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Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, Volume 21: Buddhist Philosophy from 600 to 750 A.D.

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Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, Volume 21: Buddhist Philosophy from 600 to 750 A.D.

Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies (Vol. 10): Jain Philosophy (Pt. 1)

1,990.00

author : Dalsukh Malvania, Jayandra Soni
Publisher : Motilal Banarsidass Publishing House
Binding : Hardcover
Pages : 842
Edition : 2nd Reprint
Size : 5.5″ x 8.5″
Condition : New
Language : English
Weight : 0.0-0.5 kg
Publication Year: 2014
Country of Origin : India

Categories: ,
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Description

The philosophy of Jainism is the subject of a large body of literature, but a great deal of it consists of standard summary reviews that are not sufficiently accurate to bring out the uniqueness of Jain thought. The core thesis of Jain philosophy is that of anekantavada. Such a rendering by itself fails to get to the unique contribution of the Jain position, which is just that every serious account of the world contains elements of truth, but that any single linguistic expression must fail to comprehend all those patially true perspectives or viewpoints, not because those viewpoints are false, but because the complete truth is not consistently expressible in any natural language, since any such expression must necessarily involve contradictions. The Jain position leads to evident problems in assessing any of the philosophical thesis broached by a Jain-are we to take them as truth-claims, or as merely some among an indefinite incompatible ways of looking at the world? If the latter, how can a Jain saint have or gain knowledge-can he grasp collectively all the indefinite number of true theories? And if the former, what happens to the truths presumed to be contained in each of the incompatible alternative viewpoints?

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