The learned speaker says at the beginning: All three schools of Vedanta agree upon this. The Naiyayika does not; he has the view: It is absence of light.
Ø I don’t think dravyatvaM of darkness unanimously accepted within the Advaita school. By the way just curious to know what exactly the difference between dravyatvaM of the darkness in the room and dravyatvaM of the bench or table in the room or dark room?? Is this dravyatvaM of darkness is an epistemological concept or an ontological entity?? I am sorry not clear yet to attribute material existence to the prakAsha abhAva.
Hari Hari Hari Bol!!!
bhaskar
The learned speaker says at the beginning: All three schools of Vedanta agree upon this. The Naiyayika does not; he has the view: It is absence of light.
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Regards.Sudhanshu Shekhar.
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SSSS points out "tamah prakashavad" ' is simply intended as an example to be understood in common parlance. It is a diversion of intention to discover controversial logical nuance in a drstanta. The merits of the argument is mere scholasticism.
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How the text distinguishes between vishaya and vishayi is not as two substances but as real and unreal (satya anṛte mithunīkṛtya) which are opposed to each other epistemologically not ontologically. Who commonly takes darkness to be a thing?