| Friedrich Max Müller - 1860 - 640 lehte
...professes his faith in the ends and objects of the Veda1, but the Sankhya, the Vaiscshika, the Nyaya, and Yoga philosophers, all pretend to find in the...still exist in India. Their founders, if they have 1 Vedanta is used, but not jet in its technical sense, Taittiriyaaranyaka, x. 12. ; a verse frequently... | |
| Samuel Wainwright - 1865 - 510 lehte
...professes his faith in the ends and objects of the Veda, but the Sankhya, the Vaiseshika, the Nyaya, and Yoga philosophers, all pretend to find in the...Upanishads in order to substantiate their own reasonings. " * We all know how, between Arian and Athanasian, Calvinist ' History of Ancicnt Sanskrit Literature.... | |
| George Small - 1866 - 236 lehte
...authority on which the various systems of philosophy in India rest. The founders of the various systems, if they have any pretensions to orthodoxy, invariably...Upanishads in order to substantiate their own reasonings." However, when none of the ancient Upanishads could be found to suit their purpose (liberal and conflicting... | |
| James Clement Moffat - 1871 - 596 lehte
...authority on which the various systems of philosophy in India rest. The founders of the various systems, if they have any pretensions to orthodoxy, invariably...Upanishads, in order to substantiate their own reasonings. However, when none of the ancient Upanishads could be found to suit their purpose (liberal and conflicting... | |
| Augustus J. Thébaud - 1876 - 560 lehte
...Consequently, "not only the Vedanta philosophers, but likewise the Sankhya, the Nyaya, and the Yoga teachers all pretend to find in the Upanishads some warranty for their tenets, however antagonistic in their bearings." But this is said only of comparatively modern compositions. The truly old and genuine ones... | |
| 1889 - 854 lehte
...professes his faith in the ends and objects of the Veda, but the Sankhya, the Vaiseshika, the Nyaya, and Yoga philosophers, all pretend to find in the...warranty for their tenets, however antagonistic in their hearing. The same applies to the numerous sects that have existed and still exist in India. Their founders,... | |
| 1898 - 484 lehte
...professes his faith in the ends and objects of the Veda, but the Sankhya, the Vaiseshika, the Nyaya, and Yoga philosophers all pretend to find in the Upanishads...pretensions to orthodoxy, invariably appeal to some passage of the Upanishads in order to substantiate their own reasonings. Now it is true that in the Dpauishads... | |
| University of Calcutta. Dept. of Letters - 1920 - 452 lehte
...a single original cult. " The founders of the Hindu schools," says Professor Max Miiller 1 " always pretend to find in the Upanishads some warranty for...sects that have existed and still exist in India." This remark applies mutatis mutandis to the various Buddhist sects. Each sect laid claim to the orthodoxy... | |
| University of Calcutta. Dept. of Letters - 1920 - 452 lehte
...a single original cult. " The founders of the Hindu schools," says Professor Max Muller l " always pretend to find in the Upanishads some warranty for...sects that have existed and still exist in India." This remark applies mutatis mutandis to the various Buddhist sects. Each sect laid claim to the orthodoxy... | |
| 2003 - 172 lehte
...professes his faith in the ends and objects of the Veda, but the Saukhya, the Vaiseshika, the Njaya, and Yoga philosophers, all pretend to find in the...sects that have existed and still exist in India. Tueir founders, if they have any pretensions to orthodoxy, invariably appeal to some passage of the... | |
| |