The svabhavada is considered one of the “lost philosophies” of ancient India, perhaps the earliest powerful adversary doctrine of Buddha’s teachings or at least a crucial speculative obstacle to their comprehension, as pretended by the Madhyamika texts. Among the most ancient Brahminical sources, the Paninian terminological system employed svabhava to qualify the denotation of words, as an autonomous/self-standing power, i.e. as a counterpart of their linguistic form which is declared to be nitya ‘permanent’. This paper concentrates on the possible relationship between this technical concept and the more famous speculative usages of the term svabhava involved in the philosophical debate of most schools almost dating back to the same centuri...
Vāda, the classical name for the act of discussion/debate in the Indian tradition, forms the basis o...
This dissertation is a translation of the introductory part of the Sadhanasamuddesa (versus 1-44) of...
Rāmacandrācārya’s Prakriyākaumudī and Jīva Gosvāmin’s Harināmāmṛtavyākaraṇa (15th-16th centuries) ar...
The svabhavada is considered one of the “lost philosophies” of ancient India, perhaps the earliest p...
The svabhavada is considered one of the “lost philosophies” of ancient India, perhaps the earliest p...
Bhartrhari's Vakyapadiya is a major work in Sanskrit Linguistics and its study is a long-felt need. ...
Notwithstanding its pivotal role in the thought of Indian early grammarians, the exact mean‐ ing of ...
This paper considers the philosophical interpretation of the concept of svabhāva, sometimes transla...
In the Sanskrit tradition, grammar (vyākarana ) is considered to be the principal Vedic ancillary (v...
There are certain discrepancies between the forms and constructions prescribed by Pāṇinian grammaria...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
International audienceStudy of language and communication has been an important concern in India’s i...
The ancient Indian tradition devotes some attention to origin of language, aiming to discover the tr...
The article addresses a critical problem in the history of South Asian philosophy, namely the nature...
This dissertation is a study of the first two chapters of the Śivadrsti of Somānanda, the ninth-cent...
Vāda, the classical name for the act of discussion/debate in the Indian tradition, forms the basis o...
This dissertation is a translation of the introductory part of the Sadhanasamuddesa (versus 1-44) of...
Rāmacandrācārya’s Prakriyākaumudī and Jīva Gosvāmin’s Harināmāmṛtavyākaraṇa (15th-16th centuries) ar...
The svabhavada is considered one of the “lost philosophies” of ancient India, perhaps the earliest p...
The svabhavada is considered one of the “lost philosophies” of ancient India, perhaps the earliest p...
Bhartrhari's Vakyapadiya is a major work in Sanskrit Linguistics and its study is a long-felt need. ...
Notwithstanding its pivotal role in the thought of Indian early grammarians, the exact mean‐ ing of ...
This paper considers the philosophical interpretation of the concept of svabhāva, sometimes transla...
In the Sanskrit tradition, grammar (vyākarana ) is considered to be the principal Vedic ancillary (v...
There are certain discrepancies between the forms and constructions prescribed by Pāṇinian grammaria...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
International audienceStudy of language and communication has been an important concern in India’s i...
The ancient Indian tradition devotes some attention to origin of language, aiming to discover the tr...
The article addresses a critical problem in the history of South Asian philosophy, namely the nature...
This dissertation is a study of the first two chapters of the Śivadrsti of Somānanda, the ninth-cent...
Vāda, the classical name for the act of discussion/debate in the Indian tradition, forms the basis o...
This dissertation is a translation of the introductory part of the Sadhanasamuddesa (versus 1-44) of...
Rāmacandrācārya’s Prakriyākaumudī and Jīva Gosvāmin’s Harināmāmṛtavyākaraṇa (15th-16th centuries) ar...