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Difference between revisions of "What is the "logic" in Buddhist logic? By R. Lance Factor"

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The {{Wiki|history}} of [[Indian]] [[logic]] is usually divided into
+
The {{Wiki|history}} of [[Indian]] [[logic]] is usually divided into three periods, Old Nyaaya (circa 250 B.C. ) , [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] (sixth century A.D.) and New Nyaaya. The [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] text, Nyaayaprave`sa (Introduction to Logical Methods) , had great [[influence]] upon [[Indian]] and [[Chinese Buddhism]] and also among the {{Wiki|Jains}}. As a pivotal work, the Nyaayaprave`sa has received critical [[attention]] from historians of [[religion]], philologists, [[philosophers]], and [[logicians]]. As with all advances in {{Wiki|scholarship}}, there is controversy over interpretation, but in the case of [[Buddhist]] [[logic]], the controversy cuts to the very [[heart]] of the issue of whether [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] is in any recognizable contemporary [[sense]] a "[[logic]]." The received [[view]] holds that [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] bears very close similarities to syllogistic forms and that it can be represented and analyzed by standard deductive techniques.(1) A much different and opposing [[view]] has been argued by Professor Douglas Daye in a series of papers. Daye maintains that "... the descriptive utility of {{Wiki|mathematical}} [[logic]] with early Nyaaya texts has simply been overrated";(2) that although the Nyaaya texts contain metalogical rules for evaluating the "legitimacy or illegitimacy" of arguments, the distinction between validity and invalidity does not apply;(3) that Nyaaya models are not inferences but "formalistic explanations"; and that "... [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] is not deductive, nor can it be formally valid nor is it an inference."(4) [[File:Buddha 2sw.jpg|thumb|250px|]] The cumulative effect of these claims is to assert that [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] is not a "[[logic]]" at all, at least not in any [[sense]] which is recognized by Western [[philosophers]]. There is a radical incompatibility between the Nyaaya methods of [[logic]] and those of the Prior Analytics or Principia Mathematica. Of course, there will be differences, possibly very great differences, between any two [[traditions]] so diverse as fourth century (B.C.) Greece and sixth century (A.D.) [[India]], but are we to go so far as to say that the Nyaaya does not contain inferences? The radical incompatibility thesis is, I maintain, a mistake; moreover, it is a mistake which can readily be uncovered by examining the typical Nyaaya inference scheme. Of the notion that a Nyaaya scheme could be a "formalistic explanation" without [[being]] an inference, I shall say very little because I do not see how anything which functions as an explanation could not involve inferences of some kind or other. It is important [[to know]] whether the Nyaaya scheme is deductive or not, and if it is, whether all of its parts are [[essential]] to the deduction. I will demonstrate that there are two ways of reading the Nyaaya [[form]]: one which is straightforwardly deductive and a second which is best understood by what the American pragmatist, C.S. Peirce, and later Norwood Hanson, call "retroduction."
        three periods, Old Nyaaya (circa 250 B.C. ) ,
 
        [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] (sixth century A.D.) and New Nyaaya.
 
        The   [[Buddhist]]     [[logic]]   text,   Nyaayaprave`sa
 
        (Introduction   to Logical   Methods) , had great
 
        [[influence]] upon [[Indian]] and [[Chinese Buddhism]] and also
 
        among   the   {{Wiki|Jains}}.   As   a   pivotal   work, the
 
        Nyaayaprave`sa has received critical [[attention]] from
 
        historians of [[religion]], philologists, [[philosophers]],
 
        and [[logicians]]. As with all advances in {{Wiki|scholarship}},
 
        there is controversy over interpretation, but in the
 
        case of [[Buddhist]] [[logic]], the controversy cuts to the
 
        very [[heart]] of the issue of whether [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] is
 
        in any recognizable contemporary [[sense]] a "[[logic]]."
 
        The received [[view]] holds that [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] bears
 
        very close similarities to syllogistic forms and
 
        that it can be represented and analyzed by standard
 
        deductive   techniques.(1) A much different   and
 
        opposing [[view]] has been argued by Professor Douglas
 
        Daye in a series of papers. Daye maintains that "...
 
        the descriptive utility of {{Wiki|mathematical}} [[logic]] with
 
        early Nyaaya texts has simply been overrated";(2)
 
        that although the Nyaaya texts contain metalogical
 
        rules   for   evaluating   the   "legitimacy   or
 
        illegitimacy" of arguments, the distinction between
 
        validity and invalidity does not apply;(3) that
 
        Nyaaya models are not inferences but "formalistic
 
        explanations"; and that "... [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] is not
 
        deductive, nor can it be formally valid nor is it an
 
        inference."(4)
 
[[File:Buddha 2sw.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
            The cumulative effect of these claims is to
 
        assert that [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] is not a "[[logic]]" at all,
 
        at least not in any [[sense]] which is recognized by
 
        Western   [[philosophers]].   There   is   a   radical
 
        incompatibility between the Nyaaya methods of [[logic]]
 
        and those of the Prior Analytics or Principia
 
        Mathematica. Of course, there will be differences,
 
        possibly very great differences, between any two
 
        [[traditions]] so diverse as fourth century (B.C.)
 
        Greece and sixth century (A.D.) [[India]], but are we to
 
        go so far as to say that the Nyaaya does not contain
 
        inferences? The radical incompatibility thesis is, I
 
        maintain, a mistake; moreover, it is a mistake which
 
        can readily be uncovered by examining the typical
 
        Nyaaya inference scheme. Of the notion that a Nyaaya
 
        scheme   could be a   "formalistic   explanation"
 
        without [[being]] an inference, I shall say very little
 
        because I do not see how anything which functions as
 
        an explanation could not involve inferences of some
 
        kind or other. It is important [[to know]] whether the
 
        Nyaaya scheme is deductive or not, and if it is,
 
        whether all of its parts are [[essential]] to the
 
        deduction. I will demonstrate that there are two
 
        ways of reading the Nyaaya [[form]]: one which is
 
        straightforwardly deductive and a second which is
 
        best understood by what the American pragmatist,
 
        C.S.   Peirce,   and   later   Norwood   Hanson,
 
        call "retroduction."
 
 
[[File:Bud4.jpeg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Bud4.jpeg|thumb|250px|]]
 
             To  begin  with,  consider  this  representative
 
             To  begin  with,  consider  this  representative
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             11. pak.sa - [[Sound]] is [[impermanent]].
 
             11. pak.sa - [[Sound]] is [[impermanent]].
  
            Why is this instance of modus ponens a matter of
+
            Why is this instance of modus ponens a matter of dispute? The incompatibilists point out that the relationship between the thesis (pak.sa) and the justification ([[hetu]]) is always expressed in the [[Sanskrit]] ablative case and that this relationship cannot be represented or translated as the English "therefore" (or ergo). Its best translation is "because." [[Thus]], for the incompatibilist, the [[primary]] objection to identifying the Nyaaya scheme as a deductive inference is the familiar one of ordinary [[language]] [[philosophers]] who resist the translation of expressions as `q because p' into `p ) q' on the grounds that the [[causal]] or explanatory meaning of "because" is lost in the truth-functional conditional.
        dispute? The incompatibilists point out that the
 
        relationship between the thesis (pak.sa) and the
 
        justification ([[hetu]]) is always expressed in the
 
        [[Sanskrit]] ablative case and that this relationship
 
        cannot be represented or translated as the English
 
        "therefore" (or ergo). Its best translation is
 
        "because."   [[Thus]], for   the incompatibilist, the
 
        [[primary]] objection to identifying the Nyaaya scheme
 
        as a deductive inference is the familiar one of
 
        ordinary   [[language]] [[philosophers]]   who resist the
 
        translation of expressions as `q because p' into `p
 
        ) q' on the grounds that the [[causal]] or explanatory
 
        meaning   of   "because"   is   lost   in   the
 
        truth-functional conditional.
 
 
[[File:Buddha121xs.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Buddha121xs.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
             This   objection   has force, but   one   must
+
             This objection has force, but one must distinguish between the assertion that truth-functional connectives preserve or capture the meaning of `q because p' and the claim that truth-functional connectives can represent a deductive relationship between propositions within the Nyaaya scheme. It is the latter which the received [[view]] upholds: it is the former which the incompatibilist vehemently opposes. The issue is not joined, because surely one can maintain that there is a deductive inference in the inversion Nyaaya scheme without maintaining that it captures the meaning of or even approaches synonymy with the original. In sum, the issue between the received [[view]] and the incompatibilist pivots on the former's willingness to invert the Nyaaya [[form]] and read it as a valid deduction and the latter's insistence that the [[form]] cannot be so reversed without losing the special relationship of the [[hetu]]. Given the [[merits]] of both [[views]] and given the fact that both positions are not explicit contradictories of one another, there is a way [[to understand]] the Nyaaya scheme which allows both sides to have their cake and eat it too. I believe that the three-membered Nyaaya is best understood as a retroductivc inference. A retroduction, as it has been described by C. S. Peirce and
        distinguish     between   the   assertion     that
 
        truth-functional connectives preserve or capture the
 
        meaning   of `q because p' and the claim that
 
        truth-functional   connectives   can   represent   a
 
        deductive relationship between propositions within
 
        the Nyaaya scheme. It is the latter which the
 
        received [[view]] upholds: it is the former which the
 
        incompatibilist vehemently opposes. The issue is not
 
        joined, because surely one can maintain that there
 
        is a deductive inference in the inversion Nyaaya
 
        scheme without maintaining that it captures the
 
        meaning of or even approaches synonymy with the
 
        original. In sum, the issue between the received
 
        [[view]] and the incompatibilist pivots on the former's
 
        willingness to invert the Nyaaya [[form]] and read it as
 
        a valid deduction and the latter's insistence that
 
        the [[form]] cannot be so reversed without losing the
 
        special relationship of the [[hetu]]. Given the [[merits]]
 
        of both [[views]] and given the fact that both positions
 
        are not explicit contradictories of one another,
 
        there is a way [[to understand]] the Nyaaya scheme which
 
        allows both sides to have their cake and eat it too.
 
        I believe that the three-membered Nyaaya is best
 
        understood   as   a   retroductivc   inference.   A
 
        retroduction, as it has been described by C. S.
 
        Peirce and
 
 
[[File:Buddha20i.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Buddha20i.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
                                 P.185
 
                                 P.185
  
        Norwood Hansonl is a pattern of {{Wiki|reasoning}} which
+
        Norwood Hansonl is a pattern of {{Wiki|reasoning}} which leads from some [[phenomenon]] or [[perception]] to an explanatory {{Wiki|hypothesis}} of that [[phenomenon]]. Its [[form]] is not truth-functional nor are the relationships of that premises completely rulegoverned. Peirce said, "It must be remembered that retroduction, although hampered very little by [[logical]] rules, nevertheless, is [[logical]] inference, asserting its conclusion only problematically or conjecturally...."(7) Retroduction does have a recognizable pattern, and indeed it is very close to the three-membered [[syllogism]] of [[Indian]] [[logic]]. Its [[form]], according to Peirce, is:
        leads from some [[phenomenon]] or [[perception]] to an
 
        explanatory {{Wiki|hypothesis}} of that [[phenomenon]]. Its [[form]]
 
        is not truth-functional nor are the relationships of
 
        that premises completely rulegoverned. Peirce said,
 
        "It must be remembered that retroduction, although
 
        hampered very little by [[logical]] rules, nevertheless,
 
        is [[logical]] inference, asserting its conclusion only
 
        problematically or conjecturally...."(7)
 
 
 
            Retroduction does have a recognizable pattern,
 
        and indeed it is very close to the three-membered
 
        [[syllogism]] of [[Indian]] [[logic]]. Its [[form]], according to
 
        Peirce, is:
 
  
 
             12. The surprizing fact Q is observed.
 
             12. The surprizing fact Q is observed.
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             (14')p
 
             (14')p
  
        which is isomorphic with that of the Nyaaya (that
+
        which is isomorphic with that of the Nyaaya (that is, pak.sa, because [[hetu]] and d.r.s.taanta; hence there is evidence for the pak.sa). The similarity (sapak.sa) and dissimilarity (vipak.sa) cases serve as further evidence in support of the explanatory justification. The [[philosopher]] of [[science]], Norwood Hanson, argued that retroduction was a "[[logic]] of discovery" which led to deductive-nomological explanations. Like Peirce, Hanson pointed out that the reversal of a retroduction was a deductive inference 'q, q because p', becomes 'p, if p, then q, hence q'. The notion of reversal" or inverting" a retroduction is not a technique or rule of formal [[logic]], but rather a simple [[psychological]] description of changing the [[order]] of premises.
        is, pak.sa, because [[hetu]] and d.r.s.taanta; hence
 
        there is evidence for the pak.sa). The similarity
 
        (sapak.sa) and dissimilarity (vipak.sa) cases serve
 
        as further evidence in support of the explanatory
 
        justification.
 
 
 
            The [[philosopher]] of [[science]], Norwood Hanson,
 
        argued that retroduction was a "[[logic]] of discovery"
 
        which led to deductive-nomological explanations.
 
        Like Peirce, Hanson pointed out that the reversal of
 
        a retroduction was a deductive inference 'q, q
 
        because p', becomes 'p, if p, then q, hence q'. The
 
        notion of reversal" or inverting" a retroduction is
 
        not a technique or rule of formal [[logic]], but rather
 
        a simple [[psychological]] description of changing the
 
        [[order]] of premises.
 
 
[[File:Buddhagarden.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Buddhagarden.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
             If the three-membered [[syllogism]] is retroduction
+
             If the three-membered [[syllogism]] is retroduction and if a retroduction is part of a retroductive-deductive pair, one should expect to find internal evidence for the presence or absence of a deductive fragment. To return to the Nyaaya and its commentary on this three-membered [[syllogism]], is there internal evidence to treat it as a retroduction-cum-deduction? A crucial point of philological interpretation is the [[function]] of the ablative "because" and the meaning of "[[hetu]]" itself. The weakness of the standard [[view]] is that it disregards the special features of the ablative "because" and translates the three-membered [[syllogism]] as if it contained conditionals. Following Daye, I suggest that that move is too hasty, and that we must regard the ablative "because" as an operator connecting the [[hetu]] and d.r.s.taanta to the thesis. Since the [[Sanskrit]] ablative expresses a relation of [[physical]] or {{Wiki|conceptual}} removal, separation, distinction, or origin, it was used to convey the notion of [[causal]] explanation. This fact gives prima facie evidence for interpreting it in the [[sense]] of "a [[reason]] for." Such an understanding is reinforced by the meaning of "[[hetu]]," which is the name of the explanatory part of the three-
        and   if   a   retroduction   is   part   of   a
 
        retroductive-deductive pair, one should expect to
 
        find internal evidence for the presence or absence
 
        of a deductive fragment. To return to the Nyaaya and
 
        its commentary on this three-membered [[syllogism]], is
 
        there   internal   evidence   to   treat   it as a
 
        retroduction-cum-deduction? A crucial   point   of
 
        philological interpretation is the [[function]] of the
 
        ablative "because"   and the meaning of "[[hetu]]"
 
        itself. The weakness of the standard [[view]] is that it
 
        disregards the special features of the ablative
 
        "because"   and   translates   the   three-membered
 
        [[syllogism]] as if it contained conditionals. Following
 
        Daye, I suggest that that move is too hasty, and
 
        that we must regard the ablative "because" as an
 
        operator connecting the [[hetu]] and d.r.s.taanta to the
 
        thesis. Since the [[Sanskrit]] ablative expresses a
 
        relation   of   [[physical]]   or {{Wiki|conceptual}}   removal,
 
        separation, distinction, or origin, it was used to
 
        convey the notion of [[causal]] explanation. This fact
 
        gives prima facie evidence for interpreting it in
 
        the [[sense]] of "a [[reason]] for." Such an understanding
 
        is reinforced by the meaning of "[[hetu]]," which is the
 
        name of the explanatory part of the three-
 
  
 
[[File:Buddhas.jpg|thumb|250px|]]                              P.186
 
[[File:Buddhas.jpg|thumb|250px|]]                              P.186
  
        membered [[syllogism]]. According to Tachikawa, "[[hetu]]"
+
      membered [[syllogism]]. According to Tachikawa, "[[hetu]]" primarily means 'reason'.(8) This is solid ground for reading 'q because p' as: 'p is the [[reason]] for q', 'p is the explanatory {{Wiki|hypothesis}} for q', or even the Peircean 'if p were true, q would be a matter of course'. Beyond points of translation, one of the strongest [[reasons]] for [[seeing]] the three-membered [[syllogism]] of the Nyaayaprave`sa as a retroduction-deduction is the [[existence]] of the five-membered [[syllogism]] in the earlier Nyaaya [[tradition]], particularly the Nyaaya Suutra.(9) The five-membered [[syllogism]] of the Nyaaya Suutra is perfectly symmetrical between its three initial retroductive steps and its two culminating deductive steps:
        primarily means 'reason'.(8) This is solid ground
 
        for reading 'q because p' as: 'p is the [[reason]] for
 
        q', 'p is the explanatory {{Wiki|hypothesis}} for q', or even
 
        the Peircean 'if p were true, q would be a matter of
 
        course'.
 
 
 
            Beyond   points   of translation, one of the
 
        strongest   [[reasons]] for [[seeing]] the three-membered
 
        [[syllogism]]   of   the   Nyaayaprave`sa     as   a
 
        retroduction-deduction   is the [[existence]] of the
 
        five-membered   [[syllogism]]   in the earlier Nyaaya
 
        [[tradition]], particularly the Nyaaya Suutra.(9) The
 
        five-membered [[syllogism]] of the Nyaaya Suutra is
 
        perfectly symmetrical between its three initial
 
        retroductive steps and its two culminating deductive
 
        steps:
 
  
  
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[[File:BuddhaTwang.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:BuddhaTwang.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
  
        If one were to picture this pattern as an isosceles
+
        If one were to picture this pattern as an isosceles triangle, one side would represent the retroduction from [15] the pratij~naa {{Wiki|reasoning}} through the [16] [[hetu]] to [17] the d.r.s.taanta, and the opposing side of the triangle would represent the deduction beginning with [17] the d.r.s.taanta to [18] upanaya and inferring the nigamana. The French {{Wiki|Indologist}} Rene Guenon pointed out that after the appearance of the Nyaaya Suutra, there were two abridged forms of the five-membered [[syllogism]], (10) in which either the first three [15-17] or the last three [17-19] parts appeared alone. Gutnon also pointed out that the latter abridgment resembles the [[syllogism]] of Aristolle; the former abridgment, of course, is precisely the one found in the 6th century Nyaayaprave`sa and indeed the same smoke-fire example occurs there also. Given the interpretation I have [[offered]], it is not surprising that there should be two abridgments of the five-membered [[syllogism]]. One abridgment captures the retroductive move; the second captures the deductive move. Deduction and retroduction are inversions of one another, and they can be separated by positioning the property-locus statement. One abridgment [[reasons]] from the thesis statement to an explanatory generalization; the other abridgment deduces the thesis from the generalization. The [[Buddhist]] [[logicians]] Mere quite emphatic about which abridgment they favored. The Nyaaya quite explicitly says, "We say that these three statements make the members of the [[syllogism]] and no more! "(11) Tachikwa's gloss on this statement indicates that it is an assertion that only three statements are necessary for an inference.
        triangle, one side would represent the retroduction
 
        from [15] the pratij~naa {{Wiki|reasoning}} through the [16]
 
        [[hetu]] to [17] the d.r.s.taanta, and the opposing side
 
        of the triangle would represent   the deduction
 
        beginning with [17] the d.r.s.taanta to [18] upanaya
 
        and inferring the nigamana.
 
 
 
            The French {{Wiki|Indologist}} Rene Guenon pointed out
 
        that after the appearance of the Nyaaya Suutra,
 
        there were two abridged forms of the five-membered
 
        [[syllogism]], (10) in which either the first three
 
        [15-17] or the last three [17-19] parts appeared
 
        alone. Gutnon also pointed out that the latter
 
        abridgment resembles the [[syllogism]] of Aristolle; the
 
        former abridgment, of course, is precisely the one
 
        found in the 6th century Nyaayaprave`sa and indeed
 
        the same smoke-fire example occurs there also. Given
 
        the interpretation   I have [[offered]], it is not
 
        surprising that there should be two abridgments of
 
        the five-membered [[syllogism]]. One abridgment captures
 
        the retroductive move; the second captures the
 
        deductive move.   Deduction and retroduction are
 
        inversions of one another, and they can be separated
 
        by positioning the property-locus statement. One
 
        abridgment [[reasons]] from the thesis statement to an
 
        explanatory generalization; the other abridgment
 
        deduces the thesis from the generalization. The
 
        [[Buddhist]] [[logicians]] Mere quite emphatic about which
 
        abridgment they favored. The Nyaaya quite explicitly
 
        says, "We say that these three statements make the
 
        members   of the [[syllogism]]   and no more! "(11)
 
        Tachikwa's gloss on this statement indicates that it
 
        is an assertion that only three statements are
 
        necessary for an inference.
 
 
[[File:Buddhism-2.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Buddhism-2.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
             We may conclude that what "inference" primarily
+
             We may conclude that what "inference" primarily meant to the [[Buddhist]] [[logicians]] was "{{Wiki|reasoning}} to an explanatory [[causal]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}}"; however, it would be wrong to further conclude that they had no [[appreciation]] of the deductive abridgment. To them [[logic]] was a means of bringing others to a [[recognition]] of particular statements; it was an upaaya, a heuristic [[teaching]] device. The retroductive abridgment of the five-membered [[syllogism]] clearly teaches in the sence that it brings the [[hearer]] to an [[awareness]] of a [[causal]] or {{Wiki|conceptual}} connection. The deductive abridgment does not "teach" in this [[sense]] because like all deductions its conclusion does not contain [[information]] nor already found in the premises, [[Thus]], from the standpoint of an upaaya the retroductive inference is enough, or, as the author of the Nyaayaprave`sa put it, "...these three members make the [retroductive] [[syllogism]] and no more."
        meant to the [[Buddhist]] [[logicians]] was "{{Wiki|reasoning}} to an
 
        explanatory [[causal]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}}"; however, it would be
 
        wrong   to further   conclude   that they had no
 
        [[appreciation]] of the
 
 
 
                                P.187
 
 
 
 
 
        deductive abridgment. To them [[logic]] was a means of
 
        bringing others to a [[recognition]]   of particular
 
        statements; it was an upaaya, a heuristic [[teaching]]
 
        device.   The   retroductive   abridgment   of   the
 
        five-membered [[syllogism]] clearly teaches in the sence
 
        that it brings the [[hearer]] to an [[awareness]] of a [[causal]]
 
        or {{Wiki|conceptual}} connection. The deductive abridgment
 
        does not "teach" in this [[sense]] because like all
 
        deductions   its   conclusion   does   not   contain
 
        [[information]] nor already found in the premises, [[Thus]],
 
        from the standpoint of an upaaya the retroductive
 
        inference is enough, or, as the author of the
 
        Nyaayaprave`sa put it, "...these three members make
 
        the [retroductive] [[syllogism]] and no more."
 
 
[[File:Buddhism-Mongolia.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Buddhism-Mongolia.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
             A further point in favour of reading the Nyaaya
+
             A further point in favour of reading the Nyaaya inference schema as a retroduction is that it makes the remainder of the manual on [[logical]] methods, especially the detailed sections on kinds of fallacies, more intelligible and enljghtening. More than two thirds of the text covers identification and classification of fallacies, but none bear any resemblance to the formal fallacies of deduction such as affirming the consequent or denying the antecedent, nor does the system resemble Western notions of an informal fallacy. Fallacies of irrelevance such as the ad hominem or post hoc propter hoc call [[attention]] to the lack of support between premises and putative conclusion. In [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] the classification of fallacies does not attempt to circumscribe the ways premises can be irrelevant; on the contrary it fives criteria for grading the strength or weakness of the explanatory hypotheses. This is precisely what is required for retroductive accuracy. Weak hypotheses emerge in three circumstances: (1) the [[hetu]] is unrecognized by proponent or opponent, (2) the [[hetu]] is inconclusive, or (3) it is contradicted. Inconclusive [[hetus]] are those which are not supported by further evidence from the similarity and dissimilarity cases; contradicted [[hetus]] are those which prove the opposite of the pak.sa. Such a contradiction is established by deducing the opposite property-locus assertion. A [[hetu]] can fail to be recognized, that is, it can fail as a [[teaching]] device by not making the auditor (or speaker) aware of the connection between the assertion statement and its warranting [[hetu]]. [[Thus]], when hypotheses fail to be understood, they engender fallacies of [[recognition]], but when they fail in evidential support they engender fallacies of contradiction or inconclusivity. On the whole, this classification of fallacies reflects a sophisticated, but also a commonsensical, means of evaluating hypotheses. It is open textured as retroductive {{Wiki|reasoning}} must be, and more importantly it does not attempt (as the Western notion of fallac does) to classify fallacious {{Wiki|reasoning}} as a kind of deductive argument gone awry.
        inference schema as a retroduction is that it makes
 
        the remainder of the manual on [[logical]] methods,
 
        especially   the detailed   sections on kinds of
 
        fallacies, more intelligible and enljghtening. More
 
        than two thirds of the text covers identification
 
        and classification of fallacies, but none bear any
 
        resemblance to the formal fallacies of deduction
 
        such as affirming the consequent or denying the
 
        antecedent, nor does the system resemble Western
 
        notions of an informal fallacy.   Fallacies   of
 
        irrelevance such as the ad hominem or post hoc
 
        propter hoc call [[attention]] to the lack of support
 
        between premises   and putative   conclusion.   In
 
        [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] the classification of fallacies does
 
        not attempt to circumscribe the ways premises can be
 
        irrelevant; on the contrary it fives criteria for
 
        grading the strength or weakness of the explanatory
 
        hypotheses. This is precisely what is required for
 
        retroductive accuracy. Weak hypotheses emerge in
 
        three circumstances: (1) the [[hetu]] is unrecognized by
 
        proponent or opponent, (2) the [[hetu]] is inconclusive,
 
        or (3) it is contradicted. Inconclusive [[hetus]] are
 
        those which are not supported by further evidence
 
        from   the similarity   and dissimilarity   cases;
 
        contradicted   [[hetus]] are those which   prove the
 
        opposite of the pak.sa. Such a contradiction is
 
        established by deducing the opposite property-locus
 
        assertion. A [[hetu]] can fail to be recognized, that
 
        is, it can fail as a [[teaching]] device by not making
 
        the auditor (or speaker) aware of the connection
 
        between the assertion statement and its warranting
 
        [[hetu]]. [[Thus]], when hypotheses fail to be understood,
 
        they engender fallacies of [[recognition]], but when they
 
        fail in evidential support they engender fallacies
 
        of contradiction or inconclusivity. On the whole,
 
        this   classification   of fallacies   reflects   a
 
        sophisticated, but also a commonsensical, means of
 
        evaluating hypotheses. It is open textured as
 
        retroductive {{Wiki|reasoning}} must be, and more importantly
 
        it does not attempt (as the Western notion of fallac
 
        does) to classify fallacious {{Wiki|reasoning}} as a kind of
 
        deductive argument gone awry.
 
 
[[File:Buddhism.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Buddhism.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
             In this paper I have attempted to enlarge the
+
             In this paper I have attempted to enlarge the dialogue about the nature of [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] by arguing that it is [[essentially]] retroductive. As [[philosophers]] and {{Wiki|psychologists}} continue to investigate the {{Wiki|conceptual}} and factual aspects of {{Wiki|hypothesis}} formation, the study of [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] will increase in importance because, unlike other [[logical]] treatises, the Nyaayaprave`sa is an historyically significant document about ways of {{Wiki|reasoning}} and misreasoning to an explanatory
        dialogue about the nature of [[Buddhist]] [[logic]] by
 
        arguing that it is [[essentially]] retroductive. As
 
        [[philosophers]]   and   {{Wiki|psychologists}}   continue   to
 
        investigate the {{Wiki|conceptual}} and factual aspects of
 
        {{Wiki|hypothesis}} formation, the study of [[Buddhist]] [[logic]]
 
        will increase in importance because, unlike other
 
        [[logical]]   treatises, the   Nyaayaprave`sa   is   an
 
        historyically significant document about ways of
 
        {{Wiki|reasoning}}   and   misreasoning   to an explanatory
 
 
         {{Wiki|hypothesis}}.
 
         {{Wiki|hypothesis}}.
  
                                P.188
+
                               
  
 
         NOTES
 
         NOTES

Revision as of 22:53, 1 September 2013

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The history of Indian logic is usually divided into three periods, Old Nyaaya (circa 250 B.C. ) , Buddhist logic (sixth century A.D.) and New Nyaaya. The Buddhist logic text, Nyaayaprave`sa (Introduction to Logical Methods) , had great influence upon Indian and Chinese Buddhism and also among the Jains. As a pivotal work, the Nyaayaprave`sa has received critical attention from historians of religion, philologists, philosophers, and logicians. As with all advances in scholarship, there is controversy over interpretation, but in the case of Buddhist logic, the controversy cuts to the very heart of the issue of whether Buddhist logic is in any recognizable contemporary sense a "logic." The received view holds that Buddhist logic bears very close similarities to syllogistic forms and that it can be represented and analyzed by standard deductive techniques.(1) A much different and opposing view has been argued by Professor Douglas Daye in a series of papers. Daye maintains that "... the descriptive utility of mathematical logic with early Nyaaya texts has simply been overrated";(2) that although the Nyaaya texts contain metalogical rules for evaluating the "legitimacy or illegitimacy" of arguments, the distinction between validity and invalidity does not apply;(3) that Nyaaya models are not inferences but "formalistic explanations"; and that "... Buddhist logic is not deductive, nor can it be formally valid nor is it an inference."(4)
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The cumulative effect of these claims is to assert that Buddhist logic is not a "logic" at all, at least not in any sense which is recognized by Western philosophers. There is a radical incompatibility between the Nyaaya methods of logic and those of the Prior Analytics or Principia Mathematica. Of course, there will be differences, possibly very great differences, between any two traditions so diverse as fourth century (B.C.) Greece and sixth century (A.D.) India, but are we to go so far as to say that the Nyaaya does not contain inferences? The radical incompatibility thesis is, I maintain, a mistake; moreover, it is a mistake which can readily be uncovered by examining the typical Nyaaya inference scheme. Of the notion that a Nyaaya scheme could be a "formalistic explanation" without being an inference, I shall say very little because I do not see how anything which functions as an explanation could not involve inferences of some kind or other. It is important to know whether the Nyaaya scheme is deductive or not, and if it is, whether all of its parts are essential to the deduction. I will demonstrate that there are two ways of reading the Nyaaya form: one which is straightforwardly deductive and a second which is best understood by what the American pragmatist, C.S. Peirce, and later Norwood Hanson, call "retroduction."
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            To begin with, consider this representative
        example from the Nyaaya:(5)

            1. pak.sa (thesis) Sound is imprrmanrne

            2. hetu (mark or Reason) - Because of its
               property of being produced

                                P.184


            3. d.r.s.taanta (Exemplification)--Whatever is
                produced, is impermanent
            4. sapak.sa (similar case)- As with a pot, and
                so forth
            5. vipak.sa (dissimilar case)- As (not with the
                case) of space, and so forth

            Tachikawa proposes the following scheme for what
        he calls the "three-membered Indian syllogism:(6)

            6. There is property p in locus L
            7. (because) there is property q (in L).
            8. Wherever there is property q, there is
                property p, as in locus w

Buddha 21226.jpg

        Clearly, if this schema is reversed, (8) and (7)
        become premises for a valid deductive inference of
        (6) as the conclusion. The reverse of our example
        becomes an instance of modus ponens.

            9. d.r.s.taanta - Whatever is created is
                impermanent.
            10. hetu - Sound is created.
            11. pak.sa - Sound is impermanent.

             Why is this instance of modus ponens a matter of dispute? The incompatibilists point out that the relationship between the thesis (pak.sa) and the justification (hetu) is always expressed in the Sanskrit ablative case and that this relationship cannot be represented or translated as the English "therefore" (or ergo). Its best translation is "because." Thus, for the incompatibilist, the primary objection to identifying the Nyaaya scheme as a deductive inference is the familiar one of ordinary language philosophers who resist the translation of expressions as `q because p' into `p ) q' on the grounds that the causal or explanatory meaning of "because" is lost in the truth-functional conditional.

Buddha121xs.JPG

            This objection has force, but one must distinguish between the assertion that truth-functional connectives preserve or capture the meaning of `q because p' and the claim that truth-functional connectives can represent a deductive relationship between propositions within the Nyaaya scheme. It is the latter which the received view upholds: it is the former which the incompatibilist vehemently opposes. The issue is not joined, because surely one can maintain that there is a deductive inference in the inversion Nyaaya scheme without maintaining that it captures the meaning of or even approaches synonymy with the original. In sum, the issue between the received view and the incompatibilist pivots on the former's willingness to invert the Nyaaya form and read it as a valid deduction and the latter's insistence that the form cannot be so reversed without losing the special relationship of the hetu. Given the merits of both views and given the fact that both positions are not explicit contradictories of one another, there is a way to understand the Nyaaya scheme which allows both sides to have their cake and eat it too. I believe that the three-membered Nyaaya is best understood as a retroductivc inference. A retroduction, as it has been described by C. S. Peirce and

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                                P.185

         Norwood Hansonl is a pattern of reasoning which leads from some phenomenon or perception to an explanatory hypothesis of that phenomenon. Its form is not truth-functional nor are the relationships of that premises completely rulegoverned. Peirce said, "It must be remembered that retroduction, although hampered very little by logical rules, nevertheless, is logical inference, asserting its conclusion only problematically or conjecturally...."(7) Retroduction does have a recognizable pattern, and indeed it is very close to the three-membered syllogism of Indian logic. Its form, according to Peirce, is:

            12. The surprizing fact Q is observed.

            13. But if P were true, Q would be a matter of
                course.

            14. Hence, there is reason to suspect that P is
                true.

        As a schema, for retroduction we have:

Buddha444.jpg

            (12') q
            (13') q because p
            (14')p

         which is isomorphic with that of the Nyaaya (that is, pak.sa, because hetu and d.r.s.taanta; hence there is evidence for the pak.sa). The similarity (sapak.sa) and dissimilarity (vipak.sa) cases serve as further evidence in support of the explanatory justification. The philosopher of science, Norwood Hanson, argued that retroduction was a "logic of discovery" which led to deductive-nomological explanations. Like Peirce, Hanson pointed out that the reversal of a retroduction was a deductive inference 'q, q because p', becomes 'p, if p, then q, hence q'. The notion of reversal" or inverting" a retroduction is not a technique or rule of formal logic, but rather a simple psychological description of changing the order of premises.

Buddhagarden.jpg

            If the three-membered syllogism is retroduction and if a retroduction is part of a retroductive-deductive pair, one should expect to find internal evidence for the presence or absence of a deductive fragment. To return to the Nyaaya and its commentary on this three-membered syllogism, is there internal evidence to treat it as a retroduction-cum-deduction? A crucial point of philological interpretation is the function of the ablative "because" and the meaning of "hetu" itself. The weakness of the standard view is that it disregards the special features of the ablative "because" and translates the three-membered syllogism as if it contained conditionals. Following Daye, I suggest that that move is too hasty, and that we must regard the ablative "because" as an operator connecting the hetu and d.r.s.taanta to the thesis. Since the Sanskrit ablative expresses a relation of physical or conceptual removal, separation, distinction, or origin, it was used to convey the notion of causal explanation. This fact gives prima facie evidence for interpreting it in the sense of "a reason for." Such an understanding is reinforced by the meaning of "hetu," which is the name of the explanatory part of the three-

Buddhas.jpg
P.186


       membered syllogism. According to Tachikawa, "hetu" primarily means 'reason'.(8) This is solid ground for reading 'q because p' as: 'p is the reason for q', 'p is the explanatory hypothesis for q', or even the Peircean 'if p were true, q would be a matter of course'. Beyond points of translation, one of the strongest reasons for seeing the three-membered syllogism of the Nyaayaprave`sa as a retroduction-deduction is the existence of the five-membered syllogism in the earlier Nyaaya tradition, particularly the Nyaaya Suutra.(9) The five-membered syllogism of the Nyaaya Suutra is perfectly symmetrical between its three initial retroductive steps and its two culminating deductive steps:


            15. Thesis(pratij~naa) for example, there is
                fire on the mountain.

            16. Reason (hetu)- The mountain smokes.

            17. Exemplification (d.r.s.taata) - Wherever
                there is smoke. there is fire, as (for
                example) on the hearth in the kitchen.

            18. Recapitulation of the reason (upanaya) - The
                mountain smokes.

            19. Conclusion (nigamana) There is fire on the
                mountain.

BuddhaTwang.jpg


         If one were to picture this pattern as an isosceles triangle, one side would represent the retroduction from [15] the pratij~naa reasoning through the [16] hetu to [17] the d.r.s.taanta, and the opposing side of the triangle would represent the deduction beginning with [17] the d.r.s.taanta to [18] upanaya and inferring the nigamana. The French Indologist Rene Guenon pointed out that after the appearance of the Nyaaya Suutra, there were two abridged forms of the five-membered syllogism, (10) in which either the first three [15-17] or the last three [17-19] parts appeared alone. Gutnon also pointed out that the latter abridgment resembles the syllogism of Aristolle; the former abridgment, of course, is precisely the one found in the 6th century Nyaayaprave`sa and indeed the same smoke-fire example occurs there also. Given the interpretation I have offered, it is not surprising that there should be two abridgments of the five-membered syllogism. One abridgment captures the retroductive move; the second captures the deductive move. Deduction and retroduction are inversions of one another, and they can be separated by positioning the property-locus statement. One abridgment reasons from the thesis statement to an explanatory generalization; the other abridgment deduces the thesis from the generalization. The Buddhist logicians Mere quite emphatic about which abridgment they favored. The Nyaaya quite explicitly says, "We say that these three statements make the members of the syllogism and no more! "(11) Tachikwa's gloss on this statement indicates that it is an assertion that only three statements are necessary for an inference.

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            We may conclude that what "inference" primarily meant to the Buddhist logicians was "reasoning to an explanatory causal hypothesis"; however, it would be wrong to further conclude that they had no appreciation of the deductive abridgment. To them logic was a means of bringing others to a recognition of particular statements; it was an upaaya, a heuristic teaching device. The retroductive abridgment of the five-membered syllogism clearly teaches in the sence that it brings the hearer to an awareness of a causal or conceptual connection. The deductive abridgment does not "teach" in this sense because like all deductions its conclusion does not contain information nor already found in the premises, Thus, from the standpoint of an upaaya the retroductive inference is enough, or, as the author of the Nyaayaprave`sa put it, "...these three members make the [retroductive] syllogism and no more."

Buddhism-Mongolia.jpg

            A further point in favour of reading the Nyaaya inference schema as a retroduction is that it makes the remainder of the manual on logical methods, especially the detailed sections on kinds of fallacies, more intelligible and enljghtening. More than two thirds of the text covers identification and classification of fallacies, but none bear any resemblance to the formal fallacies of deduction such as affirming the consequent or denying the antecedent, nor does the system resemble Western notions of an informal fallacy. Fallacies of irrelevance such as the ad hominem or post hoc propter hoc call attention to the lack of support between premises and putative conclusion. In Buddhist logic the classification of fallacies does not attempt to circumscribe the ways premises can be irrelevant; on the contrary it fives criteria for grading the strength or weakness of the explanatory hypotheses. This is precisely what is required for retroductive accuracy. Weak hypotheses emerge in three circumstances: (1) the hetu is unrecognized by proponent or opponent, (2) the hetu is inconclusive, or (3) it is contradicted. Inconclusive hetus are those which are not supported by further evidence from the similarity and dissimilarity cases; contradicted hetus are those which prove the opposite of the pak.sa. Such a contradiction is established by deducing the opposite property-locus assertion. A hetu can fail to be recognized, that is, it can fail as a teaching device by not making the auditor (or speaker) aware of the connection between the assertion statement and its warranting hetu. Thus, when hypotheses fail to be understood, they engender fallacies of recognition, but when they fail in evidential support they engender fallacies of contradiction or inconclusivity. On the whole, this classification of fallacies reflects a sophisticated, but also a commonsensical, means of evaluating hypotheses. It is open textured as retroductive reasoning must be, and more importantly it does not attempt (as the Western notion of fallac does) to classify fallacious reasoning as a kind of deductive argument gone awry.

Buddhism.jpg

            In this paper I have attempted to enlarge the dialogue about the nature of Buddhist logic by arguing that it is essentially retroductive. As philosophers and psychologists continue to investigate the conceptual and factual aspects of hypothesis formation, the study of Buddhist logic will increase in importance because, unlike other logical treatises, the Nyaayaprave`sa is an historyically significant document about ways of reasoning and misreasoning to an explanatory
        hypothesis.

                                 

        NOTES

            1. Daniel H. H. Ingalls, Material for the Study
        of Navya-Nyaya Logic, Harvard Oriental Series, vol.
        40 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1951);
        Hajime Nakamura, "Buddhist Logic Expounded by Means
        of Symbolic Logic," Indogku Bukkyogaku Kenkyu 7
        (1958) : 375-395; J. F. Staal, "Means of
        Formalization of Indian and Western Thought," Logic,
        Metlzodology and Philosophy of Science, Proceedings
        of the XIIth International Congress of Philosophy,
        Venice, 1958; H. Kitagawa, "A Note on the
        Methodology in the Study of Indian Logic," Indogaku
        Bukkyogaku Kenkyu 8 (1960) : 380-390; S. S.
        Barlingay, A Modern Introduction to Indian Logic
        (Delhi: National Publishing House, 1965) : A.
        Charlene S. McDermott, An Eleventh-Century Buddhist
        Logic of "Exists, " Foundations of Language,
        Supplementary Series, vol. 2 (Dordrecht, Holland: D.
        Reidel, 1970); B. K. Matilal, The Navya-Nyaaya
        Doctrine of Negation, Harvard Oriental Series, vol.
        46 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 1968): and
        particularly Epistemology, Logic and Grammar in
        Indian Philosophical Analysis, Janua Linguarum,
        Series Minor, 111 (Mouton: The Hague, 1971).

Buddhism47gf.jpg

            2. Douglas Daye, "Metalogical Incompatibilities
        In the Formal Description of Buddhist Logic
        (Nyaaya)," Notre Dame Journal of Logic 28, no. 2
        (1977): 231.

            3. Douglas Daye, "Empirical Falsifiability and
        the Frequence of Dar`sana Relevance in the Sixth
        Century Buddhist Logic of Sankaravamin," Logique et
        Analyse 86 (June 1979): 221.

            4. Douglas Daye, Comparative Issues in Buddhist
        and Angle-European Formal Logics (unpublished
        manuscript), p. 121.

            5. Musashi Tachikawa, trans., "A Sixth Century
        Manual of Indian Logic (the Nyaayaprave`sa) ,"
        Journal of Indian Philosophy 1, no. 2 (1971): 114.

            6. Ibid., p. 115, Norwood R. Hanson, Patterns of
        Discovery (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
        1958), pp. 93-105.

            "Is There A Logic of Discovery," Current Issues
        in Philosophy of Science, edited by H. Fergland and
        G. Maxwell (New York: Holt-Rinehart & Winston,
        1961), pp. 20-35. Also Aristotle, Prior Analytics II,
        25.

BuddhistTriad.JPG

            7. C. S. Peirce, Collected Works (Cambridge:
        Harvard University Press, 1933), vol. 1, p. 188.
        Also vol. 6, pp. 522-28.

            8. Tachikawa, p. 116.

            9. A. B. Keith, Indian Logic and Atomism
        (Oxford: 1921), p. 21. The author dates the Nyaaya
        Suutra at 200-450 A.D.

            10. Rene Guenon, Introduction generale a l'etude
        des doctrines hindous(Paris: 1930), pp. 226-227.

            11. Tachikawa, p. 122.

Source

ccbs.ntu.edu.tw