Hindū philosophy. The sānkhya kārikā of Iśwara Kṛishṇa, an exposition of the system of Kapila [tr.] with an appendix on the Nyaya and Vaiśeshika systems, by J. Davies1881 - 151 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 47
Seite
... object in publishing these Essays originally , was to present in a readable form all the materials for judging impartially of the scriptures and religion of the Parsis . The same object has been kept in view while preparing this Second ...
... object in publishing these Essays originally , was to present in a readable form all the materials for judging impartially of the scriptures and religion of the Parsis . The same object has been kept in view while preparing this Second ...
Seite
... object is to translate , but it does not assume to be more than tentative , and it offers both to the professed Assyriologist and to the ordinary non - Assyriological Semitic scholar the means of controlling its results . " - Academy ...
... object is to translate , but it does not assume to be more than tentative , and it offers both to the professed Assyriologist and to the ordinary non - Assyriological Semitic scholar the means of controlling its results . " - Academy ...
Seite 2
... object was to support the supreme authority of these books , to maintain their ritual , and to determine the true mean- ing of such passages as had been misunderstood , or wrested in support of error . The Vedanta , or Uttara ...
... object was to support the supreme authority of these books , to maintain their ritual , and to determine the true mean- ing of such passages as had been misunderstood , or wrested in support of error . The Vedanta , or Uttara ...
Seite 18
... objects is as material as the objects themselves , being equally an emanation from Prakriti . The soul exists as a pure inward light , without any instrumentation by which it can become cognisant of the external world . This ...
... objects is as material as the objects themselves , being equally an emanation from Prakriti . The soul exists as a pure inward light , without any instrumentation by which it can become cognisant of the external world . This ...
Seite 19
... Object aller möglichen Erfahrung , d . i . Natur heissen kann " ( Kant , Deduction of the Categories , p . 576 ) ... objects that " since nothing exists except thought , neither does bondage , for it has no cause . ' The reply is ...
... Object aller möglichen Erfahrung , d . i . Natur heissen kann " ( Kant , Deduction of the Categories , p . 576 ) ... objects that " since nothing exists except thought , neither does bondage , for it has no cause . ' The reply is ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
absolute action asat attain attribute Bhikshu bodily Brahma buddhi intellect Buddhist cause and effect cloth Colebrooke Colebrooke translates connected consciousness Daksha darkness deliverance developed Distich distinct doctrine emanation evil existent things explained external faculty five subtle elements form of matter formal existence gained Gauḍapāda Gotama gross elements gunas Hilaire Hindu commentators idea implies India inference intellect buddhi interpretation Iswara Kaṇāda Kapila's system kind knowledge ledge linga mahābhūta manas manifestation māyā means ment mind mode called mode or constituent moral Natura naturata Nature Prakriti Nyaya organs of sense pain Parsis passion Patanjali perception Post 8vo Prakriti Nature Pravachana present principle produced Professor Wilson Royal Asiatic Society sāmānya Sankhya Sankhya philosophy Sankhya system Sanskrit says Schopenhauer sensation soul Spinoza śruti substance subtle body Sūtra system of Kapila Talmud tanmātra thought three internal organs three modes tion unconscious universe Vachaspati Vedantist Vedas Vijnana word
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 19 - For, after all, what do we know of this terrible "matter," except as a name for the unknown and hypothetical cause of states of our own consciousness? And what do we know of that "spirit...