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hariH OM,
The reference given to this is:
Pollock 1986, Ramayana of Valmiki, Ayodhyakanda. Translated by Sheldon Pollock. Vol. II. Berkeley: University of California Press. Relevant parts attached.
svasti,
JAYA BHAVAANII BHAARATII,
shrivathsa.
Rajiv asks in his book "Is Pollock too big to be criticized?' . I ask "is he big enough to be paid any attention?"
thank you.
regards,
rajiv
I hope the experts here can help by providing leadership to create such a project. If interested, please write to me privately at: RajivMal...@gmail.com The sponsoring sources would like to start soon.
regards,
rajiv
hariH OM,
Pollock's 2005 edition is available on scribd:
https://www.scribd.com/doc/208090414
The relevant pages quoted in RM's book are 37-38 from the 1986 edition. Attaching the relevant portions. Forgive me for not attaching earlier.
svasti,
JAYA BHAVAANII BHAARATII,
shrivathsa.
Can we have the reference details of where Prof. Pollock made this claim / inference and what substantiation did he provide for the claim?
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1. Prof. Dominik Wujastyk :
I discovered yesterday that there exists a petitionlaunched by Prof. K. Ramasubramanian that asks for Prof. Sheldon Pollock tobe removed from his editorial leadership role with the Murty Library.The argument against Pollock is based on the idea that, "he has deepantipathy towards many of the ideals and values cherished and practiced inour civilization." The most prominent evidence given to support thisassertion is a quotation from a 2012 lecture that Prof. Pollock gave at theSouth Asia Institute in Heidelberg, titled, "What is South Asian KnowledgeGood For?" Prof. Ramasubramanian states that Prof. Pollock "echoes theviews of Macaulay and Max Weber that the shastras generated in India serveno contemporary purpose except for the study of how Indians expressthemselves." Unfortunately, Prof. Ramasubramanian has not correctlyunderstood these passages in Prof. Pollock's paper, nor the meaning of the2012 lecture as a whole.Prof. Pollock cites Macaulay and Weber as पूर्वपक्ष positions to his own,opposite view. Prof. Pollock presents Macaulay and Weber as examples ofthe worst kind of misunderstanding of Indian wisdom. He does this in orderto build his own argument that there is a deeper knowledge in India thanMacaualy or Weber realized, the knowledge that is the "South AsianKnowledge" of his title. This is the knowledge of the Indian शास्त्राणि,the Indian knowledge systems that Prof. Pollock is defending.Prof. Ramasubramanian then cites a passage in which Prof. Pollock says,Are there any decision makers, as they refer to themselves, at universitiesand foundations who would not agree that, in the cognitive sweepstakes ofhuman history, Western knowledge has won and South Asian knowledge haslost? ...That, accordingly, the South Asian knowledge South Asiansthemselves have produced can no longer be held to have any significantconsequences for the future of the human species?In this passage, Prof. Pollock is *criticising* the administrators ofwestern universities who do not give proper recognition and value to Indianknowledge systems, and only view India as a place to make money or to makepractical applications of knowledge systems of the West. Again, this isthe पूर्वपक्ष. Prof. Pollock's central argument is that the special,unique knowledge systems developed in India, mainly recorded in Sanskrit,are of great value, and that this fact is not recognized by "universitiesand foundations" who, like Macauley and Weber, think that Indian knowledgesystems have been superseded by Western ones. Prof. Pollock's point ofview is that the शास्त्राणि , representing South Asian Knowledge, areprecious, worth studying, and still have much to offer modern culturallife. On pages six and seven of his lecture, he gives the examples ofव्याकरण and the theory of रस as forms of knowledge that were developed to auniquely high degree in early India, and that still have the power toenrich thought today. On the subsequent pages, he begins to make the evenmore difficult argument for finding modern value in even moreinternally-oriented Indian sciences such as मीमांसा, अलङ्कार andनाट्यशास्त्र.The larger point of Prof. Pollock's article is that the institutions ofhigher education in America and elsewhere have found it difficult over thelast fifty years or more to develop institutional structures to support thestudy of *Indian* knowledge systems, and that the South Asia Institute inHeidelberg is a model of success in allowing those who develop knowledge *about*India to work in harmony alongside those who deepen their appreciation ofthe knowledge that was developed *by *India.It would be possible to make similar arguments for the other evidencereferred to by Prof. Ramasubramanian, e.g., Prof. Pollock's 1985 paper onthe character and importance of शास्त्राणि, of South Asian knowledgesystems. In that paper, Prof. Pollock says that, "Classical Indiancivilization, however, offers what may be the most exquisite expression ofthe centrality of rule-governance in human behavior" and that śāstra is "amonumental, in some cases unparalleled, intellectual accomplishment in itsown right." One could discuss this paper further. But to cite it as anexample of a criticism of India is the opposite of the truth.It is regrettable that Prof. Ramasubramanian has misunderstood Prof.Pollock's views by 180 degrees. Prof. Pollock is a champion for the samevalues of Indian culture as Prof. Ramasubramanian. That is why Prof.Pollock devised and brought into being the Murty Classical Library.Many people have signed Prof. Ramasubramanian's petition, presumablywithout having read Prof. Pollock's work for themselves, or having failedto undestand it. The damage done by this misunderstanding is likely tolast a long time, and hamper the efforts of Prof. Pollock and others whoseek to bring the glory and subtlety of ancient Indian knowledge to theattention of the modern world.
2. Sri Nityanandji:It is the season of petitions and statements! Adding some more details
before my comments:
1) While the petition of change.org has been started by Prof. K
Ramasubramanian, as many as 131 Indian intellectuals apart from Prof. K
Ramasubramanian signed the original plea to Mr. Narayana Murthy and Mr.
Rohan Murthy. I do not know if it was covered in a mainstream media source,
the much less-known newsgram.com carried it:
http://www.newsgram.com/132-indian-academicians-call-for-removal-of-sheldon-pollock-as-general-editor-of-murthy-classical-library/
I personally know and have met with many scholars on the list: and some of
them are very well respected in India, in addition to being well-known.
Prof. Ramasubramanian himself is a recipient of the Badarayan Vyas Samman.
2) Apart from the aspects highlighted in Dr. Wujastyk's email, two other
aspects which are very relevant to this petition: the letter by the
academicians mentions Mr. Rajiv Malhotra's *Battle of Sanskrit* as well as
Prof. Pollock's recent signing of the solidarity statement with the
“students, faculty, and staff of JNU”: the petition against Prof. Pollock
may well be a reaction to this. On the first aspect: Recently, Mr. Rajiv
Malhotra's book has been widely discussed in Indian universities of late.
Mr. Malhotra has been hosted by several Indian universities and institutes
(e.g. Karnataka Sanskrit University and TISS) for talks where he has
received both support and opposition, but more support than opposition as
far as I can say. On the second aspect, there was a discussion on the
*Bhāratīyavidvatpariṣat
*mailing list (Mr. Rajiv Malhotra recently joined this mailing list). The
thread was started by me, and I remarked in my short initial post “Before
the Indian courts decide, 455 academicians have already reached a
decision.” The discussion can be read here:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/bvparishat/cTgsJDKjA8I
My quick comments:
If it can be argued that the petition against Prof. Pollock is based on
‘misunderstanding’ or ‘wilful misconstrual’ (as members on this list have
described), then it can also be argued that the solidarity statement (to
which Prof. Pollock is a signatory) on the JNU issue is based on a ‘lack of
understanding’ of jurisprudence in India or ‘wilful misrepresentation’ of
facts. On jurisprudence: The Delhi Police has the documentary (video tapes)
and non-documentary (eye-witnesses) evidence, and the Indian courts will
examine the evidence and rule on the matter: then in what capacity does the
solidarity statement declare thrice that the police action on JNU was
‘illegal’. On misrepresentation, the solidarity statement misses that fact
that a large section of JNU students and teachers did support the police
action on JNU. This was also covered in the news:
http://www.newindianexpress.com/nation/180-JNU-Teachers-Take-the-Sarkari-Side-Demand-Action-Against-Students/2016/02/16/article3280826.ece
As I see it, both petitions are rooted more in strong differences of
opinion/ideology than in misunderstanding or wilful
misconstrual/misrepresentation.
Thanks, Nityanand
Atra prasange Nityananda-vidvan-matam sopapattikamatah sarvathaa sveekaryamiti me matih. Sanatih,
1. Prof. Dominik Wujastyk :
I discovered yesterday that there exists a petition
Namaste Kalicharan Tuvi ji
Please permit me to make some specific observations, only to fine tuning to the good points brought up in your post below.
Some technical and deep elaboration is needed, as the issues raised in these posts have deep down and distressing 'fissures and hemorrhages' located in the ' unarticulated assumed premise of current discourse. This pointer is primarily to address two issues of relevance Knowledge and Application of Word. The questions are : What is Samskrutham? How to understand Samskruth Word? For what purpose? Technically called ' Samskrutha (Veda) Shabda lakshana' and 'Samskrutha Viniyoga' (many times pointed in earlier debates by my friends - Dr. N R Joshi and Dr. Yadu Moharir). This incidentally touches upon the pious suggestion of Bijoy Mishra ji <that Government should fund Shaastra -Research/Researchers>. :
Before going for heavy stuff, what is < Hanumāna> in the sentence < In this way, Hanumāna - for instance - belongs to the same consistency (ऋत) elaborated in the Vedic system, even though the proper name isn't mentioned there. This principle has been known and implemented by Indians for a long time (admittedly, during "ancient" enough epochs). This unity is even to this day being accessed, and kept alive, by Ascetics ("yeah, field work").> Did you mean < Anu-Maana> ? please clarify.
This debate is important because , as you say < India is a young nation today. But it has got a history, an ancient history, and a prehistory, too: any sweeping generalisation is therefore a hazard scholars should avoid at all cost. > And precisely for this reason, India cannot afford to have a distorted understanding of Shaastra- Kavya - Samskrutham and pass on the authority over this to ' outsiders'. Gita says (15.20)- iti guhyatamam sastram idam uktam mayanagha etad buddhva buddhiman syat krta-krtyas ca bharatha.
Now for the technical part.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Your post responding to BM's post reads : Responding to BM's post reading < Shastra created संज्ञा for the concepts. One can create new material, > but can't use the same संज्ञा for it. New संज्ञा would develop. > One can replace the deity or the logic, but can't use the same संज्ञा. > The openness of early Indian thinkers amazes me!>
you point
< In my opinion this is a clear and accurate answer to the problem raised by Western Indology, and only needs elaboration with linguistic dressing.>
BVK Sastry observation (on technicality of संज्ञा ): The issue is much more complex than needing a 'linguistic dressing'. Why? Samjnas are DNA of Shaastra-Language - Discourse. If Samjnaa is corrupted, the understanding of Shaastra gets corrupted and leads to digestion-distortion-digression. This is what the writings of Sheldon Pollok ' using distorted understanding of Samjnaa' has lead to. Here is how traditional schools present the concept of 'Samjnaa' in a Shaastra.
Shaastra is a logical and contextual presentation of 'Darshana ( = Vision)' of a ' Yogi/ Risihi'. Shaastra is a Human composition and articulation made in a context for a purpose. Shaastra uses a technical language and discipline specific convention. The ' language of Vision is called 'Chandas'; The language of Shaastra is called ' Bhashaa'; The technical convention of Shaastra Vocabulary is called 'Paribhashaa'. The totality of all this is taught as part of Shaastra-studying methodology. The traditional word for this is ' Shaastra -Paribhashaa'.
Shaastra-Paribhashaa technicality covers three ' linguistics propositions and positions' that need to be used for valid decoding of the meaning of given Shaastra text ( or any text that claims to be a Shaastra status). This is way beyond the ' linguistic dressing' on the model of ' window dressing for shopping of products'.
The 'three propositions and positions' needed for proper understanding of 'Shaastra - Samjnaa -Paribhashaa' are as follows: (a) Acceptance of rules of decoding the given Samksruth Technical Vocabulary using the same principles and processes by which they were coined. (b) Acknowledging the Root source of Shaastra and Shaastra paribhashaa to Vedas as Sacred Spiritual texts of Vision (i.e. Acceptance of Integrity of Shaastra-Darshanas) (c) Recognizing the unique yet intertwined harmony in approach and goal of Shaastra and Kavya : position and proposition do not change the end goal and integrity of approach.
All these criticalities of Shaastra-Kavya study are violated and badly substituted in Colonial writings, on which Sheldon Pollock draws upon to build the next level stories of understanding -propagating Shaastra -Kavya.
Shaastra paribhashaa is a 'Technical Vocabulary of given discipline'. The technical word has discipline specific meaning. The technically defined meaning can (and in many cases does) carry a plurality of meanings and multivalent communications. Decoding Samjna needs the help of two Vedanga Shaastras called - Vyakaranam and Nirukta. The pooled list of 'Samjnas' is placed in a document called 'paribhashaa-pada-kosha' = Technical Vocabulary of given Shaastra discipline. This is to be first studied and comprehended before taking up debates and discourses.
At this point, the technical specific meaning of the word goes beyond ' literal meaning' to the next level , far beyond the ' linguistic dressing' ( which a translator will use ; and take recourse to tools like Thesaurus !) In Samskrutham technically each word is unique; There is no exact equivalent ; There is no substitution plausible or suggested; More so in Shaastra works. This is the norm violated by post colonial writers in interpreting Shaastra through the lens of local languages and using dictionary of Monier Williams. Interest in study does not mean right to interpret bad ! Or self-positioning as authority on Shaastra-discipline, violating the Masters. The humbleness of Indian Shaastra traditionalists to be 'Backward compliant and repeat the words of old texts and re-assert the authority to Vedas is considered ' regressive' by scholars wedded to colonial thought process. This is the position embraced by Sheldon Pollock which hurts the traditional Shaastra study. The position that 'Sanskrit is dead' does not help to study the ' Live relevance of Shaastra and Kavya in Samskrutham'.
For example, if one desires to study Vedanta, one must start the study from 'Vedanta-paribhashaa' before taking next 'progressive or regressive' discourse step in commenting / translating Vedanta Shaastra. To discuss meemaamsaa Shaastra, one need to go to 'meemaamsaa paribhashaa' ; To study Tarka, one goes to ' Tarka paribhashaa'. And so on. The ' paribhashaa' words may ( and are in many cases) drawn from Vedic resources, and given discipline specific meaning, without violating the primary ' Vision-Meaning and Purpose of the word'. Example: The word 'Prakruti' comes from 'Veda'; but when used across Vedanta, Meemaamsaa , Ayurveda, Samkhya, Vyakarana..Shaastras, the word carries different technical meanings. Tradition has a special sacred discipline to explore ' Kama' ( Human Sexuality) also as a 'Shaastra) and Kavya works are aplenty on this theme . When Kama-Shastra is studied as ' Sexuality -Erotic's by removing the 'Shaastra nature of it, the associated sacredness and its integrity with Higher concepts of Dharma and Moksha, the tradition gets misrepresented. This is the violation where Sheldon Pollock hurts.
In this sense, the given 'paribhashaa word (संज्ञा word )' is using a 'Visioned word' for a purpose; as a special technical word in the discipline. The technical word defined by the Shaastrakaara provides a sculpted perspective of the visioned word in that specific discipline; and may undergo a change / evolution over a period of Time ( as BM points out). A study of this is a part of understanding and doing research in Shaastra. The traditional scholars use the summary statement reading < Samjnaa cha paribhashaa cha, vidhirniyama eva cha..> to explain the pedagogy and scope of Shaastra. Many western studies, including Pollock violates these set norms.
Then how does one state the technical position of tradition to study Shaastra - Kavya -Samjnaa ? It starts from the 'Statement of Purpose and Method', technically called 'Anubandha Chatushtaya' coupled with 'Anvaya-Krama'. This covers the preliminary and vital issue of 'Adhikaara -Yogyataa' of Teacher and Taught. Many modern schools engaged in Shaastra studies, including lead names in Sanskrit studies violates this norm set by tradition; using the shield of ' academic freedom' and ' relative position for comparative studies'. The issues of caste and religion, social justice over Spiritual Welfare (Adhyatma) governs the selection for ' posts of power and profit' in employing institutions. Shaastra-Schoalrship becomes an issue of livelihood earning, which Is totally different from the original purpose of ' Moksha'. Thus, unless social relevance of ' Shaastra-Kavya -Samjna' is presented in a ' linguistically appropriate New Dress', it will not go any further in research. Messed up writings in the name of Shaastra cannot further the research in Shaastra -Kavya in any way !
This ' position' and postulation' hurts many for their inner pride and lead to a long unwinding of defensive statements or lamentation; for it is a factual bitter Truth. The bitterness is because of the failure to articulate and answer ' Why Samskruth Shaastra research ? How does it help deliver and steer global welfare beyond pushing a pride on achievement by past generations? Why are the current institutions failing to capture, articulate, deliver the Vision of Shaastra in current period ? for Global consumer ? Why Samskruth is not a driver in the field of World Language-Technologies, like English ? It is in this part, Rajiv Malhotras battle for Sanskrit are commendable. They have raised significant questions that need to be answered by traditional schools as well as ' Faith-pride defenders' as well as those who < seek Government fund to support Shaastra research>.
Coming back to the main part of my response on < संज्ञा >
Traditional schools demand (a) Shaastra to be seen, positioned and studied as an integral part of Veda and (b) Shaastra-Vyakhyana to be subservient to Veda.
This is the core premise of 'Samskrutham- Sacredness -Spiritual nature (Adhyatmataa)' on which the ' Bharateeya Samskruti-Samskar-Identity is built and continuing'.
Strategically if one destroys the integral relation of 'Samskruth and its Sacredness' , the net effect is ' injecting poison at the DNA level to distort the understanding of all that is built on 'Samskruth as the language of Shaastra and Kavya ∷ Veda -Vedanta-Yoga- Ramayana- Mahabharata-Purana- Tantra-Agama'. This point was raised long ago by Colonial linguists; and they have postulated ' alternate position and postulate' to study Shaastra- Kavya' through the lens of 'Historical language modeling for Sacred Texts and languages of India'. The crux of this issue has not been addressed strongly, positively and conclusively.
This 'poorvapaksha ' of colonial scholar to traditional scholar' needs research and support. The question is:How is Samskruth Different from other languages of the World ? Why Hold Samskruth unique and sacred above every other language used by world religions - Hebrew, Arabic, Aramic,.. ? What is meant by Deva-Bhashaa ? whose God/s ?
The traditional Shaastra researcher /Defender has to answer this question on a different plank other than ' Faith -Belief' and put it to the 'Scientific touch stone'. It is here that Shaastra-Scholar Researcher needs support; and that is not coming forth from those ' Shaastra loving, Shaastra -proud, Communities who want their Root and continuing Identities to be anchored to Shaastra. Failing to invest and safeguard their own texts providing roots and identities, the ' job' is outsourced' beyond India ! to 'Scholars of Religion, History, National cultures and languages'. The outcome is the current battle front.
According to traditional position, the ' Shaastra- researcher / discourses / translator has to acknowledge, accept and respect the integral connection of 'Shaastra' ( Logic) with 'Vedas'( = Vision, Sacredness, Yoga, Darshana). The Shaastra discourse and dialogue ( Poorvapaksha and Siddhanta) must work within the frame of ' Veda'. Even if it be a 'Charvaka of past' or ' Modern Charvaka'. The outcome of discourse needs to be validated by Yoga-Vijnana ( which is far above the current bio-and neuro sciences. The hot debate of Matter and Consciousness paradigm in Advanced theoretical physics needs to be reconciled to Gita-paradigm (Chapter 7- 'Bhoomiraponalo vayuh.. ) used in Shaastras; the understanding of ' Life (Prana and Ayush) in Shaastra needs to be validated by Bio- and Neuro scientists and Ayurveda-Shaastra researchers. This is where funding support for Shaastra -research is needed and Scholar-Champions of cause to investigate ' fundamental research issues in Shaastra' beyond ' grant seeking to deliver a market product'.
Summing up, to Guard the right understanding of Samjnas, which are the DNA of Shaastra and Kavya-Language - Discourse, Support funding is needed.
Allowing Samjnaa-Corruption leads to speeding up of digestion-distortion-digression of Traditional Disciplines.
Regards
BVK Sastry
-----------------
-----Original Message-----
From: bvpar...@googlegroups.com [mailto:bvpar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Kalicharan Tuvij
Sent: Tuesday, 01 March, 2016 10:31 AM
To: भारतीयविद्वत्परिषत्
Subject: Re: {भारतीयविद्वत्परिषत्} Page 389 in Rajiv Malhotras 'Battle for Sanskrit'
--
Before going for heavy stuff, what is < Hanumāna> in the sentence < In this way, Hanumāna - for instance - belongs to the same consistency (ऋत) elaborated in the Vedic system, even though the proper name isn't mentioned there. This principle has been known and implemented by Indians for a long time (admittedly, during "ancient" enough epochs). This unity is even to this day being accessed, and kept alive, by Ascetics ("yeah, field work").> Did you mean < Anu-Maana> ? please clarify.
BVK Sastry observation (on technicality of संज्ञा ): The issue is much more complex than needing a 'linguistic dressing'. Why? Samjnas are DNA of Shaastra-Language - Discourse. If Samjnaa is corrupted, the understanding of Shaastra gets corrupted and leads to digestion-distortion-digression. This is what the writings of Sheldon Pollok ' using distorted understanding of Samjnaa' has lead to. Here is how traditional schools present the concept of 'Samjnaa' in a Shaastra.
Interest in study does not mean right to interpret bad ! Or self-positioning as authority on Shaastra-discipline, violating the Masters. The humbleness of Indian Shaastra traditionalists to be 'Backward compliant and repeat the words of old texts and re-assert the authority to Vedas is considered ' regressive' by scholars wedded to colonial thought process. This is the position embraced by Sheldon Pollock which hurts the traditional Shaastra study. The position that 'Sanskrit is dead' does not help to study the ' Live relevance of Shaastra and Kavya in Samskrutham'.
Namaste Kalicharan Tuviji
1. Thanks for clarifying the word < I mean हनुमान only. I invoked an idea from Mathematics, namely "homomorphism" > as a special < संज्ञा > created by you.
2. As you have indicated < This is better understood through तंत्र विद्या, but as you know forums might not be the best place for it. > .
I agree. Rest of the interaction can be on off-forum mode.
3. Thanks for the words of appreciation < I've gone through the rest of the reply carefully. I accept, and indeed learned, all of that wholeheartedly. Nothing possible to add there.>.
Regards
BVK Sastry
From: bvpar...@googlegroups.com [mailto:bvpar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Kalicharan Tuvij
Sent: Wednesday, 02 March, 2016 8:57 AM
To: bvpar...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: {भारतीयविद्वत्परिषत्} Page 389 in Rajiv Malhotras 'Battle for Sanskrit'
प्रणाम ।
--
1. Thanks for clarifying the word < I mean हनुमान only. I invoked an idea from Mathematics, namely "homomorphism" > as a special < संज्ञा > created by you.
2. As you have indicated < This is better understood through तंत्र विद्या, but as you know forums might not be the best place for it. > .
I agree. Rest of the interaction can be on off-forum mode.
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While Ingalls continued to write on Indian philosophy, his deep interest in poetry came increasingly to the fore. In 1964, he published a 460 page volume An Anthology of Sanskrit Court Poetry. Vidyakara’s Subhasitaratnakosa. (H.O.S. Volume 44), containing some 1,700 Sanskrit verses collected by a Buddhist monk around 1050 C.E. Ingalls’ great intuition for Sanskrit along with his magisterial command of English made this translation among the very best. It is still available in a paperback edition. His introductions, notes, and commentaries make the entire work a masterful and enduring contribution to Sanskrit literary studies. In the introduction, Ingalls sheds light on the development of Indian poetry and compares the impersonality of Sanskrit poetry with the predominantly personal poetry of the West. As the project came to a conclusion, Ingalls said that Vidyakara had furnished him with “the happiest hours of labor that I have yet known.”
In 1981 the Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies joined the Center for the Study of World Religions in hosting a dinner for Ingalls to celebrate the recent publication of a Festschrift dedicated to him as “one of the great humanistic scholars of our time” and entitled Sanskrit and Indian Studies: Essays in Honour of Daniel H. H. Ingalls. Its preface emphasized his immense breadth of scholarship and the pioneering impact and lasting value of his two books, one for the study of logic and the other for literary studies. A flood of telegrams and letters of appreciation arrived from India, England, Japan, and many parts of the United States.
In 1990, after his retirement, Daniel Ingalls brought to conclusion his third major contribution to the Harvard Oriental Series, a joint undertaking with Jeffrey M. Masson and M.V. Patwardhan, The Dhvanyaloka of Anandavardhana with the Locana of Abhinavagupta, edited with an introduction by Ingalls himself (H.O.S. Volume 49). The book deals with the culmination of Indian poetics by the Kashmiri scholar Abhinavagupta in the 9th century C.E. In this, he makes one of the most influential texts and commentaries of Sanskrit aesthetics and literary theory available in English.
In addition to his three major books, he published some twenty-seven articles on Indological topics. After his retirement, Ingalls worked with his son, computer scientist Daniel H. H. Ingalls Jr., Harvard ‘66, on a computer-assisted analysis of the literary technique of the Mahabharata, and their first findings were published in 1985 in the Journal of South Asian Literature.
I would like to apologize in advance for not sharing the same love for the late Prof Ingalls.
It may be noted that the CIA and American Special Forces in Afghanistan have recognized cultural sensitivity as a strategic weapon especially as the numbers of their forces reduce.in the occupied country. It's not a new doctrine. The British knew it from their Imperial experience. The Americans learnt it during the World War II.
And oh incidentally, Ingalls did spend a few years in Kabul during World War II spying on Indian patriots who were trying to flee British Raj thru Central Asia on their way to Germany or Japan. He was an officer of the OSS, the predecessor of the CIA. The CIA itself was formed by an act of Congress only in 1947. Please refer to Ingalls's obituary in the Harvard Gazette or a book on the Great Game during the World War II. Of course as cover, he worked as an English teacher in a lycee in Kabul. It is said he was also working on his Ph D dissertation at this time.
http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2010/02/daniel-henry-holmes-ingalls/
Who says that Indologists dont learn from their field work?
Thanks and Regards,
Lakshmi Srinivas
On Mar 3, 2016, at 6:39 PM, Ajit Gargeshwari <ajit.gar...@gmail.com> wrote:>Thanks for selective quoting and twisting the story about Prof Ingalls. Please stick to Prof. Pollock's references as that is the topic of discussion here on this thread. Please discuss only matter[s] related to Sanskrit and indology here and not conspiracy theories<
> Could you show any evidence from his work related Sanskrit where such a theory about him influenced his Sanskrit scholarship.<
Though a political conservative himself, Ingalls had a lifelong friendship with the Indian Marxist historian D.D. Kosambi, who became the text-editor for the Subhasitaratnakosa. Of Kosambi, Ingalls wrote, “I have never met a man with whom I disagreed on such basic questions, yet whose company I so constantly enjoyed.”
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That an Indologist was a spy for his government and was spying on Indians is a fact, not a theory about him. Since when does a recital of a fact become scholarship bashing or conspiracy theory? I am puzzled.
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hariH OM,
1. The reference to Ingalls was brought up by Nagaraj and not Srinivas.
2. Unquestioning praise of anyone is not a hallmark of scholarliness. If Ingalls was praised for something, it is fair that we hear about his other side. Hence one doesn't understand the overreaction.
3. The reference to Ingalls' spying activity is not a "conspiracy theory". It is there in cold print in his obituary.
4. Understanding the man many a time gives insights into the expediencies he would have encountered in his work. To negate such a possibility prima facie and giving him a carte blanche thinking that he would have been academically neutral is naive. This seems the crux of the matter even in the case of Pollock. And to this extent the input of Srinivas is valuable. We are discussing a field where academic neutrality may be claimed and still not be falsified. Does it bear repetition that humanities aren't exact sciences and that much of its research is agenda driven? All those who have worked in and on India need to be analyzed for their contributions and troubles they have caused. Let none be treated as holy.
svasti,
JAYA BHAVAANII BHAARATII,
shrivathsa.
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I reverse this logic to show that USA state (as the modern equivalent of the king) is involved in Indology. Can we call it the US "aestheticization of power"? Maybe Pollock would agree with my view, as it takes his theory and applies it in reverse.
Why is it within scholarly bounds to do what Pollock does, but considered unscholarly to respond by saying that American Orientalists are equally involved in the same thing - not all of them but many of them.
Would you consider Pollock's thesis as unscholarly because it drags in Indian politics? He is not only heavily bringing in ancient Indian politics, but also present day Indian politics - many articles on the past start by framing in terms of BJP/RSS-bashing. I am not interesting in defending or criticizing BJP/RSS. I merely wish to inform scholars that such writings are considered appropriate when done by Western Indologists.
What I seek is symmetry and parity in scholarship in both directions. Nothing more or less.
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On Mar 4, 2016, at 6:21 AM, Ajit Gargeshwari <ajit.gar...@gmail.com> wrote:I don't at all agree with the views of Rajiv Malhotras views either . These are misguided statements without an iota of truth. I donot believe in a spy theories unless you bring evidence.
On Mar 4, 2016, at 7:52 AM, Ajit Gargeshwari <ajit.gar...@gmail.com> wrote:Let me add this as Mod Note: Politics is not discussed on BVP List
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As long as the policy is consistently applied it should be ok.
Personally i feel this will perpetuate Indian traditional scholars remaining in comfortable silos, afraid to come out. But maybe the moderators have their reasons for this policy, which is their prerogative.
- His theory of the aestheticization of power to explain the Sanskrit Cosmopolis as a political phenomenon.
- His thesis in the paper "Deep Orientalism" that argues how Nazis used the social oppression rationalized in Sanskrit texts to shape their own case for genocide.
- His theory of the death of sanskrit which focuses on the role of Hindu kings for this death.
Perhaps “spy” is too strong a word here. “informer,” “helper in translation,” “reporter” may be closer to the truth of what Ingalls, Frye, et al. did during the second world war
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Namaste
On the specific statement of Professor Aklujkar, continuing on this thread on < page 389 in Rajiv Malhotra’s Battle for Sanskrit>
And Professor Aklujkars post addressing ‘ One of the main reasons’ - < why Sanskrit is in such a precarious position at present is the aloofness of traditional scholars from what is happening around them."> .
( Note: Please note that I am not making a sermon, beyond sharing what my teacher said in responding to this question and options I had to choose in shaping my life.)
I hope the view shared below of < my teacher, a traditional scholar> and their action-perception to respond on < what is happening around them> in shaping social, personal and spiritual welfare for own families and society > would be taken note of. It also may explain why many wards of traditional scholars end up as taking a different social profession like engineers, doctors and still are deeply ‘committed to Dharma in their heart’.
Sharing My < traditional teachers view on this issue> : Samskrutha Scholars, especially ‘Vaidikas’ were pushed to a low-power- social minority status since 17th century, slowly and steadily due to the failure of the 75% of Society constituted by Kshatirya –Vaishya –Shudras failing to do their Swa-Dharma and ‘ making Prajna-Vada /Prajnaa-Aparadha’ on Dharma. The social shifts (Yuga-Dharma) leading to the prioritization of ‘Artha’ (Consummation of Position, Power and Wealth for personal comfort and worldly bodily pleasures) by 75% of society needed a different icon in society which had to show the other side of ‘Social renunciation of Artha’ to guard and achieve the Higher goals of life. The net result was a split of the ‘ Paramartha-Purushartha Unified’ approach to Dharma practice to ‘ Isolated model of Dharma in house and A-Dharma in society’ model ! This is the legacy of 75% of society in non-brahmana-Varna segment of India, in post 1700 A.D.
The path chosen by the ‘Vaidika –Shaastra kara – Brahmanas’ was called ‘ voluntary acceptance of poverty and failure of Vedic tradition to produce wealth and welfare for its practitioners = Worldly unwise, even though other –worldly wise. The drift of Dharma in 75% of society to ‘Mata (religion) approach in interpretation, ‘ Lowered quality and quantum in practice of Samskaras leading to ‘A-Dharma/Alpa Dharma’ was not possible to be regulated by the ‘Vaidika Brahmanas’. Maharashtra history –post Sambaji provides ample evidence to substantiate how ‘Punya-Pattana /Vidya che –Maher’ underwent mutation and transformation; the same way as Kashi and other major centers of Vedic studies went.
Such ‘Vaidikas’ social life was to be supported by the ‘ Guru-peetham and Mathas’ in society, which again went under the Control of the combine of ( Raja /dawning to be a Kshatriya) King + ( Trader masquerading as Arya-Vaishya) and rest of the society tracing their gene roots and lineage to Sri Krishna himself ( giving up his ideals of teaching!) . The corruption of ‘Guru-peetham and Mathams lead to social and spiritual decay over three centuries as of now; and we are lamenting. And still the ‘Vaidika Samskrit Scholars’ are to carry the social blame for social decadence.
It is in this back drop, each ‘Vaidika Sanskrit Scholar’ is advised inside the family and tradition : Choose your battle field. Make Right Choice (‘yathecchasi tatha Kuru’ after ‘ Vimrushya etat asheshena) after due deliberation. Work in such a way that your own social and spiritual life remains balanced and enriched. Don’t be a social janitor .Dont invoke the ‘ authority of Avatar on yourself, unless you have done enough Tapas and blessings to wage the war’. Be a good soldier and servant of Dharma.Pass on the inheritance (moola dhanam) to the right persons without distortion. Enrich the traditional understanding , if you can through your own intellectual contributions and making Dharma relevant for ‘ Dhaaranaa of Prajaa = Making Dharma practice yield good life here and now’. Perform ‘Swa-Karma’ depending upon what your ‘ Swa-Bhaava’ –‘Swa-Dharma’ provides.
If you choose and desire to be happy to guard the tradition, focus on Guarding the tradition . Do nothing to cause harm to it.
What is ‘ Tradition’-?
Is it the guarding of historical contextualized continuity of culture-practice outfit (Kama and Artha Dahrma) , ending in making Culture a cult-practice
OR
Is it providing an appropriate outfit for bringing out the ‘ Occult-Mystic Unified Spiritual and Social Welfare ( Moksha Dharma-Karma /Brahma-Karma)’ to current and future community even if it means ‘ giving up ‘ worn out formats of past cultural-practice outfits ( Vassamsi jeernaani yatha vihaya.. / Seemollanghana /Transcending but not violating Dharma, Reconstructing and not destroying the cultural continuity of practices, Make Dharma Tree to be a fruit yielding one and not fuel-utility worth asset.)
What are the life style choices that traditional scholars had because of such limited option ?
A) Teaching (Become a Guru /Acharya / upadhyaya) : A ‘Traditional Scholar – of Past in ‘Rajashraya/ /’ whose social life needs were taken care ‘ remained aloof from what was happening around them’ ‘ because their sole energy attention was invested for two things (A-1) ‘ Loka-Kalayana’ through Education with the goal of Shaping NEXT GENERATION SCHOALRS who can Guard and Pass on the Tradition . Traditionally called ‘ Shihsya-Paramparaa’. This is absolute compassion and care for traditional continuity and connectivity across the past through present to the future.
The live examples of such continuity are still seen in Traditionally ‘Institutions’ which have not yielded to ‘Guru-Brand building and blessing corrupt politicians for pecuniary gains’.
Those traditional institutions and teachers who fell in to this trap have seen their bitter end after a short stint of ‘ meteoric burning brightness, highlighted in media’.
(A-2) Become a Siddha –Yogi –Vaidya -Purohita :All of who deliver Dharma-Welfare as Practicing Professionals to society : Your goal is to delvier ‘ Loka Samgrahama/ Loka-Uddhara through Sva-Karma /Swa Dharma Practice’ serving as Present period ICONS /Mascots of Traditional Excellence – presented in dress code, life style, food habits, Ethics, and getting in to side-wings at the appropriate time ( as Vanaprastha / Sanyasa) Or stepping forward to defend Dharma on battle field ( Like Bheeshma, Sri Krishna, Sayancharya) .
This is the essence of Iconic ‘Nara-Naryana’ model of traditional Yogi icon of ‘ Traditional scholar’, who have the capability for Yoga discourse on an academic platform or Yoga-strategic war on a political kurukshetra on international arena. When they act and how they act for ‘ Dharma-Samsthapana + Adharma Naasha’ is not an issue for public discourse.
What then is our duty as ‘ Scholar who had the privilege of getting a peek and partial access to the inheritance of Veda-Vyasa Heritage called Indian traditional wisdom’ ?, In Sri Ramanuja’s words – (Asti me hasti shailagre pitru-paitamaham Dhanam…:: I have the ancestral wealth of my inheritance on the peak of the mountain called ‘Hasti Shaila’ ( todays Melukote at Karnataka)’?
Regards
BVK Sastry
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Namaste
Thanks for the correction on understanding < hastishailagre>.
Thanks for suggestion of replacement of ‘ OR’ by ‘AND’. With this, it almost becomes a < Private engagement for Public (Loka /Sarve) Welfare ( Kalyanam).
In Post-Independent India, With 75% of Varnas up and against the 25% ‘ Agra-Jama’-Varna segment ; and 25% ‘Agra-Janma’ Varna segment suffering < A-Samghata and Vishaada combined together > = low-density and High depression factor to make any significant impact through any action < due to globally scattered population with Several models of non-agglutination, non coherent goal, multiple foci and centers of action with differential priorities and preferences in resource investment and management> , the suggestion for ‘AND’ makes more sense.
Regards
BVK Sastry
Same here. I too have been waiting for the actual words where the claim is made and the context.On Mon, Feb 29, 2016 at 6:21 AM, Nityanand Misra <nmi...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, 25 February 2016 12:24:41 UTC+5:30, nagarajpaturi wrote:Can we have the reference details of where Prof. Pollock made this claim / inference and what substantiation did he provide for the claim?Apologies if I missed it, but I do not recall seeing the reference to Pollock's claim (as the original poster wrote) that the Anushtup metre was invented by Buddhists. Where has Pollock said this and what is his reason for this claim?--