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Kaṇāda (philosopher)

Kaṇāda (Sanskrit: कणाद, romanizedKaṇāda), also known as Ulūka, Kashyapa, Kaṇabhaksha, Kaṇabhuj[1][2] was an ancient Indian natural scientist and philosopher who founded the Vaisheshika school of Indian philosophy that also represents the earliest Indian physics.[3][4]

Kaṇāda
Maharishi Kanada
BornUnclear, 6th – 2nd century BCE
RegionIndian philosophy
SchoolVaisheshika
Main interests
Metaphysics
Ethics
Physics
Notable ideas
Atomism

Estimated to have lived sometime between 6th century to 2nd century BCE, little is known about his life.[5][6][7][4] His traditional name "Kaṇāda" means "atom eater",[8] and he is known for developing the foundations of an atomistic approach to physics and philosophy in the Sanskrit text Vaiśeṣika Sūtra.[9][10] His text is also known as Kaṇāda Sutras, or "Aphorisms of Kaṇāda".[11][12]

The school founded by Kaṇāda explains the creation and existence of the universe by proposing an atomistic theory, applying logic and realism, and is one of the earliest known systematic realist ontology in human history.[13] Kaṇāda suggested that everything can be subdivided, but this subdivision cannot go on forever, and there must be smallest entities (paramanu) that cannot be divided, that are eternal, that aggregate in different ways to yield complex substances and bodies with unique identity, a process that involves heat, and this is the basis for all material existence.[14][15] He used these ideas with the concept of Atman (soul, Self) to develop a non-theistic means to moksha.[16][17] If viewed from the prism of physics, his ideas imply a clear role for the observer as independent of the system being studied. Kaṇāda's ideas were influential on other schools of Hinduism, and over its history became closely associated with the Nyaya school of Hindu philosophy.[13]

Kaṇāda's system speaks of six properties (padārthas) that are nameable and knowable. He claims that these are sufficient to describe everything in the universe, including observers. These six categories are dravya (substance), guna (quality), karmana (motion), samaya (time), visesa (particular), and samavaya (inherence). There are nine classes of substances (dravya), some of which are atomic, some non-atomic, and others that are all-pervasive.

The ideas of Kaṇāda span a wide range of fields, and they influenced not only philosophy, but possibly scholars in other fields such as Charaka who wrote a medical text that has survived as Charaka Samhita.[18]

Lifetime

The century in which Kaṇāda lived is unclear and have been a subject of a long debate.[13] In his review of 1961, Riepe states Kaṇāda lived sometime before 300 CE, but convincing evidence to firmly put him in a certain century remains elusive.[19]

The Vaisheshika Sutras mention competing schools of Indian philosophy such as Samkhya and Mimamsa,[20] but make no mention of Buddhism, which has led scholars in more recent publications to posit estimates of 6th century BCE.[3][4][14] The Vaisheshika Sutras manuscript has survived into the modern era in multiple versions and the discovery of newer manuscripts in different parts of India by Thakur in 1957 and Jambuvijayaji in 1961, followed by critical edition studies, suggest that the text attributed to Kaṇāda was systematized and finalized sometime between 200 BCE and the start of the common era, with the possibility that its key doctrines may be much older.[20][4][21] Multiple Hindu texts dated to the 1st and 2nd century CE, such as the Mahavibhasa and Jnanaprasthana from the Kushan Empire, quote and comment on Kaṇāda's doctrines.[22] His ideas are also mentioned in Buddhist texts attributed to Aśvaghoṣa of the same period.[22]

In Jainism literature, he is referred to as Sad-uluka, which means "the Uluka who propounded the doctrine of six categories".[20] His Vaisheshika philosophy similarly appears with alternate names, such as "Aulukya philosophy" derived from the nickname Uluka (literally owl, or grain eater in the night).[20][note 1]

Kaṇāda was influential in Indian philosophies, and he appears in various texts by alternate names such as Kashyapa, Uluka, Kananda, Kanabhuk among others.[1][2]

Ideas

Physics is central to Kaṇāda's assertion that all that is knowable is based on motion. His ascribing centrality to physics in the understanding of the universe also follows from his invariance principles. For example, he says that the atom must be spherical since it should be the same in all dimensions.[23] He asserts that all substances are composed of four types of atoms, two of which have mass and two are massless.

Kaṇāda presents his work within a larger moral framework by defining Dharma as that which brings about material progress and highest good.[18][24] He follows this Sutra with another that asserts that the Vedas have gained respect because they teach such Dharma, and something is not Dharma simply because it is in the Vedas.[18]

 
 
 
 
Kanada makes empirical observations such as the rising upwards of fire, magnetic movement, rain and thunder, the growth of grass, and offers naturalistic explanations to them in his text Vaisheshika Sutra.[25]

Kaṇāda and early Vaisheshika scholars focused on the evolution of the universe by law.[26] However, this was not unusual for his times since several major early versions of Hindu philosophies such as Samkhya, Nyaya, Mimamsa along with sub-schools of Yoga and Vedanta, as well as non-Vedic schools such as Jainism and Buddhism, were similarly non-theistic.[27][28] Kaṇāda was among the sages of India who believed in man's potential to understand existence and reach moksha on his own, without God, a notion of ancient Indians summarized by Nietzsche as the belief that "with piety and knowledge of the Veda, nothing is impossible".[26]

The text states:[29]

  • There are nine constituents of realities: four classes of atoms (earth, water, light and air), space (akasha), time (kāla), direction (disha), infinity of souls (Atman), mind (manas).[30]
  • Every object of creation is made of atoms (paramāṇu) which in turn connect with each other to form molecules (aṇu). Atoms are eternal, and their combinations constitute the empirical material world.
  • Individual souls are eternal and pervade material bodies for a time.
  • There are six categories (padārtha) of experience — substance, quality, activity, generality, particularity, and inherence.

Several traits of substances (dravya) are given as colour, taste, smell, touch, number, size, the separate, coupling and uncoupling, priority and posterity, comprehension, pleasure and pain, attraction and revulsion, and wishes.[31]

Thus the idea of the subdivision is carried further to analytical categories as well, which explains its affinity with Nyaya.

Observations and theories

In the fifth chapter of Vaisheshika Sutra, Kaṇāda mentions various empirical observations and natural phenomena such as the falling of objects to the ground, rising of fire and heat upwards, the growth of grass upwards, the nature of rainfall and thunderstorms, the flow of liquids, the movement towards a magnet among many others, asks why these things happen, then attempts to integrate his observations with his theories on atoms, molecules, and their interaction. He classifies observed events into two: those caused by volition, and those caused by subject-object conjunctions.[25][32][33]

His idea of the observer, that is the subject, being different from objective reality is completely consistent with Vedanta, which speaks of the difference between "Apara" and "Para" knowledge, where "Apara" represents normal associational knowledge whereas "Para" represents deeper subjective knowledge.

The concept of paramanu (atom)

Vaisheshika Darshana
Dharma is that through which there is the accomplishment of rising to the unsurpassed good. Because it is an exposition of that, it has the authority of Veda. – Vaisheshika Sutras 1.1-2

(...) That there is only one individual (soul) is known from the absence of particularity when it comes to the emergence of an understanding of happiness and suffering, (whereas) a multiplicity of individuals is inferred from their perseverance in dharma, and from the strength of their teaching. – Vaisheshika Sutras 3.16-18

The true being is eternal, having no cause. Its indicator is its effect. The presence of the effect arises from the presence of its cause. – Vaisheshika Sutras 4.1-3

—Kaṇāda, Translated by John Wells[34][35]

Kaṇāda proposes that paramanu (atom) is an indestructible particle of matter. The atom is indivisible because it is a state at which no measurement can be attributed. He used invariance arguments to determine properties of the atoms. He also stated that anu can have two states — absolute rest and a state of motion.[36]


Kaṇāda postulated four different kinds of atoms: two with mass, and two without.[12] Each substance is supposed to consist of all four kinds of atoms.

Kaṇāda's conception of the atom was likely independent from the similar concept among the ancient Greeks, because of the differences between the theories.[37] For example, Kaṇāda suggested that atoms as building blocks differ both qualitatively and quantitatively, while Greeks suggested that atoms differed only quantitatively but not qualitatively.[37]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A legend in the Hindu tradition states that ascetic scholar Kanada would spend all day in his studies and in meditation, eat only once every night like an owl.[8]

References

  1. ^ a b Sharma 2000, p. 175.
  2. ^ a b Riepe 1961, p. 228 with footnote 12.
  3. ^ a b Bart Labuschagne & Timo Slootweg 2012, p. 60, Quote: "Kanada, a Hindu sage who lived either around the 6th or 2nd century BCE, and who founded the philosophical school of Vaisheshika..
  4. ^ a b c d Jeaneane D. Fowler 2002, pp. 98–99.
  5. ^ Oliver Leaman (1999), Key Concepts in Eastern Philosophy. Routledge, ISBN 978-0415173629, page 269
  6. ^ J Ganeri (2012), The Self: Naturalism, Consciousness, and the First-Person Stance, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0199652365
  7. ^ "Approximate Chronology of Indian Philosophers". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  8. ^ a b Jeaneane D. Fowler 2002, p. 99.
  9. ^ Riepe 1961, pp. 227–229.
  10. ^ "The Vaisesika sutras of Kanada. Translated by Nandalal Sinha" Full Text at archive.org
  11. ^ Riepe 1961, p. 229.
  12. ^ a b Kak, S. 'Matter and Mind: The Vaisheshika Sutra of Kanada' (2016), Mount Meru Publishing, Mississauga, Ontario, ISBN 978-1-988207-13-1.
  13. ^ a b c Jeaneane D. Fowler 2002, p. 98.
  14. ^ a b H. Margenau 2012, p. xxx-xxxi.
  15. ^ Jeaneane D. Fowler 2002, pp. 100–102.
  16. ^ James G. Lochtefeld (2002). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: N-Z. The Rosen Publishing Group. pp. 729–731. ISBN 978-0-8239-3180-4.
  17. ^ Sharma 2000, p. 177-186.
  18. ^ a b c Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977, pp. 55–56.
  19. ^ Riepe 1961, pp. 228–229.
  20. ^ a b c d Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977, p. 54.
  21. ^ Wilhelm Halbfass (1992). On Being and What There Is: Classical Vaisesika and the History of Indian Ontology. State University of New York Press. pp. 79–80. ISBN 978-0-7914-1178-0.
  22. ^ a b Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977, p. 55.
  23. ^ Kak, S. Kaṇāda, Great Physicist and Sage of Antiquity
  24. ^ Purusottama Bilimoria; Joseph Prabhu; Renuka M. Sharma (2007). Indian Ethics: Classical traditions and contemporary challenges. Ashgate. p. 76. ISBN 978-0-7546-3301-3., Quote: "Kanada's Vaisesikasutra: dharma is that from which prosperity and the highest good come about."
  25. ^ a b Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977, p. 57.
  26. ^ a b Herman Siemens; Vasti Roodt (2008). Nietzsche, Power and Politics: Rethinking Nietzsche's Legacy for Political Thought. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 578–579. ISBN 978-3-11-021733-9.
  27. ^ Surendranath Dasgupta (1992). A History of Indian Philosophy. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 281–285. ISBN 978-81-208-0412-8.
  28. ^ Roy W. Perrett (2013). Philosophy of Religion: Indian Philosophy. Routledge. pp. xiii–xiv. ISBN 978-1-135-70329-5.
  29. ^ The Vaisheshika sutras of Kanada, 2nd Edition, Translator: Nandalal Sinha (1923); Editor: BD Basu; Note: this is the translation of non-critical edition of the manuscript
  30. ^ O'Flaherty, p. 3.
  31. ^ Vitsaxis, Vassilis. Thought and Faith: Comparative Philosophical and Religious Concepts in Ancient Greece, India, and Christianity. Somerset Hall Pr 2009-10-01 (October 2009). P. 299. ISBN 1935244035.
  32. ^ The Vaisesika Sutras of Kanada, pp. 152-166, Translated by Nandalal Sinha (note this translation is of the old disputed manuscript, not critical edition)
  33. ^ John Wells (2009), The Vaisheshika Darshana, Darshana Press, Chapter 5 verses (main and appendix), critical edition
  34. ^ John Wells (2009), The Vaisheshika Darshana, Darshana Press
  35. ^ For Sanskrit and an alternate translation: Debasish Chakravarty (2003), Vaisesika Sutra of Kanada, DK Printworld, ISBN 978-8124602294
  36. ^ Roopa Narayan. "Space, Time and Anu in Vaisheshika" (PDF). Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  37. ^ a b Edward Craig (1998). Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Index. Routledge. pp. 198–199. ISBN 978-0-415-18715-2.

Sources

  • Jeaneane D. Fowler (2002). Perspectives of Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism. Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-898723-93-6.
  • H. Margenau (2012). Physics and Philosophy: Selected Essays. Springer Science. ISBN 978-94-009-9845-2.
  • Bimal Krishna Matilal (1977). Nyāya-Vaiśeṣika. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 978-3-447-01807-4.
  • Subhash Kak (2016). Matter and Mind: The Vaiśeṣika Sūtra of Kaṇāda. Mount Meru Publishing. ISBN 9781988207148.
  • Riepe, Dale Maurice (1961). Naturalistic Tradition in Indian Thought. Motilal Banarsidass (Reprint 1996). ISBN 978-81-208-1293-2.
  • Bart Labuschagne; Timo Slootweg (2012). Hegel's Philosophy of the Historical Religions. BRILL Academic. ISBN 978-90-04-22618-0.
  • Sharma, Chandradhar (2000). A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0365-7.

External links

  • Early Atomism - Resonance magazine, Oct 2010
  • The Development of the Concept of Atoms and Molecules - Resonance magazine, December 2011
  • - ISBN 81-7011-318-0, 2007
  • History of Atom in Ancient India

kaṇāda, philosopher, kaṇāda, sanskrit, कण, romanized, kaṇāda, also, known, ulūka, kashyapa, kaṇabhaksha, kaṇabhuj, ancient, indian, natural, scientist, philosopher, founded, vaisheshika, school, indian, philosophy, that, also, represents, earliest, indian, phy. Kaṇada Sanskrit कण द romanized Kaṇada also known as Uluka Kashyapa Kaṇabhaksha Kaṇabhuj 1 2 was an ancient Indian natural scientist and philosopher who founded the Vaisheshika school of Indian philosophy that also represents the earliest Indian physics 3 4 KaṇadaMaharishi KanadaBornUnclear 6th 2nd century BCERegionIndian philosophySchoolVaisheshikaMain interestsMetaphysics Ethics PhysicsNotable ideasAtomismEstimated to have lived sometime between 6th century to 2nd century BCE little is known about his life 5 6 7 4 His traditional name Kaṇada means atom eater 8 and he is known for developing the foundations of an atomistic approach to physics and philosophy in the Sanskrit text Vaiseṣika Sutra 9 10 His text is also known as Kaṇada Sutras or Aphorisms of Kaṇada 11 12 The school founded by Kaṇada explains the creation and existence of the universe by proposing an atomistic theory applying logic and realism and is one of the earliest known systematic realist ontology in human history 13 Kaṇada suggested that everything can be subdivided but this subdivision cannot go on forever and there must be smallest entities paramanu that cannot be divided that are eternal that aggregate in different ways to yield complex substances and bodies with unique identity a process that involves heat and this is the basis for all material existence 14 15 He used these ideas with the concept of Atman soul Self to develop a non theistic means to moksha 16 17 If viewed from the prism of physics his ideas imply a clear role for the observer as independent of the system being studied Kaṇada s ideas were influential on other schools of Hinduism and over its history became closely associated with the Nyaya school of Hindu philosophy 13 Kaṇada s system speaks of six properties padarthas that are nameable and knowable He claims that these are sufficient to describe everything in the universe including observers These six categories are dravya substance guna quality karmana motion samaya time visesa particular and samavaya inherence There are nine classes of substances dravya some of which are atomic some non atomic and others that are all pervasive The ideas of Kaṇada span a wide range of fields and they influenced not only philosophy but possibly scholars in other fields such as Charaka who wrote a medical text that has survived as Charaka Samhita 18 Contents 1 Lifetime 2 Ideas 2 1 Observations and theories 2 2 The concept of paramanu atom 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 External linksLifetime EditThe century in which Kaṇada lived is unclear and have been a subject of a long debate 13 In his review of 1961 Riepe states Kaṇada lived sometime before 300 CE but convincing evidence to firmly put him in a certain century remains elusive 19 The Vaisheshika Sutras mention competing schools of Indian philosophy such as Samkhya and Mimamsa 20 but make no mention of Buddhism which has led scholars in more recent publications to posit estimates of 6th century BCE 3 4 14 The Vaisheshika Sutras manuscript has survived into the modern era in multiple versions and the discovery of newer manuscripts in different parts of India by Thakur in 1957 and Jambuvijayaji in 1961 followed by critical edition studies suggest that the text attributed to Kaṇada was systematized and finalized sometime between 200 BCE and the start of the common era with the possibility that its key doctrines may be much older 20 4 21 Multiple Hindu texts dated to the 1st and 2nd century CE such as the Mahavibhasa and Jnanaprasthana from the Kushan Empire quote and comment on Kaṇada s doctrines 22 His ideas are also mentioned in Buddhist texts attributed to Asvaghoṣa of the same period 22 In Jainism literature he is referred to as Sad uluka which means the Uluka who propounded the doctrine of six categories 20 His Vaisheshika philosophy similarly appears with alternate names such as Aulukya philosophy derived from the nickname Uluka literally owl or grain eater in the night 20 note 1 Kaṇada was influential in Indian philosophies and he appears in various texts by alternate names such as Kashyapa Uluka Kananda Kanabhuk among others 1 2 Ideas EditPhysics is central to Kaṇada s assertion that all that is knowable is based on motion His ascribing centrality to physics in the understanding of the universe also follows from his invariance principles For example he says that the atom must be spherical since it should be the same in all dimensions 23 He asserts that all substances are composed of four types of atoms two of which have mass and two are massless Kaṇada presents his work within a larger moral framework by defining Dharma as that which brings about material progress and highest good 18 24 He follows this Sutra with another that asserts that the Vedas have gained respect because they teach such Dharma and something is not Dharma simply because it is in the Vedas 18 Kanada makes empirical observations such as the rising upwards of fire magnetic movement rain and thunder the growth of grass and offers naturalistic explanations to them in his text Vaisheshika Sutra 25 Kaṇada and early Vaisheshika scholars focused on the evolution of the universe by law 26 However this was not unusual for his times since several major early versions of Hindu philosophies such as Samkhya Nyaya Mimamsa along with sub schools of Yoga and Vedanta as well as non Vedic schools such as Jainism and Buddhism were similarly non theistic 27 28 Kaṇada was among the sages of India who believed in man s potential to understand existence and reach moksha on his own without God a notion of ancient Indians summarized by Nietzsche as the belief that with piety and knowledge of the Veda nothing is impossible 26 The text states 29 There are nine constituents of realities four classes of atoms earth water light and air space akasha time kala direction disha infinity of souls Atman mind manas 30 Every object of creation is made of atoms paramaṇu which in turn connect with each other to form molecules aṇu Atoms are eternal and their combinations constitute the empirical material world Individual souls are eternal and pervade material bodies for a time There are six categories padartha of experience substance quality activity generality particularity and inherence Several traits of substances dravya are given as colour taste smell touch number size the separate coupling and uncoupling priority and posterity comprehension pleasure and pain attraction and revulsion and wishes 31 Thus the idea of the subdivision is carried further to analytical categories as well which explains its affinity with Nyaya Observations and theories Edit In the fifth chapter of Vaisheshika Sutra Kaṇada mentions various empirical observations and natural phenomena such as the falling of objects to the ground rising of fire and heat upwards the growth of grass upwards the nature of rainfall and thunderstorms the flow of liquids the movement towards a magnet among many others asks why these things happen then attempts to integrate his observations with his theories on atoms molecules and their interaction He classifies observed events into two those caused by volition and those caused by subject object conjunctions 25 32 33 His idea of the observer that is the subject being different from objective reality is completely consistent with Vedanta which speaks of the difference between Apara and Para knowledge where Apara represents normal associational knowledge whereas Para represents deeper subjective knowledge The concept of paramanu atom Edit See also Mahabhuta and Dravya Vaisheshika DarshanaDharma is that through which there is the accomplishment of rising to the unsurpassed good Because it is an exposition of that it has the authority of Veda Vaisheshika Sutras 1 1 2 That there is only one individual soul is known from the absence of particularity when it comes to the emergence of an understanding of happiness and suffering whereas a multiplicity of individuals is inferred from their perseverance in dharma and from the strength of their teaching Vaisheshika Sutras 3 16 18 The true being is eternal having no cause Its indicator is its effect The presence of the effect arises from the presence of its cause Vaisheshika Sutras 4 1 3 Kaṇada Translated by John Wells 34 35 Kaṇada proposes that paramanu atom is an indestructible particle of matter The atom is indivisible because it is a state at which no measurement can be attributed He used invariance arguments to determine properties of the atoms He also stated that anu can have two states absolute rest and a state of motion 36 Kaṇada postulated four different kinds of atoms two with mass and two without 12 Each substance is supposed to consist of all four kinds of atoms Kaṇada s conception of the atom was likely independent from the similar concept among the ancient Greeks because of the differences between the theories 37 For example Kaṇada suggested that atoms as building blocks differ both qualitatively and quantitatively while Greeks suggested that atoms differed only quantitatively but not qualitatively 37 See also EditTimeline of atomic and subatomic physics List of Indian inventions and discoveries Leucippus Vedanta Vaiseṣika SutraNotes Edit A legend in the Hindu tradition states that ascetic scholar Kanada would spend all day in his studies and in meditation eat only once every night like an owl 8 References Edit a b Sharma 2000 p 175 a b Riepe 1961 p 228 with footnote 12 a b Bart Labuschagne amp Timo Slootweg 2012 p 60 Quote Kanada a Hindu sage who lived either around the 6th or 2nd century BCE and who founded the philosophical school of Vaisheshika a b c d Jeaneane D Fowler 2002 pp 98 99 Oliver Leaman 1999 Key Concepts in Eastern Philosophy Routledge ISBN 978 0415173629 page 269 J Ganeri 2012 The Self Naturalism Consciousness and the First Person Stance Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199652365 Approximate Chronology of Indian Philosophers Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 21 February 2022 a b Jeaneane D Fowler 2002 p 99 Riepe 1961 pp 227 229 The Vaisesika sutras of Kanada Translated by Nandalal Sinha Full Text at archive org Riepe 1961 p 229 a b Kak S Matter and Mind The Vaisheshika Sutra of Kanada 2016 Mount Meru Publishing Mississauga Ontario ISBN 978 1 988207 13 1 a b c Jeaneane D Fowler 2002 p 98 a b H Margenau 2012 p xxx xxxi Jeaneane D Fowler 2002 pp 100 102 James G Lochtefeld 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism N Z The Rosen Publishing Group pp 729 731 ISBN 978 0 8239 3180 4 Sharma 2000 p 177 186 a b c Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977 pp 55 56 Riepe 1961 pp 228 229 a b c d Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977 p 54 Wilhelm Halbfass 1992 On Being and What There Is Classical Vaisesika and the History of Indian Ontology State University of New York Press pp 79 80 ISBN 978 0 7914 1178 0 a b Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977 p 55 Kak S Kaṇada Great Physicist and Sage of Antiquity Purusottama Bilimoria Joseph Prabhu Renuka M Sharma 2007 Indian Ethics Classical traditions and contemporary challenges Ashgate p 76 ISBN 978 0 7546 3301 3 Quote Kanada s Vaisesikasutra dharma is that from which prosperity and the highest good come about a b Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977 p 57 a b Herman Siemens Vasti Roodt 2008 Nietzsche Power and Politics Rethinking Nietzsche s Legacy for Political Thought Walter de Gruyter pp 578 579 ISBN 978 3 11 021733 9 Surendranath Dasgupta 1992 A History of Indian Philosophy Motilal Banarsidass pp 281 285 ISBN 978 81 208 0412 8 Roy W Perrett 2013 Philosophy of Religion Indian Philosophy Routledge pp xiii xiv ISBN 978 1 135 70329 5 The Vaisheshika sutras of Kanada 2nd Edition Translator Nandalal Sinha 1923 Editor BD Basu Note this is the translation of non critical edition of the manuscript O Flaherty p 3 Vitsaxis Vassilis Thought and Faith Comparative Philosophical and Religious Concepts in Ancient Greece India and Christianity Somerset Hall Pr 2009 10 01 October 2009 P 299 ISBN 1935244035 The Vaisesika Sutras of Kanada pp 152 166 Translated by Nandalal Sinha note this translation is of the old disputed manuscript not critical edition John Wells 2009 The Vaisheshika Darshana Darshana Press Chapter 5 verses main and appendix critical edition John Wells 2009 The Vaisheshika Darshana Darshana Press For Sanskrit and an alternate translation Debasish Chakravarty 2003 Vaisesika Sutra of Kanada DK Printworld ISBN 978 8124602294 Roopa Narayan Space Time and Anu in Vaisheshika PDF Louisiana State University Baton Rouge USA Retrieved 29 May 2013 a b Edward Craig 1998 Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Index Routledge pp 198 199 ISBN 978 0 415 18715 2 Sources Edit Jeaneane D Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1 898723 93 6 H Margenau 2012 Physics and Philosophy Selected Essays Springer Science ISBN 978 94 009 9845 2 Bimal Krishna Matilal 1977 Nyaya Vaiseṣika Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 01807 4 Subhash Kak 2016 Matter and Mind The Vaiseṣika Sutra of Kaṇada Mount Meru Publishing ISBN 9781988207148 Riepe Dale Maurice 1961 Naturalistic Tradition in Indian Thought Motilal Banarsidass Reprint 1996 ISBN 978 81 208 1293 2 Bart Labuschagne Timo Slootweg 2012 Hegel s Philosophy of the Historical Religions BRILL Academic ISBN 978 90 04 22618 0 Sharma Chandradhar 2000 A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0365 7 External links EditEarly Atomism Resonance magazine Oct 2010 The Development of the Concept of Atoms and Molecules Resonance magazine December 2011 Scientists of India by Dilip M Salwi Children s Book Trust ISBN 81 7011 318 0 2007 History of Atom in Ancient India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kaṇada philosopher amp oldid 1151419553, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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