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VEDÂNTA-SOTRAS.
kaniyatva-vådin) also must admit that the actual process is that of one thing appearing as another.
Those also who hold other theories as to the kind of cognition under discussion (of which the shell, mistaken for silver, is an instance) must-whatsoever effort they may make to avoid it—admit that their theory finally implies the appearing of one thing as another. The so-called asatkhyâti-view implies that the non-existing appears as existing ; the atmakhyati-view, that the Self-which here means 'cognition '-appears as a thing; and the akhyati-view, that the attribute of one thing appears as that of another, that two acts of cognition appear as one, and-on the view of the non-existence of the object--that the non-existing appears as existing?
Moreover, if you say that there is originated silver of a totally new inexplicable kind, you are bound to assign the cause of this origination. This cause cannot be the perception of the silver ; for the perception has the silver for its object, and hence has no existence before the origination of the silver. And should you say that the perception, having arisen without an object, produces the silver and thereupon makes it its object, we truly do not know what to say to such excellent reasoning !-Let it then be said that the cause is some defect in the senseorgan.—This, too, is inadmissible ; for a defect abiding in the percipient person cannot produce an objective effect.Nor can the organs of sense (apart from defects) give rise to the silver; for they are causes of cognitions only (not of things cognised). Nor, again, the sense-organs in so far as modified by some defect; for they also can only produce modifications in what is effected by them, i.e. cognition.And the hypothesis of a beginningless, false agñana constituting the general material cause of all erroneous cognitions has been refuted above.
How is it, moreover, that this new and inexplicable thing
1 For a full explanation of the nature of these khyatis,' see A. Venis' translation of the Vedanta Siddhanta Muktavali (Reprint from the Pandit, p. 130 ff.).
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