This paper in an elementary level expresses the inevitable relation between the word and meaning from the prominent Indian philosophical trends by giving stress on Vyakti-śakti-vāda and Jāti-śakti-vāda, the two contender doctrines. The first one puts emphasis on the semantic value of a predicate whereas the latter draws attention to the generic uses of nouns. The second part of the writing underpins Navya Nyāya and Kumārila’s positions on the word-meaning reliance and the debate initiate when we look back to the question whether the word-meaning relation sounds conventional or eternal. I propose a position (śabda-vivarta-vāda) on these issues derived from the works of Patan᷈jali and Bhartṛharị, two grammarians of classical Indian tradi...
Rāmacandrācārya’s Prakriyākaumudī and Jīva Gosvāmin’s Harināmāmṛtavyākaraṇa (15th-16th centuries) ar...
The article presents the aporias that are found in classical Brahmin philosophical systems when thei...
This paper is intended as an investigation of śabdasvarūpa which means 'word itself' of 'word's ow...
This paper in an elementary level expresses the inevitable relation between the word and meaning fro...
In Indian thought we find two main approaches to the study of the problem of meaning. The Mimamseeka...
The paper concentrates on the most pressing question of Indian philosophy: what is the exact connota...
The existence of semantic relation was postulated in Katyayana’s Varttika (3 B.C.E.), which served a...
Notwithstanding its pivotal role in the thought of Indian early grammarians, the exact mean‐ ing of ...
This thesis is a study of the theory of meaning developed by the seventeenth century Indian Naiyāyik...
It is a remarkable feature of language, and of human understanding, that the same word refers to var...
abstract : This article deals with the changing ideas about meaning bearing elements in language fro...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...
textHow do hearers recognize when someone is speaking figuratively, and how do they recover the cont...
This paper undertakes textual exegesis and rational reconstruction of Mukula Bhaṭṭa’s Abhidhā-vṛttta...
Rāmacandrācārya’s Prakriyākaumudī and Jīva Gosvāmin’s Harināmāmṛtavyākaraṇa (15th-16th centuries) ar...
The article presents the aporias that are found in classical Brahmin philosophical systems when thei...
This paper is intended as an investigation of śabdasvarūpa which means 'word itself' of 'word's ow...
This paper in an elementary level expresses the inevitable relation between the word and meaning fro...
In Indian thought we find two main approaches to the study of the problem of meaning. The Mimamseeka...
The paper concentrates on the most pressing question of Indian philosophy: what is the exact connota...
The existence of semantic relation was postulated in Katyayana’s Varttika (3 B.C.E.), which served a...
Notwithstanding its pivotal role in the thought of Indian early grammarians, the exact mean‐ ing of ...
This thesis is a study of the theory of meaning developed by the seventeenth century Indian Naiyāyik...
It is a remarkable feature of language, and of human understanding, that the same word refers to var...
abstract : This article deals with the changing ideas about meaning bearing elements in language fro...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...
textHow do hearers recognize when someone is speaking figuratively, and how do they recover the cont...
This paper undertakes textual exegesis and rational reconstruction of Mukula Bhaṭṭa’s Abhidhā-vṛttta...
Rāmacandrācārya’s Prakriyākaumudī and Jīva Gosvāmin’s Harināmāmṛtavyākaraṇa (15th-16th centuries) ar...
The article presents the aporias that are found in classical Brahmin philosophical systems when thei...
This paper is intended as an investigation of śabdasvarūpa which means 'word itself' of 'word's ow...