THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE "NAYA" METHOD OF THE JAINAS

[...]the comprehensive viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension without [making] any distinction between such an individual [thing] furnished with particular features or [things]THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE NAYA METHOD 383belonging to its class.17 [2] The collective viewpoint [consists in] the comp...

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description [...]the comprehensive viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension without [making] any distinction between such an individual [thing] furnished with particular features or [things]THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE NAYA METHOD 383belonging to its class.17 [2] The collective viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension of, [say,] present, past and future pots, distinguished by the name and other [standpoints (niks. epa)], whether with regard to one [individual] or to many [things belonging to its class].18[3] The empirical viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension of precisely such [present, past and future things like pots, grasped by the collective viewpoint], comprehensible to common people and experts, [and] accessible to the conventional practice just as they are gross objects.19 [4] The direct viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension of precisely such [particular things grasped by the empirical viewpoint] which are existent [here] (sc. which are being perceived here) and are present (existing now).20 [5] The accurate verbal viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension of precisely those [objects, grasped by means of the direct viewpoint, like] pots, that are present, that comprise one of [such categories like] name etc. [and] that are already well-known.21 [6] The etymological viewpoint [consists in] the variance (sc. lack of any equivalence) in the understanding of precisely such present [particular things grasped by the accurate verbal viewpoint], like [the case of two expressions:] contemplation and meditation.22 [7] The factual [viewpoint] means the grasping of the meaning mutually dependent on subtle momentary manifestation [of an object] and the meaning [of the word denoting it, but] only [in the case] of these [present objects grasped by the etymological viewpoint].2324What is conspicuous in the above account of the sevenfold description is that each viewpoint is directly related to the one preceding it and represents a further restriction of the point of reference. The comprehensive [viewpoint] ... has as [its] scope existence and non-existence.40As the second step, the scope of the comprehensive viewpoint (naigama-naya) is narrowed down by excluding the particular and laying stress on the universal alone. [...]saying that Falstaff met Mr. Ford is tantamount to saying that Falstaff met Mr. Brook, or x follows y and y is preceded by x refer to the same arrangement of events, or Hesperus, as a western star seen in the evening, and Phosphorus, a light-bringi
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The comprehensive [viewpoint] ... has as [its] scope existence and non-existence.40As the second step, the scope of the comprehensive viewpoint (naigama-naya) is narrowed down by excluding the particular and laying stress on the universal alone. [...]saying that Falstaff met Mr. Ford is tantamount to saying that Falstaff met Mr. Brook, or x follows y and y is preceded by x refer to the same arrangement of events, or Hesperus, as a western star seen in the evening, and Phosphorus, a light-bringing star seen in the morning, both refer to Venus.41 To assign the truth-value of an utterance expressing the identity, users of the language agree upon a conventionally determined selection of verbal expressions that denote a particular individual.What happens in the sixth indexed level of description, in the case of the etymological viewpoint (samabhir ud. ha-naya), is drawing the distinction among synonymous expressions or (apparent) coreferential utterances, which have up to now been considered equivalent. [...]a statement] inasmuch as it does not demonstrate the whole real thing is called the incomplete account, which means that it merely shows [selected] properties that are possibly there in consonance with the opinion of (sc. according to) a [respective] viewpoint.36 The index parameter t, which refers to the present moment and means now, is also a variable (not a constant!), for clearly the actual meaning of the description now steadily changes along the time axis.37 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.1618: tath a vi sesmatena sambhavad-dharmancanarpita-nayah. . tatr anarpita-naya-mate tulyam eva r upa m sarves. a m siddh an a m. a-gr ahin. o rpita-nay ah. , s am anya-gr ahin. a ssiddhair eva tulya iti.bhagavatam. arpita-naya-mate tv eka-dvi-try-adi-samaya-siddhah. sva-sam ana-samaya-38 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.2526: tatra rju-s utr adaya s catv aro nay a s caritra-laks. an. ay ahkriyaya eva pradhanyam abhyupagacchanti, tasya eva moks. a m pratyavyavaharita-.trayan. am api moks. a-k aran. atvam icchanti...karan. atv at. naigama-sa mgraha-vyavah ar as tu yady api c aritra- sruta-samyaktv an a m39 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.19.40 SVM.28.205206 (p. 167.1011): ... naigamo bh av abh ava-bh umikatv ad bh uma-.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0022-1791</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1573-0395</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1023/A:1017958207684</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers</publisher><subject>Asian religions ; Circles ; Comprehension ; Consonance ; Epistemology ; Etymology ; History and sciences of religions ; Jains ; Linguistic conventions ; Logic ; Meaning ; Object pronouns ; Ontology ; Philosophical object ; Philosophical thought ; Philosophy ; Predication ; Pronunciation ; Referents ; Religious thought ; Stress ; Truth ; Vedic religions. 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Sikhism</subject><ispartof>Journal of Indian philosophy, 2001-06, Vol.29 (3), p.379-403</ispartof><rights>2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers</rights><rights>2002 INIST-CNRS</rights><rights>Kluwer Academic Publishers 2001</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><linktopdf>$$Uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/23496891$$EPDF$$P50$$Gjstor$$H</linktopdf><linktohtml>$$Uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/23496891$$EHTML$$P50$$Gjstor$$H</linktohtml><link.rule.ids>314,780,784,803,27923,27924,58016,58249</link.rule.ids><backlink>$$Uhttp://pascal-francis.inist.fr/vibad/index.php?action=getRecordDetail&amp;idt=14213998$$DView record in Pascal Francis$$Hfree_for_read</backlink></links><search><creatorcontrib>BALCEROWICZ, PIOTR</creatorcontrib><title>THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE "NAYA" METHOD OF THE JAINAS</title><title>Journal of Indian philosophy</title><description>[...]the comprehensive viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension without [making] any distinction between such an individual [thing] furnished with particular features or [things]THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE NAYA METHOD 383belonging to its class.17 [2] The collective viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension of, [say,] present, past and future pots, distinguished by the name and other [standpoints (niks. epa)], whether with regard to one [individual] or to many [things belonging to its class].18[3] The empirical viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension of precisely such [present, past and future things like pots, grasped by the collective viewpoint], comprehensible to common people and experts, [and] accessible to the conventional practice just as they are gross objects.19 [4] The direct viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension of precisely such [particular things grasped by the empirical viewpoint] which are existent [here] (sc. which are being perceived here) and are present (existing now).20 [5] The accurate verbal viewpoint [consists in] the comprehension of precisely those [objects, grasped by means of the direct viewpoint, like] pots, that are present, that comprise one of [such categories like] name etc. [and] that are already well-known.21 [6] The etymological viewpoint [consists in] the variance (sc. lack of any equivalence) in the understanding of precisely such present [particular things grasped by the accurate verbal viewpoint], like [the case of two expressions:] contemplation and meditation.22 [7] The factual [viewpoint] means the grasping of the meaning mutually dependent on subtle momentary manifestation [of an object] and the meaning [of the word denoting it, but] only [in the case] of these [present objects grasped by the etymological viewpoint].2324What is conspicuous in the above account of the sevenfold description is that each viewpoint is directly related to the one preceding it and represents a further restriction of the point of reference. The comprehensive [viewpoint] ... has as [its] scope existence and non-existence.40As the second step, the scope of the comprehensive viewpoint (naigama-naya) is narrowed down by excluding the particular and laying stress on the universal alone. [...]saying that Falstaff met Mr. Ford is tantamount to saying that Falstaff met Mr. Brook, or x follows y and y is preceded by x refer to the same arrangement of events, or Hesperus, as a western star seen in the evening, and Phosphorus, a light-bringing star seen in the morning, both refer to Venus.41 To assign the truth-value of an utterance expressing the identity, users of the language agree upon a conventionally determined selection of verbal expressions that denote a particular individual.What happens in the sixth indexed level of description, in the case of the etymological viewpoint (samabhir ud. ha-naya), is drawing the distinction among synonymous expressions or (apparent) coreferential utterances, which have up to now been considered equivalent. [...]a statement] inasmuch as it does not demonstrate the whole real thing is called the incomplete account, which means that it merely shows [selected] properties that are possibly there in consonance with the opinion of (sc. according to) a [respective] viewpoint.36 The index parameter t, which refers to the present moment and means now, is also a variable (not a constant!), for clearly the actual meaning of the description now steadily changes along the time axis.37 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.1618: tath a vi sesmatena sambhavad-dharmancanarpita-nayah. . tatr anarpita-naya-mate tulyam eva r upa m sarves. a m siddh an a m. a-gr ahin. o rpita-nay ah. , s am anya-gr ahin. a ssiddhair eva tulya iti.bhagavatam. arpita-naya-mate tv eka-dvi-try-adi-samaya-siddhah. sva-sam ana-samaya-38 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.2526: tatra rju-s utr adaya s catv aro nay a s caritra-laks. an. ay ahkriyaya eva pradhanyam abhyupagacchanti, tasya eva moks. a m pratyavyavaharita-.trayan. am api moks. a-k aran. atvam icchanti...karan. atv at. naigama-sa mgraha-vyavah ar as tu yady api c aritra- sruta-samyaktv an a m39 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.19.40 SVM.28.205206 (p. 167.1011): ... naigamo bh av abh ava-bh umikatv ad bh uma-.</description><subject>Asian religions</subject><subject>Circles</subject><subject>Comprehension</subject><subject>Consonance</subject><subject>Epistemology</subject><subject>Etymology</subject><subject>History and sciences of religions</subject><subject>Jains</subject><subject>Linguistic conventions</subject><subject>Logic</subject><subject>Meaning</subject><subject>Object pronouns</subject><subject>Ontology</subject><subject>Philosophical object</subject><subject>Philosophical thought</subject><subject>Philosophy</subject><subject>Predication</subject><subject>Pronunciation</subject><subject>Referents</subject><subject>Religious thought</subject><subject>Stress</subject><subject>Truth</subject><subject>Vedic religions. 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The comprehensive [viewpoint] ... has as [its] scope existence and non-existence.40As the second step, the scope of the comprehensive viewpoint (naigama-naya) is narrowed down by excluding the particular and laying stress on the universal alone. [...]saying that Falstaff met Mr. Ford is tantamount to saying that Falstaff met Mr. Brook, or x follows y and y is preceded by x refer to the same arrangement of events, or Hesperus, as a western star seen in the evening, and Phosphorus, a light-bringing star seen in the morning, both refer to Venus.41 To assign the truth-value of an utterance expressing the identity, users of the language agree upon a conventionally determined selection of verbal expressions that denote a particular individual.What happens in the sixth indexed level of description, in the case of the etymological viewpoint (samabhir ud. ha-naya), is drawing the distinction among synonymous expressions or (apparent) coreferential utterances, which have up to now been considered equivalent. [...]a statement] inasmuch as it does not demonstrate the whole real thing is called the incomplete account, which means that it merely shows [selected] properties that are possibly there in consonance with the opinion of (sc. according to) a [respective] viewpoint.36 The index parameter t, which refers to the present moment and means now, is also a variable (not a constant!), for clearly the actual meaning of the description now steadily changes along the time axis.37 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.1618: tath a vi sesmatena sambhavad-dharmancanarpita-nayah. . tatr anarpita-naya-mate tulyam eva r upa m sarves. a m siddh an a m. a-gr ahin. o rpita-nay ah. , s am anya-gr ahin. a ssiddhair eva tulya iti.bhagavatam. arpita-naya-mate tv eka-dvi-try-adi-samaya-siddhah. sva-sam ana-samaya-38 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.2526: tatra rju-s utr adaya s catv aro nay a s caritra-laks. an. ay ahkriyaya eva pradhanyam abhyupagacchanti, tasya eva moks. a m pratyavyavaharita-.trayan. am api moks. a-k aran. atvam icchanti...karan. atv at. naigama-sa mgraha-vyavah ar as tu yady api c aritra- sruta-samyaktv an a m39 JTBh.2 8, p. 23.19.40 SVM.28.205206 (p. 167.1011): ... naigamo bh av abh ava-bh umikatv ad bh uma-.</abstract><cop>Dordrecht</cop><pub>Kluwer Academic Publishers</pub><doi>10.1023/A:1017958207684</doi><tpages>25</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Asian religions
Circles
Comprehension
Consonance
Epistemology
Etymology
History and sciences of religions
Jains
Linguistic conventions
Logic
Meaning
Object pronouns
Ontology
Philosophical object
Philosophical thought
Philosophy
Predication
Pronunciation
Referents
Religious thought
Stress
Truth
Vedic religions. Hinduism. Jainism. Sikhism
title THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE "NAYA" METHOD OF THE JAINAS
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