Padārtha Explained

is a Sanskrit word for "categories" in Vaisheshika and Nyaya schools of Indian philosophy.[1] [2]

Etymology

The term is a portmanteau of, "word" and, "meaning" or "referent", and so the term indicates "the meaning or referent of words".[3]

Philosophical significance

Almost all of India's philosophical systems accept liberation as life's ultimate goal; it is the summum bonum. Each philosophy prescribes the means to that end independently. According to Aksapada Gautama, liberation can be attained by true knowledge of the categories or padārthas.[4] According to the Vaisheshika school, all things that exist, which can be conceptualized, and that can be named are padārthas, the objects of experience.

Types

Vaisheshika

According to Vaisheshika, padārtha or objects of experience can be divided as and . The bhāva padārthas are of six types, while non-existence was added later.[3] These are:

Later Vaiśeṣikas such as Śrīdhara, Udayana and Śivāditya added, non-existence.[5]

Nyaya

Nyāya metaphysics recognizes sixteen s, the second of which, called, includes the six (or seven) categories of the Vaiśeṣika school. They are:

  1. (valid means of knowledge),
  2. (objects of valid knowledge),
  3. (doubt),
  4. (aim),
  5. (example),
  6. (conclusion),
  7. (members of syllogism),
  8. (hypothetical reasoning),
  9. (settlement),
  10. (discussion),
  11. (wrangling),
  12. (cavilling),
  13. (fallacy),
  14. (quibbling),
  15. (sophisticated refutation)
  16. (point of defeat)

Western philosophy

s are distinct from the categories of Aristotle, Kant, and Hegel. According to Aristotle, categories are logical classification of predicates; Kant states that categories are only patterns of understanding, while Hegel’s categories are dynamic stages in the development of thought. The Vaiśeṣika categories are a metaphysical classification of all knowable objects.

Aristotle accepts ten categories:

The Vaiśeṣikas instead place the concepts of time and place under substance; relation under quality; inherence, quantity and property under quality. Passivity is considered the opposite of activity. Akṣapāda Gautama enumerates sixteen s.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/early-modern-india/#WhaVaiSysCat Padārtha
  2. Book: Daniel Henry Holmes Ingalls. Materials for the Study of Navya-nyāya Logic. 1951. Motilal Banarsidass. 978-81-208-0384-8. 37–39.
  3. Book: Mishra. Umesh. Conception of matter according to Nyayavaisesika. 1987. Gian Publishing House. Delhi. 345–347.
  4. Web site: Ganeri. Jonardon. Analytic Philosophy in Early Modern India. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 19 March 2018.
  5. Web site: Padartha, aka: Padārtha; 7 Definition(s). Wisdom library. 21 July 2013. 19 March 2018.
  6. Book: Edwards . Paul . The Encyclopedia of Philosophy . II . 46.