Search Britannica
Click here to search
Search Britannica
Click here to search
Subscribe
Subscribe
Login
Home
History & Society
Science & Tech
Biographies
Animals & Nature
Geography & Travel
Arts & Culture
Money
Games & Quizzes
Videos
On This Day
One Good Fact
Dictionary
New Articles
History & Society
Lifestyles & Social Issues
Philosophy & Religion
Politics, Law & Government
World History
Science & Tech
Health & Medicine
Science
Technology
Biographies
Browse Biographies
Animals & Nature
Birds, Reptiles & Other Vertebrates
Bugs, Mollusks & Other Invertebrates
Environment
Fossils & Geologic Time
Mammals
Plants
Geography & Travel
Geography & Travel
Arts & Culture
Entertainment & Pop Culture
Literature
Sports & Recreation
Visual Arts
Companions
Demystified
Image Galleries
Infographics
Lists
Podcasts
Spotlight
Summaries
The Forum
Top Questions
#WTFact
100 Women
Britannica Kids
Saving Earth
Space Next 50
Student Center
Ask the Chatbot
Games & Quizzes
History & Society
Science & Tech
Biographies
Animals & Nature
Geography & Travel
Arts & Culture
Money
Videos
Indian philosophy
Table of Contents
Introduction
General considerations
Significance of Indian philosophies in the history of philosophy
General characteristics of Indian philosophy
Common concerns
Forms of argument and presentation
Roles of sacred texts, mythology, and theism
A general history of development and cultural background
The prelogical period
The logical period
The ultralogical period
Historical development of Indian philosophy
Presystematic philosophy
Shruti and the nature of authority
Development of the notion of transmigration
Origin of the concept of
brahman
and
atman
The principles underlying macrocosm and microcosm
Early Buddhist developments
Background
The Four Noble Truths and the nature of suffering
The path of liberation: methods of the Eightfold Path
The concepts of
anatta
and
nibbana
The philosophical portions of the
Mahabharata
“Mokshadharma”
Proto-Samkhyan texts
Non-Samkhyan texts
Early theories of kingship and state
The
Bhagavadgita
Doctrines and ideas of the Buddhist
Tipitaka
Early system building
The history of the
sutra
style
The
Purva-mimamsa-sutra
s and Shabara’s commentary
The
Vedanta-sutra
s
Relation to the
Mimamsa-sutra
s
Contents and organization of the four books
Variations in views
The
Samkhya-karika
s
Relation to orthodoxy
The nature of the self (
purusha
)
The nature, origin, and structure of the world (
prakriti
)
The concept of the three qualities (
guna
s)
Epistemology
Ethics
The
Yoga-sutra
s
Relation to Samkhya
God, self, and body
Theories and techniques of self-control and meditation
The
Vaisheshika-sutra
s
Organization and contents
Structure of the world
Naturalism
Epistemology
Ethics
The
Nyaya-sutra
s
Content and organization
Epistemology
Theory of causation and metaphysics
The syllogism and its predecessors
Other characteristic philosophic matters
The beginnings of Mahayana Buddhist philosophy
Contributions of the Mahasangikas
Contributions of the Sarvastivadins
Contributions of the Sautrantikas
The worldview of the
Arthashastra
Theories of kingship and statecraft
Concepts of the public good
Relations between states
The formation and implementation of policy
Fragments from the Ajivikas and the Charvakas
The Ajivikas
The Charvakas
Further developments of the system
Developments in Mahayana
Nagarjuna and Shunyavada
Contributions of Vasubandhu and Asanga
Contributions of Dignaga and Dharmakirti
Purva-Mimamsa: the Bhatta and Prabhakara schools
Principal texts and relation to Shabara
Metaphysics and epistemology
Ethics
Hermeneutics and semantics
Religious consequences
The linguistic philosophies: Bhartrihari and Mandana-Mishra
Nyaya-Vaisheshika
The old school
The new school
Samkhya and Yoga
Texts and commentaries until Vachaspati and the “Samkhya-sutras”
Metaphysics and epistemology
Ethics
Raja Yoga and Hatha Yoga
Religious consequences
Vedanta
Fragments from the
Mandukya-karika
until Shankara
Varieties of Vedanta schools
The concepts of nondualism
Shankara’s theory of error and religious and ethical concerns
Concepts of
bhedabheda
Ramanuja
Madhva
Nimbarka
Vallabha
Chaitanya
Vaishnava schools
Shaivite schools
Shaiva-siddhanta
Kashmiri Shaivism
Jain philosophy
Mughal philosophy
19th- and 20th-century philosophy in India and Pakistan
References & Edit History
Related Topics
Images
For Students
Indian philosophy summary
Discover
26 Decade-Defining Events in U.S. History
10 Famous Duels
Inventors and Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
What Causes the Northern and Southern Lights?
9 of the World’s Deadliest Spiders
5 Remarkably Close U.S. Presidential Elections
Cruel and Unusual Punishments: 15 Types of Torture
Contents
Home
Philosophy & Religion
Philosophical Issues
Indian philosophy: Media
Share
Share
Share to social media
Facebook
X
URL
https://mainten.top/topic/Indian-philosophy/images-videos
Images
Krishna and Arjuna
In the
Bhagavadgita
, Arjuna and the Hindu deity Krishna, who also serves...
© Photos.com/Getty Images
Vishnu with his 10 avatars
Vishnu with his 10 avatars (incarnations): Fish, Tortoise, Boar, Man-Lion, Dwarf,...
Courtesy of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Worshipping the tree of enlightenment
Divine beings worshipping at a throne altar beneath the bodhi tree. Sandstone relief...
Pramrod Chandra
Buddha preaching
A Hellenistic influence can be seen in this relief of the Buddha preaching from Gandhara...
P. Chandra
Nagarjuna
Nagarjuna, statue at the Kagyu Samye Ling Monastery, Eskdalemuir, Scotland.
Benjamin Matthews
Shankara
A sculpture of 8th-century Vedanta philosopher Shankara, also known as Adi Shankaracharya,...
© Viacheslav Belya/Dreamstime.com
Jina and the astamangalas
The astamangalas, or eight auspicious Jaina symbols, seen above and below the seated...
Courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution, Freer Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
devotees worshipping at a stupa
Devotees worshipping at a stupa, the monument that symbolizes the Buddha's
parinirvana
,...
Pramod Chandra
VIEW MORE
in these related Britannica articles:
Media for: Jainism
Media for: Buddhism