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XVI
Contents
ive Reviewure :
f Nyaya
372
CHAPTER IX MĪMĀMSĀ PHILOSOPHY
PAGE I A Comparative Review . . . . . . . 367 2 The Mimāmsā Literature.
369 3 The Paratah-prāmānya doctrine of Nyāya and the Svatah-prāmānya
doctrine of Mīmāmsā . . . . 4 The place of Sense-organs in Perception . .
375 5 Indeterminate and Determinate Perception 6 Some Ontological Problems connected with the Doct
ception . . 7 The Nature of Knowledge
382 8 The Psychology of Illusion
sychology of musion . . . . . 9 Inference . . . . 10 Upamána, Arthāpatti
391 11 Sabda-pramāņa
394 12 The Pramāņa of Non-perception (anupalabdhi)
397 13 Self, Salvation, and God .
399 14 Mimāmsā as Philosophy and Mimāmsā as Ritualism
403
378
379
384
387
Il
CHAPTER X
THE SANKARA SCHOOL OF VEDĀNTA
406
408
429
I Comprehension of the Philosophical Issues more essential than the Dialectic of Controversy . .
phical situation: a Review . . . . 3. Vedānta Literature . . . . . . .
. . . 418 4 Vedānta in Gąudapāda .
420 5 Vedānta and Sankara (788–820 A.D.) 6 The main idea of the Vedānta philosophy .
439 7 In what sense is the world-appearance false?
• 443 8 The nature of the world-appearance, phenomena
445 9 The Definition of Ajñāna (nescience) . . 10 Ajñāna established by Perception and Inference .
454 11 Locus and Object of Ajñāna, Ahamkāra and Antahkarana 12 Anirvācyavāda and the Vedānta dialectic
461 13 The Theory of Causation . . . . .
465 14 Vedānta theory of Perception and Inference
C
. . 15 Atman, Jiva, Išvara, Ekajīvavāda and Drstisșstivāda
· 470
. . 16 Vedānta theory of Illusion
cination 17 Vedānta Ethics and Vedānta Emancipation
. . . .
485 .
. . . . . 489 18 Vedānta and other Indian systems.
492
452
457
474
INDEX .
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. 495