Lokayata/Carvaka
A Philosophical Enquiry
Price: 950.00
ISBN:
9780199460632
Publication date:
14/09/2015
Hardback
240 pages
Price: 950.00
ISBN:
9780199460632
Publication date:
14/09/2015
Hardback
240 pages
Pradeep P. Gokhale
Rights: World Rights
Pradeep P. Gokhale
Description
Philosophy in the Indian tradition is often believed to be essentially religious in character. Even schools like Nyāya and Buddhism correlate their logic and epistemology with a transcendent religious goal. Yet, there exists a purely secular and rational exercise within the Indian philosophical traditions—the Lokāyata/Cārvāka school of philosophy. Owing to a lack of substantial literary sources, Lokāyata has received only scant attention from scholars till now. This book is the first attempt to examine the philosophical energies inherent in the scattered Lokāyata/Cārvāka literature. Through a critical analysis firmly grounded in textual evidence, the author presents a systematic philosophical development of the pluralistic interpretation of this school. Claiming that the diversity in the Lokāyata school is greater and much more complex than generally imagined, the book explores the cognitive scepticism of Jayarāśi, the extreme empiricism popularly attributed to Cārvāka, and the mitigated empiricism in its two versions: positivist and common-sense-oriented. It discusses these in a wider philosophical perspective in terms of their implications and their Western parallels.
Pradeep P. Gokhale
Description
Philosophy in the Indian tradition is often believed to be essentially religious in character. Even schools like Nyāya and Buddhism correlate their logic and epistemology with a transcendent religious goal. Yet, there exists a purely secular and rational exercise within the Indian philosophical traditions—the Lokāyata/Cārvāka school of philosophy. Owing to a lack of substantial literary sources, Lokāyata has received only scant attention from scholars till now. This book is the first attempt to examine the philosophical energies inherent in the scattered Lokāyata/Cārvāka literature. Through a critical analysis firmly grounded in textual evidence, the author presents a systematic philosophical development of the pluralistic interpretation of this school. Claiming that the diversity in the Lokāyata school is greater and much more complex than generally imagined, the book explores the cognitive scepticism of Jayarāśi, the extreme empiricism popularly attributed to Cārvāka, and the mitigated empiricism in its two versions: positivist and common-sense-oriented. It discusses these in a wider philosophical perspective in terms of their implications and their Western parallels.
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