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Jain Philosophy

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Title: Jain Philosophy


1
Jain Philosophy
2
Mahavira
Kevala Absolute knowledge Omniscience
Cosmic Consciousness Anekanta Relative
imperfect knowledge Karmically conditioned
imperfect knowledge
3
Jain Cosmology
  • Jivas animate beings bound or liberated by karma
  • Invisible microbes (nigodas), plants,
    insects, animals, humans, gods.
  • Ajivas inanimate things
  • Motion
  • Rest
  • Space (akasha)
  • Time (kala)

4
  • Body (pudgala)
  • material atoms (anu) of earth, water,
    fire, air
  • Fine particles of karmic dirt (karma varana)
  • Metaphors of dust, dirt, staining,
    contamination, and coloring are used to explain
    how karma flows into (asrava) the pure
    consciousness of the jiva.

5
The Jain Universe
6
  • Realist Ontology
  • Persons and things are real.
  • The universe (loka) is real and material.
  • Karma is a form of material substance.
  • The world is eternal.
  • There is no one supreme omnipotent creator god.

7
  • Jainism is trans-theistic rather than atheistic.
  • Many devas of a higher karmic attainment.
  • Jivas are the master of their own destiny.
  • No gods grace can save them from their the
    karmic choices.
  • Jivas are infinite in number. Their true nature
    is infinite awareness, perception, bliss, energy.

8
Jaina Theory of Knowledge
  • Indirect fallible, karmically limited knowledge
    jnana
  • Mati opinion
  • Sensory perception vyavaharika
    pratyaksha
  • empirical perception
  • Memory smrti
  • Recognition pratyabhijna (combination
    of
  • memory and perception)
  • Logic (inference induction) tarka
  • Shruta verbal knowledge

9
  • Direct karmically purified supra-empirical
  • knowledge
  • Avadhi purified but still limited
    cognition of spatio-temporal objects, remote
    viewing, clairvoyance
  • Manahparyaya Even more purified
    cognition of other minds, telepathy
  • Kevala pure infinite knowledge of
    everything by the siddhas, omniscience

10
  • Jain epistemology and logic as the principle of
    ahimsa applied to thought.
  • Intellectual non-violence.

11
Svetambara Monk on Pilgrimage
12
  • The Jain Theory of Relativity
  • Anekantavada Ontology of Relativity.
  • Nayavada Epistemology of Relativity.
  • Syadvada Logic of Relativity.

13
  • Anekantavada
  • An-eka-anta Not one sided, the many-sidedness of
    reality.
  • All things have infinite aspects. As such they
    cannot they perceived and cognized by the
    ordinary human mind with its karmic limitations.
    Only omniscient kevalins can see the total
    reality.
  • Reality is infinitely and irreducibly complex.

14
  • Intellectual humility and respect for other
    points of view recognizing all are limited.
  • Avoid ekantata (absolutism) egotistical,
    sectarian, or dogmatic clinging to a point of
    view

15
Nayavada
  • The partial standpoints or perspectives.
  • Truth of any judgment or view depends on the
    perspective, the naya.
  • Apparently contradictory statements can be made
    about anything from different nayas.
  • Truth claims are based on valid nayas.

16
  • Nayas are kinds of knowledge accessible to
    humans.
  • Nayas are theoretically infinite.
  • But there are seven basic ones.
  • Not modern relativism or skepticism that there is
  • no truth or truth is a convention.
  • There is an absolute truth and Jinas know what it
    is.

17
  • Jains vigorously defend Jain principles against
    attack and critique other philosophical systems
    as one-sided.
  • Other philosophical views are stuck on one naya,
    true from a one point of view.
  • The Jain view is simply more comprehensive and
    inclusive.

18
  • Jainism saw itself as the true middle way between
    the radical impermanence of the Buddhists no self
    doctrine and the permanent enduring self of the
    Vedantists and Naiyayikas.
  • Nyaya proofs for God were also targets for much
    rigorous refutation.

19
  • Jain Logic
  • Dialectical logic of conditional predication
  • Transcends either/or binary logic and the
    disagreements that arise from partial, onesided
    judgments.

20
Syadvada Maybe Logic
  • Syat vada
  • Syat let it be or it may be
  • Multi-value logic
  • Syadvada is a seven-valued logic
  • Saptabhangiseven-fold predication

21
  • 1. From one point of view it is exists, true, or
    blue.
  • 2. From one point of view it is not.
  • 3. From one point of view it and it is not.
  • 4. From one point of view it is and it is
    indescribable.
  • 5. From one point of view it is not and it is
    indescribable.
  • 6. From one point of view it is, it is not, and
    it is indescribable.
  • 7. From one point of view it is indescribable.

22
  • From one perspective he is bad.
  • From one perspective he is not bad.
  • From one perspective he is bad and not bad.
  • From one perspective he is bad and indescribable.
  • From one perspective he is not bad and
    indescribable.
  • From one perspective he is bad, not bad, and
    indescribable.
  • From one perspective he is indescribable.

23
  • Gautama Lord. Is the soul permanent or
  • impermanent?
  • Mahavira The soul is permanent as well as
    impermanent. From the point of view of the
    substance (dravya) it is eternal. From the point
    of view of its modes (paryaya) it is undergoes
    birth, decay, and destruction and hence is
    impermanent.
  • Bhagavati
    Sutra 758-59

24
  • Mahaviras Inclusive Middle Path
  • Mahavira answered profound metaphysical
    questions with yes and no
  • Existence and non-existence of the soul
  • Eternity and non-eternity of the universe
  • Being and non-being
  • Unity and plurality
  • Permanence and impermanence
  • Identity and difference
  • Materialism and idealism
  • Necessity and freedom

25
  • Founders of Jain philosophy who set the trend
    for later Jain thinkers
  • Umasvati
  • Kundakunda
  • Siddhasena Divakara

26
  • Emergence, perishing, and endurance
    characterize all entities.

  • Tattvarthasutra
  • Meaning of the Fundamental
    Principles
  • Umasvati
    2nd-4th centuries CE,
  • First work in Sanskrit to systematize the
    basics of Jain philosophy. Touchstone for all
    later authors who write commentaries on it.

27
  • Kundakunda Digambara thinker
  • 2nd or 3rd Century
    CE
  • Two Truths
  • Mundane perspective Anekanta-Ordinary
  • Vyavahara naya cognition from
    the point of

  • view of the seven nayas.
  • Ultimate perspective Kevala-perfect
    knowledge
  • Niscaya naya of a Jina.

28
  • Siddhasena Divakara the Sun
  • Svetambara logician, circa 5th century CE
  • Nyayavatara Introduction to Logic
  • Sanmatirtarka Logic of True Doctrine
  • Divides the seven nayas into
  • Dravyastika Permanent substances
  • Paryayastika Changing modes
  • Identifies the nayas with different philosophical
    darsanas.

29
  • Permanent substances (dravyas)
  • 1. Common Vaisesika, Sankhya
  • 2. General Mahayana Buddhism, Vedanta
  • Changing modes and qualities (paryayas)
  • 3.Practical Carvaka
  • 4.Momentary Sautrantika
    Buddhism
  • 5. Verbal Grammarians
  • 6. Subtle
  • 7.Actual Mimamsa

30
  • Haribhadra 8th century CE
  • Saddarsanasamuccaya
  • Compendium of the Six Philosophical Systems
  • (Buddhism, Nyaya, Sankhya, Jainism, Vaisesika,
  • Mimamsa, Carvaka)
  • Yogadrstisamuccaya
  • Compendium of Views on Yoga
  • Victory Flag of Relativity (Anekanta)
  • Satirizes Hindu Classics in his A Tale of
    Scoundrels

31
  • Akalanka 8th c.
  • Haribhadra 8th c.
  • Hemacandra 12th c.
  • Ripper Apart of Other Systems of Thought
  • Yasovijaya 17th c.
  • Jain were great builders of libraries and
    collectors of manuscripts.

32
Religions are different roads converging upon
the same point. What does it matter if we take
different roads so long as we reach the same
goal.
Gandhi
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