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  1. Yoga: historia, filosofía y prácticas.Raquel Ferrández - 2022 - Aposta. Revista de Ciencias Sociales 3 (94):1-145.
    Monográfico: Yoga: Historia, Filosofía y Prácticas. Aposta. Revista de Ciencias Sociales, 94 (2022) .
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  • Killing as Orthodoxy, Exegesis as Apologetics: The Animal Sacrifice in the Manubhāṣya of Medhātithi.Liwen Liu - 2022 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 50 (3):427-446.
    Deeply rooted in the Vedic tradition, animal sacrifice is a controversial issue associated with a larger discourse of violence and non-violence in South Asia. Most existent studies on Vedic killing focus on the polemics of ritual violence in six schools of Indian philosophy. However, insufficient attention has been paid to killing in Dharmaśāstric literature, the killing that is an indispensable element of a Vedic householder’s life. To fill in the gap, this paper analyzes the animal sacrifice in the Manubhāṣya of (...)
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  • Debating with Fists and Fallacies: Vācaspati Miśra and Dharmakīrti on Norms of Argumentation.Malcolm Keating - 2022 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 26 (April):63-87.
    The tradition of Nyāya philosophy centers on a dispassionate quest for truth which is simultaneously connected to soteriological and epistemic aims. This article shows how Vācaspati Miśra brings together the soteriological concept of dispassion with the discourse practices of debate, as a response to Buddhist criticisms in Dharmakīrti’s Vādanyāya. He defends the Nyāyasūtra’s stated position that fallacious reasoning is a legitimate means for a debate, under certain circumstances. Dharmakīrti argues that such reasoning is rationally ineffective and indicates unvirtuous qualities. For (...)
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  • Tolerance in Swami Vivekānanda’s Neo-Hinduism.Antonio Rigopoulos - 2019 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 45 (4):438-460.
    Tolerance was and still is a key notion in Neo-Hindu discourse. Its systematic articulation is to be found in the speeches and writings of Swami Vivekānanda. Inspired by his master Rāmakṛṣṇa, he proclaimed non-dual Vedānta as the metaphysical basis of universal tolerance and brotherhood as well as of India’s national identity. Conceptually, his notion of tolerance is to be understood as a hierarchical inclusivism, given that all religions are said to be ultimately included in Vedāntic Hinduism. The claim is that (...)
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  • Manipulating the Memory of Meat-Eating: Reading the Laṅkāvatāra ’s Strategy of Introducing Vegetarianism to Buddhism.Hyoung Seok Ham - 2019 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 47 (1):133-153.
    This paper examines vegetarianism in the eighth “no meat-eating” chapter of the Laṅkāvatāra with specific attention to how the sūtra confronts the previous dietary code and combats Buddhist resistance to the new doctrine. This study corroborates previous observations that vegetarianism in Indian Buddhism was a response to outsiders’ censure, rather than an expression of a specific Buddhist doctrine. It goes on to explore how the Laṅkāvatāra introduces a new dietary norm, one that was incompatible with the preexisting monastic code that (...)
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  • Authorial Authenticity or Theological Polemics? Discerning the Implications of Śaṅkara’s Battle with the Buddhists.Stephen Kaplan - 2013 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 17 (1):1-36.
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  • The final stages of purification in classical yoga.Ian Whicher - 1998 - Asian Philosophy 8 (2):85 – 102.
    This paper attempts to clarify the processes undergone by the yoga practitioner in the later stages of purification according to the classical Yoga of Pata jali. Through a process termed the sattvification of consciousness, the mental processes of the yogin are remolded, reshaped and restructured leading to a transformation of the mind and its functioning. The mind thus can be seen not only as a vehicle of spiritual ignorance, but of liberating knowledge culminating in authentic identity. Yoga philosophy, far from (...)
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  • The liberating role of samskāra in classical Yoga.Ian Whicher - 2005 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 33 (5):601-630.
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  • One and many: The early naiyāyikas and the problem of universals. [REVIEW]Heeraman Tiwari - 1994 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 22 (2):137-170.
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  • Rethinking Advaita Within the Colonial Predicament: the ‘Confrontative’ Philosophy of K. C. Bhattacharyya.Pawel Odyniec - 2018 - Sophia 57 (3):405-424.
    I shall examine in this paper the distinctive way in which the prominent Indian philosopher Krishnachandra Bhattacharyya engaged with Advaita Vedānta during the terminal phase of the colonial period. I propose to do this by looking, first, at ways in which Krishnachandra understood the role of his own philosophizing within the colonial predicament. I will call this his agenda in ‘confrontative’ philosophy. I shall proceed, then, by sketching out the unique manner in which this agenda was successfully enacted through his (...)
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  • Sanskrit and reality: the Buddhist contribution.Bronkhorst Johannes - unknown
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  • What is Bhāvanā?Andrew Ollett - 2013 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 41 (3):221-262.
    Bhāvanā, “bringing into being,” is one of Mīmāṃsā’s hallmark concepts. It connects text and action in a single structure of meaning. This conjunction was crucially important to Mīmāṃsā’s own interpretive enterprise, and functioned— controversially but influentially—in a broader theory of language. The goal of this paper is to outline bhāvanā’s major contours as it is developed by Kumārilabhaṭṭa and some his followers (Maṇḍanamiśra, Pārthasārathimiśra, Someśvarabhaṭṭa, Khaṇḍadeva, and Āpadeva) and to examine some of the arguments they marshaled in support of it. (...)
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  • Is cognition an attribute of the self or it rather belongs to the body? Some dialectical considerations on Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s position against Nyāya and Vaiśeṣika.Krishna Del Toso - 2011 - Open Journal of Philosophy 1 (2):48.
    In this article an attempt is made to detect what could have been the dialectical reasons that impelled the Cār-vāka thinker Udbhatabhatta to revise and reformulate the classical materialistic concept of cognition. If indeed according to ancient Cārvākas cognition is an attribute entirely dependent on the physical body, for Udbhatabhatta cognition is an independent principle that, of course, needs the presence of a human body to manifest itself and for this very reason it is said to be a peculiarity of (...)
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  • Unconscious forces: a survey of some concepts in Indian philosophy.Leo Näreaho - 2004 - Asian Philosophy 14 (2):117-129.
    In this article, I examine some traditional Indian conceptions of unconscious mental activity. There are concepts in the Indian philosophical tradition, notably saskāras and vāsanās, which can be taken to refer to unconscious mental states and dispositions. My discussion, which is essentially philosophical by nature, is loosely based on the English philosopher C.D. Broad's distinctions concerning the unconscious. Saskāras, which are interpreted realistically in Indian tradition, may manifest themselves as what I (and Broad) call relatively unconscious states. Evidence for this (...)
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  • Kumārila.Daniel Arnold - 2010 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • An inquiry into the definition of tarka in nyāya tradition and its connotation of negative speculation.Sung Yong Kang - 2010 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 38 (1):1-23.
    The technical term “ tarka ” in the Nyāya tradition is the object of the present investigation. Diverse texts including Buddhist ones exhibit a negative estimation of activities using tarka . In contrast, more often than not, later treatises dealing with logico-epistemic problems, especially certain Naiyāyika works, identify the methodological peculiarity of Nyāya with tarka . Such an ambivalent attitude toward tarka can be understood in a coherent way if the essential features of tarka that gave rise to it can (...)
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  • Abhinavagupta’s Attitude towards Yoga.Raffaele Torella - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 139 (3):647.
    A major characteristic of the aristocratic attitude—and I would not know how to better define the flavor that pervades the whole of Abhinavagupta’s work—is the downgrading of all painful effort, seen as a plebeian feature. The aristocrat intends to show that what inferior people can achieve only at the cost of long and painful exercises is accessible to him promptly and very easily. One of the recurring qualifications for Abhinavagupta’s attitude to the spiritual path is precisely absence of effort, absence (...)
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  • A Return to the Self: Indians and Greeks on Life as Art and Philosophical Therapy.Jonardon Ganeri - 2010 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 66:119-135.
    Of the many interrelated themes in Pierre Hadot's Philosophy as a Way of Life: Spiritual Exercises from Socrates to Foucault, two strike me as having a particular centrality. First, there is the theme of attention to the present instant. Hadot describes this as the ‘key to spiritual exercises’, and he finds the idea encapsulated in a quotation from Goethe's Second Faust: ‘Only the present is our happiness’. The second theme is that of viewing the world from above: ‘philosophy signified the (...)
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  • Nirodha, yoga praxis and the transformation of the mind.Ian Whicher - 1997 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 25 (1):1-67.
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  • History in the Abstract: ‘Brahman-ness’ and the Discipline of Nyāya in Seventeenth-Century Vārāṇasī.Samuel Wright - 2016 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 44 (5):1041-1069.
    Over the last fifteen years, studies on Sanskrit intellectual history between the fifteenth and eighteenth centuries have produced a body of scholarship that has fundamentally reshaped our understanding of the period. Yet, despite significant advances in the understanding of the social-historical circumstances of authors and disciplines as well as success in elucidating major features of intellectual thought, a main point of difficultly has been in combining both the intellectuality and sociality of Sanskrit scholars. By examining a debate within the discipline (...)
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  • A Realist View of Hindu Law.Donald R. Davis - 2006 - Ratio Juris 19 (3):287-313.
    . Hindu law represents one of the least known, yet most sophisticated traditions of legal theory and jurisprudence in world history. Hindu jurisprudential texts contain elaborate and careful philosophical reflections on the nature of law and religion. The nature of Hindu law as a tradition has been subject to some debate and some misunderstanding both within and especially outside of specialist circles. The present essay utilizes the familiar framework of legal realism to describe the fundamental concepts of law and legal (...)
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  • Svabhāvavāda and the Cārvāka/Lokāyata: A Historical Overview. [REVIEW]Ramkrishna Bhattacharya - 2012 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 40 (6):593-614.
    svabhāva (own being) and yadṛchhā (chance, accident) are named as two different claimants among others as the first cause (jagatkāraṇa) in the ŚvUp. But in later works, such as Aśvaghoṣa’s poems, svabhāva is synonymous with yadṛchhā and entails a passive attitude to life. Later still, svabhāva is said to be inhering in the Lokāyata materialist system, although in which sense—cosmic order or accident—is not always clearly mentioned. Svabhāva is also a part of the Sāṃkhya doctrine and is mentioned in the (...)
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  • A contemporary debate among advaita vedantins on the nature of avidy ā.Martha Doherty - 2005 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 33 (2):209-241.
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  • Intrinsic Validity Reconsidered: A Sympathetic Study of the MÄ«māmsaka Inversion of Buddhist Epistemology. [REVIEW]Dan Arnold - 2001 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 29 (5/6):589-675.
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  • Some Uses of Dharma in Classical Indian Philosophy.Johannes Bronkhorst - 2004 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 32 (5-6):733-750.
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  • (2 other versions)Going or knowing? The development of the idea of living liberation in the upani $$\underset{\raise0.3em\hbox{$\smash{\scriptscriptstyle\cdot}$}}{s}$$ ads. [REVIEW]Andrew O. Fort - 1994 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 22 (4):379-390.
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  • Contemplative Grammars: Śaṅkara’s Distinction of Upāsana and Nididhyāsana.Neil Dalal - 2016 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 44 (1):179-206.
    Śaṅkara’s Advaita Vedānta is largely dismissive of ritual action, in part because the metaphysical position of non-duality erodes any independent existence of the individual as a ritual agent, and because knowledge of non-duality is thought to be independent of action. However, a close reading of Śaṅkara shows that he does accept forms of devotional practice that have remained largely marginalized in studies of Advaita Vedānta. This article compares and contrasts contemplative devotion, in the form of visualized meditations on īśvara, with (...)
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  • Philosophy and Vedic Exegesis in the Mimamsa.Johannes Bronkhorst - 1997 - Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 59:359-372.
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  • Nikāmakarma: how desireless need one be?1.Christopher Framarin - 2004 - Asian Philosophy 14 (3):239-254.
    In the Bhagavadgītā K a advises Arjuna to act without desire. He also describes the nikāmakarmin as possessed of perfect equanimity. Some scholars have argued that K a's advice is a contradiction. Because action requires desire, desireless action is impossible. Others have claimed that this fact only suggests that K a's prohibition is against a subset of desires and not desire as a whole. These ‘subset’ positions, however, are not consistent with the equanimity requirement. The conclusion that K a's advice (...)
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  • On what do we rely when we rely on reasoning?Richard Nance - 2007 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 35 (2):149-167.
    In Buddhist texts authored in Indian and Tibetan traditions of scholasticism, one is regularly directed to check one’s understanding against “scripture and reasoning.” To date, however, comparatively little attention has been given to the usage of the latter term of this pair (Skt. yukti , Tib. rigs pa) in Indian Buddhist texts. Building on the work of Scherrer-Schaub, Kapstein and others, this paper discusses divergent glosses of the term yukti as found in Indian Buddhist texts. By highlighting continuities and discontinuities (...)
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  • Recovering the indigenous legal traditions of india: Classical hindu law in practice in late medieval kerala. [REVIEW]Donald R. Davis - 1999 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 27 (3):159-213.
    The collection of Malayalam records entitled Vanjeri Grandhavari, taken from the archives of an important Namputiri Brahmin family and the temple under its leadership, provides some long-awaited information regarding a wide range of legal activities in late medieval Kerala. The organization of law and the jurisprudence represented by these records bear an unmistakable similarity to legal ideas found in dharmastra texts. A thorough comparison of the records and relevant dharma texts shows that landholding Namputiri Brahmins, who possessed enormous political and (...)
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  • On Dharmakīrti’s Notion of Contingency/Dependence, with a Special Focus on vināśa.Masamichi Sakai - 2018 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 46 (3):419-436.
    The concept of contingency is very much debated. In this paper, I’ll offer a novel interpretation of it in Dharmakīrti’s ontology, focusing on his treatment and understanding of vināśa which is, according to Dharmakīrti, not contingent and thus occurs necessarily to everything. I will do so by clarifying some important terms, motivating and explaining Dharmakīrti’s position, and analyzing firsthand some Dharmakīrtian debate excerpts with Nyāya and/or Vaiśeṣika philosophers as the main opponents. In the course of this, I will show that (...)
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  • Images of śaṃkara: Understanding the other. [REVIEW]Jacqueline Suthren Hirst - 2004 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 8 (1-3):157-181.
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  • The 'Scotch Metaphysics' in 19th Century Benares.Richard Fox Young - 2006 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 4 (2):139-157.
    That India once had a sustained ‘dialogue’ with Scottish Philosophy is not gener- ally known, or that the exchange occurred in the medium of Sanskrit, not English. The essay explores an important cross-cultural encounter in the colonial context of mid 19th-century Benares where two Scots, John Muir and James Ballantyne, served as principals of a Sanskrit college established by the East India Company. Educated toward the end of the Scottish Enlightenment, they endeavoured to translate such distinctive concepts of ‘Scotch Metaphysics’ (...)
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  • Vedic Language and Vaiṣṇava Theology:Madhva’s Use of Nirukta in his Ṛgbhāṣya. [REVIEW]Valerie Stoker - 2007 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 35 (2):169-199.
    This article explores the way in which Madhva (1238–1317), the founder of the Dvaita Vedānta system of Hindu thought, reformulates the traditional exegetic practice of nirukta or “word derivation” to validate his pluralistic, hierarchical, and Vaiṣṇava reading of the Ṛgvedic hymns. Madhva’s Ṛgbhāṣya (RB) is conspicuous for its heavy reliance on and unique deployment of this exegetical tactic to validate several key features of his distinctive theology. These features include his belief in Viṣṇu’s unique possession of all perfect attributes (guṇaparipūrṇatva) (...)
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  • Nāsti daive prabhutvam - traces of demythologisation in indian epic thought.Walter Slaje - 1998 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 26 (1):27-50.
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  • Bhartṛhari’s Linguistic Ontology and the Semantics of Ātmanepada.Dilip Loundo - 2015 - Sophia 54 (2):165-180.
    The distinct function of ātmanepada in Sanskrit language remains a sort of linguist mystery in Sanskrit studies. In this article, I analyze the larger implications and subliminal meaning of ātmanepada by moving beyond the realm of linguistics, which has been the dominant approach, and entering the territory of philosophy and, more specifically, the purportful approach of traditional Indian philosophy of language represented by Bhartṛhari’s Vākyapadīya. Bhartṛhari’s analytical procedure seeks to unveil the ontological interdependence that binds together the constituent elements of (...)
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  • (2 other versions)?a $$\underset{\raise0.3em\hbox{$\smash{\scriptscriptstyle\cdot}$}}{n}$$ kara and the Prasa $$\underset{\raise0.3em\hbox{$\smash{\scriptscriptstyle\cdot}$}}{n}$$ khy?nav?da. [REVIEW]Michael Comans - 1996 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 24 (1):49-71.
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  • Rules of untouchability in ancient and medieval law books: Householders, competence, and inauspiciousness. [REVIEW]Mikael Aktor - 2002 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 6 (3):243-274.
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