Dr. D.N. Shastri Felicitation Volume


Book Description

Festschrift honoring Dharmendra Nath Shastri, b. 1897, Indologist; comprises articles on his life and works and Indic studies.




Panini


Book Description

No detailed description available for "Panini".




The Philosophy of the Grammarians


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Ludwik Sternbach Felicitation Volume


Book Description

Felicitation volume honoring Ludwik Sternbach, Indologist, b. 1909, on the occasion of his 70th birthday; includes contributors' bio-data.







Bhartr̥hari, Philosopher and Grammarian


Book Description

Bhartrhari lived in the tenth century c.e. Being both a grammarian and philosopher, his influence on subsequent grammatical and philosophical thought in India has been enormous in spite of this modern scholarship has not yet given him the attention he deserves no doubt because his extent writings are difficult and were not until recently, available in satisfactory editions. Interest among scholars for Bhartrhari is now, however, growing. This is the reason why an international conference on Bhartrhari was organized in January 1992 in Pune, under the joint auspices of the University of Poons and the University of Lausanne (Switzerland). The present volume contains some of the papers read at this conference as well as an up-to-date bibliography on Bhartrhari.










The Saṃbandha-Samuddeśa (Chapter on Relation) and Bhartṛhari's Philosophy of Language


Book Description

In the history of the Indian grammatical tradition, Bhartṛhari (about fifth century C.E.) is the fourth great grammarian - after Pāṇini, Kātyāyana and Patañjali - and the first to make the philosophical aspects of language and grammar the main subject of an independent work. This work, the Vākyapadīya (VP), consists of about 2000 philosophical couplets or kārikās. Since the latter half of the nineteenth century, the VP has been known to Western Sanskritists, but its language-philosophical contents have started to receive serious attention only in the last few decennia. The subject matter of the VP resonates strongly with crucial themes in twentieth-century Western thought, although the background and the way the issues are elaborated are quite different. Scholars have compared and contrasted Bhartṛhari’s ideas with those of de Saussure, Wittgenstein and Derrida. A theme which, as a leitmotiv, pervades the entire VP is the relation between language, thought and reality. In several Indian traditions, a proper insight into this relation was (and still is) held to be of importance for attaining ‘liberation’.