Treatment in progress...
Close notification

We are back !

Welcome on your new side.fr !

Display notification

An Enquiry into the Nature of Liberation.

Watson A., Goodall Dominic
Publication date 16/05/2013
EAN: 9782855391304
Availability Available from publisher
An Enquiry into the Nature of Liberation : Bhatta Ramakantha’s Paramoksanirasakarikavrtti, a commentary on Sadyojyotih’s refutation of twenty conceptions of the liberated state (moksa).Edited, translated into English and annotated by Alex Watson, Dom... See full description
Attribute nameAttribute value
Common books attribute
PublisherEFEO
Page Count508
Languageen
AuthorWatson A., Goodall Dominic
FormatPaperback / softback
Product typeBook
Publication date16/05/2013
Weight900 g
Dimensions (thickness x width x height)2.50 x 18.00 x 23.00 cm
Bhatta Ramakantha's Paramoksanirasakarikavrtti, a commentary on Sadyojyotih's refutation
An Enquiry into the Nature of Liberation : Bhatta Ramakantha’s Paramoksanirasakarikavrtti, a commentary on Sadyojyotih’s refutation of twenty conceptions of the liberated state (moksa).Edited, translated into English and annotated by Alex Watson, Dominic Goodall, S.L.P. Anjaneya SarmaThis book presents a short philosophical treatise in which twenty rival theories of the liberated state (moksa) are introduced and countered, and a long, discursive commentary that explores and develops the arguments that the treatise advances or implies. The original treatise comprises fifty-nine Sanskrit verses composed by Sadyojyotih (c. 675–725 AD), the earliest named Saiva philosopher of the Mantramarga of whom works survive. The commentator, Bhatta Ramakantha (c. 950–1000 AD), was a Kashmirian whose writings systematised the doctrines of the classical Saiva Siddhanta, for some centuries the dominant school of tantric Saivism.Presented here is a first critical edition of these interlinked works and a richly annotated English translation. A lightly annotated introduction lays out clearly the ideas that the edited texts expound. Their study casts light not only on the history of Saiva thought, but also on a number of religio-philosophical doctrines for which little other testimony survives. Keywords: Liberation (moksa), Saiva siddhanta, Indian philosophy, Hindu theology, Saivism, Sanskrit philology, Sadyojyotih, Ramakantha