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Difference between revisions of "Pramāṇa"

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[[Pramāṇa]] ([[sources of knowledge]], [[Sanskrit]] [[प्रमाण]] or [[pramāṇas]]) is an {{Wiki|epistemological}} term in [[Hindu]]  and [[Buddhist]] [[dialectic]], [[debate]] and {{Wiki|discourse}}.
 
[[Pramāṇa]] ([[sources of knowledge]], [[Sanskrit]] [[प्रमाण]] or [[pramāṇas]]) is an {{Wiki|epistemological}} term in [[Hindu]]  and [[Buddhist]] [[dialectic]], [[debate]] and {{Wiki|discourse}}.
  
Pramāṇavāda and [[Hetuvidyā]] ([[因明]]) can be glossed in English as [[Indian]] and [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|Epistemology}} and [[Logic]], respectively.In [[Hinduism]]
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[[Pramāṇavāda]] and [[Hetuvidyā]] ([[因明]]) can be glossed in English as [[Indian]] and [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|Epistemology}} and [[Logic]], respectively.In [[Hinduism]]
  
 
Different systems of {{Wiki|Hindu philosophy}} accept different categories of [[pramanas]].
 
Different systems of {{Wiki|Hindu philosophy}} accept different categories of [[pramanas]].
  
Pramāṇa forms one part of a [[tripuţi]] ([[trio]]) concerning pramā (the correct [[knowledge]] of any [[object]] arrived at by thorough {{Wiki|reasoning}}, [[Sanskrit]]), namely,
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[[Pramāṇa]] [[forms]] one part of a [[tripuţi]] ([[trio]]) concerning [[pramā]] (the [[correct knowledge]] of any [[object]] arrived at by thorough {{Wiki|reasoning}}, [[Sanskrit]]), namely,
  
     [[Pramātā]] (< [[pramātŗ]]), [[the subject]], [[the knower]]
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     [[Pramātā]] ([[pramātŗ]]), the [[subject]], [[the knower]]
 
     [[Pramāņa]], [[the means of obtaining the knowledge]]
 
     [[Pramāņa]], [[the means of obtaining the knowledge]]
 
     [[Prameya]], [[the object]], [[the knowable]]
 
     [[Prameya]], [[the object]], [[the knowable]]
  
Modern Buddhist schools do not use these three distinct terms particularly, but instead employ the 'three spheres' (Sanskrit: trimaṇḍala; Tibetan: 'khor gsum):
+
{{Wiki|Modern}} [[Buddhist]] schools do not use these three {{Wiki|distinct}} terms particularly, but instead employ the '[[three spheres]]' ([[Sanskrit]]: [[trimaṇḍala]]; [[Tibetan]]: '[[khor gsum]]):
  
 
     [[subject]]
 
     [[subject]]
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     [[Anumāṇa]] ([[inference]]), the [[knowledge gained by means of inference]];
 
     [[Anumāṇa]] ([[inference]]), the [[knowledge gained by means of inference]];
 
     [[Śabda]] ([[verbal testimony]]), the [[knowledge gained by verbal testimony]];
 
     [[Śabda]] ([[verbal testimony]]), the [[knowledge gained by verbal testimony]];
     [[Upamāṇa]] ([[comparison]]), the [[knowledge gained by means of analogy]]
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     [[Upamāṇa]] (comparison), the [[knowledge gained by means of analogy]]
 
     [[Arthāpatti]] ([[postulation]]), the [[knowledge gained by superimposing the known knowledge on an appearing knowledge that does not concur with the known knowledge]];
 
     [[Arthāpatti]] ([[postulation]]), the [[knowledge gained by superimposing the known knowledge on an appearing knowledge that does not concur with the known knowledge]];
 
     [[Anupalabdi]] ([[non-cognition]]), [[non-apprehension and skepticism in the face of non-apprehension]].
 
     [[Anupalabdi]] ([[non-cognition]]), [[non-apprehension and skepticism in the face of non-apprehension]].
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[[Nyaya]]
 
[[Nyaya]]
 
[[File:B5b.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:B5b.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
The [[Nyāya school]] accepts four means of obtaining [[knowledge]] ([[pramāṇa]]), viz., [[Perception]], [[Inference]], [[Comparison]] and [[Word]].
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The [[Nyāya school]] accepts four means of obtaining [[knowledge]] ([[pramāṇa]]), viz., [[Perception]], [[Inference]], Comparison and [[Word]].
 +
 
 +
    [[Perception]], called [[Pratyakṣa]], occupies the foremost position in the [[Nyaya]] {{Wiki|epistemology}}. [[Perception]] is defined by [[sense-object]] [[contact]] and is unerring. [[Perception]] can be of two types:
  
    [[Perception]], called [[Pratyakṣa]], occupies the foremost position in the [[Nyaya]] {{Wiki|epistemology}}. [[Perception]] is defined by [[sense-object]] contact and is unerring. [[Perception]] can be of two types:
 
 
         Ordinary ([[Laukika]] or [[Sādhārana]]), of six types, viz., visual-by {{Wiki|eyes}}, {{Wiki|olfactory}}-by {{Wiki|nose}}, {{Wiki|auditory}}-by {{Wiki|ears}}, {{Wiki|tactile}}-by {{Wiki|skin}}, {{Wiki|gustatory}}-by {{Wiki|tongue}} and [[mental]]-by [[mind]].
 
         Ordinary ([[Laukika]] or [[Sādhārana]]), of six types, viz., visual-by {{Wiki|eyes}}, {{Wiki|olfactory}}-by {{Wiki|nose}}, {{Wiki|auditory}}-by {{Wiki|ears}}, {{Wiki|tactile}}-by {{Wiki|skin}}, {{Wiki|gustatory}}-by {{Wiki|tongue}} and [[mental]]-by [[mind]].
        Extraordinary ([[Alaukika]] or [[Asādhārana]]), of three types, viz., [[Sāmānyalakṣana]] ([[perceiving generality from a particular object]]), [[Jñānalakṣana]] (when one sense organ can also perceive qualities not attributable to it, as when seeing a chilli, one knows that it would be bitter or hot), and [[Yogaja]] (when certain [[human]] {{Wiki|beings}}, from the [[Power]] of {{Wiki|Yoga}}, can perceive past, present and future and have supernatural abilities, either complete or some). Also, there are two modes or steps in [[perception]], viz., [[Nirvikalpa]], when one just perceives an object without being able to know its features, and [[Savikalpa]], when one is able to clearly know an object. All [[laukika]] and [[alaukika]] [[pratyakshas]] are [[savikalpa]]. There is yet another stage called [[Pratyabhijñā]], when one is able to re-recognise something on the basis of {{Wiki|memory}}.
 
  
     [[Inference]], called [[Anumāna]], is one of the most important contributions of [[Nyaya]]. It can be of two types - inference for oneself ([[Svārthānumāna]], where one does not need any formal procedure, and at the most the last three of their 5 steps), and inference for others ([[Parāthānumāna]], which requires a systematic methodology of 5 steps). Inference can also be classified into 3 types: [[Pūrvavat]] ([[inferring an unperceived effect from a perceived cause]]), [[Śeṣavat]] ([[inferring an unperceived cause from a perceived effect]]) and [[Sāmānyatodṛṣṭa]] ([[when inference is not based on causation but on uniformity of co-existence]]). A detailed analysis of error is also given, explaining when [[anumāna]] could be false.
+
        [[Extraordinary]] ([[Alaukika]] or [[Asādhārana]]), of three types, viz., [[Sāmānyalakṣana]] ([[perceiving generality from a particular object]]), [[Jñānalakṣana]] (when one [[sense organ]] can also {{Wiki|perceive}} qualities not attributable to it, as when [[seeing]] a chilli, one [[knows]] that it would be [[bitter]] or [[hot]]), and [[Yogaja]] (when certain [[human]] {{Wiki|beings}}, from the [[Power]] of {{Wiki|Yoga}}, can {{Wiki|perceive}} {{Wiki|past}}, {{Wiki|present}} and {{Wiki|future}} and have [[supernatural]] {{Wiki|abilities}}, either complete or some).
 +
 
 +
Also, there are two modes or steps in [[perception]], viz., [[Nirvikalpa]], when one just [[perceives]] an [[object]] without [[being]] [[able]] to know its features, and [[Savikalpa]], when one is [[able]] to clearly [[know]] an [[object]]. All [[laukika]] and [[alaukika]] [[pratyakshas]] are [[savikalpa]]. There is yet another stage called [[Pratyabhijñā]], when one is [[able]] to re-recognise something on the basis of {{Wiki|memory}}.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
     [[Inference]], called [[Anumāna]], is one of the most important contributions of [[Nyaya]]. It can be of two types - [[inference]] for oneself ([[Svārthānumāna]], where one does not need any formal procedure, and at the most the last three of their 5 steps), and [[inference]] for others ([[Parāthānumāna]], which requires a systematic {{Wiki|methodology}} of 5 steps). [[Inference]] can also be classified into 3 types: [[Pūrvavat]] ([[inferring an unperceived effect from a perceived cause]]), [[Śeṣavat]] ([[inferring an unperceived cause from a perceived effect]]) and [[Sāmānyatodṛṣṭa]] ([[when inference is not based on causation but on uniformity of co-existence]]). A detailed analysis of error is also given, explaining when [[anumāna]] could be false.
  
     Comparison, which is the rough transplation of [[Upamāna]]. It is the [[knowledge]] of the relationship between a word and the [[object]] denoted by the word. It is produced by the [[knowledge]] of resemblance or similarity, given some pre-description of the new object beforehand.
+
     Comparison, which is the rough transplantation of [[Upamāna]]. It is the [[knowledge]] of the relationship between a [[word]] and the [[object]] denoted by the [[word]]. It is produced by the [[knowledge]] of resemblance or similarity, given some pre-description of the new [[object]] beforehand.
  
     [[Word]], or [[Śabda]] are also accepted as a [[pramāṇa]]. It can be of two types, Vaidika ({{Wiki|Vedic}}), which are the words of the four sacred {{Wiki|Vedas}}, or can be more broadly interpreted as [[knowledge]] from sources [[acknowledged]] as authoritative, and [[Laukika]], or words and writings of trustworthy human beings.
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     [[Word]], or [[Śabda]] are also accepted as a [[pramāṇa]]. It can be of two types, [[Vaidika]] ({{Wiki|Vedic}}), which are the words of the four [[sacred]] {{Wiki|Vedas}}, or can be more broadly interpreted as [[knowledge]] from sources [[acknowledged]] as authoritative, and [[Laukika]], or words and writings of trustworthy [[human beings]].
  
 
[[Vaisheshika]]
 
[[Vaisheshika]]
  
{{Wiki|Epistemologically}}, the [[Vaiśeṣika]] school accepts perception ([[pratyakṣa]]) and [[inference]] ([[anumāna]]) as [[Valid Sources of Knowledge]].
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{{Wiki|Epistemologically}}, the [[Vaiśeṣika]] school accepts [[perception]] ([[pratyakṣa]]) and [[inference]] ([[anumāna]]) as [[Valid Sources of Knowledge]].
  
  
Padmākara Translation Group (2005: p. 390) annotates that:
+
[[Padmākara]] Translation Group (2005: p. 390) annotates that:
 
[[File:Int phil.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Int phil.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
    Strictly speaking, [[pramana]] ([[tshad ma]]) means "[[valid cognition]]." In practice, it refers to the [[tradition]], principally associated with [[Dignāga]] and Dharmakīrti, of logic (rtags rigs) and {{Wiki|epistemology}} (blo rigs).[6]
 
  
Buddhism rejects some of the premises of Pramāṇa theory, especially the use of religious texts (āgama) as a source of valid knowledge alone.
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    Strictly {{Wiki|speaking}}, [[pramana]] ([[tshad ma]]) means "[[valid cognition]]." In [[practice]], it refers to the [[tradition]], principally associated with [[Dignāga]] and [[Dharmakīrti]], of [[logic]] ([[rtags rigs]]) and {{Wiki|epistemology}} ([[blo rigs]]).
 +
 
 +
[[Buddhism]] rejects some of the premises of [[Pramāṇa]] {{Wiki|theory}}, especially the use of [[religious]] texts ([[āgama]]) as a source of valid [[knowledge]] alone.
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 +
In [[Buddhism]], the two most important [[scholars]] of [[pramāṇa]] are [[Dignāga]] and [[Dharmakīrti]].  They lived in a [[time]] of rigorous [[debate]] with the [[Hindu]] schools, and [[Dignāga]] developed a new [[logical]] approach in these [[debates]]. [[Dharmakīrti]] continued that a century later.
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[[Sautantrika]]
 +
 
 +
[[Dignāga]] and [[Dharmakīrti]] are usually categorized as expounding the [[view]] of the [[Sautrāntika]] {{Wiki|tenets}}, though one can make a {{Wiki|distinction}} between the [[Sautrāntikas]] [[Following Scripture]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[ལུང་གི་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ]]}} [[Wylie]]: [[lung gi rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa]]) and the [[Sautrāntikas]] [[Following Reason]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[རིགས་པ་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ]]}} [[Wylie]]: [[rigs pa rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa]]) and both these [[masters]] are described as establishing the [[latter]]. [[Dignāga's]] main text on this topic is the [[Pramāṇa-samuccaya]].
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 +
 
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These two rejected the complex [[Abhidharma]]-based description of how in the [[Vaibhāṣika]] school and the [[Sautrāntika]] Following [[Scripture]] approach connected an external [[world]] with {{Wiki|mental objects}}, and instead posited that the [[mental]] domain never connects directly with the external [[world]] but instead only [[perceives]] an aspect based upon the [[sense organs]] and the [[sense]] [[consciousnesses]].  
  
In Buddhism, the two most important scholars of pramāṇa are Dignāga and Dharmakīrti. They lived in a time of rigorous debate with the Hindu schools, and Dignāga developed a new logical approach in these debates. Dharmakīrti continued that a century later.
+
Further, the [[sense]] [[consciousnesses]] assume the [[form]] of the aspect ([[Sanskrit]]: [[Sākāravāda]]) of the external [[object]] and what is [[perceived]] is actually the [[sense]] [[consciousness]] which has taken on the [[form]] of the external [[object]]. By starting with aspects, a [[logical]] argument about the external [[world]] as discussed by the [[Hindu]] schools was possible. Otherwise their [[views]] would be so different as to be impossible to begin a [[debate]]. Then a [[logical]] [[discussion]] could follow.
Sautantrika
 
  
Dignāga and Dharmakīrti are usually categorized as expounding the view of the [[Sautrāntika]] tenets, though one can make a distinction between the Sautrāntikas Following Scripture (Tibetan: ལུང་གི་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ Wylie: lung gi rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa) and the Sautrāntikas Following Reason (Tibetan: རིགས་པ་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ Wylie: rigs pa rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa) and both these masters are described as establishing the latter.[8] Dignāga's main text on this topic is the [[Pramāṇa-samuccaya]].
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This approach attempts to solve how the material [[world]] connects with the {{Wiki|mental world}}, but not completely explaining it. When pushed on this point, [[Dharmakīrti]] then drops a presupposition of the [[Sautrāntrika]] position and shifts to a kind of [[Yogācāra]] position that extramental [[objects]] never really occur but arise from the [[habitual tendencies]] of [[mind]]. So he begins a [[debate]] with [[Hindu]] schools positing external [[objects]] then later to migrate the [[discussion]] to how that is [[logically]] untenable.
  
These two rejected the complex [[Abhidharma]]-based description of how in the Vaibhāṣika school and the [[Sautrāntika]] Following Scripture approach connected an external world with mental objects, and instead posited that the mental domain never connects directly with the external world but instead only perceives an aspect based upon the sense organs and the sense consciousnesses. Further, the sense consciousnesses assume the form of the aspect (Sanskrit: Sākāravāda) of the external object and what is perceived is actually the sense consciousness which has taken on the form of the external object. By starting with aspects, a logical argument about the external world as discussed by the Hindu schools was possible. Otherwise their views would be so different as to be impossible to begin a debate. Then a logical discussion could follow.
 
  
This approach attempts to solve how the material world connects with the mental world, but not completely explaining it. When pushed on this point, Dharmakīrti then drops a presupposition of the Sautrāntrika position and shifts to a kind of Yogācāra position that extramental objects never really occur but arise from the habitual tendencies of mind. So he begins a debate with Hindu schools positing external objects then later to migrate the discussion to how that is logically untenable.
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Note there are two differing interpretations of [[Dharmakīrti's]] approach later in [[Tibet]], due to differing translations and interpretations. One is held by the [[Gelug]] school leaning to a moderate {{Wiki|realism}} with some accommodation of universals and the other held by the other schools who held that [[Dharmakīrti]] was distinctly antirealist.
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[[Apoha]]
  
Note there are two differing interpretations of Dharmakīrti's approach later in Tibet, due to differing translations and interpretations. One is held by the Gelug school leaning to a moderate realism with some accommodation of universals and the other held by the other schools who held that Dharmakīrti was distinctly antirealist.
 
Apoha
 
 
[[File:W02.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:W02.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
A key feature of Dignāga's logic is in how he treats generalities versus specific objects of knowledge. The Nyāya Hindu school made assertions about the existence of general principles, and in refutation Dignāga asserted that generalities were mere mental features and not truly existent. To do this he introduced the idea of Apoha, that the way the mind recognizes is by comparing and negating known objects from the perception. In that way, the general idea or categories of objects has to do with differences from known objects, not from identification with universal truths. So one knows that a perceived chariot is a chariot not because it is in accord with a universal form of a chariot, but because it is perceived as different from things that are not chariots. This approach became an essential feature of Buddhist epistemology.[
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A key feature of [[Dignāga's]] [[logic]] is in how he treats generalities versus specific [[objects]] of [[knowledge]]. The [[Nyāya]] [[Hindu]] school made assertions about the [[existence]] of general {{Wiki|principles}}, and in refutation [[Dignāga]] asserted that generalities were mere [[mental]] features and not truly [[existent]]. To do this he introduced the [[idea]] of [[Apoha]], that the way the [[mind]] [[recognizes]] is by comparing and negating known [[objects]] from the [[perception]].  
Madhyamaka
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 +
In that way, the general [[idea]] or categories of [[objects]] has to do with differences from known [[objects]], not from identification with [[universal]] [[truths]]. So one [[knows]] that a [[perceived]] chariot is a chariot not because it is in accord with a [[universal]] [[form]] of a chariot, but because it is [[perceived]] as different from things that are not chariots. This approach became an [[essential]] feature of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|epistemology}}.[
 +
[[Madhyamaka]]
 +
 
 +
 
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The contemporary of [[Dignāga]] but before [[Dharmakīrti]], [[Bhāvaviveka]], incorporated a [[logical]] approach when commenting upon [[Nāgārjuna]]. He also started with a [[Sautrāntika]] approach when discussing the way [[appearances]] appear, to [[debate]] with [[realists]], but then took a [[Middle Way]] [[view]] of the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[nature]] of [[phenomenon]]. But he used [[logical]] assertions and arguments about the [[nature]] of that [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[nature]].
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His incorporation of [[logic]] into the [[Middle Way]] system was later critiqued by [[Candrakīrti]], who felt that the establishment of the [[ultimate]] [[way of abiding]] since it was beyond [[thought]] and {{Wiki|concept}} was not the domain of [[logic]]. He used simple [[logical]] consequence arguments to refute the [[views]] of other [[tenet]] systems, but generally he [[thought]] a more developed use of [[logic]] and {{Wiki|epistemology}} in describing the [[Middle Way]] was problematic. [[Bhāvaviveka's]] use of autonomous [[logical]] arguments was later described as the [[Svātantrika]] approach.
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 +
 
 +
In [[Tibet]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
When [[Madhyamaka]] first migrated to [[Tibet]], [[Śāntarakṣita]] established a [[view]] of [[Madhyamaka]] more consistent with [[Bhāvaviveka]] while further evolving [[logical]] assertions as a way of contemplating and developing one's viewpoint of the [[ultimate truth]].
  
The contemporary of Dignāga but before Dharmakīrti, Bhāvaviveka, incorporated a logical approach when commenting upon Nāgārjuna. He also started with a Sautrāntika approach when discussing the way appearances appear, to debate with realists, but then took a Middle Way view of the ultimate nature of phenomenon. But he used logical assertions and arguments about the nature of that ultimate nature.
 
  
His incorporation of logic into the Middle Way system was later critiqued by Candrakīrti, who felt that the establishment of the ultimate way of abiding since it was beyond thought and concept was not the domain of logic. He used simple logical consequence arguments to refute the views of other tenet systems, but generally he thought a more developed use of logic and epistemology in describing the Middle Way was problematic. Bhāvaviveka's use of autonomous logical arguments was later described as the Svātantrika approach.
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In the 14th Century [[Je Tsongkhapa]] presented a new commentary and approach to [[Madhyamaka]], which became the normative [[form]] in [[Tibet]]. In this variant, the [[Madhyamaka]] approach of [[Candrakīrti]] was elevated instead of [[Bhāvaviveka's]] yet [[Tsongkhapa]] rejected [[Candrakirti's]] disdain of [[logic]] and instead incorporated [[logic]] further.
  
In Tibet
 
  
When Madhyamaka first migrated to Tibet, Śāntarakṣita established a view of Madhyamaka more consistent with Bhāvaviveka while further evolving logical assertions as a way of contemplating and developing one's viewpoint of the ultimate truth.
+
The exact role of [[logic]] in [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[practice]] and study may still be a topic of [[debate]],  but it is definitely established in the [[tradition]]. [[Ju Mipham]] remarked in his 19th century commentary on [[Śāntarakṣita's]] [[Madhyamakālaṅkāra]]:
  
In the 14th Century Je Tsongkhapa presented a new commentary and approach to Madhyamaka, which became the normative form in Tibet. In this variant, the Madhyamaka approach of Candrakīrti was elevated instead of Bhāvaviveka's yet Tsongkhapa rejected Candrakirti's disdain of logic and instead incorporated logic further.
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“ The [[Buddha's]] [[doctrine]], from the [[exposition]] of the [[two truths]] onward, unerroneously sets forth the mode of [[being]] of things as they are. And the followers of the [[Buddha]] must establish this accordingly, through the use of {{Wiki|reasoning}}. Such is the unerring [[tradition]] of [[Śakyamuni]]. On the other hand, to claim that analytical [[investigation]] in general and the inner [[science]] of [[pramana]], or [[logic]], in particular are unnecessary is a terrible and [[evil]] spell, the [[aim]] of which is to prevent the {{Wiki|perfect}} assimilation, through valid {{Wiki|reasoning}}, of the [[Buddha's]] words .
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 +
[[Sankhya]]
  
The exact role of logic in Tibetan Buddhist practice and study may still be a topic of debate,  but it is definitely established in the tradition. Ju Mipham remarked in his 19th century commentary on Śāntarakṣita's Madhyamakālaṅkāra:
 
“ The Buddha's doctrine, from the exposition of the two truths onward, unerroneously sets forth the mode of being of things as they are. And the followers of the Buddha must establish this accordingly, through the use of reasoning. Such is the unerring tradition of Śakyamuni. On the other hand, to claim that analytical investigation in general and the inner science of pramana, or logic, in particular are unnecessary is a terrible and evil spell, the aim of which is to prevent the perfect assimilation, through valid reasoning, of the Buddha's words .
 
Sankhya
 
 
[[File:-007.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:-007.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
According to the Sankhya school, knowledge is possible through three pramanas  
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According to the [[Sankhya school]], [[knowledge]] is possible through three [[pramanas]]
  
     Pratyakşa — direct sense perception
+
     [[Pratyakşa]] [[direct sense perception]]
     Anumāna — logical inference
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     [[Anumāna]] [[logical inference]]
     Śabda — Verbal testimony
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     [[Śabda]] [[Verbal testimony]]
  
Nyaya
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[[Nyaya]]
  
The Nyāya school accepts four means of obtaining knowledge (pramāṇa), viz., Perception, Inference, Comparison and Word.  
+
The [[Nyāya]] school accepts four means of obtaining [[knowledge]] ([[pramāṇa]]), viz., [[Perception]], [[Inference]], Comparison and [[Word]].  
  
     Perception, called Pratyakṣa, occupies the foremost position in the Nyaya epistemology. Perception is defined by sense-object contact and is unerring. Perception can be of two types:
+
     [[Perception]], called [[Pratyakṣa]], occupies the foremost position in the [[Nyaya]] {{Wiki|epistemology}}. [[Perception]] is defined by [[sense-object]] [[contact]] and is unerring. [[Perception]] can be of two types:
        Ordinary (Laukika or Sādhārana), of six types, viz., visual-by eyes, olfactory-by nose, auditory-by ears, tactile-by skin, gustatory-by tongue and mental-by mind.
 
        Extraordinary (Alaukika or Asādhārana), of three types, viz., Sāmānyalakṣana (perceiving generality from a particular object), Jñānalakṣana (when one sense organ can also perceive qualities not attributable to it, as when seeing a chilli, one knows that it would be bitter or hot), and Yogaja (when certain human beings, from the power of Yoga, can perceive past, present and future and have supernatural abilities, either complete or some). Also, there are two modes or steps in perception, viz., Nirvikalpa, when one just perceives an object without being able to know its features, and Savikalpa, when one is able to clearly know an object. All laukika and alaukika pratyakshas are savikalpa. There is yet another stage called Pratyabhijñā, when one is able to re-recognise something on the basis of memory.
 
  
Inference, called Anumāna, is one of the most important contributions of Nyaya. It can be of two types - inference for oneself (Svārthānumāna, where one does not need any formal procedure, and at the most the last three of their 5 steps), and inference for others (Parāthānumāna, which requires a systematic methodology of 5 steps). Inference can also be classified into 3 types: Pūrvavat (inferring an unperceived effect from a perceived cause), Śeṣavat (inferring an unperceived cause from a perceived effect) and Sāmānyatodṛṣṭa (when inference is not based on causation but on uniformity of co-existence). A detailed analysis of error is also given, explaining when anumāna could be false.
+
        Ordinary ([[Laukika]] or [[Sādhārana]]), of six types, viz., visual-by [[eyes]], olfactory-by {{Wiki|nose}}, auditory-by {{Wiki|ears}}, tactile-by {{Wiki|skin}}, gustatory-by {{Wiki|tongue}} and mental-by [[mind]].
  
Comparison, which is the rough transplation of Upamāna. It is the knowledge of the relationship between a word and the object denoted by the word. It is produced by the knowledge of resemblance or similarity, given some pre-description of the new object beforehand.
+
        [[Extraordinary]] ([[Alaukika]] or [[Asādhārana]]), of three types, viz., [[Sāmānyalakṣana]] (perceiving [[generality]] from a particular [[object]]), [[Jñānalakṣana]] (when one [[sense organ]] can also {{Wiki|perceive}} qualities not attributable to it, as when [[seeing]] a chilli, one [[knows]] that it would be [[bitter]] or [[hot]]), and [[Yogaja]] (when certain [[human beings]], from the [[power]] of [[Yoga]], can {{Wiki|perceive}} {{Wiki|past}}, {{Wiki|present}} and {{Wiki|future}} and have [[supernatural]] {{Wiki|abilities}}, either complete or some).  
  
Word, or Śabda are also accepted as a pramāṇa. It can be of two types, Vaidika (Vedic), which are the words of the four sacred Vedas, or can be more broadly interpreted as knowledge from sources acknowledged as authoritative, and Laukika, or words and writings of trustworthy human beings.
+
Also, there are two modes or steps in [[perception]], viz., [[Nirvikalpa]], when one just [[perceives]] an [[object]] without [[being]] [[able]] to know its features, and [[Savikalpa]], when one is [[able]] to clearly [[know]] an [[object]]. All [[laukika]] and [[alaukika pratyakshas]] are [[savikalpa]]. There is yet another stage called [[Pratyabhijñā]], when one is [[able]] to re-recognise something on the basis of [[memory]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[Inference]], called [[Anumāna]], is one of the most important contributions of [[Nyaya]]. It can be of two types - [[inference]] for oneself ([[Svārthānumāna]], where one does not need any formal procedure, and at the most the last three of their 5 steps), and [[inference]] for others ([[Parāthānumāna]], which requires a systematic {{Wiki|methodology}} of 5 steps). [[Inference]] can also be classified into 3 types: [[Pūrvavat]] (inferring an unperceived effect from a [[perceived]] [[cause]]), [[Śeṣavat]] (inferring an unperceived [[cause]] from a [[perceived]] effect) and [[Sāmānyatodṛṣṭa]] (when [[inference]] is not based on [[causation]] but on uniformity of co-existence). A detailed analysis of error is also given, explaining when [[anumāna]] could be false.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Comparison, which is the rough transplation of [[Upamāna]]. It is the [[knowledge]] of the relationship between a [[word]] and the [[object]] denoted by the [[word]]. It is produced by the [[knowledge]] of resemblance or similarity, given some pre-description of the new [[object]] beforehand.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[Word]], or [[Śabda]] are also accepted as a [[pramāṇa]]. It can be of two types, [[Vaidika]] ({{Wiki|Vedic}}), which are the words of the four [[sacred]] [[Vedas]], or can be more broadly interpreted as [[knowledge]] from sources [[acknowledged]] as authoritative, and [[Laukika]], or words and writings of trustworthy [[human beings]].
 +
 
 +
[[Vaisheshika]]
  
Vaisheshika
 
 
[[File:000140923.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:000140923.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
Epistemologically, the Vaiśeṣika school accepts perception (pratyakṣa) and inference (anumāna) as [[Valid Sources of Knowledge]].  
+
{{Wiki|Epistemologically}}, the [[Vaiśeṣika]] school accepts [[perception]] ([[pratyakṣa]]) and [[inference]] ([[anumāna]]) as [[Valid Sources of Knowledge]].  
 
In [[Tibetan Buddhism]]
 
In [[Tibetan Buddhism]]
  
Strictly speaking, pramana (tshad ma) means "valid cognition." In practice, it refers to the tradition, principally associated with Dignāga and Dharmakīrti, of logic (rtags rigs) and epistemology (blo rigs).[6]
 
  
Buddhism rejects some of the premises of Pramāṇa theory, especially the use of religious texts (āgama) as a source of valid knowledge alone.
+
Strictly {{Wiki|speaking}}, [[pramana]] ([[tshad ma]]) means "[[valid cognition]]." In [[practice]], it refers to the [[tradition]], principally associated with [[Dignāga]] and [[Dharmakīrti]], of [[logic]] ([[rtags rigs]]) and {{Wiki|epistemology}} ([[blo rigs]]).
 +
 
 +
[[Buddhism]] rejects some of the premises of [[Pramāṇa]] {{Wiki|theory}}, especially the use of [[religious]] texts ([[āgama]]) as a source of valid [[knowledge]] alone.
 +
 
  
In Buddhism, the two most important scholars of pramāṇa are Dignāga and Dharmakīrti.  They lived in a time of rigorous debate with the Hindu schools, and Dignāga developed a new logical approach in these debates. Dharmakīrti continued that a century later.
+
In [[Buddhism]], the two most important [[scholars]] of [[pramāṇa]] are [[Dignāga]] and [[Dharmakīrti]].  They lived in a [[time]] of rigorous [[debate]] with the [[Hindu]] schools, and [[Dignāga]] developed a new [[logical]] approach in these [[debates]]. [[Dharmakīrti]] continued that a century later.
Sautantrika
+
[[Sautantrika]]
  
Dignāga and Dharmakīrti are usually categorized as expounding the view of the [[Sautrāntika]] tenets, though one can make a distinction between the Sautrāntikas Following Scripture (Tibetan: ལུང་གི་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ Wylie: lung gi rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa) and the Sautrāntikas Following Reason (Tibetan: རིགས་པ་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ Wylie: rigs pa rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa) and both these masters are described as establishing the latter.  Dignāga's main text on this topic is the [[Pramāṇa-samuccaya]].
+
[[Dignāga]] and [[Dharmakīrti]] are usually categorized as expounding the [[view]] of the [[Sautrāntika]] {{Wiki|tenets}}, though one can make a {{Wiki|distinction}} between the [[Sautrāntikas]] Following [[Scripture]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[ལུང་གི་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ]]}} [[Wylie]]: [[lung gi rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa]]) and the [[Sautrāntikas]] Following [[Reason]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[རིགས་པ་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ]]}} [[Wylie]]: [[rigs pa rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa]]) and both these [[masters]] are described as establishing the [[latter]][[Dignāga's]] main text on this topic is the [[Pramāṇa-samuccaya]].
  
These two rejected the complex [[Abhidharma]]-based description of how in the Vaibhāṣika school and the [[Sautrāntika]] Following Scripture approach connected an external world with mental objects, and instead posited that the mental domain never connects directly with the external world but instead only perceives an aspect based upon the sense organs and the sense consciousnesses. Further, the sense consciousnesses assume the form of the aspect (Sanskrit: Sākāravāda) of the external object and what is perceived is actually the sense consciousness which has taken on the form of the external object. By starting with aspects, a logical argument about the external world as discussed by the Hindu schools was possible. Otherwise their views would be so different as to be impossible to begin a debate. Then a logical discussion could follow.
 
  
This approach attempts to solve how the material world connects with the mental world, but not completely explaining it. When pushed on this point, Dharmakīrti then drops a presupposition of the Sautrāntrika position and shifts to a kind of Yogācāra position that extramental objects never really occur but arise from the habitual tendencies of mind. So he begins a debate with Hindu schools positing external objects then later to migrate the discussion to how that is logically untenable.  
+
These two rejected the complex [[Abhidharma]]-based description of how in the [[Vaibhāṣika]] school and the [[Sautrāntika]] Following [[Scripture]] approach connected an external [[world]] with {{Wiki|mental objects}}, and instead posited that the [[mental]] domain never connects directly with the external [[world]] but instead only [[perceives]] an aspect based upon the [[sense organs]] and the [[sense]] [[consciousnesses]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Further, the [[sense]] [[consciousnesses]] assume the [[form]] of the aspect ([[Sanskrit]]: [[Sākāravāda]]) of the external [[object]] and what is [[perceived]] is actually the [[sense]] [[consciousness]] which has taken on the [[form]] of the external [[object]]. By starting with aspects, a [[logical]] argument about the external [[world]] as discussed by the [[Hindu]] schools was possible. Otherwise their [[views]] would be so different as to be impossible to begin a [[debate]]. Then a [[logical]] [[discussion]] could follow.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
This approach attempts to solve how the material [[world]] connects with the {{Wiki|mental world}}, but not completely explaining it. When pushed on this point, [[Dharmakīrti]] then drops a presupposition of the [[Sautrāntrika]] position and shifts to a kind of [[Yogācāra]] position that extramental [[objects]] never really occur but arise from the [[habitual tendencies]] of [[mind]]. So he begins a [[debate]] with [[Hindu]] schools positing external [[objects]] then later to migrate the [[discussion]] to how that is [[logically]] untenable.  
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Note there are two differing interpretations of [[Dharmakīrti's]] approach later in [[Tibet]], due to differing translations and interpretations. One is held by the [[Gelug]] school leaning to a moderate {{Wiki|realism}} with some accommodation of universals and the other held by the other schools who held that [[Dharmakīrti]] was distinctly antirealist.
 +
[[Apoha]]
  
Note there are two differing interpretations of Dharmakīrti's approach later in Tibet, due to differing translations and interpretations. One is held by the Gelug school leaning to a moderate realism with some accommodation of universals and the other held by the other schools who held that Dharmakīrti was distinctly antirealist.
 
Apoha
 
 
[[File:1 500.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:1 500.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
A key feature of Dignāga's logic is in how he treats generalities versus specific objects of knowledge. The Nyāya Hindu school made assertions about the existence of general principles, and in refutation Dignāga asserted that generalities were mere mental features and not truly existent. To do this he introduced the idea of Apoha, that the way the mind recognizes is by comparing and negating known objects from the perception. In that way, the general idea or categories of objects has to do with differences from known objects, not from identification with universal truths. So one knows that a perceived chariot is a chariot not because it is in accord with a universal form of a chariot, but because it is perceived as different from things that are not chariots. This approach became an essential feature of Buddhist epistemology.  
+
A key feature of [[Dignāga's]] [[logic]] is in how he treats generalities versus specific [[objects]] of [[knowledge]]. The [[Nyāya]] [[Hindu]] school made assertions about the [[existence]] of general {{Wiki|principles}}, and in refutation [[Dignāga]] asserted that generalities were mere [[mental]] features and not truly [[existent]]. To do this he introduced the [[idea]] of [[Apoha]], that the way the [[mind]] [[recognizes]] is by comparing and negating known [[objects]] from the [[perception]].  
 +
 
 +
In that way, the general [[idea]] or categories of [[objects]] has to do with differences from known [[objects]], not from identification with [[universal]] [[truths]]. So one [[knows]] that a [[perceived]] chariot is a chariot not because it is in accord with a [[universal]] [[form]] of a chariot, but because it is [[perceived]] as different from things that are not chariots. This approach became an [[essential]] feature of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|epistemology}}.  
 
[[Madhyamaka]]
 
[[Madhyamaka]]
  
The contemporary of Dignāga but before Dharmakīrti, Bhāvaviveka, incorporated a logical approach when commenting upon [[Nāgārjuna]]. He also started with a [[Sautrāntika]] approach when discussing the way appearances appear, to debate with realists, but then took a [[Middle Way]] view of the ultimate nature of phenomenon. But he used logical assertions and arguments about the nature of that ultimate nature.[8]
 
  
His incorporation of logic into the [[Middle Way]] system was later critiqued by Candrakīrti, who felt that the establishment of the ultimate way of abiding since it was beyond thought and concept was not the domain of logic. He used simple logical consequence arguments to refute the views of other tenet systems, but generally he thought a more developed use of logic and epistemology in describing the [[Middle Way]] was problematic. Bhāvaviveka's use of autonomous logical arguments was later described as the Svātantrika approach.[8]
+
The contemporary of [[Dignāga]] but before [[Dharmakīrti]], [[Bhāvaviveka]], incorporated a [[logical]] approach when commenting upon [[Nāgārjuna]]. He also started with a [[Sautrāntika]] approach when discussing the way [[appearances]] appear, to [[debate]] with [[realists]], but then took a [[Middle Way]] [[view]] of the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[nature]] of [[phenomenon]]. But he used [[logical]] assertions and arguments about the [[nature]] of that [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[nature]].
In Tibet
+
 
 +
 
 +
His incorporation of [[logic]] into the [[Middle Way]] system was later critiqued by [[Candrakīrti]], who felt that the establishment of the [[ultimate]] [[way of abiding]] since it was beyond [[thought]] and {{Wiki|concept}} was not the domain of [[logic]]. He used simple [[logical]] consequence arguments to refute the [[views]] of other [[tenet]] systems, but generally he [[thought]] a more developed use of [[logic]] and {{Wiki|epistemology}} in describing the [[Middle Way]] was problematic. [[Bhāvaviveka's]] use of autonomous [[logical]] arguments was later described as the [[Svātantrika]] approach.  
 +
In [[Tibet]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
When [[Madhyamaka]] first migrated to [[Tibet]], [[Śāntarakṣita]] established a [[view]] of [[Madhyamaka]] more consistent with [[Bhāvaviveka]] while further evolving [[logical]] assertions as a way of contemplating and developing one's viewpoint of the [[ultimate truth]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
In the 14th Century [[Je Tsongkhapa]] presented a new commentary and approach to [[Madhyamaka]], which became the normative [[form]] in [[Tibet]]. In this variant, the [[Madhyamaka]] approach of [[Candrakīrti]] was elevated instead of [[Bhāvaviveka's]] yet [[Tsongkhapa]] rejected [[Candrakirti's]] disdain of [[logic]] and instead incorporated [[logic]] further.
  
When [[Madhyamaka]] first migrated to Tibet, Śāntarakṣita established a view of [[Madhyamaka]] more consistent with Bhāvaviveka while further evolving logical assertions as a way of contemplating and developing one's viewpoint of the ultimate truth.
 
  
In the 14th Century [[Je Tsongkhapa]] presented a new commentary and approach to [[Madhyamaka]], which became the normative form in Tibet. In this variant, the [[Madhyamaka]] approach of Candrakīrti was elevated instead of Bhāvaviveka's yet [[Tsongkhapa]] rejected Candrakirti's disdain of logic and instead incorporated logic further.
+
The exact role of [[logic]] in [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[practice]] and study may still be a topic of [[debate]], but it is definitely established in the [[tradition]]. [[Ju Mipham]] remarked in his 19th century commentary on [[Śāntarakṣita's]] [[Madhyamakālaṅkāra]]:
  
The exact role of logic in [[Tibetan Buddhist]] practice and study may still be a topic of debate, but it is definitely established in the tradition. [[Ju Mipham]] remarked in his 19th century commentary on Śāntarakṣita's Madhyamakālaṅkāra:
+
The [[Buddha]]'[[s]] [[Doctrine]], from the [[exposition]] of the [[two truths]] onward, unerroneously sets forth the mode of [[being]] of things as they are. And the followers of The [[Buddha]] must establish this accordingly, through the use of {{Wiki|reasoning}}. Such is the unerring [[tradition]] of [[Śakyamuni]]. On the other hand, to claim that analytical [[investigation]] in general and the inner [[science]] of [[pramana]], or [[logic]], in particular are unnecessary is a terrible and [[evil]] spell, the [[aim]] of which is to prevent the {{Wiki|perfect}} assimilation, through valid {{Wiki|reasoning}}, of The [[Buddha]]'[[s]] words[11]
“ [[The Buddha]]'s [[Doctrine]], from the exposition of the two truths onward, unerroneously sets forth the mode of being of things as they are. And the followers of [[The Buddha]] must establish this accordingly, through the use of reasoning. Such is the unerring tradition of Śakyamuni. On the other hand, to claim that analytical investigation in general and the inner science of pramana, or logic, in particular are unnecessary is a terrible and evil spell, the aim of which is to prevent the perfect assimilation, through valid reasoning, of [[The Buddha]]'s words[11]
 
 
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{{R}}

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Pramāṇa (sources of knowledge, Sanskrit प्रमाण or pramāṇas) is an epistemological term in Hindu and Buddhist dialectic, debate and discourse.

Pramāṇavāda and Hetuvidyā (因明) can be glossed in English as Indian and Buddhist Epistemology and Logic, respectively.In Hinduism

Different systems of Hindu philosophy accept different categories of pramanas.

Pramāṇa forms one part of a tripuţi (trio) concerning pramā (the correct knowledge of any object arrived at by thorough reasoning, Sanskrit), namely,

    Pramātā (pramātŗ), the subject, the knower
    Pramāņa, the means of obtaining the knowledge
    Prameya, the object, the knowable

Modern Buddhist schools do not use these three distinct terms particularly, but instead employ the 'three spheres' (Sanskrit: trimaṇḍala; Tibetan: 'khor gsum):

    subject
    object, and
    action.[3]

Advaita Vedanta

In Advaita Vedānta, the following pramanas are accepted:

    Pratyakṣa (perception), the knowledge gained by means of the senses;
    Anumāṇa (inference), the knowledge gained by means of inference;
    Śabda (verbal testimony), the knowledge gained by verbal testimony;
    Upamāṇa (comparison), the knowledge gained by means of analogy
    Arthāpatti (postulation), the knowledge gained by superimposing the known knowledge on an appearing knowledge that does not concur with the known knowledge;
    Anupalabdi (non-cognition), non-apprehension and skepticism in the face of non-apprehension.

Sankhya

According to the Sankhya school, knowledge is possible through three pramanas :

    Pratyakşadirect sense perception
    Anumānalogical inference
    ŚabdaVerbal testimony

Nyaya

B5b.jpg

The Nyāya school accepts four means of obtaining knowledge (pramāṇa), viz., Perception, Inference, Comparison and Word.

    Perception, called Pratyakṣa, occupies the foremost position in the Nyaya epistemology. Perception is defined by sense-object contact and is unerring. Perception can be of two types:

        Ordinary (Laukika or Sādhārana), of six types, viz., visual-by eyes, olfactory-by nose, auditory-by ears, tactile-by skin, gustatory-by tongue and mental-by mind.

        Extraordinary (Alaukika or Asādhārana), of three types, viz., Sāmānyalakṣana (perceiving generality from a particular object), Jñānalakṣana (when one sense organ can also perceive qualities not attributable to it, as when seeing a chilli, one knows that it would be bitter or hot), and Yogaja (when certain human beings, from the Power of Yoga, can perceive past, present and future and have supernatural abilities, either complete or some).

Also, there are two modes or steps in perception, viz., Nirvikalpa, when one just perceives an object without being able to know its features, and Savikalpa, when one is able to clearly know an object. All laukika and alaukika pratyakshas are savikalpa. There is yet another stage called Pratyabhijñā, when one is able to re-recognise something on the basis of memory.


    Inference, called Anumāna, is one of the most important contributions of Nyaya. It can be of two types - inference for oneself (Svārthānumāna, where one does not need any formal procedure, and at the most the last three of their 5 steps), and inference for others (Parāthānumāna, which requires a systematic methodology of 5 steps). Inference can also be classified into 3 types: Pūrvavat (inferring an unperceived effect from a perceived cause), Śeṣavat (inferring an unperceived cause from a perceived effect) and Sāmānyatodṛṣṭa (when inference is not based on causation but on uniformity of co-existence). A detailed analysis of error is also given, explaining when anumāna could be false.

    Comparison, which is the rough transplantation of Upamāna. It is the knowledge of the relationship between a word and the object denoted by the word. It is produced by the knowledge of resemblance or similarity, given some pre-description of the new object beforehand.

    Word, or Śabda are also accepted as a pramāṇa. It can be of two types, Vaidika (Vedic), which are the words of the four sacred Vedas, or can be more broadly interpreted as knowledge from sources acknowledged as authoritative, and Laukika, or words and writings of trustworthy human beings.

Vaisheshika

Epistemologically, the Vaiśeṣika school accepts perception (pratyakṣa) and inference (anumāna) as Valid Sources of Knowledge.


Padmākara Translation Group (2005: p. 390) annotates that:

Int phil.jpg


    Strictly speaking, pramana (tshad ma) means "valid cognition." In practice, it refers to the tradition, principally associated with Dignāga and Dharmakīrti, of logic (rtags rigs) and epistemology (blo rigs).

Buddhism rejects some of the premises of Pramāṇa theory, especially the use of religious texts (āgama) as a source of valid knowledge alone.

In Buddhism, the two most important scholars of pramāṇa are Dignāga and Dharmakīrti. They lived in a time of rigorous debate with the Hindu schools, and Dignāga developed a new logical approach in these debates. Dharmakīrti continued that a century later.
Sautantrika

Dignāga and Dharmakīrti are usually categorized as expounding the view of the Sautrāntika tenets, though one can make a distinction between the Sautrāntikas Following Scripture (Tibetan: ལུང་གི་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ Wylie: lung gi rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa) and the Sautrāntikas Following Reason (Tibetan: རིགས་པ་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ Wylie: rigs pa rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa) and both these masters are described as establishing the latter. Dignāga's main text on this topic is the Pramāṇa-samuccaya.


These two rejected the complex Abhidharma-based description of how in the Vaibhāṣika school and the Sautrāntika Following Scripture approach connected an external world with mental objects, and instead posited that the mental domain never connects directly with the external world but instead only perceives an aspect based upon the sense organs and the sense consciousnesses.

Further, the sense consciousnesses assume the form of the aspect (Sanskrit: Sākāravāda) of the external object and what is perceived is actually the sense consciousness which has taken on the form of the external object. By starting with aspects, a logical argument about the external world as discussed by the Hindu schools was possible. Otherwise their views would be so different as to be impossible to begin a debate. Then a logical discussion could follow.

This approach attempts to solve how the material world connects with the mental world, but not completely explaining it. When pushed on this point, Dharmakīrti then drops a presupposition of the Sautrāntrika position and shifts to a kind of Yogācāra position that extramental objects never really occur but arise from the habitual tendencies of mind. So he begins a debate with Hindu schools positing external objects then later to migrate the discussion to how that is logically untenable.


Note there are two differing interpretations of Dharmakīrti's approach later in Tibet, due to differing translations and interpretations. One is held by the Gelug school leaning to a moderate realism with some accommodation of universals and the other held by the other schools who held that Dharmakīrti was distinctly antirealist.
Apoha

W02.jpg

A key feature of Dignāga's logic is in how he treats generalities versus specific objects of knowledge. The Nyāya Hindu school made assertions about the existence of general principles, and in refutation Dignāga asserted that generalities were mere mental features and not truly existent. To do this he introduced the idea of Apoha, that the way the mind recognizes is by comparing and negating known objects from the perception.

In that way, the general idea or categories of objects has to do with differences from known objects, not from identification with universal truths. So one knows that a perceived chariot is a chariot not because it is in accord with a universal form of a chariot, but because it is perceived as different from things that are not chariots. This approach became an essential feature of Buddhist epistemology.[
Madhyamaka


The contemporary of Dignāga but before Dharmakīrti, Bhāvaviveka, incorporated a logical approach when commenting upon Nāgārjuna. He also started with a Sautrāntika approach when discussing the way appearances appear, to debate with realists, but then took a Middle Way view of the ultimate nature of phenomenon. But he used logical assertions and arguments about the nature of that ultimate nature.


His incorporation of logic into the Middle Way system was later critiqued by Candrakīrti, who felt that the establishment of the ultimate way of abiding since it was beyond thought and concept was not the domain of logic. He used simple logical consequence arguments to refute the views of other tenet systems, but generally he thought a more developed use of logic and epistemology in describing the Middle Way was problematic. Bhāvaviveka's use of autonomous logical arguments was later described as the Svātantrika approach.


In Tibet


When Madhyamaka first migrated to Tibet, Śāntarakṣita established a view of Madhyamaka more consistent with Bhāvaviveka while further evolving logical assertions as a way of contemplating and developing one's viewpoint of the ultimate truth.


In the 14th Century Je Tsongkhapa presented a new commentary and approach to Madhyamaka, which became the normative form in Tibet. In this variant, the Madhyamaka approach of Candrakīrti was elevated instead of Bhāvaviveka's yet Tsongkhapa rejected Candrakirti's disdain of logic and instead incorporated logic further.


The exact role of logic in Tibetan Buddhist practice and study may still be a topic of debate, but it is definitely established in the tradition. Ju Mipham remarked in his 19th century commentary on Śāntarakṣita's Madhyamakālaṅkāra:

“ The Buddha's doctrine, from the exposition of the two truths onward, unerroneously sets forth the mode of being of things as they are. And the followers of the Buddha must establish this accordingly, through the use of reasoning. Such is the unerring tradition of Śakyamuni. On the other hand, to claim that analytical investigation in general and the inner science of pramana, or logic, in particular are unnecessary is a terrible and evil spell, the aim of which is to prevent the perfect assimilation, through valid reasoning, of the Buddha's words .

 Sankhya

-007.jpg

According to the Sankhya school, knowledge is possible through three pramanas

    Pratyakşadirect sense perception
    Anumānalogical inference
    ŚabdaVerbal testimony

Nyaya

The Nyāya school accepts four means of obtaining knowledge (pramāṇa), viz., Perception, Inference, Comparison and Word.

    Perception, called Pratyakṣa, occupies the foremost position in the Nyaya epistemology. Perception is defined by sense-object contact and is unerring. Perception can be of two types:

        Ordinary (Laukika or Sādhārana), of six types, viz., visual-by eyes, olfactory-by nose, auditory-by ears, tactile-by skin, gustatory-by tongue and mental-by mind.

        Extraordinary (Alaukika or Asādhārana), of three types, viz., Sāmānyalakṣana (perceiving generality from a particular object), Jñānalakṣana (when one sense organ can also perceive qualities not attributable to it, as when seeing a chilli, one knows that it would be bitter or hot), and Yogaja (when certain human beings, from the power of Yoga, can perceive past, present and future and have supernatural abilities, either complete or some).

Also, there are two modes or steps in perception, viz., Nirvikalpa, when one just perceives an object without being able to know its features, and Savikalpa, when one is able to clearly know an object. All laukika and alaukika pratyakshas are savikalpa. There is yet another stage called Pratyabhijñā, when one is able to re-recognise something on the basis of memory.


Inference, called Anumāna, is one of the most important contributions of Nyaya. It can be of two types - inference for oneself (Svārthānumāna, where one does not need any formal procedure, and at the most the last three of their 5 steps), and inference for others (Parāthānumāna, which requires a systematic methodology of 5 steps). Inference can also be classified into 3 types: Pūrvavat (inferring an unperceived effect from a perceived cause), Śeṣavat (inferring an unperceived cause from a perceived effect) and Sāmānyatodṛṣṭa (when inference is not based on causation but on uniformity of co-existence). A detailed analysis of error is also given, explaining when anumāna could be false.


Comparison, which is the rough transplation of Upamāna. It is the knowledge of the relationship between a word and the object denoted by the word. It is produced by the knowledge of resemblance or similarity, given some pre-description of the new object beforehand.


Word, or Śabda are also accepted as a pramāṇa. It can be of two types, Vaidika (Vedic), which are the words of the four sacred Vedas, or can be more broadly interpreted as knowledge from sources acknowledged as authoritative, and Laukika, or words and writings of trustworthy human beings.

Vaisheshika

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Epistemologically, the Vaiśeṣika school accepts perception (pratyakṣa) and inference (anumāna) as Valid Sources of Knowledge.
In Tibetan Buddhism


Strictly speaking, pramana (tshad ma) means "valid cognition." In practice, it refers to the tradition, principally associated with Dignāga and Dharmakīrti, of logic (rtags rigs) and epistemology (blo rigs).

Buddhism rejects some of the premises of Pramāṇa theory, especially the use of religious texts (āgama) as a source of valid knowledge alone.


In Buddhism, the two most important scholars of pramāṇa are Dignāga and Dharmakīrti. They lived in a time of rigorous debate with the Hindu schools, and Dignāga developed a new logical approach in these debates. Dharmakīrti continued that a century later.
Sautantrika

Dignāga and Dharmakīrti are usually categorized as expounding the view of the Sautrāntika tenets, though one can make a distinction between the Sautrāntikas Following Scripture (Tibetan: ལུང་གི་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ Wylie: lung gi rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa) and the Sautrāntikas Following Reason (Tibetan: རིགས་པ་རྗེས་འབྲང་གི་མདོ་སྡེ་པ Wylie: rigs pa rjes 'brang gi mdo sde pa) and both these masters are described as establishing the latter. Dignāga's main text on this topic is the Pramāṇa-samuccaya.


These two rejected the complex Abhidharma-based description of how in the Vaibhāṣika school and the Sautrāntika Following Scripture approach connected an external world with mental objects, and instead posited that the mental domain never connects directly with the external world but instead only perceives an aspect based upon the sense organs and the sense consciousnesses.


Further, the sense consciousnesses assume the form of the aspect (Sanskrit: Sākāravāda) of the external object and what is perceived is actually the sense consciousness which has taken on the form of the external object. By starting with aspects, a logical argument about the external world as discussed by the Hindu schools was possible. Otherwise their views would be so different as to be impossible to begin a debate. Then a logical discussion could follow.


This approach attempts to solve how the material world connects with the mental world, but not completely explaining it. When pushed on this point, Dharmakīrti then drops a presupposition of the Sautrāntrika position and shifts to a kind of Yogācāra position that extramental objects never really occur but arise from the habitual tendencies of mind. So he begins a debate with Hindu schools positing external objects then later to migrate the discussion to how that is logically untenable.


Note there are two differing interpretations of Dharmakīrti's approach later in Tibet, due to differing translations and interpretations. One is held by the Gelug school leaning to a moderate realism with some accommodation of universals and the other held by the other schools who held that Dharmakīrti was distinctly antirealist.
Apoha

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A key feature of Dignāga's logic is in how he treats generalities versus specific objects of knowledge. The Nyāya Hindu school made assertions about the existence of general principles, and in refutation Dignāga asserted that generalities were mere mental features and not truly existent. To do this he introduced the idea of Apoha, that the way the mind recognizes is by comparing and negating known objects from the perception.

In that way, the general idea or categories of objects has to do with differences from known objects, not from identification with universal truths. So one knows that a perceived chariot is a chariot not because it is in accord with a universal form of a chariot, but because it is perceived as different from things that are not chariots. This approach became an essential feature of Buddhist epistemology.
Madhyamaka


The contemporary of Dignāga but before Dharmakīrti, Bhāvaviveka, incorporated a logical approach when commenting upon Nāgārjuna. He also started with a Sautrāntika approach when discussing the way appearances appear, to debate with realists, but then took a Middle Way view of the ultimate nature of phenomenon. But he used logical assertions and arguments about the nature of that ultimate nature.


His incorporation of logic into the Middle Way system was later critiqued by Candrakīrti, who felt that the establishment of the ultimate way of abiding since it was beyond thought and concept was not the domain of logic. He used simple logical consequence arguments to refute the views of other tenet systems, but generally he thought a more developed use of logic and epistemology in describing the Middle Way was problematic. Bhāvaviveka's use of autonomous logical arguments was later described as the Svātantrika approach.
In Tibet


When Madhyamaka first migrated to Tibet, Śāntarakṣita established a view of Madhyamaka more consistent with Bhāvaviveka while further evolving logical assertions as a way of contemplating and developing one's viewpoint of the ultimate truth.


In the 14th Century Je Tsongkhapa presented a new commentary and approach to Madhyamaka, which became the normative form in Tibet. In this variant, the Madhyamaka approach of Candrakīrti was elevated instead of Bhāvaviveka's yet Tsongkhapa rejected Candrakirti's disdain of logic and instead incorporated logic further.


The exact role of logic in Tibetan Buddhist practice and study may still be a topic of debate, but it is definitely established in the tradition. Ju Mipham remarked in his 19th century commentary on Śāntarakṣita's Madhyamakālaṅkāra:

“ The Buddha's Doctrine, from the exposition of the two truths onward, unerroneously sets forth the mode of being of things as they are. And the followers of The Buddha must establish this accordingly, through the use of reasoning. Such is the unerring tradition of Śakyamuni. On the other hand, to claim that analytical investigation in general and the inner science of pramana, or logic, in particular are unnecessary is a terrible and evil spell, the aim of which is to prevent the perfect assimilation, through valid reasoning, of The Buddha's words[11]

Source

wikipedia.org