Schools of Ancient Indian Philosophy
Ancient Indian Philosophy encompasses both orthodox (Āstika) schools, which accept Vedic authority (e.g., Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Samkhya, Yoga, Mimamsa, Vedanta), and heterodox (Nāstika) systems (e.g., Charvaka, Jainism, Buddhism). These schools primarily aim to articulate paths to Moksha (liberation) by systematically analyzing epistemology, metaphysics, and ethics.
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Evolution of Philosophical Schools |
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Era |
Key Development and Focus |
Epistemological and Metaphysical Evolution |
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Early Ancient |
Formative Stage: Emergence of core tenets in Sutras (e.g., Nyaya Sutras, Samkhya Karika) that distilled earlier Vedic and Upanishadic concepts, focusing on establishing logical foundations against heterodox challenges. |
Epistemological Divergence: Nyaya systematically defined four valid means of knowledge (Pramanas); Samkhya posited dualism (Purusha and Prakriti) .... |
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Indian History
- 1 Mughal Architecture, Music & Painting
- 2 Gupta Period: Classical Age of Art, Literature, Science & Architecture
- 3 Post-Mauryan Artistic Traditions
- 4 Temple-Building Traditions of Pallavas, Cholas & Hoysalas
- 5 Buddhist and Mural Paintings
- 6 Medieval Writers on Art and Culture
- 7 Literary Works of Medieval India
- 8 Classical Languages & their Status in Ancient India
- 9 Temple Architecture Styles
- 10 Rise and Decline of Artisan Industries in India

