Evaluating the Reliability of an Authoritative Discourse in a Jain Epistemological Eulogy of the 6th c

Journal of Indian Philosophy 50 (5):865-887 (2022)
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Abstract

This paper explores the coexistence of more apologetic and of more systematic considerations in the _Āpta-mīmāṁsā_ (ĀMī), _Investigation on authority_, of the Jain author Samantabhadra (530–590). First, this treatise offers a relevant case study to investigate the transition from a conception in which the reliability criterion of an authoritative discourse is the authoritative character of its utterer, to a conception in which the criteria of validity and soundness of the discourse itself are foremost. Second, Samantabhadra is one of the first authors to undertake to logically prove the omniscience of the Jain teachers. And third, he links these questions to the celebrated Jain epistemological theory of non-one-sidedness.

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Marie-Hélène Gorisse
SOAS, University of London

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