Knowlet

Unit 4: Nyāya-Vaiśeṣika

The Nyāya and Vaiśeṣika schools are two of the six Āstika (orthodox) systems. They developed separately but were later merged into a "sister" school (Nyāya-Vaiśeṣika) due to their shared realistic worldview.

  • Nyāya is the school of logic and epistemology (how we know).
  • Vaiśeṣika is the school of metaphysics and atomism (what we know).
Nyāya provides the logical method, and Vaiśeṣika provides the content (the categories of reality) to be analyzed.

Nyāya: Theory of Knowledge

Nyāya is also called Tarka-śāstra (the science of reasoning). Its primary goal is to attain liberation (Moksha) by dispelling ignorance, which is achieved through correct knowledge. Therefore, its main focus is on epistemology (Pramāṇa-śāstra).

Pramā and Pramāṇa

  • Pramā (प्रमा): Valid knowledge. It is defined as a true and non-contradictory cognition of an object as it really is (yathārtha-anubhava). For example, seeing a rope as a "rope."
  • Apramā (अप्रमा): Invalid knowledge. This is knowledge that does not correspond to reality. It includes:
    1. Smṛti (Memory): Nyāya does not consider memory to be valid knowledge (Pramā) because it is not a *present* cognition; it is a *recollection* of a previous Pramā.
    2. Saṃśaya (Doubt): The state of uncertainty, e.g., "Is that a post or a man?"
    3. Viparyaya (Error): False cognition, e.g., mistaking a rope for a snake.
    4. Tarka (Hypothetical Reasoning): Not considered valid knowledge itself, but a *tool* to arrive at it.
  • Pramāṇa (प्रमाण): The valid means or source of acquiring Pramā (valid knowledge).

The object of valid knowledge is a Prameya. The person who has the knowledge is the Pramātā. The result of the process is the Pramiti (which is synonymous with Pramā).

The Four Pramāṇas

A Pramāṇa is the valid means or source of acquiring Pramā (valid knowledge). The Nyāya school accepts four independent Pramāṇas:

  1. Pratyakṣa (Perception)
  2. Anumāna (Inference)
  3. Upamāna (Comparison)
  4. Śabda (Testimony)

(Note: Your syllabus only explicitly lists Pratyakṣa and Anumāna, so we will focus on them.)

Pratyakṣa (Perception)

This is the most fundamental Pramāṇa. It is the direct cognition or knowledge that arises from the contact between a sense organ (indriya) and its object (artha).

Nyāya classifies perception in several ways:

1. Laukika (Ordinary) vs. Alaukika (Extraordinary)

  • Laukika (Ordinary): When there is direct contact between sense organs and worldly objects.
    • External: Through the five external senses (sight, sound, smell, taste, touch).
    • Internal: Through the mind (Manas), which perceives internal states like pleasure, pain, desire, etc.
  • Alaukika (Extraordinary): When there is no direct sensory contact, but perception still occurs. This is unique to Nyāya.
    • Sāmānyalakṣaṇa: Perception of a "universal" (e.g., when I see *one* cow, I perceive "cowness" in all cows).
    • Jñānalakṣaṇa: "Complicated perception" where one sense "sees" the quality of another (e.g., "The ice *looks* cold." The "coldness" is a quality of touch, not sight, but they are associated through past knowledge).
    • Yogaja: The intuitive perception of enlightened Yogis, who can see past, present, and future.

2. Nirvikalpaka (Indeterminate) vs. Savikalpaka (Determinate)

  • Nirvikalpaka (Indeterminate): The first, brief moment of perception. It is a simple, undifferentiated awareness of an object, *before* any analysis or naming. E.g., seeing a "something" without yet knowing "it is a book."
  • Savikalpaka (Determinate): The second stage, which is a conceptualized, judgmental cognition. E.g., "That is a blue book." This is the knowledge we use in daily life.

Anumāna (Inference) and its kinds

Anumāna is the knowledge that *follows* (anu) some other knowledge (māna). It is knowing something (the unperceived) by means of something else (the perceived).

The logical basis of inference is the Vyāpti: the universal, invariable, and unconditional relationship between the Hetu (middle term/reason) and the Sādhya (major term/object of inference).

Example of Inference:
  1. The hill has fire (Sādhya - what we are proving).
  2. Because it has smoke (Hetu - the reason/mark).
  3. Wherever there is smoke, there is fire (Vyāpti - the universal rule).
  4. The hill has smoke (Pakṣadharmatā - the presence of the Hetu in the Pakṣa, or subject).
  5. Therefore, the hill has fire.

Kinds of Anumāna

Nyāya classifies inference in three main ways:

Basis of Classification Types Description
1. Based on Psychological Process Svārtha (For oneself) An internal, psychological process of reasoning. A person sees smoke and *concludes for themselves* that there is fire. No formal steps are needed.
Parārtha (For others) A formal, syllogistic argument used to *convince* another person. This requires the famous five-step syllogism (Pañcāvayava).
2. Based on the nature of Vyāpti Pūrvavat Inferring an unperceived *effect* from a perceived *cause*. (e.g., "Seeing dark clouds [cause], I infer it will rain [effect].")
Śeṣavat Inferring an unperceived *cause* from a perceived *effect*. (e.g., "Seeing a flooded river [effect], I infer it must have rained upstream [cause].")
Sāmānyatodṛṣṭa Inference based not on direct causal link, but on a general principle or analogy. (e.g., "We infer the movement of the sun by seeing its position change in the sky, just as we infer our own movement.")

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