000 01405nam a2200145Ia 4500
020 _a9780415895545
040 _cCUS
082 _a121.0954
_bPHI/E
245 0 _aEpistemology in classical India/
_bthe knowledge sources of the Nyāya school
_cPhillips, Stephen
250 _a1st ed.
260 _aNew York:
_bRoutledge,
_c2012.
300 _a194 p.
505 _a1 Historical and Conceptual Introduction Nyaya within Classical Indian Philosophy Knowledge: Truth, Belief, and Justification Internalism and Externalism 2 Certification The Justification Regress Fallible Foundations Fpistemic Excellences and Defects The Generality Problem Belief-Warranting tarka, "Suppositional Reasoning" 3 Perception Concept-Laden vs. Concept-Free Perception Recognition Perceptual Error (Pseudo-Perception) The Generality Problem Revisited: Types of Sensory Connection Apperception 4 Inference Inference for Oneself and Inference for Another (Formal Demonstration) From Extrapolation to Generalization The Ontology of Pervasion Philosophical Proofs of Self, God, and mukti, "Liberation" Fallacies and Debate Theory 5 Analogy Learning What Words Mean "Indirect Indication," upalaksana The Ontology of Similarity 6.Testimony Testimony Not a Form of Inference Statements and Facts "Figurative Meaning," laksana Speaker's Intention 7.Lessons for Analytic Epistemology
942 _cWB16
999 _c176214
_d176214