Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Anekantavada> ?p ?o }
- Anekantavada abstract "Anekāntavāda (Sanskrit: अनेकान्तवाद \"many-sidedness\") refers to the principles of pluralism and multiplicity of viewpoints, or vantage points, the notion that reality is perceived differently from diverse points of view, and that no single point of view is the complete truth, yet taken together they comprise the complete truth.Jains contrast all attempts to arrogantly proclaim the sole monopoly on truth with andhagajanyāyah, which can be illustrated through the parable of the \"blind men and an elephant\". In this story, each blind man felt a different part of an elephant (trunk, leg, ear, etc.). All the men claimed to understand and explain the true appearance of the elephant, but could only partly succeed, due to their limited perspectives. This principle is more formally stated by observing that objects are infinite in their qualities and modes of existence, so they cannot be completely grasped in all aspects and manifestations by finite human perception.(this is the Absolute Truth) According to the Jains, only the Kevalis—omniscient beings—can comprehend objects in all aspects and manifestations; others are only capable of partial knowledge. Consequently, no single, specific, human view can claim to represent absolute truth.The origins of anekāntavāda can be traced back to the teachings of Mahāvīra (599–527 BCE), the 24th Jain Tīrthankara. The dialectical concepts of syādvāda \"conditioned viewpoints\" and nayavāda \"partial viewpoints\" arose from anekāntavāda, providing it with more detailed logical structure and expression. The Sanskrit compound an-eka-anta-vāda literally means \"doctrine of uncertainty\" (an- \"not\", ekānta \"certainty\" or \"single-natured\", vāda (\"school of thought\" or \"thesis\"); it is roughly translated into English as \"non-absolutism\". An-ekānta \"uncertainty, non-exclusivity\" is the opposite of ekānta (eka+anta) \"exclusiveness, absoluteness, necessity\" (or also \"monotheistic doctrine\").Anekāntavāda encourages its adherents to consider the views and beliefs of their rivals and opposing parties. Proponents of anekāntavāda apply this principle to religion and philosophy, reminding themselves that any religion or philosophy—even Jainism—which clings too dogmatically to its own tenets, is committing an error based on its limited point of view. The principle of anekāntavāda also influenced Mahatma Gandhi to adopt principles of religious tolerance, ahiṃsā and satyagraha.".
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink H4.
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink index.htm.
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink ipq.
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink search=%22anekantvada%22.
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink indianjaina-1-1.htm.
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink sspredication.htm.
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink index.php.
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink jain2.php.
- Anekantavada wikiPageExternalLink sbe2200.htm.
- Anekantavada wikiPageID "2974488".
- Anekantavada wikiPageLength "53923".
- Anekantavada wikiPageOutDegree "183".
- Anekantavada wikiPageRevisionID "703257145".
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Acharanga_Sutra.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Adi_Shankara.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Advaita_Vedanta.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Agnosticism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Ahimsa.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Ahimsa_in_Jainism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Anekantavada.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Aptamimamsa.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Ardha_Magadhi.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Arvind_Sharma.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Asian_studies.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink BMW.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Blind_men_and_an_elephant.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Brahma_Sutras.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Brahman.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Buddhism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jain_philosophical_concepts.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jain_texts.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Category:Relativism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Category:Religious_pluralism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Christian.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Christianity.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Common_Era.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Contextualism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Critical_philosophy.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Degree_of_truth.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Dharmakirti.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Dialectic.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Dogma.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Doxography.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Dualism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Dvaita.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Epistemology.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink False_dilemma.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink File:Blind_monks_examining_an_elephant.jpg.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Freedom_of_speech.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Gautama_Buddha.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Haribhadra.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Harvard_University.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Hemachandra.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Hermann_Jacobi.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Hindu.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Hinduism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Indian_logic.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Indian_philosophy.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Indian_religions.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Indology.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Inference.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink J._B._S._Haldane.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Jain_epistemology.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Jain_literature.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Jain_philosophy.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Jainism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Kali_Yuga.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Kevala_Jnana.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Kundakunda.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Ladnu.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Logical_disjunction.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Logical_equality.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Mahatma_Gandhi.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Mahavira.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Many-valued_logic.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Max_Müller.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Monism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Moral_relativism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Multiplicity_(mathematics).
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Muslim.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Natural_science.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Naturalism_(philosophy).
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Nonviolence.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Occams_razor.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Ontology.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Optative_mood.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Pancastikayasara.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Pantheism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Parable.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Paradox.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Perspectivism.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Philosophy.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Philosophy_of_self.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Pluralism_(philosophy).
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Polemic.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Prakrit.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Prasanta_Chandra_Mahalanobis.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Principle_of_bivalence.
- Anekantavada wikiPageWikiLink Privative_a.