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Anekantavada

Anekāntavāda (Hindi: अनेकान्तवाद, "many-sidedness") is the Jain doctrine about metaphysical truths that emerged in ancient India.[1] It states that the ultimate truth and reality is complex and has multiple aspects.[2]

According to Jainism, no single, specific statement can describe the nature of existence and the absolute truth. This knowledge (Kevala Jnana), it adds, is comprehended only by the Arihants. Other beings and their statements about absolute truth are incomplete, and at best a partial truth.[3] All knowledge claims, according to the anekāntavāda doctrine must be qualified in many ways, including being affirmed and denied.[4] Anekāntavāda is a fundamental doctrine of Jainism.

The origins of anekāntavāda can be traced back to the teachings of Mahāvīra (599–527 BCE), the 24th Jain Tīrthankara.[5] The dialectical concepts of syādvāda "conditioned viewpoints" and nayavāda "partial viewpoints" arose from anekāntavāda in the medieval era, providing Jainism with more detailed logical structure and expression. The details of the doctrine emerged in Jainism in the 1st millennium CE, from debates between scholars of Jain, Buddhist and vedic schools of philosophies.[6]

Anekantavada has also been interpreted to mean non-absolutism, "intellectual Ahimsa",[7] religious pluralism,[8] as well as a rejection of fanaticism that leads to terror attacks and mass violence.[9] Some scholars state that modern revisionism has attempted to reinterpret anekantavada with religious tolerance, openmindedness and pluralism.[10][11].The word may be literally translated as “non-one-sidedness doctrine,” or “the doctrine of not-one-side.”

Etymology

The word anekāntavāda is a compound of two Sanskrit words: anekānta and vāda. The word anekānta itself is composed of three root words, "an" (not), "eka" (one) and "anta" (end, side), together it connotes "not one ended, sided", "many-sidedness", or "manifoldness".[12][13][14] The word vāda means "doctrine, way, speak, thesis".[15][16] The term anekāntavāda is translated by scholars as the doctrine of "many-sidedness",[17][18] "non-onesidedness",[19] or "many pointedness".[13]

The term anekāntavāda is not found in early texts considered canonical by Svetambara tradition of Jainism. However, traces of the doctrines are found in comments of Mahavira in these Svetambara texts, where he states that the finite and infinite depends on one's perspective. The word anekantavada was coined by Acharya Siddhasen Divakar to denote the teachings of Mahavira that state truth can be expressed in infinite ways. The earliest comprehensive teachings of anekāntavāda doctrine is found in the Tattvarthasutra by Acharya Umaswami, and is considered to be authoritative by all Jain sects. In the Digambara tradition texts, the 'two-truths theory' of Kundakunda also provides the core of this doctrine.[13]

Philosophical overview

The doctrine of anekāntavāda, also known as anekāntatva, states that truth and reality is complex and always has multiple aspects. Reality can be experienced, but it is not possible to totally express it with language. Human attempts to communicate are naya, or "partial expression of the truth".[12][13] Language is not truth, but a means and attempt to express it. From truth, according to Māhavira, language returns, and not the other way around.[12][20] For example, one can experience the truth of a taste, but cannot fully express that taste through language. Any attempts to express the experience are syāt, or valid "in some respect" but it still remains a "perhaps, just one perspective, incomplete".[20] In the same way, spiritual truths are complex, they have multiple aspects, language cannot express their plurality, yet through effort and appropriate karma they can be experienced.[12]

The anekāntavāda premises of the Jains are ancient, as evidenced by mentions of them in Buddhist texts such as the Samaññaphala Sutta. The Jain āgamas suggest that Māhavira's approach to answering all metaphysical philosophical questions was a "qualified yes" (syāt).[21][22] These texts identify anekāntavāda doctrine to be one of the key differences between the teachings of the Māhavira and those of the Buddha. The Buddha taught the Middle Way, rejecting extremes of the answer "it is" or "it is not" to metaphysical questions. The Māhavira, in contrast, taught his followers to accept both "it is" and "it is not", with "from a viewpoint" qualification and with reconciliation to understand the absolute reality.[23] Syādvāda (predication logic) and Nayavāda (perspective epistemology) of Jainism expand on the concept of anekāntavāda. Syādvāda recommends the expression of anekānta by prefixing the epithet syād to every phrase or expression describing the nature of existence.[24][25]

The Jain doctrine of anekāntavāda, according to Bimal Matilal, states that "no philosophic or metaphysical proposition can be true if it is asserted without any condition or limitation".[26] For a metaphysical proposition to be true, according to Jainism, it must include one or more conditions (syadvada) or limitations (nayavada, standpoints).[27]

Syādvāda

Syādvāda (Sanskrit: स्याद्वाद) is the theory of conditioned predication, the first part of which is derived from the Sanskrit word syāt (Sanskrit: स्यात्), which is the third person singular of the optative tense of the Sanskrit verb as (Sanskrit: अस्), 'to be', and which becomes syād when followed by a vowel or a voiced consonant, in accordance with sandhi. The optative tense in Sanskrit (formerly known as the 'potential') has the same meaning as the present tense of the subjunctive mood in most Indo-European languages, including Hindi, Latin, Russian, French, etc. It is used when there is uncertainty in a statement; not 'it is', but 'it may be', 'one might', etc. The subjunctive is very commonly used in Hindi, for example, in 'kya kahun?', 'what to say?'. The subjunctive is also commonly used in conditional constructions; for example, one of the few English locutions in the subjunctive which remains more or less current is 'were it ०, then ०', or, more commonly, 'if it were..', where 'were' is in the past tense of the subjunctive.

Syat can be translated into English as meaning "perchance, may be, perhaps" (it is).[28] The use of the verb 'as' in the optative tense is found in the more ancient Vedic era literature in a similar sense. For example, sutra 1.4.96 of Panini's Astadhyayi explains it as signifying "a chance, maybe, probable".[28]

In Jainism, however, syadvada and anekanta is not a theory of uncertainty, doubt or relative probabilities. Rather, it is "conditional yes or conditional approval" of any proposition, states Matilal and other scholars.[28][29] This usage has historic precedents in classical Sanskrit literature, and particularly in other ancient Indian religions (Buddhism and Hinduism) with the phrase syad etat, meaning "let it be so, but", or "an answer that is 'neither yes nor no', provisionally accepting an opponent's viewpoint for a certain premise". This would be expressed in archaic English with the subjunctive: 'be it so', a direct translation of syad etat. Traditionally, this debate methodology was used by Indian scholars to acknowledge the opponent's viewpoint, but disarm and bound its applicability to certain context and persuade the opponent of aspects not considered.[28][30]

According to Charitrapragya, in Jain context syadvada does not mean a doctrine of doubt or skepticism, rather it means "multiplicity or multiple possibilities".[29] Syat in Jainism connotes something different from what the term means in Buddhism and Hinduism. In Jainism, it does not connote an answer that is "neither yes nor no", but it connotes a "many sidedness" to any proposition with a sevenfold predication.[30]

Syādvāda is a theory of qualified predication, states Koller. It states that all knowledge claims must be qualified in many ways, because reality is many-sided.[4] It is done so systematically in later Jain texts through saptibhaṅgīnaya or "the theory of sevenfold scheme".[4] These saptibhaṅgī seem to have been first formulated in Jainism by the 5th or 6th century CE Svetambara scholar Mallavadin,[31] and they are:[30][32][33]

  1. Affirmation: syād-asti—in some ways, it is,
  2. Denial: syān-nāsti—in some ways, it is not,
  3. Joint but successive affirmation and denial: syād-asti-nāsti—in some ways, it is, and it is not,
  4. Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial: syāt-asti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is, and it is indescribable,
  5. Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial: syān-nāsti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is not, and it is indescribable,
  6. Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial: syād-asti-nāsti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is, it is not, and it is indescribable,
  7. Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial: syād-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is indescribable.

Each of these seven predicates state the Jain viewpoint of a multifaceted reality from the perspective of time, space, substance and mode.[30][32] The phrase syāt declares the standpoint of expression – affirmation with regard to own substance (dravya), place (kṣetra), time (kāla), and being (bhāva), and negation with regard to other substance (dravya), place (kṣetra), time (kāla), and being (bhāva). Thus, for a ‘jar’, in regard to substance (dravya) – earthen, it simply is; wooden, it simply is not. In regard to place (kṣetra) – room, it simply is; terrace, it simply is not.[34] In regard to time (kāla) – summer, it simply is; winter, it simply is not. In regard to being (bhāva) – brown, it simply is; white, it simply is not. And the word ‘simply’ has been inserted for the purpose of excluding a sense not approved by the ‘nuance’; for avoidance of a meaning not intended.[34]

According to Samantabhadra's text Āptamīmāṁsā (Verse 105), "Syādvāda, the doctrine of conditional predications, and kevalajñāna (omniscience), are both illuminators of the substances of reality. The difference between the two is that while kevalajñāna illumines directly, syādvāda illumines indirectly".[35] Syadvada is indispensable and helps establish the truth, according to Samantabhadra.[36]

Nayavāda

Nayavāda (Sanskrit: नयवाद) is the theory of standpoints or viewpoints. Nayavāda is a compound of two Sanskrit words—naya ("standpoint, viewpoint, interpretation") and vāda ("doctrine, thesis").[37] Nayas are philosophical perspective about a particular topic, and how to make proper conclusions about that topic.[38]

According to Jainism, there are seven nayas or viewpoints through which one can make complete judgments about absolute reality using syadvada.[39] These seven naya, according to Umaswati, are:[38][40]

  1. Naigama-naya: common sense or a universal view
  2. Samgraha-naya: generic or class view that classifies it
  3. Vyavahara-naya: pragmatic or a particular view assesses its utility
  4. Rijusutra-naya: linear view considers it in present time
  5. Sabda-naya: verbal view that names it
  6. Samabhirudha-naya: etymological view uses the name and establishes it nature
  7. Evambhuta-naya: actuality view considers its concrete particulars

The naya theory emerged after about the 5th century CE, and underwent extensive development in Jainism. There are many variants of nayavada concept in later Jain texts.[38][39]

A particular viewpoint is called a naya or a partial viewpoint. According to Vijay Jain, Nayavada does not deny the attributes, qualities, modes and other aspects; but qualifies them to be from a particular perspective. A naya reveals only a part of the totality, and should not be mistaken for the whole. A synthesis of different viewpoints is said to be achieved by the doctrine of conditional predications (syādvāda).[41]

Jiva, the changing soul

 
Mahāvīra did not use the word anekāntavada, but his teachings contain the seeds of the concept (painting from Rajasthan, ca. 1900)

Ancient India, particularly the centuries in which the Mahavira and the Buddha lived, was a ground of intense intellectual debates, especially on the nature of reality and self or soul. Jain view of soul differs from those found in ancient Buddhist and Hindu texts, and Jain view about jiva and ajiva (self, matter) utilizes anekantavada.[42][43][44]

The Upanishadic thought (Hindu) postulated the impermanence of matter and body, but the existence of an unchanging, eternal metaphysical reality of Brahman and Ātman (soul, self). The Buddhist thought also postulated impermanence, but denied the existence of any unchanging, eternal soul or self and instead posited the concept of anatta (no-self).[45][46][47] According to the vedāntin (Upanishadic) conceptual scheme, the Buddhists were wrong in denying permanence and absolutism, and within the Buddhist conceptual scheme, the vedāntins were wrong in denying the reality of impermanence. The two positions were contradictory and mutually exclusive from each other's point of view.[48] The Jains managed a synthesis of the two uncompromising positions with anekāntavāda.[49][50] From the perspective of a higher, inclusive level made possible by the ontology and epistemology of anekāntavāda and syādvāda, Jains do not see such claims as contradictory or mutually exclusive; instead, they are seen as ekantika or only partially true.[51] The Jain breadth of vision embraces the perspectives of both Vedānta which, according to Jainism, "recognizes substances but not process", and Buddhism, which "recognizes process but not substance". Jainism, on the other hand, pays equal attention to both substance (dravya) and process (paryaya).[52]

This philosophical syncretisation of paradox of change through anekānta has been acknowledged by modern scholars such as Arvind Sharma, who wrote:[50]

Our experience of the world presents a profound paradox which we can ignore existentially, but not philosophically. This paradox is the paradox of change. Something – A changes and therefore it cannot be permanent. On the other hand, if A is not permanent, then what changes? In this debate between the "permanence" and "change", Hinduism seems more inclined to grasp the first horn of the dilemma and Buddhism the second. It is Jainism that has the philosophical courage to grasp both horns fearlessly and simultaneously, and the philosophical skill not to be gored by either.

Inclusivist or exclusivist

Some Indian writers state that Anekantavada is an inclusivist doctrine positing that Jainism accepts "non-Jain teachings as partial versions of truth", a form of sectarian tolerance. Others scholars state this is incorrect and a reconstruction of Jain history because Jainism has consistently seen itself in "exclusivist term as the one true path".[53] Classical Jain scholars saw their premises and models of reality as superior than the competing spiritual traditions of Buddhism and Hinduism, both of which Jainism considered inadequate. For instance, the Jain text Uttaradhyayana Sutra in section 23.63 calls the competing Indian thought to be "heterodox and heretics" and that they "have chosen a wrong path, the right path is that taught by the Jinas".[53] Similarly, the early Jain scholar Haribhadra, who likely lived between the 6th and 8th century, states that those who do not follow the teachings of Jainism cannot be "approved or accommodated".[54]

John Koller states anekāntavāda to be "epistemological respect for view of others" about the nature of existence whether it is "inherently enduring or constantly changing", but "not relativism; it does not mean conceding that all arguments and all views are equal".[55]

In contemporary times, according to Paul Dundas, the Anekantavada doctrine has been interpreted by some Jains as intending to "promote a universal religious tolerance", and a teaching of "plurality" and "benign attitude to other [ethical, religious] positions". This is problematic and a misreading of Jain historical texts and Mahavira's teachings, states Dundas.[56] The "many pointedness, multiple perspective" teachings of the Mahavira is a doctrine about the nature of Absolute Reality and human existence, and it is sometimes called "non-absolutism" doctrine.[57] However, it is not a doctrine about tolerating or condoning activities such as sacrificing or killing animals for food, violence against disbelievers or any other living being as "perhaps right".[56] The Five vows for Jain monks and nuns, for example, are strict requirements and there is no "perhaps, just one perspective".[58] Similarly, since ancient times, Jainism co-existed with Buddhism and Hinduism, according to Dundas, but Jainism was highly critical of the knowledge systems and ideologies of its rivals, and vice versa.[59]

History and development

The principle of anekāntavāda is one of the foundational Jain philosophical concept. The development of anekāntavāda also encouraged the development of the dialectics of syādvāda (conditioned viewpoints) and nayavāda (partial viewpoints).

According to Karl Potter, the Jain anekāntavāda doctrine emerged in a milieu that included Buddhists and Hindus in ancient and medieval India.[60] The diverse Hindu schools such as Nyaya-Vaisheshika, Samkhya-Yoga and Mimamsa-Vedanta, all accepted the premise of Atman that "unchanging permanent soul, self exists and is self-evident", while various schools of early Buddhism denied it and substituted it with Anatta (no-self, no-soul). But the leading school of Buddhism named Shunyavada falls apart which says that there is no permanent soul or everything is Shunya (Empty) with argument that who is the witness of everything is Shunya (Emptiness). Further, for causation theories, Vedanta schools and Madhyamika Buddhists had similar ideas, while Nyaya-Vaisheshika and non-Madhyamika Buddhists generally agreed on the other side. Jainism, using its anekāntavāda doctrine occupied the center of this theological divide on soul-self (jiva) and causation theories, between the various schools of Buddhist and Hindu thought.[44][60]

Origins

The origins of anekāntavāda are traceable in the teachings of Mahāvīra, who used it effectively to show the relativity of truth and reality. Taking a relativistic viewpoint, Mahāvīra is said to have explained the nature of the soul as both permanent, from the point of view of underlying substance, and temporary, from the point of view of its modes and modification.[61]

Early history

Early Jain texts were not composed in Vedic or classical Sanskrit, but in Ardhamagadhi Prakrit language.[62] According to Matilal, the earliest Jain literature that present a developing form of a substantial anekantavada doctrine is found in Sanskrit texts, and after Jaina scholars had adopted Sanskrit to debate their ideas with Buddhists and Hindus of their era.[63] These texts show a synthetic development, the existence and borrowing of terminology, ideas and concepts from rival schools of Indian thought but with innovation and original thought that disagreed with their peers.[63]

The early Svetambara canons and teachings do not use the terms anekāntavāda and syādvāda, but contain teachings in rudimentary form without giving it proper structure or establishing it as a separate doctrine. Śvētāmbara text, Sutrakritanga contains references to Vibhagyavāda, which, according to Hermann Jacobi, is the same as syādvāda and saptibhaṅgī.[64] For example, Jacobi in his 1895 translation interpreted vibhagyavada as syadvada, the former mentioned in the Svetambara Jain canonical text Sutrakritanga.[65] However, the Digambara Jains dispute this text is canonical or even authentic.[66]

A monk should be modest, though he be of a fearless mind; he should expound the syādvāda, he should use the two permitted kinds of speech, living among virtuous men, impartial and wise.

— Sūtrakritānga, 14:22, A Svetambara text disputed by the Digambaras[65]

According to Upadhyaye, the Bhagvatisūtra (also called Vyākhyāprajñapti) mentions three primary predications of the saptibhaṅgīnaya.[67] This too is a Svetambara text, and considered by Digambara Jains as unauthentic.[66]

The earliest comprehensive teachings of anekāntavāda doctrine is found in the Tattvarthasutra of Umasvati, considered to be authoritative by all Jain sects including Svetambara and Digambara.[13] The century in which Umaswati lived is unclear, but variously placed by contemporary scholars to sometime between 2nd and 5th century.[68][69][70]

The Digambara scholar Kundakunda, in his mystical Jain texts, expounded on the doctrine of syādvāda and saptibhaṅgī in Pravacanasāra and Pancastikayasāra.[67][13] Kundakunda also used nayas to discuss the essence of the self in Samayasāra. Kundakunda is believed in the Digambara tradition to have lived about the 1st-century CE, but has been placed by early modern era scholars to 2nd or 3rd century CE.[71] In contrast, the earliest available secondary literature on Kundakunda appears in about the 10th century, which has led recent scholarship to suggest that he may have lived in or after 8th-century. This radical reassessment in Kundakunda chronology, if accurate, would place his comprehensive theories on anekantavada to the late 1st millennium CE.[72]

Parable of the blind men and an elephant

 

The Jain texts explain the anekāntvāda concept using the parable of blind men and an elephant, in a manner similar to those found in both Buddhist and Hindu texts about limits of perception and the importance of complete context. The parable has several Indian variations, but broadly goes as follows:[73][74]

A group of blind men heard that a strange animal, called an elephant, had been brought to the town, but none of them were aware of its shape and form. Out of curiosity, they said: "We must inspect and know it by touch, of which we are capable". So, they sought it out, and when they found it they groped about it. In the case of the first person, whose hand landed on the trunk, said "This being is like a thick snake". For another one whose hand reached its ear, it seemed like a kind of fan. As for another person, whose hand was upon its leg, said, the elephant is a pillar like a tree-trunk. The blind man who placed his hand upon its side said, "elephant is a wall". Another who felt its tail, described it as a rope. The last felt its tusk, stating the elephant is that which is hard, smooth and like a spear.

This parable is called Andha-gaja-nyaya maxim in Jain texts.[75]

Two of the Jain references to this parable are found in Tattvarthaslokavatika of Vidyanandi (9th century) and it appears twice in the Syādvādamanjari of Ācārya Mallisena (13th century).[75] According to Mallisena, whenever anyone takes a partial, unconditional view of the ultimate reality, and denies the possibility of another aspect of that reality, it is an instance of the above parable and a defective view.[75] Mallisena goes further in his second reference to the above parable and states that all reality has infinite aspects and attributes, all assertions can only be relatively true. This does not mean scepticism or doubt is the right path to knowledge, according to Mallisena and other Jain scholars, but that any philosophical assertion is only conditionally, partially true. Any and all viewpoints, states Mallisena, that do not admit an exception are false views.[75]

While the same parable is found in Buddhist and Hindu texts to emphasize the need to be watchful for partial viewpoints of a complex reality, the Jain text apply it to isolated topic and all subjects.[76][77][78] For example, the syadvada principle states that all the following seven predicates must be accepted as true for a cooking pot, according to Matilal:[79]

  • from a certain point of view, or in a certain sense, the pot exists
  • from a certain point of view, the pot does not exist
  • from a certain point of view, the pot exists and does not exist
  • from a certain point of view, the pot is inexpressible
  • from a certain point of view, the pot both exists and is inexpressible
  • from a certain point of view, the pot both does not exist and is inexpressible
  • from a certain point of view, the pot exists, does not exist, and is also inexpressible

Medieval developments

Ācārya Haribhadra (8th century CE) was one of the leading proponents of anekāntavāda. He wrote a doxography, a compendium of a variety of intellectual views. This attempted to contextualise Jain thoughts within the broad framework, rather than espouse narrow partisan views. It interacted with the many possible intellectual orientations available to Indian thinkers around the 8th century.[80]

Ācārya Amrtacandra starts his famous 10th century CE work Purusathasiddhiupaya with strong praise for anekāntavāda: "I bow down to the principle of anekānta, the source and foundation of the highest scriptures, the dispeller of wrong one-sided notions, that which takes into account all aspects of truth, reconciling diverse and even contradictory traits of all objects or entity."[81]

Ācārya Vidyānandi (11th century CE) provides the analogy of the ocean to explain the nature of truth in Tattvarthaslokavārtikka, 116:[82]

Yaśovijaya Gaṇi, a 17th-century Jain monk, went beyond anekāntavāda by advocating madhāyastha, meaning "standing in the middle" or "equidistance". This position allowed him to praise qualities in others even though the people were non-Jain and belonged to other faiths.[83] There was a period of stagnation after Yasovijayaji, as there were no new contributions to the development of Jain philosophy.[84]

Influence

The Jain philosophical concept of Anekantavada made important contributions to ancient Indian philosophy, in the areas of skepticism and relativity.[85] The epistemology of anekāntavāda and syādvāda also had a profound impact on the development of ancient Indian logic and philosophy.

While employing anekāntavāda, the 17th century Jain scholar Yasovijaya stated that it is not anābhigrahika (indiscriminate attachment to all views as being true), which is effectively a kind of misconceived relativism.[86] In Jain belief, anekāntavāda transcends the various traditions of Buddhism and Hinduism.[87]

Role in Jain history

Anekāntavāda played a role in the history of Jainism in India, during intellectual debates from Śaivas, Vaiṣṇavas, Buddhists, Muslims, and Christians at various times. According to John Koller, professor of Asian studies, anekāntavāda allowed Jain thinkers to maintain the validity of their doctrine, while at the same time respectfully criticizing the views of their opponents.[88] In other cases, it was a tool used by Jaina scholars to confront and dispute Buddhist scholars in ancient India, or in the case of Haribhadra justify the retaliation of the killing of his two nephews by Buddhist monks, with capital punishment for all Buddhist monks in the suspected monastery, according to the Buddhist version of Haribhadra's biography.[89]

There is historical evidence that along with intolerance of non-Jains, Jains in their history have also been tolerant and generous just like Buddhists and Hindus.[90] Their texts have never presented a theory for holy war.[90] Jains and their temples have historically procured and preserved the classic manuscripts of Buddhism and Hinduism, a strong indicator of acceptance and plurality.[90] The combination of historic facts, states Cort, suggest that Jain history is a combination or tolerance and intolerance of non-Jain views, and that it is inappropriate to rewrite the Jainism past as a history of "benevolence and tolerance" towards others.[91]

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

 
Gandhi used the Jain concept of Anekantavada to explain his views.[92]

Mahatma Gandhi mentioned Anekantavada and Syadvada in the journal Young India – 21 Jan 1926. According to Jeffery D. Long – a scholar of Hindu and Jain studies, the Jain Syadvada doctrine helped Gandhi explain how he reconciled his commitment to the "reality of both the personal and impersonal aspects of Brahman", and his view of "Hindu religious pluralism":[93][94]

I am an Advaitist and yet I can support Dvaitism (dualism). The world is changing every moment, and is therefore unreal, it has no permanent existence. But though it is constantly changing, it has a something about it which persists and it is therefore to that extent real. I have therefore no objection to calling it real and unreal, and thus being called an Anekāntavadi or a Syādvadi. But my Syādvāda is not the Syādvāda of the learned, it is peculiarly my own. I cannot engage in a debate with them. It has been my experience that I am always true from my point of view, and am often wrong from the point of view of my honest critics. I know that we are both right from our respective points of view. And this knowledge saves me from attributing motives to my opponents or critics. (...) My Anekāntavāda is the result of the twin doctrine of Satyagraha and ahiṃsā.

Against religious intolerance and contemporary terrorism

Referring to the September 11 attacks, John Koller states that the threat to life from religious violence in modern society mainly exists due to faulty epistemology and metaphysics as well as faulty ethics. A failure to respect the life of other human beings and other life forms, states Koller, is "rooted in dogmatic but mistaken knowledge claims that fail to recognize other legitimate perspectives". Koller states that anekāntavāda is a Jain doctrine that each side commit to accepting truths of multiple perspectives, dialogue and negotiations.[95][96][97]

According to Sabine Scholz, the application of the Anekantavada as a religious basis for "intellectual Ahimsa" is a modern era reinterpretation, one attributed to the writings of A.B. Dhruva in 1933. This view states that Anekantavada is an expression of "religious tolerance of other opinions and harmony". In the 21st century, some writers have presented it as an intellectual weapon against "intolerance, fundamentalism and terrorism".[10] Other scholars such as John E. Cort and Paul Dundas state that, while Jainism indeed teaches non-violence as the highest ethical value, the reinterpretation of Anekantavada as "religious tolerance of other opinions" is a "misreading of the original doctrine". In Jain history, it was a metaphysical doctrine and a philosophical method to formulate its distinct ascetic practice of liberation. Jain history shows, to the contrary, that it persistently was harshly critical and intolerant of Buddhist and Hindu spiritual theories, beliefs and ideologies.[98][10] John Cort states that the Anekantavada doctrine in pre-20th century Jain literature had no relation to religious tolerance or "intellectual Ahimsa". Jain intellectual and social history toward non-Jains, according to Cort, has been contrary to the modern revisionist attempts, particularly by diaspora Jains, to present "Jains having exhibited a spirit of understanding and tolerance toward non-Jains", or that Jains were rare or unique in practicing religious tolerance in Indian intellectual history.[99] According to Padmanabha Jaini, states Cort, indiscriminate open mindedness and the approach of "accepting all religious paths as equally correct when in fact they are not" is an erroneous view in Jainism and not supported by the Anekantavada doctrine.[100]

According to Paul Dundas, in and after the 12th century, the persecution and violence against Jains by Muslim state caused Jain scholars to revisit their theory of Ahimsa (non-violence). For example, Jinadatta Suri in 12th century, wrote during a time of widespread destruction of Jain temples and blocking of Jaina pilgrimage by Muslim armies, that "anybody engaged in a religious activity who was forced to fight and kill somebody" in self-defense would not lose any merit.[101] N.L. Jain, quoting Acarya Mahaprajna, states Anekantavada doctrine is not a principle that can be applied to all situations or fields. In his view, the doctrine has its limits and Anekantavada doctrine does not mean intellectual tolerance or acceptance of religious violence, terrorism, taking of hostages, proxy wars such as in Kashmir, and that "to initiate a conflict is as sinful as to tolerate or not oppose it".[102]

The reinterpretation of Anekantavada as a doctrine of religious tolerance is novel, popular but not unusual for contemporary Jains. It is a pattern of reinterpretation and reinvention to rebrand and reposition that is found in many religions, states Scholz.[10]

Comparison with non-Jain doctrines

According to Bhagchandra Jain, one of the difference between the Buddhist and Jain views is that "Jainism accepts all statements to possess some relative (anekāntika) truth" while for Buddhism this is not the case.[103]

In Jainism, states Jayatilleke, "no proposition could in theory be asserted to be categorically true or false, irrespective of the standpoint from which it was made, in Buddhism such categorical assertions were considered possible in the case of some propositions."[104] Unlike Jainism, there are propositions that are categorically true in Buddhism, and there are others that are anekamsika (uncertain, indefinite). Examples of categorically true and certain doctrines are the Four Noble Truths, while examples of the latter in Buddhism are the avyakata-theses.[104] Further, unlike Jainism, Buddhism does not have a Nayavāda doctrine.[105]

According to Karl Potter and other scholars, Hinduism developed various theory of relations such as satkaryavada, asatkaryavada, avirodhavada and others.[60][106] The anekantavada overlaps with two major theories found in Hindu and Buddhist thought, according to James Lochtefeld. The Anekantavada doctrine is satkaryavada in explaining causes, and the asatkaryavada in explaining qualities or attributes in the effects.[60][107] The different schools of Hindu philosophy further elaborated and refined the theory of pramanas and the theory of relations to establish correct means to structure propositions in their view.[108]

Criticism

Indologists such as professor John E. Cort state that anekāntavāda is a doctrine that was historically used by Jain scholars not to accept other viewpoints, but to insist on the Jain viewpoint. Jain monks used anekāntavāda and syādvāda as debating weapons to silence their critics and defend the Jain doctrine.[98] According to Paul Dundas, in Jain hands, this method of analysis became "a fearsome weapon of philosophical polemic with which the doctrines of Hinduism and Buddhism could be pared down to their ideological bases of simple permanence and impermanence, respectively, and thus could be shown to be one-pointed and inadequate as the overall interpretations of reality they purported to be".[109] The Jain scholars, however, considered their own theory of Anekantavada self-evident, immune from criticism, needing neither limitations nor conditions.[109]

The doctrines of anekāntavāda and syādavāda are often criticised to denying any certainty, or accepting incoherent contradictory doctrines. Another argument against it, posited by medieval era Buddhists and Hindus applied the principle on itself, that is if nothing is definitely true or false, is anekāntavāda true or false?[110][111]

According to Karl Potter, the Anekantavada doctrine accepts the norm in Indian philosophies that all knowledge is contextual, that object and subject are interdependent. However, as a theory of relations, it does not solve the deficiencies in other progress philosophies, just "compounds the felony by merely duplicating the already troublesome notion of a dependence relation".[112]

Hindu philosophies

Nyaya

The Nyaya school criticized the Jain doctrine of anekantavada, states Karl Potter, as "wanting to say one thing at one time, the other at another", thereby ignoring the principle of non-contradiction.[112] The Naiyayikas states that it makes no sense to simultaneously say, "jiva and ajiva are not related" and "jiva and ajiva are related". Jains state that jiva attaches itself to karmic particles (ajiva) which means there is a relation between ajiva and jiva. The Jain theory of ascetic salvation teaches cleansing of karmic particles and destroying the bound ajiva to the jiva, yet, Jain scholars also deny that ajiva and jiva are related or at least interdependent, according to the Nyaya scholars. The Jain theory of anekantavada makes its theory of karma, asceticism and salvation incoherent, according to Nyaya texts.[112]

Vaisheshika

The Vaisheshika and Shaivism school scholar Vyomashiva criticized the Anekantavada doctrine because, according to him, it makes all moral life and spiritual pursuits for moksha meaningless. Any spiritually liberated person must be considered under Anekantavada doctrine to be [a] both liberated and not liberated from one point of view, and [b] simply not liberated from another point of view, since all assertions are to be qualified and conditional under it. In other words, states Vyomashiva, this doctrine leads to a paradox and circularity.[113]

Vedanta

Anekāntavāda was analyzed and critiqued by Adi Śankarācārya (~800 CE) in his bhasya on Brahmasutra (2:2:33–36):[114] He stated that anekantavada doctrine when applied to philosophy suffers from two problems: virodha (contradictions) and samsaya (dubiety), neither of which it is able to reconcile with objectivity.[113]

It is impossible that contradictory attributes such as being and non-being should at the same time belong to one and the same thing; just as observation teaches us that a thing cannot be hot and cold at the same moment. The third alternative expressed in the words — they either are such or not such — results in cognition of indefinite nature, which is no more a source of true knowledge than doubt is. Thus the means of knowledge, the object of knowledge, the knowing subject, and the act of knowledge become all alike indefinite. How can his followers act on a doctrine, the matter of which is altogether indeterminate? The result of your efforts is perfect knowledge and is not perfect knowledge. Observation shows that, only when a course of action is known to have a definite result, people set about it without hesitation. Hence a man who proclaims a doctrine of altogether indefinite contents does not deserve to be listened any more than a drunken or a mad man.

— Adi Shankara, Brahmasutra, 2.2:33–36

Shankara's criticism of anekantavada extended beyond the arguments of it being incoherent epistemology in ontological matters. According to Shankara, the goal of philosophy is to identify one's doubts and remove them through reason and understanding, not get more confused.[112] The problem with anekantavada doctrine is that it compounds and glorifies confusion. Further, states Shankara, Jains use this doctrine to be "certain that everything is uncertain".[112]

Contemporary scholars, states Piotr Balcerowicz, concur that the Jain doctrine of Anekantavada does reject some versions of the "law of non-contradiction", but it is incorrect to state that it rejects this law in all instances.[115]

Buddhist philosophy

The Buddhist scholar Śāntarakṣita, and his student Kamalasila, criticized anekantavada by presenting his arguments that it leads to the Buddhist premise "jivas (souls) do not exist". That is, the two of the most important doctrines of Jainism are mutually contradictory premises.[112][116] According to Santaraksita, Jains state that "jiva is one considered collectively, and many considered distributively", but if so debates Santaraksita, "jiva cannot change". He then proceeds to show that changing jiva necessarily means jiva appear and disappear every moment, which is equivalent to "jiva don't exist".[112] According to Karl Potter, the argument posited by Śāntarakṣita is flawed, because it commits what is called in the Western logic as the "fallacy of division".[112]

The Buddhist logician Dharmakirti critiqued anekāntavāda as follows:[117]

With the differentiation removed, all things have dual nature. Then, if somebody is implored to eat curd, then why he does not eat camel?" The insinuation is obvious; if curd exists from the nature of curd and does not exist from the nature of a camel, then one is justified in eating camel, as by eating camel, he is merely eating the negation of curd.

— Dharmakirti, Pramānavarttikakārika

Self-criticism in Jain scholarship

The medieval era Jain logicians Akalanka and Vidyananda, who were likely contemporaries of Adi Shankara, acknowledged many issues with anekantavada in their texts. For example, Akalanka in his Pramanasamgraha acknowledges seven problems when anekantavada is applied to develop a comprehensive and consistent philosophy: dubiety, contradiction, lack of conformity of bases (vaiyadhi karanya), joint fault, infinite regress, intermixture and absence.[113] Vidyananda acknowledged six of those in the Akalanka list, adding the problem of vyatikara (cross breeding in ideas) and apratipatti (incomprehensibility). Prabhācandra, who probably lived in the 11th century, and several other later Jain scholars accepted many of these identified issues in anekantavada application.[113]

See also

References

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anekantavada, anekāntavāda, hindi, अन, तव, many, sidedness, jain, doctrine, about, metaphysical, truths, that, emerged, ancient, india, states, that, ultimate, truth, reality, complex, multiple, aspects, according, jainism, single, specific, statement, describ. Anekantavada Hindi अन क न तव द many sidedness is the Jain doctrine about metaphysical truths that emerged in ancient India 1 It states that the ultimate truth and reality is complex and has multiple aspects 2 According to Jainism no single specific statement can describe the nature of existence and the absolute truth This knowledge Kevala Jnana it adds is comprehended only by the Arihants Other beings and their statements about absolute truth are incomplete and at best a partial truth 3 All knowledge claims according to the anekantavada doctrine must be qualified in many ways including being affirmed and denied 4 Anekantavada is a fundamental doctrine of Jainism The origins of anekantavada can be traced back to the teachings of Mahavira 599 527 BCE the 24th Jain Tirthankara 5 The dialectical concepts of syadvada conditioned viewpoints and nayavada partial viewpoints arose from anekantavada in the medieval era providing Jainism with more detailed logical structure and expression The details of the doctrine emerged in Jainism in the 1st millennium CE from debates between scholars of Jain Buddhist and vedic schools of philosophies 6 Anekantavada has also been interpreted to mean non absolutism intellectual Ahimsa 7 religious pluralism 8 as well as a rejection of fanaticism that leads to terror attacks and mass violence 9 Some scholars state that modern revisionism has attempted to reinterpret anekantavada with religious tolerance openmindedness and pluralism 10 11 The word may be literally translated as non one sidedness doctrine or the doctrine of not one side Contents 1 Etymology 2 Philosophical overview 2 1 Syadvada 2 2 Nayavada 2 3 Jiva the changing soul 2 4 Inclusivist or exclusivist 3 History and development 3 1 Origins 3 2 Early history 3 3 Parable of the blind men and an elephant 3 4 Medieval developments 4 Influence 4 1 Role in Jain history 4 2 Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi 4 3 Against religious intolerance and contemporary terrorism 5 Comparison with non Jain doctrines 6 Criticism 6 1 Hindu philosophies 6 1 1 Nyaya 6 1 2 Vaisheshika 6 1 3 Vedanta 6 2 Buddhist philosophy 6 3 Self criticism in Jain scholarship 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksEtymology EditThe word anekantavada is a compound of two Sanskrit words anekanta and vada The word anekanta itself is composed of three root words an not eka one and anta end side together it connotes not one ended sided many sidedness or manifoldness 12 13 14 The word vada means doctrine way speak thesis 15 16 The term anekantavada is translated by scholars as the doctrine of many sidedness 17 18 non onesidedness 19 or many pointedness 13 The term anekantavada is not found in early texts considered canonical by Svetambara tradition of Jainism However traces of the doctrines are found in comments of Mahavira in these Svetambara texts where he states that the finite and infinite depends on one s perspective The word anekantavada was coined by Acharya Siddhasen Divakar to denote the teachings of Mahavira that state truth can be expressed in infinite ways The earliest comprehensive teachings of anekantavada doctrine is found in the Tattvarthasutra by Acharya Umaswami and is considered to be authoritative by all Jain sects In the Digambara tradition texts the two truths theory of Kundakunda also provides the core of this doctrine 13 Philosophical overview EditThe doctrine of anekantavada also known as anekantatva states that truth and reality is complex and always has multiple aspects Reality can be experienced but it is not possible to totally express it with language Human attempts to communicate are naya or partial expression of the truth 12 13 Language is not truth but a means and attempt to express it From truth according to Mahavira language returns and not the other way around 12 20 For example one can experience the truth of a taste but cannot fully express that taste through language Any attempts to express the experience are syat or valid in some respect but it still remains a perhaps just one perspective incomplete 20 In the same way spiritual truths are complex they have multiple aspects language cannot express their plurality yet through effort and appropriate karma they can be experienced 12 The anekantavada premises of the Jains are ancient as evidenced by mentions of them in Buddhist texts such as the Samannaphala Sutta The Jain agamas suggest that Mahavira s approach to answering all metaphysical philosophical questions was a qualified yes syat 21 22 These texts identify anekantavada doctrine to be one of the key differences between the teachings of the Mahavira and those of the Buddha The Buddha taught the Middle Way rejecting extremes of the answer it is or it is not to metaphysical questions The Mahavira in contrast taught his followers to accept both it is and it is not with from a viewpoint qualification and with reconciliation to understand the absolute reality 23 Syadvada predication logic and Nayavada perspective epistemology of Jainism expand on the concept of anekantavada Syadvada recommends the expression of anekanta by prefixing the epithet syad to every phrase or expression describing the nature of existence 24 25 The Jain doctrine of anekantavada according to Bimal Matilal states that no philosophic or metaphysical proposition can be true if it is asserted without any condition or limitation 26 For a metaphysical proposition to be true according to Jainism it must include one or more conditions syadvada or limitations nayavada standpoints 27 Syadvada Edit Syadvada Sanskrit स य द व द is the theory of conditioned predication the first part of which is derived from the Sanskrit word syat Sanskrit स य त which is the third person singular of the optative tense of the Sanskrit verb as Sanskrit अस to be and which becomes syad when followed by a vowel or a voiced consonant in accordance with sandhi The optative tense in Sanskrit formerly known as the potential has the same meaning as the present tense of the subjunctive mood in most Indo European languages including Hindi Latin Russian French etc It is used when there is uncertainty in a statement not it is but it may be one might etc The subjunctive is very commonly used in Hindi for example in kya kahun what to say The subjunctive is also commonly used in conditional constructions for example one of the few English locutions in the subjunctive which remains more or less current is were it ० then ० or more commonly if it were where were is in the past tense of the subjunctive Syat can be translated into English as meaning perchance may be perhaps it is 28 The use of the verb as in the optative tense is found in the more ancient Vedic era literature in a similar sense For example sutra 1 4 96 of Panini s Astadhyayi explains it as signifying a chance maybe probable 28 In Jainism however syadvada and anekanta is not a theory of uncertainty doubt or relative probabilities Rather it is conditional yes or conditional approval of any proposition states Matilal and other scholars 28 29 This usage has historic precedents in classical Sanskrit literature and particularly in other ancient Indian religions Buddhism and Hinduism with the phrase syad etat meaning let it be so but or an answer that is neither yes nor no provisionally accepting an opponent s viewpoint for a certain premise This would be expressed in archaic English with the subjunctive be it so a direct translation of syad etat Traditionally this debate methodology was used by Indian scholars to acknowledge the opponent s viewpoint but disarm and bound its applicability to certain context and persuade the opponent of aspects not considered 28 30 According to Charitrapragya in Jain context syadvada does not mean a doctrine of doubt or skepticism rather it means multiplicity or multiple possibilities 29 Syat in Jainism connotes something different from what the term means in Buddhism and Hinduism In Jainism it does not connote an answer that is neither yes nor no but it connotes a many sidedness to any proposition with a sevenfold predication 30 Syadvada is a theory of qualified predication states Koller It states that all knowledge claims must be qualified in many ways because reality is many sided 4 It is done so systematically in later Jain texts through saptibhaṅginaya or the theory of sevenfold scheme 4 These saptibhaṅgi seem to have been first formulated in Jainism by the 5th or 6th century CE Svetambara scholar Mallavadin 31 and they are 30 32 33 Affirmation syad asti in some ways it is Denial syan nasti in some ways it is not Joint but successive affirmation and denial syad asti nasti in some ways it is and it is not Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial syat asti avaktavyaḥ in some ways it is and it is indescribable Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial syan nasti avaktavyaḥ in some ways it is not and it is indescribable Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial syad asti nasti avaktavyaḥ in some ways it is it is not and it is indescribable Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial syad avaktavyaḥ in some ways it is indescribable Each of these seven predicates state the Jain viewpoint of a multifaceted reality from the perspective of time space substance and mode 30 32 The phrase syat declares the standpoint of expression affirmation with regard to own substance dravya place kṣetra time kala and being bhava and negation with regard to other substance dravya place kṣetra time kala and being bhava Thus for a jar in regard to substance dravya earthen it simply is wooden it simply is not In regard to place kṣetra room it simply is terrace it simply is not 34 In regard to time kala summer it simply is winter it simply is not In regard to being bhava brown it simply is white it simply is not And the word simply has been inserted for the purpose of excluding a sense not approved by the nuance for avoidance of a meaning not intended 34 According to Samantabhadra s text Aptamimaṁsa Verse 105 Syadvada the doctrine of conditional predications and kevalajnana omniscience are both illuminators of the substances of reality The difference between the two is that while kevalajnana illumines directly syadvada illumines indirectly 35 Syadvada is indispensable and helps establish the truth according to Samantabhadra 36 Nayavada Edit Nayavada Sanskrit नयव द is the theory of standpoints or viewpoints Nayavada is a compound of two Sanskrit words naya standpoint viewpoint interpretation and vada doctrine thesis 37 Nayas are philosophical perspective about a particular topic and how to make proper conclusions about that topic 38 According to Jainism there are seven nayas or viewpoints through which one can make complete judgments about absolute reality using syadvada 39 These seven naya according to Umaswati are 38 40 Naigama naya common sense or a universal view Samgraha naya generic or class view that classifies it Vyavahara naya pragmatic or a particular view assesses its utility Rijusutra naya linear view considers it in present time Sabda naya verbal view that names it Samabhirudha naya etymological view uses the name and establishes it nature Evambhuta naya actuality view considers its concrete particularsThe naya theory emerged after about the 5th century CE and underwent extensive development in Jainism There are many variants of nayavada concept in later Jain texts 38 39 A particular viewpoint is called a naya or a partial viewpoint According to Vijay Jain Nayavada does not deny the attributes qualities modes and other aspects but qualifies them to be from a particular perspective A naya reveals only a part of the totality and should not be mistaken for the whole A synthesis of different viewpoints is said to be achieved by the doctrine of conditional predications syadvada 41 Jiva the changing soul Edit Mahavira did not use the word anekantavada but his teachings contain the seeds of the concept painting from Rajasthan ca 1900 Ancient India particularly the centuries in which the Mahavira and the Buddha lived was a ground of intense intellectual debates especially on the nature of reality and self or soul Jain view of soul differs from those found in ancient Buddhist and Hindu texts and Jain view about jiva and ajiva self matter utilizes anekantavada 42 43 44 The Upanishadic thought Hindu postulated the impermanence of matter and body but the existence of an unchanging eternal metaphysical reality of Brahman and Atman soul self The Buddhist thought also postulated impermanence but denied the existence of any unchanging eternal soul or self and instead posited the concept of anatta no self 45 46 47 According to the vedantin Upanishadic conceptual scheme the Buddhists were wrong in denying permanence and absolutism and within the Buddhist conceptual scheme the vedantins were wrong in denying the reality of impermanence The two positions were contradictory and mutually exclusive from each other s point of view 48 The Jains managed a synthesis of the two uncompromising positions with anekantavada 49 50 From the perspective of a higher inclusive level made possible by the ontology and epistemology of anekantavada and syadvada Jains do not see such claims as contradictory or mutually exclusive instead they are seen as ekantika or only partially true 51 The Jain breadth of vision embraces the perspectives of both Vedanta which according to Jainism recognizes substances but not process and Buddhism which recognizes process but not substance Jainism on the other hand pays equal attention to both substance dravya and process paryaya 52 This philosophical syncretisation of paradox of change through anekanta has been acknowledged by modern scholars such as Arvind Sharma who wrote 50 Our experience of the world presents a profound paradox which we can ignore existentially but not philosophically This paradox is the paradox of change Something A changes and therefore it cannot be permanent On the other hand if A is not permanent then what changes In this debate between the permanence and change Hinduism seems more inclined to grasp the first horn of the dilemma and Buddhism the second It is Jainism that has the philosophical courage to grasp both horns fearlessly and simultaneously and the philosophical skill not to be gored by either Inclusivist or exclusivist Edit Some Indian writers state that Anekantavada is an inclusivist doctrine positing that Jainism accepts non Jain teachings as partial versions of truth a form of sectarian tolerance Others scholars state this is incorrect and a reconstruction of Jain history because Jainism has consistently seen itself in exclusivist term as the one true path 53 Classical Jain scholars saw their premises and models of reality as superior than the competing spiritual traditions of Buddhism and Hinduism both of which Jainism considered inadequate For instance the Jain text Uttaradhyayana Sutra in section 23 63 calls the competing Indian thought to be heterodox and heretics and that they have chosen a wrong path the right path is that taught by the Jinas 53 Similarly the early Jain scholar Haribhadra who likely lived between the 6th and 8th century states that those who do not follow the teachings of Jainism cannot be approved or accommodated 54 John Koller states anekantavada to be epistemological respect for view of others about the nature of existence whether it is inherently enduring or constantly changing but not relativism it does not mean conceding that all arguments and all views are equal 55 In contemporary times according to Paul Dundas the Anekantavada doctrine has been interpreted by some Jains as intending to promote a universal religious tolerance and a teaching of plurality and benign attitude to other ethical religious positions This is problematic and a misreading of Jain historical texts and Mahavira s teachings states Dundas 56 The many pointedness multiple perspective teachings of the Mahavira is a doctrine about the nature of Absolute Reality and human existence and it is sometimes called non absolutism doctrine 57 However it is not a doctrine about tolerating or condoning activities such as sacrificing or killing animals for food violence against disbelievers or any other living being as perhaps right 56 The Five vows for Jain monks and nuns for example are strict requirements and there is no perhaps just one perspective 58 Similarly since ancient times Jainism co existed with Buddhism and Hinduism according to Dundas but Jainism was highly critical of the knowledge systems and ideologies of its rivals and vice versa 59 History and development EditThe principle of anekantavada is one of the foundational Jain philosophical concept The development of anekantavada also encouraged the development of the dialectics of syadvada conditioned viewpoints and nayavada partial viewpoints According to Karl Potter the Jain anekantavada doctrine emerged in a milieu that included Buddhists and Hindus in ancient and medieval India 60 The diverse Hindu schools such as Nyaya Vaisheshika Samkhya Yoga and Mimamsa Vedanta all accepted the premise of Atman that unchanging permanent soul self exists and is self evident while various schools of early Buddhism denied it and substituted it with Anatta no self no soul But the leading school of Buddhism named Shunyavada falls apart which says that there is no permanent soul or everything is Shunya Empty with argument that who is the witness of everything is Shunya Emptiness Further for causation theories Vedanta schools and Madhyamika Buddhists had similar ideas while Nyaya Vaisheshika and non Madhyamika Buddhists generally agreed on the other side Jainism using its anekantavada doctrine occupied the center of this theological divide on soul self jiva and causation theories between the various schools of Buddhist and Hindu thought 44 60 Origins Edit The origins of anekantavada are traceable in the teachings of Mahavira who used it effectively to show the relativity of truth and reality Taking a relativistic viewpoint Mahavira is said to have explained the nature of the soul as both permanent from the point of view of underlying substance and temporary from the point of view of its modes and modification 61 Early history Edit Early Jain texts were not composed in Vedic or classical Sanskrit but in Ardhamagadhi Prakrit language 62 According to Matilal the earliest Jain literature that present a developing form of a substantial anekantavada doctrine is found in Sanskrit texts and after Jaina scholars had adopted Sanskrit to debate their ideas with Buddhists and Hindus of their era 63 These texts show a synthetic development the existence and borrowing of terminology ideas and concepts from rival schools of Indian thought but with innovation and original thought that disagreed with their peers 63 The early Svetambara canons and teachings do not use the terms anekantavada and syadvada but contain teachings in rudimentary form without giving it proper structure or establishing it as a separate doctrine Svetambara text Sutrakritanga contains references to Vibhagyavada which according to Hermann Jacobi is the same as syadvada and saptibhaṅgi 64 For example Jacobi in his 1895 translation interpreted vibhagyavada as syadvada the former mentioned in the Svetambara Jain canonical text Sutrakritanga 65 However the Digambara Jains dispute this text is canonical or even authentic 66 A monk should be modest though he be of a fearless mind he should expound the syadvada he should use the two permitted kinds of speech living among virtuous men impartial and wise Sutrakritanga 14 22 A Svetambara text disputed by the Digambaras 65 According to Upadhyaye the Bhagvatisutra also called Vyakhyaprajnapti mentions three primary predications of the saptibhaṅginaya 67 This too is a Svetambara text and considered by Digambara Jains as unauthentic 66 The earliest comprehensive teachings of anekantavada doctrine is found in the Tattvarthasutra of Umasvati considered to be authoritative by all Jain sects including Svetambara and Digambara 13 The century in which Umaswati lived is unclear but variously placed by contemporary scholars to sometime between 2nd and 5th century 68 69 70 The Digambara scholar Kundakunda in his mystical Jain texts expounded on the doctrine of syadvada and saptibhaṅgi in Pravacanasara and Pancastikayasara 67 13 Kundakunda also used nayas to discuss the essence of the self in Samayasara Kundakunda is believed in the Digambara tradition to have lived about the 1st century CE but has been placed by early modern era scholars to 2nd or 3rd century CE 71 In contrast the earliest available secondary literature on Kundakunda appears in about the 10th century which has led recent scholarship to suggest that he may have lived in or after 8th century This radical reassessment in Kundakunda chronology if accurate would place his comprehensive theories on anekantavada to the late 1st millennium CE 72 Parable of the blind men and an elephant Edit Seven blind men and an elephant parable The Jain texts explain the anekantvada concept using the parable of blind men and an elephant in a manner similar to those found in both Buddhist and Hindu texts about limits of perception and the importance of complete context The parable has several Indian variations but broadly goes as follows 73 74 A group of blind men heard that a strange animal called an elephant had been brought to the town but none of them were aware of its shape and form Out of curiosity they said We must inspect and know it by touch of which we are capable So they sought it out and when they found it they groped about it In the case of the first person whose hand landed on the trunk said This being is like a thick snake For another one whose hand reached its ear it seemed like a kind of fan As for another person whose hand was upon its leg said the elephant is a pillar like a tree trunk The blind man who placed his hand upon its side said elephant is a wall Another who felt its tail described it as a rope The last felt its tusk stating the elephant is that which is hard smooth and like a spear This parable is called Andha gaja nyaya maxim in Jain texts 75 Two of the Jain references to this parable are found in Tattvarthaslokavatika of Vidyanandi 9th century and it appears twice in the Syadvadamanjari of Acarya Mallisena 13th century 75 According to Mallisena whenever anyone takes a partial unconditional view of the ultimate reality and denies the possibility of another aspect of that reality it is an instance of the above parable and a defective view 75 Mallisena goes further in his second reference to the above parable and states that all reality has infinite aspects and attributes all assertions can only be relatively true This does not mean scepticism or doubt is the right path to knowledge according to Mallisena and other Jain scholars but that any philosophical assertion is only conditionally partially true Any and all viewpoints states Mallisena that do not admit an exception are false views 75 While the same parable is found in Buddhist and Hindu texts to emphasize the need to be watchful for partial viewpoints of a complex reality the Jain text apply it to isolated topic and all subjects 76 77 78 For example the syadvada principle states that all the following seven predicates must be accepted as true for a cooking pot according to Matilal 79 from a certain point of view or in a certain sense the pot exists from a certain point of view the pot does not exist from a certain point of view the pot exists and does not exist from a certain point of view the pot is inexpressible from a certain point of view the pot both exists and is inexpressible from a certain point of view the pot both does not exist and is inexpressible from a certain point of view the pot exists does not exist and is also inexpressibleMedieval developments Edit Acarya Haribhadra 8th century CE was one of the leading proponents of anekantavada He wrote a doxography a compendium of a variety of intellectual views This attempted to contextualise Jain thoughts within the broad framework rather than espouse narrow partisan views It interacted with the many possible intellectual orientations available to Indian thinkers around the 8th century 80 Acarya Amrtacandra starts his famous 10th century CE work Purusathasiddhiupaya with strong praise for anekantavada I bow down to the principle of anekanta the source and foundation of the highest scriptures the dispeller of wrong one sided notions that which takes into account all aspects of truth reconciling diverse and even contradictory traits of all objects or entity 81 Acarya Vidyanandi 11th century CE provides the analogy of the ocean to explain the nature of truth in Tattvarthaslokavartikka 116 82 Yasovijaya Gaṇi a 17th century Jain monk went beyond anekantavada by advocating madhayastha meaning standing in the middle or equidistance This position allowed him to praise qualities in others even though the people were non Jain and belonged to other faiths 83 There was a period of stagnation after Yasovijayaji as there were no new contributions to the development of Jain philosophy 84 Influence EditThe Jain philosophical concept of Anekantavada made important contributions to ancient Indian philosophy in the areas of skepticism and relativity 85 The epistemology of anekantavada and syadvada also had a profound impact on the development of ancient Indian logic and philosophy While employing anekantavada the 17th century Jain scholar Yasovijaya stated that it is not anabhigrahika indiscriminate attachment to all views as being true which is effectively a kind of misconceived relativism 86 In Jain belief anekantavada transcends the various traditions of Buddhism and Hinduism 87 Role in Jain history Edit Anekantavada played a role in the history of Jainism in India during intellectual debates from Saivas Vaiṣṇavas Buddhists Muslims and Christians at various times According to John Koller professor of Asian studies anekantavada allowed Jain thinkers to maintain the validity of their doctrine while at the same time respectfully criticizing the views of their opponents 88 In other cases it was a tool used by Jaina scholars to confront and dispute Buddhist scholars in ancient India or in the case of Haribhadra justify the retaliation of the killing of his two nephews by Buddhist monks with capital punishment for all Buddhist monks in the suspected monastery according to the Buddhist version of Haribhadra s biography 89 There is historical evidence that along with intolerance of non Jains Jains in their history have also been tolerant and generous just like Buddhists and Hindus 90 Their texts have never presented a theory for holy war 90 Jains and their temples have historically procured and preserved the classic manuscripts of Buddhism and Hinduism a strong indicator of acceptance and plurality 90 The combination of historic facts states Cort suggest that Jain history is a combination or tolerance and intolerance of non Jain views and that it is inappropriate to rewrite the Jainism past as a history of benevolence and tolerance towards others 91 Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi Edit Gandhi used the Jain concept of Anekantavada to explain his views 92 Mahatma Gandhi mentioned Anekantavada and Syadvada in the journal Young India 21 Jan 1926 According to Jeffery D Long a scholar of Hindu and Jain studies the Jain Syadvada doctrine helped Gandhi explain how he reconciled his commitment to the reality of both the personal and impersonal aspects of Brahman and his view of Hindu religious pluralism 93 94 I am an Advaitist and yet I can support Dvaitism dualism The world is changing every moment and is therefore unreal it has no permanent existence But though it is constantly changing it has a something about it which persists and it is therefore to that extent real I have therefore no objection to calling it real and unreal and thus being called an Anekantavadi or a Syadvadi But my Syadvada is not the Syadvada of the learned it is peculiarly my own I cannot engage in a debate with them It has been my experience that I am always true from my point of view and am often wrong from the point of view of my honest critics I know that we are both right from our respective points of view And this knowledge saves me from attributing motives to my opponents or critics My Anekantavada is the result of the twin doctrine of Satyagraha and ahiṃsa Against religious intolerance and contemporary terrorism Edit Referring to the September 11 attacks John Koller states that the threat to life from religious violence in modern society mainly exists due to faulty epistemology and metaphysics as well as faulty ethics A failure to respect the life of other human beings and other life forms states Koller is rooted in dogmatic but mistaken knowledge claims that fail to recognize other legitimate perspectives Koller states that anekantavada is a Jain doctrine that each side commit to accepting truths of multiple perspectives dialogue and negotiations 95 96 97 According to Sabine Scholz the application of the Anekantavada as a religious basis for intellectual Ahimsa is a modern era reinterpretation one attributed to the writings of A B Dhruva in 1933 This view states that Anekantavada is an expression of religious tolerance of other opinions and harmony In the 21st century some writers have presented it as an intellectual weapon against intolerance fundamentalism and terrorism 10 Other scholars such as John E Cort and Paul Dundas state that while Jainism indeed teaches non violence as the highest ethical value the reinterpretation of Anekantavada as religious tolerance of other opinions is a misreading of the original doctrine In Jain history it was a metaphysical doctrine and a philosophical method to formulate its distinct ascetic practice of liberation Jain history shows to the contrary that it persistently was harshly critical and intolerant of Buddhist and Hindu spiritual theories beliefs and ideologies 98 10 John Cort states that the Anekantavada doctrine in pre 20th century Jain literature had no relation to religious tolerance or intellectual Ahimsa Jain intellectual and social history toward non Jains according to Cort has been contrary to the modern revisionist attempts particularly by diaspora Jains to present Jains having exhibited a spirit of understanding and tolerance toward non Jains or that Jains were rare or unique in practicing religious tolerance in Indian intellectual history 99 According to Padmanabha Jaini states Cort indiscriminate open mindedness and the approach of accepting all religious paths as equally correct when in fact they are not is an erroneous view in Jainism and not supported by the Anekantavada doctrine 100 According to Paul Dundas in and after the 12th century the persecution and violence against Jains by Muslim state caused Jain scholars to revisit their theory of Ahimsa non violence For example Jinadatta Suri in 12th century wrote during a time of widespread destruction of Jain temples and blocking of Jaina pilgrimage by Muslim armies that anybody engaged in a religious activity who was forced to fight and kill somebody in self defense would not lose any merit 101 N L Jain quoting Acarya Mahaprajna states Anekantavada doctrine is not a principle that can be applied to all situations or fields In his view the doctrine has its limits and Anekantavada doctrine does not mean intellectual tolerance or acceptance of religious violence terrorism taking of hostages proxy wars such as in Kashmir and that to initiate a conflict is as sinful as to tolerate or not oppose it 102 The reinterpretation of Anekantavada as a doctrine of religious tolerance is novel popular but not unusual for contemporary Jains It is a pattern of reinterpretation and reinvention to rebrand and reposition that is found in many religions states Scholz 10 Comparison with non Jain doctrines EditAccording to Bhagchandra Jain one of the difference between the Buddhist and Jain views is that Jainism accepts all statements to possess some relative anekantika truth while for Buddhism this is not the case 103 In Jainism states Jayatilleke no proposition could in theory be asserted to be categorically true or false irrespective of the standpoint from which it was made in Buddhism such categorical assertions were considered possible in the case of some propositions 104 Unlike Jainism there are propositions that are categorically true in Buddhism and there are others that are anekamsika uncertain indefinite Examples of categorically true and certain doctrines are the Four Noble Truths while examples of the latter in Buddhism are the avyakata theses 104 Further unlike Jainism Buddhism does not have a Nayavada doctrine 105 According to Karl Potter and other scholars Hinduism developed various theory of relations such as satkaryavada asatkaryavada avirodhavada and others 60 106 The anekantavada overlaps with two major theories found in Hindu and Buddhist thought according to James Lochtefeld The Anekantavada doctrine is satkaryavada in explaining causes and the asatkaryavada in explaining qualities or attributes in the effects 60 107 The different schools of Hindu philosophy further elaborated and refined the theory of pramanas and the theory of relations to establish correct means to structure propositions in their view 108 Criticism EditIndologists such as professor John E Cort state that anekantavada is a doctrine that was historically used by Jain scholars not to accept other viewpoints but to insist on the Jain viewpoint Jain monks used anekantavada and syadvada as debating weapons to silence their critics and defend the Jain doctrine 98 According to Paul Dundas in Jain hands this method of analysis became a fearsome weapon of philosophical polemic with which the doctrines of Hinduism and Buddhism could be pared down to their ideological bases of simple permanence and impermanence respectively and thus could be shown to be one pointed and inadequate as the overall interpretations of reality they purported to be 109 The Jain scholars however considered their own theory of Anekantavada self evident immune from criticism needing neither limitations nor conditions 109 The doctrines of anekantavada and syadavada are often criticised to denying any certainty or accepting incoherent contradictory doctrines Another argument against it posited by medieval era Buddhists and Hindus applied the principle on itself that is if nothing is definitely true or false is anekantavada true or false 110 111 According to Karl Potter the Anekantavada doctrine accepts the norm in Indian philosophies that all knowledge is contextual that object and subject are interdependent However as a theory of relations it does not solve the deficiencies in other progress philosophies just compounds the felony by merely duplicating the already troublesome notion of a dependence relation 112 Hindu philosophies Edit Nyaya Edit The Nyaya school criticized the Jain doctrine of anekantavada states Karl Potter as wanting to say one thing at one time the other at another thereby ignoring the principle of non contradiction 112 The Naiyayikas states that it makes no sense to simultaneously say jiva and ajiva are not related and jiva and ajiva are related Jains state that jiva attaches itself to karmic particles ajiva which means there is a relation between ajiva and jiva The Jain theory of ascetic salvation teaches cleansing of karmic particles and destroying the bound ajiva to the jiva yet Jain scholars also deny that ajiva and jiva are related or at least interdependent according to the Nyaya scholars The Jain theory of anekantavada makes its theory of karma asceticism and salvation incoherent according to Nyaya texts 112 Vaisheshika Edit The Vaisheshika and Shaivism school scholar Vyomashiva criticized the Anekantavada doctrine because according to him it makes all moral life and spiritual pursuits for moksha meaningless Any spiritually liberated person must be considered under Anekantavada doctrine to be a both liberated and not liberated from one point of view and b simply not liberated from another point of view since all assertions are to be qualified and conditional under it In other words states Vyomashiva this doctrine leads to a paradox and circularity 113 Vedanta Edit Anekantavada was analyzed and critiqued by Adi Sankaracarya 800 CE in his bhasya on Brahmasutra 2 2 33 36 114 He stated that anekantavada doctrine when applied to philosophy suffers from two problems virodha contradictions and samsaya dubiety neither of which it is able to reconcile with objectivity 113 It is impossible that contradictory attributes such as being and non being should at the same time belong to one and the same thing just as observation teaches us that a thing cannot be hot and cold at the same moment The third alternative expressed in the words they either are such or not such results in cognition of indefinite nature which is no more a source of true knowledge than doubt is Thus the means of knowledge the object of knowledge the knowing subject and the act of knowledge become all alike indefinite How can his followers act on a doctrine the matter of which is altogether indeterminate The result of your efforts is perfect knowledge and is not perfect knowledge Observation shows that only when a course of action is known to have a definite result people set about it without hesitation Hence a man who proclaims a doctrine of altogether indefinite contents does not deserve to be listened any more than a drunken or a mad man Adi Shankara Brahmasutra 2 2 33 36 Shankara s criticism of anekantavada extended beyond the arguments of it being incoherent epistemology in ontological matters According to Shankara the goal of philosophy is to identify one s doubts and remove them through reason and understanding not get more confused 112 The problem with anekantavada doctrine is that it compounds and glorifies confusion Further states Shankara Jains use this doctrine to be certain that everything is uncertain 112 Contemporary scholars states Piotr Balcerowicz concur that the Jain doctrine of Anekantavada does reject some versions of the law of non contradiction but it is incorrect to state that it rejects this law in all instances 115 Buddhist philosophy Edit The Buddhist scholar Santarakṣita and his student Kamalasila criticized anekantavada by presenting his arguments that it leads to the Buddhist premise jivas souls do not exist That is the two of the most important doctrines of Jainism are mutually contradictory premises 112 116 According to Santaraksita Jains state that jiva is one considered collectively and many considered distributively but if so debates Santaraksita jiva cannot change He then proceeds to show that changing jiva necessarily means jiva appear and disappear every moment which is equivalent to jiva don t exist 112 According to Karl Potter the argument posited by Santarakṣita is flawed because it commits what is called in the Western logic as the fallacy of division 112 The Buddhist logician Dharmakirti critiqued anekantavada as follows 117 With the differentiation removed all things have dual nature Then if somebody is implored to eat curd then why he does not eat camel The insinuation is obvious if curd exists from the nature of curd and does not exist from the nature of a camel then one is justified in eating camel as by eating camel he is merely eating the negation of curd Dharmakirti Pramanavarttikakarika Self criticism in Jain scholarship Edit The medieval era Jain logicians Akalanka and Vidyananda who were likely contemporaries of Adi Shankara acknowledged many issues with anekantavada in their texts For example Akalanka in his Pramanasamgraha acknowledges seven problems when anekantavada is applied to develop a comprehensive and consistent philosophy dubiety contradiction lack of conformity of bases vaiyadhi karanya joint fault infinite regress intermixture and absence 113 Vidyananda acknowledged six of those in the Akalanka list adding the problem of vyatikara cross breeding in ideas and apratipatti incomprehensibility Prabhacandra who probably lived in the 11th century and several other later Jain scholars accepted many of these identified issues in anekantavada application 113 See also EditProblem of universals Contextualism Degrees of truth False dilemma Indian logic Jain epistemology Jaina seven valued logic Logical disjunction Logical equality Logical value Multiplicities Multi valued logic Perspectivism of Nietzsche Pluralism Principle of bivalence Propositional logic Relativism Rhizome philosophy Value pluralismReferences EditCitations Edit Cort 2000 p 325 326 342 Dundas Paul 2004 Beyond Anekantavada A Jain approach to religious tolerance In Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publ pp 123 136 ISBN 81 208 2036 3 Jaini 1998 p 91 a b c Koller John 2004 Why is Anekantavada important In Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism Delhi Motilal Banarsidass pp 90 92 ISBN 81 208 2036 3 Matilal 1981 pp 2 3 Matilal 1981 pp 1 2 Cort 2000 p 324 Wiley 2009 p 36 Koller John 2004 Why is Anekantavada important In Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism Delhi Motilal Banarsidass pp 85 88 ISBN 81 208 2036 3 a b c d Sabine Scholz 2012 Julia A B Hegewald and Subrata K Mitra ed Re Use The Art and Politics of Integration and Anxiety SAGE Publications pp 282 284 ISBN 978 81 321 0981 5 Cort 2000 pp 329 334 a b c d Charitrapragya 2004 pp 75 79 a b c d e f Dundas 2002 pp 229 231 Grimes John 1996 p 34 Monier Monier Williams 1899 व द Sanskrit English Dictionary with Etymology Oxford University Press pages 939 940 Philip C Almond 1982 Mystical Experience and Religious Doctrine An Investigation of the Study of Mysticism in World Religions Walter de Gruyter p 75 ISBN 978 90 279 3160 3 Nicholas F Gier 2000 Spiritual Titanism Indian Chinese and Western Perspectives State University of New York Press pp 80 90 92 ISBN 978 0 7914 4528 0 Andrew R Murphy 2011 The Blackwell Companion to Religion and Violence John Wiley amp Sons pp 267 269 ISBN 978 1 4051 9131 9 Matilal 1981 p 1 a b Jain Philosophy Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 11 February 2023 Matilal 1990 pp 301 305 Balcerowicz 2015 pp 205 218 Matilal 1998 pp 128 135 Koller 2000 pp 400 407 Sangave 2006 p 48 51 Matilal 1981 p 2 Matilal 1981 pp 2 3 30 32 52 54 a b c d Matilal 1981 pp 52 53 a b Charitrapragya 2004 pp 81 83 a b c d Koller John 2004 Why is Anekantavada important In Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism Delhi Motilal Banarsidass pp 93 95 ISBN 81 208 2036 3 Dundas 2002 p 230 a b Grimes John 1996 p 312 Vijay K Jain 2016 p 29 a b Vijay K Jain 2016 p 30 Vijay K Jain 2016 p 163 Vijay K Jain 2016 p 174 Grimes John 1996 p 198 202 03 274 301 a b c Long 2009 p 125 a b Dundas 2002 pp 230 231 Grimes John 1996 p 119 198 03 274 301 Vijay K Jain 2016 p 28 Walter Benesch 1997 An Introduction to Comparative Philosophy Springer pp 133 134 ISBN 978 0 230 59738 9 Karl H Potter 1991 Presuppositions of India s Philosophies Motilal Banarsidass pp 145 149 ISBN 978 81 208 0779 2 a b Johnson W J 1995 Harmless Souls Karmic Bondage and Religious Change in Early Jainism with Special Reference to Umasvati and Kundakunda Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 978 81 208 1309 0 Dundas 2002 pp 87 88 Wiley 2004 pp 2 5 Long 2013 pp 122 125 Koller John 2004 p 97 Huntington Ronald Jainism and Ethics Archived from the original on 19 August 2007 Retrieved 18 July 2007 Quote To counter the proponents of these diametrically opposed positions Buddhist and Hindu Jains developed a position knows as syadvada seeud VAH duh the way or path of perhaps maybe or somehow Syadvada states simply that judgments resting on different points of view may differ without any of them being wholly wrong A limited and incomplete judgment is called a naya nuh yuh and all human knowledge is a compilation of nayas judgments resulting from different attitudes The Jains were thus able to accept equally the Hindu views of being and Buddhist views of becoming but took neither in the sense that their partisan advocates desired or found comforting The Jain doctrine of syadvada is non absolutist and stands firmly against all dogmatisms even including any assertion that Jainism is the right religious path a b Sharma Arvind 2001 Preface xii Sethia Tara 2004 p 97 Burch George 1964 pp 68 93 a b Paul Dundas 2004 Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism Motilal Banarsidass pp 123 125 ISBN 978 81 208 2036 4 Paul Dundas 2004 Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism Motilal Banarsidass pp 125 127 ISBN 978 81 208 2036 4 John Koller 2004 Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism Motilal Banarsidass pp 88 89 ISBN 978 81 208 2036 4 a b Dundas 2002 pp 232 234 Sethia 2004 pp 86 91 Long 2009 pp 98 106 Dundas 2002 p 233 a b c d Karl H Potter 1991 Presuppositions of India s Philosophies Motilal Banarsidass pp 114 115 ISBN 978 81 208 0779 2 Charitrapragya 2004 p 75 Dundas 2002 pp 60 62 a b Matilal 1981 pp 1 3 Jacobi Hermann 1895 14 21 22 a b H Jacobi 1895 Gaina Sutras Clarendon Press pp 327 with footnotes a b Jaina canon religious texts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 11 February 2023 a b Upadhyaye A N 2001 pp 6136 37 Walter Slaje 2008 Sastrarambha Inquiries Into the Preamble in Sanskrit Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 35 with footnote 23 ISBN 978 3 447 05645 8 Jaini 1998 p 81 Dundas 2006 pp 395 396 Piotr Balcerowicz 2003 Essays in Jaina Philosophy and Religion Motilal Banarsidass pp 280 282 ISBN 978 81 208 1977 1 Dundas 2002 pp 107 109 E Bruce Goldstein 2010 Encyclopedia of Perception SAGE Publications p 492 ISBN 978 1 4129 4081 8 C R Snyder Carol E Ford 2013 Coping with Negative Life Events Clinical and Social Psychological Perspectives Springer Science p 12 ISBN 978 1 4757 9865 4 a b c d Piotr Balcerowicz 2003 Essays in Jaina Philosophy and Religion Motilal Banarsidass pp 40 43 with footnotes ISBN 978 81 208 1977 1 John D Ireland 2007 Udana and the Itivuttaka Two Classics from the Pali Canon Buddhist Publication Society pp 9 81 84 ISBN 978 955 24 0164 0 Paul J Griffiths 2007 An Apology for Apologetics A Study in the Logic of Interreligious Dialogue Wipf and Stock pp 46 47 ISBN 978 1 55635 731 2 E Bruce Goldstein 2010 Encyclopedia of Perception SAGE Publications p 492 ISBN 978 1 4129 4081 8 Matilal 1981 pp 54 56 Dundas Paul 2002 p 228 Jain J P 2006 Verse no 2 T W Rhys Davids 1980 pp 576 Dundas Paul 2004 p 134 Jain J C 2001 p 1487 McEvilley Thomas 2002 p 335 Dundas Paul 2004 pp 131 132 Wright J C 2000 Reviewed work s Jaina Theory of Multiple Facets of Reality and Truth Anekantavada by Nagin J Shah Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London London Cambridge University Press 63 3 435 37 doi 10 1017 s0041977x00008594 JSTOR 1559507 S2CID 161116916 John Koller 2004 Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism Motilal Banarsidass p 8 ISBN 978 81 208 2036 4 Cort 2000 pp 335 336 338 339 a b c Cort 2000 pp 336 337 Cort 2000 pp 340 341 J D Long 2008 Rita Sherma and Arvind Sharma ed Hermeneutics and Hindu Thought Toward a Fusion of Horizons Springer Science pp 193 194 ISBN 978 1 4020 8192 7 Long 2013 p 169 Hay Stephen N 1970 Jain Influences on Gandhi s Early Thought In Sibnarayan Ray ed Gandhi India and the World Bombay Nachiketa Publishers pp 14 23 Koller John 2004 pp 85 98 Stroud Scott R 3 July 2014 Anekantavada and Engaged Rhetorical Pluralism Explicating Jaina Views on Perspectivism Violence and Rhetoric Advances in the History of Rhetoric 17 2 131 156 doi 10 1080 15362426 2014 933721 ISSN 1536 2426 S2CID 145165187 James William Jones 2008 a b Cort 2000 pp 324 347 Cort 2000 pp 329 331 Cort 2000 pp 333 334 Dundas 2002 pp 162 163 N L Jain 2008 Colette Caillat and Nalini Balbir ed Jaina Studies Motilal Banarsidass pp 82 84 ISBN 978 81 208 3247 3 Bhagchandra Jain The Rudiments Of Anekantavada In Early Pali Literature a b Jayatilleke Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge Publisher George Allen and Unwin 1963 pp 279 280 Jayatilleke Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge Publisher George Allen and Unwin 1963 p 280 Richard King Early Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism The Mahayana Context of the Gaudapadiya Karika State University of New York Press pp 194 203 ISBN 978 1 4384 0904 7 James G Lochtefeld 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M The Rosen Publishing Group p 133 see Causal Models ISBN 978 0 8239 3179 8 Julius Lipner 1986 The Face of Truth A Study of Meaning and Metaphysics in the Vedantic Theology of Ramanuja State University of New York Press pp 82 89 133 136 ISBN 978 0 88706 038 0 a b Dundas Paul 2002 p 231 Webb Mark Owen The Jain Philosophy The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on 2 March 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2008 Pandya V 2001 p 5210 a b c d e f g h Karl H Potter 1991 Presuppositions of India s Philosophies Motilal Banarsidass pp 145 149 ISBN 978 81 208 0779 2 a b c d Matilal 1981 pp 57 58 Nakamura Hajime 1992 pp 169 70 Piotr Balcerowicz 2003 Essays in Jaina Philosophy and Religion Motilal Banarsidass pp 42 43 with footnotes 15 and 16 ISBN 978 81 208 1977 1 Quote This is the sense in which it is correct to say that the Jainas reject the law of non contradiction Matilal 1981 p 57 Pandya 2001 Bibliography Edit Balcerowicz Piotr 2015 Early Asceticism in India Ajivikism and Jainism Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 53853 0 Acarya Siddhasena Divakara 2004 Bhadrankar Vijaya Gani ed Vardhamana Dvatrimsika Jaipur Prakrit Bharti Academy Dhruva A B ed 1933 Syadvadamanjari of Mallisena with the Anya yoga vyavaccheda dvatrimsika of Hemacandra Bombay Sanskrit and Prakrit Series No 83 Burch George Bosworth 1964 Seven Valued Logic in Jain Philosophy International Philosophical Quarterly Bronx NY IV 1 68 93 doi 10 5840 ipq19644140 ISSN 0019 0365 Archived from the original on 10 December 2011 Chatterjea Tara 2001 Knowledge and Freedom in Indian philosophy Lanham MD Lexington Books ISBN 0 7391 0692 9 Cort John 2000 Intellectual Ahimsa revisited Jain Tolerance and Intolerance of Others Philosophy East and West University of Hawai i Press 50 3 324 47 JSTOR 1400177 Dasgupta S N 1932 History of Indian Philosophy Vol II Cambridge Cambridge University Press Duli Chandra Jain ed 1997 Studies in Jainism Reader 2 New York Jain Study Circle Inc ISBN 0 9626105 2 6 Dundas Paul 2002 1992 The Jains Second ed London and New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 26605 X Dundas Paul 2006 Olivelle Patrick ed Between the Empires Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 977507 1 Nagendra Kr Singh ed 2001 Encyclopedia of Jainism Edited by Nagendra Kr Singh New Delhi Anmol Publications ISBN 81 261 0691 3 Jain J C 2001 Development of doctrine of Anekantavada In Nagendra Kr Singh ed Encyclopedia of Jainism New Delhi Anmol Publications ISBN 81 261 0691 3 Pandya V 2001 Refutation of Jaina Darsana by Sankaracarya in Nagendra Kr Singh ed Encyclopedia of Jainism New Delhi Anmol Publications ISBN 81 261 0691 3 Upadhyaye A N 2001 Syadvada in the Ardhamagadhi Canon In Nagendra Kr Singh ed Encyclopedia of Jainism New Delhi Anmol Publications ISBN 81 261 0691 3 Gandhi Mohandas 1955 Jitendra Thakorbhai Desai comp R K Prabhu ed Truth Is God Gleanings from the Writings of Mahatma Gandhi Bearing on God God Realization and the Godly Way Ahmedabad Navajivan Publishing House Grimes John 1996 A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy Sanskrit Terms Defined in English New York SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 3068 5 Humphreys Christmas 1969 The Buddhist Way of Life London Unwin Books Hiriyanna M 1993 Outlines of Indian Philosophy Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1086 0 Jaini Padmanabh S 1998 1979 The Jaina Path of Purification Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 1578 5 Jones James William 2008 Blood That Cries Out From the Earth The Psychology of Religious Terrorism The Psychology of Religious Terrorism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 804431 4 Jacobi Hermann 1884 F Max Muller ed The Acaranga Sutra Sacred Books of the East vol 22 Part 1 Oxford The Clarendon Press ISBN 0 7007 1538 X Note ISBN refers to the UK Routledge 2001 reprint URL is the scan version of the original 1884 reprint Jacobi Hermann 1895 F Max Muller ed The Sutrakritanga Oxford The Clarendon Press ISBN 0 7007 1538 X Note ISBN refers to the UK Routledge 2001 reprint URL is the scan version of the original 1895 reprint Jain Vijay K 1 January 2016 Acarya Samantabhadra s Aptamimamsa Devagamastotra ISBN 9788190363983 Jain J P 2006 The Art and Science of Self Realisation Purusathasiddhiupaya of Acarya Amrtacandra in Sanskrit and English Delhi Radiant Publishers Koller John M 2000 Syadvada as the Epistemological Key to the Jaina Middle Way Metaphysics of Anekantavada Philosophy East and West Honolulu 50 3 628 630 doi 10 1353 pew 2000 0009 ISSN 0031 8221 JSTOR 1400182 S2CID 170240551 Long Jeffery D 2009 Jainism An Introduction I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 8577 3656 7 Long Jeffery D 2013 Jainism An Introduction I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 8577 1392 6 Matilal Bimal Krishna 1990 Logic Language and Reality Indian Philosophy and Contemporary Issues Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0717 4 Matilal Bimal Krishna 1998 Ganeri Jonardon Tiwari Heeraman eds The Character of Logic in India State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 3739 1 Majmudar Uma 2005 Gandhi s Pilgrimage of Faith From Darkness to Light New York SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 6405 9 Matilal B K 1981 The Central Philosophy of Jainism Anekantavada L D Series 79 Ahmedabad McEvilley Thomas 2002 The Shape of Ancient Thought Comparative Studies in Greek and Indian Philosophies New York Allworth Communications Inc ISBN 1 58115 203 5 Nakamura Hajim 1992 Comparative History of Ideas Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Pub ISBN 81 208 1004 X Sethia Tara 2004 Ahiṃsa Anekanta and Jainism Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 2036 4 Charitrapragya Samani 2004 Mahavira Anekantavada and the World Today In Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jaininsm Delhi Motilal Banarsidass pp 75 89 ISBN 81 208 2036 3 Jain Kamla 2004 Anekantavada in present day social life In Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jaininsm Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publ pp 113 122 ISBN 81 208 2036 3 Vallely Anne 2004 Anekanta Ahiṃsa and question of Pluralism In Tara Sethia ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jaininsm Delhi Motilal Banarsidass pp 99 112 ISBN 81 208 2036 3 Sangave Vilas Adinath 2006 1990 Aspects of Jaina religion 5 ed Bharatiya Jnanpith ISBN 81 263 1273 4 Schwartz Wm Andrew 2018 The Metaphysics of Paradox Jainism Absolute Relativity and Religious Pluralism Lexington Books ISBN 9781498563925 Shah Natubhai 1998 Jainism The World of Conquerors Volume I and II Sussex Sussex Academy Press ISBN 1 898723 30 3 Sharma Arvind 2001 Jaina Perspective on the Philosophy of Religion Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 1760 5 Sonnleitner Michael W 1985 Gandhian Nonviolence Levels of Satyagraha India Abhinav Publications ISBN 81 7017 205 5 T W Rhys Davids 1980 Sacred books of the East Delhi Motilal Banarasidass ISBN 81 208 0101 6 Webb Mark Owen The Jain Philosophy The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on 2 March 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2008 Wiley Kristi L 2009 The A to Z of Jainism vol 38 Scarecrow ISBN 978 0 8108 6337 8 Wiley Kristi L 2004 Historical Dictionary of Jainism Scarecrow ISBN 978 0 8108 6558 7 External links EditThe Doctrine of Relative Pluralism anekantavada Surendranath Dasgupta 1940 Pravin K Shah on Anekantvada The Indian Jaina Dialectic of Syadvada in Relation to Probability by P C Mahalanobis Dialectica 8 1954 95 111 The Syadvada System of Predication by J B S Haldane Sankhya 18 195 200 1957 Anekantvada Archived 17 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Pluralism Project at Harvard University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anekantavada amp oldid 1149756121 Sy C4 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