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Produktbild: Conceptualizing Categories: Texts and Context in Indian Philosophy
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Conceptualizing Categories: Texts and Context in Indian Philosophy Festschrift in Honor of Professor ShashiPrabha Kumar

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

07.12.2026

Herausgeber

Purushottama Bilimoria + weitere

Verlag

Springer

Seitenzahl

270

Maße (L/B)

23,5/15,5 cm

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-3-032-16221-2

Beschreibung

Portrait



Purushottama Bilimoria specializes in Indian & Cross-Cultural Philosophy, Global Critical Philosophies of Religion, Law (India), and Diaspora studies. A teaching faculty with the University of San Francisco; Principal Fellow in the University of Melbourne (Australia); an Editor-in-Chief of  Sophia (Journal of Philosophy & Traditions, Springer), and Sophia Studies in Cross-cultural Philosophy & Traditions, formerly Distinguished Professor of Law and Global Ethics in O P Jindal University (India). An elected member of European Academy of Arts, Sciences, he is recipient of awards and research grants, including Nehru-US Fulbright Fellowship, John Templeton Foundation, Indian Council for Philosophical Research, Harvard Divinity School (CSWR Visiting Fellow) Public Scholarship with Emory University’s Institute of Liberal Studies. His Recent publications include Routledge History of Indian Philosophy (2019); Contemplative Studies and Hinduism (with Rita D. Sherma, C. Bohenac, 2021); Companion to Indian Ethics: Women, Justice Bioethics and Ecology (with Amy Rayner, 2024); Mind, Body and Self (with J L Shaw, Anand Vaidya, Springer, 2024);  Engaging Philosophies of Religion: Across Global Boundaries (with Gereon Kopf and Nathan Loewen, Bloomsbury, 2025).

Agnieszka Rostalska is a philosopher specializing in Indian and cross-cultural philosophy, with a focus on sociopolitical philosophy, epistemology, and the philosophy of religion. She currently works on a novel study of the Arthaśāstra as an FWO Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Ghent University. In 2022, she held the 'Cross-Cultural Conceptions of the Self' project, funded by the Global Philosophy of Religion Project and the John Templeton Foundation. She is president of the Logic and Religion Association and a board member of the Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy and the Global-Critical Philosophy of Religion Unit of the American Academy of Religion. With Nathan R. B. Loewen, she co-edited 'Diversifying Philosophy of Religion’ and 'Philosophies of Self: A Cross-Cultural Introduction,' both published by Bloomsbury.

Devendra Singh is an Assistant Professor and Head of the Department of Sanskrit Language and Literature at Sanchi University of Buddhist-Indic Studies. He earned his Ph.D. from the Special Centre for Sanskrit Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. He worked as a Project Fellow in a UGC Major Research Project, Research Assistant at the Special Centre for Sanskrit Studies at JNU, and Junior Research Fellow at the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts, New Delhi. His work focuses on Vedic Studies, Ayurveda, and Indian Philosophy. He has authored five books, over fifteen articles, and organized several conferences, including the 2018 International Conference on Shaktatantra. He presented at several academic events, including the 16th World Sanskrit Conference in Bangkok, Thailand, and lectured to graduate students at Capital Normal University in Beijing, China.

Renu K. Sharma is an Assistant Professor of Vedic Studies at the University of Allahabad. She earned her Ph.D. from JNU, New Delhi, was a UGC Post-Doctoral Fellow, and worked as an Assistant Professor at Hindu Girls College, Sonepat, Haryana. Sharma has authored two books and over twenty-five articles. Her key publications include Shatapatha Brahmana mein Darshanika Pratika (2014), Shatapatha Shevadhi (2016), and an essay on Disasters in: The Emerging Threshold of Disaster Law, edited by Amita Singh (Routledge: 2018). She organized a 2019 lecture series at Hindu Girls College funded by the Indian Council for Philosophical Research and participated in conferences including the 16th World Sanskrit Conference (2015), the International Conference Veda as Global Heritage (2016), and the 22nd International Congress of Vedanta (2015).

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

07.12.2026

Herausgeber

Verlag

Springer

Seitenzahl

270

Maße (L/B)

23,5/15,5 cm

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-3-032-16221-2

Herstelleradresse

Springer International Publishing AG
Gewerbestr. 11
6330 Cham
Schweiz
Url: www.springer.com

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  • Produktbild: Conceptualizing Categories: Texts and Context in Indian Philosophy
  • 1. Introduction.- 2. Particularity and Universality in the Philosophy of Recognition (pratyabhijñā) (Gavin Flood).- 3.The Vaiśeṣika Self: the Norms and Agency of Life (Shalini Sinha).- 4. Later Vaiśeṣika: The ‘Seven Category Ontology’ Reaffirmed (Jonardon Ganeri).- 5. On sāpekṣa and nirapekṣa in the Vaiśeṣikasūtra (Katsunori Hirano).- 6. Categories and Principles of Vaiśeṣika (Subhash Kak).- 7. Taxonomical, Ritual, and Spiritual Exercises: A Heuristic Approach to the Pedagogy of the Vaiśeṣikasūtra-s (Karl-Stéphan Bouthillette).- 8. A Romanized Transliteration of the Manuscript Of Padãrthadhamzasmzgraha Preserved in Kashimir University (Norihiko Tanaka).- 9. On What Being Is and What There Is Not: Engaging ShashiPrabha Kumar on the Vaiśeṣika (Purushottama Bilimoria).- 10. The Metaphysics of Similarity in Kumārila Bhaṭṭa’s Ślokavārttika (Malcolm Keating).- 11. The Fallibilist Epistemology of Gaṅgeśa Applied to the “Gettier Problem” (Stephen Phillips).- 12. The Power of the Unseen: the Concept of adṛṣṭa in Nyāya and its Importance for Philosophy of Religion (Agnieszka Rostalska).- 13. Suffering, Death and Transcendence as Human Value (Asha Mukherjee).- 14. Essence and Difference in Indian Philosophy (Ionut Moise).- 15. Heart Meditation: Rāmānuja on the Chandogya Up. 3.14.1–4. (Halina Marlewicz).- 16. Debate on the Nature of the Goddess in the Rāmānuja School (Gerhard Oberhammer).- 17. On Philosophizing (Ramesh Chandra Sinha).- 18. A Critique of Śaṅkarācārya’s Refutation of Vijñānavāda (Sujata Purkayastha).- 19. Dignāga's Criticism of the Vaiśeṣika Definition of Perception (pratyakṣa) (Victoria Lysenko).- 20. Jayanta on Whether Recognition Refutes Momentariness (Alex Watson).- 21. A Comparative Study of the Concept of Karma and Rebirth in Hinduism and Buddhism (Arvind Sharma).- 22. Concept of Person in the Buddhist School of Thought (Rev. Samdong Rinpoche).- 23. Shadows of Buddhism in Sufism (Lokesh Chandra).- 24. Eternal Veda, Eternal Philosophy? With Special Reference to the Sarvadarśanasaṃgraha (Johannes Bronkhorst).- 25. Can the Vedic Doctrine of the Creative Sacrifice of Puruṣa Enrich Christianity? (M. Krzysztof Byrski).- 26. The Upaniṣads: a Personal Appreciation (Nicholas Kazanas).- 27. The Dharmaśāstric Principles of Rājadharma Advocated by the Rulers of Ancient Assam: Some Inscriptional Evidences (Manjula Devi).- 28. Yogavāśiṣṭha Within and Beyond the Orbit of Vālmīki-Rāmāyaṇa (Uma Vaidya).- 29. One and All: akṣára in Middle and Late Vedic (Lauren M. Bausch).- 30. Pāṇini 6.1.135 (सुट्कात्पूर्वः) and Related Rules (George Cardona).- 31. Sanskrit Dictionaries in Modern European Languages and a Proposal for a New Sanskrit-English Dictionary (Oscar Pujol).