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  1. The Ocean of Yoga: An Unpublished Compendium Called the Yogārṇava.S. V. B. K. V. Gupta & Jason Birch - 2022 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 50 (3):345-385.
    The Yogārṇava is a Sanskrit compendium on yoga that has not been published, translated or even mentioned in secondary literature on yoga. Citations attributed to it occur in several premodern commentaries and compendiums on yoga, and a few published library catalogues report manuscripts of a work on yoga called the Yogārṇava. This article presents the results of the first academic study of the text. It has attempted to answer basic questions, such as the work’s provenance and textual sources. The authors (...)
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  • Haṃsamiṭṭhu: “Pātañjalayoga is Nonsense”. [REVIEW]Som Dev Vasudeva - 2011 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 39 (2):123-145.
    The ninth chapter of the Haṃsavilāsa of the Gujarati Śaiva author Haṃsamiṭṭhu (born 1738 ad) argues that Pātañjalayoga, conceived of as a conflation of Aṣṭāṅgayoga and Haṭhayoga, cannot be valid soteriology. Pātañjalayoga is presented as a paradoxical and painful attempt to achieve quiescence by forcibly eliminating karma. Haṃsamiṭṭhu, conversely, views ‘euphoria’ (ullāsa) as a prerequisite for liberation, and therefore advocates a painless method of Rājayoga. This is taught as a Śaiva form of the Rāsalīlā involving transgressive substances and behaviour. A (...)
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  • Science and vedic studies.D. Wujastyk - 1998 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 26 (4):335-345.
    This paper addresses the issue of how science and history of science may help or be helped by Vedic studies. The conclusions drawn are that: 1. Vedic studies are important for the history of Indian science; 2. Modern science, in particular physics, is not a useful source of philosophical ideas that confirm aspects of Vedic studies; 3. Vedic studies will not contribute to modern scientific research; and 4. Vedic studies are nevertheless centrally important for an understanding of Indian history and (...)
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  • Change and creativity in early modern indian medical thought.Dominik Wujastyk - 2005 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 33 (1):95-118.
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  • Scholar Networks and the Manuscript Economy in Nyāya-śāstra in Early Colonial Bengal.Samuel Wright - 2020 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 49 (2):323-359.
    This essay engages with two large themes in order to address the social and intellectual practices of nyāya scholars in early colonial Bengal. First, I examine networks that connected scholars with each other and, to a lesser extent, students and households. Exemplified in historical documents of the period, these networks demonstrate that nyāya scholars were part of larger scholar communities in Bengal and across India during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. I map these networks and examine their relevance for how (...)
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  • Haṃsamiṭṭhu: “Pātañjalayoga is Nonsense”. [REVIEW]Som Dev Vasudeva - 2011 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 39 (2):123-145.
    The ninth chapter of the Haṃsavilāsa of the Gujarati Śaiva author Haṃsamiṭṭhu (born 1738 ad) argues that Pātañjalayoga, conceived of as a conflation of Aṣṭāṅgayoga and Haṭhayoga, cannot be valid soteriology. Pātañjalayoga is presented as a paradoxical and painful attempt to achieve quiescence by forcibly eliminating karma. Haṃsamiṭṭhu, conversely, views ‘euphoria’ (ullāsa) as a prerequisite for liberation, and therefore advocates a painless method of Rājayoga. This is taught as a Śaiva form of the Rāsalīlā involving transgressive substances and behaviour. A (...)
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  • Defining the Other: An Intellectual History of Sanskrit Lexicons and Grammars of Persian. [REVIEW]Audrey Truschke - 2012 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 40 (6):635-668.
    From the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries, Indian intellectuals produced numerous Sanskrit–Persian bilingual lexicons and Sanskrit grammatical accounts of Persian. However, these language analyses have been largely unexplored in modern scholarship. Select works have occasionally been noticed, but the majority of such texts languish unpublished. Furthermore, these works remain untheorized as a sustained, in-depth response on the part of India’s traditional elite to tremendous political and cultural changes. These bilingual grammars and lexicons are one of the few direct, written ways (...)
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  • An Early Modern Account of the Views of the Miśras.Christopher Minkowski - 2018 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 46 (5):889-933.
    In a doxography of views called the Ṣaṭtantrīsāra, a seventeenth century commentator and Advaitin, Nīlakaṇṭha Caturdhara, describes the doctrines of a group he calls the Miśras. Nīlakaṇṭha represents the doctrines of the Miśras as in most ways distinct from those of the canonical positions that usually appear in such doxographies, both āstika and nāstika. And indeed, some of the doctrines he describes resemble those of the Abrahamic faiths, concerning the creator, a permanent afterlife in heaven or hell, and the unique (...)
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