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Epistemology Of Perception: Gangesa's Tattvacintamani Jewel of Reflection on the Truth (About Eistemology) |
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Author |
Phillips, Stephen H.
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Tatacharya, N. S. Ramanuja
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Date | 2004.12.30 |
Pages | 723 |
Publisher | American Institute of Buddhist Studies |
Content type | 書籍=Book |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | Bilingual edition; Treasury of the Indic Sciences
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Keyword | Vijnana=Perception; 正念=覺知=Mindfulness=Awareness; 因果=Cause and Effect=Causality=Causation; 吠陀=吠陀安陀=Vedanta; 認識論=Epistemology |
Table of contents | SERIES EDITOR'S PREFACE PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS PRELIMINARIES 1. For Philosophers 2. For Sanskritists INTRODUCTION: GANGESA AND NYAYA PHILOHOPHY 1. An Epistemology of "Knowledge Sources" 2. Cognition 3. Inference 4. Ontological Categories 5. Causality 6. Predecessors and Opponents 6.1. Mimamsa, Vedanta, and Bauddha philosophy 6.2. Nyaya and Vaisesika 6.3. Mimamsaka subcamps TATTVACINTAMANI Auspicious Performance--THE PERCEPTION CHAPTER Knowing Veridicality Production of Veridical Cognition Characterizing Veridical Awareness Perceptual Presentation of Something as Other Than What It Is Characterizing Perception Sensory Connection Inherence Non-Cognition Absence The Connection of the Sense Object and Light The Perceptibility of Air The Fiery Character of Gold The Mind's Atomicity Apperception Indeterminate Perception Qualifiers versus Indicators Determinate Perception GLOSSARY NOTES BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX
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ISBN | 0975373439 (hc) |
Hits | 403 |
Created date | 2005.03.25
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