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Gandhi has dwelt upon Ahiṁsā at such a length that it requires a separate paper to present it in its various aspects. What Gandhi contributed to the doctrine of means is not the doctrine of Ahimsā as such, but its universal application to every aspect of life, social, political and economic, and so on.
Thus Gandhi is a philosopher of fundamental human situations and a mystic of activistic type.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
REFERENCES Gandhi, M.K. My Religion. Datta D.M., The Philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi p. 38. Raju, P.T., Idealistic Thought of India, p. 297. Dhawan, The Political Philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi P. 55. Sogani, K.C., Ethical Doctrines in Jainism. Clark, W.H., The Psychology of Religion, p. 327.
Alston, Philosophy of Languages, p.6 'Ibid, P. 6 .
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7. 8.
Spiritual Awakening (Samyagdarśana) and Other Essays
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