Open Journal of Philosophy 2011. Vol.1, No.2, 48-56 Copyright © 2011 SciRes. DOI:10.4236/ojpp.2011.12009 Is Cognition an Attribute of the Self or It Rather Belongs to the Body? Some Dialectical Considerations on Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s Position against Nyāya and Vaiśeṣika Krishna Del Toso University of Trieste, Trieste, Italy. Email: krishna.deltoso@gmail.com Received October 14th, 2011; revised November 15th, 2011; accepted November 20th, 2011. In this article an attempt is made to detect what could have been the dialectical reasons that impelled the Cār- vāka thinker Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa to revise and reformulate the classical materialistic concept of cognition. If indeed according to ancient Cārvākas cognition is an attribute entirely dependent on the physical body, for Udbha- ṭabhaṭṭa cognition is an independent principle that, of course, needs the presence of a human body to manifest itself and for this very reason it is said to be a peculiarity of the body. Therefore, Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa seems to de- scribe the cognizing faculty according to a double ontology: it is both a principle and a characteristic, both inde- pendent and dependent. Two philosophical contexts—Vaiśeṣika and Nyāya schools—are here taken into account as possible anti-Cārvāka fault-finding points of view that spured Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa to reconsider the Cārvāka per- spective. Although we do not have so much textual material on this particular aspect of the ancient and medieval philosophical debate in India, it nonetheless can be supposed that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s reformulation of the concept of cognition was a tentative response to the Vaiśeṣika idea that cognition is not an attribute of the body, rather of the mind (which is here supposed to be eternal), and to the Naiyāyika perspective according to which cognition would be an attribute of an everlasting self. In the case of the Nyāya school, fortunately we have at our disposal the criticism put forward by Vātsyāyana against the materialistic conception of cognition during this time. By examining some Vātsyāyana’s objections, it will emerge that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s idea of cognition really seems to have the aspect of a consistent answer to them, from a renewed materialistic point of view. Keywords: Cognition, Cārvāka Materialism, Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa, Vaiśeṣika, Nyāya, Vātsyāyana Introduction This paper is to be considered as a philosophic exercise ba- sed on what can be called a case study because here I will take into consideration a particular aspect of the discussion con- cerning the nature of cognition (caitanya, buddhi, jñāna etc.)1 according to three different philosophical perspectives, which are on the one hand, the “reformed” Cārvāka materialism of Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa (or Bhaṭṭodbhaṭa, 8th - 9th century CE?) and, on the other hand, both the classical Vaiśeṣika and Vātsyāyana’s Naiyāyika points of view. It is a philosophic exercise because, in spite of the paucity of the sources available at present on Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s thought, an attempt is here proposed to make two different philosophical contexts—Cārvāka and Nyāya-Vaiśeṣi- ka—interact critically on the same subject, namely, the idea of cognition. Furthermore, I will try to give some indication on the possible reasons for Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s reformulation of the clas- sical Cārvāka concept of cognition, on the basis of Vaiśeṣika and Nyāya material. Classical Cārvāka View on Cognition Even if only very few fragments of the Cārvākas’ aphorisms have reached us, from the extant excerpts fortunately we can infer the general position on cognition upheld by the adherents to this school. The materialistic perspective on cognition pecu- liar to the classical Cārvāka system is, hence, summarized by the following aphorisms:2 01. pṛthivyāpastejovāyur iti tattvāni | “Earth, water, heat and air are the principles”. 02. tatsamudāye śarīrendriyaviṣayasaṃjñāḥ | “What is called “body”, “sense organs”, “object” [takes place] in the combination of those [principles]”. 03. tebhyaś caitanyam | “Out of those [there is] cognition”. 04. kiṇvādibhyo madaśaktivat | “Like the inhebriating power [that takes place] out of fer- ments and so on”. 05. caitanyaviśiṣṭaḥ kāyaḥ puruṣaḥ | “The man is [nothing but] a body characterized by cogni- tion”. 06. śarīre bhāvāt | “Because of the existence/appearance [of cognition only] when there is a body”. From these aphorisms we deduce that, according to the Cār- vākas, the material elements are only four, and that these ele- ments constitute not only the physical body (śarīra, kāya) and the external objects (viṣaya), but also cognition (caitanya), whi- ch appears in the body as, for instance, the alcoholic power in a hotchpotch of juices, ferments, sugar, etc. Consequently, the 1As a preliminary note it has to be underlined that with “cognition” I mean here both knowledge (cognition of objects) and self-awareness (cognition o oneself or of one’s self). This is because it seems to me that within the Cār- vāka philosophy caitanya sometimes can stand for “knowledge” (buddhi, ñāna), whereas some other times for “consciousness” (caitanya tout court). 2For the full list (with all the references) and translation of the extant San- skrit fragments of the Cārvākas see Bhattacharya (2009: pp. 78-92), from which I quote with little adaptation. All the passages from Sanskrit texts referred to in this paper have been, when necessary, adapted to the quotation style used here, without of course changing the structure and meaning.
K. DEL TOSO 49 human being is here reduced to a very particular mixture of physical elements, characterized by the presence of a cognizing faculty, which is likewise physical. Anantavīrya (10th - 11th cen- turies CE), in his Siddhiviniścayaṭīkā (Explanation of The as- certainment of logical demonstrations), informs us that one of the adherents to the classical Cārvāka philosophy, viz. Puran- dara, theorized that the arising of cognition from a mass of elements is possible only when those very elements assume a certain and well-determined shape. In all the other cases, cogni- tion would not appear:3 07. mūrtasya pṛthivyādicatuṣṭayasya jñānam anena pauraṃ mataṃ darśitam | “[There is appearance of] cognition of the four [elements such as] earth etc., [only when they are] settled into a fix- ed shape. By means of this, the opinion of Paura[ndara] is explained”. Unfortunately, the exiguity of Purandara’s and other classical Cārvākas’ fragments at our disposal does not allow us to know in detail which was his conception of cognition. In any case, on the basis of our aphorism 05. we can suppose also that the fixed shape (mūrta), needed for the appearance of cognition, to which Purandara alludes to, were the human figure. However, even if we agree to consider cognition as somehow dependent on the material elements (aphorism 03.) only when they assume the form of a human body (quotation 07.), we still have to solve the problem of defining which kind of relation exists between the body and cognition itself. Indeed, the pas- sage 07. shows us a Purandara’s reasoning on the cognizing faculty that, although it is evidently based on the abovemen- tioned aphorism 05., unfortunately does not provide in itself any further explanation of that very aphorism. In other words, we still do not know whether cognition is a product of the ma- terial body, or if it is rather some material thing, which is added to the body. Indeed, this one is the crucial philosophical prob- lem related to the cognizing faculty. More precisely, the ques- tion is whether the relation between body and cognition is similar to the one between cause and effect, or to the one be- tween substance and its attribute(s). This should have been a fundamental matter of discussion also within the Cārvāka cyrcles, as it emerges from for instance the different interpretations assigned by Cārvākas to some of the abovementioned aphorisms. In particular, it is worth noting here that aphorism 03. accounts for at least two readings on the basis of both grammatical and semantic considerations. Gram- matical considerations, because the term tebhyaḥ can be inten- ded either as a dative (“to them”) or as an ablative case (“from them”). Semantic considerations, because the absence of a verb specifying the nature of the relation between the terms involved in the sentence is undoubtedly problematic. These ambiguities led at a certain point to two parallel commentarial positions on that aphorism, as Kamalaśīla (8th century CE) clearly points out in his Tattvasaṃgrahapañjikā (Running commentary on The collection of philosophical principles):4 08. tatra kecid vṛttikārā vyācakṣate utpadyate tebhyaś caitan- yam | anye abhivyajyata ity āhuḥ | ataḥ pakṣadvayam āha jayate vyajyate’tha ceti | “There, some commentators explain that “consiousness originates from those [principles]”; others say “[cognition] is manifested”. Therefore, they set forth a double position: “[cognition] is born” and “[cognition] is manifested”. Hence, according to the first interpretation, cognition origin- nates (utpadyate), or comes into being (jayate), from the mix- ture of material elements. The verbs utpadyate and jayate con- vey the idea of a somehow productive relation between two fa- ctors, one of which plays the role of cause and the other the role of effect. In this case, the link between cognition and body cou- ld be philosophically interpreted according to at least two per- spectives. On one side, cognition could be considered as an attribute of the body, which is therefore its substance (this posi- tion is in accordance with our aphorism 05., where the human body is defined caitanyaviśiṣta, “characterized by cognition»). On the other side, cognition could be thought as the effect of the body, with the specification that the two must be necessarily involved in a particular kind of causal relation in which, when the cause ceases, the effect does not survive to it in any way (this is a possible reading of the abovementioned aphorism 06.).5 The second perspective referred to by Kamalaśīla recalls the idea that the elements are not the cause stricto sensu, rather the occasion for the apparition of cognition (note the passive forms abhivyajyate, vyajyate, “is manifested”): in this case, cognition would somehow (but unfortunately our sources do not allow us to understand exactly how) differ from the four elements, although existing in dependence on them. If the first position (utpadyate, jayate) seems to represent the classical Cārvāka perspective, the second one (abhi vyajya te , vyajyate) depicts or, better, anticipates the so-called “reformed” Cārvāka philosophy of Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa.6 Cakradhara (11th century CE), in his Granthibhaṅga (Break- ing the knot), a commentary on Jayantabhaṭṭa’s (9th century CE) Nyāyamañjarī (The flower of Nyāya), appears to be more accu- rate in explaining which are the fundamental distinctions be- tween the two perspectives. In doing that, he also informs us that the first position, besides other ancient Cārvāka thinkers, was upheld by Bhāvivikta:7 09. cirantanacārvākair hi bhāviviktaprabhṛtibhiḥ bhūtebhyaś caitanyam iti sūtram bhūtebhya iti pañcamyantapaday- ojanayā vyākhyātam bhūtebhya utpadyate caitanyam iti || udbhaṭena tu bhūtebhyaḥ itipadaṃ caturthyantatayā vyākhyātam bhūtebhyaś caitanyaṃ bhūtārthaṃ caitan- yaṃ svatantram eva śarīrārambhakabhūtopakārakam ity arthaḥ || (Indeed, by the ancient Cārvākas, beginning with Bhāvi- vikta, the aphorism “bhūtebhyaś caitanyam” is explained with the use of the term bhūtebhya in the fifth [ablative] 5Unfortunately, we do not have any witness of what Cārvākas thought about causal relations except for a fragment from Vādidevasūri’s Syādvādaratnā- kara (The jewel mine of the doctrine of “may be”), where Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s conception of effect is referred to (Osval, 1988: p. 764): yatra tu bhaṭṭodb- haṭaḥ prācīkaṭat | na hy atra kāraṇam eva kāryātmatām upaiti yata ekas- ākāraṇātmana ekakāryarūpatopagame tadanyarūpābhāvāt tadanyakāry- ātmanopagatir na syāt | kiṃ tv apūrvam eva kasyacid bhāve prāgavidya- mānaṃ bhavat tat kāryam |. I propose the following translation: “Whereas Bhaṭṭodbhaṭa demonstrated that in this case the cause itself does not obtain the nature of the effect since, when there is assimilation/acquisition of the essential form of a certain effect by something that is not a cause, then it [i.e., that non-cause] could not get the nature of the effect [which is] othe than that [cause], because it has not the essential form of the other [i.e., o the cause]. Nonetheless, that which is completely new, [and although hav- ing being] formerly absent, [becomes] existent when something [else] is present, that is the effect». Quoted—but not translated—also in Bha- ttacharya (2009: p. 82). 6For a discussion on these two positions see Bhattacharya (2010b: pp. 537- 539). 7Quoted from Bhattacharya (2009: p. 81). 3Quoted from Bhattacharya (2009: p. 83). 4Tattvasaṃgrahapañjikā ad Tattvasaṃgraha (The collection of Philoso- hical Principle) verses 1857-1858 (Śāstrī, 1968: p. 633).
K. DEL TOSO 50 case: “from the elements, cognition originates”. But by Udbhaṭa the word bhūtebhya is explained with the fourth [dative] case: “to the elements, cognition [is added]”; in- deed, cognition is [for Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa] a material object, [which is] independent [but] auxiliary to the elements that constitute the body. This is the meaning). Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s New Approach The main point that distinguishes Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s from Bhā- vivikta’s perspective, as can be inferred from our quotation 09., is the idea that cognition would be a material (bhūtārtha), self- dependent (svatantra) element, which nonetheless needs the presence of a likewise material body for manifesting itself (see the abovementioned aphorism 06.). Hence, Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa see- ms to describe a cognition that is actually a principle (because of its being svatantra, “self-dependent”), but a non-primary principle (because it is bhūtopakāraka, “subsidiary to the ele- ments”). In this very consideration lies the fundamental differ- rence between cognition, on the one hand, and earth, water, heat and air (that could be consequently considered as primary prin- ciples), on the other hand. Once again, it is Cakradhara who he- lps us to better understand Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s thought:8 10. tatra hi pṛthivyāpastejovāyur iti ya itiśabdaḥ sa evaṃ prāyaprameyāntaropalakṣaṇatvena tasyābhimataḥ | “There, indeed, [in the sūtra] “pṛthivyāpastejovāyur iti” the word iti is thus supposed by him [scil. Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa] to imply similar objects of knowledge, [but] different [from earth, water, heat and air]”. Besides the four material elements—we infer from this pas- sage—Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa supposes the existence of other elements that remain unmentioned in the aphorism, but implicitly for- shadowed by the particle iti (“thus”). Vādidevasūri (12th cen- tury CE), in his Syādvādaratnākara (The jewel mine of the do- ctrine of “may be”), confirms to us that this was the original perspective of Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa:9 11. yadā caṣṭa bhaṭṭodbhaṭaḥ itiśabdaḥ pradarśanaparo na punaḥ samāptivacanaś caitanyaśabdasukhaduḥkhecchā- dveṣaprayatnasaṃskārāṇām tattvāntaratvāt | “Whereas, Bhaṭṭodbhaṭa said [that] the word iti is noth- ing but illustrative and is not [at all] an indication of con- clusion, because of the [existence of the] other principles of cognition, sound, pleasure, pain, desire, aversion, ef- fort and subliminal impressions”. Moreover, Cakradhara elucidates as follows Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s position on the relation existing between cognition and the phy- sical body:10 12. yathā udbhaṭenoktam śarīrārambhakakāraṇānām eva bhūtānāṃ sa kaścit tādṛśo vicitrasukhaduḥkhopabhoga- do dharmaḥ svabhāvaviśeṣa ity arthaḥ | “As said by Udbhaṭa, this [cognition] is such a certain property, [which is capable of] enjoying the various plea- sures and pains, a particular intrinsic nature of just the e- lements that are the causes that constitute the body. Thus is the meaning”. This excerpt reminds us of the abovementioned aphorism 05., where cognition is described as a characteristic of the body. Also in the present case, indeed, cogniton is defined by Udbha- ṭabhaṭṭa as a property (dharma) or an intrisic attribute (svab- hāvaviśeṣa) of the four elements, but only (eva) when they are mixed up in the shape of a human body (śarīra; see the passage 07., quoted above). This very property is what experiences the different feelings to which the body is subjected. Furthermore, the parallel reading of the passages 11. and 12. suggests to us that also those feelings like pleasure, pain, desire etc., should be considered as peculiar properties of the physical body, because they share a similar nature with cognition. All this helps us to understand the nature of the auxiliary principles: they are prin- ciples because they are svatantra (“self-dependent”), but they are in a certain way properties because they are bhūtopakāraka (“auxiliary to the elements”). Put it in another—somehow con- tradictory—way, they are self-based properties. However, why did Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa deviate from the classical Cārvāka perspective on cognition? Why did he feel the need for developing a definition of cognition, which is more sophisti- cated than the one accepted by the ancient Cārvākas? Is this due to the fact that, like apparently other Cārvākas, Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa accepted within his philosophical horizon some tenets belong- ing to other traditions of thought such as the Nyāya and/or the Vaiśeṣika (as scholars generally believe)?11 Well, I think that, even if it could be, in this case it is not unlikely to suppose that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa reconsidered the materialistic concept of cogni- tion because at a certain point Cārvākas had to face up to many opponents who articulated more and more their rebuttals a- gainst the idea that cognition could be a simple effect or attri- bute of the material elements.12 Therefore, in order to give more internal consistence to his theories in the light of the criticism put forward by the non-materialists, as was the case of the ob- jections discussed below and raised against Cārvāka philosophy by Vātsyāyana (5th century CE) in his Nyāyasūtrabhāṣya (Com- mentary on The Nyāya aphorisms), it is not impossible that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa tried to find new interpretations of some pro- blematic Cārvāka aphorism. First of all, with the aim of giving more substance to this per- spective, let us take into consideration the Vaiśeṣika notion of cognition. If Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa was really influenced by this phi- losophical school, the outline of his possible dialectical interac- tions with Vaiśeṣikas will help us to understand in what the two ideas of cognition differ. Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa and the Vaiśeṣikasūtras on Cognition The abovementioned Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s passages give the im- pression that, in developing his point of view on cognition, he took care in distinguishing his own understanding of the na- ture of the cognizing faculty from the Vaiśeṣika understanding of the same concept. Indeed, if we look at the Vaiśeṣikasūtras (The Vaiśeṣika aphorisms, compiled around the turn of the common era and traditionally attributed to the sage Kaṇāda),13 we remark that the substances and the qualities admitted here are (Vaiśeṣikasūtra 1.1.4-5): 11Consider for instance Bhattacharya (2010a: p. 423): “Aviddhakarṇa and Udbhaṭa were basically Naiyāyikas. Even if they were converted to the Cārvāka/Lokāyata, they brought the whole baggage of Nyāya-Vaiśeṣika terminology when they composed their commentaries on the Cārvākasūtra”. A similar opinion on Aviddhakarṇa has been upheld by Solomon (1972); see also Solomon (1977-1978). 12Consider the following opinion of Halbfass (1991: p. 293): “the old [Cār- vāka] ideas attributed to Bṛhaspati and Purandara were adjusted, modified, and refined in response to the arguments presented by the Hindu and Bud- dhist opponents”. 13For an outlook on the Vaiśeṣikasūtras see, among others, Matilal (1977: pp 53-59). All the quotations from the Vaiśeṣikasūtras, and the relative num- ers of the aphorisms, when not specified otherwise, are here referred to from Jambuvijayaji (1961). 8Quoted from Bhattacharya (2009: p. 81). 9Quoted from Bhattacharya (2009: p. 82). 10Quoted from Bhattacharya (2009: p. 81).
K. DEL TOSO 51 13. pṛthivyāpastejovāyurākāśaṃkālodigātmāmaneti dravyā- ṇi | “The substances are earth, water, heat, air, ether, time, s- pace, self and mind”. 14. rūparasagandhasparśāḥ saṃkhyāḥ parimāṇāni pṛthakt- vaṃ saṃyogavibhāgau paratvāparatve buddhayaḥ suk- haduḥkhe icchādveṣau prayatnaś ca guṇāḥ | “The qualities are form/colour, taste, odour, touch, num- ber, weight, distinctiveness, conjunction, separation, other- ness, non-otherness, cognition, pleasure, pain, desire, aver- sion and effort”. Besides the elements barely material, according to Vaiśeṣi- kas there are other non strictly material principles, such as time or space. But what is worth noting here is that some among the qualities listed in aphorism 14.—cognition, pleasure, pain, desi- re, aversion and effort—are the same that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa consi- dered to be principles (see quotation 11.), which have the nature of properties (see quotation 12.) of material bodies. Because of the almost identical order according to which these qualities are listed in both cases, it can be argued that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa could have been actually influenced by the Vaiśeṣikas. For instance, he could have derived from the Vaiśeṣikas the very idea that cognition, pleasure etc.—because they need a substratum for actually taking place—should necessarily have the nature of quality or property. What makes the fundamental difference between Vaiśeṣika philosophy and Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa is the follo- wing point: for Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa, cognition, pleasure etc. are all independent attributes of the physical body, whereas for Vaiśe- ṣikas, on the one hand, cognition is thought as a sign of the mi- nd (manas) and, on the other hand, pleasure, pain, desire, aver- sion and effort are thought as signs of the self (ātman), the body being here confined to a secondary level or role. Indeed, as concerning the mind, we read (Vaiśeṣikasūtra 3.2.1): 15. ātmendriyārthasannikarṣe jñānasyābhāvo bhāvaś ca ma- naso liṅgam | “When there is contact between self, senses and object, the presence or absence of cognition is the mark of the mind”. Moreover, concerning the self we have the following apho- rism (Vaiśeṣikasūtra 3.2.1): 16. prāṇāpānanimeṣonmeṣajīvanamanogatīndriyāntaravikā- rāḥ sukhaduḥkhe icchādveṣau prayatnaś cety ātmaliṅgā- ni | “The marks of the self are prāṇa and apāna [breaths], closing and opening of the eyes, vital and mental mo- tions, alteration of [some sense with] another sense, plea- sure, pain, desire, aversion and effort”. To that, it must be added that both mind and self are by the Vaiśeṣikas believed to be everlasting substances. The following aphorism, repeated twice (once referring to the mind and once to the self) clarifies exactly this point (Vaiśeṣikasūtra 3.2.2, 5): 17. dravyatvanityatve vāyunā vyākhyāte | “[Its] substance-hood and permanence are explained by [the reference to] the air [which is unseen but exis- tent]”.14 It is because the mind and the self are conceived as eternal, not strictly material elements, that they are denied by the mate- rialist Cārvākas, who cannot admit that something does actually survive to the death of the body.15 Even if we do not have any specific fragment bearing witness on Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s position on this particular issue, it is not difficult to imagine that also him, like all the other Cārvākas, accepted this perspective. Con- sequently, in theorizing the attributive nature of cognition, pleasure, pain etc., Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa assigned to the body the sta- tus of their substratum. In doing so, he implicitly refuses the Vaiśeṣika opinion that, on the one side, the mind is the actual substratum of cognition16 and, on the other side, the self is the actual substratum of pleasure, pain etc. To say the truth, Udbha- ṭabhaṭṭa probably had to face himself with a later Vaiśeṣika theory, according to which cognition was listed among the at- tributes of the self, rather than among those of the mind. This suspect acquires more substantiality when we compare the list of the “other principles” in passage 11., quoted above, with the following excerpt from Candrānanda’s (around 8th - 9th century CE) Vaiśeṣikasūtravṛtti (Glosses on The Vaiśeṣika aphorisms) 15As fas as the theory of the existence of a former life is concerned, the Cārvāka perspective is summarized for instance in the extant Tibetan translation of Bhāviveka’s (6th century CE) Prajñāpradīpavṛtti (Glosses called The lamp of wisdom) on Nāgārjuna’s (2nd century CE) Mūlamad- hyamakakārikā (Root stanzas on the middle) stanza 16.1 (foll. 164a7- b1): ’di ltar ma śi ba’i bar du gnas pa rnams la blo gcig kho nar zad pa’i hyir te | de ltar re źig ’jig rten sṅa ma med do | | (“Thus, because, until the[ir] death, there is nothing but one [faculty of] cognition for [each of] those who remain [in this world], hence, then, [it is to be concluded that] a former world does not exist”). Other Cārvāka arguments against the idea of a stream of consciousness underlying several existences is met with in the following excerpts. Tattvasaṃgrahapañjikā ad Tattvasaṃgraha verses 1871-1876 (Śāstrī, 1968: p. 637): punarukta deśāntaraṃ kalāntaram avasthāntaraṃ vā paralokaḥ (“It is repeted [by the Cārvākas] that the world beyond [the present one] is another place, another time or another condition”) . Tattvasaṃgrahapañjikā ad Tattvasaṃgraha verse 1938 (Śās- trī, 1968: p. 663): ihalokaparalokaśarīrayor bhinnatvāt tadgatayor api cittayor naikaḥ santānaḥ (“Because of the difference between the body in this world and [the body] in the world beyond, also the stream of the two cognitions that adheres [respectively] to those [two bodies] is not the same”). All these passages are referred to also in Bhattacharya (2009: p. 83), with the exception of the excerpt from Bhāviveka’s Prajñāpradī- avṛtti that is quoted there from a Sanskrit restoration provided by San- itkumar Sadhukhan (see Bhattacharya, 2009: p. 91). A text entirely de- voted to the Buddhist rebuttal of the Cārvāka idea of the inexistence of a world beyond the present one is Dharmottara’s (8th century CE) Paralo- kasiddhi (The proof of rebirth), on account of which see Steinkellner (1986). 16See Candrānanda’s Vaiśeṣikasūtravṛtti (Glosses on The Vaiśeṣika apho- risms) on Vaiśeṣikasūtra 3.2.1 (Jambuvijayaji, 1961: p. 28): ātmendriyār- - thānāṃ sannikarṣe yadabhāvāj jñānaṃ na bhavati yadbhāve ca bhavati tad manaḥ | evaṃ jñānotpattyanutpattī manaso liṅgaṃ | (“When there is contact of self, senses and objects, mind is that which, because of its absence, there is no cognition, while in its presence, there is [cognition]. Thus, the occurrence and non occurrence of cognition is the mark of the mind”). On the absence of cognition among the characteristics of the sel in our aphorism 16. see Bronkhorst (1994: pp. 675-676). Within the phi- losophical Vaiśeṣika horizon, cognition can be admitted as an attribute o the mind because the mind is considered to be a substance and not, as it happens in other systems of thought, an organ of sense (see below, note 23). In spite of its being a characteristic of the mind, cognition is in any case accepted among the proofs of the existence of the self, as Vaiśe- ṣikasūtra 3.1.2 is reputed to demonstrate: indriyārthaprasiddhir indri- ārthebhyo’rthāntaratve hetuḥ (“The accomplishment of [the contact between] senses and objects [i.e., cognition,] is the proof of something different from senses and objects”). It is perhaps for this very reason that at a certain point in the development of Vaiśeṣika philosophy, and not- withstanding the clear import of our aphorisms 15. and 16. quoted above, cognition began to be considered a mark not of the mind, rather of the self, as we will see in a while. 14The term vāyunā, “by the air” here refers to the arguments in favour of the permanence of the air contained in Vaiśeṣikasūtra 2.1.11 (adravyavattvā dravyam; “[The air] is a substance because of [its] non inherence to [other] substances”) and 2.1.13 (adravyavattvena nityatvam uktam; “The perma- nence [of the air] is affirmed by means of [its] non inherence to [other] sub- stances”). The same reasoning, according to our aphorism 17., should be applied to the self and the mind.
K. DEL TOSO 52 on Vaiśeṣikasūtra 3.2.17:17 18. tasya guṇāḥ buddhisukhaduḥkhecchādveṣaprayatnādṛṣṭ- asaṃskārā vaiśeṣikāḥ || “Its [scil. the self’s] peculiar qualities are cognition, pleasure, pain, desire, aversion, effort, the unseen [me- rit and demerit] and subliminal impressions”. The list is almost identical in both cases, except for ādṛṣṭa (“the unseen”, referring to karman, the moral law of cause and effect) in Candrānanda’s passage, which is—so to speak—sub- stituted by Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa with śabda (“sound”). In any case, the Vaiśeṣika re-elaboration of the concept of “self”, of which Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa was surely aware, does not invalidate in itself his dialectical position towards the classical Vaiśeṣika dichoto- my between the mind and the self. In sum, the point against which Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa seems to hurl himself is the Vaiśeṣika idea that cognition, pleasure etc., although they need a body for actually taking place, depend nonetheless primarily on the mind and the self (or on the self alone, according to Candrānanda): it is, indeed, the presence of the mind and the self that for Vai- śeṣikas would allow the origination or the manifestation of co- gnition, pleasure etc. Therefore, a body devoid of a mind and a self could not—we infer from our aphorism 15.—experience any cognition, pleasure and so on. On the contrary, according to Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa (and to Cārvākas in general), it is exactly be- cause the occurrence of those events is observed to take place only when and where there is a body, that we should consider the body itself to be the actual basis for the intervention of cog- nition etc. (this is the primary meaning of our aphorism 06.). Consequently, the need for a mind and/or a self becomes com- pletely unnecessary. However, the materialistic reduction of psychological or psy- cho-physical events, such as cognition or pleasure, to the sim- ple aggregation of four material elements, and the total denial of some non-physical substratum (mind, self or whatever), on which make those events depend, may have put Udbhaṭab- haṭṭa (and of course many other Cārvākas) in front of a serious problem. Indeed, in order to be consistent with the assumption that cognition, pleasure etc., are qualities or characteristics, the Vaiśeṣikas admitted the mind and the self as their substantial substrata. Furthermore, the Vaiśeṣika consideration that the mind and the self are substances quite different from the mate- rial elements that constitute the physical body represents a good position to explain why events like cognition or desire etc., notwithstanding their being qualities, do not manifest them- selves in the same way in which other (physical) qualities, like form, taste etc., do. Indeed, being cognition, pleasure etc., psy- chological characteristics, the ancient Vaiśeṣikas should have remarked that their intervention into or onto the substance (s) to which they adhere to, had to depend on precise and more ar- ticulated causes than the causes allowing the manifestation of a colour, of a form, and so on. To exemplify this point, we can say that a white stone of 21 pounds remains always a stone that is white and whose weight is 21 pounds: in this case the sub- stance “stone” holds—so to speak—permanently the characteri- stics “white” and “21 pounds”. Pleasure, on the contrary, rises in or on its very substance only on certain occasions, and when there is pleasure, generally there is not pain, which in its turn takes place on other occasions. To justify, on the one hand, the collection of all the cognitions, all the pleasures etc., experi- enced in one’s life under a unifying principle that could gua- rantee the reference of all those psychological events to the one and the same person or body and, on the other hand, the fact that a body is not always affected by cognitions, pleasures etc., the Vaiśeṣikas admitted the mind and the self as permanent substances—underlying bodies—of, respectively, cognition and pleasure, pain etc. Hence, for the ancient Vaiśeṣikas the cog- nizing faculty can actually take place not merely when and where there is a body, but primarily where and when there is an active mind (which of course dwells in the body): in this way they explain why cognition does not always characterize the body. The same for the self with pleasure, pain etc. The Cārvāka denial of any substance different from the body and able to support the cognizing faculty, the pleasures etc., could have represented a serious philosophical problem in the differentiation of bare characteristics (such as colour, form, and so on), which are observed to belong always to their characteri- zed, from psychological events (such as cognition, desire etc.) that, albeit adhering to the same substratum, are nonetheless occasional. Hence, facing this consideration, the fundamental question could have been: how can we save the materialistic assumption of the inexistence of the self etc., and simultaneou- sly justify the fact that, because cognition, pleasure etc., mani- fest themselves in one and the same body, but only on certain occasions, they—unlike the other characteristics—seem to have a sort of partial independence from their own substratum? Per- haps, it is because he was impelled exactly by problems of this kind that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa theorized what could be called a new materialistic ontology of cognition, rethinking it in terms of svatantra (self-dependent). Of course, being both svatantra (self-dependent) and bhūtārtha (material), cognition cannot ob- viously be a mere characteristic: indeed, characteristics are by definition paratantra, that is, “dependent on something other”.18 Therefore, if a certain thing is not a characteristic tout court, it must have also some aspect of the nature of the characterized, that is, of a principle, a tattva. However, cognition as a prince- ple is observed to take place only in the presence of a body (constituted in its turn by other principles). This means that, when a body is absent, also what depends on it does not occur: it is for this very reason—I suggest—that earth, water etc. are taken to be bhūtas (elements) while cognition is defined by Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa as bhūtārtha (litt: “object/thing made by/based on elements”; see quotation 09. above). To put it in simple wo- rds, cognition in Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s system of thought preserves its—so to speak—behaviour of property, without being exactly a property: it can be described as a secondary or auxiliary prin- ciple (that is, not a principle tout court). Transposed in more philosophical terms, we could say that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s cogni- tion seems to lie on a double ontology: it is a characteristic when compared with its substance (i.e., the body), but it is also 17Jambhuvijayaji (1961: p. 31). Note the presence of “subliminal impres- sions” (saṃskāra) among the characteristics of the self. Another thinker, who flourished some century before Candrānanda, namely the Buddhist Bhāviveka, asserted a similar perspective in his Tarkajvālā. Bhāviveka, in- deed, upheld that the Vaiśeṣikas admitted the following qualities of the sel (I quote from He, 2011: p. 25, note 8): blo daṅ | bde ba daṅ | sdug bsṅal ba daṅ | ’dod pa daṅ | źe sdaṅ ba daṅ | ’bad pa daṅ | chos daṅ | chos ma yin pa daṅ | śes pa daṅ | ’dus byas (“Cognition, pleasure, pain, desire, aversion, effort, merit, demerit, knowledge and subliminal impressions”). He (2011: p 25) translates ’dus byas with “conditioned”, thus interpreting this term as meaning saṃskṛta. No doubt that here it is to be taken rather as the Tibetan translation of the Sanskrit saṃskāra. Bhāviveka belongs to the so called Vaiśeṣika “dark period” (Matilal, 1977: pp. 59-62) and for this very reason his witness is particularly important for the reconstruction of the history o Vaiśeṣika philosophy. 18In Vaiśeṣikasūtra 1.1.15, the author describes the nature of a quality (guṇa) as: dravyāśrayī agunavān (“Resting on a substance and not endowed with [other] qualities”).
K. DEL TOSO 53 an independent principle when compared with the other char- acteristics of its very substratum.19 A reasoning of such a kind could have been what led Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa to reformulate the Cārvāka idea of cognition. Of course, all this would remain only a supposition, although likely, unless we find some further corroboration. I suggest he- re—also on the basis of the abovementioned familiarity of Ud- bhaṭabhaṭṭa with the Nyāya philosophy—that a possible argu- ment in favour of this thesis could be (found) forshadowed in some passages of Vātsyāyana’s (4th - 5th century CE) Nyāya- sūtrabhāṣya against materialism, with which Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa cer- tainly had to face up to. Vātsyāyana on Cognition and His Criticism towards Materialism Before taking into account Vātsyāyana’s reasoning, it will be helpful here to contextualize in brief the general, classical Nyā- ya perspective on cognition—as is drawn in the Nyāyasūtras (The Nyāya aphorisms)—and the subjects related to it. To be- gin with, we find that the principles admitted by the Naiyāyi- kas are five (Nyāyasūtra 1.1.13):20 19. pṛthivyāpastejovāyurākāśam iti bhūtāni | “Earth, water, heat, wind and ether are the elements”. Moreover, we are also reminded that several words are to be taken as synonyms referring to cognition (Nyāyasūtra 1.1.15): 20. buddhir upalabdhir jñānam ity anarthāntaram | “Cognition, conception and knowledge have the same meaning”. On the basis of this specification we are allowed to consider all these three terms as indicating the same faculty. This is an important assumption for correctly interpreting the excerpts that follow. Taking these aphorisms as general premises, let us con- sider now the following one (Nyāyasūtra 1.1.10): 21. icchādveṣaprayatnasukhaduḥkhajñānāni ātmano liṅgam iti | “Desire, aversion, effort, pleasure, pain and cognition are the mark of the self”. What is worth noting here, is the fact that according to the Naiyāyikas, contrarily to what was asserted by the ancient Vai- śeṣikas (see our aphorisms 15. and 16.), but in at least partial accordance with the abovementioned position of Candrānanda, also cognition is a characteristic of the self. However, like in the case of Vaiśeṣikas, the Naiyāyikas accepted the existence of a self,21 which is conceived as an entity that, albeit its dwelling within the body, survives to the physical or biological death (Nyāyasūtra 1.1.9 mentions pretyabhāva, litt. “the state after death”, as a peculiarity of the the self). Consequently, the body is described as nothing but the place or the means that allows the self’s wordly experiences (Nyāyasūtra 1.1.11): 22. ceṣṭendriyārthāśrayaḥ śarīram | “The body is the recipient of exertion, senses and [the feelings derived from] objects”. It is interesting, in this respect, to notice that Vātsyāyana, in his Nyāyasūtrabhāṣya, clearly interprets the body as an instru- ment of the self. Introducing his discussion on the aphorism just quoted, he indeed writes:22 23. tasya bhogādhiṣṭhānam | “[The body] is the basis of its [scil. self’s] experiences”. The reason why the Naiyāyikas conceived the body as the seat of the sense organs can be, in my opinion, understood quite intuitively. Not so for exertion and objects, for which we need to have recourse to Vātsyāyana’s interpretation:23 24. kathaṃ ceṣṭāśrayaḥ | īpsitaṃ jihāsitaṃ vārtham adhikṛt- yepsājihāsāprayuktasya tadupāyānuṣṭhānalakṣaṇā samī- hā ceṣṭā sā yatra vartate tac charīram | […] katham ar- thāśrayaḥ | yasmin āyatane indriyārthasannikarṣād ut- pannayoḥ sukhaduḥkhayoḥ pratisaṃvedanaṃ pravartate sa eṣām āśrayaḥ tac charīram iti | “How [is the body] a recipient for exertion? Concerning a thing desired or avoided, exertion [consists in] the wish— which aims at carring out the means for [obtaining or avoiding] that [thing]—of appropriate desire to obtain or desire to abandon; the place in which this [exertion] takes place is the body. […] How [is the body] a recipient for objects? The enjoyment of pleasure and pain arisen be- cause of the contact between senses and objects occurs where there is such a support [viz. the body, consequently] that which is the recipient of those [objects], is the body”. We conclude, hence, that the Naiyāyikas considered the self as the actual experiencer of cognition, desire, aversion, pleasure and pain, whereas the body would have a mere role of occa- sioning factor or, better said, of bare place for the occurrence of these very experiences. Furthermore, by not admitting—as, on the contrary, the ancient Vaiśeṣikas did—the mind as substra- tum of cognition,24 the Naiyāyikas had to refer the articulation 22Sastri Tailanga (1984: p. 25). 23Sastri Tailanga (1984: pp. 25 - 26), with the following readings: tadupāyā- nuṣṭhānalakṣaṇam → tadupāyānuṣṭhānalakṣaṇā; varttate → vartate; ya- sminn → yasmin; utpannayoḥ sukhaduḥkhayoḥ pravartate sa eṣām āśrayaḥ ratisaṃvedanaṃ → utpannayoḥ sukhaduḥkhayoḥ pratisaṃvedanaṃ pra- vartate sa eṣām āśrayaḥ. 24The most important distinction between the ancient Vaiśeṣika and the aiyāyika psychologies lies in their different interpretation of the mind. According to the Naiyāyikas, indeed, the mind is to be intended as having the nature of internal sense organ—even if it is not explicitly defined as such in the Nyāyasūtras. Vātsyāyana is quite clear on this point in his com- mentary on Nyāyasūtra 1.1.4 (Sastri Tailanga, 1984: p. 13): manas aś cen- driyabhāvān na vācyaṃ lakṣaṇāntaram iti | tantrāntarasamācārāc caita atyetavyam iti | paramatam apratiṣiddham anumatam iti hi tantrayuktiḥ| (“And [mind] is not explicitly mentioned as another attribute [of perception, different from the five sense organs,] because of the nature of sense organ o the mind. This [notion] is to be admitted because of the customary [accep- tance of it] in other systems [of thought]: it is indeed usage with [other] systems that an opinion different [from ours, when] not denied, is [impli- citly] approved”). Whereas, the Vaiśeṣikasūtras (Comba, 1987: p. 44): “never clearly state that the manas is an indriya, on the contrary they de- scribe it as something very different from the sense organs: the manas is substance (dravya), while the sense organs are made of substances but do not constitute separate substances; the manas is eternal, while the sense organs die with the body, because of their composite and elemental nature; the functions of the manas are totally different from the functions of sense organs […]; every time that the sūtras speak of the manas and of the sense organs, they are listed separately”. For a clear survey on the philosophical import of Vaiśeṣika into Vātsyāyana’s thought see Thakur (2003: pp. 367-372). 19What has been called here “double ontology”—referring to a dialectical perspective—is to be considered as a quite different concept from Bhatta- charya’s (2010a: p. 424) “the dualist position adopted by Udbhaṭa”—refer- ring rather to a philosophical definition. See also Bhattacharya (2010a: pp. 423, 427-428). According to Bhattacharya (2010b: p. 538): “ y saying that consciousness is independent of the four elements that constitute the human body Udbhaṭa leaves the door open to a non-materialist position. The Cār- vāka position was essentially monistic: no body, no consciousness”. But, as we have seen, our quotation 12. prevents us to think that for Udbhaṭabhaṭṭ there could be actually any cognition without a body, a concept that seems to e somehow forshadowed also in quotation 09., where cognition is said to be bhūtārtha, “an object/thing made by/based on the elements”. Thus, the in- dependence of cognition seems to be a concept that is dialectically (it is svatantra without exactly being svatantra), more than philosophically use- ful. 20All the quotations from the Nyāyasūtras follow the edition Chandra, Sinha (1930). 21A discussion on the Naiyāyika proofs of the existence of the self is avail- able, among others, in Chakravarti (1982).
K. DEL TOSO 54 of all the psychological events to the self.25 This means that the self is not only what experiences the various feelings and de- sires, but it is also the actual knower of them. Hence, if the ancient Vaiśeṣikas kept separated the feelings (referring to the self) from cognition (referring to the mind), the Naiyāyikas—as apparently some later Vaiśeṣikas like Candrānanda—prefer to unify all these elements under one single factor, namely, the self. The self is thus capable of both knowing and feeling. Now, it seems to me that Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s idea of cognition conceptually followed more—so to speak—the “self” unifying principle of the Naiyāyikas, than the “self-mind” dichotomy proposed by the ancient Vaiśeṣikas. Indeed, on the basis of the abovementioned passage 12., and considered the fact that Ud- bhaṭabhaṭṭa, as specified above, could not admit the existence of a self without contravening the basic Cārvāka stance, we can easily understand why for him cognition must represent not only the knowing faculty (being it, by definition, the knowing faculty) of the body, but also what experiences pleasures, pains etc. In other words, Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa seems to confer to cognition the same role that in the Nyāya system is played by the self. Now, keeping in mind all what precedes and considering it as a general premiss, let us turn our attention to a particular pas- sage of Vātsyāyana’s commentary on the Nyāyasūtras, from which we can take a sketch of the pre-Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa Cārvāka argumentation in favour of the physicity of cognition. Accord- ing to Vātsyāyana’s Nyāyasūtrabhāṣya ad Nyāyasūtra 3.2.35- 36, the first of these two aphorisms would expound a theory, attributed to a general opponent, a partisan of materialism (call- ed bhūtacaitanika, a term referring to the upholder of the doc- trine that cognition is from material elements, and recalling our aphorism 03.), according to whom activity (ārambha) and inac- tivity (nivṛtti)—that in Nyāyasūtra 3.2.34 are said to be occa- sioned by desire and aversion (which are, in their turn, the marks/properties of the self, as our quotation 20. clearily testi- fies)—would belong to the physical body. The second aphorism, on the contrary, represents the Naiyāyikas’ answer:26 25. atra bhūtacaitanika āha | [Nyāyasūtra 3.2.35:] talliṅga- tvād icchādveṣayoḥ pārthivādyeṣv apratiṣedhaḥ || āra- mbhanivṛttiliṅgāv icchādveṣāv iti yasyārambhanivṛttī ta- syecchādveṣau tasya jñānam iti prāptaṃ pārthivāpy ata- ijasavāyavīyānāṃ śarīrāṇām ārambhanivṛttidarśanād ic- chādveṣajñānair yoga iti caitanyam | [Nyāyasūtra 3.2.36:] paraśvādiṣv ārambhanivṛttidarśa- nāt || śarīre caitanyanivṛttiḥ | ārambhanivṛttidarśanād icchādveṣajñānair yoga iti prāptaṃ paraśvādeḥ karaṇa- syārambhanivṛttidarśanāc caitanyam iti | atha śarīra- syecchādibhir yogaḥ paraśvādes tu karaṇasyārambhani- vṛttī vyabhicarataḥ na tarhy ayaṃ hetuḥ pārthivāpy ataijasavāyavīyānāṃ śarīrāṇām ārambhanivṛttidarśanād icchādveṣajñānair yoga iti | ayaṃ tarhy anyo’rthaḥ talliṅgatvād icchādveṣayoḥ pār- thivādyeṣv apratiṣedhaḥ | pṛthivyādīnāṃ bhūtānām āra- mbhas tāvat trasasthāvaraśarīreṣu tadavayavavyūha- liṅgaḥ pravṛttiviśeṣaḥ loṣṭādiṣu ca liṅgābhāvāt pravṛtti- viśeṣābhāvo nivṛttiḥ | ārambhanivṛttiliṅgāv icchādveṣāv iti pārthivādyeṣv aṇuṣu taddarśanād icchādveṣayogas tadyogāj jñānayoga iti siddhaṃ bhūtacaitanyam iti | kumbhādiṣv anupalabdher ahetuḥ | kumbhādimṛdavaya- vānāṃ vyūhaliṅgaḥ pravṛttiviśeṣa ārambhaḥ sikatādiṣu pravṛttiviśeṣābhāvo nivṛttiḥ | na ca mṛtsikatānām āram- bhanivṛttidarśanād icchādveṣaprayatnajñānair yogaḥ | tasmāt talliṅgatvād icchādveṣayor ity ahetur iti || “There, the adherent to the doctrine that cognition is from material elements says: [Nyāyasūtra 3.2.35] “Because they are marks of those [activity and inactivity, which takes place only in presence of a body], there [can] not [be] negation of desire and aversion in these [bodies] made by earth etc.” Desire and aversion are the marks of activity and inactivity; [therefore,] activity and inactivity [are characteristics] of some thing, of which [also] desire and aversion [are characteristics, and] it is proper [to think] that [also] knowledge [must be a characteristic] of that [very thing]; moreover, the [body] made by earth— because activity and inactivity are observed [to be the marks] of bodies not [composed by] igneous and aereal [elements]—does possess desire, aversion and knowledge, and hence cognition. [Nyāyasūtra 3.2.36] “[We Naiyāyikas reject all this,] be- cause activity and absence of activity are observed in [inanimated things like] axes etc.” [This functions as a] rebuttal of [the idea that] cognition is in the body. [If] it were proper [to admit] that the combination of desire, aversion and knowledge [belongs to the body] because activity and inactividy are observed [in it, then] cognition [should be a property also] of instruments like an axe etc., because activity and inactivity are observed [also there]. But, [if only] the body possesses desire etc., then activity and inactivity of instruments such as an axe etc. deviate from [your argument], and in that case this [of yours] is not a [valid] reason [for upholding that]: moreover, the [body] made by earth—because activity and inactivity are observed [to be the marks] of bodies not [composed by] igneous and aereal [elements]—does possess desire, aversion and knowledge. 25To explain this point in brief, let us follow this reasoning. Nyāyasūtra 1.1.16: ugapaj jñānānutpatt ḥ manaso liṅgaṃ | (“The non-arising of simultaneous cognitions is the mark of the mind”). In this aphorism the function of the mind is limited to the simple sieving of the several cognitions coming from the senses and it does not, as in the abovementioned Vaiśeṣikas’ aphorims 15., constitute the primary element whose presence allows consequently the presence of cogni- tion. The perspective put forward in Nyāyasūtra 1.1.16 represents the theoretical basis for Nyāyasūtra 3.2.19: yugapaj jñeyānupalabdheś ca na manasaḥ | (“An [cognition does] not [belong] to the mind because of the non perception o simultaneous cognised objects”). Vātsyāyana comments on this last aphorism as follows (Sastri Tailanga, 1984: p. 168): yugapaj jñeyānupalabdhir antaḥkar- aṇasya liṅgam tatra yugapaj jñeyānupalabdhyā yad anumīyate antaḥkaraṇam na tasya guṇo jñānam | kasya tarhi jñasya vaśitvāt | vaśī jñātā vaśyaṃ karaṇam ñānaguṇatve ca karaṇabhāvanivṛttiḥ | (“The non perception of simultaneous cognised objects is the mark of the internal instrument [of cognition, scil. the mind]; therefore, by means of the non perception of simultaneous cognised objects, the internal instrument is inferred; [hence,] cognition is not a quality o that [internal instrument]. Of what then [is cognition a quality]? [It is the quality] of the cognizer [scil. the self], because of [its] being the controller. The control- ler is the knower and the controlled is the instrument, and if [the mind] had the quality of cognition, [there would be] cessation of [its] being an instrument”). Therefore, according to the Naiyāyikas, cognition cannot be the mark of the mind, rather it is the mark of the self. To the mind seems to belong the capacit of processing just one cognition at a time. 26Sastri Tailanga (1984: p. 174). The enumeration of the aphorisms in Sastri Tailanga’s edition differs from ours as follows: Nyāyasūtra 3.2.35 is Sastri Tailanga’s Nyāyasūtra 3.2.36, and Nyāyasūtra 3.2.36 is Sastri Tailanga’s yāyasūtra 3.2.37. [Objection by the materialist:] in that case, this [sūtra], “Because they are marks of those [activity and inactivity], there [can] not [be] negation of desire and aversion in these [bodies] made by earth etc.” has [to be interpreted according to] another meaning. Activity is [a property] of elements like earth etc., insofar as there is a particular spontaneous attitude in moving or immovable [living] bodies, which is a mark of the component limbs of those [very bodies], and inactivity is the absence of that par- ticular spontaneous attitude in [for instance] a lump of clay etc., because of the absence of that mark. Desire and
K. DEL TOSO 55 aversion are the marks of activity and inactivity; as those [activity and inactivity] are observed in the atoms27 of those [elements like] the earthy one etc., there is con- junction with desire and aversion. Because there is con- junction with those [two], there is [also] conjunction with knowledge. Thus it is established that cognition [belongs] to elements. [Answer: your argument] is not a [valid] reason because of the non perception [of activity and inactivity] in [ob- jects like] a jar etc. [Indeed, if we follow your reasoning,] activity [should be also] a particular spontaneous attitude that is the mark of the [whole] structure of the portions of clay of a jar etc., and inactivity [should be] the absence of that particular spontaneous attitude in [things such as] gravel etc. [where there is no structure of parts]; but [in these inanimate things] there is not conjunction with de- sire, aversion, effort and knowledge [simply] because ac- tivity and inactivity of jars and gravel are observed. Therefore, “of desire and aversion, because they are mar- ks of those” is not a [valid] reason». The objection raised here by the hypothetical materialist can be summarized in the following terms: (a) activity (ārambha) is a mark of only the living beings (both movable, as animals, and immovable, as vegetals); (b) activity is due to a particular spontaneous attitude (pravṛttiviśeṣa) that is peculiar to those living beings; (c) this particular spontaneous attitude can be peculiar to living beings because in primis it is a mark of the material elements that constitute their parts, and manifests itself only when and where the elements attain the form and nature of a living being. Moreover, it is worth noting that (d) cognition is by the materialist proved to belong to the material elements on the basis of its link with desire and aversion (as the sentence tadyogāj jñānayoga, “because there is conjunction with them, there is conjunction with cognition”, reveals), which are seen in their turn as the marks of activity and inactivity. All this reminds us of the abovementioned passage 12., in which Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa speaks of a particular intrinsic nature (svabhāvaviśeṣa, to compare with pravṛttiviśeṣa, “particular sp- ontaneous attitude”, of quotation 25.), which is described as a property (dharma, to compare with tadav ayavavy ūhaliṅga, “ma- rk of the component limbs of those [bodies]”, of quotation 25.) peculiar to the body, and which is able to experience pleasures, pains, desires and aversions. The argument of the materialist against which Vātsyāyana directs his criticism seems, in any case, to have some weak as- pect. Indeed, if the materialist upholds that desire and aversion exist where activity and inactivity exist, Vātsyāyana argues that activity and inactivity can be observed also in non living beings, as for instance in an axe (whose activity depends on someone’s utilization of it). The fundamental critical point is, therefore, the following one: Vātsyāyana rejects the idea according to which activity and inactivity are primarily defined as marks of bodies, which are in their turn thought to be an assemblage of different component parts, each of them subjected to activity and inac- tivity. Indeed, Vātsyāyana points out that also inanimate objects have parts—like for example a jar, which has a lip, handels etc.—, but nobody would admit that these parts do actually ex- perience desire, aversion etc. It follows that (A) cognition (and desire and aversion as well) cannot be a simple or mere proper- ty of the elements, otherwise it should be present in each ele- ment, with the consequence that every single body would have a number of cognitions according to as many elements concure to constitute it (Nyāyasūtrabhāṣya ad Nyāyasūtra 3.2.37):28 26. bhūtacaitanikasyaikaśarīre bahūni bhūtāni jñānecchād- veṣaprayatnaguṇānīti jñātṛbahutvaṃ prāptam | “[If we accept the idea] of the adherent to the doctrine that cognition is from material elements, [then] the va- rious material elements [present] in a single body [would each one] have the qualities of cognition, desire, aversion and effort; [thus, we will] come to a multitude of cogni- zers [in one and the same body]”. Cognition (B) cannot be either a property of the parts that constitute a body as such, otherwise it would/should be pre- sent—according to Vātsyāyana’s reasoning—in almost every body, because the majority of the existents are formed by dif- ferent parts linked together (like in the case of a man, a jar etc.). This is, I think, a good example of the kind of criticism to which Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa intended to answer to with his reformula- tion of the Cārvāka idea of cognition: to admit that cognition is a bhūtārtha svatantra (a self-dependent thing consituted by material elements), as we have seen, allows Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa to confer to it a certain degree of autonomy from the body, on which it depends nonetheless in toto for its manifestation. Moreover, by virtue of its partial autonomy, cognition does not depend stricto sensu on bare elements (atoms etc.) or on the component limbs of a body tout court. Rather, it takes place as a—so to speak— added principle, but only when and where the elements are mixed up in a certain, precise manner, to consti- tute bodies whose parts are organized in a likewise certain and precise way. The concept of a svatantra (self-dependent) cogni- tion, which is also a svabhāvaviśeṣa (particular intrinsic nature) of the body, therefore, can represent a tentative dialectical re- sponse to both the abovementioned Vātsyāyana’s objections (A) and (B). Conclusion Cognition, pleasure, pain etc., are defined by Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa both as principles and as properties of the human body, for distinguishing them from what we have called the bare proper- ties, like colour, weight etc., which are characteristics not pecu- liar to human bodies, but belonging to every existing thing. Indeed, cognition, pleasure etc. are really of a particular nature, because they do not manifest themselves for all the time their substantial substratum remains present, as colour or weight ac- tually do. This aspect—namely, the occasionality of cognition, pleasure etc.—marks a fundamental difference also with, for instance, the quality “inhebriating power” belonging to the su- bstance “liquour” (see our aphorism 04.). When, in fact, the mi- xture of ferments, juices etc., develops its alcoholic degree, this alcoholic degree remains permanent in that very substance. In other terms, a case in which a liquour does not manifest the 27The Sanskrit term aṇu generally refers to “atom”. Atoms, according to certain philosophers (among which the Vaiśeṣikas) would represent the basic particles of every material element (earth, water etc.). Although Vāt- syāyana’s reference to aṇus (atoms) is probably due to the fact that materi- alists known to him upheld atomism (see Sinha, 1952: p. 242), nonetheless we do not have any certain data on whether Cārvākas or other schools o materialism were atomists or not. A ossible source in favour of Cārvākas’ atomism could be for instance Guṇaratnasūri’s (14th - 15th century CE) Tarkarahasyadīpikā (The lamp of subtle points on reasoning) on Haribha- drasūri’s (8th century CE) Ṣaḍdarśanasamuccaya (Collection of six points o view) verses 48 - 49, where the materialistic point of view on this subject is explained as follows (Jain, 1981: p. 218): aṇavo’pi hy apratyakṣāḥ kiṃtu haṭādikāryatayā pariṇatās te pratyakṣatvam upayānti (“Although the atoms are imperceptible, nevertheless [when] developed into the condition of an effect [of their mixture,] like a jar etc., they gain perceptibility”). 28Sastri Tailanga (1984: p. 175). According to Sastri Tailanga’s edition this is the commentary on Nyāyasūtra 3.2.39.
K. DEL TOSO 56 inhebriating power as its quality is not given, whereas we con- tinuously have experience of ourselves enjoying pleasures and pains only on certain occasions. Also cognition takes place just when we cognize. Therefore, for instance, during the deep sleep the cognizing faculty is reputed to be suspended. This means that the simile of the liquour (the lion’s roar of the materialistic conception of cognition), although being very attractive, does not represent with the due accuracy the relation existing be- tween body and cognition. The learned Vātsyāyana should have remarked, and consequently criticized, exactly this kind of in- congruences. Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa tried, with his reformulation of the nature of cognition, to find a new definition of the psychological events that were, at one time, in line with the materialistic assump- tions—according to which cognition would be nothing but a factor that is subordinated (note the compounds caitanyaviśiṣṭa, “characterized by cognition”, in aphorism 05., and svabhāvavi- śeṣa, “particular intrinsic nature”, in quotation 12.) to the hu- man body—, but more philosophically and dialectically ar- ticulated—although it is definded by him as svatantra (self-de- pendent), Udbhaṭabhaṭṭa’s cognition is not at all an independent principle in the same way in which the four elements of the aphorism 01. are independent, and nonetheless it is less de- pendent on that four elements than a bare quality, such as co- lour, weight etc., is to conclude, we can suppose that Udbha- ṭabhaṭṭa did so for better preventing and/or rebutting some pos- sible spiritualistic or anti-materialistic objections, among which those pointed out by Vātsyāyana undoubtedly represent a good example. 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