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Studies on the Carvaka/Lokayata

Studies on the Carvaka/Lokayata

Ramkrishna Bhattacharya

(2011)

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Abstract

‘Studies on the Carvaka/Lokayata’ is the first attempt at a scientific study of the Carvaka/Lokayata, the materialist system of philosophy that flourished in ancient India between the eighth and the twelfth century CE. This study seeks to disprove certain notions about the Carvaka/Lokayata, particularly the following: that the Carvaka-s did not approve of any other instrument of cognition except perception; and that they advocated unalloyed sensualism and hedonism. This volume also seeks to establish the fact that there existed a pre-Carvaka school of materialism in India, although there is no way to prove that the Carvaka system grew out of it.


‘Studies on the Carvaka/Lokayata’ is the first attempt at a scientific study of the Carvaka/Lokayata, the materialist system of philosophy that flourished in ancient India between the eighth and twelfth centuries CE, and which has since disappeared. Despite the paucity of material relating to the Carvaka, a reconstruction of its basic tenets reveals it to be the lone contender standing against the perceived binary of pro-Vedic Brahminical schools on the one hand, and the non-Vedic Buddhist and Jain schools on the other.

This study seeks to disprove certain notions about the Carvaka/Lokayata, particularly that the Carvaka-s did not approve of any instrument of cognition other than perception, and that they advocated unalloyed sensualism and hedonism. In contrast, this volume offers evidence to show that the Carvaka-s, despite their difference of opinion in other areas, did admit inference in so far as it was grounded on perception. Furthermore, the author argues that the common belief that ‘all materialists are nothing but sensualists’ is a misconception, as no authentic Carvaka aphorisms have been cited by the movement’s opponents to support this view.

This study also seeks to establish the fact that a pre-Carvaka school of materialism existed in India, although there is no way to prove that the Carvaka system grew out of it. Yet if the evidence provided by the ‘Manimekalai’ – and indirectly supported by the ‘Mahabharata’ – is admitted, it could be suggested that the two schools existed simultaneously.


Ramkrishna Bhattacharya is an Emeritus Fellow in English, University Grants Commission, New Delhi. He was previously a Reader in the Department of English at Anandamohan College, Kolkata and a Guest Lecturer with the postgraduate faculty of English at the University of Calcutta.


Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
FRONT MATTER 1
Half Title Page 1
Series Page 2
Main Title Page 3
Copyright Page 4
Dedication 5
Contents 7
Preface 9
Acknowledgements 11
Abbreviations 13
MAIN MATTER 19
I. Origin of Materialism in India: Royal or Popular? 21
II. Jain Sources for the Study of Pre-Carvaka Materialist Ideas in India 33
III. Ajita Kesakambala: Nihilist or Materialist? 45
IV. Perception and Inference in the Carvaka Philosophy 55
V. Commentators of the ‘Carvakasutra’ 65
VI. Carvaka Fragments: New Collection 69
VII. On the Authenticity of an Alleged Carvaka Aphorism 105
VIII. ‘Paurandarasutra’ Revisited 109
IX. What Did the Carvaka-s Mean by ‘sukham jivet’? 123
X. Samkhya, Yoga and Lokayata in the ‘Kautiliya Arthasastra’: A Re-View 131
XI. Yogacara Against the Carvaka: Critical Survey of ‘Tattvasamgraha’, Chapter 22 137
XII. Jayantabhatta’s Representation of the Carvaka: Critique 147
XIII. What does Udayana mean by ‘lokavyavaharasiddha iti carvakah’? 159
XIV. Hemacandra on the Carvaka: Study 163
XV. Haribhadra’s ‘Saddarsanasamuccaya’, Verses 81-84: A Study 175
XVI. The Significance of ‘Lokayata’ in Pali 187
XVII. On ‘Lokayata’ and ‘Lokayatana’ in Buddhist Sanskrit 193
XVIII. ‘Lokayata’ and ‘Lokayatana’ in Sanskrit Dictionaries 197
XIX. ‘rnam krtva ghrtam pibet’: Who Said This? 201
XX. ‘jivika dhatṛnirmita' or 'jiviketi brhaspatih'? 207
XXI. ‘mrtanamapi jantunam...’ 213
XXII. Carvaka/Lokayata Philosophy: Perso-Arabic Sources 219
XXIII. What is meant by ‘Nastika’ in the ‘Nyayasutra’ Commentary? 227
END MATTER 233
Bibliography 233