Rule-extension strategies in ancient India: ritual, exegetical and linguistic considerations on the tantra- and prasaṅga- principles

Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang Edition. Edited by Tiziana Pontillo (2013)
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Abstract

This study focuses on the devices implemented in classical Indian texts on ritual and language in order to develop a structure of rules in an economic and systematic way. These devices presuppose a spatial approach to ritual and language, one which deals for instance with absences as substitutions within a pre-existing grid, and not as temporal disappearances. In this way, the study reveals a key feature of some among the most influential schools of Indian thought. The sources are Kalpasūtra, Vyākaraṇa and Mīmāṃsā, three textual traditions which developed alongside each other, sharing - as the volume shows - common presuppositions and methodologies. The book will be of interest for Sanskritists, scholars of ritual exegesis and of the history of linguistics. - Cover.

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Elisa Freschi
University of Toronto, St. George Campus

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The Nyāyamukha and udghaṭitajña.Yasutaka Muroya - 2017 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 45 (2):281-311.

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