Tarka Bhasa
Tarka Bhasa
Tarka Bhasa
WILLIAM
H.
D0.\\l R
COLLECTION
purchased from
a gift by
HH DONNEK CANADIAN
FOUNDATION
Me moires
t. II,
3.
POUL TUXEN,
PH.
i).
D. KGL.
7.
R. EKKE, HISTORISK
OG FILOSOFISK AFD.
II.
3.
K0BENHAVN
HOVEDKOMMISSION^R: ANDR, FRED. H0ST &
S0N, KGL.
HOF-BOGHANDEL
Det
Kg
l,
Skrifter,
Kr.
Ore
"
I,
1.
1852
Peteraen, F. C.
Om
Athen.
1847
2.
1.
2.
3.
Rosenvlnge, J. L. A. Kolderup-.
Scharling, C. E.
Om
1847
35.
Laere og Skjaebne.
i
1852
4.
4.
Usslng, J. L.
Om
Italienernes Deelagtiggjerelse
1852
...
1.
65.
8.
i
50.
"
Ussing, J. L.
Kj0benhavn.
1854
Kileskrift.
2.
I.
2. 3.
Westergaard, N. L.
Usslng, J.L.
Om
den anden
1.
eller
1854
3.
35.
Attiske Studier.
Om
Sokrates
3 Tavler.
Om
Planen og Ind~"
retningen af Parthenon.
4.
Med
Paludan-Muller, C.
Reformationshistorie.
5.
en kritisk
Muller, L.
Mynter.
Med
9 Tavler
1857
4.
>
III, med
1.
1869
tillagte
8-
Usslng, J.L.
Muller, L.
-
Om
de Kejscr Trajan
Breve
til
Plinius.
I860
1861
75.
2.
Med
Traesnit.
65.
3.
Religiose
Traesnit.
Med
Tavlc og
75.
4.
5.
- Undersegelse af et gammelt persisk Symbol, bcstaaende Med 1 Tavle. 1864 - Hermes-Stavens Med 1 Tavle. 1865 Oprindelse.
J.L.
en
Ring med
forskjellige Tilsaetninger.
i>0-
"
65.
75.
6.
llssing,
To
graeske Vaser
Antik-Kabinettet
Kjebenhavn.
geistlige
til
Med
eller
2 Tavler.
1866
1867
Allen, C. F.
8.
Om
L.
Christiern den
Andens saakaldte
fra del
Lov
Loven
for Landet.
50.
Westergaard, N.
De indiske Keiserhuse
4de
det lOde
Aarhundrede og nogle
aeldre Fyrsteslaegter
3.
Resume en
francais.
1867
69
S. 3.)
15.
(Fortsaettes
paa Omslagets
pori. TrxKX.
PH.D.
I).
Kc,i..
DAXSKK VIOF.NSK.
SKI.SK.
SKIMKTKH.
7.
H.I:KKI:.
HISTOIUSK
nc,
n.nsoriSK AKIX
II.
.\.
K0BENHAVX
HOVKDKOMMISSIONVKH: ANDR.
I
1914
"B
PREFACE
r
I his
interested
litlle
work has
Its
first
aim
is
to
furnish
readers
in
philosophical
logicians
which
the
of
the
Indian
some specimens of the problems with were occupied. Its second aim is to make easier to
with
student of Sanscrit philosophy Hie entering into that most interesting branch
Indian
philosophy,
the
to
Nyaya-darcana,
Kecava
compendium being
in
my
this
among
other
things
because
I
its
have endeavoured
make
though, as
is
but as
had
could
to
not
my
native,
to
not
lind
myself
make
the
some
technical
of course
siderably,
meaning of
I
the Sanscrit
differ
con
in
and therefore
My
and
lo
it
ANDKHSKN
for
valuable criticisms
-CAKLSBKHG
FOND"
for the
made
possible lo
me
lo
Regarding the
assistance of Miss
English
my
translation
A.
may acknowledge
the
useful
THOHA POULSKN, M.
POL L TUXEN.
21
Introduction.
Kecavani era
i
Ihe
ent
treatise
translation of
.
cxccl-
compendium
the
philosophy of Nyaya
Tarkabhasa
is
an elementary
exposition of all the mainpoinls of Nyaya (and Vaicesika) intended for young people who have studied the common disciplines, such as grammar, poetics etc., but
ventured to grapple with philosophy, the three disciplines: poetics and philosophy forming to this day the basis of the education of every Pandit. Setting apart the absolute value which might eventually be ascribed to the work of Keeava, it must be supposed to be of some interest
not
yet
who have
Sanscrit
grammar,
showing us what was required (and is required) in India of the young man who wants a general basis in the way of philosophical method and phraseology corresponding to Philosophicum with us (The B. A. degree of philosophy). Nyaya
in
general basis of philosophical education through the fact that system, as DVIVKDI says with great truth (Tarkakaumud! 1880, p. 7), is the grammar of Indian philosophy; its phraseology, method and style have exercised a
is
this
predominating influence on
interest,
in
all
Tarkabhasa has
for
everybody
interested
in
India
as mentioned, a general view of the systems of Nyaya and Vaicesika, which have not yet found any European exponent 1 two systems which form such
giving,
;
great part
in
modern India
that the
knowledge
of
them
is
absolutely necessary
everybody who
literature.
Of
"orthodox"
occupies himself with Sanscrit Indian systems. Nyaya and Vaicesika are
deals
most
scientific
and the
art of disputation,
treatment of the
phenomena
"
M Immediately before the printing of this treatise, which was delivered to the "Kgl. danske Videnskabernes Selskab April 1913, I have noticed a Tarkabhasa-translation made by Pandit Gangamitlui
.Ilia
j"Pandit"
19()1|)
and
published
in
the Quarterly
Indian
thought"
Allahabad 1911.
later
della
A very detailed and thorough-going survey of the two systems, as the} appear in the compendiums, Professor Suali has now given in his comprehensive work Introduzione allo studio
:
filosofia
1C)C)
main the grouping usually prevailing dealing with the two systems present in Hie The oldest source that \ve possess is the Uvo in a system of Indian philosophy. Sfilra works which, however, evidently does not form the beginning of a philo
sophical development but rather to a certain degree, up and fixing of the results gained in the schools;
S. XXXI, placed by .J.u.om (J.A.O. Buddhistic schools, between A. I).
1.
mark
in
their present
on the basis of their polemics against The standard-works of the two 201) and 450. vi/. as to Vaicesika the systematic systems belong to the end of the same period, which must be separated from 1895 d Benares a sla (ed. of Praca pa representation a considerable Kanada. of the author Sutra, space of time, and as to Nyaya by ted. Calcutta 1865). s Sutras Vatsyayana s Vatsyayana s commentary on (iotama to defend who wished CM was commented on by I ddyotakara
191()\
,
Bhasya
it
U>th
the
attacks
of
the
commented on by Ya ca spa
Over against this thousand years and is closely attached to (iotama s Sutras, stands another group based on Gangeca s more systematic exposition of Nyaya, Tatlva-einlamani (12th c.) and elaborated by the so-called XavadvJpa school (Xuddea in Bengal) during the
Udayana.
Uddyolakara s Nyayavartika and this again by extensive bulk of literature which stretches over a
.I)ignaga>:
I
i
Buddhists
era
.)th
or Kith CM
the acuteness following centuries in works that bear testimony to a brain-excercise, same the at but which, time, by or subtlety of which is said to be almost unique, its sterility had a fatal inlluence on the school of Nyaya.
Nearly
century,
a
coincident
of
with
the
beginning of
this
period,
itself
that
is
new form
literature begins to
assert
in
growing
natural desire namely that of the shorter compendium*; they are probably due to a of the ever in consideration of doctrine, the to find one s bearing in the chief points bulk of commentaries. To the last representatives of this direction belong the
Tarkasa ingraha
zu Gottingen.
the oldest are
with Dlpikfi. translated by HU.T/SUI (Abh. d. kgl. Ges. and Tarkakaumnd! (/. I). M. (i. 1907);
i
d.
Wiss.
among
We
tion
to
Civaditya s Saptapadarth! and K ec a va m c r a s Tarkabhasa. do not know anything about Kecavamiera Paranjape, in the introduc
;
his
edition
of
his
lifetime
between 1200
namely written in the 14lh hand Kecava other on the quotes Udayana whom Paranjape and century, whilst llth is not correct, Udayana lived in the 10 others place in the 12th cent.; the latter cent. (See Venis in Preface to Tarkikaraksfi, Pandit 1899): Kecava must, however, have lived in the interval between Udayana and Chinnabhatta. The contents of
and 1400; Chinnabhatta
commentary on Tarkabhasf,
is
Tarkabhasa point
the book was probably written before Gangeca s been influenced, as far as style or subject-matter Tattvaeintamani, as it has scarcely are concerned, by this work, which has exercised a predominating inlluence on 12th cent.), we dis aflerages; if we compare Tarkabhasa with SaptapadarthI (1Kb
to the
same period;
cover that while ibis work acknowledges abhava (non-existence) as seventh category in Vaicesika Tarkabhasa mentions only the first six at the place where these categories
f>8
in tliis translation)
but adds,
it
is
true,
the seventh as a
probable that Tarkabhasa belongs to one of the lirsl centuries of the second millennium, for from the lime of Saptapadarth! the seventh category is Cully acknowledged together with the others.
supplement;
this incertitude,
too,
makes
it
The
great
number
of
the
book
has occasioned bear witness to the popularity of Tarkabhasa. Auf rechl s Cat. catalogornm mentions 26 different commentaries. Of these the publication of Chinnabhatta s above-mentioned commentary has long been announced, but, unfortunately, has never appeared. On the other hand have been able to make use of Go vardh ana s commentary in Paranjape s edition (1894) and that of Vicvakarman in Surendralala Gosvamin s edition (Pandit XXII XXIII, Benares 1901), besides the fragments of Ga url k a n la s and Madha vade va s commentaries, which Paranjape has published in the notes of his edition of Tarkabhasa. Vicvakarman lived in the Kith c. thus also Govardhana as proved by Paranjape; consequently he cannot be a pupil of Keeavamiera as Surendralfda maintains on the basis of an
I
;
expression (vivicya gurunirmitim) in the introductory verses of his commentary; nor is he, as Colebrooke believed (Essays I, 263), the oldest commentator on Tar kabhasa; his father Balabhadra, as well, has written a commentary on Tarka
which Paranjape has published together with Govardhana s Tarkabhasaprakaca, but Vicvakarman s commentary, too, has been a good help to the understanding of the text, which is not quite easy as far
bhasa.
text
Tarkabhasa
yet
gives, as
without, like
later
mentioned, the doctrine of both Nyaya and Vaicesika, compendiums exhibiting any complete fusion of the two
systems; for the book professes to be pure Nyaya and on the points where the two systems diverge it follows the views of Nyaya and is founded on the first Nyayasutra;
but
in
it
of Vaicesika
of the
translation)
work.
work,
.
Comparatively by
is
dedicated
to
the
of the
This category is treated of in ledge the Method which will be applied. Knowledge gives rise to a short
inherent,
up a great part of the more than one half of the 16 categories of Nyaya, e. g. Means of Know the beginning, after some remarks concerning The characterisation of Means of right mentioning of the three sorts of Causes, Then the four means of knowledge follow:
(ills
which
of this,
Perception and
practically, with a
different
forms;
Inference,
treated
of
theoretically
and
supplement on Fallacy;
Then
the establishment of
Comparison and finally Testimony. Other Means of Knowledge is rejected and the first
work ends in a contemplation on Validity of Knowledge and its substantiation. The second half begins with the second category of Nyaya, Objects of Know* ledge, which are considered in accordance with Nyayasutra 1,9 in the
half of the
1
To
tliis
edition the
numerals
in
he margin refer.
1B8
succession:
of
c
Soul, Body. Souses. Objects (including, as mentioned, the categories Vnicesika at length: Substance, Quality. Action, Generality, Parti1
x s Ie n ce Notion, Organ of T h ought. and Final Liberation. With Fruit. Pain, Activity, Defects, Future Life. these subdivisions of the two lirsl categories we have arrived at page 92 of the 11H
a r
n h
e r e n c e
and N o
last
14 categories are
Doubt, Motive, Instance, Tenet. Members of Syllogism, Reduelio in absurdum. Ascertainment, Discussion, Wrangling, Cavilling; then the renewed, more detailed treatment of Fallacy, as mentioned above, with an
remark about
Criteria
additional
and their
faults;
finally
treating
of Faults during Discussion. As this argument has shown, these categories are set fortunately this special point of up from the point of view: Art of disputation of the subject which, through the view is of small consequence in the treatment matters which are treated of in this connection, is of far greater interest than
;
mere sophistry might reckon upon. Of the very few modern works concerning Xvfiya [here JS;}? which of COLMUHOOKK S short review in Misc. Kssays
1
is is
basis of Tarkabhfisfi
,
i.
Abt. (1908
s
!
Bd. exposition in Allg. Geschiehte der Philosophic, I. on the basis of the first book of the Nyayasulras besides, concerning
;
Di.i
SSIA
Die indische Logik a single phase of the system, an excellent exposition by J.u.om of the The Kl. in Gott. gel. An/. Nachrichten 1901, phil.-hisl. system has been history of BODAS in the introduction of Athalye s edition Tarkasamgraha (1897 delineated
:
by
To
lliis
of Indian
lotfie
above-mentioned
Introdti/ionc".
\vliieli
Tarkabhasa.
For him who wishes, though young to penetrate into the system of Nyiiya, but without great exertion and exlensive sludies, I elaborate the following Tarka
1
bhasa-,
concise, but
Method.
Xyayasiilra runs as follows: "Final beatitude is attained through of the essence of the following categories: means of acquaintance right know
first
The
(of syllogism),
ledge, object of knowledge, doubt, motive, instance, tenet, member reductio in absurdum, ascertainment, discussion, wrang1
(2)
ling, cavilling, fallacy, perversion, futility, and occasion for rebuke." The meaning hereof is that final liberation is attained by essential acquaintance
categories: means of right knowledge, etc. Essential knowledge, i. e. right knowledge, of the means of right knowledge etc., is, however, not possible, before these (categories) are made the object of statement, characterization, and 1 as the author of the Bhasya says: "The method of this doctrine investigation;
(3)
of the
1()
(6)
is
and
to
investigation."
Now stale me ui
that has been
1
(uddeca)
means
name, and
(7)
done
in Ihe
quoted Sutra.
"he
Hala means, properly, a hoy; Vicvakarman explains the word as who signifying does not know the l(i categories, means of knowledge, The word appears in the intro ductory verse, in order to indicate Ihe person for whom the work is composed; the fact is
etc."
that the introductory verse is to indicate the four factors (annbandha] necessary at the com position of such a hook: its subject matter (/>/,SY///\ its purpose (/>r(ii/ojcmci\ connexion (sanujati) and 111 reader (arf/ziVam /j); here respectively: the system of Nyaya with its categories; the easy acquirement and further the acknowledgment of truth as means of liberation; the rela tion between the text-book and its subject, that is what exhibits and what is exhibited; and,
finally, the
-
young seeker of
truth.
Tarkyante tarkasahakrtapramanajanyapramitivisayikriyanta iti larkiih padarthas te bhasyante uddecalaksanapariksadibhir nirupyanle nayeti tarkabhasa (iaurlkanta). It is strange that the Tarkabhasa is not introduced by a prayer as a good omen Yicvakarman takes comfort in the thought that Kecavaiuicra may have said the (mai/</(ila)prayer within himself, which we may infer from the fact that the work is finished (samaptya lingena tadanumanat). N. S. I, 1, 2; When of pain, birth, activity, faults, and false notions, by the disappearing of each ;member the preceding disappears, final liberation sets in.
v
;i
E.
I)
g.
Vatsyayana ad N.
7.
Ilii
S.
1,
1.
2.
(Calcutta
II
181)5,
p.
<).).
I).
K.
klu-,
hist, on lilos
AM.
3.
170
CJia ra cleri/a
the mailer in
<|iu
on
is
(lak.\an<i)
slion
means to indicate special attribute, as, oi the cow, dewlap, ele. possession
;>
when
>
When
means
or not.
(<S)
7/f.sv7i
(/>/
applied
hi
o!
These two things, therefore, eharaeteri/alion and investigation, must needs undertaken in order to arrive at an essential knowledge of (the categories) means
right
knowledge
etc.
II.
Means
of Right
l/Ki
Knowledge.
is the category first staled, it is also knowledge .prdiii lirsl characleri/ed here: -means of right knowledge" is instrument of right knowledge; here means of right knowledge is what must hi characleri/ed. and instrument of
As
means
of right
right
knosvledge
is
the characteristic.
Now,
if
means
of right
knowledge
is
knowledge,
its
accom effect (j)lidl(t> must be capable of being slated, as an instrument must needs be is is i.e. what just the produced, panied b\ an ctTect. This is also true: the efVecl, effect of an axe as instrument of cleaving. right knowledge: just as cleaving is the of which the means of knowledge is the what is this
Now,
right
(<))
10)
knowledge (tiinhlxiuit which is the a pprehcnsion knowledge its with term object processes of agrees By the agrees with its object yatli- rllta in a 1) surd urn knowledge as doubt :.sc//m;m/a), error />//;un/rn/rn and reductio apprehen15y the term (/(//AY/I which do not agree with their object, are excluded. is all excluded: is knowing jnnnu sion remembi-ance (smrli apprehension
instrument
.
Answer:
right
<
.>
,[>r(iiu<~:
>.
),
remembrance excepled.
111.
Causality.
Av/n/mnV
ell
It
Now, what
(l-nrc.nin;
is
inslrumenl
is
the
most
is
e e
v e c a u s e
most
elVeclive
eclive: that
to
cause
and cause are synonyms; therefore we do not yet know what cause means! That is now explained: the cause of a product
Well, but
the
words
LaksdiHi is most often translated by delinition. wh;il is wrong. II means Hie quality which separates Hie thing from what is nol the tiling utullvaviuwmrhcilakn dlidrnio htksitiuun. Kecava explains laksana as state Yatsyayana ad I. 1,2 thus chief characteristic, etc. When ment of a special quality asadliaraiiadliarmavaeanam il is nol. consequently, quite correct; Concerning have been obliged to follow the inaccuracy in my translation vliaractcri/ation wide, or the Ihree faults with which a characteristic may be beset, as being too narrow, loo
:
.
lOi.
-12.
Kununi
to
is
in
acting-
s]>ecial
cause;
acting
is
said
exclude inherent cause, special in order to exclude the common causes: these god: his knowledge, wisli and acts: former are. according to Vakyavrtli Nyavakoca p. 1)17
in
order
((idrsltt)-
11
"
Hie existence of which before the product (punmbhavu) is ;il)solnlely (Hi and not formerly explained otherwise (ananyathrisiddha)*, as, for instance, necessary, threads and loom as opposed to cloth. Kven if, when cloth is produced, a donkey brought on by chance, for instance,
is
the
tiling
must be said
cloth),
to exist
has already been explained in another way, as (the colour of the threads) exhausts its powers in producing the colour of the cloth, loo complicated supposition to regard it as the cause of the its being a and
this pnv-existenee
necessary. but
And
before (the cloth in question), this pra>exislence is not absolutely must needs, it is true, exist before (the
by
cloth, too.
To be
not
cause,
therefore,
means
to
be
in
is
(13i
absolutely necessary; already explained otherwise, an of to be in means necessary succession alter some absolutely possession product otherwise. thing which has not previously been explained that to be cause means to have maintained is it when it is Therefore wrong
l
and which
and
to
be
pr;rscnlia
and
lujdlirckituai:
as space, for
corresponding to that of the product (karyamikrtanvaijafor the result hereof would In- that eternal and infinite (substances; instance, could not be cause, as in their case absentia regarding lime
absentia
(IT)!
and place
is
out of question.
Now
Of
these
the
mentioned cause
is
threefold:
inherent,
is
non-inherent, and
in
ell eclive.
is
that
one
which
the
product
is inherent, when it comes there exists a connexion (16) as but into existence, not in the shuttle, etc. Well, just between the cloth :md the threads, thus it is also connected with the shuttle, etc.; is inherent why, then, is it only in the threads, not in the shuttle etc. that the cloth sorts of Iwo are there but so fan is V (This is true, it when objection
is
in the
produced is a con connexion: conjunction and inherence; of those inherence (s(tnuw nexion of two (things) which cannot be supposed to exist apart (ayutasiddha); between others only simple conjunction is found .s-a/m/or/ai. Now, what are two
ij<t)
<
of the
Because three forms of din/dlluisiddlii Hie following instances m;iy be iven. itself the colour of the thread is ainidtlidxiddlid as opposed to the cloth, even 2 Because of the notion to exist together witli the thread before the cloth is seen if it in his relation to the pot. even if is dtiudtluixiddhu father the the potters father, potters thus also before the pot. .\ A donkey brought it is evident thai lie exists before the potter, and
K
For
the-
thread
on by chance is (tniidthuxiddhd as opposed to the pot here, even if it appears together with stick and disc, which in other cases must be supposed necessarily to exist before the pot. Thus the cases look, summarily slated: both in the Tarkakaumud! and \vilh the commentators of the Tarkabhasa they give rise to elaborate researches, which, however, may be left out The meaning is that the here, as the phenomenon itself is only hinted at in Kecava s text. is factors of the as cause a already explained and thus concerning ling exhausted otherwise: if diii/dlluisiddhd is translated by unessential, etc., the meaning,
i-
in
be vague.
172
12
things
tilings
l<>
exist
apart
Not
existing
apart
arc
two
it
As
as
it
said
know that two things are not existing apart when Hie one, as long remains only reiving on the other. Instances are: parts and whole, qualities and their possessor, motion and its and individual, particularity (incesa) and eternal possessor, characteristic of genus
Yon
shall
it
subsists,
etc.,
1
"
(17)
In the stale in which they are destroyed they remain, on parts, etc. on nothing, as, for instance, the cloth, when the threads are deshowever, relying To be destroyed is equal is destroyed. troyed, or a quality, when its substratum
to the
apart.
as,
destruction. presence of the totality of the causes of Now threads and cloth stand in the relation of parts and whole; therefore the connexion between them is inherence, as they cannot be imagined to exist Between the shuttle and the cloth, on the other hand, there is no inherence,
to exist
apart
is
out of question.
For
on the shuttle; only remain relying on the cloth, and not the cloth, either, relying therefore the connexion between them is simple conjunction.
The cloth, then, is inherent in the threads; and the thing inheres, when it comes into existence, is the inherent cause of
fore only the threads and not The cloth is, further, the
in
which
product
the product; there cause of the cloth. inherent the are the shuttle, etc.,
clay
is
the
inherent cause as opposed to its own colour, etc., inherent cause of the jar, and the jar that of its
a
produced, its colour etc. is also between a produced; therefore, because of the contemporaneity (samnnakdlinatua} and cause is out of question, quality and its possessor, a relation as between product as well as between the right and left horn of a cow. succession being precluded, and therefore the jar, etc., cannot be the inherent cause of its own colour, etc., for
Well, but
now when,
for instance,
jar
is
inherent cause
is
only
lint-
special
kind of cause.
the following consideration
into existence
Against this
a quality
of
argument
must be maintained:
substance
(18)
contemporaneously, but lirsl the and then the inherent qualities qualities" was simultaneous if a assumed, there would be no dif are produced; origination as the totality of causes would be its ference between the quality and possessor, the same (for both of them): and it is an established rule that the difference of
and
its
possessor do not
come
without
comes
into existence
See page
10
(,<S7).
must, consequently, be understood relatively; the parts of a independent of the concerning; whole, but ceases at the same time to be parts of the same whole; the threads may be imagined separated from the cloth, but then they are not parts hereof and. accordingly, not the inherent cause of the cloth. 11 This seams not to a.qree quite \vitb the assertion formerly alleged that a quality and its possessor cannot exist apart; cf.. however, the preceding note.
The terms
purls,
etc..
exist
to
difference of cause.
Thus
il
is
moment
is
without
therefore,
In
the inherent cause of the qualities. difference of cause will also appear,
jar
is
not
its
own
it
cause,
as,
can can
the
exist
he
1
on the part of a single object, succession is out of question, hecause neither hel ore nor after itself. Hut as il can exist heibre its qualities,
if
il
Well, hut
lirsl
moment was
the fact, the consequence hereof would he that the jar at invisihle, as il, jusl like Ihe wind, would he a colourless
is
(19)
suhslance; for only the suhslance the same lime as il has a certain
Further,
slance, as
il
visihle
at
si/e.
consequence hereof would he that (the jar) would he no suh would not he substratum of qualities, for the chief characteristic of a
the
a
substance
is:
substance
be true,
(druinjcf) is
substratum of qualities
(yiiua).
This
subtile
may
but now,
when
jar at
the
first
adopted
came
might no
much is question. without existence therefore an established fact: first the jar comes into qualities, and in Ihe nexl and following moments il is apprehended by the eye. The con
more be apprehended when
(only) a
moment
was
in
So
sequence hereof
is
not that
it.
at the first
moment,
is
no substance,
for
we apply
Ihe following chief characteristic on a substance: substance is what is inherent cause, and it is substratum of qualities by ils being capable of (obtaining qualities); to be
to
(20)
Now
cause
is
the
non-inherent cause
t
Ihe (cause
((isamavdyikurand) is staled: non-inherent the power of closely connected with the inherent cause and
which
the
(to
be cause
of of Ihe
il
in Ihe case
under consideration)
is
is
established.
Thus,
Ihe
for instance,
conjunction
fact
the
threads
is
the
non-inherent
cause
of
cloth,
for
the
(21
conjunction
the
threads
quality
that
as
inheres
its
acts
are the possessors, Ihe threads, which as cause in ils relation to the cloth, its
same way
is
1
being absolutely necessary and not already otherwise the colour of Ihe threads is the non-inherent cause of
the
,
Well, but
is
the cloth
inherent
it
thus
when
is
is
being non-inherent cause of the colour of Ihe cloth, as il, loo. is nected with the inherent cause; on the other hand, not the colour of the threads,
-
Cf.
Vaicesikasutra IV,
|>.
1.
,"">.
1:1
See
I
13 b
v<>L>\ata
ca
gunalyantabhavabhavah.
kasi/acid
171
C22)
as
il
latter
lh;il
it
is
the inberen!
cause
Do
cause
i
for
cause) which
is
is
Hie inlu
reiit
cause of a
in
question
Kffeclive cause (iiimiUakilrana^ the cause is termed which is neither inherent nor noil-inherent, and which nevertheless is cause; thus the loom etc. is the effective cause of the cloth. These three kinds of causes are only relevant lo positive cate
gories;
as this
when non-existence
category
(blinini).
(ablinini]
is
in
is
relevant.
inheres
in
nothing:
that
for
inherence
is
things
Of
minent
one which
in
some way
most pro
is
what we
call
instrument.
alleged
right:
means
knowledge that it consequence wrong; acknowledges an object not formerly acknowledged, of knowledge (/O.-Tmn of the fol of this would be that a succession of processes same jar was concerned, lowing form, this is a jar; this is a jar when one and the would not be right knowledge, since Ibese (processes) would perceive something which
:
of right knowledge is instrument of right knowledge. On the olbcr hand, the characteristic 14 of means of right
is
lor the
it
knowledge
of an object not (formerly) perceived ilhe object) is made tbe object (of the knowledge), as
ised
lo
(
at
is
more
precisely particular
by ever
new fragments
finest
grasp the
[he four
,r
(processes):
a
through perception it is impossible difference in time: if i! was possible, an illusory understanding motion, (disjunction, abolition of the former conjunction,
of a
lor
moment:
and entering of
Well,
perceiving
new) conjunction
as coexisting,
would be precluded.
knowledge, as for instance the are they instruments (of right
1
many
causes of right
of
object
knowledge;
Answer: As right knowledge needs not come into existence even if a perceiving are at hand, while, inversely, right knowledge person and the object of knowledge sense land object) will immediately arise- when the connexion between organ of has taken place, then only this connexion between organ of sense (and object) for by this eminence it rises over the etc. is the instrument (of right knowledge);
etc."
perceiving person
11 This view Kumarilabhatta.
etc.,
even
if
in
being elTeclive
all
of
is
maintained, according
apprehend Paranjape uses as instance the falling lo Hie ground movement in the fruit arises, by that means process, while there are really four: lirst a is abolished, the fruit and Ihc tree are separated, thus the connexion between fruit and tree Yicvakarman Hie and fruit Hie ground. between filtered is connexion and finally a new
fruit:
we
its
lall
MS
one
leaves at once. illustrates by that process to pierce Kte. refers to inference, comparison and testimony.
!<>()
"
means more Ihan dice-live, and il was just thai which we Icnncd Therefore the perceiving person etc. is nol means of knowledge, bul only the connexion between organ of sense (and object) etc. because it is inslrumenl.
llu in;
most
clfeclive
inslrumenl.
IV.
Perception.
Now
the
17
means
are:
of
knowledge;
is
(I,
1,3) savs,
means
is
of
knowledge
.
perception,
is
inference,
comparison and
testimony".
What
perception
Perception
(pratyaksa)
produced
Its
instrument
two-fold: differentiated (sauikalpaka) and undifferentiated (nirvikalpukd). is three-fold sometimes an organ of sense, sometimes the con
:
between organ of sense and object, sometimes notion jntiua). When is an organ of sense the instrument V An organ of sense is the inslru menl when the effect (phalli) is the right knowledge which has the form of undilTerenlialed; for the soul comes in contact with the organ of thought (manas), the
tact (saiiinikarsa)
(
organ of though with the organ of sense, the organ of sense with the object, il being an established rule that Ihe organs of sense produce the notion after having reached the tiling; then arises through the organ of sense connected with the object
I
an undifferentiated notion without connexion with name, genus, characteristic, etc., lh which only refers to the thing itself and has the following form: this is something: the organ of sense is the instrument of this notion, as Ihe axe is (the inslrumenl)
of cleaving; Ihe contact between organ of sense and object is the intervening operalion as the connexion of the tree and the axe as the instrument (wy<l]):lra)
1:I
{ai><lnlai
is
an undifferenlialed notion,
is
(the effect)
When
after
is
contact between
the contact between organ of sense and object the instrument The of sense and is the instrument when organ object immediately
.
arises consisting
this
in
is
con
nexion
Ibis
is
7
with
a
name, genus-characteristic, etc., which has Brahman, this is black and which refers to
,
form:
this
Dittha,
(the relation
between) the
Tarkikarnksa three verses indicating the point means of knowledge: The materialists Buddhists perception and inference; Samkhya these two together with testimony; some philosophers of Ny ay a the same, while others acknowledge in addition comparison; Prabliakarn (MImamsfl) acknowledges these four and, besides, implication; Kumarilabhatta s school of the Mlmamsfi and the Yedanta moreover non-existence as the sixth; linally Paurnnikas these Mentioned and, besides, possibility and tradition Kle. signifies quality, motion (Yiev.i. The genus-characteristic is the general notion
s
of view of the diU erent schools as to the number of the ((tri ukd) acknowledge only perception: Vaicesika and
"
</luilati>(i.
a thing and which at the same time produces that which is produced by the same thing: for instance Ihe contact between axe and tree is produced by the axe and produces the cleaving produced by the axe (If. Vicv.
is
what
produced by
170
object
and
-"
its
qualification
(mces(inai>ici>xija\:
Ihe unditVerentialed
notion
is
the
8)
is
Hie
instrument when
notions \hmltlhi)
immediately
In
after the
mentioned
arise
is
connexion
is
organ of sense
the
(however) il is maintained by somebody thai only the instrument also of the differentiated (notion), etc.; all the
thai case) Hie intervening operation. inUM-vening contacts, etc., form (in of sense and object which is the cause of intuitive The contact between organ
right
knowledge
is
six-fold
connexion,
inherence inherence
inherence,
in
in
in
something connected,
inherence
something which inheres, and finally relation between the object and its qualilicalion.
in
of the eye, a notion with a jar for its object arises, the of sense and the jar is object and their contact is a simple eye is (the acting! organ connexion, as il is out of question thai these two might not be found apart. the inner organ of sense, Likewise-, when, by means of the organ of thought, the organ of thought is of self, notion the a notion arises with the soul as objecl. contact is also simple their and the (acting) organ of sense and the soul the object,
When
thus, by
means
connexion.
When
of the eye of these
the jar
is
apprehended by means
with this jar black colour is found, then the eye is the objecl; and the contact the (acting) organ of sense, and the colour of the jar inheres in two is inherence in something connected, as the colour
we
slate.)
which is connected with the eye; the same kind when, by means of the organ of thought, we apprehend
etc.
of contact
is
forthcoming
inherent
in
the soul.
etc.
When
the dimension
of a jar
is
(2U)
wanting, are incapable contact as further cause (of knowledge!, as we, when even if the mentioned of apprehending the dimension, etc., (of a thing) far away, is at hand; this four-fold contact looks thus:
is
inherence
something connected the parts of the object, connexion between Ihe parts of the organ of sense and a as the whole, between the parts object between the organ of sense as a whole and
in
or prakara the The object O/?.T.S-;/</) is lor instance a jar. the qualification (I iri snnd the relation between these two r. where of notion the jar >,hnlatva is. then, of a form thiim) we have the differentiated perception this is a jar. e. g. this thing is qualified is perceived undifferentiated Preceelin.u is always an indefinite, general, through the qualilication not is perceived. yet where the relation between object and qualification
"
<,lialuli>u.
perception
17
177
of the organ of SCMISC and the object as a whole, and (finally; between the ori an of sense as a whole and the parts of the object.
When
has,
then,
the
some
connected?
When
by means
of the eve
(the genus-characteristic) of colour (rilpatna), etc., the colour of the jar is produced, then the eye is (the acting) organ of the general notion of colour etc., the object, and the contact between
,
is
inherence
of
in
in
something connected,
inheres
in
for the
general
notion
colour
the
the
jar
When
prehended the sound
then, the mentioned contact inherence When the sound is ap by the organ of hearing, then this is the (acting) organ of sense and is the object; and the contact between these two is inherence; for the
is,
?
,
21 and the sound is a quality with the space, organ of hearing consists of the space relation and the between quality and the possessor of the quality is inherence. When is, then, the mentioned contact inherence in something which
by means of the organ of hearing the general notion (the genus-characteristic) of sound etc., inhering in the sound is apprehended, then the organ of hearing is the (acting) organ of sense and the general notion of sound etc., is the object; and the contact between these two is inherence in something
/
, ,
inheres
When
which inheres, the general notion of sound inhering in the sound which again inheres in the organ of hearing. When has, finally, the contact between organ of sense and object the form of
r e
1
on
ween
it
the object
is
and
its
qua
is
ca
on
vicesun twicesyabli
in
<~n>a
When
is the non*existence of the jar, place connected with the eye. And when in the soul connected with the organ of thought (nmnas) the non-exist ence of joy, etc., is apprehended (and it is stated): I am without joy, etc., then the
a place
connected
non-existence of joy, etc., is a qualification with the soul connected with the organ of thought. And when in the g-sound inhering in the organ of hearing the nonexistence of the general notion of the gh-sound is apprehended, (that is when it is then the nonstaled): the g-sound is without the general notion of the gh-sound
,
(30)
existence of the general notion of the gh-sound is a qualification with the g-sound inhering in the organ of hearing. Thus, in short, the non-existence (of a thing) is apprehended by means of an organ of sense, that is through a contact between
organ of sense and object, a contact which is characterized through the relation between object and qualification, connected with one of the live (mentioned) con-
See
p. (08).
but
is,
Here the text seems to he corrupted; Vievakarman s text inserts hhutalaiii viecsynni moreover, no more satisfactory as far as the symmetry is concerned. The sense, how
sufficiently clear.
Vidcnsk. Sclsk. Skr.
7.
I).
ever,
I).
is
K.
H;cKUc. hist.
0.4
iilus. Aftl.
II.
I!.
23
17S
nexions:
and
likewise
also
n h e
r e
n ce
is
apprehended
it
through the
ils
fact
thai
the threads)
is
apprehended by
is
being a qualifica
staled):
Ihe cloth
Thus
described
is
the
here recorded)
summed
The
iated
six
right
lakes place in six ways, and (what is up (in the following cloka): on an organ of sense is two-fold: different
contact which
is
three-fold,
and
is
its
contact
has
forms.
it
Well, be
has
a
nd
ITc
ren
ia
led (noiion)
different
(genns-characlerislici
real individual object (paramdrthasatsual(ikxan<tvisaya}\ noiion a led (notion) be perception, (Ihe notion! which has a general like testimony and inference on a for li it as
i
object,
depends
is
(objects), 2) and only be called perception, i) and tin- (notion) produced (immediately) by the objecl may individual Hut real is the thing, not only a real objecl is able to produce if. 3 for this one, the positive existence of which is refilled Ihe notion
form
(nknra)
vix.
general noiion
which
found
in
several
"
general
(lil)
in consisting only ol an through means of knowledge, is deprived of real existence is different which thai from (anyauynurtli). exclusion (of the objects concerned) does not hold true, as the Against Ibis we maintain that this argument)
(
of the things iixisluhhnta). general notion belongs to Ihe real essence have thus explained perception.
We
V.
Inference.
is
staled.
Inference
the
for
inference
signifies
;
(
m/a/u//v7/m//ra)
inference.
considera And
it
of Ihe Vaicesika denies, however, that inherence may be perceived p. :vi). by perception: it can only he perceived by inference (See Pracaslapadabhasya Vicvakarman s text contains one cloka more \\hich sums up what is perceived by of the colour, means of the six -contacts, vi/. f the jar. 2i its colour. :ij the general notion inherence. and non-existence and sound, of the notion the lithe sound. general the individual thing, hut not that of the
<)>
">.)
>f
and Vicv.
p. :?1.
who
found with individual things, makes the Buddhist ask if it is found with other individual things; there totally or partially: in the first case it cannot be found notion is namely eternal, the second possibility is incompatible with its unity. The general one. and is found with several things; see below p. Like the horns of a hare (Vicv.). Vidhihhiira Vicv. explains by aslilixt. On the other hand it cannot be said, according to Vicv. in Cf. Xyayavartika p. 17.
(8(>).
the
is made words of U day a na, that logical inference is the syllogistic characteristic which a logical inference in reference the object of consideration, for the consequence would be that the syll. characteristic in these eases to something passed or future would be impossible, as
lias
no existence.
H
consists in
17
.)
knowledge of smoke,
((iniiniUi).
etc., !his
knowledge
is
Logical knowledge
means knowledge
etc.,
etc.,
lion
Now, what
makes us apprehend
instance,
of the
for the
And wherein does the consideracharacteristic is that which concomitance. Thus smoke, for
(32)
concomitance
invariable companionship (of two things): where there is smoke, and only when (the concomitance) is perceived the smoke produces the knowledge
of lire;
therefore
the
smoke
is
the
syll.
characteristic of the
lire,
as
it
makes
us
by knowledge (of the smoke) is termed consideration of the svll. characteristic. At first smoke and (in the same lime) lire is seen again and
The
third
lire
is
stated:
Even
like
if
the repeated
sight
By this repeated sight an essential connexion b where there is smoke, there is (ire, too. takes place in the same way by an observation
-
(34)
this:
,
Maitri
son
we have
black
Maitri
there
however,
,
exist
any
essential
connexion
between
to
be
son
and
to
be black
because the
is required consisting, for instance, in the of For when to be black is in question, to be Maitri s son digestion vegetables. is not the effecting factor, but, for instance, a certain assimilation of vegetables, and the effecting factor is termed necessary condition.
fulfilment
of a
necessary
condition"
fire
is
there
is
there
any,
it
must
former case
it
is
(in
existence,
a necessary condition is required, it will be seen, too; as, for instance, the presence of wet fuel, when the connexion of the fire with smoke is in question; or like the fact that the action concerned is prohibited when the connexion between
:!
"
Where
to commit slaughter and to entail guilt is in question; or (finally) as a certain assimilation of vegetables, for instance, when the connexion between to be Maitri s son and to be black is in question. fact that the smoke is constantly accompanied by fire is concerned, the fulfilment of no condition is required; if such a one had existed it must have been seen; therefore it does not exist, as it is not seen; by means
it is possible to apprehend the concomitance, as we cannot come and smoke, the answer will be that knowledge of all lire and smoke is possible by virtue of a special knowledge depending on the acquaintance of the general notions lire and smoke See Siddhantamuktavall ad Karika 03, Turkadipikn p. 91.
!
II
in
contact with
lire
-"
See
p. (43).
if
"
presence of smoke
is
inferred from
lire.
180
of
tliis
reduclio in
of
nbsurdum
I
(tarku),
which supports
non-observation
question.
the condition),
we
record that
and (ire Now, when hat is the case, we record concomitance helween smoke is attended and their companionship by means of the perception which apprehends im sight, partly by an (sdnmknrd}
I
by repealed non-presence of this condition, apprehension pression suggested by no conTherefore between smoke and lire is found only an essential connexion, ditional one, and an essential connexion is termed concomitance. When by that way we get an understanding of the concomitance between smoke and (ire, the first knowledge of the smoke is that which lakes place The second knowledge of the smoke is that which lakes in the kitchen. Then the con of the syllogism (paksd). place on a mountain or another subject and the comitance formerly apprehended between smoke and lire is remembered on the here considered: is which is found there on the mountain again
suggested
of
the
partly by an impression
the
smoke
1
mountain smoke
e
is
lire.
This
is
the
third
know-
d ge o
mok
Thus
as follows:
(ire
the
mallei
it
where there
be
attained"
smoke
there
a
is
lire;
but
here
,
Therefore
smoke
here,
the must be required, and just this (knowledge) forms the consideration of the is Ibis consideration forms the inference, as it syllogistic characteristic; and instrument of logical knowledge; from this (third knowledge) the logical knowledge
loo
arises: lire
is
Well, but
in
why
is
it
not the
lirst
knowledge of smoke,
that
the kitchen,
which
is
makes
us
infer the
far be true,
but
that
we have
us,
only
is
when
Well, but
ascertained.
let
lire
knowledge may appear. in the kitchen as soon as the concomitance seen it, and beyond doubt, because we have
is
has said: Logical proof lakes place neither against an object which is not perceived, which is nor against a mailer which is settled, but only in reference lo a mailer doubted.
Well, but
\/
|
why
a
is
not, then,
an inference concerning
lire
of smoke which
man
is
has
in
the
doubt as
a basis of the logical argu question, as doubt becomes of means knowledge being at hand. mentation, neither a conclusive nor a refuting This is in so far true; but remembrance of the concomitance is also a (necessary) the for the man who has recorded but forgotten cause of the
to the
(ire
logical
knowledge,
concomitance
logical
who
has
Yatsyavana
21
181
not recorded
by Hie sight of the lire Hie latent impression (saiiiskdru) CM) has been aroused, then Hie concomitance is remembered What is in possession of
it.
:
When
smoke
of
also in possession of lire, as for instance the kitchen. Therefore the third knowledge of smoke is that \vhich arises
is
when
the sight
forthcoming and which has the following form: this (mountain) is in possession of smoke. Only this (knowledge) and no other makes us infer (the presence of) lire, and herein the
the
smoke and
recollection
of the
concomitance are
consideration of the syllogistic characteristic consists. Thus (the stated) characteri/alion is established: inference is the consideration of the syllogistic characteristic. Now inference is twofold: that which takes place for one s own sake, and
1
The lormer is thai that which takes place for the sake of another person. which is the cause of one s own understanding (pratipatti). The fact is that when
a
person
hended
has through a qualified the concomitance between smoke and lire, and then
in
:!
which
then,
mountain, and doubts the existence of fire thereon, and then sees a streak of smoke is on the mountain and unbroken ascends from this towards the clouds,
a
the concomitance:
is
where there
smoke
there
is
lire,
realizes
now
smoke, and attains to the comprehension: accordingly there is lire here on the mountain. This is an inference for one s own sake. The inference for the sake of another person arises, on the other hand, when, having himself inferred the lire from the smoke, a man applies the proposition with the live members (auayava) to make it obvious to another person. It has
the following form
:
lire.
Because
it
has smoke.
lire,
What
Thus
too, as
kitchen.
Therefore
is
so.
Starting from the syllogistic characteristic staled in this proposition, and furnished with the live qualities", another person, too, understands the (existence of) lire.
Therefore Ibis
is
Mere
fact
what
is to
called an inference for the sake of another person. be proved (stldhya) is that the mountain has
(38)
lire,
and the
mountain) has smoke is the reason (hetu). The latter is in posses sion of both positive and negative (concomitance), the concomitance taking place both positively and negatively. The positive concomitance (anvayavijapti) runs namely as follows: where
thai (the
possession of smoke there is also possession of kitchen; for in the kitchen we find stated the connexion
there
is
lire,
;;1
(anvaija) between
smoke
and
fire.
-
Qualified through
freedom
Yie;v.
of co n
<1
o n
;in<l
through
concomitance.
See
;u
i.
p. ill
NYilli
e.
simultaneous presence.
182
In
like
manner
lire
the
negative concomitance
not smoke, either, as is lire. By negative con exclusion imintireka) of both smoke and pond we lind the which of that the is the by positivenegation following comitance the regular order here accompanying (ini<lpaka), and concomitance was (mjnpijd) becomes
there
is
not
there
accompanying positive concomitance) Il is expressed (in the following clokas) accompanied. found between the negations of two things Ihe negative concomitance) is
the negation of that
1
"
was
becomes
between accompanied and accompanying admitted between Iwo things (by positive concomitance) and what is is accompanied, By positive concomitance the reason (sildhaim) the negation of what is to be proved isHdluja) is accompanying: in the other case, reason is accompanying. to be proved is accompanied, and the negation of the the accompanying; thus examined First the accompanied is staled, and then
inverse
relation of the relation
.
(By
becomes obvious. the concomitance lakes place both in Ihe propositions only the positive concomitance positively and negatively. When one alone, and is slated, this statement is done because Ihe result is attained by -- il being un two the of direct concomitance is the most because the
Thus with
reason like
to
have smoke
positive
a
reasonable,
il
when
result
may
be arrived but
il
by
roundabout way
is
found.
tive
Thus the reason lo have concomitance, and likewise other reasons, too. are found with both positive and negative concomitance, as for instance a reason like to be produced when is what is to be proved. to be transient has only negative concomitance, as lor (Another kind of) logical reason when Me) be animated is elc. instance the reason Mo be in possession of prfma
smoke"
1
by the straight way, to try to reach not because no negative concomitance is is in possession of both positive and nega
at
,
..
The
As
it
living
is
body
is
animated.
in
What
Thus
is
like
for instance
the
jar here.
this
living
il
body
so.
is
not.
Therefore
In this
is
not
instance
in
and
to
be
concomitance,
what is to be proved, has is the reason: exclusively negative possession of prfiua, etc. concomitance may be imagined: lor no instance (<//-.s//7/i/) as no
Ihe
is
il
whal
is
in
possession of prfma,
f.
etc.,
is
ani-
The
"
iHenares 181)8- )!)). one is found in Rumania s <;iokavartika p. iiSl thetranslators see p. 8(5. (Copenhagen Yoga Breath, one of the live animal spirits;
lirsl
llu-
1!
etc.
si-Millies
in
Yaicesikasutra
III. 2.
I.
mated, as
for
instance
*.
All
what
is
living
body
is,
namely,
(in
this case)
the
Also the chief characteristic (of a tiling) is a reason which has only nega For instance the chief characteristic (laksana) of the substance (40) of earth is the possession of smell:
tive
concomitance.
The present
As
it
is
to
be termed
earth
is
is
in
What
Or (another
possession of smell. not called earth is not in possession of smell, as for instance \valer.
means
of knowledge
to
be
Accordingly:
.
must be termed means of knowledge Perception, As it is instrument of right knowledge. What is not termed means of knowledge is not instrument of
right
know
ledge, as for instance fallacious perception. Here no positive concomitance is forthcoming, for no instance of the following form is found: what is the instrument of right knowledge must be called means of
knowledge, as
for
instance such
or such,
all
that
is
means
of
knowledge being
the subject of the syllogism. In these instances the designation (i)yavahara) itself is what must be proved, and not the notion of means of knowledge ( pramanalmi); for as just this consists
made
being the instrument of right knowledge and, accordingly, is not different from the fault would occur which consists in (reason) being identic with what is to be proved (sudhydbhedadosa}. Thus the reasons are stated which have only concomitance. negative
in
reason,
Another kind of
instance:
logical reason
concomitance,
as for
As
may be named. may be made the object What may be made the object
117
Sound
it
may
be named, as for
Thus
this
is,
it
too.
is
instance a jar.
Therefore
so.
This (reason) has exclusively may as no instance of positive concomitance, negative concomitance of the following form may be imagined what is not able of being named cannot be made the object of The fact is that an instance right knowledge, either, as for instance this or that. must always be slated which is aulhori/ed by a means of knowledge, and it must of course be capable of being perceived and named.
:
be
made
must be proved
the reason
is
Of
these
three
kinds of)
inferences,
comitancc, only with positive, or only with negative concomitance, the reason which
117 I
text:
calxlo bhidhevali.
184
has
both
concomitance is capable to prove \vbal positive and negative with live qualities (nlpa), but not if only as far as it is furnished
live qualities are:
it
it
must wants
The
to
concomitance, Hie subject of the syllogism, as it is namely, an attribute of the mountain, be found with analogous found with the mountain. Likewise (is here staled): to instances like the kitchen. instances, i.e. it (Ihe reason) is found with analogous the pond, to be excluded from contrary instances like (In like manner we have): an object has either, not, smoke have to (A reason like) is not found there.
i.
be an attribute with the subject of the syllogism (paksadharnmtva), to be found with analogous instances (sa/wiA .se saliva), to be excluded from contrary instances (vipakxtid vyavrtti), and not to have an object which is contradicted (abddhitavisayatud), not to be counterbalanced (by another reason, asatpralipaksatva). and negative Tliese (pialities are found with a reason which has both positive smoke is, have To smoke to have reason) the for instance (with
.
e.
il
smoke is Inequality which is contradicted; for the object of a reason like to have not contradicted, i. e. not which must be proved, namely to have lire and it is reason) to have overthrown by any means of knowledge whatever. Likewise (the reason; the e. il is not hit by any contradictory smoke is not counterbalanced, the which contrary ot proves fact is that another reason is called contradictory,
,
i.
what has
like
a
to
to
is
have smoke as we cannot see it. smoke reason like to have smoke therefore this 4o have
,
not to be found as opposed to a reason 3 are found with Thus all live qualities
"
is
logically conclusive
with reference
have lire. an attribute with the subject of the syllogism is proved by The logical inference has, namely, the reason s being an attribute with the same. an attribute two constituents: the concomitance and the (reason s) being what with the subject of the syllogism; of these the concomitance proves connexion the while special must be proved, in its general form (sddluiasdmdmja), of what is to be proved with the subject of Ihe syllogism (paksasambandhitvamresa) an attribute with the latter. is proved by the fact that the reason is attribute with the mountain, we infer By the tact that to have smoke is an Otherwise we might quite do Ihe connexion of the tire with just this mountain. form Irom is proved in ils general without the inference, as what is to be proved the apprehending of Ihe concomitance alone. and negative concomitance loo, which have both positive All other
to
k
lo
Thai the
lire
is
reasons, with these five qualities, otherwise are only right reasons when they are furnished reasons. The reason which has no as as much i. e. they are fallacies (helvdbhdsa) on the contrary, what it must prove, when merely positive concomitance proves, as far as il is concerned, lo be excluded only fournished with four qualities, for,
"
live -qualities
see p. (110).
25
185
from contrary instances is out of question, as such are not found. Also the reason which has negative concomitance only, is merely furnished \vith four characteristics, tor, as far as it is concerned, to he found with analogous instances is out of question, as such are not found.
Now, what
instances
?
It
are
analogous instances
the
and contrary
(42)
is
explained:
(
[>aksa]
is
Analogous instance
session
(sapakxa)
a thing
is
called,
which
is
in
of the attribute
same
sion
logical
for instance
the
Contrary instance
of the negation logical inference.
of
thing
is
called,
which
is
in
decided posses
in
pond
the
same
Thus
three (kinds of) reasons are staled: with both positive and negative con
comitance, with only positive concomitance, and with only negative concomitance. (Reasons) different from these are called fallacies. Fallacies (hetuablulsa) are reasons which want the characteristics (laksana)
of a
reason,
many
forms.
but which, nevertheless, look like (real) reasons; they appear under They are live the irreal, the contrary, the non-cogent, the counter
Of them
itself,
is
concerned.
is
irreal
(ricraijusiddha)
is
The
sky-lotus
is
fragrant.
in
the pond.
Here the sky-lotus is the substratum (of the reason), but such a one does not exist. A reason, irreal as to the reason itself (svarupasiddha), (is found in the
following syllogism):
Sound
As
it
is
is
Like a
jar.
,
Here the reason is to be the object of the organ of sight but this (reason) is not found with sound, as sound is the object of the organ of hearing. The reason, irreal as to the concomitance (injapyatvusiddlia) is again divided into two subdivisions: on is due to want of a means of knowledge for
1)
(43)
K.
1)
VicliMisk.SrlsU. Ski-
186
the other to the existence of apprehending the concomitance, must he required fulfilled). The first (is found in the following syllogism):
a condition
(which
What
momentary
.
. .
existence
(ksanikd)*"
Now, sound
exists, etc.
us apprehend But there does not exist any means of knowledge which makes maintained it is If existence. the concomitance between existence and momentary because it is conditional, then that (the reason) here is irreal as to the concomitance, due to something else. is existence the momentary has to be admitted that it
produces
guilt.
is
killing.
sacrifices.
itself
Here
it
is
not
to
he killing
which occasions
is
the pro
ducing of
guilt,
hut
is
prohibited,
fulfilled).
which
a
is
the producing factor, i. e. the condition (that For the chief characteristic of a condition (upddhi)
tion
is
must be required
the following:
condi
proves.
but not what the thing which invariably accompanies what must be proved, for the notion is found with the notion prohibited
This (characteristic)
what must he proved, vi/. the production of guilt: where prohibited accompanies we have production of guilt, we have invariably also the notion prohibited On the other hand the notion prohibited does not accompany what proves,
.
(44)
vi/.
to
be killing
prohibited
notion
killing
animal
Ho
a
like to be prohibited is required, (a reason like) As, consequently, a condition is concerned, and dependent on be killing is irreal, as far as the concomitance
else."
Contrary
is
the
reason
accompanied
Sound
As
it
is is
eternal.
accompanied by the notion transient consequently which was what should be proved; what is pro of the opposite of to be eternal reason to be produced duced is namely transient and not eternal; therefore the
For the notion produced
,
is
contrary.
The no n -cogent
!W
(fallacy
anaikantika
is
the reason)
logical
states as an instance of a
the
Cf.
wrong momentary
Viz.
by the condition
in question.
27
187
inference
its
It
lias
to
Of
these
of the
with contrary
instances.
Sound
As
it
is
eternal.
is
Like space.
is
to
and
is
it
is
found with
excluded
Too particular
(asadharananaikantika}
which
is
from both analogous and contrary instances, and which For instance: subject of the syllogism.
is
The element
Because
it
of earth
is
eternal.
has smell.
excluded from analogous instances, eternal things, and from contrary instances, perishable things, and is only found with the element of earth. The counterbalanced 41 reason (prakaranasama) is the reason opposed to
is
To have smell
is
is
And:
qualities.
Refuted
the negation of
called the neutrali/ed (satpratipaksa). (kalatyayapadista)* the reason is called the object of
1
which
is
refuted,
cold.
As
(45)
11 have used in the translation the terms by which they As to the two hist fallacies, are later on designated (satpratipaksa and bitdhita) (and which are found, too. with Kecava), in order to avoid the obscure terms borrowed from the Nvayasutra I, 2, 48 and applied with him, with the more reason as Keeava s explanation of these two fallacies agrees with the later conception, and not with the explanation which the Sutra and the Bhasya give of them. The terms of the Sutras are respectively pvakaranasama which according to Vatsyayana seems to mean what does not gel further than to assertion and counter-assertion and kalaI
.">(),
tyayapadista which musl mean the one staled after the lapse of the favourable moment or the like. It is evident thai none of these designations applies to Kecava s explanation, as. upon the whole, the fallacies mentioned in the Nyayasutra t, 2, 1(5 and the Yaicesikasutra III, foil, might hardly be reconciled with the system given in the compendiums later on. 1, With the exposition of the fallacies finished here may be compared the more detailed treatment which follows p. (101) (110).
f>0
lf>
24*
188
Here the reason is to be produced and what it must prove is the notion But the negation of this we have stated through perception, perceiving (that cold
.
lire
is)
is
called touching.
Comparison.
knowledge of an object characleri/ed through (upamana) a knowledge accompanied by the remembrance likeness with (for instance) a cow, of a tending to the transfer (of qualities from one thing the
Comparison
object
is
of
proposition
to another, alidecavakya}.
some
when
forest
man who
has heard
does not
a
know
forest,
and remembering the object of this proposition, sees an object characterized is the knowledge which takes place through likeness with a cow, then comparison characterized through likeness with a cow and accom reference to an
with
object
object panied by the remembrance Knowledge through it is an instrument of knowledge through comparison (npamiti). characterized of an through object takes place immediately after the sight
of the
of the
for
comparison
and consists
between denomination and denominated: This is the result (phala, of the comparison). the word buffalo.
Thus comparison
is
finished.
VII.
(46)
Testimony.
man.
Trustworthy is collection of words
Testimony
the
(rabrfa]
is
(47)
is a thing as it is. A statement (sentence) which are in possession of (reciprocal) dependence (strictly speaking: claim),
man who
stales a
com
patibility,
are
no sentence,
as they
want reciprocal dependence (akdnksa). is not No more is you shall besprinkle with tire a sentence, as compatibility no is there compatibility reciprocal found here, for between tire and sprinkling the inslrumentalis agnina fire is namely construction a By (aiwaya). for forming the of the act of sprinkling, and tire is not compatible (with given as instrument and fire therefore there exists between idea of) being the instrument of sprinkling: as there is no compatibility, and instrument, action no relation as between
sprinkling and therefore
shall besprinkle with fire is no sentence. words: bring the cow hither form no sentence Similarly/ for instance, the at intervals of three when they are not pronounced coherently but one by one, even if it is true hours, for there is no reciprocal juxtaposition (samnidhija) for forming a construction that reciprocal dependence and reciprocal compatibility
you
are found.
29
189
Only the words which arc in possession of (reciprocal) dependence, compati he wo desires heaven must bility, and juxtaposition form a sentence, as for instance
l
perform the Jyotistoma-sacriflce or at the river-hank are five fruits or the ahove mentioned words bring the cow hither pronounced without delay. Well, but here is it not the words which possess dependence, but the things (r//ia), as for instance the fruits, as far as they must abide somewhere (adheya), require a place as for instance the bank on which to abide (adhura}\ on a closer examination it is not the things, either, which possess dependence, for as dependence (here) has the character of a desire, it must be the attribute of something
,
, ,
(48)
conscious.
true; but the things are said to have dependence as they suggest with the person who hears the words which signifies them, the desire (dkanksa) of other objects, and thus the words, loo, which express the things in a figurative
is
,
This
are
said
Or only the words, having espressed the dependence to have dependence in suggesting a desire the object figuratively
.
of
a
to
which is another thing. Thus the things, when they have dependence, become compatible for forming reciprocal construction, and thence the expression compatible is, loo, transferred
the words.
(49)
means the articulation of the words without delay by the same found immediately in the words, not (indirectly) through the things. By that we have arrived at the following definition: a sentence (vakijci) is a collection of words pronounced immediately one after the other, expressing things
Juxlaposition
il
man;
is
the
expressing
compatibility of which for reciprocal construction is obvious and which by the thing suggests with the listener the desire of another word or
another thing.
(pada) is a collection of sounds; collection (samilha) here means to of a be object single cognition. As we are incapable of apprehending several sounds simultaneously, the sounds in due succession being quickly destroyed, then, at the moment when we, after
A word
having apprehended the preceding sounds, hear the last sound, arises at once the comprehension of words depending on several existing or non-existing (no
longer existing) sounds, by
the
means
last
comprehension
is
of the conventional
of the organ of hearing, which is supported by meaning of the derivation of words, ami,
(finally) is
then,
accompanied by the
(this
(saniskdra] suggested by apprehension preceding sounds; comprehension of words is produced) by virtue of subsidiaries (sahakarin}> like recognition; for by the perception where a recognition takes place, a former stale, though passed, appears. Then appears the comprehension of sentences, depending on several words, by means of the organ of hearing, which is supported by the notion of the thing that is expressed by the word, and has as its object the last word, and
impressions
of
the
190
which
is,
(finally,)
man
is
is
the
knowledge which
is
called
right testimony;
its
result
the
means
means
of knowledge:
testimony,
is
is
common
to
ordinary and Vedic tradition; as far exists that many a one maybe trustworthy, but not every one; therefore only some
viz. such as originate from a ordinary statements are means of right knowledge, on the to As all. not Veda, contrary, any statement com (51) trustworthy person, but of right knowledge, as they means God is posed by the most trustworthy supreme are the statements of a trustworthy person, every one and all.
Thus
the four
means
of right
right
Knowledge.
means of right knowledge; does not eat during the Devadalta for when we him who does not eat for the eat must night; during day, we comprehend that he therefore implication by day it is impossible to be fat without eating by night; the arisen through the impossibility of explaining the fatness in another way is means of right knowledge (which makes us comprehend) that (Devadatta) eats in etc., for eating in the night cannot And it is different from the
Well, but
implication
(artlulpatti) is a particular
the fat
night.
perception
etc.
is
for to eat by night (Against this we answer) no, of the following form:
Devadatla eats by night. As he is fat without eating by day. He who does not eat by night is not
instance he
who
without
for
Thus
(52)
As we
this
way comprehend
by night by means of
implication
called
why
means
then regard
of
as a
is
another
particular
in
knowledge
non-
existence
(ablitiufi)
this
we must admit
for instance,
of by means of the non-apprehension (amipalabdhi) means the non-existence of apprehension, and through
Non-apprehension
this non-existence as
means
of right knowledge
we apprehend,
31
191
is
the use of a
means
when
\ve
perception, accompanied by non-apprehension and supported hy a reductio in ah surd u in of, for instance, the following form: if there had been a jar here, il would have been seen just as well as the place (whereon it is not
seen).
having (the thing), both parties agree. But now no connexion takes place between an organ of sense and non-existence; 41 for we have two kinds of connexion: and none of conjunction and inherence them is found wilh the two factors in question. It is an established rule
,
Well, but the organs of sense make us only perceive an object connected wilh them; for the organs of sense suggest a notion (prakara) when they have reached the thing, because Ihey are instruments of knowledge, like light, or eye and ear suggest a notion when they have reached the thing, because they are exterior organs of sense, like the of for touch, organ instance, and that the organ of touch produces (notion) after reached is a fact on which
namely
that
conjunction only
is
existence
factors)
no substance.
not
Neither
to
may inherence
are
known
not
be able to
two substances (drcwya), and nonbe in question as (the two exist apart. These (two connexions),
positive
(53)
things
(bhava).
Finally
relation between object and qualification (vicexanamcesyabhava} is no connexion as (this relation is not different (from the two factors), does not sub sist in both, and is nol one thing; for a connexion is different from the two connected (factors), subsists in them and is one, as for instance the conjunction between drum and stick; il is namely different from drum and stick, subsists in them, and is one. Such is not, however, the relation between object and qualification; for the relation between object and qualification, as it is found between a man and a stick,
,
the fact that the stick acts as qualification not being a different thing (added to it) but even its character. And non-existence, too, appears as qualification, and in non-existence no category (padartha), substance etc.,
is
these two,
be imagined subsisting. 44 When, therefore, the character of non-existence is to occasion a notion (buddhi) coloured by itself, it is just that which makes it a qualification; and it is no different thing. Likewise the relation between accompanied
may
42
4:5
See
p. (16).
idea was that a connexion between organ of sense and object must lie found in order that a perception might be affected. The Mimamsaka, which is here supposed to deny the possibility of apprehending the non-existence of a thing through perception, asserts that a connexion between organ of sense and object is impossible when the non-existence of a thing as an object is in question. So far everything is clear. Hut when he at the same time proceeds asserting that the relation between an object and its qualification is not a sambandhu, he may be right; but it does not seem to concern the matter here, as this connexion by no means may be parallelized wilh a connexion between an organ of sense and its object and it is not either applied Ihuswise in the Nyaya.
14
The
it
a different thing
192
"
32
and accompanier
(54)
and cause, and the like, must he accompany (the smoke) is just that character regarded; for with a notion depending on itself, and with the threads, (of the lire), which produces is in for instance, to he cause (of the cloth) is just that character of them which to that of the product, and no possession of pnesentia and absentia corresponding as And non-existence, too, appears accompanier and cause, and in different
(in
inference)
between
effect
thing.
he imagined. Thus the relation between object and (nullification is not different from the character of the two
16
.
etc.,
may
(This relation)
in
both
(factors), as
with the
found, and not to be object, and as with not to be qualification. and found
either;
for
word bhmm which appears after the copulative compound thus dissolved: qualification and object, the being quali fication and object resp., must be combined with each (of the preceding words), two things, so that we gel: to be qualification and to he object: and they are and between relation object qualification while a connexion is one; therefore the
(This
relation)
is
not one
the
is
no connexion.
Such
panier
etc.
is
also
the
case
between
on a figurative sense and is application of the word connexion depends real and connexion) are like one due to the fact that both relations (i.e. relation
The
another
in being produced through two factors. Therefore it is impossible to apprehend non-existence through with the latter. sense, as it is unable of being connected
an organ of
4
is This might so far seem correct; but (the above-mentioned) concomitance of a a notion which of sense gives only determined by positive things; an organ but it has reached, this notion only of a thing that positive thing gives, it is true, of sense this is not applicable when it gives a notion of non-existence; an organ of the means a so) non-existence (does by the of a notion (of thing) which
gives
(f>f>)
relation
school
that
1
"
thus
the
the
doctrine
fault
is
of
our
this
theory of
a too
qualification
avoided
l!
wide application (atiprasanga), because (our conception) might we might also apprehend a non-existence not connected (with the organ of sense). The same might, by the way, occur, loo, at the admission of the opinion of our of faulty is the same with both parties, opponent; and when faulty and refutation
involve
lire is accom relation of concomitance, lor instance, between lire and smoke; fire. See without smoke (38). no have p. we panier and smoke accompanied, as Or an other from non-existence different category. 17 and connexion between organ of sense and object". See p. (52). Between
45
The
"
perception"
4* 4
See
p. (29).
"
We
this
in
of
a thin?*
not
>()
to
at
the consideration of
such a matter.
IX.
On
Validity of
1
Knowledge.
.
is Here Hie following consideration put forward When a knowledge (//mm/) of water, for instance, has arisen, a man approaches the water after having ascer
tained the validity of the knowledge; another man goes doubt and establishes the validity after having moved,
to vi/.
the water; thus the matter may be regarded in two ways. Now here (a MImamsaka) says: the man moves after having ascertained the validity of the knowledge, this being ascertained from
he
know
ledge itself
(si>atas).
The idea is the following: the validity of a knowledge is apprehended through the same (process) by which the knowledge itself is gained, and Ihe (process) which makes us apprehend the validity of a knowledge, its attribute, is no other than that which makes us apprehend the knowledge itself; therefore the validity of a knowledge is apprehended from the knowledge itself, what means that il does not require any other (process) than that which makes us apprehend the knowledge. The knowledge itself is of course apprehended before the person moves. How
validity or non-validity be doubled, as no doubt may arise might has not been apprehended. which a thing concerning When therefore a person has apprehended Ihe knowledge before moving,
(57)
otherwise
its
by means of an
attribute)
to
impossible, Ihen the validity resting in and then the man moves. the knowledge is apprehended, too, through implication the is first so that But it is not knowledge apprehended alone, and that then
is
,
which
arises
through
the fact
that (the
is
ascertained
result,
after
Ihe
To
Ibis
we
say:
when
il
is
said that
knowledge
this,
an implication which
we cannot admit
apprehension of the validity of knowledge through implication. The following is, namely, the opinion of our opponent: when
has come
will be
knowledge
(58)
into existence, for instance with a jar as object, the result as to the jar to be apprehended expressed in Ihe following form: I apprehend this jar
infer that,
and hence we
r
>o
when
a
p.!)
knowledge has
II
arisen,
an attribute by
name
to
Kumarila, Clokavarlika
iv. 2.Y2,
cunyavada).
he easier understood il what the Mimamsa tenches is kept in mind, thai the validity of a knowledge is established through the apprehension of the knowledge itself, while Ihe Nyaya maintains that it is established independent of Ihe know
ri
will
Concerning
this
7.
means
of
C>K
in
the
Nyaya
see
-
p.
(.">!)
1).
Ua-kUe, hisl.
d.
II.
:;.
194
34
be apprehended
through positive and negative concomitance thai it arises through the knowledge, as it has not arisen before the has come knowledge, but (on the other hand) has arisen as soon as the knowledge to be name attribute this Likewise originated existence. apprehended, into by with the knowledge, cannot be possible without knowledge, as a product does nol
has arisen, too, and
we
establish
arise
when no cause
implication
is
is
present,
to
be apprehended proves
through
;V.))
own cause, the knowledge. however, correct, as no attribute to be apprehended is found of the knowledge. beyond the character of being object when for instance a jar is in question, to be but (The Mlmainsaka): Well, to be is the same as to be the substratum of (the attribute) object of knowledge the know the knowledge. For Ho be object (of apprehended which is produced by does nol arise through consubstanlialily (tadatinya), as we do nol admit
its
(All) this
not,
ledge)
If
we
further
would admit
knowledge) depends on
consequence would be that for instance the knowledge originates also from the organs of sense. object (of the knowledge), as the Therefore we draw the following inference: through knowledge something (vi/. and this means which the in nothing arises just attribute to be apprehended jar by to be appre else becomes the object of the particular knowledge; (the attribute) be possible cannot hended is thus proved by the fad, that the being an object a perception alone. (otherwise), but nol through is not relevant, however, because the being an object may This consideration character the (svabliava) (of the particular factor) alone. be possible starting from such a natural particularity (viresa) that the Object and knowledge have, namely, and the vehicle of the latter (visayauisayibluiva) thus becomes relation between
)
relation of origin (tadutpatti), the the organs of sense, loo, would become
a
object Otherwise past and future (things) could not be an object, possible between them. know be to as (the attribute) apprehended in such cases could nol arise through itself the when arise (ilharmin) cannot a thing) thing ledge; for the attributes (of does not exist. Furthermore a new attribute to be apprehended must be required, we are led to as this attribute itself may be the object of a knowledge, and by this to be If it is maintained that (the attribute) a regressus in inlinilum (aiuwnstlnl). of its character virtue (snabhdim) a of an knowledge by object apprehended may be what is then the use of this attribute new
being apprehended
question? admitted that (such an attribute) as to be apprehended exists, we that only the knowledge, [not its validity. If it be main (60) understand, after all, by tained that all knowledge is perceived through the attribute to be apprehended and its validity through a particular kind of being apprehended, then the know(the
when
knowledge
it
Or be
Tadnlnu/d
in
the
MTniamsa corresponds
to the relation of
inherence
in the Yaiccsika
.Yicvakarman
35
195
itself
is
consequently apprehended through Ho he apprehended 4 and its which is infallible in the know validity through a particular being apprehended ledge of a means of right knowledge, but how do we then get (the result) that (In
ledge
]"
by e. might be apprehended by other means, by other means than that which makes us apprehend knowledge itself. Knowledge itself is, namely, apprehended by a perception through the organ of thought (munasapralijakxa), but its validity by inference. After the know ledge of water the activity (pravrtli) with the person who wishes water may, namely, be of two kinds: successful or not successful. Of these the is successful
(fjaratas)
non-validity of the knowledge, so that a knowledge and its non-validity would be apprehended together by means of a special being apprehended which is infallible in the know ledge of what is not a means of right knowledge, and thus, too, the non-validity of a knowledge would be apprehended starting from the knowledge itself. If therefore the non-validity of a knowledge is apprehended other means
,
validity of Ihe knowledge is apprehended by the same factor which makes us apprehend the knowledge itself? If it is maintained that knowledge and its validity are apprehended together a by particular being apprehended which is infallible in the knowledge of a means of right knowledge, the same thing may be asserted over against the
,
then
its
validity,
too,
i.
activity
which
is
fit
(samartha), and
know
a
ledge (ydtharthya).
The knowledge
fit
produces
(61
activity.
is
What
Thus
Subject
not valid
knowledge produces no
right.
(it
activity,
like a
knowledge
only apparently
of the
;
which
is
is
negative only.
a
its
e.
syllogism
is
here (he
successful activity what is to be proved not its object, being the instrument of right
validity
"
i.
its
agreeing with
is
knowledge"
".
would be
a
fit
a fallacious
,
inference as
to
recollection"
Logical reason
produce
activity
i.
e.
a successful one.
When we
prehended the validity of a knowledge the first time it occurs (anabhyasada<jupanna), we infer, even before the production of activity, the validity of a later knowledge, a such (the like of which, accordingly,) has taken place formerly, by an inference
to
positive and negative concomitance, be of the same kind as the first one
knowledge) as an instance.
M The words
6
in
Yicvakarman
a successful
text.
Read pramakaranatvam.
The
fact
is
that
recollection
Yicv.j
may
occasion
activity,
hut
it
is
not an
25*
196
(62)
knowledge
The means
thus
stated
itself.
of right knowledge, which are only four in number, Kecava for the understanding of young people, according to the doctrine
little
argumentation/
the
With
this
(ends
the
exposition of)
category
called
means
of
right
knowledge.
X.
Objects of Knowledge.
organ
final
The (Nyaya)-sutra (1,9) the objects of knowledge (prameiia) are staled. of sense, objects, notion, runs, "Object of kowledge is soul, body, organs and of activity, defects, future life, fruit, pain,
Then
thought,
I
be ra
io
n."
1.
Soul.
>H)
(64)
is thai which is in possession of the germs-characteristic one to each body, from is distinct It soul body and senses, etc., is distributed, the direct of the is It perception through object omnipresent (mhhu), and eternal. are notion etc., the syll then qualities organ of thought; if this is not admitted, characteristics (which make us infer its existence). are For notion, etc., are qualities, as they, al the same lime as being transient, like colour; a quality must depend on a subapprehended by one organ of sense, the elements, as they stratum (gunin)\ now notion, etc., cannot be qualities with are found the qualities which are perceived by means of the organ of thought; for as example with the elements are not perceived through the organ of thought, time or organ of cardinal with (///r), be points qualities colour; neither they
Of
these
soul (atman)
7 the qualities in cardinal points, etc., as thought, as they are particular qualities common for instance number, are not peculiar qualities: they are, namely, qualities as they to all substances; notion, etc., on the contrary, are particular qualities,
;
may
one single organ of sense, like colour. together with being qualities are perceived by Therefore they are not qualities in cardinal points, etc. the eight must accordingly admit a substratum of notion, etc., distinct from runs: The syllogism (substances at hand), and that is even the soul.
We
,Kf>)
Notion,
etc.,
must
rest
with
earth, etc.
resting
substances:
desire, aversion, exertion, colour, particular qualities are: notion, pleasure, pain, and demerit, merit together with impression taste, smell, touch, viscidity, original fluidity, Karikavall 90 IT. Bomhay HMKV. and sound.
"
The
:M
197
rest
will)
not a quality without resting with the etc., like, for instance, colour.
only.
Notion,
etc.,
must
rest
earth, etc.
qualities
without
resting
with
the
eight
substances:
That which without resting with (a substance) is a quality, must rest with one distinct from this, as for instance sound, which does not rest with earth, etc., rests with the space (dktli-a) distinct from earth, etc.
a soul as a
s are found omnipresent, as its effects, the it is in of as it is omni i.e. dimension; very largest possession everywhere, of like Because the of it is eternal, pleasure, etc., (it space. present, multiplicity to each one must be) distributed body.
This (soul)
is
2.
Uody.
Body
(of the soul)
(t-anrd)
is
that
which
is
compound (antyavayauin) sensation of either pleasure or pain; basis of enjoying or suffering is that by which enjoying and suffering are determined, when they appear in the soul, and that is the body.
is
and
ultimate
(bhoga)
is
for
(
Or
the
body
is
substralion of motions;
(67)
spandanamatra).
3.
Organs of sense.
of sense (indriya) is that which is imperceptible, instrument of know and in ledge, conjunction with the body. If there was only said organ of sense the consequence would be that lime, etc., were an is that which is imperceptible This added, the organ of sense, too; therefore we said instrument of knowledge characterisation would, moreover, be loo wide, still, (being applicable also) on the
Organ
we had only
light
therefore we said in conjunction with instrument of knowledge and in conjunction with for instance might also be called an organ of sense; therefore we
said
imperceptible.
The organs
of sense
are
six
organs of smell,
taste,
sight,
With
this
is
"
What
is meant notion, pleasure, etc. (Vicv.i not itself a part of a further unity.
198
38
Of
it
these
organ of smell
it
(ghrana}
is
the organ
is in
perceptions, and
has
its site
which As it
is is
the
means
of olfactory
in possession of smell,
(68)
colour,
etc.,
possession of smell because it makes connected with that of the five qualities: which it apprehends, as, for instance, the organ of sight, which makes colour, has colour: now the organ of smell makes us apprehend
is
it
is
in
possession of smell.
in
Organ
taste,
of taste (rasaiia)
has
its
and
it
site
is
It
the
means
of perception of
water, being in possession of taste, and it is in possession of taste because it of the five (qualities): colour, etc., manifests just taste, like for instance saliva. of (aiksns) is the organ which is the means of perceptions of
Organ
and
it
sight
colours, fire, as
it
has
its
site
in
the tip of
the pupil.
It
consists
of the
element of
light.
Organ
touch, and
it
of touch
is
(ti>uo
is
the organ
which
is
the
found
in
the
it
its
means
which manifests
Organ
sound, and
of hearing
it
(rrotra)
is
1
only space
",
(akfira),
other substance
(69)
having the apprehend the sound; an organ of sense is conjoined with even that of the live the organ of sight, which qualities: colour, etc., which it apprehends, as for instance makes us apprehend colour, has colour; now the organ of hearing makes us ap prehend the sound, therefore it has sound as a quality.
the organ which is the means of perceptions of limited by the auditory passage, but no i. e. sound as a quality; and that it has, making us
is
Organ
of
bought
It
of pleasure, etc.
(manas) is the organ which is the means of perceptions has the dimension of an atom (anil).
is
now
?
the
proof
etc.,
(i>rainana)
(The proof
is)
an inference,
Perceptions of colour,
4.
Objects.
11
:
substance, quality, action, is generality, particularity, and inherence. Even if right knowledge, etc.,
Objects
definite aim. comprised under here, they are yet mentioned apart vdth
f>0
See
]>.
(75).
his exposition of the system of Xyaya the six categories consequently here quite a small compendium of the Vaiceresulting could not he helped, matters being here mentioned which partly have been spoken of, partly will be spoken of in its due place in the survey
"
in
i>ives
199
a.
Substances.
that
Of ((he categories) substance (dravya) isl hat which is an inherent cause or which is the substratum of a quality. The substances are nine, viz. the ele
(<7/r),
ments of earth, water, fire, and wind, space dlkilra), time, cardinal points soul, and organ of thought. Of these element of earth (prthwi) is that which has the genus-characteristic
of
earth
It
is
connected with
its
combination of
parts.
is
It
and
in
hardness, softness, etc., according to the special has the form of organ of smell, body, lumps of clay, of possession colour, taste, smell, touch, number, dimen
sion, separateness, conjunction, disjunction, distance, proximity, gravity, fluidity and impression. It is twofold: eternal and transient; eternal as an atom, transient as a product. In either colour, smell, and touch are and
taste,
(70)
through heating; heating (pfika) means connexion with the former colour, etc., of the earth are destroyed, and
they are
produced
means only
therefore
new ones
arise,
produced through heating. Element of water (fipas) has the genus-characteristic water it has the form of organ of taste, body, rivers, oceans, snow, and hail, etc., and is in possession of the above mentioned qualities except smell, and with the addition of viscidity. It is eternal and transient: according to its being eternal or transient its
,
colour,
etc.,
is
eternal or transient.
has the genus-characteristic fire and is divided into and lightning, etc. It has colour, touch, number, -, dimension, separateness, conjunction, disjunction, distance, proximity, fluidity, and It is divided into four impression. It is eternal and transient as above. groups. 1) with developed colour and touch, 2) with undeveloped colour and touch, 3) with developed colour and undeveloped touch, 4) with undeveloped colour and developed touch. Of these developed colour and touch are found in the densified (pintlita) element of fire, as for instance common fire. Gold, on the contrary, has developed colour and touch, which, however, are suppressed; if it had not developed colour, it would not be visible, and if it had not developed touch, it could not be appre hended by the organ of touch; the suppression is produced by something prevalent of the same kind, viz. of the colour and touch of the element of earth. Undeve- (71) loped colour and touch has the organ of sight. Developed colour and undeveloped touch has the halo round a light. The fire (finally) which is in water has
(tejas)
Element
of fire
organ of
sight,
boiling
62
Tbe proof
that gold
is lire
may
p. 35.
20(1
4()
Klein on
of
wind
(ixlyu)
is
connected with (the genus-characteristic) wind breath, wind, etc. It has touch, number, body
, t!:! ,
and velocity. dimension, separaleness, conjunction, disjunction, distance, proximity, the For touch, neither hot We infer the existence of this (element) from touch. with nor cold, which is felt when the wind blows, is, being a quality, impossible this substratum out a substratum, and makes us consequently infer a substratum; as the touch, and of element of the see earth, we the wind, as is even nothing
is twofold: eternal neither hot nor cold, takes place with earth and wind only. II and transient; eternal as an atom, transient as a product. Now is set forth the order in which the four (elements) earth, etc., as products
produced;
its
by action two atoms are inherent cause are the two atoms;
1 1
When
in
its
is
When
the three doubleproduced; its inherent cause are Likewise a quadruple-atom (is produced) by four By so on from the latter the grossest (composition of atoms). triple-atoms, and are wind and water, of produced; earth, tire, that means the perceptible elements which is found in the colour, etc., found in a product arises from the colour, etc.,
the inherent cause of
its
substratum, according
to
cause produce the qualities of the product. thus brought into In the parts of a product-substance, for instance a jar, a disjunction (is hence and or blows, existence, an action arises through thrusts cause and com non-inherent is destroyed which is produced); then the conjunction instance the for then the product-substance, i. e. the whole, poses the whole, and Thus we have showed the destruction of a substance through the jar, is destroyed. Sometimes a substance is destroyed through destruction of its non-inherent cause. of the above the destruction of the inherent cause. At the lime for the withdrawal
draw in (the mentioned element of earth, etc., with Mahecvara (God) who is to in the atoms arises, and world), the wish of drawing in arises; then an action
then the because of the disjunction thus produced the conjunction is destroyed; the double-atoms perish, and next, because of the destruction of their substralums, the instance for Or are the element of earth, etc., destroyed. triple-atoms, etc., up to is destroyed by cloth is destroyed by the destruction of the threads. Its colour, etc., while the substratum the destruction of the substratum; in other cases they perish,
subsists, at the
(?;*)
for
ol
the colour of a jar, etc., through healing. Now what is the proof of the existence of a loins the finest (particle) seen in a
sunbeam
falling
When
in
i>od
the world of
(lire),
114
and
as In the four elements to appear as body is in question, it means respectively m;m (earth in the world of Varuna (water), in the world of Aditya, the sun2 in the world ol Vayn the C.od ol the winds (wind) (Tarkasamgraha p.
i.
Compare
to this
racastapiula
description
p.
18
IV.
41
201
by
a
like a
substance of very small dimension, being a substance which is a product, Also this (productive) substance must be a jar. product, as what composes perceptible (nmhat)* substance must of necessity be a product (itself). Thus we
a
to
have attained
too
is
the establishing
a
composed by
jar.
product, like a
it
of a new substance, termed double-atom. This small inherent a substance which is cause, being a very That which composes the double-atom is even the atom, and
else).
,
is
not
as that which composes a productWell, but how can it be not composed substance cannot a being product-substance (itself) To be sure, otherwise we should have the fault consisting in an infinite series
.
would he thai the mountain Sumeru and a grain of have the same dimension, as in that case both would have been composed by an endless number of product-substances; therefore the atom is not composed. The double-atom, on the other hand, is composed of two, and onlv two, atoms, a single one not being able to compose anything, and no proof existing for the admission of three or still more. The triple-atom is composed of three double-atoms, a single one not being able to compose anything, and because it would
the
result
of products and
mustard-seed would
(74)
be impossible to account for the magnitude (mahattva) of the product, supposed to be composed of two only; for in a product the
7
if
it
were
arises
magnitude
through the magnitude of the cause, or through the multiplicity of the cause, and the iormer not being found" we must admit the latter; there is no proof for the admission of four or still more, magnitude being produced by three only. * Space (akara) is that which has sound as a quality. It is in possession of
,
sound, number, dimension, separaleness, conjunction, and disjunction; omnipresent, eternal, and has sound as syllogistic characteristic.
it
is
one,
How
For sound
is
sound
is
its syllogistic characteristic Through elimination (pari^e.vya). a special quality, as it together with having a genus-characteristic is
.
people by one external organ of sense, like colour. A (75) in a substratum; now neither one of the four elements beginning with earth nor soul may be a substratum of the sound, as it is the apprehended
common
by
organ of hearing; the qualities with the elements of earth, etc., are not apprehended by the organ of hearing, as for instance colour, etc., but sound is apprehended by the organ of hearing; neither may it be a quality of cardinal points (die), time, and
organ of thought, being a particular quality. Therefore we must infer a substratum of the sound different from these, and that is even the space.
one, no proof existing of its division (blicda}, and all requirements being the admission of its unity. Because of its unity there is not in space e. which may he made the object of Literally great", perception. I read with Yicv.: karyadravyatvavyabhicarat tasya. For the double-atom is not great com]), note K Must not be mistaken for the cardinal points (see p. (77)); akaea is a construction with Hie aim of attaining an element corresponding to sound, just as the four elements correspond cacti to its particular quality; it is not like Hie others composed of atoms.
It
is
fullilled
i:
at
i.
ll7
<),">.
I).
K.
1).
VhliMisk.
Si-lsli. Ski-., 7.
K:rliko, hist.
01;
lilos.
A IV I.
11.
;!.
2(1
12
round
nkn.-alva,
as generality niusl
be
found
7C,,
more than
is
one.
its elTeel being appre omnipresent, i. e. of the very largest dimension, Space is eternal. it of its because omnipresence hended everywhere: Time (knia) we infer from a distance and a proximity contrary to thai relating con It is in to cardinal points. possession of number, dimension, separaleness, and disjunction; it is one, omnipresent and eternal.
junction,
How may we
to
infer
.
it
from
cardinal
points
In
the following
distance and a proximity contrary to that relating us way: as to an old man who is near to
,
(a notion of a) and who, because of his proximity, ought to be called near to cardinal points): and as to remoteness arises contrary to (the proximity relating to be called a young man, far from us, and who, because of his remoteness, ought to remote (a notion arises of a) proximity contrary to (the remoteness relating to that cardinal points); being a product, this remoteness and proximity, contrary
(77)
occasioned by cardinal points, makes us infer a cause, vi/. lime, cardinal points, not being able of being cause. and future past Kven if time is one, it gets the designation present
, ,
etc.,
by
virtue of conditional
man
like
factors u//n7J/;M like present, past or future actions, just as a factor begging etc., by virtue of a conditional cooking
,
, ,
the action
to
time as above.
Cardinal points
u/iV
are
(as
substance, means
them from notions
a
for
locali/ing)
one,
We
infer
east
etc.,
it
as they
because
thing
is
the same,
whether
is
located
east or west.
"
Though
Soul
it
eastern
etc.,
by
;
(ninmn)
is
that
which
the connexion of the sun with different regions. with the genus-characteristic soul is
conjoined
manifold because of the multiplicity of pleasure, with number, and the nine which tioned; its qualities are the live which begin due to it) as above. Kternity and omnipresence (are begin with notion. is which that is conjoined with the genusOrgan of thought (mantis) an atom and is in posses of dimension the has it characteristic organ of thought is the instrument of the and sion of conjunction; it is the interior organ of sense, has the live qualities: number, etc. it is eternal, apprehension of pleasure, etc.; of sense make us apprehend Through conjunction with this the external organs
it
is
pain, etc.:
has been
men
(7S)
it
is
means
of every apprehension.
I.
e.
like space.
The
it
self.
71
See the
of
lie
qualities
p. i7Si.
II
cannot
he
apprehended
Ihe following:
directly
through
he,
1
perception,
hut
is
allaiiu d
by
inference.
Namely
produced by an instrument distinct from the organ of sight, etc. As they arise without any organ of sense, etc., being present. It is of an infinitesimal dimension. This instrument is even uuinas.
Pleasurable sensations,
etc.,
7 -
must
Thus
Qualities.
Then qualities
characteristic,
sist
which
7
is
((juna) shall he spoken of. Quality is that \vhich has genusnot inherent cause, and Ihe nature of which does not con
in
vix. colour, conjunction, disjunction, distance, proximity, gravity, fluidity, viscidity, sound,
in
motion.
It
abides
a substance.
number, dimension,
pa ra
te n ess,
in
water
il
is
while, bul
is a particular quality, to be apprehended by the organ of taste. earth and water; in earth il is of six kinds: sweel, etc., and arises through healing; in water il is sweel, does not arise through heating, and may he eternal or transient; it is eternal in water-atoms, transient in aqueous products.
Taste
(rasa)
1 1
is
found
in
(aamllid) is a particular quality, to be apprehended by the organ of found only in earth, and is fragrant or ill-smelling. Smell apparently found in water and other things must be regarded las depending on) inherence in 71 with waler, etc. something connected
Smell
il
smell;
is
Touch
of feeling;
il
(sparra)
is
is
a
in
found
particular quality, lo be apprehended only by the organ Three sorts are earth and the three following elements.
distinguished:
cold,
hot,
is
cold
in
waler, hot in
fire,
and
they
lemperate
in earth
and wind.
are called developed (mlbhutd)
These four
inhere in the
(qualities):
when
same Ihing
7
.
as
by perception.
7 -
According
j).
to
Yicvakarman
former men-
lion of annuls
7:
IOC).
Of these three definitions the iirsl excludes the categories: generality, parti cularity, and inherence which have no genus-characteristic; the next excludes substance which is inherent cause, and the third action which consists in motion. 7t 1. e. earth mixed up with waler. ?n e. Accordingly not in an atom which, indeed, is not in possession of magnitude",
i.
perceptibility;
cf.
note
<>.">.
II
Number
(NO)
(saiiilJujtl)
is
general quality,
UK- cause
ol
k-rins like
unity
etc.
these unity It begins with unity and ends in in trans transient in eternal things, is of two kinds: eternal and transient; eternal on the unity of the inherent cause of its substratum. itory things; it depends a distinguishing on the contrary, is transient only it is produced by Duality, of Iwo and that is one is this form: one, notion (apcksnlmddln) of llu following
;
100,000,000,000,000,000 (parnrdlm). Of
cause,
unities are non-inherent objects are inherent cause, their notion is ell eclive cause, as duality disappears at its
destruction.
Likewise
Dimension
(pariinand)
measure
it
is
fourfold:
Number, dimension or aggregation (practiija) produce the dimension of a double-atom thus is produced by
it
(81)
number as a produced by number, i.e. it has the dimension of a triple-atom, loo, is cause, arising from the duality of atoms; cause of its substratum; the e. by multiplicity in the inherent produced by number, of the inherent dimension the the dimension of a quadruple-atom, etc., arises by is produced by the cause of its substratum; the dimension of a piece of cotton
God
s
distinguishing notion;
is
i.
auareualion o
I~^
t*
of the particles of
its
cause;
means
The dimension the loose accumulation of the inherent cause of their substratum. with found is it as extension, space (<7Av7m), etc., of the atom, and the very largest
are always eternal.
Separaleness
eternal or transient;
jtrlhaklna
a
is
separate".
It
is
results transitory product separaleness does. guishing notion as duality, etc., Conjunction (sanujoya) is the cause of the term conjoint
with
from
distin
It
7
It is three and is found in them without pervading them altogether. of both, fold: arising from the action of one (substratum), arising from the action action the from arises which of that instance an As or arising from conjunction. immovable an of the mentioned post and junction of one (substratum) may be That cause. its non-inherent is arising a moving falcon; for the motion of the falcon of two from the actions of both (substratum*) is for instance the collision
stratums,
lighting
rams or
of
in
motion.
The conjunction
resulting
the conjunction of product and that which is not product, from a conjunction because of the conjunction of cause and what is not cause; for instance the junc
tion of
and tree. by means of the junction of hand the It requires Disjunction (vibhtiya) is the cause of the notion disjoint It is threefold: existence of a conjunction beforehand, and has two substratum*. of both, or the action from one from the action of (substratum), arising
body and
tree
arising
li
Hie Tarka-dTpika (p. 55; defined as to have the same substratum falcon perching on the post conjunction is found ;is its own absolute non-existence: with at the foot of the post. in the lop of the post, its absolute non-existence, on the contrary, 77 as ol the part of it. body The fact is that the hand is the cause
mnminjavviniva
is
in
;i
arising from a disjunction. Tin- lirsl of these is, for instance. Hit- disiunclion of a rock and a falcon through the motion of the alcon standing on Hie rock. The second
I
is, disjunction of two wrestlers or rams. The third is, for instance, the disjunction of body and tree through the disjunction of hand and tree.
for instance,
lie
and
it
near\
They
are
(paratunparalue] are the causes of the terms of two kinds: occasioned hy cardinal points U//V),
dinal points
proximity arises
how the (distance and proximity) occasioned by car two things being found in the same direction, the (quality) of
1
(<S2)
the nearer (sanmikrsla) through conjunction of the cardinal points and the thing, supported by the notion this is nearer than that in the farther, the (quality) of distance arises through the notion of its being farther (uiprakrxla}; near ness means the smaller (number) of conjunctions of conjoined things between the
;
body of
shall
Then
is
it
be told
how
the remoteness
constituted; when a young and an old person slay at fortuitous places, then (the this is connected with a quality) of proximity arises in the young at the notion lower degree of time than the oilier and in the old man the (quality) of distance arises at the notion this is connected with a higher degree of time than the other.
,
Gravity (yurulva) is the non-inherent cause of Ihe first falling; it is found in earth and water; as it is said "Where conjunction, velocity, and exertion are nol
":
at
hand,
earth,
falling (arises)
through
gravity."
it
Fluidity
in
fire,
(dravatva} is the non-inherent cause of the lirsl flowing; and water. In earth and lire as (respectively) butler, etc.,
is
found
is
and gold
in
water the
original (naisargika).
Viscidity
(sneha)
is
in
smoothness and is found only in water. It requires the its cause and like gravity, etc., it lasts as long as the
is
Sound
(rabdd)
which
is
a particular
may
the
drum
true,
in
be apprehended by the organ of hearing, as the sound for instance, while the organ of hearing is found with (the
it
(83)
hearing)
manV
is
This
Ihe
bouring sound,
same way
7
";
as
Ibis
drum produces a new neigh one wave produces a new, or as the buds of sound produces another and so on, until the
organ of hearing, is apprehended by the latter, bul, neither the first sound, nor the intermediate. Likewise when a reed acccordingly,
the
7
"
Ct.
Vaicesikasutra
said to
V.
1,
7:
saniskarabhave
directions
ijiinilval pataiiiini.
at
They are
expand
in all
Laukikanyavafijali
i.l
JOOj p. 10
sound originating from the place where the wo parts separate, new sounds, the last sound at the organ of hearing, produces. Ihrough and this last sound, hut, accordingly, neither the first, nor the intermediate, is The notion that I have heard the sound apprehended by the organ of hearing. of the drum is, consequently, always illusory. When the sound of the drum is produced, the conjunction of drum and space non-inherent cause: the conjunction of drum and stick is ell ective cause, and is
is
cleft.
Then
the
a series of
space
cracking sound of the cleaving of a reed is two parts of the reed and (parts of) space is nonproduced, the disjunction of the Thus the first inherenl cause: the disjunction of the two parts is effective cause. sound arises Ihrough conjunction or through disjunction: the intermediate sounds and the last one, on the contrary, have the sound as non-inherent cause, and favour able wind as effective (cause), as il lias been said Yaicesika-sfitra 11,2, of), "Sound
is
inherent cause.
When
the
and by sound originates by conjunction, by disjunction, cause of all sounds, the first one as well as the others,
(8-4)
itself."
sounds now one perishes by the last but one. and tin- last but one by the this is not correct, for the last but one cannot last like Sunda and I pasunda lasi one, as it only lasts for three moments, possibly produce the destruction of the one to the second moment of the latter, but last the accordingly only accompanies
tained
that) the last
"
is space. the sounds) last only for three moments; the first and it now he main perish by the sound they produce: (if
does not
exist
in
arises only
by the
third
of
We
sound; the
a
fact
is
thai:
an gcnus-characienstic is apprehended by a like an jar. external organ of sense with ordinary man, perishableness Here the perishahleness of sound is that which must be proved: means that the nature lot a thing) is determined by destruction, but not that it is
connected with
being which
)
is
determined by destruction,
-
would
the negation of transitoriness, as he that we in prior non-existence the logical reason (in the syllogism above) rprior non-existence is without being: man together with is to be perceived by the external organ of sense of an ordinary as it is perceived by the senses if we had only said having a genus-characteristic we would have drawn a conclusion encumbered with exceptions (uyabhicdra), vi/.
would
find
(8f>)
as to soul; therefore
we
said
be apprehended by .an external ence might nevertheless be forthcoming, because said in order to exclude the Yogi organ of sense might imply that of a Yogi, we
an ordinary
su
man".
Two
giants
p. (XX
i.
who
lilitinii
foe. cil.
for a
If
woman
p.
IS.
sent
by
Brahma
killed
one another.
M See
See .Jacob,
(15)021
proof of the existence of Yogis V It follows here: be perceived by somebody, being objects of right knowledge, like a jar; the person by whom they may be perceived is even Yogi. The mentioned inference might after all be erroneous because of generality etc.; therefore we said together with having a genus-characteristic generality and the two following categories are namely without genus-characteristic. Notion (bnddlii) is the manifestation of a thing.
is,
What
by
atoms
iniisl
he
al)le to
Pleasure
everybody.
(sukli(i)
is
joy,
that
is
what makes
favourable
impression
on
Pain
(diihklw]
is
suffering,
that
is
on everybody.
Desire
A
v e
r s
i
(iccha)
is
attachment.
is
o n (dncsa)
anger.
is
Exertion
(prayalna}
energy.
Notion and the following five (qualities) are the objects of perception through the organ of thought. Merit (dharma) and demerit (ndharma) are the special causes of pleasure and pain. They cannot be perceived through the senses, but are attained by inference: Devadatla
s
body,
etc.,
must be produced by
is the cause of Devadatta s enjoying (and suffering), like the things produced by Devadalla s exertion. The particular quality in soul which produces body, etc., is even merit and demerit, exertion, etc., not producing body, etc. Disposition (saiiiskara) is the special cause of the term disposition. It is
it
Because
threefold:
in earth
Of these velocity (vega) found velocity, impression and elasticity. and the three following (elements), and with the organ of thought, is the
,
(80)
cause of motion.
in soul,
The (form
impression
is
(bhrivana)
is
found
arises
the
cause of
remem
brance.
The
it
is
said:
thought,
etc.,
awaken
the
germ
of re
membrance.
Elasticity
possess touch;
it
(sthitisthapaka) is found in some particular things (uiresa) which restores its substratum, for instance a how, the slate of which had
been altered,
to
its
former condition.
notion,
etc..
The
qualities:
impression, are
Thus
c.
Action.
Now action
in
(kdrnuin)
it
is
staled.
Action
is
that
the nature of
motion.
Like quality
and
il
inheres
208
tiling in
48
the substance, also called
(of a
which
dimension
ol
bodily form
the conjunction It is the cause of inheres. thing) with a later place, when Five sorts are has ceased. by disjunction the conjunction with the former place enumerated: to cast upward, to cast downward, to contract, to extend, and going;
by the expression
going
is
also
etc.
Generality.
Generality
found
in in
I.sv7/ji/7m/ai
is
conformity
(<inunrtti).
It
is
substance and the following two (categories). It is eternal, one, and found several things. Il is twofold: wider and narrower; of these the wider is being
the
latter
(.S7////7),
having]
notion
many
of
objects;
and
the
it
is
generality
only,
the
cause of
,
the
conformity;
narrower (generality)
is
substance etc., the latter having (comparatively) few objects; it is both generality and particularity, being also the cause of an exclusion (v\]avrtti). Here someone objects-generality exists different from the individual di lie re ill objects with different things (t Udkth; to this we answer: on what depends, the notion of oneness, if not on one thing that is in characteristics
"No
being
this
found
in
all
ol
them;
Well,
but
question, there is such a thing, it is even generality. notion of oneness may be occasioned by an exclusion
if
from
what is not the particular thing: exclusion from what is not cow, for instance horses;
is
lor thus
there
found
in
all
objects of
cow an
several
and
lluis is
found
in
which as its object has an exclusion Irom objects this notion of onenes, a notion what is not cow, but which, on the other hand, has not as its object a positive
generality: the notion
cow
not
This, however,
is
correct,
as
we only by
the
oneness.
"
:;
e.
Particularity.
Particularity
(inresa)
is
eternal
and found
in
eternal substances;
it
is
the
Internal substances are space and cause of the notion of exclusion only. and the following three (elements), earth following; moreover (elements of)
the tour
when
Inherence.
to
connexion of two things which cannot be imagined Inherence (fi(umw-~ exist apart; it has been mentioned above."
is
y<i)
"-
to Hie point, by -generality or -general notion is not quite means is. M<//m//i// what really but perhaps it nuiy pass when it is only understood to the same kind; individual belonging all in things found the common characterislie that which makes a substance a substance; Uhatalixi is that which makes a jar a jar. ilnwijatim has the of a thing, for instance soul, as that which compare above the frequent definition found (ieneralil.v is consequently a reality -soul atma). (atmasamanyavau genus-characteristic translation correct more a been have would in itself in the tilings, why -enus-eharaeteristic the worst of it. if the abstract point of the notion had not thus got M See 1(5).
(loinp. note
2.").
The
tninshilion of
.s<mmm/r/
.S<//IK//J//
p.
49
209
Well, but parts and whole cannot be imagined to exist apart, therefore the connexion between them is inherence; but Ibis is wrong, no whole being found different from the parts; for it is the many atoms which, combined in different ways,
are apprehended as, for instance, jar or cloth. object to this: the notion of a jar being one and gross (sllulla) depends on perception, and the latter would not be possible in that way before many,
We
not gross
to
the jar)
is
imperceptible atoms; if it be asserted that this notion (with reference illusory, we say: no, because no (means of knowledge) refutes it.
sfl
Thus substance, etc., is described; these (categories) have being attained through positive notions.
Non-existence.
i
positive character,
g.
Now the seventh category si: is staled, \\7.. n on - e x s I e n c e (abhmni) arrived at by means of knowledge through negative notions. Non-existence of two kinds: non-existence by connexion and mutual non-existence.
which
is
is
(88)
shortly
Non-existence by connexion (samsargabhavd) is three-fold: Prior non-existence, non-existence by destruction, and absolute non-existence. Prior non-existence (prdyabhdva] is the non-existence of a product in the cause before it is produced, for instance the non-existence of the cloth in the threads;
it
has no beginning as
it
it
itself
destruction.
Non-existence by destruction (pradhvamsabhaua] is the non-existence, e. destruction, of the product which has come into existence, in its cause, for instance when a jar has gone to pieces, the non-existence of the jar in the heap
i.
of shards;
is
for instance
a
by blows of
Absolute
three times,
as a counter-
wind.
is
Mutual non-existence
(anyonydbhdva)
a non-existence
a jar
which
is
enlity has a consubstanliality (t(lddtnu}(i), as for instance Thus the objects are explained.
not cloth/
87 Well, but no objects are found outside (our) notions or outside Brahman. Do not say so, for (the external existence) of objects cannot be denied, being proved through perception and other (means of right knowledge).
*"
parts which
sr>
is
of these two notions is maintained by the Buddhistic vijftanavada which leaches that things have existence only as notions in us, but no outward reality; the other is maintained by the Vedanta, which teaches thai all is Brahman. The Nyaya and the Yai cesika on the other hand teach that the external world lias reality.
"~
The
first
I).
K.
I).
7.
K;rUUi
AW.
21
11.
:i.
210
f)0
5.
Notion.
is
(89)
Notion
notion
is
(Imddhi)"
is
thai
which
signified
[pratijuya].
It
Or
is
(it
may
the
manifestation
of a
thing (arlhaprakaca).
shortly of
Apprehension (aniibhaixi) is also of two kinds: right one (yathtlrtha) is that the object of which
right
of right knowledge, for instance the produced through perception and other means knowledge of a jar by means of indel ective eyes, etc., or the knowledge of fire by means of smoke as a syllogistic characteristic, or the knowledge that (an object) at the sight of its likeness to a cow, or the knowledge must be termed buffalo
,
that
the .Ivotistoma-sacriiice
is
means
of attaining heaven,
he who desires heaven must perform the Jyotistoma-sacrifice. The (ayatharlha} apprehension is that which arises
wrong
not a
fold:
means
doubt,
is It three of right knowledge and does not agree with the object. Doubt and reduclio in absurdum reduclio in absurdum, and error.
will
Krror (mpanjaya}
thai
is
is
e.
i.
the apprehension of a thing with reference to an object an illusory knowledge, for instance the transfer of (the
notion)
(3ii
this
is
silver
on
h ra
thing
al
hand which
is
pearl. sorts of
rem e m
nee
both
as
some
sleep every knowledge is remembrance and wrong^ delect (the notion) of Mhis arises where that rightly ought lo
in
is
without form
(ninlkara).
for
form
No,
we dismiss
its
is
encumbered with form. For the same reason we dismiss means of the form transferred on the
of a jar
is
we
infer
the object, proved through perception. Kvery notion is determined by of the it is for only when connected with the object thought, organ apprehended by have a notion of a jar, not only (under the and it appears (under the form):
l
form
have
notion.
Oriran of thought.
the inner organ of sense,
Organ of thought
tioned.
(nutnas)
is
and
it
has been
men
ts Here we follow again the enumeration of the Nyayasutra finished the review of the (i (7) categories of the Yaicesika. s the things are in dream apprehended as present. i. e.
"
I.
1.9 (see p.
((i2o.
after
having
51
211
7.
Activity.
Activity
the speech, etc.;
(prtwrtti)
it
consists
of
merit
is
action
through
is
namely accomplishing
S.
worldly proceedings.
Defects.
is
desire;
are
Attachment
is
(rdya)
(<1uesa)
resentment,
i.e.
wrong
knowledge,
e.
error.
<).
Future
rebirth;
etc.
life.
it
Future
life
(pretyabhava)
in
is
obtaining the
aggregation consisting
new body,
10.
Fruit.
suffering,
and
and
it
(1)1
11.
Pain.
Pain (duhkha)
is
suffering,
and
it
12.
Final liberation.
the
are,
Final liberation (apavarga) is release, and that means cessation of the pain comprised under 21 heads. The 21 heads
secondary and essential: the body, the six organs of sense, six notions (based on the objects), pleasure and pain.
Also pleasure
to
is
absolute
comprising
the
means not
way
pain, as being encumbered with pain; to be encumbered with this transfer of sense (npacara] (appears) in the same without; appear as when, honey being mixed with poison, honey too is reckoned as poison. Now, how is final liberation attained? In the following way when by studies
:
knowledge of the categories has been gained, \vhen by the sight of the defects of the objects a person has become indifferent and wants release, when meditation is carried on, and soul is directly perceived by virtue of the ripening of the meditation, when a person is relieved from afflictions (kleca) and does not acquire new merit and demerit, only uninterested actions being made, when by exercise of Yoga the formerly earned sum of merit and demerit has been then, acknowledged and (the fruit thereof) is being enjoyed in compressed time
of the text-books
essential
: 1
"
II,
>
life.
mentions the live A /m/.s: nescience, subjectivism, attachment, aversion, (Particulars in my book "Yoga". 112 121.)
|>.
suppose
in
Yo^in s being able to procure several bodies at one extraordinary shortness of lime pass through the expiation of their deeds.
thai Uiis refers lo the
>7*
p. litti.
212
(92)
when
is
the present body, etc., departs, as no future found with the 21 pains, since there is no cause
21 sorts
This,
the
cessation
of the
of
pain
is
release,
and
this
is
final
liberation.
XI.
Doubt.
Doubt is the consideration of diverse same thing. It is of three sorts.
the particularity
a
The
first
depends on
a
common
is
quality,
trunk or
For instance:
this a
the
it
man
that
trunk,
it
that
is
crookedness, hollowness, etc., and not that, either, man, vi/. head, hands, etc., but only perceives the quality
\\v..
which
settles
to
common
a man, which consists in being erect, it becomes a question to him whether it is a trunk or a man. The next (sort on doubt depends on a difference of opinion, the parti For instance: Is sound eternal or transient (of the thing) being unnoticed.
trunk and
cularity
Because is eternal, another, on the contrary: it is transient. to a neutral a it becomes two these of of question of the difference persons, opinion is eternal sound whether sound), man, who does not perceive the particularity (of
or transient.
depends on
\\/..
a (too)
(its)
is
special quality.
For instance
is
eternal or transient,
to
have smell,
Doubt then gets the following form: is earth transient, being uneternal (things). connected with to have smell which is excluded from all (other) eternal (things), which is excluded from all or is it eternal, being connected with to have smell
, k
(other) transient
things
?
)
XII.
Motive.
which a person is incited when acting. It con (prayojann) is that by for the activity sists in attainment and prevention of (respectively) pleasure and pain, view. in that with takes man of every normal place
Motive
XIII.
Instance.
topic on
Instance
consent.
It
(drslanta)
is,
in
discussion, a
is
twofold.
to
the kitchen,
when
an instance of similarity (sndharmya), for instance have smoke is a logical reason; the other is an instance of
One
is
dissimilarity
v-
to
the
same
reason.
(44).
XIV.
(siddhanta) lend admitted by all
Tenet.
:
Tend
is
:i
It
is
fourfold:
(1)
(he
admitted by related systems systems, (2) the tenet from (the admission of another) matter only, (3) following in question, and (4) the tenet appearing as merely a preliminary a
<i
ss o
i
n.
A
kind
is
tenet admitted
for instance: a
by
all
systems
is
for instance:
something
exists.
The second
(94)
Xaiyayika regards the organ of thought as an organ of sense, for that has been established in the Vaicesika-syslem consistent (with the Xyfiya). The third kind is for instance, it being proved that earth, etc., must have a creator,
that
this creator
then must be
omniscient."
,
The
it
fourth kind
is
of a
Mlmamsaka:
sound
is
eternal or transient.
XV.
Members
1
of Syllogism.
Members
for
the
sake of
(1,1,32) runs:
elusion.
component parts of the syllogism in an inference another person. They are proposition, etc., as the Nyaya-sfilra Members are proposition, reason, example, application, and cona statement setting forth the thing qualified be proved, for instance The mountain has fire.
(pratijfia}
is
(95)
Of
by
these
proposition
which must
(hetu)
the quality
is a statement setting forth in the ablative or the instrumenlalis the syllogistic characteristic, for instance As it lias smoke.
Reason
Example
(udaharana]
instance
is
for
(n/;m/;/a) consists in establishing by the statement: "Thus is (the presence) of the syllogistic characteristic in the subject of the syllo for gism, example This, too, has smoke or, Thus is this, too.
Application
,
this,
loo
Conclusion (nigamand)
be proved
in
the subject,
for
consists in establishing (the presence of) what must instance Therefore it has smoke There or,
,
fore
it
is so.
five
These
1:1
(members), proposition,
;
etc.,
are called
members, being
like parts
if it really should -be authori/ed. Notice the expression "regarded as it might at an extreme estimate he applied on the two lirst sorts only. The commentaries of the Nyava31 are, moreover, mutually contradictory as to the three last sorts of siddhdnta. sutra I, 1, My translation of the terms autrwihinlni-. pratitantra-, udhikdnuui-. and (ibhijnpayamasiddhanta} considers Kecava s explanation of the matter itself. This form is clearly illustrated by the instance in the a III, N, 37: a r a k a sa m h When the following is under discussion: .The released makes no action which entails de merit and merit, being without desire then both actions, their fruit, linal liberation, the souls, and future life are thence given.
2(>
"
"
See
p. (37).
214
of the
syllogism
;
"
its
in
space (akaqa).
XVI.
(<)n)
Reductio
(farka]
is
in
absurdum.
the indirect consequence of an eventuality 7 not wished not \vished for. It consists in (the demonstration) of an accompanied at the admission of an accompanied (factor), when two things are
Reductio
in
absurdum
for,
occurring
concomitance of which is established; for instance: if there had been a jar here, it had been seen as well as the ground. This reductio in absurdum supports the means of right knowledge; for if a here has lire or is without person, when a doubt has arisen whether the mountain to him that il is demonstrated then without it is thai the has fire, fire, opinion
in
question
the
had not smoke, either If (the mountain) for that reason have been without smoke. This (demonstration of) the indirect consequence (of what would occur) (prasanyd) Of the staled reductio in absurdum the object is is called reductio in adsurdum. the mailer which is to be proved, as il refutes (the thought that Ihe mountain) has
the indirect consequence
it
it
(97)
connexion someone objects thai reduclio in absurdum belongs to (the one alternative (koli) as ils category) doubt; but this is not correct, as il has only
sphere.
XVII.
Ascertainment.
il
is
(nirnaya) is a knowledge which establishes (something); the result of the means of right knowledge.
Ascertainment
XVIII.
Discussion.
Discussion (nfida) is the talk of a person"* who wishes to apprehend truth. rebukes are too little these eight Il may comprise eight rebukes too much (udhikn), renouncing of position (apasiddhanta), and the five (ni/ilmi),
(niyrahd)""
;
fallacies.
XIX.
(100)
Wrangling.
an interlocution between those merely contending for on both sides. It may, according to circum victory, but which contains arguments ends the all rebukes contain and, stances, position of the opponent being overthrown, own one s for of argument in Ihe position. establishing
Wrangling
(jalpd)
is
application
"
"
Otherwise the parts of a thing are ils inherent cause. Of course in a logical sense. See note 15. Would it not be better to read tattvabubhutsvoh: an interlocution between two?
See
p. (112).
""
55
215
XX.
is
Cavilling.
oi
eslablishmenl of a person s own position, Cavilling (vitanda) deprived and ends in the mere refutation of that of the opponents; the cavilling person has no position of his own which must be proved. An interlocution (kathn) is a collection of statements which put forward objection and position, and which are carried on by different, speakers.
XXI.
Fallacies.
1
""
Non-reasons want one or other of the (above) mentioned to be qualities an attribute with the subject of the syllogism etc.; but, being connected with some of the qualities of a reason and (therefore) looking like reasons (hetuvad abhasa:
(1(11)
are called fallacies (hetiwbhasa}. They are five, vi/. the irreal, contrary, the non-cogent, the counterbalanced, and the refuted. As to (the first) the irreality (asiddhi) consists, according to
manahj they
the (102)
Udayana,
in
the
negation
of
of the
reality
and
to
reality
means
the
notoriety of the
of
the
irreal
(reason)
(fallacy)
accompanied
subject
is
(by what
syllogism.
is
be
proved),
chief
the
Thus
the
characteristic
stated.
be applied also on the contrary etc., it is evident that a confu in order to escape that the following is stated: the defect in which a reason is first manifested and which is able to (make us) apprehend its defectiveness (dusti), that and no other is the cause of the knowledge of its
this
As
may
and
defeetiveness,
i.
e.
it
is
any other secondary (defect), the defectiveness being apprehended tested alone and the discussion thus being discontinued.
When that is the case, we have the contrary fallacy, where it is a contra diction (virodha), vi/. that (the reason) is accompanied by the contrary of that which was to be proved, which occasions the knowledge of the defectiveness; and in the same way we have the non-cogent, etc., where the fact that other con clusions than the intended are possible (vyabhicara}, etc., occasions the know
ledge of the defectiveness.
knowledge of
the defecliveness (of the reason) through the absence of the knowledge of the essence of the reason qualified by concomitance and by its being an attribute of the subject. The irreal (asiddha] fallacy thus conditioned comprises three kinds, according to
its
being
substratum,
(2)
as to
itself,
and
is
(3)
as to the concomitance.
is
Of
not
known
irreal as to
the substratum
for instance:
is
The
sky-lotus
it
fragrant.
Because
is
growing
in
the pond.
is
See
p. (41).
216
as to the substratum:
is
substratum
is
really found,
the
reason
as
it
is
a product
is
but (it may be admitted) that (here) something is established (siddlwsudliuim), it being proved that the jar (already) is transitory, what is established (beforehand). This, however, cannot be taken for an objection, for anything whatever cannot in itself be a substratum of a logical inference, but only that which is the object that Logical to the of (nyaya) takes place neither
not irreal as to the substratum;
is
doubt, according
rule""
proof
not perceived, nor against a matter which is settled, but and there is no doubt as lo the onlv in reference to a mailer, which is doubted Iransiloriness of the jar, as the latter has been established; therefore even if the as far as il itself is concerned (.s/>uri//H /mi, is found, it cannot be a substratum,
is
jar,
as
its
transitoriness
is
is
no
(real)
The reason
instance
:
irreal
as to the substratum.
is
unreal as
to itself; for
Generality
is
Being produced.
The reason to be produced is not found in the substratum The partly irreal reason (blidgasiddha) also is only
instance
:
irreal
The atoms
of earth
To have
ject
smell
is
not
(howeven found
in
the
of the syllogism, being only found in earth; therefore the irreality as to itself" appears in a part (of the reason). Subdivisions of that fallacy which is irreal as lo itself the reasons are, loo,
which are
irreal as to qualification
.
as lo object
as to unfit qualification
and
as to unfit object
Of
qualification
(viqesanasiddha]
is
for instance
the following:
Sound
As
it
is
eternal.
touch. being a substance is not in possession of to be a is of touch qualified through Here the reason not to be in possession a sub be to sound in and not not to be in possession of touch alone; substance as to irreal is stance is not, however, found, as it is aquality; therefore (this reason) to be a substance is not found, the notion For when the
,
qualification.
qualification
qualified thereby,
is
1.
not found either, because, a qualification not found either, as for instance a man qualified
is
:\.
Yatsyayana ad N.
S.
I,
1.
p.
57
a slick
is
217
is
by
when merely the stick is not found, as well as when the Therefore even if not to have touch is in hand, no qualified reason is found, and therefore (this is) irreal as lo itself. Irreal as to the object is (the following reason):
not found
man
not found.
(uigesyusiddha)
Sound is eternal. As it is a substance without having touch. Here too we have a qualified reason, and when the object not in hand we cannot have something qualified in itself;
reason
is
is
(A reason with)
following case:
Sound
As
able to
it
is
eternal.
quite unfit,
its
object,
vix.
to
have no cause
the
alone being
of
which
unfit,
is
is
eternity (of sound); (a reason) therefore, irreal as to itself, a qualified (reason) not
qualification
existing
when
the
qualification
not found.
,
but the qualification was here to be a quality and that is found in sound; how can it be said that qualification is not found? That is true; to be a quality is in hand, but not a qualification by means hereof; for the qualification of a reason is that which has as ils aim lo distinguish
Well,
it
from others;
but
to
be a quality
is
(here) purposeless,
and
is
therefore called
unfit (asamartha).
(A reason with) unfit object (asamarthavifesya) exemplification with transposition (of the members):
is
the following:
i.
e.
the
same
Sound
As
it
is
is
eternal.
a quality together with being without cause. Here the qualified object is namely unfit, the qualification alone being able to prove eternity (of sound). (This reason) is irreal as to itself, as there cannot be
exist,
was
stated as qualified.
The
rest as
above.
(the reason)
is
Irreal as to the
concomitance
the
is
with
which
no con-
one
is
not
accompanied by
a
that
which
thai
must be proved;
the other
only through
(in the
following instance):
as for instance Ihe clouds.
What exists has only momentary existence, Now sound or what else is discussed exists.
is
Here sound, for instance, is the subject of the syllogism, and ils momentary existence that which is to be proved; existence is the reason, bul there is no proof of the concomitance of Ihe reason with momentary existence.
1).
K.
1).
7. Ili. Ulir,
hi-l.
OK
lih.s.
AM.
II.
3.
28
218
58
(106)
is
Now
put forward.
For instance:
all
we
see.
;
Here
black
to
is
he black
in
but when Ho be Mailrl proved by means of Mo be a son of that is the effective factor, but, question it is not lo be a son of MailrT
is
on the contrary,
and
therefore the assimilation of vegetables or the like is a condi is called condition; and to be black as the con to be a son of MailrT tion of the connexion between
,
and smoke. A reason like to be a son of MailrT is thus irreal as to the concomitance for no concomitance is in band, the (necessary) connexion (of reason and what must be proved) depending on a condition. Also the following (reason) is irreal as to the concomitance
fuel
is
thai of the
connexion between
lire
The
As
it
killing
is
guilt.
killing, like
to
The
does not produce guill, but to be prohibited as thus, just as above, a condition is in hand, (which is a (necessary) condition; must be required fulfilled), this reason to be killing is irreal as to the con
fact
is
that here
comitance.
Well, but the chief characteristic of a (necessary) condition is thai it invariably and Ibis that which proves accompanies thai which must be proved, but not how then can to be prohibited be a (neces to be prohibited is not relevant to
1
"
the
condition
is
found also
with
to be prohibited
\\/..
for
the notion
prohibited
accompanies
that
which
is
to
be proved,
and (on the other hand) we have not necessarily the notion prohibited everywhere where we have the notion killing as an exception takes place as to the killing which is a part of the sacrifice; for here with the killing which is a purl of the sacrifice we have the notion killing Thus the (fallacy) irreal as to the concomitance but not Ihe notion
prohibited
every
prohibited
is
described.
Now
the
contrary
(fallacy)
is
staled.
The reason
to
which was
is
which must be proved, and -to be produced is accomwhat is produced is only Iransiloriness vi/. by (107)panied by the opposite hereof,
thai
:
1M Cf. p. (34).
"
1:i
Cf. p. (43).
transitory; there Core the reason lo he produced hy the opposite of thai which \vas lo he proved.
is
contrary,
being accompanied
Non-cogent Hie reason is which is encumhered \vithdonhl concerning that which must he proved, or which allows an oilier inference than the intended, ll has wo suhdivisions, as to ils heing loo general or loo particular. Of these the first is thai which is found holh with the suhjecl of Ihe syllogism, with analogous instances, and with contrary instances; for instance:
I
Sound
As
it
is is
eternal.
Now here the reason to he the ohject of right knowledge is found hoth with Hie suhject of the syllogism and wilh analogous instances, i. e. eternal things, and with contrary instances, i. e. transient things; for everything may he made the
object of right knowledge.
Too particular
that reason
is
which
is
is
lo
have smell
and
it
is
eternal things, for instance space, and from contrary instances, things, for instance water, as to have smell is only found in earth.
e.
e.
transient
(vijabhicara)
is
characterized.
When
a reason has holh analogous and contrary instances"", the facl that il must he (108) excluded from contrary instances together with heing found with analogous instances,
a necessary rule (niyama), as il is that which makes us draw the conclusion. possihility of exceptions is the negation of this established rule wilh such a reason which is not accompanied by the opposite of that which was lo be proved. I0
is
The
It
takes place in two ways, (the reason) being found either wilh holh analogous and contrary instances, or heing excluded from holh of them. The counterbalanced (reason) 10 is thai opposed to which another reason, is found as opponent (pratipaksa); il is called the neutralized. For instance:
1
Sound As we
or
is
transient.
il)
(in
is
qualities,
Sound
As we
eternal.
il)
(in
do not
is
The
here called another logical inference of the same strength which proves the contrary case; but that which has nol the same strength is nol an opponent.
fact
is
that
opponent
I read will) Yicv. sambhavalsapaksavipaksasya hetoh. This definition is necessary, as otherwise the contrary fallacy must he comprised under here (under the non-cogent). Concerning the designation of this and the Following fallacy see note 41.
101
105
1(
"
27*
220
60
which proves Hie contrary may he threefold 1) that on which the 2) other (on olher) dependent (upajwaka), or (the inference) depends (iipajiinja),
An
inference
{)
neither.
Of
instance
:
these the
lirsl
kind
is
refuting
hecause of
its
strength;
let
it
he said for
An atom
As
109)
it
is
transient.
lias
going to prove transitoriness, is not possible with reference to a thing, for instance an atom which is not apprehended by a means of right knowledge, as (in that case) irreality as to substratum would be the result; by this inference the validity of that which makes us apprehend the
atom is (namely) admitted, as it otherwise could not arise; therefore (an inference) 107 on which the other depends, is always refuting. The dependent on the olher hand, is refuted because of its deficiency; as for instance the above mentioned logical in lemur which will prove transitoriness. The third kind is the counterbalanced, (the two reasons here) having the same strength. The refuted (reason) is that in the subject of which the negation of what was to be proved is slated by perception or another means of right knowledge; it For instance: is called (a reason) whose object is precluded.
,
Fire
is
is
cold.
produced, like water. and the negation of what was Here the reason is to be prodcued
As
il
vi/.
coldness,
lire
is
is
to
that
hot.
,
Likewise also the following (reason) is refuted reason existence when what must be proved is that
,
vi/.
the
above mentioned
has only
prove was momentary existence, and momentary existence; that which it had the negation hereof, consequently not-momentary existence, is established through as we establish the permanence (sthayitua) of perception supported by recognition, have of the a the jar by following form: this is the same jar which recognition of sense an is which accompanied organ seen formerly, a recognition produced by extends over the which and former the by apprehension, produced impression by
to
I
former and the later moment of lime. These live fallacies, the irreal, etc., do not prove that which they had to prove (110) I(1S vi/. respect and are not (real) reasons, as they \vanl one of (the live) qualities etc. of the the to be an attribute with syllogism subject ively
,
,
7 The inference as to the transitoriness of the atom is deficient, being dependent on an inference which proves the existence of the atom allto^ether, and this last inference proves and the basis of involuntarily at the same time that it is eternal, is consequently ujmjwya the first dependent inference, which therefore is wrong; in about this way the train of ideas
"
may
be
1011
summed
See
up.
p. (41).
til
221
The
regarded
(three
faults)
which
characteristic
10
Idksaiid
),
which
viz.
must
to
hi:
as a
reason
with
may
have,
he too
narrow (avyapti), loo wide (ativyapti), or impossihle (asambhava), are also comprised here, and are not something different from the five (fallacies). A too wide (characteristic) is (a reason) which is irreal as to the concomit ance, not heing excluded from all contrary instances, or requiring a condition; for instance the notion animal as the chief characteristic of a cow, for to have dew and lap, etc., is the effecting (determining) factor ( prayojakci) of the notion cow not to he an animal. Likewise a loo narrow (characteristic) is (a reason) which is partly irreal; for instance lo originate from (the cow) Caball as characteristic of a cow.
,
(characteristic) is (a reason), irreal as lo itself; for instance \vhole-hoofedness as a chief characteristic of a cow.
An impossihle
(HI)
XXII.
Perversion.
Perversion
in
(chala)
is
(the proceeding)
is
when, a word having been applied substituted and the refutation (of the opponent)
this hoy has a new garment on (the and then a person takes it for granted from this point of view) raises the following
,
thus
attained.
for instance in the proposition:
is
When
word nava)
that
it
applied has another sense, and (starling objection: He has not nine (nava) garments, heing poor; he can hardly be supposed to have two, lo say nothing of nine. He who discusses in this way is overthrown by the fact that he makes use
1
in
the sense
new
of
perversion.
XXIII.
is
Futility.
etc.;
wrong answer. It appears under many forms, utkarsasama, (112) Futility (jcili} but will not be fully set forlh here from fear of difl useness. The
futility called
consists in the transfer of a quality to the the same of a because quality is found in the instance, but without syllogism, subject of concomitance relation taking place; for instance when a person after the any argumentation: Sound is transient, as it is produced, like a jar, raises (the following
"
utkarsasama
is
lo
be transient for the reason of being produced, like a jar, like the jar, too, consist of parts.
n(}
The
futility called
apakarxasama
a quality (lo the subject of a syllogism) because of a quality in the instance, with as for instance when someone lo out any relation of concomitance taking place
;
"-
Cf. p. (7)
and note
5.
jati are
thing, starting
222
62
the above mentioned logical inference says the following: If sound must be transient for the reason of being produced, like a jar. il must also for the same reason and
like the jar, too, not be audible; for a jar
is
not audible.
Occasion
it
for
rebuke
liltle
,
has
many
forms:
,
too
1 is the cause of overthrow. Though (nigrahasthana.) a new object too much renouncing of position
1
,
(113) bewilderment
will not be fully exposed it contradiction approval of opinion Too little (injund) consists in the fact that there of diffuseness.
, ,
to
be exposed
in
too
few
11 -
(members).
Too much
some way are
Renouncing of position (apasiddhanid) consists in the many new object (arthuntara) consists in the staling of an tenet. A of a abandoning Bewilderment (apralibhd) con that taken in hand. with not connected object sists in not to understand how to answer (the opponent). Approval of opinion
(members).
(niatriinijria)
consists in a person s approval, i. e. admission of a case which is main Contradic tained by the opponent and which is at variance with his own." tion consists in being guilty of a rejection of the case approved." That only the most useful different forms are treated here, and that those
1
which
stated
are
is
not
most serviceable
for the
is
not characteri/ed
11
is
"
no
c ra
fault,
as
that
so far
sufficient
Thus
111
the
Ta rka
bh
composed by K
designates a
e c a v a
is
finished.
in
The
I.
lerin
iii</r<ih(istli(uxi
case
where overthrow
the discussion
is
certain.
one or several members are wanting in the form in which the logical in see Vatsyayana ad N. S. V. _ 12. and Carakasamhita III, 8, I.e. not only members of the syllogism, but particularly superfluous secondary are irreal as to quali qualifications, as for instance in the fallacies mentioned p. (KM) which II I, these; Carakasamhita classed are too amonjj; fication, etc. Superfluous repetitions 111 According to Vatsvayana ad V. 2. 21 the fault aimed at here seems to be thai of a lo point out with the opponent a defect demonstrated in his own argument person lryin without clearin," himself of the delect in question. 111 the question here is incompatibility of proposition According to Vatsyayana ad V, 2, and reason. and note 1. Cf. p.
"
e.
that
ference
is
arranged
>.(
<T.
.">(>.
.)">));
11:1
<S,
~>1.
"
CONTENTS
Introduction .......................................
5
<)
Tarkabhasa ..............................................................................
I.
II.
10
III.
I
Causality ........................................................................ 10
V.
V. VI.
VII.
VIII.
means of
right
2.
IX.
On
Validity of
knowledge ...................................
...
33
X.
2.
Body
(carira) ............................................................. 37
(indrii/d) ................................................ 37
3.
-I.
Organs of sense
a.
.38
Substances
Qualities
(di
ai>i/a)
................................................ 39
b.
c.
(aiiiid)
.................................................... 43
d.
e.
f.
Inherence
(tfarndi difa).
............................................ 48
4i
g.
5.
(i.
Organ of thought
I
50
7. 8.
9.
.......................... 51
Future
life
(prelyabhiwa) ................................................. 51
........ 51
....... 51
10.
11.
12.
....................
51
224
64
Page 52
XI.
XII.
XIII.
Doubt (saninnjd)
Motive
(i>ri/ojdiid)
52
.
Instance
(drsldiitti)
.
.
52
58
.
58
5-1
51
51
Discussion
(ixida)
(jaljxi}
XIX.
Wran^lin^
54
(vilaiidd)
55
.
(lictwihlntsu)
.
. . .
55
(51
(51
Perversion (diald)
Futility (jati)
...
(52
Mre
50.
IV, med
1.
12 Tavler, 1874
til
12.
Ussing, J.L.
Kritiske Bidrag
Mcd
et
Resume;
75.
en francais.
2.
18GS
Polilik
Holm,
I
E.
Danmarks
C.
Resume
en francais.
1868
...
ll
1.
15.
3.
aludan-Muller,
Studier
til
Danmarks
Historie
I.
Underhandlingerne
1869
til
om Valdcmar
Fangeuskah.
i.
Grevskabel iNerrehalland.
Resume
en franniis,
85.
Uoiirichsen,
II.
J.F.
Om
1869
Maximos Planudcs
Anthologie.
5--G.
50.
til
Paludan-Miiller, C.
HI.
Studier
Danmarks
i
Historie
II.
Om
1871
50. 75.
7.
Gislason, Konr.
om
Skjaldedigtenes
i
Beskall enhed
IV.
funnel Henseende.
1872
8.
Paludan-Muller, C.
Danmarks
Historie
Kurie
9.
Kongens
Strid
Erlandscn.
1872
50.
Rordam, H. F.
ved nogle kriliske Bidrag Bemaerkninger Med 8 Tavler (Prover af aeldre danske Historikeres Haandskrifter). 1873
om
den historiske
Krilik, oplyst
dausk
Historie.
2.
1.
65. 35.
75.
10.
Ussing,
J.L
Kong
Attalos
Stoa
Athen.
Med
Tavler.
Resume en
francais.
1873
11.
Gislason, Eonr.
Om
Navnet Ymir.
1874
16.
i
V, med
1.
6 Tavler,
187792
s
50.
25. 80.
Miiller, L.
Anvendelse og Belydning
Oldtiden.
Resume en
francais.
1877
3.
1.
2.
3.
Lange, Jul.
Ussing,
J. L.
Med
3 Tavler.
Resume en
Nye Erhvervelser
til
Antiksamlingen
Kjobenhavn.
Med
3 Tavler.
1884
4.
2.
i
Lange, Jul.
dens
Hwjdepunktet
9.
Ore
I,
1.
189093, med
7 Tavler
14.
2.
En sproghistorisk Beroringer mellem de finske og de baltiske (litauisk-lettiske) Sprog. 1890 Undersogelse. Yak-Lungta -Bracteaternc, Archaeologernes nordlske Gruppe af Guldbracteater Steenslrup, J. Japrtus S. fra den aeldre Jernalder, betragtede som saaregne Minder om en Kulturfoibindelse imellem HojAsiens og det Skandinaviske Nordcns Folkefuerd tidlige Aarhnndreder af vor Tidsregning, naermcst Folkevandringstiden. Med 4 Dobbelt-Tavler, 3 Enkelt-Tavler og mange Texten indtrykte Figurer. 1893
Thoinsen, Vllh.
i
9.
65.
7.
II,
1.
188889
12.
5.
2.
3. 4.
1888 den oprindelige Ordning af nogle af den islandske Fristats Institutioner. Genkendelse. Forsog paa en experimental Verilikation af Forestillings-Associalionernes Teori. 1888 Om Scholierne til Euklids Elernenter. Resume en francais. 1888 flclberg, J.L.
Finsen, V.
Om
50.
Lehmann,
Alfr.
Om
1.
50.
50.
2.
Ussing, J.L.
Resume
en francais.
1889
2.
65. 80.
5.
6.
Starckc, C. N.
LcliiHaiiii.
1889 Etikens teoretiskc Grundlag. En Korrektion af Webers Lov Skelueloven. Grundlag af psykometriske Undersogelser. 1889
Alfr.
og
den
Ebbinghaus ske
Kontrastlov
paa
2.
(Fortseettes
paa Oiuslagets
S. 4.)
ALL
PRICES
ARE
CANC2LLSL
Kr.
Ore
50. 25. 50.
25.
8 Tavler
13.
lloffdlng,
H.
2. 3.
Blinkenbcrg, Chr.
Sorenseii, S.
1889
3.
Resume
en francais.
1891
i
1.
Om
Sanskrits Stilling
Steenslriip, Japetus.
den almiridelige Sprogudvikling Det store Selvfund ved Gundestnip Jylland 1891.
i i
hidien.
Resume en
francais.
1891
5.
1895
....
G.
50
50. 80.
50.
IV,
1.
lloffdlng,
H.
2. 3.
ftslrup, J.
Kort og 1 Tavle 1 1893 Hants (ilosofiske Udviklingsgang. til Kendskabel til den syriske Orkcn. liidrag Historisk-lopografiske
.
.
1893-99, med
i
10.
1. 1.
Kontinuiteten
Usslng, J. L.
Betragtninger over Vitrnvii de architectura libri Resume en francais. hvilken delte^Skrift kan viurc alfattet.
Studier
Med el Oversigtskort 1895 decem med saerligt Hensvn til den Tid, paa
1896
i
2.
15.
4.
Liinge, Julius.
i
5.
Usslng,
J.
den gracske Kunsts forste Storhedstid. Billedkunstens Fremstilling af Menneskeskikkelsen Resume en francais. 1898 de fra Perioden efterladte Kunslvaerker. Om Phidias Athenestatuer sirrlig Kliduchos. Med en fototypcret Tavle og Billeder i
,
4.
Textcn.
G.
Resume en
francais.
1898
for logiske
2-
"
Heffding, H.
Domme.
1899
1.
Haulierg, P.
2.
20 Tavler Uanmark indtil 1 146. Med 13 Tavler. Resume en francais. 1900. og Udmyntninger Myntforhold Om den rette Forstaaelse af Bevaegelser og Stillinger nogle antike Kuuslvaerker. Med en Usslng, J. 1. Resume en francais. 1902. ... Texten. fololyperet Tavle og Billeder Avec un resume en francais: Histoire 1146-1241. Tidsrummel P. Danmarks Myntvaesen Uauberg, Med G Tavler 1906 146 a 1241. monelaire du Danemark de
.
V, 19001906, med
16. 12.
45. 80.
1.
G5.
4.
40.
85.
30.
VI,
1
1900- 1907,
med
S.
Tavler
10.
Jonsson,
Flitnur.
1900
1.
2.
Pelersen.
Kn Monografi.
Fyenboen Claudius Clausson Swart (Claudius Clavus), Nordens 1904 Avec un resume en francais.
1
8.
15
3.
ancien armenien.
les
altcrnances
1.
60.
15.
4.
a,
mo.
Med
2 Tavler.
1907.
...
2.
Dansk Ordbog.
Espersen, J. C. S.
Tome
IV,
V,
PR.
VII, 2, D.
1863. 2 Kr.
V-Z.
1905
VI, S.
1848. 12 Kr.
VII,
1,
T.
1853. 4 Kr.
Bornholmsk Ordbog. Med Indledning og Tiling. 1908 andre BrevChronologisk Fortegnelse over hidtil trykte Diplomer og Hegesta Diplomatica Historic Danicse. 1847 1536). skaber til Oplysning af den danske Historic. T.I. (822 * N Pars 2. 1870. (16321660). 1870 T. 11, Pars 1. (1536-1631).
. . .
10.
Series secunda.
T.I.
T.
II
30
Fasc.
2.
4.
(1608
1628).
1898.
Fasc. 1901
3.
(1574-1607).
a
5.
6.
T.
llet
i
II.
Fasc.
(1644-1660).
1907
50
50.
Molbech, C.
af et Haandskrift af
Saxo Grammaticus,
i
Facsimile.
1843.
1879
8 VO
-
2.
Snorre Sturlassons Hislorieskrivning. Storm, Gustaf. Fortegnelse over de af del Kgl. Danske Videnskabernes
skabclige Arbejder.
Med
et
Kort.
i
1873.
8 VO
3.
35.
Selskab
Tidsrummet 1742-1891
udgivne viden-
1802
Kes"ava
132 N8K463
19U
UNIVERSITY
OF TORONTO
LIBRARY