of Hinduism.[18]

Structure

Reality is truth (prāma),
and what is true is so,
irrespective of whether we know it is,
or are aware of that truth.

— Akṣapada Gautama in Nyaya Sutra[19]

The text is written in sutra genre. A sutra is a Sanskrit word that means "string, thread", and represents a condensed manual of knowledge of a specific field or school.[20][21] Each sutra is any short rule, like a theorem distilled into few words or syllables, around which "teachings of ritual, philosophy, grammar or any field of knowledge" can be woven.[20][22] Sutras were compiled to be remembered, used as reference and to help teach and transmit ideas from one generation to the next.[21][23]

The Nyayasutra is divided into five books, each book subdivided into two chapters each. The structure of the text is, states Potter, a layout of ahnikas or lessons served into daily portions, each portion consisting of a number of sutras or aphorisms.[18] The architecture of the text is also split and collated into prakaranas or topics, which later commentators such as Vatsyayana and Vacaspati Misra used to compose their bhasya, ancient texts that have survived into the modern era.[18] There are several surviving manuscripts of the Nyayasutras, with a slight difference in number of sutras, of which the Chowkhamba edition is often studied.[18]

The structure of Nyayasutra
Book Chapter Number of sutras Topics[24][25]
1 1 41 Subject matter and statement of purpose of the text. Four reliable instruments of correct knowledge. Definitions. Nature of argument and nature of the process of valid proof.
2 20 How to analyze opposing views, presents its theory of five-membered arguments, correct conclusions are those where contradictions do not exist, theory of reasoning methods that are flawed, what is a quibble and how to avoid it.
2 1 69 Presents its theory of Doubt. Discusses epistemology, when perception, inference and comparison is unreliable and reliable. Theory that the reliability of testimony depends on the reliability of the source. Theory that the testimony in the Vedas are a source of knowledge and inconsistencies are either defects or choices in the text, the best way to understand the Vedas is to divide it into three: injunction, descriptions and reinculcations.
2 71 Instruments of knowledge are fourfold, Confusion caused by presumption and prejudice, Sound is noneternal theory, Theory of three meaning of words (vyakti, akrti and jati)
3 1 73 presents its theory of body, followed by theory of sensory organs and their role in correct and incorrect knowledge, states that the soul is not a sense organ nor an internal organ.
2 72 presents its theory of soul (self, atman), that the essence of a person and source of judgments is the soul, states its "judgment is non-eternal" theory, presents theory of Karma
4 1 68 Presents its theory of defects, then its theory that "everything has cause, and consequences", and its "some things are eternal, some non-eternal" theory. Defines and describes Fruits, Pain, Release.
2 50 Presents correct knowledge is necessary and sufficient to destroy defects. Both whole and part must be known. Establishes external world exists, and phenomenon are as real as objects. Refutes the "everything is false" theory. Presents ways to produce and maintain correct knowledge, Need to seek and converse with those with knowledge.
5 1 43 24 futile rejoinders, how to avoid errors and present relevant rejoinders
2 24 22 ways of losing an argument

Content

 
The first ten sutras of the text in Sanskrit

The first sutra 1.1.1 of the text asserts its scope and the following sixteen categories of knowledge as a means to gain competence in any field of interest:[18]

Perfection is attained by the correct knowledge about true nature of sixteen categories: means of right knowledge (pramāṇa); object of right knowledge (prameya); doubt (samsaya); purpose (prayojana); familiar instance (dṛṣṭānta); established tenet (siddhānta); members of an inference (avayava); reasoning (tarka); ascertainment or results (nirṇaya); discussion (vāda); sophistic disputations (jalpa); cavil (vitaṇḍa); fallacies (hetvābhāsa); quibbles (chala); futile rejoinders (jāti); and methods of losing an argument (nigrahasthāna).

— Nyayasutra, 1.1.1[18][26][27]

These sixteen categories cover many sections of the text. The verse 1.1.2 of the Nyāya Sūtra declares the text's goal is to study and describe the attainment of liberation of soul from wrong knowledge, faults and sorrow, through the application of above sixteen categories of perfecting knowledge.[18][28][29]

Means of attaining valid knowledge

The Nyaya-sutras assert the premise that "all knowledge is not intrinsically valid", that "most knowledge is not valid unless proven" and "truth exists whether we human beings know it or not".[30] However, states Fowler, the text accepts the foundation that "some knowledge is self evident" and axiomatic in every field of knowledge, which can neither be proven nor needs proof, such as "I am conscious", "I think" and "soul exists".[30][31] Furthermore, the text presents its thesis that knowledge is not self-revealing, one must make effort to gain knowledge and this is a systematic process that empowers one to learn correct knowledge, and abandon incorrect knowledge.[30][32]

The Nyāya sutras asserts and then discusses four reliable means of obtaining knowledge (pramāṇa), viz., Perception, Inference, Comparison and Reliable Testimony.[33][24]

Pratyaksha: Perception

The Nyayasutras assert that perception is the primary proper means of gaining true knowledge.[30] All other epistemic methods are directly or indirectly based on perception, according to the text, and anything that is claimed to be "true knowledge" must be confirmed or confirmable by perception.[30] This it terms as the doctrine of convergence, and this doctrine includes direct or implied perception.[32] Gautama defines perception as the knowledge that arises by the contact of one or more senses with an object or phenomenon.[30][34] Gautama dedicates many sutras to discuss both the object and subject in the process of perception, and when senses may be unreliable. Erratic eyesight or other senses (Avyabhicara) can be a source of doubt or false knowledge, as can prejudgmental or prejudicial state of mind, states the Nyayasutras.[30][34][32]

The text asserts Pratyaksa leads to Laukika or ordinary knowledge, where the five senses directly and clearly apprehend a reality, and this is true definite knowledge according to the text.[30][32] It defines indefinite knowledge as one where there is doubt, and the text gives an example of seeing a distant stationary object in the evening and wondering whether it is a post or a man standing in the distance. In some of these cases, states Nyayasutras, correct knowledge is formulated by the principle of cumulative evidence.[30] Manas (mind) is considered an internal sense, in the text, and it can either lead to correct or incorrect knowledge depending on how it includes, excludes or integrates information.[30] These ideas are compiled, in later chapters of the text, into its treatise on Aprama (Theory on Errors).[30][32]

Anumana: Inference

Inference is knowledge which is preceded by perception,
and is of three kinds:
a priori, a posteriori and commonly seen.

Nyayasutras 1.1.5[35]

The epistemic rationale for inference as a reliable source of knowledge, and Nyaya's theory has been a major contribution to the diverse schools of Indian Darshanaparampara, and other schools looked up to Nyaya scholars for insights on correct knowledge and incorrect knowledge through inference.[36] The sections in Nyayasutras on inference blossomed into a treatise on syllogism over time.[36]

Nyayasutras defines inference as the knowledge that follows or derives from other knowledge. It always follows perception, states the text, and is a universal relation or essential principle. One form of inference is a Purvavat, or as Fowler translates, "from cause to effect or a priori".[36] Thus, if a path or road is wet or river is swollen, states the text, then "it has rained" is a valid knowledge.[36] The sutras assert that the "universal relationship" between the two is necessary for correct, reliable knowledge, that is "if in all cases of A, B is true, then one may correctly infer B whenever A is perceived".[36] Further, there is a causal relation between the two, whether one knows or not of that cause, but inferred knowledge does not require one to know the cause for it to be valid knowledge, states Nyayasutra.[36][37] The text states one must not confuse coexistence as a universal relation, and that while deduction and induction both are useful and valid means for gaining true knowledge, it lists rules when this method can lead to false knowledge.[38]


Upamana: Comparison and analogy

The word upamana, states Fowler, is a compound of upa (similarity) and mana (knowledge).[39] It is a means of gaining knowledge based on "similarity, comparison, analogy", and considered reliable in Nyaya and many schools of Indian Darshanaparampara (but not in Vaisheshika and Charvaka, or Buddhism).[40][41]

The Nyayasutras define upamana as the knowledge of a thing based on "its likeness to another thing which is familiar".[39][42] It differs from Anumana (inference) in lacking a direct or immediate causal relation. It differs from Pratyaksha (perception), states the text, in using a linguistic referent and the foundation of pre-existing knowledge within the individual and what he learnt from his teachers, friends, family and past knowledge inherited from the wise, through a process of social cooperation.[39][43] The Upamana method is secondary, it relies on perception, combined with linguistic referent and context.[39][43] Comparison is not isolated pramana means, and sometimes works together with the Anumana and Sabda epistemic methods.[44] Comparison is, in Nyayasutras, the process of permeating or infusing hypothesis, examples and tests, thus leading to objectivity and correct knowledge about something new and what one already presumes to know.[45][46]

Shabda: Testimony and reliable sources

Śabda (Sanskrit: शब्द, Word), in Nyayasutras, means relying on word, testimony of a reliable source.[47][48] Sabda-pramana has been an accepted and reliable method to knowledge by all orthodox schools of Hinduism including Nyaya, asserting that a human being needs to know numerous facts, and with the limited time and energy available, he can learn only a fraction of those facts and truths directly.[49][50] He must rely on others, his parents, family, friends, teachers, ancestors and kindred members of society to rapidly acquire and share knowledge and thereby enrich each other's lives. This means of gaining correct knowledge is either spoken or written, but it is through Sabda (words).[49][50] In addition to words, state the Nyayasutras, Shabda as a means of true knowledge depends on an agreed convention on what words mean, the structure of sentences, establishing context and their import.[50] The source must be reliable and comprehensible, and the receiver of knowledge must be able to understand the knowledge therefrom.[50][51]

The reliability of the source is important, and legitimate knowledge can only come from the Sabda of reliable sources.[49][48] The schools of Indian Darshanaparampara have debated if, how and when reliability of source can be objectively established. Gautama, in the Nyayasutras, offers a description for a reliable source.[50][52] Some schools, such as Charvaka, state that this is never possible, and therefore Sabda in the Vedas or anyone else, can never be a proper pramana. Other schools debate means to establish reliability.[53]

Theory of proper Argument

The text, in sutras 1.1.32 and 1.1.39, presents its theory of proper arguments, stating that a proper argument must include five components:[54][55]

  1. pratijna – the proposition or hypothesis (that which needs to be proved or decided)
  2. hetu – the reason (can be positive or negative)
  3. udaharana – the general rule (that which is independently confirmed or confirmable)
  4. upanaya – the application of the rule (validity test, or example to the instance)
  5. nigamana – the conclusion (the hypothesis is either true or false or in doubt)

The text defines and aphoristically discusses each of these.[54]

An example of a proper argument is: [56]

  1. There is a fire on the hill
  2. Because there is smoke on the hill
  3. Whenever there is smoke, there is a fire
  4. The hill is smoky
  5. Therefore, there is a fire on the hill

Theory of doubt as incomplete knowledge

The Nyayasutras define and discuss Samsaya (Sanskrit: संशय, doubt) in sutras 1.1.23, 2.1.1 to 2.1.7, 3.2.1, 4.2.4 among others.[57] This discussion is similar to those found in other schools of Hindu philosophy, expands on the theory of doubt presented by Kanada in the Vaisheshika school, but disagrees with the Charvaka school's theory of doubt and consequent "there is no empirical knowledge ever".[58][59]

The theory of doubt, according to the Nyayasutras, starts with the premise that doubt is part of the human learning process and occurs when conflicting possibilities exist with regard to a cognized object.[60] Doubt is neither error nor absence of knowledge, but a form of uncertainty and human struggle with probability when it faces incomplete or inconsistent information.[60] It is a knowledge that is possibly partially valid and partially invalid, but doubt is a form of knowledge that has positive value.[60] Doubt is an invitation to "proceed to further investigation", asserts the text. All four means of knowledge discovery (perception, inference, comparison and testimony) may be useful in this investigation, but doubt is both a psychological state and a means to knowledge, not in itself a valid knowledge, according to the sutras.[60][59]

Hetvabhasa, theory of errors

The Nyayasutra defines error as knowledge, an opinion or a conclusion about something that is different from what it really is.[36] Gautama states in the text that the error is always in the process of cognition itself, or the "subjective self", and not in the object.[36][61] It is the duty of the knowledge-seeker to "test the validity of his knowledge", both in assumptions or through practice (experience), but neither the object of knowledge nor the knowledge itself is responsible for errors; only the knowledge-seeker and his process of cognition is.[36][61] The Nyaya theory shares ideas on the theory of errors with Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism and Mimamsa schools of Indian philosophies, states Rao, and these schools likely influenced each other.[62]

The text identifies and cautions against five kinds of fallacious reasoning (hetvabhasa) in sutra 1.2.4, discussing each in the sutras that follow, stating that these lead to false knowledge, in contrast to proper reasoning (hetu), which leads to true knowledge.[63] The five fallacies or errors, according to Nyayasutras, are to be avoided, in addition to watching for debating tricks (chala) used by those whose aim isn't true knowledge.[63] The five forms of bogus reasoning identified by the text, states Ganeri, are:[64][65]

  1. the wandering or erratic (Nyayasutra 1.2.5)[66]
  2. the contradictory (Nyayasutra 1.2.6)[66]
  3. the unproven (Nyayasutra 1.2.8)[66]
  4. the counterbalanced (Nyayasutra 1.2.7)[66]
  5. the untimely (overgeneralization across time, or sublated, Nyayasutra 1.2.9)[66][67]

Theory of causality

The Nyayasutras dedicate many sections on causality and causal relations (Karana, Sanskrit: कारण), particularly Book 4.[68][69] Causes, in Nyaya view states Fowler, are "antecedents of their effects invariably and unconditionally".[70] A specific effect is produced by a specific cause (plurality in causes is accepted). A specific cause produces a specific effect and no other (plurality in effect, or contradictory effect is not accepted). There cannot be reciprocity to a cause; either we misunderstand the cause or misapprehend the effect.[70] The text rejects remote or supernatural causes, and rejects that qualities are causes. Causes are immediately antecedent, causes exist before an effect in time, and to know something is to understand the effect and the specific cause(s).[70][71]

The text identifies three types of causes – inherent or material cause (Samavayi-karana), non-inherent cause (Asamavayi-karana), and efficient cause (Nimitta-karana).[72] These, it states, arise from Dravya (substance), Guna (quality) and Karma (action).[70][73]

Theory of negatives

The text seeds the theory of negative entities, where both being and non-being, presence and absence of something is considered correct and useful knowledge.[74] Absence of a book on a table or absence of particular color in a painting has a place in its epistemic process, in addition to positively verifiable characteristics of the table or a painting.[74]

God in Nyayasutras

Early Nyaya school scholars considered the hypothesis of Ishvara as a creator God with the power to grant blessings, boons and fruits. They are considered non-theistic by some authors.[75][76]

In Nyayasutra's Book 4, Chapter 1 examines what causes production and destruction of entities (life, matter) in the universe. It considers many hypotheses, including Ishvara. Verses 19–21 postulate that Ishvara exists and is the cause, states a consequence of the postulate, then presents contrary evidence, and from contradiction concludes that the postulate must be invalid.[77]

सिद्धान्तसूत्र : ईश्वरः कारणम्, पुरुषकर्माफल्यदर्शनात्
पूर्वपक्षसूत्र : न, पुरुषकर्माभावे फ्लानिष्पत्तेः
सिद्धान्तसूत्र : तत्कारितत्वादहेतुः

Proposition sutra: Ishvara is the cause, since we see sometimes human action lacks fruits (results).
Prima facie objection sutra: This is not so since, as a matter of fact, no fruit is accomplished without human action.
Conclusion sutra: Not so, since it is influenced by him.

— Nyaya Sutra, 4.1.19 – 4.1.21[77]

Other scholars of Nyaya school reconsidered this question and offered arguments for what is God (Ishvara) and various arguments to prove the existence of Ishvara.[78] The 5th century CE Nyaya school scholar Prastapada, for example, revisited the premise of God. He was followed by Udayana, who in his text Nyayakusumanjali, interpreted "it" in verse 4.1.21 of Nyaya Sutra above, as "human action" and "him" as "Ishvara", then he developed counter arguments to prove the existence of Ishvara, a reasoning that fueled the debate and disagreements on God in Neo-Nyaya and other Hindu traditions of 2nd millennium CE.[77][79][80]

Soul, self exists, inner freedom

The Soul is the perceiver of all that brings pain and pleasure,
the experiencer of all pains and pleasures,
the knower of all pains, pleasures and their causes,
the ground of consciousness, knowledge and cognitions.
The Soul (self) can be known.

Nyayasutras, interpreted by Jeaneane Fowler, Perspectives of Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism[81]

A large part of the third book of the Nyayasutras is dedicated to the premise and the nature of a Self (soul, atman) and its relation to knowledge, liberation from sorrow and inner freedom (moksha).[81][82]

Philosophy: a form of Yoga

The sutras 4.2.42 to 4.2.48 of Nyayasutras, states Stephen Phillips, state that "philosophy is a form of yoga".[83]

The text recommends yogic meditation in quiet places such as a forest, cave or sandy beach in sutra 4.2.42, that the knowledge seeker should purify one's soul by Yamas, Niyamas and spiritualism of yoga in sutra 4.2.46.[84][85] Meditation is a treasured and recommended practice in the text, and extensively discussed by Nyaya scholars that followed Aksyapada Gautama.[86] Vatsyayana wrote in his commentary on Nyayasutras, for example, that meditation is that which enables the mind to contact one's soul, which is accompanied by a conscious eagerness to get at the truth, and such meditation is an essential practice to gain true knowledge.[86]

The Nyayasutras state that one must study the means of correct knowledge and hold discussions with the learned, sincere and unenvious fellow seekers of knowledge state sutras 4.2.47 and 4.2.48.[84][85] One must, translates Phillips, take into account "consideration of personal character as well as the nature of beliefs held by the opponent", in deciding the nature of one's discussions, according to Nyayasutras.[87] In some cases, asserts the text, it is better to avoid arguing with hostile opponents and use methods of knowledge like "a fence is used to safeguard the growth of seeds".[84][85]

Commentaries

The earliest surviving complete bhasya (review and commentary) on Nyaya Sutras is by Vatsyayana.[3] This commentary itself inspired many secondary and tertiary bhasya. Vatsyayana's commentary has been variously dated to be from the 5th century CE,[3] or much earlier around 2nd century BCE.[13] Another often studied surviving commentary on the text is credited to Vacaspati Mishra from about 9th century CE.[3]

Liberation is impossible without knowledge of the real nature of the world. To achieve liberation and to know the soul, one must take shelter of yoga practices, because without this knowledge, knowledge of Reality is not obtained.

— Akṣapada Gautama in Nyayasutra[86]

Other historical Indian commentaries and works inspired by Nyayasutras and which have survived into the modern era, include Nyaya-varttika by 6th-century Uddyotakara, Nyaya-bhasyatika by 6th-century Bhavivikta, another Nyaya-bhasyatika by 7th-century Aviddhakarna, Nyaya-bhusana by 9th-century Bhasarvajana, Nyaya-manjari by 9th-century Kashmir scholar Jayanta Bhatta, Nyaya-prakirnaka by 10th-century Karnata scholar Trilocana, and Nyaya-kandali by 10th-century Bengal scholar Sridhara.[13][14]

Numerous other commentaries are referenced in other Indian historical texts, but these manuscripts are either lost or yet to be found. Starting around 11th- to 12th century CE, Udayana wrote a primary work, that built upon and expanded the theories on reason found in Nyayasutras. Udayana's work created the foundation for Navya-Nyaya (new Nyaya) school.[5] The Hindu scholar Gangesa of 13th- or 14th-century, integrated the Gautama's Nyayasutras and Udayana's Navya-Nyaya work, to create the influential Tattvacintāmaṇi text considered a masterpiece by scholars.[5][88]

Influence

On Hinduism's soul, Buddhism's no-soul debate

The Nyaya-sutras have been one of the foundations for the historic debate between Hinduism's premise that purusa (spirit, ultimate reality) and atman (selfhood, soul) exists, and Buddhism's premise that there is voidness and anatta (no-soul).[89][90][91] In Nyaya-sutra, the Buddhist premises and arguments to refute those premise are found in many chapters,[note 2] such as sutras of chapters 3.2, 4.1 and 4.2.[92] The text has been influential in this debate, with the 2nd-century Buddhist scholar Nagarjuna states that the Nyaya school and Buddhism differ on their conception of Self (Atman) and their views on the Vedas, and the sutra 4.2.25 of Nyayasutra is addressed against the Madhyamika system of Buddhism.[16][note 3]

Nagarjuna's Madhyamika-karika targets Nyaya-sutra, among other Hindu texts, for his critique and to establish his doctrine of no self and voidness. In this text, and Vigrahavya-vartani, he presents his proof of voidness by challenging the Pramanas at the foundation of Nyaya-sutras.[92][96][97] In his work Pramana-vihetana, Nagarjuna, takes up each of the sixteen categories of knowledge in Gautama's Nyaya-sutras at the foundation of Nyaya's discussion of "soul exists and the nature of soul in liberation process", and critiques them using the argument that these categories are relational and therefore unreal.[92] The Nagarjuna's texts, along with Gautama's Nyaya-sutras states Sanjit Sadhukhan, influenced Vatsyayana's work who called Nagarjuna's doctrine of voidness as flawed, and presented his arguments refuting Nagarjuna's theory on "objects of knowledge are unreal, like a dream or a form of jugglery and a mirage", but by first presenting his demonstration that the theory of reason and knowledge in the Nyaya-sutras are valid.[92][98]

The Buddhist thesis that all things are negative in nature (inasmuch as a thing's nature is constituted by its differences from others), or the Hindu thesis counter-arguing the Buddhist thesis, have been accepted, is still unclear because nothingness cannot be proved and existence of soul has been claimed solely on the basis of personal feeling and experience.[citation needed]

On Vedanta traditions

The Nyayasutras were influential to the Vedanta schools of Hindu philosophy, and provided the epistemological foundations.[99][100] The terms Nyaya and Mimamsa were synonymous, states Hajime Nakamura, in the earliest Dharmasutras of 1st millennium BCE.[101] Over time, Nyaya, Mimamsa and Vedanta became three distinct and related schools.[101]

Translations

  • Nandalal Sinha, Mahamahopadhyaya Satisa Chandra Vidyabhusana, The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama, The sacred books of the Hindus, 1930; Motilal Banarsidass, 1990 reprint, ISBN 978-81-208-0748-8; Munshiram Manoharlal reprint, 2003, ISBN 978-81-215-1096-7.
  • Ganganatha Jha, Nyaya- Sutras of Gautama (4 vols.), Motilal Banarsidass, 1999 reprint, ISBN 978-81-208-1264-2.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Francis Clooney states, "Nyaya is the traditional school of Hindu logic. In the early centuries BCE the Nyaya logicians undertook the project of describing the world in a coherent rational fashion and without reliance on revelation or a commitment to any particular deity. Nyaya's primary text, the Nyaya Sutras of Gautama, can be read as a neutral analysis neither favoring nor opposing the idea of God".[8]
  2. ^ Nyayasutras' 3.2.10–17 present its argument against Buddhist "momentariness of everything", while sutras 4.1.37–40 challenge the "voidness of everything" premise of Buddhism, sutras 4.2.6–4.2.11 question its "whole is not separate from parts" premise, and sutras 4.2.26–37 present its refutation of Buddhism's "denial of objects and observed reality" premises.[92]
  3. ^ Like other schools of Hinduism, the Nyaya school holds the premise, "Soul exists, and Soul (or self, Atman) is a self evident truth". Buddhism, in contrast, holds the premise, "Atman does not exist, and An-atman (or Anatta, non-self)[93] is self evident".[94] Buddhists do not believe that at the core of all human beings and living creatures, there is any "eternal, essential and absolute something called a soul, self or atman".[95]

References

  1. ^ Klaus K Klostermaier (1998), A concise encyclopedia of Hinduism, Oneworld, ISBN 978-1851681754, page 129
  2. ^ Jeaneane Fowler (2002), Perspectives of Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism, Sussex Academic Press, ISBN 978-1898723943, pages vii, 33, 129
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Jeaneane Fowler (2002), Perspectives of Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism, Sussex Academic Press, ISBN 978-1898723943, page 129
  4. ^ B. K. Matilal "Perception. An Essay on Classical Indian Theories of Knowledge" (Oxford University Press, 1986), p. xiv.
  5. ^ a b c d Jeaneane Fowler (2002), Perspectives of Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism, Sussex Academic Press, ISBN 978-1898723943, pages 127–136
  6. ^ Ganganatha Jha (1999 Reprint), Nyaya-Sutras of Gautama (4 vols.), Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1264-2
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Further reading

  • J Ganeri (2001), Indian Logic: A Reader, Routledge, ISBN 978-0700713066
  • Sue Hamilton, Indian Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2001) ISBN 0-19-285374-0
  • B.K. Matilal, Epistemology, Logic, and Grammar in Indian Philosophical Analysis (Oxford University Press, 2005) ISBN 0-19-566658-5
  • J.N. Mohanty, Classical Indian Philosophy (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000) ISBN 0-8476-8933-6

External links

  • The Nyâya Sutras of Gotama, SC Vidyabhushana (1913), English translation
  • Gautama's Nyayasutra without any commentary, GRETIL version of Sanskrit text, University of Goettingen, Germany
  • Nyāyasūtra: Devanagari, A SARIT Initiative, German Research Foundation
  • Gautama's Nyayasutra with Vacaspatimisra's commentary Nyayavarttikatatparyatika, GRETIL version of Sanskrit text, University of Goettingen, Germany
  • Gautama: Nyayasutra with Vatsyayana's commentary Nyayabhasya, GRETIL version of Sanskrit text, University of Goettingen, Germany

nyāya, sūtras, gotama, redirects, here, other, uses, gautama, buddha, ancient, indian, sanskrit, text, composed, akṣapāda, gautama, foundational, text, nyaya, school, hindu, philosophy, date, when, text, composed, biography, author, unknown, variously, estimat. Gotama redirects here For other uses see Gautama Buddha The Nyaya Sutras is an ancient Indian Sanskrit text composed by Akṣapada Gautama and the foundational text of the Nyaya school of Hindu philosophy 1 2 The date when the text was composed and the biography of its author is unknown but variously estimated between 6th century BCE and 2nd century CE 3 4 The text may have been composed by more than one author over a period of time 3 The text consists of five books with two chapters in each book with a cumulative total of 528 aphoristic sutras about rules of reason logic epistemology and metaphysics 5 6 7 The means to correct knowledge according to ancient Nyayasutras The Nyaya Sutras is a Hindu text note 1 notable for focusing on knowledge and logic and making no mention of Vedic rituals 9 The first book is structured as a general introduction and table of contents of sixteen categories of knowledge 3 Book two is about pramana epistemology book three is about prameya or the objects of knowledge and the text discusses the nature of knowledge in remaining books 3 It set the foundation for Nyaya tradition of the empirical theory of validity and truth opposing uncritical appeals to intuition or scriptural authority 10 The Nyaya sutras cover a wide range of topics including Tarka Vidya the science of debate or Vada Vidya the science of discussion 11 The Nyaya Sutras are related to but extend the Vaiseṣika epistemological and metaphysical system 12 Later commentaries expanded expounded and discussed Nyaya sutras the earlier surviving commentaries being by Pakṣilasvamin Vatsyayana 5th 6th Century CE followed by the Nyayavarttika of Uddyotakara 6th 7th Century CE Vacaspati Misra s Tatparyatika 9th Century CE Udayana s Tatparyaparisuddhi 10th Century CE and Jayanta s Nyayamanjari 10th Century CE 13 14 15 Contents 1 Author and chronology 2 Structure 3 Content 3 1 Means of attaining valid knowledge 3 1 1 Pratyaksha Perception 3 1 2 Anumana Inference 3 1 3 Upamana Comparison and analogy 3 1 4 Shabda Testimony and reliable sources 3 2 Theory of proper Argument 3 3 Theory of doubt as incomplete knowledge 3 4 Hetvabhasa theory of errors 3 5 Theory of causality 3 6 Theory of negatives 3 7 God in Nyayasutras 3 8 Soul self exists inner freedom 3 9 Philosophy a form of Yoga 4 Commentaries 5 Influence 5 1 On Hinduism s soul Buddhism s no soul debate 5 2 On Vedanta traditions 6 Translations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksAuthor and chronology EditThe Nyaya sutras is attributed to Gautama who was at least the principal author 3 According to Karl Potter this name has been a very common Indian name 16 and the author is also reverentially referred to as Gotama Dirghatapas and Aksapada Gautama 3 Little is known about Gautama or which century he lived in Scholarly estimates based on textual analysis vary from the 6th century BCE making him a contemporary of Gautama Buddha Siddhartha Gautama and Mahavira to as late as the 2nd century CE 3 Some scholars favor the theory that the cryptic text Nyaya sutras was expanded over time by multiple authors 3 with the earliest layer from about mid first millennium BCE that was composed by Gautama 16 The earliest layer is likely to be Book 1 and 5 of the text while Book 3 and 4 may have been added last but this is not certain 16 One may sum up the situation pretty safely by saying that we have not the vaguest idea who wrote the Nyayasutras or when he lived Karl Potter The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies 16 It is likely states Jeaneane Fowler that Nyaya and the science of reason stretch back into the Vedic era it developed in the ancient Indian tradition that involved dialectical tournaments in the halls of kings and schools of Vedic philosophers and Gautama was the one who distilled and systematized this pre existing knowledge into sutras or aphoristic compilations called nyayasutras 17 The Nyaya school of Hinduism influenced all other schools of Hindu philosophy as well as Buddhism Despite their differences these scholars studied with each other and debated ideas with Tibetan records suggesting that Buddhist scholars spent years residing with Hindu Nyaya scholars to master the art of reasoning and logic 5 This cooperation has enabled scholars to place the currently surviving version of the Nyayasutras to a terminus ante quem completed before date of about the 2nd century CE because one of the most famous and established Buddhist scholars of that era Nagarjuna explicitly states sutra 4 2 25 is addressed against the Madhyamika system of Buddhism 16 Other ancient Buddhist texts confirm that Nyayasutras existed before them and the text is considered the primary text of old Nyaya school of Hinduism 18 Structure EditReality is truth prama and what is true is so irrespective of whether we know it is or are aware of that truth Akṣapada Gautama in Nyaya Sutra 19 The text is written in sutra genre A sutra is a Sanskrit word that means string thread and represents a condensed manual of knowledge of a specific field or school 20 21 Each sutra is any short rule like a theorem distilled into few words or syllables around which teachings of ritual philosophy grammar or any field of knowledge can be woven 20 22 Sutras were compiled to be remembered used as reference and to help teach and transmit ideas from one generation to the next 21 23 The Nyayasutra is divided into five books each book subdivided into two chapters each The structure of the text is states Potter a layout of ahnikas or lessons served into daily portions each portion consisting of a number of sutras or aphorisms 18 The architecture of the text is also split and collated into prakaranas or topics which later commentators such as Vatsyayana and Vacaspati Misra used to compose their bhasya ancient texts that have survived into the modern era 18 There are several surviving manuscripts of the Nyayasutras with a slight difference in number of sutras of which the Chowkhamba edition is often studied 18 The structure of Nyayasutra Book Chapter Number of sutras Topics 24 25 1 1 41 Subject matter and statement of purpose of the text Four reliable instruments of correct knowledge Definitions Nature of argument and nature of the process of valid proof 2 20 How to analyze opposing views presents its theory of five membered arguments correct conclusions are those where contradictions do not exist theory of reasoning methods that are flawed what is a quibble and how to avoid it 2 1 69 Presents its theory of Doubt Discusses epistemology when perception inference and comparison is unreliable and reliable Theory that the reliability of testimony depends on the reliability of the source Theory that the testimony in the Vedas are a source of knowledge and inconsistencies are either defects or choices in the text the best way to understand the Vedas is to divide it into three injunction descriptions and reinculcations 2 71 Instruments of knowledge are fourfold Confusion caused by presumption and prejudice Sound is noneternal theory Theory of three meaning of words vyakti akrti and jati 3 1 73 presents its theory of body followed by theory of sensory organs and their role in correct and incorrect knowledge states that the soul is not a sense organ nor an internal organ 2 72 presents its theory of soul self atman that the essence of a person and source of judgments is the soul states its judgment is non eternal theory presents theory of Karma4 1 68 Presents its theory of defects then its theory that everything has cause and consequences and its some things are eternal some non eternal theory Defines and describes Fruits Pain Release 2 50 Presents correct knowledge is necessary and sufficient to destroy defects Both whole and part must be known Establishes external world exists and phenomenon are as real as objects Refutes the everything is false theory Presents ways to produce and maintain correct knowledge Need to seek and converse with those with knowledge 5 1 43 24 futile rejoinders how to avoid errors and present relevant rejoinders2 24 22 ways of losing an argumentContent Edit The first ten sutras of the text in Sanskrit The first sutra 1 1 1 of the text asserts its scope and the following sixteen categories of knowledge as a means to gain competence in any field of interest 18 Perfection is attained by the correct knowledge about true nature of sixteen categories means of right knowledge pramaṇa object of right knowledge prameya doubt samsaya purpose prayojana familiar instance dṛṣṭanta established tenet siddhanta members of an inference avayava reasoning tarka ascertainment or results nirṇaya discussion vada sophistic disputations jalpa cavil vitaṇḍa fallacies hetvabhasa quibbles chala futile rejoinders jati and methods of losing an argument nigrahasthana Nyayasutra 1 1 1 18 26 27 These sixteen categories cover many sections of the text The verse 1 1 2 of the Nyaya Sutra declares the text s goal is to study and describe the attainment of liberation of soul from wrong knowledge faults and sorrow through the application of above sixteen categories of perfecting knowledge 18 28 29 Means of attaining valid knowledge Edit The Nyaya sutras assert the premise that all knowledge is not intrinsically valid that most knowledge is not valid unless proven and truth exists whether we human beings know it or not 30 However states Fowler the text accepts the foundation that some knowledge is self evident and axiomatic in every field of knowledge which can neither be proven nor needs proof such as I am conscious I think and soul exists 30 31 Furthermore the text presents its thesis that knowledge is not self revealing one must make effort to gain knowledge and this is a systematic process that empowers one to learn correct knowledge and abandon incorrect knowledge 30 32 The Nyaya sutras asserts and then discusses four reliable means of obtaining knowledge pramaṇa viz Perception Inference Comparison and Reliable Testimony 33 24 Pratyaksha Perception Edit The Nyayasutras assert that perception is the primary proper means of gaining true knowledge 30 All other epistemic methods are directly or indirectly based on perception according to the text and anything that is claimed to be true knowledge must be confirmed or confirmable by perception 30 This it terms as the doctrine of convergence and this doctrine includes direct or implied perception 32 Gautama defines perception as the knowledge that arises by the contact of one or more senses with an object or phenomenon 30 34 Gautama dedicates many sutras to discuss both the object and subject in the process of perception and when senses may be unreliable Erratic eyesight or other senses Avyabhicara can be a source of doubt or false knowledge as can prejudgmental or prejudicial state of mind states the Nyayasutras 30 34 32 The text asserts Pratyaksa leads to Laukika or ordinary knowledge where the five senses directly and clearly apprehend a reality and this is true definite knowledge according to the text 30 32 It defines indefinite knowledge as one where there is doubt and the text gives an example of seeing a distant stationary object in the evening and wondering whether it is a post or a man standing in the distance In some of these cases states Nyayasutras correct knowledge is formulated by the principle of cumulative evidence 30 Manas mind is considered an internal sense in the text and it can either lead to correct or incorrect knowledge depending on how it includes excludes or integrates information 30 These ideas are compiled in later chapters of the text into its treatise on Aprama Theory on Errors 30 32 Anumana Inference Edit Inference is knowledge which is preceded by perception and is of three kinds a priori a posteriori and commonly seen Nyayasutras 1 1 5 35 The epistemic rationale for inference as a reliable source of knowledge and Nyaya s theory has been a major contribution to the diverse schools of Indian Darshanaparampara and other schools looked up to Nyaya scholars for insights on correct knowledge and incorrect knowledge through inference 36 The sections in Nyayasutras on inference blossomed into a treatise on syllogism over time 36 Nyayasutras defines inference as the knowledge that follows or derives from other knowledge It always follows perception states the text and is a universal relation or essential principle One form of inference is a Purvavat or as Fowler translates from cause to effect or a priori 36 Thus if a path or road is wet or river is swollen states the text then it has rained is a valid knowledge 36 The sutras assert that the universal relationship between the two is necessary for correct reliable knowledge that is if in all cases of A B is true then one may correctly infer B whenever A is perceived 36 Further there is a causal relation between the two whether one knows or not of that cause but inferred knowledge does not require one to know the cause for it to be valid knowledge states Nyayasutra 36 37 The text states one must not confuse coexistence as a universal relation and that while deduction and induction both are useful and valid means for gaining true knowledge it lists rules when this method can lead to false knowledge 38 Upamana Comparison and analogy Edit The word upamana states Fowler is a compound of upa similarity and mana knowledge 39 It is a means of gaining knowledge based on similarity comparison analogy and considered reliable in Nyaya and many schools of Indian Darshanaparampara but not in Vaisheshika and Charvaka or Buddhism 40 41 The Nyayasutras define upamana as the knowledge of a thing based on its likeness to another thing which is familiar 39 42 It differs from Anumana inference in lacking a direct or immediate causal relation It differs from Pratyaksha perception states the text in using a linguistic referent and the foundation of pre existing knowledge within the individual and what he learnt from his teachers friends family and past knowledge inherited from the wise through a process of social cooperation 39 43 The Upamana method is secondary it relies on perception combined with linguistic referent and context 39 43 Comparison is not isolated pramana means and sometimes works together with the Anumana and Sabda epistemic methods 44 Comparison is in Nyayasutras the process of permeating or infusing hypothesis examples and tests thus leading to objectivity and correct knowledge about something new and what one already presumes to know 45 46 Shabda Testimony and reliable sources Edit Sabda Sanskrit शब द Word in Nyayasutras means relying on word testimony of a reliable source 47 48 Sabda pramana has been an accepted and reliable method to knowledge by all orthodox schools of Hinduism including Nyaya asserting that a human being needs to know numerous facts and with the limited time and energy available he can learn only a fraction of those facts and truths directly 49 50 He must rely on others his parents family friends teachers ancestors and kindred members of society to rapidly acquire and share knowledge and thereby enrich each other s lives This means of gaining correct knowledge is either spoken or written but it is through Sabda words 49 50 In addition to words state the Nyayasutras Shabda as a means of true knowledge depends on an agreed convention on what words mean the structure of sentences establishing context and their import 50 The source must be reliable and comprehensible and the receiver of knowledge must be able to understand the knowledge therefrom 50 51 The reliability of the source is important and legitimate knowledge can only come from the Sabda of reliable sources 49 48 The schools of Indian Darshanaparampara have debated if how and when reliability of source can be objectively established Gautama in the Nyayasutras offers a description for a reliable source 50 52 Some schools such as Charvaka state that this is never possible and therefore Sabda in the Vedas or anyone else can never be a proper pramana Other schools debate means to establish reliability 53 Theory of proper Argument Edit The text in sutras 1 1 32 and 1 1 39 presents its theory of proper arguments stating that a proper argument must include five components 54 55 pratijna the proposition or hypothesis that which needs to be proved or decided hetu the reason can be positive or negative udaharana the general rule that which is independently confirmed or confirmable upanaya the application of the rule validity test or example to the instance nigamana the conclusion the hypothesis is either true or false or in doubt The text defines and aphoristically discusses each of these 54 An example of a proper argument is 56 There is a fire on the hill Because there is smoke on the hill Whenever there is smoke there is a fire The hill is smoky Therefore there is a fire on the hillTheory of doubt as incomplete knowledge Edit The Nyayasutras define and discuss Samsaya Sanskrit स शय doubt in sutras 1 1 23 2 1 1 to 2 1 7 3 2 1 4 2 4 among others 57 This discussion is similar to those found in other schools of Hindu philosophy expands on the theory of doubt presented by Kanada in the Vaisheshika school but disagrees with the Charvaka school s theory of doubt and consequent there is no empirical knowledge ever 58 59 The theory of doubt according to the Nyayasutras starts with the premise that doubt is part of the human learning process and occurs when conflicting possibilities exist with regard to a cognized object 60 Doubt is neither error nor absence of knowledge but a form of uncertainty and human struggle with probability when it faces incomplete or inconsistent information 60 It is a knowledge that is possibly partially valid and partially invalid but doubt is a form of knowledge that has positive value 60 Doubt is an invitation to proceed to further investigation asserts the text All four means of knowledge discovery perception inference comparison and testimony may be useful in this investigation but doubt is both a psychological state and a means to knowledge not in itself a valid knowledge according to the sutras 60 59 Hetvabhasa theory of errors Edit The Nyayasutra defines error as knowledge an opinion or a conclusion about something that is different from what it really is 36 Gautama states in the text that the error is always in the process of cognition itself or the subjective self and not in the object 36 61 It is the duty of the knowledge seeker to test the validity of his knowledge both in assumptions or through practice experience but neither the object of knowledge nor the knowledge itself is responsible for errors only the knowledge seeker and his process of cognition is 36 61 The Nyaya theory shares ideas on the theory of errors with Advaita Vedanta Buddhism and Mimamsa schools of Indian philosophies states Rao and these schools likely influenced each other 62 The text identifies and cautions against five kinds of fallacious reasoning hetvabhasa in sutra 1 2 4 discussing each in the sutras that follow stating that these lead to false knowledge in contrast to proper reasoning hetu which leads to true knowledge 63 The five fallacies or errors according to Nyayasutras are to be avoided in addition to watching for debating tricks chala used by those whose aim isn t true knowledge 63 The five forms of bogus reasoning identified by the text states Ganeri are 64 65 the wandering or erratic Nyayasutra 1 2 5 66 the contradictory Nyayasutra 1 2 6 66 the unproven Nyayasutra 1 2 8 66 the counterbalanced Nyayasutra 1 2 7 66 the untimely overgeneralization across time or sublated Nyayasutra 1 2 9 66 67 Theory of causality Edit The Nyayasutras dedicate many sections on causality and causal relations Karana Sanskrit क रण particularly Book 4 68 69 Causes in Nyaya view states Fowler are antecedents of their effects invariably and unconditionally 70 A specific effect is produced by a specific cause plurality in causes is accepted A specific cause produces a specific effect and no other plurality in effect or contradictory effect is not accepted There cannot be reciprocity to a cause either we misunderstand the cause or misapprehend the effect 70 The text rejects remote or supernatural causes and rejects that qualities are causes Causes are immediately antecedent causes exist before an effect in time and to know something is to understand the effect and the specific cause s 70 71 The text identifies three types of causes inherent or material cause Samavayi karana non inherent cause Asamavayi karana and efficient cause Nimitta karana 72 These it states arise from Dravya substance Guna quality and Karma action 70 73 Theory of negatives Edit The text seeds the theory of negative entities where both being and non being presence and absence of something is considered correct and useful knowledge 74 Absence of a book on a table or absence of particular color in a painting has a place in its epistemic process in addition to positively verifiable characteristics of the table or a painting 74 God in Nyayasutras Edit Early Nyaya school scholars considered the hypothesis of Ishvara as a creator God with the power to grant blessings boons and fruits They are considered non theistic by some authors 75 76 In Nyayasutra s Book 4 Chapter 1 examines what causes production and destruction of entities life matter in the universe It considers many hypotheses including Ishvara Verses 19 21 postulate that Ishvara exists and is the cause states a consequence of the postulate then presents contrary evidence and from contradiction concludes that the postulate must be invalid 77 स द ध न तस त र ईश वर क रणम प र षकर म फल यदर शन त प र वपक षस त र न प र षकर म भ व फ ल न ष पत त स द ध न तस त र तत क र तत व दह त Proposition sutra Ishvara is the cause since we see sometimes human action lacks fruits results Prima facie objection sutra This is not so since as a matter of fact no fruit is accomplished without human action Conclusion sutra Not so since it is influenced by him Nyaya Sutra 4 1 19 4 1 21 77 Other scholars of Nyaya school reconsidered this question and offered arguments for what is God Ishvara and various arguments to prove the existence of Ishvara 78 The 5th century CE Nyaya school scholar Prastapada for example revisited the premise of God He was followed by Udayana who in his text Nyayakusumanjali interpreted it in verse 4 1 21 of Nyaya Sutra above as human action and him as Ishvara then he developed counter arguments to prove the existence of Ishvara a reasoning that fueled the debate and disagreements on God in Neo Nyaya and other Hindu traditions of 2nd millennium CE 77 79 80 Soul self exists inner freedom Edit The Soul is the perceiver of all that brings pain and pleasure the experiencer of all pains and pleasures the knower of all pains pleasures and their causes the ground of consciousness knowledge and cognitions The Soul self can be known Nyayasutras interpreted by Jeaneane Fowler Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism 81 A large part of the third book of the Nyayasutras is dedicated to the premise and the nature of a Self soul atman and its relation to knowledge liberation from sorrow and inner freedom moksha 81 82 Philosophy a form of Yoga Edit The sutras 4 2 42 to 4 2 48 of Nyayasutras states Stephen Phillips state that philosophy is a form of yoga 83 The text recommends yogic meditation in quiet places such as a forest cave or sandy beach in sutra 4 2 42 that the knowledge seeker should purify one s soul by Yamas Niyamas and spiritualism of yoga in sutra 4 2 46 84 85 Meditation is a treasured and recommended practice in the text and extensively discussed by Nyaya scholars that followed Aksyapada Gautama 86 Vatsyayana wrote in his commentary on Nyayasutras for example that meditation is that which enables the mind to contact one s soul which is accompanied by a conscious eagerness to get at the truth and such meditation is an essential practice to gain true knowledge 86 The Nyayasutras state that one must study the means of correct knowledge and hold discussions with the learned sincere and unenvious fellow seekers of knowledge state sutras 4 2 47 and 4 2 48 84 85 One must translates Phillips take into account consideration of personal character as well as the nature of beliefs held by the opponent in deciding the nature of one s discussions according to Nyayasutras 87 In some cases asserts the text it is better to avoid arguing with hostile opponents and use methods of knowledge like a fence is used to safeguard the growth of seeds 84 85 Commentaries EditThe earliest surviving complete bhasya review and commentary on Nyaya Sutras is by Vatsyayana 3 This commentary itself inspired many secondary and tertiary bhasya Vatsyayana s commentary has been variously dated to be from the 5th century CE 3 or much earlier around 2nd century BCE 13 Another often studied surviving commentary on the text is credited to Vacaspati Mishra from about 9th century CE 3 Liberation is impossible without knowledge of the real nature of the world To achieve liberation and to know the soul one must take shelter of yoga practices because without this knowledge knowledge of Reality is not obtained Akṣapada Gautama in Nyayasutra 86 Other historical Indian commentaries and works inspired by Nyayasutras and which have survived into the modern era include Nyaya varttika by 6th century Uddyotakara Nyaya bhasyatika by 6th century Bhavivikta another Nyaya bhasyatika by 7th century Aviddhakarna Nyaya bhusana by 9th century Bhasarvajana Nyaya manjari by 9th century Kashmir scholar Jayanta Bhatta Nyaya prakirnaka by 10th century Karnata scholar Trilocana and Nyaya kandali by 10th century Bengal scholar Sridhara 13 14 Numerous other commentaries are referenced in other Indian historical texts but these manuscripts are either lost or yet to be found Starting around 11th to 12th century CE Udayana wrote a primary work that built upon and expanded the theories on reason found in Nyayasutras Udayana s work created the foundation for Navya Nyaya new Nyaya school 5 The Hindu scholar Gangesa of 13th or 14th century integrated the Gautama s Nyayasutras and Udayana s Navya Nyaya work to create the influential Tattvacintamaṇi text considered a masterpiece by scholars 5 88 Influence EditOn Hinduism s soul Buddhism s no soul debate Edit The Nyaya sutras have been one of the foundations for the historic debate between Hinduism s premise that purusa spirit ultimate reality and atman selfhood soul exists and Buddhism s premise that there is voidness and anatta no soul 89 90 91 In Nyaya sutra the Buddhist premises and arguments to refute those premise are found in many chapters note 2 such as sutras of chapters 3 2 4 1 and 4 2 92 The text has been influential in this debate with the 2nd century Buddhist scholar Nagarjuna states that the Nyaya school and Buddhism differ on their conception of Self Atman and their views on the Vedas and the sutra 4 2 25 of Nyayasutra is addressed against the Madhyamika system of Buddhism 16 note 3 Nagarjuna s Madhyamika karika targets Nyaya sutra among other Hindu texts for his critique and to establish his doctrine of no self and voidness In this text and Vigrahavya vartani he presents his proof of voidness by challenging the Pramanas at the foundation of Nyaya sutras 92 96 97 In his work Pramana vihetana Nagarjuna takes up each of the sixteen categories of knowledge in Gautama s Nyaya sutras at the foundation of Nyaya s discussion of soul exists and the nature of soul in liberation process and critiques them using the argument that these categories are relational and therefore unreal 92 The Nagarjuna s texts along with Gautama s Nyaya sutras states Sanjit Sadhukhan influenced Vatsyayana s work who called Nagarjuna s doctrine of voidness as flawed and presented his arguments refuting Nagarjuna s theory on objects of knowledge are unreal like a dream or a form of jugglery and a mirage but by first presenting his demonstration that the theory of reason and knowledge in the Nyaya sutras are valid 92 98 The Buddhist thesis that all things are negative in nature inasmuch as a thing s nature is constituted by its differences from others or the Hindu thesis counter arguing the Buddhist thesis have been accepted is still unclear because nothingness cannot be proved and existence of soul has been claimed solely on the basis of personal feeling and experience citation needed On Vedanta traditions Edit The Nyayasutras were influential to the Vedanta schools of Hindu philosophy and provided the epistemological foundations 99 100 The terms Nyaya and Mimamsa were synonymous states Hajime Nakamura in the earliest Dharmasutras of 1st millennium BCE 101 Over time Nyaya Mimamsa and Vedanta became three distinct and related schools 101 Translations EditNandalal Sinha Mahamahopadhyaya Satisa Chandra Vidyabhusana The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama The sacred books of the Hindus 1930 Motilal Banarsidass 1990 reprint ISBN 978 81 208 0748 8 Munshiram Manoharlal reprint 2003 ISBN 978 81 215 1096 7 Ganganatha Jha Nyaya Sutras of Gautama 4 vols Motilal Banarsidass 1999 reprint ISBN 978 81 208 1264 2 See also EditDebates in ancient India NyayaNotes Edit Francis Clooney states Nyaya is the traditional school of Hindu logic In the early centuries BCE the Nyaya logicians undertook the project of describing the world in a coherent rational fashion and without reliance on revelation or a commitment to any particular deity Nyaya s primary text the Nyaya Sutras of Gautama can be read as a neutral analysis neither favoring nor opposing the idea of God 8 Nyayasutras 3 2 10 17 present its argument against Buddhist momentariness of everything while sutras 4 1 37 40 challenge the voidness of everything premise of Buddhism sutras 4 2 6 4 2 11 question its whole is not separate from parts premise and sutras 4 2 26 37 present its refutation of Buddhism s denial of objects and observed reality premises 92 Like other schools of Hinduism the Nyaya school holds the premise Soul exists and Soul or self Atman is a self evident truth Buddhism in contrast holds the premise Atman does not exist and An atman or Anatta non self 93 is self evident 94 Buddhists do not believe that at the core of all human beings and living creatures there is any eternal essential and absolute something called a soul self or atman 95 References Edit Klaus K Klostermaier 1998 A concise encyclopedia of Hinduism Oneworld ISBN 978 1851681754 page 129 Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 pages vii 33 129 a b c d e f g h i j k Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 page 129 B K Matilal Perception An Essay on Classical Indian Theories of Knowledge Oxford University Press 1986 p xiv a b c d Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 pages 127 136 Ganganatha Jha 1999 Reprint Nyaya Sutras of Gautama 4 vols Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1264 2 SC Vidyabhushan and NL Sinha 1990 The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120807488 Francis X Clooney 2001 Hindu God Christian God How Reason Helps Break Down the Boundaries between Religions Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199738724 page 18 Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 page 129 Quote In focusing on knowledge and logic Gautama s Sutras made no mention of Vedic ritual Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 3 1 12 Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 191 199 207 208 Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 pages 98 103 104 128 a b c KK Chakrabarti 1999 Classical Indian Philosophy of Mind The Nyaya Dualist Tradition SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791441718 pages 14 15 a b Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 8 10 Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 239 a b c d e f Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 220 221 Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 pages 128 129 a b c d e f g Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 221 223 Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 page 130 a b Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary Oxford University Press Entry for Sutra page 1241 a b Gavin Flood 1996 An Introduction to Hinduism Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521438780 pages 54 55 M Winternitz 2010 Reprint A History of Indian Literature Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120802643 pages 249 White David Gordon 2014 The Yoga Sutra of Patanjali A Biography Princeton University Press pp 194 195 ISBN 978 0691143774 a b Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 222 238 SC Vidyabhushana 1913 Translator The Nyaya Sutras The Sacred Book of the Hindus Volume VIII Bhuvaneshvar Asrama Press pages i v SC Vidyabhushana 1913 Translator The Nyaya Sutras The Sacred Book of the Hindus Volume VIII Bhuvaneshvar Asrama Press page 1 Nandalal Sinha 1990 The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120807488 page 1 Chattopadhyaya D 1986 Indian Philosophy A popular Introduction New Delhi People s Publishing House ISBN 81 7007 023 6 p 163 SC Vidyabhushana 1913 Translator The Nyaya Sutras The Sacred Book of the Hindus Volume VIII Bhuvaneshvar Asrama Press page 2 a b c d e f g h i j k Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 page 134 138 S Dasgupta 1996 Yoga Philosophy In Relation to Other Systems of Indian Thought Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120809093 pages 142 148 a b c d e Stephen Phillips 2014 Epistemology in Classical India The Knowledge Sources of the Nyaya School Routledge ISBN 978 1138008816 Chapter 1 John A Grimes A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy Sanskrit Terms Defined in English State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791430675 page 238 a b Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 223 224 SC Vidyabhushan and NL Sinha 1990 The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120807488 page 4 a b c d e f g h i Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 page 139 140 SC Vidyabhushan and NL Sinha 1990 The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120807488 pages 55 70 Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Indian Darshanaparampara Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 pages 142 144 a b c d Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 pages 144 145 John A Grimes 2006 A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy Sanskrit Terms Defined in English State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791430675 page 238 Wilhelm Halbfass 1985 India and the Comparative Method Philosophy East and West Vol 35 No 1 pages 3 15 For history see VS Sowani and VV Sowani 1920 Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute Vol 1 No 2 pages 87 98 SC Vidyabhushana 1913 Translator The Nyaya Sutras The Sacred Book of the Hindus Volume VIII Bhuvaneshvar Asrama Press pages 3 4 a b Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 222 227 406 408 SC Vidyabhushana 1913 Translator The Nyaya Sutras The Sacred Book of the Hindus Volume VIII Bhuvaneshvar Asrama Press pages 35 43 Stephen Phillips 2014 Epistemology in Classical India The Knowledge Sources of the Nyaya School Routledge ISBN 978 1138008816 Chapter 5 S Dasgupta 2004 A History of Indian Philosophy Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120804128 pages 354 360 SC Vidyabhushana 1913 Translator The Nyaya Sutras The Sacred Book of the Hindus Volume VIII Bhuvaneshvar Asrama Press pages 4 5 a b Eliott Deutsche 2000 in Philosophy of Religion Indian Philosophy Vol 4 Editor Roy Perrett Routledge ISBN 978 0815336112 pages 245 248 John A Grimes 2006 A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy Sanskrit Terms Defined in English State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791430675 page 238 a b c M Hiriyanna 2000 The Essentials of Indian Philosophy Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120813304 page 43 a b c d e Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 pages 145 146 JL Shaw 2000 Conditions for Understanding the Meaning of a Sentence The Nyaya and the Advaita Vedanta Journal of Indian Philosophy Volume 28 Issue 3 pages 273 293 SC Vidyabhushana 1913 Translator The Nyaya Sutras The Sacred Book of the Hindus Volume VIII Bhuvaneshvar Asrama Press pages 4 5 37 39 59 61 P Billimoria 1988 Sabdapramaṇa Word and Knowledge Studies of Classical India Volume 10 Springer ISBN 978 94 010 7810 8 pages 1 30 a b Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 page 224 SC Vidyabhushan and NL Sinha 1990 The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120807488 pages 13 16 Julian Baggini 2018 How the World Thinks SC Vidyabhushan and NL Sinha 1990 The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120807488 pages 10 29 32 105 158 Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 170 172 a b JN Mohanty 1970 Nyaya Theory of Doubt Phenomenology and Ontology Volume 37 ISBN 978 9401032544 pages 198 219 a b c d Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 page 132 134 a b S Rao 1998 Perceptual Error The Indian Theories University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0824819583 pages 59 72 S Rao 1998 Perceptual Error The Indian Theories University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0824819583 pages 22 23 21 44 a b Roy Perrett 2001 Indian Philosophy Logic and philosophy of language Routledge ISBN 978 0815336105 page xiv J Ganeri 2003 Philosophy in Classical India An Introduction and Analysis Routledge ISBN 978 0415240352 pages 33 40 K Ramasubramanian 2011 The Concept of Hetvabhasa in Nyaya sastra in Proof Computation and Agency Volume 352 Springer Netherlands ISBN 978 9400700796 pages 355 371 a b c d e SC Vidyabhushan and NL Sinha 1990 The Nyaya Sutras of Gotama Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120807488 pages 21 23 Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 198 199 Bimal Krishna Matilal 1975 Causality in the Nyaya Vaiseṣika School Philosophy East and West Vol 25 No 1 pages 42 44 S Dasgupta 2004 A History of Indian Philosophy Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120804128 pages 319 326 a b c d Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 pages 150 152 Bimal Krishna Matilal 1975 Causality in the Nyaya Vaiseṣika School Philosophy East and West Vol 25 No 1 pages 41 48 John C Plott et al 2000 Global History of Philosophy The Patristic Sutra period Volume 3 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120805507 pages 66 67 JL Shaw 2002 Causality Samkhya Bauddha and Nyaya Journal of Indian Philosophy Vol 30 Issue 3 pages 213 270 a b KK Chakrabarti 1978 The Nyaya Vaisesika theory of negative entities Journal of Indian Philosophy Vol 6 No 2 pages 129 144 John Clayton 2010 Religions Reasons and Gods Essays in Cross cultural Philosophy of Religion Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521126274 page 150 G Oberhammer 1965 Zum problem des Gottesbeweises in der Indischen Philosophie Numen 12 1 34 a b c Original Sanskrit Nyayasutra Anand Ashram Sanskrit Granthvali pages 290 292 Alternate Archive Archived 7 November 2016 at the Wayback MachineEnglish translation Francis X Clooney 2010 Hindu God Christian God How Reason Helps Break Down the Boundaries Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199738724 page 37 Francis X Clooney 2010 Hindu God Christian God How Reason Helps Break Down the Boundaries Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199738724 pages 18 19 35 39 Sharma C 1997 A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 0365 5 pp 209 10 VR Rao 1987 Selected Doctrines from Indian Philosophy ISBN 81 70990009 pages 11 12 a b Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 page 147 with 148 150 Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 pages 31 37 95 96 228 233 Stephen Phillips 2009 Yoga Karma and Rebirth A Brief History and Philosophy Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231144841 page 281 footnote 40 a b c SC Vidyabhushana 1913 Translator The Nyaya Sutras The Sacred Book of the Hindus Volume VIII Bhuvaneshvar Asrama Press pages 137 139 a b c Karl Potter 2004 The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies Indian metaphysics and epistemology Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803091 page 237 a b c Jeaneane Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723943 page 157 Stephen Phillips 2009 Yoga Karma and Rebirth A Brief History and Philosophy Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231144841 pages 65 66 Stephen Phillips 1992 Review Gadadhara s Theory of Objectivity Philosophy East and West Volume 42 Issue 4 page 669 P Bilimoria and JN Mohanty 2003 Relativism Suffering and Beyond Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195662078 pages i ix with Introduction and Chapter 3 J Ganeri 2012 The Self Naturalism Consciousness and the First Person Stance Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199652365 pages 162 169 Ganganatha Jha 1999 Reprint Nyaya Sutras of Gautama Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120812642 pages 198 199 a b c d e Sanjit Sadhukhan 1990 The conflict between the Buddhist and the Naiyayika Philosophers Journal Bulletin of Tibetology Vol BT1990 Issues 1 3 pages 39 54 Anatta Encyclopaedia Britannica 2013 Quote Anatta in Buddhism the doctrine that there is in humans no permanent underlying soul The concept of anatta or anatman is a departure from the Hindu belief in atman the self John C Plott et al 2000 Global History of Philosophy The Axial Age Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120801585 page 63 Quote The Buddhist schools reject any Atman concept As we have already observed this is the basic and ineradicable distinction between Hinduism and Buddhism a KN Jayatilleke 2010 Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge ISBN 978 8120806191 pages 246 249 from note 385 onwards b Steven Collins 1994 Religion and Practical Reason Editors Frank Reynolds David Tracy State Univ of New York Press ISBN 978 0791422175 page 64 Central to Buddhist soteriology is the doctrine of not self Pali anatta Sanskrit anatman the opposed doctrine of atman is central to Brahmanical thought Put very briefly this is the Buddhist doctrine that human beings have no soul no self no unchanging essence c Edward Roer Translator Shankara s Introduction p 2 at Google Books to Brihad Aranyaka Upanishad pages 2 4 d Katie Javanaud 2013 Is The Buddhist No Self Doctrine Compatible With Pursuing Nirvana Philosophy Now John Kelley 1997 in Bhartrhari Philosopher and Grammarian Editors Saroja Bhate Johannes Bronkhorst Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120811980 pages 179 188 P Bilimoria and JN Mohanty 2003 Relativism Suffering and Beyond Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195662078 Chapters 3 and 20 David Burton 1999 lt Emptiness Appraised A Critical Study of Nagarjuna s Philosophy Routledge ISBN 978 0700710669 pages 1 5 127 138 151 153 160 166 181 195 CR Prasad 2002 Advaita Epistemology and Metaphysics Routledge ISBN 978 0700716043 pages 101 110 129 136 BNK Sharma 2008 A History of the Dvaita School of Vedanta and Its Literature Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120815759 pages 306 311 a b Hajime Nakamura 1989 A History of Early Vedanta Philosophy Volume 2 ISBN 978 8120806511 pages 313 321Further reading EditJ Ganeri 2001 Indian Logic A Reader Routledge ISBN 978 0700713066 Sue Hamilton Indian Philosophy A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 285374 0 B K Matilal Epistemology Logic and Grammar in Indian Philosophical Analysis Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 0 19 566658 5 J N Mohanty Classical Indian Philosophy Rowman amp Littlefield 2000 ISBN 0 8476 8933 6External links EditThe Nyaya Sutras of Gotama SC Vidyabhushana 1913 English translation Gautama s Nyayasutra without any commentary GRETIL version of Sanskrit text University of Goettingen Germany Nyayasutra Devanagari A SARIT Initiative German Research Foundation Gautama s Nyayasutra with Vacaspatimisra s commentary Nyayavarttikatatparyatika GRETIL version of Sanskrit text University of Goettingen Germany Gautama Nyayasutra with Vatsyayana s commentary Nyayabhasya GRETIL version of Sanskrit text University of Goettingen Germany Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nyaya Sutras amp oldid 1135306689, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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