The Introductory Part of Udayana’s Critique of the Buddhist Doctrine of Momentariness
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Text. …Tatra bādhakam bhavat kşaņabhaňgah….(ATV 20)
Translation (Tran): There an opposed view is that everything is momentary.
Note. Udayana holds the classical Nyaya-Vaisesika (NV) view that the self is a permanent substance (dravya) that is the substratum of its changing qualia (guņa), such as pleasure, cognition, etc., and ontologically different from them. In the above text, he cites an opposed viewpoint endorsed by Buddhist philosophers (we skip three other rival views he cites due to limited space). Clearly, that everything is momentary conflicts with the NV position that the self is permanent. Towards the end of his work, Udayana argues directly for NV views, but only after critically discussing rival views, though the first and by far the largest part of the work is devoted to criticism of the doctrine of universal flux. The classical commentators Samkara Misra (SM), Bhagiratha Thakkura (BT) and Raghunatha Siromani (RS) point out that, in philosophical discourse, it is not only useful to argue for one’s own position, but also to argue against the opposing views, and that the refutation of opposing views may contribute towards further development, clarification and better understanding of one’s own positive views. (ATV 20–22) [Since the three classical commentaries of SM, BT and RS are included in the standard printed Sanskrit edition of the ATV, the ATV’s page numbers are used for references to these commentaries also.]
Text. Tatra na prathamah pramāņa-abhāvāt. Yat sat tat kşaņikam yathā ghatah saňśca vivada-adhyāsitah śabdādih iti cet na pratibandha-asiddheh.(ATV 22)
Tran: There the first (view that all things are momentary) is not tenable, for there is no proof. Suppose it is inferred that whatever is real is momentary, like a pot and that sound, etc. that are the subject of contention are real? No (the inference is not sound), for the pervasion is not justified.Note. Udayana begins the examination of a classical inference for the doctrine of universal flux, advanced by highly influential Buddhist philosophers, in response to the Nyaya contention that there is no proof of the doctrine.3 The inference may be reformulated as:All real things are momentary, e.g., a pot.All sounds, etc., that are the subject of contention are real.
2. The Main Buddhist Argument
3. Critique of the Argument
Text. Sāmarthya-asāmarhya-lakşaņa-viruddha-dharma-saňsargeņa bheda-siddhau tat-siddhih iti cet. Na viruddha-dharma-saňsarga-asiddheh.(ATV, 34)
Tran: Suppose that that (the said pervasion) is justified by proof of difference based on the attribution of the opposed characters of ability and inability? Not so, for the (claim of) attribution of opposed characters is not true.Note. Udayana claimed above that the pervasion that all real things are momentary is not justified. Now, the Buddhist counterargues to show that the pervasion is justified. Consider a seed in a store that is not productive. Now consider a seed planted in soil with water, etc., that is productive. Being productive and not being productive are opposed and cannot belong to the same thing and, accordingly, a seed in a store is different from a seed planted in soil, etc. Udayana claims that a seed in a store is permanent. But a seed in a store is also undergoing change and is productive of the change. Indeed, being productive is the ticket to reality. Nothing unreal, such as a hare’s horn, is productive. If something is productive, it has ability to produce. If something is not productive, it lacks the ability to produce. Such ability and inability are opposed. If something has the ability to produce an effect, it does not depend on anything else for production and produces the effect. But once it produces the effect, it no longer has the ability to produce that effect (though it may have ability to produce another effect). Thus, anything producing an effect at a given moment, as it must to be real, must be different from anything in the next moment, for nothing in the next moment has ability to produce the same effect already produced in the previous moment. It follows that nothing can remain the same for any two moments, for then the same thing must be both able and unable to produce the same effect, which is impossible. In other words, something must be productive to be real. But when it produces something, it ceases to be the thing that has the ability to produce that thing. Therefore, we must have a different thing and the thing in the previous moment is gone. This applies to anything at any moment; universal momentariness follows.
Text. Prasaňga-viparyayābhyām tat-siddhih iti cet. Na. Sāmarthyam hi karaņatvam vā yogyatā vā. Nādyah sādhya-avśişţatva-prasaňgāt.(ATV, 34)
Tran: Suppose it is said that that (the said pervasion) is justified with the help of conditional arguments? No. Is ability to produce or causal efficacy being an instrumental causal condition or being capable by nature? Not the first, for then there is the charge of being indistinguishable from the probandum.Note. The Buddhist now offers two conditional arguments to show that the above pervasion is justified. (1) If a thing at a given moment were incapable of producing the effect, it could not have performed it; but it does (as it must to be real); therefore, it is not incapable of producing the effect. (2) If a thing were capable of producing the effect (in the succeeding moment), it should have performed it, but it does not; therefore, it is not capable of producing the effect. The first conditional proves capability and the second, incapability. The two arguments together show that a thing, when it is productive, must be different from when it is not productive. Since these conditional arguments apply to any two moments, it follows that nothing is the same for any two moments and that all that is real is momentary.
Text. Vyāvŗtti-bhedāt ayam adoşa iti cet. Na. Tat-anupapatteh.Vyāvartya-bhedena virodho hi tat-mūlam. Sa ca na tāvat mitho vyāvarttya-pratikşepāt gotva-aśvatvavat tathā sati virodhāt anyatara-apāye bādha-asiddhayoh anyatara-prasaňgāt. Na ca tat-ākşepa-pratikşepabhyām vŗkşatva-śiňśapātvavat para-apara-bhāva-anabhyupagamāt. Abhyupagame vā samarthasya api akaraņam asamarthasya api kaaņam prasajyeta. Na api upaādhibhedāt kāryatva-anityatvavat, tat-abhāvāt.(ATV, 34–43)
Tran: What if this is not a flaw because there is difference with respect to differentiation? No; it does not stand upon examination. The difference (opposition) due to the difference of the differentiata (vyāvarttya) is the basis of that (difference with respect to differentiation). That is not like the mutual exclusion of the differentiata as in the case of cow-ness and horse-ness. If it were so, since either would be negated due to opposition, the result will be either negation (bādha) [of the consequent] or falsity (asiddhi) [of the antecedent]. Nor is it like tree-ness and aśoka-ness through inclusion and non-inclusion, for it is not that there is the relation of being greater or smaller. If it were so, there would be either something which is capable of producing the effect but is not an instrument or something which is an instrument but is not capable of producing the effect. Nor is it also due to difference of the associates like that of effect-ness and non-eternality, for those (such associates) are not there.Note. The traditional Buddhist theory of meaning is that words signify meanings primarily by way of exclusion or differentiation from others (anya-apoha). For example, the word cow primarily signifies what excludes or is different from what is not a cow. This Buddhist theory rejects the theories that a word primarily signifies (1) an individual (vyakti), (2) a universal or class character (jāti), (3) the form (ākŗti), (4) the relation (sambandha) between the individual and the universal or (5) the individual as related to the universal.
Text. …Na api dvitīyah. Sa hi sahakāri sākalyam vā prātisvikī vā. Na … ādyah pakşah siddhasādhanāt…. Yat sahakāri-samavadhānavat tat hi karoti eva iti ko … na abhyupaiti…. Na ca akarana-kale sahakāri-samavadhānavatvam asmābhih abhyupeyate….(ATV, 46)
Tran: Not also the second. Is it (1) having all the auxiliary conditions or (2) being of the nature of each specifier of causality? But not the first, for that would involve proving what is already accepted. That which is attended by (all) the (other) causal conditions invariably produces the effect: who denies this? On the other hand, when it does not produce the effect, we do not admit that (all) the auxiliary causal conditions are available.Note. Udayana has earlier distinguished between two different interpretations of ability or causal efficacy, viz., (1) being an instrument or being immediately followed by the effect and (2) being capable by nature. He has raised objections against the first interpretation. Now, he proceeds to examine the second interpretation, which boils down to having the specifier of causality (kāraņatā-avacchedaka), i.e., having that feature by the virtue of which something is a causal condition. For example, to make a traditional clay pot, we need clay, water, a wheel, a stick, etc. Each of these is a necessary condition and may be said to possess a feature, by virtue of which it is a causal condition of a pot. For clay, that feature may be called clay-ness, for a wheel, wheel-ness, and so on. Then clay-ness, wheel-ness, etc., are the specifiers of causality. Though each is a necessary condition, none of these by itself is a sufficient condition: only the sum total (sāmagrī) of these is, for Udayana, the sufficient condition.
Text. Prātisvikī tu yogyatā anvaya-vyatireka-vişayībhūtam bījatvam vā syāt tat-avāntara-jātibhedo vā…(ATV 48)
Tran: Is inherent ability (to produce the effect) the same as seed-ness (etc.) which are the contents of awareness of co-presence (anvaya) and co-absence (vyatireka) or is it a specific property subordinate to that (seed-ness)?Note. Udayana examines if inherent ability or being capable by nature may be construed as being of the nature of specifier of causality. First, he offers the interpretation that inherent ability is the same as seed-ness, etc. This boils down to that that which has seed-ness, etc., viz., the seed, etc., are inherently able. In other words, the seed is a causal condition of the sapling and seed-ness is the specifier of the fact of the seed being a causal condition of the sapling. This is known through the observation of the co-presence and co-absence of the seed and the sapling, i.e., through the observation that the sapling sprouts when the seed is there (as with all other causal conditions) and does not sprout when the seed is not there.
Text. Na … ādyah, akurvatah api bījajātīyasya prakyakşa-siddhatvāt, tava api tatra avipratipatteh.(ATV, 49)
Tran: Not the first: it is known through perception that there are those which do not produce the effect (sapling) and yet are of the same kind as the seed; you too do not disagree on this.Note. The Buddhist does not admit universals that are different from and independent of the particulars. Nevertheless, the Buddhist, too, holds that both what is called the seed in a storage and what is called the seed in a field are different from everything else that is not a seed. Udayana implies that such a position does not necessarily support momentariness and may be consistent with permanence. He implies further that the Buddhist is not at liberty to deny that the seed in a field and the seed in a store are of the same kind: this is a matter of common experience in the form of perception that cannot be set aside without compelling counter evidence, which may be hard to come by if such counter evidence is grounded in perception and presupposes perception.Text. Na dvitīyah. Tasya kurvatah api mayā anabhyupagamena dŗşţāntasya sādhana-vikalatvāt. Ko hi … sustha-ātmā pramāņa-śūnyam abhyupagachhet. Sa hi na … pratyakşeņa anubhuyate…. Na api anumānena, liňga-abhāvāt. Yadi na kaścit viśeşah katham tarhi karaņa-akaraņe iti cet. Kah evam āha na iti. Param kim jāti-bheda-rūpah sahakāri-lābha-alābha-rūpah vā iti niyāmakam pramāņam anusarantah na paśyāmah. … Yah ayam sahakāri-madhya-madhyāsīnam akşepa-karaņa-svabhāvah bhāvah sa yadi prāk api āsīt tadā prasahya kāryam kurvāņah gīrvāņa-śāpa-śatena api na apahastayitum śakyata iti cet. Yuktam etat yadi akşepa-karaņa-svabhavātvam bhāvasya pramāņa-gocarah syāt, tat eva kutah siddham iti na adhigachhāmah. Prasaňga-viparyayābhyām iti cet, na, pasparāśraya prasaňgāt. Evam svabhāvatva-siddau tayoh pravŗttih, tat-pravŗttau ca evam sbhavātva-siddhih iti.(ATV 50)
Tran: Not the second. Since I (=the Nyaya) do not admit that that which is productive possesses that (immediate productivity), the (intended) corroborative example (the seed producing a sapling) is devoid of the ground (immediate productivity). Which sensible person would admit something without proof? For sure it does not become the object of perception. Nor is it proved by inference, for there is no probans. (Objection): If there is no specialty (difference, viśeşa), why is it that some are productive and some are not? (Reply): Who says that there is none? But is the explanation in terms of the particular (additional) property (immediate productivity) and its absence or is it in terms of availability and non-availability of auxiliaries? In this regard we do not find any decisive ground even after examination. (Objection): If the thing which becomes immediately productive when together with auxiliaries already possessed this nature, it would have produced the effect by force and could not be stopped even by a hundred divine curses. (Reply): This would have been reasonable if there were a proof that things have the (additional) property (called) immediate productivity; but we do not know how that is proved. (Objection): The proof is by way of conditional reasoning from supposition (prasaňga) and reverse supposition (viparyaya). (Reply): No, for then there is circularity. If this property were proved, those reasonings would have held; and if those reasonings held, this property would have been proved.Note. Udayana argues to refute the second suggestion that inherently ability is the same as having the property of being currently or immediately productive. The Buddhist claims that whatever is inherently able is immediately productive. This may be restated in the conditional form as (1) if something is inherently able, it is immediately productive (prasaňga) and (2) if something is not immediately productive, it is not inherently able (viparyaya). Udayana grants that if (1) holds then (2) holds, and vice versa. But if (2) were offered as proof of (1) and vice versa, the argument would be circular and flawed. The Buddhist claims that immediate productivity should be admitted as an additional property when a causal condition is immediately followed by the effect. If the causal condition were already possessed of this (additional) property, then there is no reason why the effect was not produced earlier. Udayana objects that presence and absence of all other causal conditions suffices as the reason. The Buddhist counterargues that it should be admitted that a causal condition has the additional property called immediate productivity whenever all other causal conditions are available. Udayana objects that this is not acceptable, for no such additional property is observed and there is also no inferential evidence for this property. It is an observed fact that an effect comes into being if, and only if, all the causal conditions are available, and not otherwise. The observed presence and absence of causal conditions explains why and when the effect originates or not. Hence, inferring the additional unobserved property called immediate productivity is, Udayana implies, uneconomical and unacceptable.
4. Summary
5. Conclusions
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Conflicts of Interest
1 | Besides the ATV, Udayana authored the Nyāyakusumānjali, which is mainly devoted to in-depth and rigorous analysis and defense of causality, induction, etc. His ground-breaking contributions are relevant for contemporary philosophy. Towards the end of this work, he offers proofs of the existence of God. He also wrote the Pariśuddhi, which deals with all the sixteen major topics of Nyaya philosophy with a preponderance of logical and epistemological themes. Further, he is the author of an unfinished work called the Kiranņaāvalī (probably his last work), which deals with ontological categories, such as substance, qualia, etc. Again, he is the author of the Pariśişţa, which is devoted to fallacies. Finally, he wrote the Lakşaņāvalī and the Lakşaņamālā, both of which deal with definition. He belongs to the Nyaya school, which is one of the oldest, most productive and most influential schools of philosophy. (the influence of Nyaya on the development of logic in South/South East Asia and the Far East is substantial.) His illustrious Nyaya predecessors include Vacaspati Misra (9th century CE), Jayanta Bhatta (9th century CE), Uddyotakara (6th century CE), Vatsyayana (2nd century BCE?) and Gotama, the founder of the school and author of the Nyayasutra (6th century BCE?). Some of his illustrious successors are Gangesa (13th century CE), Mathuranatha (16th century CE), Raghunatha Siromani (16th century CE), Jagadisa (18th century CE) and Gadadhara (18th century CE). |
2 | In the Nyaya view, time is one, infinite, simple, indivisible and eternal, and divisions of time, such as moments, months, etc., are based on associated conditions. Still the divisions of time are not unreal. When I say that I have lived longer than my brother, living longer than my brother, if true, is a real characteristic (dharma) of me and implies that I have existed for more moments than my brother. In the Nyaya view, all things happen in time and time is the locus of all non-eternal things. Accordingly, a moment is the locus of all non-eternal things happening then. |
3 | See, for example (Ratnakirti 1975, chps. 4 and 5, RN). |
4 | For further discussion, including the Nyaya approach to the logic of relations, see (Bhattacharya 1990, chp. III). |
5 | See Chakrabarti (1999), specifically, the Preface and the Introduction, for a discussion of the principle of induction arguing that both corroborative examples and counterexamples of a generalization should be acceptable to both sides in a systemic study. |
6 | See RN op cit. and (Santaraksita 1981, p. 166ff). |
7 | See (Chakrabarti 1978, chp. IV). In a typical kind of inference, that the probandum belongs to the inferential subject, is inferred from the premises that the probans belongs to the inferential subject and that the probans is pervaded by the probandum. If the probans were the same as the probandum, the premises would be that the probandum belongs to the inferential subject (which is the same as the inferential conclusion) and that the probandum is pervaded by the probandum. Such premises are useless for showing that the conclusion (which may be open to challenge) is reasonable or acceptable. |
8 | In the opinion of some scholars, Heraclitus, who promoted constant change, was influenced by Indian thought. See (McEvilley 2002, chp. 1). The doctrine of constant change in the Far East was influenced by Indian Buddhism. |
9 | The interested reader may consult Kisor K. Chakrabarti’s English translation, with notes on the first chapter of the ATV published in instalments in the Journal of Indian Philosophy and Religion, 1996–2021. |
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Chakrabarti, K. The Introductory Part of Udayana’s Critique of the Buddhist Doctrine of Momentariness. Religions 2022, 13, 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030241
Chakrabarti K. The Introductory Part of Udayana’s Critique of the Buddhist Doctrine of Momentariness. Religions. 2022; 13(3):241. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030241
Chicago/Turabian StyleChakrabarti, Kisor. 2022. "The Introductory Part of Udayana’s Critique of the Buddhist Doctrine of Momentariness" Religions 13, no. 3: 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030241
APA StyleChakrabarti, K. (2022). The Introductory Part of Udayana’s Critique of the Buddhist Doctrine of Momentariness. Religions, 13(3), 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030241