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- Hindu_philosophy abstract "Hindu philosophy is traditionally divided into six āstika (Sanskrit: आस्तिक "orthodox") schools of thought, or darśanam (दर्शनम्, "view"), which accept the Vedas as authoritative texts. Four other nāstika (नास्तिक "heterodox") schools don't draw upon the Vedas as authoritative texts, and develop their own traditions of thought. The āstika schools are:Samkhya, an atheistic and strongly dualist theoretical exposition of consciousness and matter.Yoga, a school emphasising meditation, contemplation and liberation.Nyaya or logic, explores sources of knowledge. Nyāya Sūtras.Vaisheshika, an empiricist school of atomismMimāṃsā, an anti-ascetic and anti-mysticist school of orthopraxyVedanta, the last segment of knowledge in the Vedas, or the 'Jnan' (knowledge) 'Kanda' (section). Vedanta came to be the dominant current of Hinduism in the post-medieval period.The nāstika schools are (in chronological order):Cārvāka, a materialism school that accepted free will existsĀjīvika, a materialism school that denied free will existsEach school of Hindu philosophy has extensive epistemological literature called Pramana-sastras.In Hindu history, the distinction of the six orthodox schools was current in the Gupta period "golden age" of Hinduism. With the disappearance of Vaisheshika and Mimamsa, it became obsolete by the later Middle Ages, when the various sub-schools of Vedanta (Dvaita "dualism", Advaita Vedanta "non-dualism" and others) began to rise to prominence as the main divisions of religious philosophy. Nyaya survived into the 17th century as Navya Nyaya "Neo-Nyaya", while Samkhya gradually lost its status as an independent school, its tenets absorbed into Yoga and Vedanta.".
- Hindu_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink books?id=xkrCRbOq-HUC.
- Hindu_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink hindu-ph.
- Hindu_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink AHistoryOfIndianPhilosophyBySurendranathDasgupta-5Volumes.
- Hindu_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Indian.Idealism.by.Surendranath.Dasgupta.
- Hindu_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Mysore.Hiriyanna-Outlines.of.Indian.Philosophy.
- Hindu_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Sarvepalli.Radhakrishnan.Indian.Philosophy.Volume.1-2.
- Hindu_philosophy wikiPageID "307365".
- Hindu_philosophy wikiPageRevisionID "644245934".
- Hindu_philosophy hasPhotoCollection Hindu_philosophy.
- Hindu_philosophy subject Category:Hindu_philosophical_concepts.
- Hindu_philosophy subject Category:Indian_philosophy.
- Hindu_philosophy subject Category:Metaphilosophy.
- Hindu_philosophy type Abstraction100002137.
- Hindu_philosophy type Cognition100023271.
- Hindu_philosophy type Concept105835747.
- Hindu_philosophy type Content105809192.
- Hindu_philosophy type HinduPhilosophicalConcepts.
- Hindu_philosophy type Idea105833840.
- Hindu_philosophy type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Hindu_philosophy comment "Hindu philosophy is traditionally divided into six āstika (Sanskrit: आस्तिक "orthodox") schools of thought, or darśanam (दर्शनम्, "view"), which accept the Vedas as authoritative texts. Four other nāstika (नास्तिक "heterodox") schools don't draw upon the Vedas as authoritative texts, and develop their own traditions of thought.".
- Hindu_philosophy label "Filosofia hindu".
- Hindu_philosophy label "Filosofía hindú".
- Hindu_philosophy label "Filsafat Hindu".
- Hindu_philosophy label "Hindoeïstische filosofie".
- Hindu_philosophy label "Hindu philosophy".
- Hindu_philosophy label "Индуистка философия".
- Hindu_philosophy label "Философия индуизма".
- Hindu_philosophy label "ヒンドゥー哲学".
- Hindu_philosophy label "힌두 철학".
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs Filosofía_hindú.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs Filsafat_Hindu.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs ヒンドゥー哲学.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs 힌두_철학.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs Hindoeïstische_filosofie.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs Filosofia_hindu.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs m.01sq52.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs Q1079293.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs Q1079293.
- Hindu_philosophy sameAs Hindu_philosophy.
- Hindu_philosophy wasDerivedFrom Hindu_philosophy?oldid=644245934.
- Hindu_philosophy isPrimaryTopicOf Hindu_philosophy.