Structure and Authorship of the KusumÀ·jali
This paper suggests that the classic of Indian theology, the Nyāya-kusumâñjali is in fact two texts: an earlier treatise in 65 ślokas, and Udayana’s (mostly prose) commentary on it. Internal evidence consists in: (a) the ślokas read as a continuous text; (b) there are extremely long prose passages w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Indian philosophy 2022-11, Vol.50 (5), p.803-819 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper suggests that the classic of Indian theology, the
Nyāya-kusumâñjali
is in fact two texts: an earlier treatise in 65
ślokas,
and Udayana’s (mostly prose) commentary on it. Internal evidence consists in: (a) the
ślokas
read as a continuous text; (b) there are extremely long prose passages without verses; (c) Udayana does not comment on his own verses, only on the
ślokas;
(d) the basic plan of the two texts are markedly different; (e) different content of some chapters: ch. 1 about karma
vs.
rituals to reach heaven, ch. 2 about creation
vs.
eternality of sound, and in ch. 5 Udayana doubles the arguments for God; (f) Udayana deals extensively with atoms and yogic perception and rejects the concept of
śakti,
in contrast to the verses; (g) there are a few manifest disagreements (on
creatio continua
and the sacredness of god-images). External evidence for the thesis: (a) there are mss. of the verses only; (b) there are many commentaries on the verses only; (c) these commentators—with a single exception—do not seem to take Udayana for the author of the verses; (d) the first commentary on Udayana names his own work a subcommentary; (e) in his other works, it is atypical of Udayana to insert
ślokas
in his text; (f) a legend of the Bhāduṙī Brahmins stating that Udayana “received” the
Kusumâñjali
. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1791 1573-0395 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10781-022-09520-6 |