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________________ GE REF UNIVERSITY CALIF .A. INTRODUCTION. This second volume completes the translation of the principal Upanishads to which Sankara appeals in his great commentary on the Vedanta-Satras?, viz. : 1. Khândogya-upanishad, _ 2. Talavakâra or Kena-upanishad, 3. Aitareya-upanishad, 4. Kaushîtaki-upanishad, - 5. Vâgasaneyi or Isâ-upanishad, 6. Katha-upanishad, /- %. Mundaka-upanishads 8. Taittirîyaka-upanishady 9. Brihadâranyaka-upanishad, + 10. Svetâsvatara-upanishad, . 11. Prasña-upanishad. These eleven have sometimes 2 been called the old and genuine Upanishads, though I should be satisfied to call them the eleven classical Upanishads, or the fundamental Upanishads of the Vedânta philosophy. Vidyâranya?, in his 'Elucidation of the meaning of all the Upanishads, Sarvopanishadarthânubhùti-prakâsa, confines himself likewise to those treatises, dropping, however, the Îsâ, and adding the Maitrậyana-upanishad, of which I have given a translation in this volume, and the Nrisimhottara-tapanîya-upanishad, the translation of which had to be reserved for the next volume. 1 See Deussen, Vedanta, Einleitung, p. 38. Sankara occasionally refers also to the Paingi, Agnirahasya, Gâbâla, and Nârâyaniya Upanishads. * Deussen, loc. cit. p. 82. * I state this on the authority of Professor Cowell. See also Fitzedward Hall, Index to the Bibliography of the Indian Philosophical Systems, pp. 116 and 236. Digitized by Digitized by Google
SR No.007674
Book TitleDhammapada
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorMax Muller
PublisherOxford
Publication Year1881
Total Pages2540
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English
File Size45 MB
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