The Sociology of Philosophies

(Wang) #1
and west, where overseas trade gave an alternative basis for state revenues. The
importance of this pattern for state-building in the European context is shown by
Tilly (1990). This may be a reason why the Jainas, associated with merchants, were
major contenders for state alliance in these regions. Conversely the Buddhists, with
their agrarian monastic base, fit Tilly’s alternative pattern of state formation:
landed revenues. Hence Buddhism declined in the south as the trade-based states
rose.


  1. It is worth underlining that the so-called “six darshanas” or “orthodox philoso-
    phies” (Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Yoga, Samkhya, Mimamsa, Vedanta), which are the
    standard rubrics in virtually all general histories of Indian philosophy, were by no
    means static or primordial positions. The notion of “six darshanas” was not
    created until fairly late in the medieval period, and they developed, much as
    philosophical schools did elsewhere, out of debates both among their own ranks
    and across the attention space with non-Hindu rivals. The ideology of the darsha-
    nas is part of the static bias which it is necessary to break through in order to
    reconstruct the actual history of Indian intellectual life.

  2. Sources for the networks which follow (EIP, 1977, 1981, 1987, 1990; Halbfass,
    1991, 1992; Isayeva, 1993; Potter, 1976; Dasgupta, 1922–1955; Chattopadhyaya,
    1972, 1979; Basham, 1989; Raju, 1985; Pandey, 1986; Nakamura, 1980; Dutt,
    1962; Hirakawa, 1990; Conze, 1962; Kalupahana, 1992; Lamotte, 1958; Stcher-
    batsky, 1962; Phillips, 1995).

  3. Nakamura (1973: 33–35); Chattopadhyaya (1972: 32–40); Gonda (1975); Stutley
    (1980). For a position stressing the long-term unity of orthodox Hinduism since
    the early Vedas, see Smith (1994). On the other side, see Krishna (1991).

  4. These separate groups of teachers were recognized outside the Vedic texts as well.
    The Buddha himself refers to followers of the Samaveda, Rigveda, and the two
    Yagurvedas (Barua, 1974: 284). Krishna (1991: 83–84) argues for even more
    sub-splits within the schools of the Vedas.

  5. It is not clear when the Upanishads actually became standard parts of the Vedic
    transmission schools; as we shall see, the early and middle Upanishads depict
    freelance sages who are quite critical of Vedic priestcraft. The reorganization of
    Upanishadic lore into a broad pan-Vedic coalition may have occurred in the early
    centuries of the Common Era.

  6. E.g., Chand. Up. 7.1.2; Brihad. Up. 1.5.5 and 4.1.2 (700–500 b.c.e.). Somewhat
    later the Aitareya (1.3.9), about 500 b.c.e., mentions only the three Vedas. The
    Buddhist Jataka tales, ca. 300 b.c.e., similarly refer to the three Vedas; so does
    Kautilya’s Arthashastra, which itself draws on spells from the Atharva, as from a
    separate tradition, as “secret means” for spying and destroying enemies (bk. 14).
    The earliest to list all four as Vedas is the Mundaka Upanishad (1.5), ca. 350–300
    b.c.e. But the late Maitriyana (6.32) still lists only three Vedas and calls the Atharva
    “hymns,” indicating that the canon was not settled as late as 200 c.e. Dates from
    Nakamura (1973: 77–78); see also OHI, (1981: 86–87, 107).

  7. Krishna (1991: 95–109) points out that the “Upanishads” are an inchoate category
    of texts, selected under that label from a wide variety of sources and time periods.
    Far from constituting “the end of the Vedas,” they were often selected from


962 •^ Notes to Pages 193–195

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