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Book

Textual Authority in Classical Indian Thought

Book

Textual Authority in Classical Indian Thought

DOI link for Textual Authority in Classical Indian Thought

Textual Authority in Classical Indian Thought book

Ramanuja and the Vishnu Purana

Textual Authority in Classical Indian Thought

DOI link for Textual Authority in Classical Indian Thought

Textual Authority in Classical Indian Thought book

Ramanuja and the Vishnu Purana
BySucharita Adluri
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2014
eBook Published 19 November 2014
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315754826
Pages 170
eBook ISBN 9781315754826
Subjects Area Studies, Humanities
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Adluri, S. (2014). Textual Authority in Classical Indian Thought: Ramanuja and the Vishnu Purana (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315754826

ABSTRACT

Theistic Vedānta originated with Rāmānuja (1077-1157), who was one of the foremost theologians of Viśistādvaita Vedānta and also an initiate of the Śrīvaisnava sectarian tradition in South India. As devotees of the God Visnu and his consort Śrī, the Śrīvaisnavas established themselves through various processes of legitimation as a powerful sectarian tradition. One of the processes by which the authority of the Śrīvaisnavas was consolidated was Rāmānuja’s synthesis of popular Hindu devotionalism with the philosophy of Vedānta.

This book demonstrates that by incorporating a text often thought to be of secondary importance - the Visnu Purāna (1st-4th CE) - into his reading of the Upanisads, which were the standard of orthodoxy for Vedānta philosophy, Rāmānuja was able to interpret Vedānta within the theistic context of Śrīvaisnavism. Rāmānuja was the first Brahmin thinker to incorporate devotional purānas into Vedānta philosophy. His synthetic theology called Viśistādvaita (unity-of-the-differenced) wielded tremendous influence over the expansion of Visnu devotionalism in South India and beyond. In this book, the exploration of the exegetical function of this purana in arguments salient to Rāmānuja’s Vedānta facilitates our understanding of the processes of textual accommodation and reformulation that allow the incorporation of divergent doctrinal claims.

Expanding on and reassessing current views on Rāmānuja’s theology, the book contributes new insights to broader issues in religious studies such as canon expansion, commentarial interpretation, tradition-building, and the comparative study of scripture. It will be of interest to students and scholars of Indian philosophy and Religious Studies.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|50 pages

The individual self, cosmology, and the divine body in the Veda-rthasam. graha

chapter 3|49 pages

Brahman, the individual self, and ignorance in the S´rı-bha-s.ya

chapter 4|37 pages

Sa-m. khya-Yoga, Kr.s.n.a, and the foremost devotee in the Bhagavadgı-ta-bha-s.ya

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