Re: substance and attribute
From the Bhakti List Archives
• March 22, 2001
Sri Sadananda, This is in response to your questions. I have attempted to restate your question based on my understanding. Please correct me if am wrong. I wish some student of philosophy on this list would help us organize discussions on these matters. Perception has two aspects to it. One is the input, the sense data. The other is the output, which is the consciousness that the subject has; we can call this interpretation, modification of consciousness, or whatever. Let us imagine a black box, with input as the sense data, and output as the consciousness which the subject has. The contents of the black box include the perceptual apparatus as well as past impressions; all these without doubt influence the consciousness which the subject has. Let us define perceptual knowledge (following our acharyas) as the knowledge that is produced during the contact of sense organs with their objects. This definition is of the knowledge of the subject; the contact of the sense organs with their objects occasions it but does not completely determine it. Let us consider some examples of perception. All instances involve the data (input to the black box) and interpretation (output). 1. When I look out of the window, I am aware of curves, boundaries, height, shape etc. This subjective awareness is already different from the sense data; there is an interpretation which is perhaps influenced mostly by the make-up of the sense organs. 2. When a man approaches me, I have the awareness of him expressible by "This is a man." This awareness presupposes an earlier cognition of a man. Thus this perceptual awareness is based on more than the immediate sense data; it is influenced by a past awareness. But that does not make the knowledge corresponding to the awareness inferential. 3. In the cognition expressible by the sentence "This is the same devadatta i saw in chennai", the categories of space and time are implicit. No particular cognition reveals these categories to us, yet our consciousness is often in terms of these categories. This does not make the knowlegde produce by the above cognition inferential. Similarly, substance and attribute are implicit in the cognition of "a pretty, red, rose". They are fundamental categories in terms of which our cognitions seem to take place. The point I have tried to make is that substance and attribute are terms that purport to describe the fundamental categories in terms of which our cognitions seem to take place. We may ask how the subject of cognitions has arrived at these categories. But this would require the understanding of the black box, which I feel science is nowhere near at present. But we can ask some questions about these categories. First of all, we should describe them in some detail and examine if they really correspond to what they purport, which is categories in terms of which cognition takes place. Secondly, we can ask if these these categories are valid, that is, do they correspond to reality. I feel your questions should be recast in terms of validity. (Ultimately, this is because all perceptual cognitions involve sense data and interpretation, which are two different things.) I look forward to responses. best wishes kasturi I am trying to collect books on visistadvaita that deal with aspects of consciousness, pramanas etc. Books in English that I have are SMS Chari's Advaita and Visistadvaita (satadushani), fundamentals of visistadvaita vedanta (tattva-mukta-kalapa), KC Varadachari's Sri Ramanuja's theory of knowledge, Thibaut's translation of Sribhasya. As a book on Indian phil. in general, Radhakirshnan's Indian Philosophy. Any reference to good books on these issues with ref. to visistadvaita or Indian phil. in general will be very useful. -------------------------------------------------------------- - SrImate rAmAnujAya namaH - To Post a message, send it to: bhakti-list@yahoogroups.com Archives: http://ramanuja.org/sv/bhakti/archives/ Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
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