Lesson 11 of 13 • 8 upvotes • 4:12mins
Indians distinguish two classes of Indian philosophies: astika and nastika. The astika systems respect the Vedas to some degree. They are: Sankhya, Yoga, Vedanta, Mimamsa, Nyaya, and Vaisheshika. The nastika systems reject Vedic thought. They are: Jainism, Buddhism, and Lokayata. Though forms of most of these schools still exist today, I will write of them in the past tense to refer to their ancient forms. In the West, philosophical schools tended to rise and fall, one after the other. But in India all these systems competed for adherents beside each other for centuries. Each system (or darshana, literally “view”) eventually developed sutras: aphoristic summaries of its positions, along with quick responses to common objections and brief attacks on the other systems. But the systems themselves predate their sutras, probably by many centuries.
13 lessons • 2h 42m
Course Overview (in Hindi)
8:52mins
Religion and its Importance (in Hindi)
14:59mins
What is Philosophy and How is it Different from Religion (in Hindi)
14:56mins
Hinduism and Aadi Shankaracharya (in Hindi)
10:29mins
Islam and Hazrat Muhammad (in Hindi)
11:52mins
Sikhism (in Hindi)
11:47mins
Christianity, Judaism and Zoroastrianism (in Hindi)
13:34mins
Jainism and Jain Philosophy (in Hindi)
14:59mins
Buddha Philosophy (in Hindi)
14:59mins
Ancient Theism and Medieval Theism Philosophy (in Hindi)
12:40mins
Atheist Philosophy - Maharishi Charvak (in Hindi)
4:12mins
MCQ's in Indian Religion and Philosophy: Part 1 (in Hindi)
15:00mins
MCQ's in Indian Religion and Philosophy: Part 2 (in Hindi)
13:59mins