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they attribute to the will of a god. Accordingly, when we have seen that nothing can be created out of nothing, we shall then have a clearer picture of the path ahead, the problem of how things are created and occasioned with the aid of the gods. (Book 1, p. 31). The proposition is said to have been advanced first by Melissus (fifth century BCE), a Greek philosopher. See Rosenthal and Yudin, p. 492. Cārvāka Fragment, I.2. For sources etc. see Ramkrishna Bhattacharya 2002e. p. 603. The word jāņayā has been explained by the Dipikā as jñānaka=panditammanya, one who considers himself to be a scholar (but is not). There is a variant reading:āvare for jāņayā / jāņagā. Commentators take this to mean another sect of Buddhists, but the doctrine is more akin to materialism than Buddhism. Sīlāňka glosses on āvare, but also refers to the reading jāņagā and explains it as follows: tatrāpyayam artho jānakā' jñānino vayam kiletyabhimānāgnidagdhāh santa evam āhuriti
samvandhaniyam (p.18) 7. DN, part 1., p. 48; trans. TSDN, p.83. 8. SKSVr, p.p. 13-14. Sīlānka also refers to a passage from
Br. Up. (2.4. 12): vijñānaghana evaitebhyo bhūtebhyaḥ samutthyāya tānyevānu vinaśyati, na pretyasamjñāstī, “The pure Intellingence comes out of these elements and is destroyed with them, there is no awareness after death." The same passage has been quoted among others by Jayantabhațța, NM, part 1, ch. 3, pp. 387-88 and Sāyaṇa
in SDS, ch.1, p.4. See C/L, pp. 157, 248. 9. The Mahabodhi Jataka (Jataka 528), Vol. 5, pp. 228,
239, 246. 10. SKSVr, p. 14. Sīlānka also quotes a verse attributed to
the svabhāvavādin-s : kantakasya ca tikşņatvan, mayūrasya vicitratā/ varņāśca tāmracūļānām, svabhāvena bhavanti hill The sharpness of the thorn, the variety of the peacock
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