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  • Nyāya Sūtra – on Philosophical Method: Sanskrit Text, Translation, and Commentary

    Nyāya Sūtra – on Philosophical Method by van Bijlert, Victor A.;

    Sanskrit Text, Translation, and Commentary

    Series: Routledge Hindu Studies Series;

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    Product details:

    • Edition number 1
    • Publisher Routledge
    • Date of Publication 28 November 2025

    • ISBN 9781032758398
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages260 pages
    • Size 234x156 mm
    • Language English
    • 700

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    Short description:

    Nyāya Sūtra offers a new English translation of the text ascribed to Akṣapāda, an Indian philosopher who lived around the beginning of the Common Era. This book will be of interest to Indian philosophy, world philosophies, epistemology, philosophical method, soteriology, rationalism, spirituality, Hinduism and religious studies.

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    Long description:

    Nyāya Sūtra offers a new English translation of the text ascribed to Akṣapāda, an Indian philosopher who lived around the beginning of the Common Era. The translation is accompanied by the original Sanskrit text and an original commentary.


    The commentary explains every sūtra separately and identifies the sources of the Nyāya Sūtra. It analyses the way older ideas on epistemology, logic, and soteriology were presented as a new coherent system of thought. The book puts forward the main goal of the Nyāya Sūtra: to define what it considered the basic tenets of a soteriology and how the goal of this soteriology could be reached by rationally applying epistemological and logical methods to finding out the truth. In turn, this truth was thought to lead to the ultimate soteriological goal of freedom from suffering. Showing the coherence of the text and its ultimate goal being soteriological, the new commentary also discusses many scholarly issues regarding the Nyāya Sūtra and its position in the history of Indian philosophy.


    This book will be of interest to researchers studying Indian philosophy, world philosophies, epistemology, logic, philosophical method, art of debate, soteriology, rationalism, spirituality, Hinduism, Indian religions, and religious studies.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction 1


    Chapter 1a 11


    The use 11


    Means of valid cognition 13


    Objects worth knowing 16


    On the method, first part 21


    Established tenets 23


    The method defined 25


    Further parts of the method 33


    Chapter 1b 36


    Verbalised forms 36


    Fallacious reasons 37


    Deliberate misinterpretation 39


    General inferential mistakes 42


    Chapter 2a 44


    Doubt 44


    General characteristics of the means of valid cognition 47


    Definition of perception 54


    Perception is inference 57


    Whole made up of parts 58


    Inference 60


    Present 62


    Comparison 63


    Statement in general 66


    Statement in detail 69


    Chapter 2b 73


    Four means of valid cognition 73


    Non-eternity of sound 78


    Modifications of sound 87


    Ascertaining the meaning of words 94


    Chapter 3a 99


    The different senses 99


    The self is separate from the body 100


    The organ of sight is not single 102


    The self is different from the mind 104


    The self is eternal 105


    Physical body 109


    Senses derive from the elements 110


    Differences between the sense organs 115


    Sense objects 119


    Chapter 3b 126


    Understanding is not eternal 126


    Momentariness in general 131


    Understanding as a quality of the self 134


    Understanding springs up and comes to a final end 144


    Understanding not a quality of the body 145


    Mind 149


    The body brought about by unseen causes 151


    Chapter 4a 157


    Worldly activities and moral flaws 157


    Three types of moral flaws 157


    Hereafter 159


    The material cause is emptiness 161


    The material cause is the Lord 162


    Things come into being without cause 164


    Refuting that everything is impermanent 165


    Refuting that everything is permanent 166


    Refuting that everything is totally particular 168


    Refuting the emptiness of everything 170


    Refuting enumerations 172


    Fruits of action 174


    Suffering 178


    Final liberation 179


    Chapter 4b 186


    True knowledge 186


    Parts and wholes consisting of parts 187


    That which is without parts 193


    Refuting the breaking up of outer objects 196


    Increasing true knowledge 201


    Protecting true knowledge 205


    Chapter 5a 207


    Fallacious indications of a true counter-position 208


    Six rejoinders 213


    Two rejoinders 218


    Infinite regress and a generally perceived fact that is contrary 219


    Non-emergence 221


    Doubt 222


    Subsection 222


    Absence of a reason 223


    Implication 224


    Non-differentiation 224


    What is truly possible 225


    Perception 226


    Non-perception 226


    What is not eternal 227


    What is eternal 228


    Effect 229


    Six positions in a fallacious debate 230


    Chapter 5b 234


    Five grounds for losing an argument 234


    Four grounds for losing an argument 238


    Three grounds for losing an argument 239


    Repetitiveness 240


    Inability to give an answer 241


    Assenting to the opinion of the opponent 242


    Unusual statements 243


    Bibliography 245


    Index 249

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