Universität Wien

142540 SE Udayana, founding father of Navya Nyaya, as a commentator (2021S)

Selected topics from the Nyayavarttikatatparyaparisuddhi and Kiranavali

Prüfungsimmanente Lehrveranstaltung

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max. 36 Teilnehmer*innen
Sprache: Englisch

Lehrende

Termine

Mi 12.00-13:30, digital.


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Ziele, Inhalte und Methode der Lehrveranstaltung

The great logician Udayana, mostly called reverentially Udayanācārya, is rightly considered the founding father of Navya Nyāya by many Indian and non-Indian scholars and played a crucial role in the defense of the authority of the Nyāyaśāstra against the powerful Buddhist epistemologists, which constituted a major inner or intellectual motivation of the classical and early medieval commentators on the Nyāyasūtra whose works have been preserved as well as of the authors of independent Nyāya treatises such as Bhaṭṭa Jayanta and Bhāsarvajña. The frequent references by Buddhist authors of this period to other, now lost commentaries allow the inference that their authors as well participated in this defense. This fruitful controversy reached its culmination in the early medieval period, in the eleventh century. Now the debate is for the first time conducted in truly independently designed treatises, foremost those composed by Udayana. Udayana was obviously dissatisfied with the many commentaries and sub-commentaries on the Nyāyasūtra which were after all formally and structurally bound by the given, partially very archaic formulations and argumentation of their root text(s), and no longer convinced about the effectiveness of works belonging to this genre when the logically impeccable establishment of the central metaphysical presuppositions of the Nyāya tradition against the formidable Buddhists was concerned. We therefore have Udayana’s famous treatises establishing with a strictly logical and terminologically systematic approach the existence of an individual and permanent Self (ātman) and of an omniscient eternal creator-god, respectively, namely, the Ātmatattvaviveka and the Nyāyakusumāñjali. Additionally, in two small works, the Lakṣaṇamālā and the Lakṣaṇāvali, he presents exhaustive definitions pertaining to the central topics of the Nyāya and Vaiśeṣika doctrinal edifices.
However, Udayana also devoted himself to writing a commentary on Vācaspati Miśra’s commentary on the Nyāyavārttika, the Nyāyavārttikatātparyaṭīkā (NVTṬ); this occurred demonstrably – and significantly – after he had completed his own independent treatises. The Nyāyavārttikatātparyapariśuddhi (NVTP) or Nyāyanibandha, even though primarily a commentary on the NVTṬ, occasionally also relates directly to the two other, earlier works of the so-called Nyāyacaturgranthikā and to the Nyāyasūtra itself. Beyond that, it contains longer independent deliberations and argumentations on selected topics that especially demonstrate Udayana’s logical, terminological and stylistic–argumentative innovations. When it comes to the presentation and interpretation of sophisticated objections (jāti) and points of defeat in a debate (nigrahasthāna), however, which are treated in the fifth adhyāya of the Nyāyasūtra, Udayana decided to better write his own, direct commentary on the sūtra-s, the Nyāyapariśiṣṭa.
Moreover, Udayana wrote a commentary on what had somehow become the foundational work of the Vaiśeṣika tradition, replacing the Vaiśeṣikasūtra in terms of popularity, namely, Praśastapāda’s Padārthadharmasaṅgraha (PDhS), called Kiraṇāvalī (Kir). In this way, Udayana’s oeuvre reflects his perception of the close relationship of the śāstra-s of Nyāya and Vaiśeṣika and their convergence in the middle of the medieval period.
In this seminar, we will be studying the following sample passages: NVTP p. 423, line 2 to p. 425, line 5 (relating to Nyāyadarśanam [ND] pp. 697–698), and NVTP p. 430, line 19 to p. 431, line 7 (relating to ND pp. 697–714); Kir p. 53, line 24 to p. 56, line (on the initial sections 48 to 54 of the PDhS on the element wind [vāyu]) and, if the available time will allow it, Kir p. 170, line 3 to p. 171, line 8 (on the initial sections 211 to 212 of the PDhS on cognition [buddhi] as a quality).

Art der Leistungskontrolle und erlaubte Hilfsmittel

Participants are expected to prepare the assigned texts comprehensively and in depth, and to translate and interpret them independently, based on their exploration of the thematic context by means of the relevant secondary literature. Furthermore, participants are encouraged to independently consult and present additional primary materials in class and to participate in the critical discussion of selected secondary sources in the sessions.

Mindestanforderungen und Beurteilungsmaßstab

50% of the evaluation is based on the oral and written performance during the course, consisting of the thorough preparation of the underlying texts, the presentation of own translations in class, and the active participation in the analysis, interpretation and problematization of the read materials (20%), as well as of a short written assignment (mini-essay or translation, book, chapter or essay review, etc.) (15%). A further 15% of the assessment basis is covered by an oral presentation. The seminar paper makes up its remaining 50%. The topic of the seminar paper (about 15 pages) related to the course topic has to be chosen in consultation with the course instructor.
Regular attendance is obligatory and essential. If more than three sessions are missed, a negative evaluation will be made.
This is a course designed for second-semester students of the MA program “Languages and Cultures of South Asia” (MASK). The recommended prerequisite for participation is the completion of module MASK 1.

Prüfungsstoff

Not applicable.

Literatur

Primary textual basis:
Amarendramohan Tarkatirtha (ed.), Nyāyadarśanam with Vātsyāyana’s Bhāṣya, Uddyotakara’s Vārttika, Vācaspati Miśra’s Tātparyaṭikā & Viśvanātha’s Vṛtti. Calcutta Sanskrit Series 29. Calcutta 1944. (= ND)
Anantalal Thakur and J. S. Jetly (eds.), Nyāyālaṅkāra (Pañcaprasthānanyāya¬mahā-tarkaviṣamapadavyākhyā). A Commentary on the Five Classical Texts of the Nyāya Philosophy of Abhayatilaka. Gaekwad’s Oriental Series 169. Baroda 1981.
Anantalal Thakur (ed.), Nyāyavārttikatātparyaṭīkā of Vācaspatimiśra. Nyāyacaturgranthikā 3. New Delhi 1996. (= NVTṬ)
Anantalal Thakur (ed.), Nyāyavārttikatātparyapariśuddhi of Udayanācārya. Nyāyacaturgranthikā 4. New Delhi 1996. (= NVTP)
Jitendra S. Jetly (ed.), Praśastapādabhāṣyam with the Commentary Kiraṇāvalī of Udayanācarya. Gaekwad’s Oriental Series 154. Baroda 1991 (reprint of the original edition of 1971). (= Kir)
Narendra Chandra Vedantatirtha (ed.), Kiraṇāvalī of Udayanācāryya. Bibliotheca Indica 200. Calcutta 1956.
Selected secondary literature:
Bhattacharya, D. (1958). History of Navya-Nyāya in Mithilā. Mithila Institute Series 2. Darbhanga (Chapter I: “Udayanācārya and his Predecessors”).
Bhattacharyya, S. (2004). Development of Nyāya Philosophy and its Social Context. History of Science, Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization II, 3. Delhi (Section IV: “Udayana”).
Chemparathy, G. (1972). An Indian Rational Theology. Publications of the De Nobili Research Library 1. Wien.
Gopinath Kaviraj (1982). The History and Bibliography of Nyāya-Vaiśeṣika Literature. Princess of Wales Sarasvati Bhavana Studies Reprint Series 2. Varanasi (reprinted from Vol. 3-5 and 7, 1924-1926 and 1929) (pp. 23–26).
Laine, J. (1998). ‘Udayana (11th century)’, in Edward Craig (ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol. 9. London (pp. 512-513).
Matilal, B.K. (1977). Nyāya-Vaiśeṣika. A History of Indian Literature VI, 2. Wiesbaden (pp. 96–100).
Phillips, St. H. (1995). Classical Indian Metaphysics. Refutations of Realism and the Emergence of “New Logic”. Chicago and La Salle, Illinois (Chapter 2: “Early Systematic Realism”).
Tachikawa, M. (1981). The Structure of the World in Udayana’s Realism. A Study of the Lakṣaṇāvalī and the Kiraṇāvalī. Studies of Classical India 4. Dordrecht etc.
Thakur, A. (1960–1961). “The Lakṣaṇamālā of Udayanācārya”. Bhāratīya Vidyā 20–21 (pp. 171–181)
Thakur, A. (2003). Origin and Development of the Vaiśeṣika System. History of Science, Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization II, 4. Delhi (pp. 286–298, 304).
Further literature will be pointed out while the seminar is in progress.

Zuordnung im Vorlesungsverzeichnis

MASK5

Letzte Änderung: Mo 01.03.2021 05:08