Can you kindly point out this to me? Where Nyaya teaches that empirical enquiry can impart moksha?
Nyaya sutra 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3. I have difficulty copy pasting.
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Can you kindly point out this to me? Where Nyaya teaches that empirical enquiry can impart moksha?
IMHO, it is relevant. Jews came to India in BC, Christians and Muslims soon after their religions took birth; and the Zoroastrians later. None faced any discrimination. Nor any of the dharmic religions. How do you justify your following statement?
My understanding is that the Hindus gave as good as they got."Jinnah proclaimed 16 August 1946, Direct Action Day, with the stated goal of highlighting, peacefully, the demand for a Muslim homeland in British India. However, on the morning of the 16th armed Muslim gangs gathered at the Ochterlony Monument in Calcutta to hear Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, the League's Chief Minister of Bengal, who, in the words of historian Yasmin Khan, "if he did not explicitly incite violence certainly gave the crowd the impression that they could act with impunity, that neither the police nor the military would be called out and that the ministry would turn a blind eye to any action they unleashed in the city." That very evening, in Calcutta, Hindus were attacked by returning Muslim celebrants, who carried pamphlets distributed earlier showing a clear connection between violence and the demand for Pakistan, and implicating the celebration of Direct Action day directly with the outbreak of the cycle of violence that would be later called the "Great Calcutta Killing of August 1946".
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Vallabhbhai Patel was one of the first Congress leaders to accept the partition of India as a solution to the rising Muslim separatist movement led by Muhammad Ali Jinnah. He had been outraged by Jinnah's Direct Action campaign, which had provoked communal violence across India and by the viceroy's vetoes of his home department's plans to stop the violence on the grounds of constitutionality."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parti...ar_II.2C_Lahore_Resolution:_1930.E2.80.931945
I would greatly appreciate it if this thread on the philosophy of Nyaya does not get derailed by a 1947 partition debate. I am writing posts slowly here as I want them to be of good quality and that takes time. Thank you1947 comes immediately to mind
Can you kindly show that Gautama rejected the idea of Ishwara?
"......for Gautama did not accept Ishwara.
IMHO, that is not 'nyaya'. That is application of 'nyaya', one way or the other.I am asking you to kindly show us a statement of Gotama that indicates that Gotama did not accept Ishwara.
"God realization" does not apply to Nyaya's definition of Moksha, for Gautama did not accept Ishwara.
Like all other other early darshanas (Mimamsa, Baudha, Sankhya, Vaisesika), Nyaya too was atheistic in nature. Much later, some Nyaya scholars attempted to introduce Ishwara into the doctrine.
I do not see any reason why they should not.My understanding is that the Hindus gave as good as they got.
Thank you for your very detailed post. I do not need details of categories etc.
I am asking you to kindly show us a statement of Gotama that indicates that Gotama did not accept Ishwara.
Nyaya is quite famous, in the Indian context, of having their own version of the cosmological argument to prove the existence of God.
Nyaya sutra 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3. I have difficulty copy pasting.
How do you prove a negative?
But I see now why my statement can lead to this question. Let me rephrase - Gautama's doctrine does not include Ishwara. That is, Ishwara has no role to play in the Nyaya-Sutras and in Vatsyayana's commentary - which is the earliest available commentary on the Sutras. I have explained how and why in my earlier post.
If it is acceptance of an axiom, then it is not 'nyaya'. Buddha said ".. nor upon an axiom (naya-hetu), ..".Further, the following indicates that the Iswara of Veda is also an axiom for the Nyaya.
shivsomashekhar said:This has been covered already in my earlier post. These arguments came much later, starting with Udyotakara. The subject is completely absent in the earlier Nyaya texts - including the sutras. As @Aupmanyav said, the arguments in favor of God are based on the Nyaya dialectic method and not on the sutras themselves.
Unseen things can be part of empirical inquiry as well. Indeed they regularly are, and can be inferred from what is observable. Nyaya believed that the soul/self can be inferred from the observable properties of consciousness. That is where their disputation with Buddhists were.Thanks.
I am pasting 1,2, and 3 below. I earlier indicated that 'Nyaya Sutra' takes repeated birth as 'Given', as an axiom.
"1. Supreme felicity is attained by the knowledge about the true nature of sixteen categories, viz., means of right knowledge (prarnana), object of right knowledge (pra-meya), doubt (samsaya), purpose (prayojana), familiar instance (drstanta), established tenet (siddhanta), members (avayava), confutation (tarka*), ascertainment (nirnaya), discussion (vada), wrangling (jalpa), cavil (vitanda), fallacy ”
“2. Pain, birth, activity, faults and “misapprehension— on the successive annihilation of these in the reverse order, there follows release.”
“3. Perception, inference, comparison and word (verbal testimony)—these are the means of right knowledge.”
Additionally, the following three verses, in my opinion, indicate that Rishi Gautama Aksapada is not merely talking about the 'Tangible'/'Measurable'.
“7. Word (verbal testimony) is the instructive assertion of a reliable person.”
“8. It is of two kinds, viz., that which refers to matter which is seen and that which refers to matter which is not seen.”
“9. Soul, body, senses, objects of sense, intellect, mind, activity, fault, transmigration, fruit, pain and release-— are the objects of right knowledge.”
Further, the following indicates that the Iswara of Veda is also an axiom for the Nyaya.
BOOK IV, CHAPTER 1”
“21. Since fruits are awarded by God, man's acts, we conclude, are not the sole cause thereof.
That is a better statement yet wrong. Please see above post. God and Soul are axiomatic for Nyaya .. God by the Word of Veda and Soul as self evident seat of consciousness.
BOOK IV, CHAPTER 1”
“21. Since fruits are awarded by God, man's acts, we conclude, are not the sole cause thereof.
I mentioned in one of my earlier posts to you that the Nyayasutras are not a theological treatise. They seek to establish rules of argumentation and technical terminology that was indeed adopted by many of their opponents themselves. Proving the existence of God is not the Nyayasutras' concern.