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Do you have to be one to know one? Madhvacarya, the founder of the
thirteenth century school of Vedanta, answered this question with a
resounding 'yes!' Madhvacarya's insistence that one must be a
Madhva to study Madhva Vedanta led him to employ various strategies
to exclude outsiders and unauthorized readers from accessing the
root texts of his tradition and from obtaining oral commentary from
living virtuosos. Deepak Sarma explores the degree to which
outsiders can understand and interpret the doctrine of the Madhva
school of Vedanta. The school is based on insider epistemology
which is so restrictive that few can learn its intricate doctrines.
This book reveals the complexity of studying traditions based on
insider epistemologies and encourages its audience to ponder both
the value and the hazards of granting any outsider the authority
and opportunity to derive important insights into a tradition as an
insider. The first analysis of the Madhva tradition, this work
contributes to the ongoing controversies regarding epistemic
authority and voice in religious studies.
All religions are experiencing rapid changes due to a confluence of
social and economic global forces. The modern world threatens the
foundations of the world's religions and the cohesive assurances of
their societies. Factors such as the pervasive intrusion of
globalizing political and economic developments; polarized and
morally equivalent presentations seen in the media; the sense of
surety demanded in and promised by a culture dominated by science
are but some of the factors that have placed extreme pressure on
all religious traditions. This has stimulated unprecedented
responses by religious groups, ranging from fundamentalism to the
syncretistic search for meaning. The totality of pressures and
responses is pushing religious people into controversial forms. As
religion takes on new forms, balances between individual and
community are disrupted and reconfigured. Religions often lose the
capacity to recall their ultimate purpose or to lead their
adherents towards it. This is why we call this complex situation
"the crisis of the holy." This crisis is a confluence of threats,
challenges, and opportunities for all religions. The present volume
explores the contours of pressures, changes, and transformations,
and reflects on how all our religions are changing under the common
pressures of recent decades. By identifying commonalities across
religions as they respond to these pressures, it suggests how
religious traditions might cope with these changes and how they
might join forces in doing so.
One of the biggest challenges for relations between religions is
the view of the religious Other. The question touches the roots of
our theological views. The Religious Other: Hostility, Hospitality,
and the Hope of Human Flourishing explores the views of multiple
religious traditions on how to regard otherness. How does one move
from hostility to hospitality? How can hospitality be understood
not simply as social hospitality but as theological hospitality,
making room for the religious Other on theological grounds? What is
our vision for the flourishing of the Other, while respecting his
otherness? This volume is an exercise in constructive
interreligious theology. By including perspectives of Abrahamic and
non-Abrahamic traditions, it approaches these challenges from
multiple perspectives, highlighting commonalities in approach and
ways in which one tradition might inspire another.
Deepak Sarma completes the first outline in more than fifty
years of India's key philosophical traditions, inventively sourcing
seminal texts and clarifying language, positions, and issues.
Organized by tradition, the volume covers six schools of orthodox
Hindu philosophy: Mimamsa (the study of the earlier Vedas, later
incorporated into Vedanta), Vedanta (the study of the later Vedas,
including the "Bhagavad Gita" and the "Upanishads"), Sankhya (a
form of self-nature dualism), Yoga (a practical outgrowth of
Sankhya), and Nyaya and Vaisesika (two forms of realism). It also
discusses Jain philosophy and the Mahayana Buddhist schools of
Madhyamaka and Yogacara. Sarma maps theories of knowledge,
perception, ontology, religion, and salvation, and he details
central concepts, such as the "pramanas" (means of knowledge),
"pratyaksa" (perception), "drayvas" (types of being), "moksa"
(liberation), and "nirvana." Selections and accompanying materials
inspire a reassessment of long-held presuppositions and modes of
thought, and accessible translations prove the modern relevance of
these enduring works.
Deepak Sarma explores the degree to which outsiders can understand
and interpret the doctrine of the Madhva school of Vedanta. The
school is based on insider epistemology which is so restrictive
that few can learn its intricate doctrines. This book reveals the
complexity of studying traditions based on insider epistemologies
and encourages its audience to ponder both the value and the
hazards of granting any outsider the authority and opportunity to
derive important insights into a tradition as an insider.
Deepak Sarma completes the first outline in more than fifty years
of India's key philosophical traditions, inventively sourcing
seminal texts and clarifying language, positions, and issues.
Organized by tradition, the volume covers six schools of orthodox
Hindu philosophy: Mimamsa (the study of the earlier Vedas, later
incorporated into Vedanta), Vedanta (the study of the later Vedas,
including the Bhagavad Gita and the Upanishads), Sankhya (a form of
self-nature dualism), Yoga (a practical outgrowth of Sankhya), and
Nyaya and Vaisesika (two forms of realism). It also discusses Jain
philosophy and the Mahayana Buddhist schools of Madhyamaka and
Yogacara. Sarma maps theories of knowledge, perception, ontology,
religion, and salvation, and he details central concepts, such as
the pramanas (means of knowledge), pratyaksa (perception), drayvas
(types of being), moksa (liberation), and nirvana. Selections and
accompanying materials inspire a reassessment of long-held
presuppositions and modes of thought, and accessible translations
prove the modern relevance of these enduring works.
This introduction to the Madhva school of Vedanta is accessible to
a wide audience with interest in Hinduism, Indian thought and in
the comparative philosophy of religion. Deepak Sarma explores the
philosophical foundations of Madhva Vedanta and then presents
translations of actual debates between the Madhva and Advaita
schools of Vedanta, thus positioning readers at the centre of the
700 year-old controversy between these two schools of Vedanta.
Original texts of Madhvacarya are included in an appendix, in
translation and in Sanskrit.
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