Past Continuous or Present Perfect? Continuity and Change in Contemporary Indian Philosophy

Contemporary Indian philosophy is a distinct genre of philosophy that draws both on classical Indian philosophical sources and on Western materials, old and new. It is comparative philosophy without borders. In this paper, I attempt to show how contemporary Indian philosophy works through five insta...

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Main Author: Daniel Raveh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-12-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/12/1087
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author Daniel Raveh
author_facet Daniel Raveh
author_sort Daniel Raveh
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description Contemporary Indian philosophy is a distinct genre of philosophy that draws both on classical Indian philosophical sources and on Western materials, old and new. It is comparative philosophy without borders. In this paper, I attempt to show how contemporary Indian philosophy works through five instances from five of its protagonists: Krishnachandra Bhattacharyya (his new interpretation of the old rope-snake parable in his essay “Śaṅkara’s Doctrine of Maya”, 1925); Daya Krishna (I focus on the “moral monadism” that the theory of karma in his reading leads to, drawing on his book <i>Discussion and Debate in Indian Philosophy</i>, 2004); Ramchandra Gandhi (his commentary on the concept of Brahmacharya in correspondence with his grandfather, the Mahatma, in his essay “Brahmacharya”, 1981); Mukund Lath (on identity through—not despite—change, with classical Indian music, Rāga music, as his case-study, in his essay “Identity through Necessary Change”, 2003); and Rajendra Swaroop Bhatnagar (on suffering, in his paper “No Suffering if Human Beings Were Not Sensitive”, 2021). My aim is twofold. First, to introduce five contemporary Indian philosophers; and second, to raise the question of newness and philosophy. Is there anything new in philosophy, or is contemporary philosophy just a footnote—à la Whitehead—to the writings of great thinkers of the past? Is contemporary Indian philosophy, my protagonists included, just a series of footnotes to classical thinkers both in India and Europe? Footnotes to the Upaniṣads, Nāgārjuna, Dharmakīrti and Śaṅkara, as much as (let us not forget colonialism and Macaulay) to Plato, Aristotle, Kant and Hegel? Footnotes can be creative and work almost as a parallel text, interpretive, critical, even subversive. However, my contention is that contemporary Indian philosophy (I leave it to others to plea for contemporary Western philosophy) is not a footnote, it is a text with agency of its own, validity of its own, power of its own. It is wholly and thoroughly a text worth reading. In this paper, I make an attempt to substantiate this claim through the philosophical mosaic I offer, in each instance highlighting both the continuity with classical sources and my protagonists’ courageous transgressions and innovations.
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spelling doaj.art-e61d7d1ffc6c4d3f9478cfaa5a9e117f2023-11-23T10:22:25ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442021-12-011212108710.3390/rel12121087Past Continuous or Present Perfect? Continuity and Change in Contemporary Indian PhilosophyDaniel Raveh0Department of Philosophy, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, IsraelContemporary Indian philosophy is a distinct genre of philosophy that draws both on classical Indian philosophical sources and on Western materials, old and new. It is comparative philosophy without borders. In this paper, I attempt to show how contemporary Indian philosophy works through five instances from five of its protagonists: Krishnachandra Bhattacharyya (his new interpretation of the old rope-snake parable in his essay “Śaṅkara’s Doctrine of Maya”, 1925); Daya Krishna (I focus on the “moral monadism” that the theory of karma in his reading leads to, drawing on his book <i>Discussion and Debate in Indian Philosophy</i>, 2004); Ramchandra Gandhi (his commentary on the concept of Brahmacharya in correspondence with his grandfather, the Mahatma, in his essay “Brahmacharya”, 1981); Mukund Lath (on identity through—not despite—change, with classical Indian music, Rāga music, as his case-study, in his essay “Identity through Necessary Change”, 2003); and Rajendra Swaroop Bhatnagar (on suffering, in his paper “No Suffering if Human Beings Were Not Sensitive”, 2021). My aim is twofold. First, to introduce five contemporary Indian philosophers; and second, to raise the question of newness and philosophy. Is there anything new in philosophy, or is contemporary philosophy just a footnote—à la Whitehead—to the writings of great thinkers of the past? Is contemporary Indian philosophy, my protagonists included, just a series of footnotes to classical thinkers both in India and Europe? Footnotes to the Upaniṣads, Nāgārjuna, Dharmakīrti and Śaṅkara, as much as (let us not forget colonialism and Macaulay) to Plato, Aristotle, Kant and Hegel? Footnotes can be creative and work almost as a parallel text, interpretive, critical, even subversive. However, my contention is that contemporary Indian philosophy (I leave it to others to plea for contemporary Western philosophy) is not a footnote, it is a text with agency of its own, validity of its own, power of its own. It is wholly and thoroughly a text worth reading. In this paper, I make an attempt to substantiate this claim through the philosophical mosaic I offer, in each instance highlighting both the continuity with classical sources and my protagonists’ courageous transgressions and innovations.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/12/1087contemporary Indian philosophyKrishnachandra BhattacharyyaDaya KrishnaRamchandra GandhiMukund LathRajendra Swaroop Bhatnagar
spellingShingle Daniel Raveh
Past Continuous or Present Perfect? Continuity and Change in Contemporary Indian Philosophy
Religions
contemporary Indian philosophy
Krishnachandra Bhattacharyya
Daya Krishna
Ramchandra Gandhi
Mukund Lath
Rajendra Swaroop Bhatnagar
title Past Continuous or Present Perfect? Continuity and Change in Contemporary Indian Philosophy
title_full Past Continuous or Present Perfect? Continuity and Change in Contemporary Indian Philosophy
title_fullStr Past Continuous or Present Perfect? Continuity and Change in Contemporary Indian Philosophy
title_full_unstemmed Past Continuous or Present Perfect? Continuity and Change in Contemporary Indian Philosophy
title_short Past Continuous or Present Perfect? Continuity and Change in Contemporary Indian Philosophy
title_sort past continuous or present perfect continuity and change in contemporary indian philosophy
topic contemporary Indian philosophy
Krishnachandra Bhattacharyya
Daya Krishna
Ramchandra Gandhi
Mukund Lath
Rajendra Swaroop Bhatnagar
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/12/1087
work_keys_str_mv AT danielraveh pastcontinuousorpresentperfectcontinuityandchangeincontemporaryindianphilosophy