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Jain Approaches to Plurality: Identity as Dialogue: Currents of Encounter, cartea 55

Autor Melanie Barbato
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 oct 2017
In Jain Approaches to Plurality Melanie Barbato offers a new perspective on the Jain teaching of plurality (anekāntavāda) and how it allowed Jains to engage with other discourses from Indian inter-school philosophy to global interreligious dialogue. Jainism, one of the world’s oldest religions, has managed to both adapt and preserve its identity across time through its inherently dialogical outlook. Drawing on a wide range of textual sources and original research in India, Barbato analyses the encounters between Jains and non-Jains in the classical, colonial and global context. Jain Approaches to Plurality offers a comprehensive introduction to anekāntavāda as a non-Western resource for understanding plurality and engaging in dialogue.

“Building upon earlier work in this field without simply reduplicating it, Melanie Barbato’s work delves deeply into the question of the relevance of Jain approaches to religious and philosophical diversity to contemporary issues of inter-religious dialogue, and dialogues across worldviews more generally. (…) This work is a most welcome contribution to the conversation.”

— Jeffery D. Long, Professor of Religion and Asian Studies, Elizabethtown College. April 2017. Author of Jainism: An Introduction.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004339309
ISBN-10: 9004339302
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Currents of Encounter


Cuprins

Acknowledgements

1 Introduction: Identity in Changing Times
The Historical Development of Anekāntavāda
First Stage: Discourse within the Jain Community
Second Stage: Indian Inter-school Discourse
Third Stage: Colonial Discourse
Fourth Stage: Global Discourse
The Structure of the Book

2 Who are the Jains? A Community between Indian Tradition and Global Modernity
The Fordmakers
Beliefs and Worship
Puṇya and Pāpa
The Historical Development of Jainism
Conclusion

3 Jains in Inner-indian Dialogue
The Schools of Indian Philosophy
The Historical Development of Jain Philosophy
The Classical Concept of Anekāntavāda
Plurality in Jain Ontology
Indian Ontologies
An Ontology of Organic Plurality
Origination, Destruction and Persistence
Substance, Qualities and Modifications
The Complex Union of Reality
Classical Applications
Universals
Relations
Cause and Effect
The Nature of the Soul
Plurality in Jain Discursive Logic
Logic in India
The Nyāya Inference Model
The Aim of Indian Logic
Jain Logic: Every Statement is Conditional
Sevenfold Predication
Yaśovijaya’s Interpretation of the Saptabhaṅgī
Śankara’s Criticism of Jain Logic
Jain Logic, Nyāya Logic, Western Logic
Plurality and Perfect Knowledge
Jain Soteriology
The Stages of Knowledge
Limited Knowledge: The View-points
False Views and Absolutism
What the Omniscient Know
Plurality in the Light of Omniscience
Kundakunda’s Two Viewpoints
Conclusion

4 Plurality in Modern Jain Dialogues
Tolerance and Interreligious Dialogue
The World’s Parliament of Religions in Chicago
Indian Inclusivism
The Limits of Jain Tolerance
Gandhi and Shrimad Rajchandra
Anekāntavāda as Intellectual Non-violence
Anekāntavāda as Relativism
Identity, Values and Doctrine
Jainism in Dialogue with Science
The Historical Context
A Scientific Religion?
Jainism as Scientific Theory
Jain Diplomacy
Jain Environmental Activism
Acharya Sushil Kumar and Religious Diplomacy
Conclusion

5 Jain Dialogic Identity – Then and Now
Anekāntavāda between Philosophy and Rhetorics
Four Understandings of anekāntavāda
A Philosophical Understanding of anekāntavāda
A Conservative Modern Understanding of anekāntavāda
A Modernist Understanding of anekāntavāda
A Lay Orthodox Understanding of anekāntavāda
Who Speaks for anekāntavāda?
Conclusion

Bibliography

Notă biografică

Melanie Barbato is a researcher at the Institute for Religious Studies and Intercultural Theology at WWU Münster. She holds a doctorate in Indology and Religious Studies from LMU Munich and a Master in Oriental Studies from the University of Oxford.