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________________ 3. A summary account of Sankara's version of Vedānta: (a) The nature of Brahma, Māyā and Jagat (both jada and cetana) (b) The nature of bondage (c) The nature of mokṣa 4. A summary account of Rāmānuja's version of Vedanta : 5. CONTENTS 6. (a) The nature of Brahma and Jagat (both jaḍa and cetana) (b) The nature of bondage and mokṣa Sankara and Rāmānuja compared contrasted Further elaboration of Sankara's view : (a) Sankara on Brahma's causality of the world and (b) The gradual development of Sankara's philosophy out of the old Upanisads (c) Brahma and Brahma (d) For Sankara the jiva is Brahma (not Brahma) and it is Brahma (not becomes Brahma) (e) Sankara's view contrasted with that of Yoga (f) Sankara explains away-and with ease -the Upanisadic passages where they speak as if the jiva and jagat too are independent realities (like Brahma) (g) Vedānta-like all idealism-goes against commonsense (h) Vedanta accepts the idea of God and of His worship-from a practical standpoint Jain Education International (i) The knowledge had from the practical standpoint is supplanted by that had from the ultimate standpoint For Private & Personal Use Only 31 74 74 76 76 77 79 80 81 82 83 883 83 84 85 85 86 www.jainelibrary.org
SR No.002019
Book TitleSystems of Indian Philosophy
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorVirchand R Gandhi
PublisherMahavir Jain Vidyalay
Publication Year1993
Total Pages212
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English & Philosophy
File Size10 MB
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