Book Title: First Steps to Jainism Part 2
Author(s): Sancheti Asso Lal, Manakmal Bhandari
Publisher: Sancheti Trust Jodhpur

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Page 154
________________ 140 First Steps to Jainism dpoint of interception (of their present state of being infernal after the expiry of that form of existence). A third pair of nayas is also mentioned in the same text, viz. vāvahāriya-naya (Skt. vyāvahārikanaya, the popular standpoint), and necchaiva-naya (naiścayikanaya, the factual or scientific standpoint). Thus from the popular standpoint the drone is black in colour, but factually or scientifically speaking, it is possessed of all the five colours, viz. black, blue, red, yellow and white (op. cit, XVIII. 6. 108). 3. (c). Saptabhangi As the third stage of development of the concept of anekānta, we find a primitive saptabhangf and syädvāda in the Bhagavati Sūtra XII. 10.211-226. Here the things are judged under the categories of 'self' (āyā Skt. ātman) and 'notself' (no-aya Skt. noätman). An object is characterized as 'self' in some respect (siya ayā), 'not-self' in some respect (siya no-āyā), and 'indescribable, that is, both self and not-self' in some respect (siya avattavvam aya' ti ya no-aya' tiya). These three attributes are predicated of an object, noncomposite or composite, respectively from the standpoints of existent characters, non-existent characters, and existent-cum-nonexistent characters. In the case of the objects that are noncomposite (for instance, a monad), the attributes are only three in number, viz. self, not-self and indescribable. Here 'indescribable' means the impossibility of the object being spoken of or described exclusively as 'self' or not-self', because of the same object being both (self and not-self) at the same time. These three attributes however, become six in the case of a dyad (a composite body of two space-points) as follows: (1) self, (2) not-self, (3) indescribable, (4) self and not-self (one attribute for each space-point), (5) self and indescribable (one attribute for each space-point). (6) notself and indescribable (one attribute for each space-point). These six ways again become seven in the case of a triad (a composite body of three space points) in the following way: (1) to (6) as above, and (7) self, not self and indescribable (one attribute for each of the three space points). Here the fourth, fifth and sixth ways have each two more subdivisions. Thus the fourth, viz. self and not-self, has the following two additional subdivisions-(1) self (for two space-points) and not-self (for the remaining one space point). The fifth and sixth ways also have similar subdivisions. The text referred to above gives the divisions and subdivisions of the tetrad, pentad and hexad also. The basic ways however do never exceed the number seven as in the case of the triad, though the number of subdivisions gradually go up on account of the various For Private & Personal Use Only Jain Education International www.jainelibrary.org

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