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Being primarily analytical, one examines the doctrines they hold to be true and engages in discussions filled with doubt and resolution. Often, they overturn established doctrines through argumentation and establish new principles, or make improvements upon them. The summary is that the Jain tradition has contributed significantly to preserving the philosophy and ethics inherited from previous generations, more than it has to new creations.
Choice of topics: In some philosophies, the description of a subject is primarily focused on Mimamsa. For instance, the Vaisheshika, Samkhya, and Vedanta philosophies. The Vaisheshika philosophy, from a parental perspective, describes the world by examining how many fundamental substances exist, their nature, and the other related substances. It mainly conducts an analysis of the world's primary entities. The Samkhya philosophy describes nature and Purusha and primarily analyzes the fundamental elements of the world. Similarly, the Vedanta philosophy primarily focuses on the fundamental Brahman of the world.
In the beliefs of the Digambara sect, no significant changes have occurred. However, the commentators of the Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita, and Brahma Sutras independently discuss to such an extent that a philosophical gap between the East and West has emerged. In this, the qualities and the essence are not indicative. The statement is merely sufficient to describe the state of affairs. Qualities and essence are relative and may be present in a tradition but may not necessarily be the case.