Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nyaya> ?p ?o }
- Nyaya abstract "Nyāya (Sanskrit: न्याय, ny-āyá), literally means \"rules\", \"method\" or \"judgment\". It is also the name of one of the six orthodox (astika) schools of Hinduism. This school's most significant contributions to Indian philosophy was systematic development of the theory of logic, methodology, and its treatises on epistemology.Nyaya school's epistemology accepts four out of six Pramanas as reliable means of gaining knowledge – Pratyakṣa (perception), Anumāṇa (inference), Upamāṇa (comparison and analogy) and Śabda (word, testimony of past or present reliable experts).In its metaphysics, Nyaya school is closer to Vaisheshika school of Hinduism than others. It holds that human suffering results from mistakes/defects produced by activity under wrong knowledge (notions and ignorance). Moksha (liberation), it states, is gained through right knowledge. This premise led Nyaya to concern itself with epistemology, that is the reliable means to gain correct knowledge and to remove wrong notions. False knowledge is not merely ignorance to Naiyyayikas, it includes delusion. Correct knowledge is discovering and overcoming one's delusions, and understanding true nature of soul, self and reality.Naiyyayika scholars approached philosophy as a form of direct realism, stating that anything that really exists is in principle humanly knowable. To them, correct knowledge and understanding is different than simple, reflexive cognition; it requires Anuvyavasaya (अनुव्यवसाय, cross-examination of cognition, reflective cognition of what one thinks one knows). An influential collection of texts on logic and reason is the Nyayasutras, written by Aksapada Gautama about 2nd century CE.Nyaya school shares some of its methodology and human suffering foundations with Buddhism; however, a key difference between the two is that Buddhism believes that there is neither a soul nor self; Nyaya school like other schools of Hinduism believes that there is a soul and self, with liberation (moksha) as a state of removal of ignorance, wrong knowledge, the gain of correct knowledge and unimpeded continuation of self.".
- Nyaya wikiPageExternalLink early-modern-india.
- Nyaya wikiPageExternalLink epistemology-india.
- Nyaya wikiPageExternalLink 201.
- Nyaya wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Nyaya wikiPageID "59941".
- Nyaya wikiPageLength "39954".
- Nyaya wikiPageOutDegree "83".
- Nyaya wikiPageRevisionID "702522772".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Advaita_Vedanta.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Annambhatta.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Anuvyavasaya.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Bhaṭṭikāvya.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Bimal_Krishna_Matilal.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Buddhism.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_philosophical_schools_and_traditions.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Atomism.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hindu_philosophical_concepts.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_logic.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Indian_philosophy.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Nyaya.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philosophical_schools_and_traditions.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philosophical_traditions.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Āstika.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Charvaka.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_H._H._Ingalls,_Sr..
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Enthymeme.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Epistemology.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Formal_system.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Francis_Xavier_Clooney.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Gautama_Buddha.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Gautama_Maharishi.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Hearsay.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Hindu_philosophy.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Hinduism.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Indian_logic.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Ishvara.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Jayanta_Bhatta.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Karl_Harrington_Potter.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink List_of_teachers_of_Nyaya.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Logic.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Metaphysics.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Moksha.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Monier_Monier-Williams.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Mīmāṃsā.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Nabadwip.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Nasadiya_Sukta.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Navya-Nyāya.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Neti_neti.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Nirvikalpa.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Nyāya_Sūtras.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Padārtha.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Philosophical_realism.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Pramana.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Raghunatha_Siromani.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Rigveda.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Sandhi.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Sanskrit.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Savikalpa.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Syllogism.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Udayana.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Udyotakara.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Upamāṇa.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Vaisheshika.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Vedas.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Viparyaya.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Visvanatha_Panchanana_Bhattacharya.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Vyapti.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Vācaspati_Miśra.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Vātsāyana.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink Āstika_and_nāstika.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLink File:4_Pramanas,_epistemology_according_to_ancient_Nyayasutras.svg.
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "''nyāya''".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hindu logic".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Naiyayika".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyaya Padārtha".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyaya School".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyaya Shastra".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyaya on God and Salvation".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyaya sastra".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyaya school".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyaya".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyayists".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyâya".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyāya School".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyāya realists".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyāya".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyāya-Śāstra".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nyāyá".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "logic".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "more..".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "naiyAyika".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "nyaya".
- Nyaya wikiPageWikiLinkText "nyāya".
- Nyaya align "right".
- Nyaya bgcolor "#FFE0BB".
- Nyaya qalign "left".
- Nyaya quote "Metaphysics".
- Nyaya quote "Nyaya-Vaisheshika offers one of the most vigorous efforts at the construction of a substantialist, realist ontology that the world has ever seen. It provides an extended critique of event-ontologies and idealist metaphysics. This ontology is Platonistic, realistic, but neither exclusively physicalistic nor phenomenalistic.".
- Nyaya quote "The gods came after this world's production,".