Concepts of knowledge - East and West

Concepts of knowledge - East and West

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Author: Susan Walters
J L Shaw/
Publisher: Ramakrishna Mission
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 340
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8187332018

Description

This volume is a collection of twenty-one papers presented at an International Seminar attended by thirteen scholars from overseas and ten from India, besides a number of notable scholars who took part in the discussions as observers.

How do we know? This seemingly simple question has aroused the interest of numerous philosophers of East and West from ancient times down to the present, and innumerable answers have been given. Because of the wide interest in this vital question, a - 5 day international seminar was organized by the Ramakrishna Mission with a view to help narrow the wide gap of misunderstanding on this subject between modern philosophers of East and West.

Prof. DasGupta in his paper 'Swami Vivekananda's Concept of Knowledge' discussed Western epistemology comparing it with Swami Vivekananda's views. The editors decided that because of the paper's relevance to the subject of the Seminar, it would be a fitting introduction to this volume. Therefore it has become the Foreword to this book.

Contents

Publisher's Note
Foreword : Swami Vivekananda's Concept of Knowledge

CHAPTER I
The Epistemological Point of View of Bhartrhari

CHAPTER II
Cultural Presuppositions as Determinants in Experience : A Comparison of Some Basic Indian and Western Concepts

CHAPTER III
An Epistemological Study of Mysticism in Christianity and Hinduism

CHAPTER IV
Ramanuja's Concept of Knowledge

CHAPTER V
Some Remarks on the Definition of Knowledge

CHAPTER VI
The Use of the Word Prama : Valid Cognition in Advaita Vedanta

CHAPTER VII
Theories of Error in Indian Philosophy or Five Types of Khyati

CHAPTER VIII
Valid Cognition (Prama) and the Truth (Satyata) of its Object

CHAPTER IX
The Concept of 'Realization' Re-examined

CHAPTER X
Classical Yoga Philosophy and Some Issues in the Philosophy of Mind

CHAPTER XI
Epistemology from a Relativistic Point of View

CHAPTER XII
Epistemology and Understanding of Language

CHAPTER XIII
Confucian Knowledge : Commensurability and Alterity

CHAPTER XIV
Knowledge and Ignorance

CHAPTER XV
Truth Vs. Workability Rehashed

CHAPTER XVI
Knowledge, Truth, and Scepticism

CHAPTER XVII
Knowledge : Some contemporary Problems and their Solutions from the Nyaya Perspective

CHAPTER XVIII
Madhyamaka on Naturalized Epistemology

CHAPTER XIX
What Limits to Though, Inquiry and Philosophy ?

CHAPTER XX
The Action of the Subject towards the Outer World in Indian Realism

CHAPTER XXI
Patanjali's Classical Yoga : An Epistemological Emphasis