Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Indian_philosophy> ?p ?o }
- Indian_philosophy abstract "Indian philosophy (Sanskrit: darśana) comprises the philosophical traditions of the Indian subcontinent. Since medieval India (ca.1000–1500), schools of Indian philosophical thought have been classified by the Brahmanical tradition as either orthodox or non-orthodox – āstika or nāstika – depending on whether they regard the Vedas as an infallible source of knowledge. There are six schools of orthodox Hindu philosophy—Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Samkhya, Yoga, Mīmāṃsā and Vedanta—and three heterodox schools—Jain, Buddhist and Cārvāka. However, there are other methods of classification; Vidyaranya for instance identifies sixteen schools of Indian philosophy by including those that belong to the Śaiva and Raseśvara traditions.The main schools of Indian philosophy were formalised chiefly between 1000 BCE to the early centuries of the Common Era. According to philosopher Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, the earliest of these, which date back to the composition of the Upanishads in the later Vedic period (1000–500 BCE), constitute \"the earliest philosophical compositions of the world.\" Competition and integration between the various schools was intense during their formative years, especially between 800 BCE and 200 CE. Some schools like Jainism, Buddhism, Śaiva and Advaita Vedanta survived, but others, like Samkhya and Ājīvika, did not; they were either assimilated or went extinct. Subsequent centuries produced commentaries and reformulations continuing up to as late as the 20th century by Sri Aurobindo and Prabhupāda among others.For Indian philosophers (dārśanika) of antiquity, philosophy was a practical necessity that needed to be cultivated to understand how life can best be led. It was thus customary for them to explain how their ideas and treatises served human ends (puruṣārtha). Indian philosophy is distinctive in its application of analytical rigour to metaphysical problems. It goes into very precise detail about the nature of reality, the structure and function of the human psyche, and how the relationship between the two have important implications for human salvation (moksha). Sages (rishis) centred philosophy on the assumption that there is a unitary underlying order (ṛta) in the universe and everything within it. The various schools concentrated on explaining this order and the metaphysical entity at its source (Brahman). The concept of natural law (dharma) was the basis for understanding how life on earth should be lived.".
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink IntroductionToIndianPhilosophy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Sarvepalli.Radhakrishnan.Indian.Philosophy.Volume.1-2.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink ipi.org.in.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink indian.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink indian-schools-of-philosophy-and-theology.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Indian.pdf.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink AHistoryOfIndianPhilosophyBySurendranathDasgupta-5Volumes.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Indian.Idealism.by.Surendranath.Dasgupta.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Mysore.Hiriyanna-Outlines.of.Indian.Philosophy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Mysore.Hiriyanna-The.Essentials.of.Indian.Philosophy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink Radhakrishnan-History.of.Philosophy-Eastern.and.Western-Volume.1-2.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageExternalLink books?id=xkrCRbOq-HUC.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageID "310169".
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageLength "28016".
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageOutDegree "209".
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageRevisionID "707995002".
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Achintya_Bheda_Abheda.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Advaita_Vedanta.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Affectionism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Ahimsa.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Ahimsa_in_Jainism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Ajativada.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Ananda_Coomaraswamy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Anatta.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Anekantavada.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Arthashastra.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Schopenhauer.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Atheism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Atheism_in_Hinduism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Bal_Gangadhar_Tilak.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Bankim_Chandra_Chattopadhyay.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Being.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Bhagavad_Gita.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Bihar.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Bombay_Samachar.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Brahman.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Brahmana.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Brihadaranyaka_Upanishad.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Buddhahood.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Buddhism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_India.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Indian_culture.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Indian_literature.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Indian_philosophy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Chanakya.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Charvaka.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Circa.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Civil_and_political_rights.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Common_Era.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Confucius.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Darśana.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Dayananda_Saraswati.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Dharma.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Dualism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Dvaita.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Dvaitadvaita.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Egalitarianism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Epic_poetry.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Ford_(crossing).
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Gautama_Buddha.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Hellenistic_period.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Hellenistic_philosophy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Henry_David_Thoreau.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Hindu.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Hindu_philosophy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Hinduism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Impermanence.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink India.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Indian_independence_movement.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Indian_logic.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Indian_religions.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Indian_subcontinent.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Indra_Sen.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Internet_Archive.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Jainism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink John_Ruskin.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Kantianism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Karma_in_Buddhism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Keshub_Chandra_Sen.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Kevala_Jnana.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Kireet_Joshi.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Krishnananda_Saraswati.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Leo_Tolstoy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink M._Hiriyanna.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink M._N._Roy.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Mahatma_Gandhi.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Mahavira.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Martin_Luther_King,_Jr..
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Materialism.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Maurya_Empire.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Medieval_India.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Merit_(Buddhism).
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Middle_term.
- Indian_philosophy wikiPageWikiLink Moksha.