TY - BOOK AU - Keating,Malcolm TI - Controversial reasoning in Indian philosophy: major texts and arguments on Arthâpatti SN - 9781350070493 U1 - 181.4 PY - 2020/// CY - London PB - Bloomsbury Academic, KW - Reasoning KW - Hindu logic KW - Buddhist logic KW - Knowledge, Theory of (Hinduism) KW - Knowledge, Theory of (Buddhism) N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Introduction -- 1. Kumārila Bhaṭṭa's Explanation in Verse / Andrew Ollett and Elisa Freschi -- 2. Prabhākara's Long Explanation / Andrew Ollett and Elisa Freschi -- 3. Śālikanātha's Straightforward and Lucid Gloss; Comprehensive Survey of the Epistemic Instruments / Andrew Ollett and Elisa Freschi -- 4. Nārāyaṇa Bhaṭṭa's Elucidation of Epistemic Instruments and Their Objects / Malcolm Keating -- 5. Akṣapāda Gautama's Nyāya-sūtra with early commentaries / Malcolm Keating -- 6. Udayana Ācārya's The Flower-Offering of Reason / Nilanjan Das -- 7. Jayanta Bhaṭṭa's Flowers of Reasoning / Alessandro Graheli -- 8. Gaṅgeśa Upādhyāya's Jewel of Reflection on the Truth / Stephen Phillips -- 9. The Physical Existence of a Living Being and Kumārila's Theory of Arthâpatti / Kiyotaka Yoshimizu -- 10. Raghunātha on Arthâpatti / Nilanjan Das -- 11. Against Reducing Arthâpatti / Mark Siderits -- 12. Arthâpatti: An Anglo-Indo-Analytic Attempt at Cross-Cultural Conceptual Engineering / Anand Vaidya -- Table of Important Figures, Dates, and Works -- English-Sanskrit Glossary -- Sanskrit-English Glossary -- Index N2 - "A pervasive form of reasoning exists in Indian philosophy. Known as arthâpatti, this epistemic instrument is crucial to Mimamsa philosophers, as well as a point of controversy for Nyaya and Buddhist philosophers, yet to date it has received less attention than perception, inference, and testimony. This collection presents a one-of-a-kind reference resource for understanding this form of reasoning in Indian philosophy. It assembles translations of central primary texts by Kumarila Bhatta, Prabhakara Misra, Jayanta Bhatta, Udayana and Gangésa Upadhyaya, together with newly-commissioned essays on research topics. These readable translations of Sanskrit works are accompanied by critical notes which introduce arthâpatti, offer historical context, and clarify the philosophical debates surrounding it. Showing how arthâpatti is used as a way to reason about the basic unseen causes driving language use, cause-and-effect relationships, as well as to interpret ambiguous or figurative texts, this book demonstrates the importance of this epistemic instrument in both contemporary Anglo-analytic and classical Indian epistemology, language, and logic"-- ER -