DAILY PHOTO: Chitradurga Below

Banashankari Temple; Taken on September 11, 2021 at Chitradurga Fort
Gunpowder Mill
Stepwell

DAILY PHOTO: Sampige Siddeshwara Temple

Taken on September 11, 2021 at Chitradurga Fort

DAILY PHOTO: Two Towers, Pushkar

Taken in Pushkar in November of 2015

DAILY PHOTO: Thommanom

Taken in Cambodia in October of 2012

DAILY PHOTO: Two Ganeshas

Taken in Bangalore on August 1, 2021

DAILY PHOTO: Chau Say Tevoda, Angkor

Taken in October of 2012 at Angkor

DAILY PHOTO: Blue & Gold Gate, Mangalore

Taken in Mangalore (Mangaluru) on July 11, 2021

DAILY PHOTO: Kudroli Shree Bhagavathi, Mangalore

Taken on July 11, 2021 in Mangalore

DAILY PHOTO: Hanuman Temple, Kadri

Taken on July 11, 2021 in Mangalore

BOOK REVIEW: Indian Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction by Sue Hamilton

Indian Philosophy: A Very Short IntroductionIndian Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction by Sue Hamilton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

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A concise guide to Indian Philosophy is a tall order. Over millennia, the discipline has had time to swell. This necessitated some careful pruning and selection on the part of the author. While the book does present key distinctions between all six of the orthodox schools of Indian Philosophy (i.e. Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Samkhya, Yoga, Mimamsa, and Vedanta,) the only one of the heterodox schools that it substantially addresses is that of Buddhism. (There are three major heterodox schools of Indian Philosophy by most accounts – Caravaka, Buddhist, and Jain, though some also include Ajivika and Ajnana to make five.)

This book focuses on the most novel ideas of each of philosophical schools under study, and it particularly focuses on points of debate where there is disagreement within or between schools. The book, therefore, moves metaphysics, ontology, and epistemology, but doesn’t explore all major philosophical questions for all the schools.

If you’re looking for a book that sums up the key points of debate between and within major schools of Indian philosophy, this is a great book. It does the job quite well and with a minimal page count. If you need a book that offers insight into more than the major points of contention, but extends into a given school’s stance on some of the less provocative questions, I’d recommend Chatterjee and Datta’s “An Introduction to Indian Philosophy” (it’s much longer and denser, but dives deeper and farms wider.)

I like how this book was organized and thought it did a good job of being both concise and clear (a duo that doesn’t play well together with regards complex philosophical subjects.)

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