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Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj Chair Professor, IIT-Madras.
Senior Fellow, ICSSR, New Delhi.
Academic Director, Swadeshi Indology.
Nominated Member, IIAS, Shimla.
Former Professor, CAHC, Jain University, Bangalore.Former Director, Karnataka Samskrit
University, Bangalore.
Former Head, Dept. of Sanskrit, The
National Colleges, Bangalore.
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Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj Chair Professor, IIT-Madras.
Senior Fellow, ICSSR, New Delhi.
Academic Director, Swadeshi Indology.
Member, Academic Council, Veda Vijnana Shodha Samsthana.
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Namaste
In response to the starting question : < Radhakrishna Warrier, <radwa...@hotmail.com> wrote: What is the Sanskrit equivalent of the Buddhist term “Vipassana”? I know it is a kind of meditation, but what exactly is it? > :
The most practical, closest meaning Samskruth term looks like : < (vishesha/ vishuddha) - [ prekshaa ( pra + iikshaa)] - (prajna) >.
This matches with the understanding and practice in the communities and Yoga-Tradition context to which this term belongs to.
In case more details on Pali dictionaries are needed, please explore: http://www.leighb.com/glossary.htm
The Vipassanaa Research institution : https://www.vridhamma.org/What-is-Vipassana
Source : https://www.saigon.com/anson/ebud/bud-dict/dic3_v.htm : vipassanā: 'insight', is the intuitive light flashing forth and exposing the truth of the impermanency, the suffering and the impersonal and unsubstantial nature of all corporeal and mental phenomena of existence. It is insight-wisdom (vipassanā-paññā) that is the decisive liberating factor in Buddhism, though it has to be developed along with the 2 other trainings in morality and concentration. The culmination of insight practice (s. visuddhi VI) leads directly to the stages of holiness (s. visuddhi VII).
Insight is not the result of a mere intellectual understanding, but is won through direct meditative observation of one's own bodily and mental processes. In the commentaries and the Vis.M., the sequene in developing insight-meditation is given as follows: 1. discernment of the corporeal (rūpa), 2. of the mental (nāma), 3. contemplation of both (nāmarūpa; i.e. of their pairwise occurrence in actual events, and their interdependence), 4. both viewed as conditioned (application of the dependent origination, paṭiccasamuppāda), 5. application of the 3 characteristics (impermanency, etc.) to mind-and-body-cum-conditions.
The stages of gradually growing insight are described in the 9insight- knowledges (vipassanā-ñāṇa), constituting the 6th stage of purification: beginning with the 'knowledge of rise and fall' and ending with the 'adaptation to Truth'. For details, see visuddhi VI and Vis.M. XXI.
Eighteen chief kinds of insight-knowledge (or principal insights, mahā-vipassanā) are listed and described in Vis.M. XXII, 113: (1) contemplation of impermanence (aniccānupassanā), (2) of suffering (dukkhānupassanā), (3) of no self (anattānupnupassanā), (4) of aversion (nibbidānupassanā). (5) of detachment (virāgānupassanā), (6) of extinction (nirodhānupassanā), (7) of abandoning (paṭinissaggānupassanāā), (8) of waning (khayānupassanā), (9) of vanishing (vayānupassanā), (10) of change (vipariṇāmānupassanā), (11) of the unconditioned (or signless, animittānupassanā), (12) of desirelessness (apaṇihitānupassanā), (13) of emptiness (suññatāupassanā), (14) insight into phenomena which is higher wisdom (adhipaññā-dhamma-vipassanā), (15) knowledge and vision according to reality (yathā-bhūta-ñāṇadassana), (16) contemplation of misery (or danger, ādīnavānupassanā), (17) reflecting contemplation (paṭisaṅkhānupassanā), (18) contemplation of turning away (vivaṭṭanānupassanā).
Through these 18, the adverse ideas and views are overcome, for which reason this way of overcoming is called 'overcoming by the opposite' (tadaṅga-pahāna, overcoming this factor by that). Thus (1) dispels the idea of permanence. (2) the idea of happiness, (3) the idea of self, (4) lust, (5) greed, (6) origination, (7) grasping, (8) the idea of compactness, (9) kamma-accumulation, (10) the idea of lastingness, (11) the conditions, (12) delight, (13) adherence, (14) grasping and adherence to the idea of substance, (15) attachment and adherence, (17) thoughtlessness, (18) dispels entanglement and clinging.
Insight may be either mundane (lokiya, q.v.) or supermundane (lokuttara, q.v.). Supermundane insight is of 3 kinds: (1) joined with one of the 4 supermundane paths, (2) joined with one of the fruitions of these paths, (3) regarding the extinction, or rather suspension, of consciousness (s. nirodha-samāpatti).
See samatha-vipassanā, visuddhi, III-VII.
Literature: Manual of Insight, by Ledi Sayadaw (WHEL 31/32). Practical Insight Meditation, Progress of Insight, both by Mahāsi Sayadaw (BPS). The Experience of Insight, by Joseph Goldstein (BPS).
Regards
BVK Sastry
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Yours Faithfully
BALAGOPALTo view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/bvparishat/CANrsxROd-BJNc2Xt1Pj2bZ47fUsJYBAj2d8kdXJSc-fL%2B2Rs%2BQ%40mail.gmail.com.
1. is used in the entire area of the language ( here, in majority of the Indic sub-continent)2. is used uniformly throughout the area ( here, in majority of the Indic sub-continent)3. does not change in time as fast as the dialects (here, Prakrits including Pali )
We notice many movements today favoring /asking for the use of the regional or social dialects replacing the current standard form /dialect. These movements have regionalist or other social and/or political motivations. That is why the use of Prakrits including Pali by Buddhists and Jains is being interpreted as an activity with social and/or political motivations.1. are used only in the respective regions and the respective social classes only2. have different forms from each other3. change in time faster than the standard dialect / form.
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From: bvpar...@googlegroups.com <bvpar...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of K S Kannan <ks.kan...@gmail.com>
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--Dr. K.S.Kannan D.Litt.Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj Chair Professor, IIT-Madras.
Senior Fellow, ICSSR, New Delhi.
Academic Director, Swadeshi Indology.
Nominated Member, IIAS, Shimla.
Former Professor, CAHC, Jain University, Bangalore.Former Director, Karnataka Samskrit University, Bangalore.
Former Head, Dept. of Sanskrit, The National Colleges, Bangalore.
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--Dr. K.S.Kannan D.Litt.Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj Chair Professor, IIT-Madras.
Senior Fellow, ICSSR, New Delhi.
Academic Director, Swadeshi Indology.
Member, Academic Council, Veda Vijnana Shodha Samsthana.
Nominated Member, IIAS, Shimla.
Former Professor, CAHC, Jain University, Bangalore.Former Director, Karnataka Samskrit University, Bangalore.
Former Head, Dept. of Sanskrit, The National Colleges, Bangalore.
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--Dr. K.S.Kannan D.Litt.Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj Chair Professor, IIT-Madras.
Senior Fellow, ICSSR, New Delhi.
Academic Director, Swadeshi Indology.
Member, Academic Council, Veda Vijnana Shodha Samsthana.
Nominated Member, IIAS, Shimla.
Former Professor, CAHC, Jain University, Bangalore.Former Director, Karnataka Samskrit University, Bangalore.
Former Head, Dept. of Sanskrit, The National Colleges, Bangalore.
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Namaste
On < linguistics of Pali and Sanskrit ... reasons for the failure of Pali to maintain traction in India due to the difference in contents handled mostly in the two languages? .... Pali's thrust in Buddhism and Jainism and that of the Sanskrit in the Vedas? > :
Some observations: ( if not palatable an out of main stream, please excuse).
a) Language and Religion streak association :
Language, irrespective of Samskruth, Pali, Prakrut, apabhramsha, Mleccha... survives in a society by serving a utility. That utility is dependent on the patronage of user community for that language. Samskruth has survived over a period of time/ centuries due to the ' unquestioned faith/ trust/ belief' associated with this language for the benefits desired by user community. Best example : sensitivity for articulate 'Swara purity' of Vedic Chant in user community is anchored to the faith ( - brahma loke maheeyate) and fear ( yathendrashatruh svartoparaadhaat). This has helped to preserve the 'sound-structure- sequence-flow' of Vedas . But the same level of sensitivity for 'meaning of the mantra ( -mantraartha) ' is not present in user community.
Net outcome: Perfection in guarding Vedic Chanting through voice-mode-articulation and deployment in Vidhi is supported unquestioned; any effort to change the 'swara' is resisted. CONTRA, the meaning of Veda-mantra is allowed to be plastically fluidly distorted; the support to guard the meaning of mantra (Veda) is minimal. The post colonial model indian support for Veda-preservation, till date, is a standing example for this. While Indian traditionalists have made every effort to guard 'Veda-(Shabda) Shareera', they have not matched their effort in guarding the ' Veda- (Artha/Atma)- Shareera'.
The thrust in society for any specific language depends upon the community connect and Communication utility.
Buddhism and Jainism used social languages to deliver the Yoga- Practice Benefits. The practicality of ardha-magadhi, magadhi, desh bhashaa, prakrits served this need.
The same teams used Samskruth for writing their 'Shaastra' works. For the social language was not precise enough for this need. Buddhism and Jainism used social language as a foundation to bridge the path towards the Spiritual (Adhyatma-Yoga-bhashaa; techncially called the language technicality of the Suttas) language. The choice was based on the motive and purpose served. Over a period of time, the dynamics of languages of Prakruths changed. So the Pali-Prakruth end up as ' out of society/ locked to the seminary/ classical languages'. the new social model is 'Desha-bhashaa, Jati-bhashaa, kula-bhashaa'. Now a days, it is ' international cyber-bhahsaa, the english we are using to make this dialogue.
Vedic teams ( including Valmiki/ Vyasa paramparaa) was connecting the society to higher level of Rushi -paramparaa using the 'model of Chandas- Bhashaa' paradigm. The Bhashaa served as the bridge to get to Yoga/ Vak-yoga model of Samskrutham to have the vision of ' Chandas/ Mantra'. The yajna was a speciifc model of Yoga for providing this connect. The details are in aaranyaka. The social model of benefit through yajna is given in Shrauta and Gruhya sutras. the yoga models of yajna are given in Gita. So, the language of 'Bhasha' to get to 'Chandas' was Vedic teams model. The choice was based on the motive and purpose served.
b) On < failure of Pali to maintain traction in India > : The language did not fail. The society had a different dynamics to keep the language alive. If you look at the Indian languages itself, tenth century desi language models of Kannada, telugu, Tamil, Gurjari, Maharshtrian,..... does not work for 14th century; 17th century; 20th century. Same for english also. Shakespearean English does not work in 21 st century social media.
So, the language gets traction only when language user community is sensitive to the importance of language, work consciously and vigilantly to prevent language deterioration in education and usage. In other words, if one were to understand the strategy of colonial mindset to bring down the culture of target nation, the first goal was to take total control of ' language of community and language of religion of community'. No need to elaborate on this.
Pali was preferred at some point in india by rulers at India; and the position -control reverted to Samskruth. just a historic change. Now, neither Pali or Samskruth has any love left with Nations governance and user communities ! When user community highlights and supports only social benefit/ job opportunity through language learning, and ignores the cultural/spiritual / religious benefits and connectivity to inheritance, the slide down of language begins. In present period, in the moving language-bus, english is in driving seat; rest of the languages are jam packed in the bus; and sanskrit -pali- prakruth are hanging by side rails of the moving bus.
c) This situation can be rectified only by proactive interest and investment support to revive the language by practically demonstrating the ' social benefit of the language along side cultural benefit' right from early education through advanced studies. Post mortem of history helps; but will give the traction.
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Things are not that simple, which is why I quote below a longer excerpt from the "Introduction" to Thomas Oberlies' recently published "Pali Grammar" (for the sake of clarity, I will omit the numerous footnotes, references and examples).
Best,
RS
* * *
Thomas Oberlies: Pāli Grammar. The Language of the Canonical Texts of Theravāda Buddhism. Vol. I: Phonology and Morphology. Bristol: The Pali Text Society 2019.
[p. 9] “1. Middle Indo-Aryan and Pāli. Over time various languages evolved out of (Vedic) Sanskrit, these being collectively referred to as Middle Indo-Aryan. This can be divided into three linguistic, albeit not strictly chronological, stages -- Old, Middle and New Middle Indo-Aryan– covering a period ranging from approximately 500 B.C. to 1000 A.D. Old MIA is represented by Aśokan Prakrit, Ardha-Māgadhī and Pāli. The latter is the language of the texts of the Theravāda, an ancient school of Śravakayāna Buddhism. Related to Vedic Sanskrit on the one hand and to Ardha-Māgadhī, the language of the canon of the Śvetāmbara Jainas, the most archaic Prakrit on the other, Pāli is, together with Ardha-Māgadhī, ‘the most ancient normalization of the koinē gangétique’, the lingua franca used in the Gangetic plains during the second part of the first millennium B.C. This eastern Middle Indic had grown out of the Vedic vernacular of that region [...], which stood beside ‘the younger Vedic language that was in current use with the Brahmins’, its foremost use being in their theological discussions and in the instruction of pupils. The Vedic vernacular (which was by no means uniform) possessed, [p. 10] as far as can be seen, almost all characteristics of later ancient Middle Indo-Aryan which resulted from phonological, morphological and syntactical simplifications [...], disuse of uncommon words and inclusion of new words from various sources [...]. There was a strong influence emanating from it on Vedic Sanskrit. Against the growing influx of vernacular words and forms, which were seen as corruptions (apaśabda), the native Indian Sanskrit grammarians formed a bastion. Based on the spoken language of the educated Brahmins of the time, the foremost of these grammarians, Pāṇini, who came from the north-west of India, described a form of the language current around the early fourth century B.C. [n. 2: Cf. Leumann, Merkmale des Sanskrit als Brahmanensprache und als Kunstsprache. Asiatische Studien 18–19 (1965) 208: “That Panini did not himself insist in his rules on a literary language, but rather took the living language of the Brahmins as his model, is shown by some of his tenets: he speaks of linguistic differences between the East (the Ganges below Patna) and the North (presumably around Taksila); many of these specifications can not be referring to literature, since the phenomena can only be observed in dialogue, in the spoken language, and yet on no account can they belong to Middle Indic”.] After that Sanskrit evolved in a bifurcated form: On the one side was ‘classical' Sanskrit, which remained more or less fixed in the form given to it by Pāṇini; on the other was the ‘Dichtersprache' of the epics and Purāṇas, which admitted a considerable number of newly coined forms borrowed from the popular spoken language. Quite analogous to this poetic language of the Sanskrit epics, the Gangetic Middle Indic lingua franca seems to have been the pro-[p. 11]duct of a long-time use as an ancient literary language of Buddhism and Jainism, which had rejected Sanskrit as the language transmitting their texts. [...].”
[p. 14] “Many Pāli words and forms -- especially with their ‘frozen' phonetics’, [...] -- are relics from such an earlier eastern dialect in which the ‘texts' of early Buddhism were (orally) handed down: [...] When Buddhism moved from the land of its origin into areas further west, it took with it the ancient texts which were composed in this eastern Middle Indic literary language which must have shared many features of the idiom Buddha, who spent most of his life in Bihar, must have spoken and have employed in his sermons [...]. In its new home, these texts were adapted to local western Middle Indic, which bore strong similarities to the language of the Aśokan inscriptions of Girnār. The eastern proto-canonical language [... p. 15] -- akin to the administrative language of the Maurya king Aśoka who likewise did not use Sanskrit for his edicts but an ancient form of Middle lndic [...] -- was, however, when compared with OIA, in many ways further advanced than the western dialects of its time [...]. As a result, the ‘texts' were transformed into a more archaic language (unless the words were taken over unaltered) as Buddhism spread westward. [...].”
[p. 18] “2. Vedic Sanskrit and Pāli. It is possible to trace a steady development of Sanskrit from the Ṛgveda, the most ancient Sanskrit document, through the later Vedic texts to what is called Middle lndo-Aryan. The grammar was gradually simplified, mostly by eliminating archaic forms and by reducing the rich varieties of nominal and verbal categories. The hymns of the Ṛgveda are composed in a -- deliberately -- archaic form of Sanskrit. The then spoken language was already, it seems certain, far more developed [...]. From it quite a number of features intruded into the hieratic ‘high speech' of the Veda, where a considerable number of words of ‘Prakritic' origin are found. However, this state of affairs characterised not only the main dialect of the Ṛgveda. Though the language of the Ṛgvedic hymns is on the whole remarkably uniform, there are clear indications that it is, in fact, a mixture of dialects which inter-[p. 19]borrowed words and forms. Thus, side by side with the main dialect, which was located in the north-western part of India and in which the hymns were composed throughout [...], there existed a number of closely related ‘Nebenmundarten’, which had developed out of Indo-Iranian independent of the main dialect [...} Moreover, each of these had its own linguistic innovations and archaisms. This situation is also borne out by Pāli. There are features (a.) it shares with the main dialect of the Ṛgveda and there are some (b.) in which it deviates, indeed preserving the older form; while (c.) agreeing with the popular dialects from which words penetrated into the Ṛgveda and became mixed up with its main dialect, it again (d.) differs from them [...].”
[p. 21] “[...] Such morphonological and lexical features betray the fact that Pāli is not a direct continuation of Ṛgvedic Sanskrit; rather it descends from one of the ‘Nebenrnundarten’ [...] of the Ṛvedic main dialect, or at least was closely akin to it. One of the dialects on which Pāli rests seems to have borne affinities with the language of the holy texts of Zarathustrism, the Avesta [...].”
[p. 22] “[...] 3. The Vedic vernacular(s) and Pāli. After the time of the Ṛgveda the Vedic vernacular(s) gained ground -- a process which can be traced through the Vedic texts. And from the odd popular forms they contain conclusions can be drawn concerning ‘Vedic Prakrit'. lt tums out that almost all typical characteristics of Middle Indo-Aryan (with the striking exception of the ‘law of mora', [...]) are seen to have arisen long before that language's first documents appear in the 3rd century B.C. [...]”
[p. 34] “4. The development of Sanskrit -- The vocabulary. This same state of affairs is also exemplified by the vocabulary of the languages mentioned above. Even within Vedic Sanskrit old words were continuously dropping out of use [...] Some words which appear in Vedic texts turn up again, after disappearing from the later Sanskrit literary tradition [...], and even occur in modern Indian languages [...]. On the other hand, a number of old [p. 35] words unknown to Classical Sanskritare preserved in MIA (see below, S.). And finally, a number of words of Indo-European origin first appear in the various stages of MIA [...].
5. (Post-Vedic I Classical) Sanskrit and Pāli. Pāli goes back to a Vedic vernacular situated most probably (south-)east of Arachosia near the Bolan pass [...]. This vernacular was linguistically more advanced than the hieratic language of the Vedic hymns. As archaisms prove, Pāli is by no means younger than (classical) Sanskrit and hence cannot be derived directly from it, which, for its part, is not directly descended from Vedic Sanskrit: [...].”
[p. 42] “[...] 6. Aśokan Prakrit and Pāli. Side by side with the evolution of Sanskrit, the popular vernacular which co-existed with the Vedic ‘high speech' developed into what is called Middle Indo-Aryan. lts rise as a literary language coincides with the foundation of the new religions of Buddhism and Jainism in the middle of the first millennium BCE. The first accurately datable documents of this linguistically developed stage of Indo-Aryan are the inscriptions of King Aśoka, who reigned from 273/267 to 237/231 B.C. They supply a fair picture of the dialectal diversity of Middle lndic in the 3rd century [p. 43] B.C. Delineated by isoglosses three main varieties can be made out: eastern, western and north-western. Moreover, they permit us to locate Pāli and to check such information as the texts supply. For the Theravāda tradition has always claimed that the language spoken by the Buddha was Māgadhī -- i.e. an eastern language -- and that this language was the same as that used in its canonical texts, a language now called Pāli (a designation which originally meant ‘text' and whose use as the name of a particular language seems not to antedate the 17th century). Indeed we might expect that the language of early Buddhism was essentially an eastern one, current in the Gangetic basin in the 5th century B.C. It should therefore have the same features as eastern Aśokan Prakrit. Pāli, however, as we know it, is basically a language of western lndia, as the edicts of Aśoka [...] clearly show. Some of its salient features it shares with the western edicts, especially that of Ginār, e.g. [...].”
[p. 52] “[...] Perusal of the salient features of Vedic vernacular and of Aśokan Prakrit shows, therefore, that Pāli as a MIA language differs from Sanskrit not so much in terms of its time of origin as of its dialectal base. It is a western language whose ancestor was probably situated at the border of ancient Eastern Iran, (south)east of Arachosia, Drangane and Sakastane, presumably not that far from present-day Quetta and the Bolan pass. Interspersed into it, however, are a substantial number of traits of (an) eastern language(s) [...].”
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Namaste
1. Misra ji: I agree with your observation < Revolution in Indology is badly called for! >
2. RS : I agree with you on the observation < Things are not that simple > ;
2a) May I request you to clarify your position on the statement: < Pali has a strong influence on Vedic Sanskrit (Chandas)> ;
< Pali.... rests with the language of the holy texts of Zarathustism, the Avesta > .
< Pāli goes back to a Vedic vernacular situated most probably (south-)east of Arachosia near the Bolan pas>
< Pāli, however, as we know it, is basically a language of western lndia, as the edicts of Aśoka [...] clearly show.>
Inscriptions provide only a very minor percentage of vocabulary of language (spoke, literary, ritual, religion-discourse). Vocabulary in inscription does not help to build the total grammar of language!
2b) I would like to see a separation on 'History of Languages' in a parallel lane with ' Language -Grammar/ Languages -relation by derivation and influences' debate.
Indian understanding of Language-relations and modeling for the two scenarios are different for :
- (2a-1) Samskruth: Chandas and Bhashaa
- (2a-2) Bhashaa - (Prakruts/ Apabrhamsha/ Mleccha/ Desi) are totally out of synch with Western/ indology/ Oriental models.
The western scholars have trimmed and force fitted (Vedic/ Bharateeya/ Brahmi ) languages history at India on a hypothesis : Samskruth was not native to India; So is the
language family of Pali .
The issue can be resolved only when the Indian model of languages of Brahmi family from Buddha /Mahaveer ( circa 700 BCE) backwards, through Vyasa ( 3100 BCE) and beyond till Valmiki (circa 6000 BCE) gets studied objectively in the total backdrop of ancient Civilizations, spread of Buddhism from India, and global imprints of Vedic Civilization. Till then, all views as quoted remains ' one more view from a scholar', respectfully to be noted and reviewed. Un-established data as foundation for forceful conclusions can not be a valid logic.
Regards
BVK Sastry
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Dear Irene.The main issue is whether the sequencing of the letters for teaching the Sanskrit Script also served the purpose of instructing how to phonate letters of the Vedic/Sanskrit language.It is important to understand that children learn to speak by picking up words and not individual letters of a language. In order that instruction of letters fall in line with the way children learn a language the individual letters need to be instructed in groups. This is exactly what Panini did through his Maheshwar Sutras.However, while designing the script each individual letter was suffixed with each of the vowels to render क काकिकी ...... and so on mechanistically and thereafter they were instructed in the same order. This to my mind was the main cause behind the deterioration of the Vedic tongue. The sequence of the plosive consonants (कखगघङ ...)was equally responsible.To add to it these were then included in the shiksha granthas thus giving them sanctity for instruction. Thus the model of the script which was imposed on the shiksha is the main cause for Sanskrit losing its pristene form.Once one is able to distinguish between the need of instructing the script and the instruction of how to phonate (shiksha) Sanskrit will again regain its past form as the following generations have deligently preserved its literature in letter though possibly not in spirit.With regards,Achyut Karve.
On Thu, 5 Dec 2019 04:29 Bijoy Misra, <misra...@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear Roland,You are again talking like a religious scholar and notan objective researcher. I have been seeing the languageliterature for the past twenty years. They are all built onpremise which do not have analytic foundation. You maysend me any paper on the origin of Pali that is analyticfrom the first principles. "It is widely believed" does notmake a scientific statement!BM
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