Vachaspati Misra
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contribution to Indian philosophy
- In Indian philosophy: The linguistic philosophies: Bhartrihari and Mandana-Mishra
Even Vachaspati, who accepted many of Mandana’s theories, rejected the theory of sphota and in general conformed to the Shankarite’s acceptance of the Bhatta epistemology.
Read More - In Indian philosophy: The old school
Vachaspati Mishra in the 9th century wrote his Tatparyatika (c. 840) on Uddyotakara’s Varttika and further strengthened the Nyaya viewpoint against the Buddhists. He divided perception into two kinds: the indeterminate, nonlinguistic, and nonjudgmental and the determinate and judgmental. In defining the invariable connection (vyapti)…
Read More - In Indian philosophy: Texts and commentaries until Vachaspati and the Samkhya-sutras
There are three commentaries on the Samkhya-karika: that by Raja, much referred to but not extant; that by Gaudapada (7th century), on which there is a subcommentary Chandrika by Narayanatirtha; and the Tattva-kaumudi by Vachaspati (9th century). The Samkhya-sutras are a…
Read More - In Indian philosophy: Metaphysics and epistemology
…the earlier Samkhya authors, including Vachaspati, did not consider the question about the ontological status of the gunas, Bhikshu regards them as real, as extremely subtle substances—so that each guna is held to be infinite in number. In general, the Samkhya-sutras show a greater Brahmanical influence, and there is a…
Read More - In Indian philosophy: Metaphysics and epistemology
Vachaspati, taking over a notion emphasized in Indian epistemology for the first time by Kumarila, introduced into the Samkhya theory of knowledge a distinction between two stages of perceptual knowledge. In the first, a stage of nonconceptualized (nirvikalpaka) perception, the object of perception is apprehended…
Read More - In Indian philosophy: Shankara’s theory of error and religious and ethical concerns
…century) and those who followed Vachaspati’s commentary (known as Bhamati) on Shankara’s bhashya. Among the chief issues that divided Shankara’s followers was the question about the locus and object of ignorance. The Bhamati school regarded the individual self as the locus of ignorance and sought to avoid the consequent circularity…
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