Buddhist Philosophy of Language in India: Jñanasrimitra on Exclusion
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Jñanasrimitra (975-1025) was regarded by both Buddhists and non-Buddhists as the most important Indian philosopher of his generation. His theory of exclusion combined a philosophy of language with a theory of conceptual content, or, in simpler terms, an investigation into the nature of our words and thoughts. His theory informed nearly all the work accomplished at Vikramasila, a monastic and educational complex instrumental to the development of Buddhism. His ideas were also vividly debated among the Hindu and Jain philosophers who succeeded him.
This volume marks the first English translation of Jñanasrimitra's Monograph on Exclusion, a careful, critical exploration of language, perception, and conceptual awareness. Featuring the rival arguments of Buddhist, Hindu, and other thinkers, the Monograph reflects more than half a millennium of hotly contested debate along with an invaluable introduction to one of the most important philosophers of late medieval India. Lawrence J. McCrea and Parimal G. Patil familiarize the reader with the authors, themes, and topics included in the text and situate Jñanasrimitra's findings within his larger intellectual milieu. Their translation and contextualization is clear, accessible, and accurate, opening Jñanasrimitra's thought to anyone interested in the foundations of Buddhist and Indian philosophy.
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Buddhist Philosophy of Language in India - Lawrence J. McCrea
BUDDHIST PHILOSOPHY
OF LANGUAGE IN INDIA
LAWRENCE J. MCCREA
AND PARIMAL G. PATIL
Columbia University Press New York
Columbia University Press
Publishers Since 1893
New York Chichester, West Sussex
cup.columbia.edu
Copyright © 2010 Columbia University Press
All rights reserved
E-ISBN 978-0-231-52191-8
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
McCrea, Lawrence J.
Buddhist philosophy of language in India :
Jñānaśrimitra's monograph on exclusion /Lawrence J. McCrea and Parimal G. Patil.
p. cm.
Includes Jñanasrimitra's text in Sanskrit and its translation.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978–0-231–15094–1 (cloth : alk. paper)—
ISBN 978–0-231–15095–8 (pbk. : alk. paper)—
ISBN 978–0-231–52191–8 (ebook)
1. Jñanasrimitra. Apohaprakarana. 2. Buddhist logic.
3. Language and languages—Philosophy. 4. Yogacara (Buddhism)
I. Patil, Parimal G. II. Jñanasrimitra. Apohaprakarana. English & Sanskrit. III. Title.
BC25.M37 2010
181'043—dc22 2010004989
A Columbia University Press E-book.
CUP would be pleased to hear about your reading experience with this e-book at [email protected].
References to Internet Web sites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing.
Neither the author nor Columbia University Press is responsible for URLs
that may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared.
For Edith and Emily
CONTENTS
Preface
INTRODUCTION
1. Jñānaśrīmitra's Intellectual World and Its History
Jñānasrīmitra's Intellectual Contexts
Philosophical Traditions and Text Traditions
Sanskrit Intellectual Practices
Sources of Knowledge
2. The Buddhist Epistemological Tradition: Dignāga and Dharmakīrti
Objects and Their Status
The Elements of Inferential Reasoning
3. Dharmottara's Epistemological Revolution
4. Jñānaśrīmitra's Reworking of the Theory of Exclusion
Relativization of Internal and External
Conditionally Adopted Positions
5. Translation Practices
Editorial Conventions
Numbering System
JÑĀNAŚRĪMITRA'S MONOGRAPH ON EXCLUSION
Outline
Translation
SANSKRIT TEXT OF THE MONOGRAPH ON
EXCLUSION (APOHAPRAKARAṆAM)
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
PREFACE
This book was written from 2006 to 2008 while both of us were teaching at Harvard University. It is built on work that we have done both individually and together since our graduate work at the University of Chicago. At Harvard, we used to meet three times a week, for several hours at a time, to work on this and other projects. Our collaboration is such that we wrote each and every sentence of this book together, literally line by line. It is a work that neither of us would have undertaken or would have undertaken in anything like the way that we have, had we worked separately. It is in every sense a true collaboration.
Through our work on this project, we have become increasingly convinced of the need to break down the divide between exegetical and analytical work in Sanskrit studies. It has become clear to us that it is simply impossible to properly explain, translate, or even edit Sanskrit philosophical texts without a sustained analysis of their arguments and a broad and far-ranging exploration of their historical and intellectual contexts. By the same token, responsible historical and philosophical analysis necessitates systematic engagement with philological and textual details. This is particularly true for the study of Sanskrit philosophical texts, the vast majority of which have never been translated or studied, and many of which have not even been edited. Such engagement is necessary for the future of our field, despite the very strong institutional pressures against philological (and collaborative) work.
The study of Sanskrit philosophy is still in its infancy. The foundational work presupposed by almost all serious studies of Euro-American philosophical traditions has barely begun for the Sanskrit philosophical tradition, although it is comparable in its breadth, antiquity, and sophistication. As a result, even analytical and historical studies of Sanskrit philosophical work must remain very closely engaged in detailed exegetical and philological work, as virtually no Sanskrit philosophical text is yet thoroughly understood. No amount of detailed textual study and exegesis will be able to move the field forward, however, unless it also addresses larger historical and philosophical questions, despite the necessarily preliminary nature of all such efforts given the current state of the field. There may be other ways to meet these various desiderata, but the method that we have adopted here is the result of our own struggle to chart a way forward.
We are very fortunate to be part of a truly global field, and we are grateful to our colleagues in North America, Europe, Japan, and India for their interest in and support of our work. We have been challenged by our ongoing conversations with them and by their own exemplary scholarship. In particular, we would like to thank Leonard W. J. van der Kuijp, Ernst Steinkellner, Helmut Krasser, Eli Franco, Birgit Kellner, and Shoryu Katsura.
Lawrence J. McCrea and Parimal G. Patil
Cambridge, Massachusetts
INTRODUCTION
1. JÑĀNAŚRĪMITRA'S INTELLECTUAL WORLD AND ITS HISTORY
The theory of exclusion (apoha) has long been recognized as one of the most fundamental and distinctive components of Buddhist philosophy in India.¹ Modern scholars have tended to view the theory as primarily a theory of meaning,² but since its origins in the work of the sixth-century Buddhist philosopher Dignāga,³ the theory of exclusion was used to address a much broader range of philosophical problems. Indeed, for Dignāga and his successors, it formed the basis of their account of all conceptual awareness.⁴
A distinctive feature of Dignāga's philosophy is its radical distinction between conceptual and perceptual awareness. His position is that only perceptual awareness can be genuinely free from error. Objects of awareness other than those that we directly perceive are said to exist in only a conventional sense; that is, while our awareness of them may help us attain certain practical results, they are just convenient fictions and do not correspond to anything that exists outside our own minds. For Dignāga, anything of which we are aware apart from what we directly and non-conceptually perceive can be explained only in terms of exclusion. Thus, although it includes all awareness produced through language, the scope of exclusion extends to much else besides.
In addition to restricting their discussion of exclusion to language, modern scholars have tended to focus on the theory's earliest articulations in the works of philosophers like Dignāga and his seventh-century successor Dharmakīrti.⁵ Although the theory was elaborated and further developed for hundreds of years, comparatively little attention has been given to later developments.⁶ The prevailing attitude seems to be that these later developments are mainly secondary and derivative and add little to the seminal treatments of Dignāga and Dharmakīrti.⁷
Despite this prevailing assumption, we show that later exclusion theorists in India did not just replicate and reorganize existing knowledge but sometimes drastically reshaped and redirected the theory. The specific theory that we will be examining here, that of the late tenth-century Buddhist philosopher Jñānaśrīmitra, was particularly radical and proved to be highly influential in the following centuries. Jñānaśrīmitra was well known to Hindu and Jain critics in the early centuries of the second millennium and seems to be have been widely regarded as the cutting-edge Buddhist philosopher.⁸ His theory of exclusion was of particular importance to the great eleventh-century Nyāya philosopher Udayana, who devoted much of his own treatment of exclusion to a detailed and penetrating critique of Jñānaśrīmitra's version of the theory.⁹ It is not an understatement to say that Jñānaśrīmitra's Monograph on Exclusion was the last and most serious attempt to provide a consistent and coherent understanding of exclusion based on and informed by the more than half a millennium of previous debate on the topic. It offers specific and up-to-date responses to the objections of non-Buddhist philosophers and provides a coherent, but critical, account of intra-Buddhist debates on the nature and function of exclusion. More than an abstract discussion of the theory, the Monograph offers an intellectual history of Buddhist and non-Buddhist discourse on exclusion and conceptuality.
Jñānaśrīmitra's Intellectual Contexts
The theory of exclusion is central to Jñānaśrīmitra's work, but his thought and work extend far beyond it. Jñānaśrīmitra was perhaps the most significant Buddhist intellectual of his period, and his works cover the full range of topics important to Buddhist philosophers.¹⁰ Apart from his philosophical work, Jñānaśrīmitra also wrote on metrics and was himself a poet; several of his verses are quoted in the twelfth-century poetic anthology the Subhāṣitaratnakośa.¹¹ Even in his philosophical work, his poetic sensibilities are evident. He extensively uses complex poetic meters and often appears to choose words and phrases for aesthetic effect and not merely for their content.¹²
Jñānaśrīmitra is known as well to have been one of the gatekeepers
at the great monastic and educational center of Vikramaśīla. Vikramaśīla, which was founded by the Pāla king Dharmapāla in the late eighth century, was the main center of Buddhist learning in India until its decline in the late twelfth or early thirteenth century. Vikramaśīla was the institutional home of many of the most important Buddhist philosophers of the tenth and eleventh centuries, for example, Jitāri, Yamāri, Durvekamiśra, Jñānaśrīmitra, Ratnākaraśānti, Ratnakīrti, Abhayākaragupta, and Atīśa.¹³ At Vikramaśīla, Jñānaśrīmitra appears to have been the principal exponent of the Sākāra school of Yogācāra Buddhism,¹⁴ which was the basis for much of the controversy between him and another leading scholar from Vikramakśīla, Ratnākaraśānti, who was the principal defender of the rival Nirākāra school.¹⁵ One of Jñānaśrīmitra's main philosophical works, Sākārasiddhiśāstra (A Treatise Proving That Awareness Contains an Image), contains a lengthy and detailed attack on Ratnākaraśānti’s position.¹⁶ And in the introductory verse to his Īśvarasādhanadūṣaṇa (Refutation of the Proof of God), Jñānaśrīmitra's protégé, Ratnakīrti, describes his teacher as the one who has defeated Ratnākara.
¹⁷
Philosophical Traditions and Text Traditions
Like most of the Vikramaśīla-based Buddhist philosophers just listed, Jñānaśrīmitra worked within a textual and philosophical tradition that grew out of the work of the great seventh-century Buddhist philosopher Dharmakīrti.¹⁸ While it thus is reasonable to label him a follower of Dharmakīrti,
this should not be taken to mean that Jñānaśrīmitra was, even in his own mind, simply seeking to clarify and defend philosophical arguments already made by Dharmakīrti himself. Although Jñānaśrīmitra's work was shaped and inspired by Dharmakīrti at every turn, he was very much an independent thinker. Unlike many post-Dharmakīrtian writers on Buddhist logic and epistemology, Jñānaśrīmitra wrote no commentaries on Dharmakīrti's work, preferring instead to produce a series of specialized monographs on particular topics.¹⁹ In all his works, he attempts to defend positions that can be plausibly understood as consistent with Dharmakīrti's own, but much of what he says goes far beyond anything found in Dharmakīrti's work. Although the overall framework of Jñānaśrīmitra's thought is constructed from lines of argument and key phrases drawn from Dharmakīrti's texts, what he constructs from these architectural elements is his own creation.
Jñānaśrīmitra inhabited a world of Buddhist intellectuals who, while working within basically the same intellectual framework, articulated and defended a set of radically distinct and incompatible philosophical worldviews. For example, some Dharmakīrtians believed in the real existence of external objects, while others denied it. Some argued that the contents (ākāra) of our awareness are ultimately real, while some believed the contrary; some believed it was possible to arrive at a maximally adequate philosophical description of reality, while others believed that no such description was possible.²⁰ It therefore would be misleading to describe these authors as sharing a single philosophical system; it would be more accurate to describe them as belonging to a single text tradition.
Without exception, they all look back to the foundational texts of Dharmakīrti and, to a lesser extent, his predecessor Dignāga as the fundamental source of their basic concepts and arguments. They very rarely, if ever, openly contradict an explicit position taken by Dharmakīrti (although, as we shall see, according to Jñānaśrīmitra, at least sometimes Dharmakīrti did not really mean what he said).²¹ What these authors really share, then, is not a philosophical position but a set of building blocks and common textual resources provided by Dharmakīrti, which constitute a common intellectual heritage, all of which, however, was subject to critical examination vis-à-vis its meaning and ultimate significance. Their work is thus directed as much toward criticizing rival Buddhist philosophers working within the Dharmakīrtian text tradition as it is toward non-Buddhists.
The concept of a text tradition can usefully be applied not only to Buddhist epistemologists but also to most historical practitioners of what today is called Indian philosophy.
We would argue that it represents a much better way of thinking about affiliated groups of philosophers than do more widely applied concepts such as philosophical schools
or systems.
Because Indian philosophers themselves have tended to classify their own works under one or more labels—for example, Nyāya and Mīmāṃsā—modern scholars have often been too quick to assume that all philosophers or texts grouped under a certain label are committed to the same philosophical positions. This in turn has led people to assume that there is a great deal more consistency than careful observation reveals and that there is little or no real innovation to be found in later commentaries and scholastic
works of these traditions. In fact, within each of the so-called schools of Indian philosophy there is a great deal of internal variation, debate, and polemic directed against other practitioners of that school, as well as substantive and often dramatic evolution over time. The foundational texts that form the basis of these traditions are often as much a source of contention as they are of unity. In our view, a text tradition
model provides a better way of thinking about what those who work within these traditions do and do not have in common. It opens up a space within which the internal histories and geographies of these textual fields can be mapped out.
The text tradition growing out of Dignāga's work proved to be among the most influential in South Asian intellectual history, in that it prompted a major transformation in the self-conception and organization of Sanskrit philosophy as a whole. Dignāga's principal work, the Compendium on Sources of Knowledge (Pramāṇasamuccaya), as its title suggests, organizes philosophical discussion first and foremost in terms of epistemology. In the wake of Dignāga's work, there was a very marked epistemological turn,
not simply among Buddhist philosophers, but among all Sanskrit philosophers. In the centuries following Dignāga's work, virtually all philosophical questions were reconfigured as epistemological ones. That is, when making any claim at all, it came to be seen as incumbent on a philosopher to situate that claim within a fully developed theory of knowledge. The systematic articulation and interrogation of the underlying presuppositions of all knowledge claims thus became the central preoccupation of most Sanskrit philosophers.
With this preoccupation came a dramatic shift in the discursive practices of Sanskrit philosophy. Beginning with Dignāga, Sanskrit philosophers began to read and criticize the works of their opponents in a far more detailed and systematic way than before, criticizing not only the general positions of their rivals but also very specific textual formulations of those positions. Consequently, the critical exchange between rival philosophical traditions became far more intimate, using a shared conceptual vocabulary to formulate and pursue philosophical questions. In effect, debate over basic epistemological and ontological questions became a single, extended conversation.
Buddhist, Hindu, and Jain philosophers from the sixth century onward wrote for a general philosophical
audience at least as much as for members of their own text traditions. It can thus be argued that Dignāga's work ushered in a shared Sanskrit philosophical culture that had not existed previously. For all their differences, most of the Sanskrit philosophers of this period held a common understanding of what constituted the standards for rational acceptability and the proper sort of framework through which philosophical claims were to be formulated and defended. They developed an increasingly specific, shared understanding of the precise points of disagreement among their respective positions, and of the systemic consequences that would follow from resolving these disagreements in one way or another. Their disputes thus were extremely focused, with everyone understanding that these few narrowly defined points of contention were the key to their disagreements.
Sanskrit Intellectual Practices
Despite their intense philosophical disagreement, there was remarkable uniformity in intellectual and textual practices of Sanskrit philosophers. Therefore, to fully appreciate the significance of Jñānaśrīmitra's Monograph on Exclusion in its intellectual context, we will briefly examine some of these practices’ basic features.
Throughout its history, Sanskrit philosophy has been marked by a deep scholasticism,²² with the majority of philosophical works presenting themselves as commentaries of one sort or another on earlier works in their respective text traditions. Even those works not explicitly presented as commentaries typically formulated philosophical problems and their solutions with extensive reference to the foundational works of their respective text traditions. With this commentarial orientation came a reluctance to claim substantive philosophical originality. Even radically innovative philosophers often went to great lengths to portray themselves as unoriginal, presenting new ideas and arguments as if they were merely drawing out the implications of these foundational works. Furthermore, nearly all Sanskrit philosophical works affiliate themselves with a particular textual tradition, usually traced back to a single defining root text.²³
In the Sanskrit philosophical world, commentary
encompasses a broad range of genres and modes of argument. Philosophical commentaries usually do not seek merely to elucidate the meaning of the texts on which they are commenting but to elaborate, extend, and revise the texts’ positions and arguments. The commentaries serve as a forum in which adherents of a particular tradition can respond to their opponents’ cutting-edge arguments. In responding to arguments that were not envisioned by the authors of their root texts, they often revise and occasionally radically transform the philosophical systems that they claim merely to be explicating.²⁴
Philosophical arguments often are developed through a stylized dialogue between real or constructed representatives of rival traditions. Indeed, the dialogical format is so basic to the discursive practice of Sanskrit philosophy that philosophical arguments are set forth in a dialogical format even when no real dialogue partner exists.²⁵ The traditional format in which Indian philosophical arguments are laid out begins with the position of an opponent, or pūrvapakṣin, whose views are, through a series of counterarguments and intermediate positions, ultimately supplanted by the fully established conclusion, or siddhānta.
Sources of Knowledge
The philosophical text traditions active in India in the first millennium CE were many and various, and there is no need to catalog them here. The text traditions most directly relevant to understanding Jñānaśrīmitra's Monograph on Exclusion, apart from the Dignāga/Dharmakīrtian epistemological tradition itself, are those of Mīmāmsa (Hermeneutics) and Nyāya (Systematic Reasoning). Among the principal points of contention between the Buddhist epistemologists and their Mīmāmsā and Nyāya rivals were the nature, number, and taxonomy of the sources of knowledge (pramāṇas) and the nature of linguistic reference and its ontological implications.²⁶
The principal rubric within which epistemological debate took place was that of the sources of knowledge,
that is, means of valid awareness. Rival philosophical text traditions differed over the number of distinct sources of knowledge, the precise nature of each, and the sorts of things that could be known through them. Virtually everyone at least accepted perception (pratyakṣa)²⁷ and inference (anumāna) as genuine sources of knowledge. Some scholars argued that verbal testimony (śabda/śāstra/āgama) constituted an independent source of knowledge, but others—including the Buddhist epistemologists—argued that it could be reduced to inference.²⁸
PERCEPTION In general, Mīmāṃsakas and Naiyāyikas²⁹ believe that in order for perception to occur, there must be a sense faculty, a perceivable object, and a relation between them. In contrast, Buddhist epistemologists do not require a distinct sense faculty or object and therefore any specific relation between them. For them, the distinction between perceptual and nonperceptual knowledge is not causal but broadly phenomenal. It is not the etiology of perceptual awareness-events that is emphasized but their content, including how that content appears to us. Valid awareness-events that are free from conceptualization/conceptual content are classified as perceptual, and all other valid awareness-events are classified as inferential.³⁰
INFERENCE Buddhists, Mīmāmsakas, and Naiyāyikas agreed that inference requires an awareness of pervasion (vyāpti) between the inferential reason (hetu) and what is to be inferred (sādhya).In the standard example, one can infer the presence of fire on a mountain by seeing smoke rising up from it because one knows that wherever there is smoke, there is fire. Despite this general agreement, though, there is considerable disagreement over both the nature of this inference-warranting relation of pervasion and how we come to know of it in a particular case. More specifically, while the Mīmāmsakas’ and Naiyāyikas’ understanding of pervasion is broadly empiricist, the Buddhists’ understanding, at least after Dharmakīrti, is broadly antiempiricist. For the former, an inference-warranting relation obtains between things that are invariably observed together, whereas for the Buddhists, it obtains only between things that are invariably related, either conceptually or causally.³¹
TESTIMONY Buddhist epistemologists, Mīmāmsakas, and Naiyāyikas all agree that certain linguistic expressions, particularly those