Hindu
Philosophy
Hindu
philosophy began in the period of the Upanishads
(900–500 B.C.), but systematic philosophical elaboration did not appear
until several centuries later. Philosophical tenets were presented in the form
of aphorisms or sutras, intended to serve as an aid to memory and a
basis for oral elaboration. Their extreme conciseness presupposes an oral or
written commentary, and the traditions developed through successive layers of
commentarial tradition. Although all six schools of classical Hindu philosophy
accepted the authority of the Veda
, they had widely differing philosophical positions; they developed in
competition not only with one another, but also with the so-called heterodox
schools, which rejected the authority of the Veda: Buddhism
, Jainism
, the Ajivikas or skeptics, and the materialist Carvaka school.
Schools
of Hindu Philosophy
Nyaya,
traditionally founded by Akshapada Gautama (6th cent. B.C.), is a school of
logic and epistemology that defined the rules of debate and canons of proof.
Its views were accepted with modification by most of the other schools. The
atomist school, Vaisheshika, founded by Kanada (3d cent. B.C.), analyzed
reality into six categories: substance, quality, activity, generality,
particularity, and inherence. The universe is made up of nine kinds of
substance: earth, water, light, air, ether, time, space, soul (or self), and
mind.
The
Samkhya school, founded by Kapila (6th cent. B.C.), admits two basic
metaphysical principles, purusha (soul) and prakriti
(materiality). Prakriti consists of three gunas or qualities: sattva
(light or goodness), rajas (activity or passion), and tamas
(darkness or inertia). When these constituents are in equilibrium, prakriti
is static. However, disturbance of the equilibrium initiates a process of
evolution that ultimately produces both the material world and individual
faculties of action, thought, and sense. The purusha appears to be
bound to prakriti and its modifications and may become free only
through the realization that it is distinct from prakriti. Early
versions of Samkhya, now lost, may have been theistic, but the classical
system does not include God. The yoga
school expounded by Patanjali (2d cent. B.C.) accepts Samkhya metaphysics
to explain the validity of yogic processes described in the Yoga Sutras
and also accepts the concept of an Ishvara, God or supreme soul. Yoga
is defined as "cessation of the modifications of consciousness" and
is achieved by an eight-stage discipline of self-control and meditation.
The
Purva Mimamsa school, founded by Jaimini (2d cent. B.C.), set forth
sophisticated principles for interpreting the Veda, which was regarded as
entirely composed of injunctions to ritual action. Its epistemology and theory
of meaning were constructed to show that the words of the Veda had eternal and
intrinsic validity. The different schools of Uttara Mimamsa or Vedanta are all
based on the Upanishads and the Brahma-Sutras of Badarayana (c.200
B.C.–A.D.; 200), but differ in their concepts of God, world, soul, and the
relation between them.
Adapted
from Questia