Saturday, 28 December 2013

I knew I was a Jain!

         Anybody else a Jain?

        Anekāntavāda encourages its adherents to consider the views and beliefs of their rivals and opposing parties. Proponents of anekāntavāda apply this principle to religions and philosophies, reminding themselves that any of these—even Jainism—that clings too dogmatically to its own tenets is committing an error based on its limited point of view.[24] The principle of anekāntavāda also influenced Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi to adopt principles of religious tolerance, ahiṃsā andsatyagraha.[25]
Syādvāda is the theory of conditioned predication, which recommends the expression of anekānta by prefixing the epithetSyād to every phrase or expression.[26] Syādvāda is not only an extension of anekānta into ontology, but a separate system of logic capable of standing on its own. The Sanskrit etymological root of the term syād is "perhaps" or "maybe", but in the context of syādvāda it means "in some ways" or "from some perspective". As reality is complex, no single proposition can express its nature fully. The term "syāt" should therefore be prefixed to each proposition, giving it a conditional point of view and thus removing dogmatism from the statement.[27] Since it comprises seven different conditional and relative viewpoints or propositions, syādvāda is known as saptibhaṅgīnāya or the theory of seven conditioned predications. These seven propositions, also known as saptibhaṅgī, are:[28]
  1. syād-asti—in some ways, it is;
  2. syād-nāsti—in some ways, it is not;
  3. syād-asti-nāsti—in some ways, it is, and it is not;
  4. syād-asti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is, and it is indescribable;
  5. syād-nāsti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is not, and it is indescribable;
  6. syād-asti-nāsti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is, it is not, and it is indescribable;
  7. syād-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is indescribable.
Each of these seven propositions examines the complex and multifaceted nature of reality from a relative point of view of time, space, substance and mode.[28] To ignore the complexity of reality is to commit the fallacy of dogmatism.[21]

4 comments:

  1. I say!

    It's like the twelve days of Christmas!

    Seven propositions
    Six noble truths
    Five righteous paths
    Four philosophies
    Three marks of existence
    Two basic precepts
    And a Buddhist in a pear tree

    ReplyDelete
  2. I say! My last comment here disappeared

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wayne County had the op and became a Jayne.

    ReplyDelete