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Indian
Schools of Religious Philosophy
Jainism,
founded in about the 6th century BC by Vardhamana
Mahavira, the 24th in a succession of religious leaders known
as Jinas (Conquerors), rejects the idea of God as the creator
of the world but teaches the perfectibility of man, to be
accomplished through the strictly moral and ascetic life.
Central to the moral code of Jainism is the doctrine of
ahimsa, or noninjury to all living beings, an idea that
may have arisen in reaction to Vedic sacrifice ritual. There
is also a great emphasis on vows (vratas) of various orders.
Although
earlier scriptures, such as the Bhagavati-sutra, contained
assorted ideas on logic and epistemology, Kundakunda of the
2nd century AD was the first to develop Jaina logic. The
Tattvarthadhigama-sutra of Umasvatis,however, is the first
systematic work, and Siddhasena (7th century AD) the first
great logician. Other important figures are Akalanka (8th
century), Manikyanandi, Vadideva, Hemchandra (12th century),
Prabhachandra (11th century), and Yasovijaya (17th century).
The
principal ingredients of Jaina metaphysics are: an ultimate
distinction between "living substance" or
"soul" ( jiva) and "nonliving substance" (ajiva);
the doctrine of anekantavada,
or nonabsolutism (the thesis that things have infinite aspects
that no determination can exhaust); the doctrine of naya (the
thesis that there are many partial perspectives from which
reality can be determined, none of which is, taken by itself,
wholly true, but each of which is partially so); and the
doctrine of karma, in Jainism a substance, rather than a
process, that links all phenomena in a chain of cause and
effect.
As
a consequence of their metaphysical liberalism, the Jaina
logicians developed a unique theory of
seven-valued logic, according to which the three
primary truth values are "true," "false,"
and "indefinite," and the other four values are
"true and false," "true and indefinite,"
"false and indefinite," and "true, false, and
indefinite." Every statement is regarded as having these
seven values, considered from different standpoints.
Knowledge
is defined as that which reveals both itself and another (svaparabhasi).
It is eternal, as an essential quality of the self; it is
noneternal, as the perishable empirical knowledge. Whereas
most Hindu epistemologists regarded pramana as the cause of
knowledge, the Jainas identified pramana with valid knowledge.
Knowledge is either perceptual or nonperceptual.
Perception is either empirical or nonempirical. Empirical
perception is either sensuous or nonsensuous. The
latter arises directly in the self, not through the sense
organs, but only when the covering ignorance is removed. With
the complete extinction of all karmas, a person attains
omniscience (kevala-jñana). (See also JAINISM.).
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