Phenomenology and Ontology PDF
Phenomenology and Ontology PDF
Phenomenology and Ontology PDF
PHAENOMENOLOGICA
COLLECTION PUBLIEE SOUS LE PATRONAGE DES CENTRES
D'ARCHIVES-HUSSERL
37
J. N. MOHANTY
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J. N. MOHANTY
Preface v
Part One
I. Modes of Givenness 3
II. The Given 12
III. Thought and Action 22
IV. Meaning and Truth-I 30
V. Meaning and Truth-II 50
VI. Language and Reality 60
VII. On Reference 72
VIII. Remarks on the Content Theory 84
IX. Phenomenology and Ontology 92
Part Two
X. A Note on Modern Nominalism I07
XI. A recent Criticism of the Foundations of Nicolai
Hartmann's Ontology II5
XII. Remarks on Nicolai Hartmann's Modal Doctrine 129
XIII. The 'Object' in Edmund Husserl's Phenomenology 138
XIV. Individual Fact and Essence in Edmund Husserl's
Philosophy 152
XV. Gilbert Ryle's Criticisms of the Concept of Conscious-
ness 163
XVI. On G. E. Moore's Defence of Common sense 170
Part Three
XVII. Reflections on the N yaya theory of A vayavipratyak$a 183
XVIII. Nyaya Theory of Doubt 198
PART ONE
CHAPTER I
MODES OF GIVENNESS*
3 This distinction was brought home to the present author by the lectures of
Professor ]. Konig at Gottingen during the years 1953-54. The present use of it
however is the present author's own.
MODES OF GIVENNESS 7
theoretical subject there would be no things, but only sense-data,
essences, and the subjective. Given the thing, it can of course be
analysed, through subsequent reflection, into sense-data; the
temptation therefore to recompose that original unity out of
these data is natural for the theoretician. One has only to re-
member that, to avoid this temptation, that which is presupposed
in analysis cannot be got back through analysis. The unity of the
thing as revealed in its original mode of givenness through
practice is radically different from that unity - be it that of
'family', series, or of nexus which analysis seeks to substitute for
it.
Amongst these latter, the contents and the functions are said to
be given in introspection. The functions alone however are data
of introspection in the true sense.
These five however do not exhaust all that we are acquainted
with. For there is that immediate self-consciousness which is
neither practical nor theoretical, which in fact - so far as its
own mode of givenness is concerned - transcends that distinction
and yet accompanies both. Each of the other modes of con-
sciousness we have mentioned is an awareness at ... ; self-con-
sciousness however which accompanies all our awareness is not
itself an awareness of ... It would be wrong to hold that this
self-consciousness is an introspective datum. It is an 'enjoyment',
not a 'contemplation' - to use a distinction familiarised by Sa-
muel Alexander.
We have thus three levels of the subjective: the mental con-
tents, the mental functions and self-consciousness. The first has
a curious status, being also interpretable as objective or at least
not distinguishable from the object. The functions are ontolo-
gically subjective but epistemologically still objective, for they
are 'contemplated', i.e., are made objects of awareness; their
awareness is awareness at ... Self-consciousness is both ontolo-
cally and epistemologically subjective; it is not an awareness at ..
CHAPTER II
THE GIVEN*
II
III
IV
v
I have briefly sketched two radically different modes of givenness,
the practical and the theoretical. In the former, the external world
of physical objects and the community of persons are given:
there are correspondingly two subdivisions of the practical mode
for whom I have suggested the Kantian designations 'technically-
practical' and 'morally practical'. In the latter, sense-data,
abstract entities, and the passive witness Self are given, and
there would be corresponding subdivisions of the theoretical
mode. The resulting scheme has no claim to exhaustiveness. The
main distinction between the practical and the theoretical
however may claim to be a useful and illuminating explanatory
principle. It would however lose its value if attempts are made to
bridge the gulf separating the two. Using a metaphor, I should
say there is no continuous passage from the one to the other: a
"jump", a radical change of attitude, is indispensable.
This leads me to formulate what I consider to be a cardinal
principle of all phenomenological philosophy. I shall call this
principle, "the principle of phenomenological discontinuity".
It states that phenomenology should recognise, wherever it
comes across, radical discontinuities amongst phenomena and
should not seek to blur the distinctions out of a sheer system-
building interest.
Keeping this in mind, we may say that no intelligible relation
can be formulated between (r) physical objects and sense-data
and (2) the person and the subject. With this, many traditional
philosophic discussions are rendered pointless, for the things
which have been sought to be related are given in two totally
THE GIVEN 2I
think out of, or rather in, some practical situation, the essence
of thinking is radically different from that of practice or action.
The fact that thought can, and in fact does, attain to freedom
from practical relevance proves its essential freedom. Thought
and action are essentially distinct. That they are nevertheless
found in some cases to be associated with each other has to be
explained otherwise than by any sort of false reductionism.
3.2. Heidegger goes beyond the pragmatists, although it seems
at first as if he is giving nothing other than a pragmatist account
of thinking. Both intuition and thought are, for Heidegger,l
derivative from that primitive understanding which characterises
human existence. This primitive understanding (which is not a
kind of knowledge, but a fundamentalfactor of human existence 2)
is anticipatory and projective in character. Heidegger rejects
the conception of a pure subject. Human existence again is not
a present fact or thing, but an everpresent possibility of existing.
This possibility involves anticipation of, and projection into, the
future. This "being ahead of oneself", this anticipation and pro-
jection, constitutes that primitive understanding which has
always a feeling-tone, as it were. 3 The cool and contemplative
theoretical thinking (leading to science and philosophy) as well
as practical action, - both are derivative from this primitive
human existing.
Heidegger is not deriving theory from practice, nor is he plea-
ding for the primacy of practice over theory.4 Here he avoids the
error of the pragmatists. He is only insisting on the primacy of
human existence. Thinking (scientific or philosophic) is, for
Heidegger, a mode of existence. 5 It is therefore derivative from
the basic existential categories. While we need not, in our pre-
sent context, pursue this philosophy further, we may safely say
that Heidegger is dissatisfied with the dichotomy of theory and
practice and that he seeks to overcome this dualism not by re-
ducing the one to the other but by deriving them from a higher,
1 Martin Heidegger, Sein und Zeit, Max Niemeyer, Tiibingen, 7th edn. I953, p. I47.
2 Martin Heidegger, Kant und das Problem der Metaphysik, Vittorio Klostermann,
Frankfurt, 2nd edn. I95I, p. 2IO.
3 Sein und Zeit, p. I42: "Verstehen ist immer gestimmtes".
4 Ibid., p. I93: "Das Phiinomen driickt daher keineswegs einen Vorrang des 'prak-
tischen' Verhaltens vor dem theoretischen aus ... 'Theorie' und 'Praxis' sind Seins-
moglichkeiten eines Seienden, dessen Sein als Sorge bestimmt werden muss."
5 Ibid., p. 357.
THOUGHT AND ACTION 25
a more original unity. This too is reductionism, but this type of
reductionism is philosophically more satisfying, since it has the
courage to look squarely at the initial dichotomy. It shall be our
attempt in the present paper to explore some means of over-
coming the dualism between thought and action, but we could
do that only by a phenomenological receptivity to the facts as
they present themselves to us, and not by trying rival meta-
physical hypotheses.
9 The former is ably dealt with in Nicolai Hartmann's Das Problem des geistigen
Seins, Berlin and Leipzig, 1933; the latter is discussed in ample detail in the present
author's Nicolai Hartmann and A. N. Whitehead: A Study in Recent Platonism, Cal-
cutta, Progressive Publishers, 1957.
10 Hegel, Die Wissenschaft der Logik, Phil. Bibliothek edn., 1951, Vol. II, p. 3.
CHAPTER IV
I.I. It has been argued that since (( 'S is p' is true" is equi-
valent to'S is p', the predicate 'is true' is superfluous and has at
best - as Geach says2 - the function of cancelling the quotes. (It
* Presidential Address, Logic and Metaphysics Section, 36th session of the Indian
Philosophical Congress, Santiniketan, I96I [Proceedings, pp. 27-47.]
1 A. J. Ayer, "The Criterion of Truth" in Macdonald (ed.), Philosophy and Analysis.
2 P. T. Geach, Mental Acts, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, p. 96.
MEANING AND TRUTH-I 31
is at once obvious that this argument closely resembles Russell's
elimination of the philosophical problem of existence). As against
this one may argue that though the above equivalence holds
good, it does not follow that the predicate 'is true' is redundant.
The redundancy is wrongly supposed to follow from the equi-
valence partly owing to the failure to distinguish between the
different senses in which the connective 'is' is used in the type-
sentence'S is p' as it occurs on the left-hand side of the equivalen-
ce and as it occurs on the right-hand side. As a consequence, it
has been wrongly supposed that the'S is p' remains unaffected
by the addition of the predicate 'is true' and that it re-appears on
right-hand side unaffected, though only without the quotes.
The error in the argument however would immediately be clear
if we bear in mind that the 'is' in'S is p' is not quite the same on
both the sides of the equivalence. On the left hand side expression
the 'is' is a predicative 'is', whereas on the right hand side ex-
pression it is an existential 'is', so that what the equivalence really
amounts to is this: saying that the predicative assertion'S is p'
is true is the same as saying that S is in fact p. In that case, the
predicate 'is true' far from being redundant fulfils the function
of transforming the predicative 'is' into an existential 'is'. Hence
the problem of truth is genuine, at least in the sense that it
survives the above discussed attempt at its elimination, though as
we shall show later on, there is another important sense in which
the problem may be replaced by the problem of falsity.
tal acts or attitudes on the other? - are not the sort of things
that could be said to be true or false. Consequently, we are left
with the knowledges and these alone are the proper subjects for
the predication of truth or falsity. We have thereby no doubt
left the conception of knowledge or iiiiina vague, but our own
immediate purpose in hand would have been served if we can
emphasise that truth or falsity on the one hand and meaning-
fulness on the other are predicated of quite different sorts of
things - which corroborates our conclusion that the two notions
are really distinct.
II
while the latter rescues the former from the charge of relati-
vism. To reduce the one to the other for the sake of metaphy-
sical simplicity would amount to a distortion of the phenome-
non.
III
8.1. There are two extreme cases where this fundamental dis-
tinction appears to be blurred. In the first place, there are
proper names - perhaps Russell's 'logically proper names', the
'this' and the 'I' - in whose case understanding amounts to
knowing. There are, on the other, abstract sciences like mathe-
matics and logic in whose case again understanding seems to be
the same as knowing. In both cases, the distinction between
meaning and reference seems to get blurred: in the former the
meaning is assimilated into reference, in the latter the reference
into the meaning. But closer examination would reveal that even
in these cases understanding may not quite amount to knowing.
MEANING AND TRUTH-I 47
In the former case, the "this" has still a theoretical meaning
which might be grasped without an identification of the unique
reference involved. In the latter case, we might argue - following
the intuitionists - that understanding the expression 'the first
prime number between 2000 and 3000' need not imply a know-
ledge of that number: it can be said to amount to knowledge
only when the number can be constructed in intuition. The only
difference between the two cases seems to be that in the former
the passage from understanding to knowing involves a transition
from the theoretical attitude to the practical, whereas in the
latter the passage is within theoretical consciousness. The really
pertinent question therefore concerns the former, and in a way
all concrete knowing. Since - as has been said by implication -
the gulf between the two attitudes is bridged by intuition and
since in all cases of concrete knowing the intuition would have to
be such as to involve a unique reference, the question arises,
how is such unique reference possible? This question must not be
confused with the quite different question, how is extra-lin-
guistic reference of language possible? to which E. W. Hall has
devoted two excellent papers in M ind.l 5 It seems to me how-
ever that extralinguistic reference of language is not a real
problem, for such reference is an essential character of a language
qua language. What however is a problem is, how it possible
to make unique reference? It must be emphasised that within
language purely unique reference is not possible, for even Russell's
'ego-centric particulars' or Hall's 'empirical ties' have an aspect
of meaning distinguishable from that to which they may be used
to refer uniquely. Unique reference presupposes a transcendence
of the attitude of pure understanding. The unique individual must
be known. And the knowledge of the unique individual is far from
being a contemplative perception. It must be recognised as a
radically different mode of knowing, intimately associated with
and built upon interests, dispositions, evaluations and practical
manipulations. For, the more contemplative a knowing is, the
more it approximates towards the attitude of understanding.
The more does it succeed in making unique reference possible
through a practically oriented approach, the more does it be-
15 E. W. Hall, "The Extra-linguistic Reference of Language" in Mind, 1943, pp.
230-4 6 ; 194-4, pp. 25-47.
MEANING AND TRUTH-I
16 For a similar viewpoint, see S. Hampshire, Thought and Action, London, Chatto
&Windus, 1959, especially pp. 47-53.
MEANING AND TRUTH-I 49
For phenomenology, the intentional consciousness i.e. the
consciousness of ... is the ultimate notion. This intentionality of
consciousness develops into two modes: the extra-linguistic
reference of expressions through meanings, and the objective
reference of knowledge, the former being the presupposition of
the latter.
CHAPTER V
* Read at the first regional Seminar of the Centre of Advanced Study in Philosophy,
Visva·Bharati University, Santiniketan in April, 1964; and published in the Visva·
Bharati Journal 0/ Philosophy, Vol. I, 1964, No. 1,9-14.
1 See Meaning and Truth·I of this book.
MEANING AND TRUTH-II 5I
words. For the present I would rather begin by attempting pre-
cise formulations of the two key concepts of this paper.
I
It is of course obvious that "What does the word 'cat' mean?"
is not a philosophical question. Nor is "What does the sentence
'The cat is on the mat' mean?" a philosophical question. One
answers these questions if one knows the English language, and
one expects no special philosophical ability for this purpose.
What, then, is philosophical about the question "What is mea-
ning?"? It has also to be admitted that there is no meaning as
such and that meaning is always meaning of ... , so that the
philosophical question "What is meaning?" should really be
"What is (the) meaning of ... ?". It is indeed difficult to see why
"What is the meaning of 'cat'?" is not, but "What is the mea-
ning of ... ?" is a philosophical question. Asking "What is the mea-
ning of ... ?" is, of course, asking the meaning of an expression.
What, then, are we asking when we are asking philosophically
the meaning of an expression? The peculiarity of the situation is
that as soon as we specify the expression whose meaning we are
asking for the question ceases to be philosophical. This consi-
deration shows that the two questions - "What is the meaning of
'cat'?" and "What is the meaning of an expression?" - do not
have the same logical nature. Nor can it be said that the former
alone is a genuine question whereas the latter is a mere dummy
question, in the same way as a mere proposition functional is not
a proposition but only a dummy.
We may say that in asking "What is the meaning of an ex-
pression?" we are asking about what constitutes an expression
qua expression. Understood in this sense, the question may be
construed as being about the meaning of 'an expression qua ex-
pression'. We are indeed asking about the essential and con-
stitutive functions of expressions. We are not expecting to be
given a meaning in the same manner in which one gives the
meaning of 'cat'.
The philosophical problem, therefore, is to find out the es-
sential functions of expressions qua expressions and to enquire
into the conditions of their possibility.
52 MEANING AND TRUTH-II
deceptive, for the language (the word, the sentence, etc.) which
it takes as basic is already charged with meaning and is not a
mere physical event. We may likewise take the intension, the
meaning, to be basic and reduce the others to it. Expressions
become accidental vehicles of eternal meanings, and the sub-
jective acts become the means of grasping them. The danger is
that thereby we hypostatise meanings and cut off their moorings
in language on the one hand, and in the subjective, on the other.
Subjectivism is a third possibility - reducing meaning and lan-
guage to their essential origin in the subjective acts of spon-
taneous, interpretative, creative thinking. Its risk lies in a pos-
sible blindness to the aspect of receptivity, i.e., to the objective
restraint that is experienced in operating with a given linguistic
system and in the apprehension of meanings. Thus, all the three
systems would be one-sided and would err at some point. In
order to grasp the essential structure of expressions qua ex-
pressions we have to fix our attention on the total nexus of
phenomena in their inalienable unity. The three aspects supple-
ment one another.
The doctrine of the ideality of meanings has to be understood
in this enlarged perspective, if we are not to be guilty of hypo-
statisation. The ideality is not an original one. Meanings are not
self-existent. They do not constitute an ontological region of
their own. Their ideality is derivative. They presuppose both a
linguistic system and the spontaneity of the subjective act of
thinking. At the same time such is the very nature of human
subjectivity that what it generates it also receives as passively
pre-given. This gives rise to the transcendental question - how is
it possible for a real personal subject to generate meanings that
are ideal, impersonal and objective?
The ideality of meanings is purely phenomenological. Of them
it holds good that they are as they are given. They are in that
sense pure phenomena. They do not point to a noumenon whose
phenomena they are. Understanding captures them - if it does this
at all- in toto, not in aspects or perspectives. In this last respect
they are like sense-data. But they are unlike sense-data in so
far as the sense-data point to the perceptual object as their
substratum which is presented through them. Meanings, no
doubt, make reference to reality possible, but this reference is
MEANING AND TRUTH-II 55
not to be construed as the reference of a phenomenon to its
noumenon. The analogy, often stressed, between perceptual
apprehension of sensible objects and intellectual apprehension of
meanings breaks down here.
II
III
Now that the concepts of meaning and truth have been iden-
tified and located we may proceed to investigate the relation
that obtains between them. In any concrete knowledge situation,
such as when I know an object while at the same time either
naming or referring to it by an expression (as when I name what I
perceive as "This man here before me"), it should be obvious that
meaning and truth are together in an inalienable unity.
Meaning belongs to expressions and is grasped through an act
of understanding, howsoever such an act may be interpreted.
Truth belongs to knowledge. The difference and yet the inter-
relation between them is exactly what concerns us here. It must
be clear that the two represent two different attitudes. In the
attitude of mere understanding I merely apprehend the meaning,
and in so far as the meaning determines the mode of reference I
also apprehend the type of reference it is capable of being used
to make. But all this does not amount to knowledge. When, on
the other hand, I know, the general reference is made determinate
through intuition or experience; the object, and not the meaning,
is what is given as it is really in itself. In this sense, knowledge of
MEANING AND TRUTH-II 59
A as A presupposes understanding of the meaning of 'A'. In
this sense, meaning is presupposed by truth, but truth goes
beyond meaning. Whether truth can be had except through the
via media of meaning would depend upon whether or not we
have a mode of knowledge which is not linguistic. It seems,
however, to me - to quote Merleau-Ponty - that we are 'con-
demned to meaning'. The reference of knowledge to its object
presupposes the reference of expressions. The latter reference,
however, remains indeterminate. We can think of things that
we do not know, and can understand possibilities that exceed the
scope of actual knowledge.
Formal logic may be construed as a logic of meanings. It deals
with two levels of problems: first, the problem of demarcating
meaningful from meaningless sequences of meanings, and, next,
the problem of the relations of compatibility, incompatibility
and entailment amongst meanings. Accordingly, formal logic
falls into two strata: a logical grammar and a logic of non-con-
tradiction.
An incidental point needs to be emphasised. It concerns the
distinction between analytic and synthetic truths. From the
point of view of a theory of meaning, such a distinction is rele-
vant: there are true propositions which are true by virtue of
their component meanings, and there are those whose truth is
left undetermined by the relations obtaining among the com-
ponent meanings.
In a logic of knowledge, on the other hand, such a distinction
becomes pointless. For all knowledges are so far alike that their
truth consists in the apprehension of their objects as they really
are. It is only when the propositional content is abstracted from
the knowledge and is treated as a self-subsistent meaning that
the question of its analyticity or otherwise becomes significant.
This, I guess, would partly explain the absence of this distinction
in Indian logic which is a logic of knowledge rather than of
meaning.
CHAPTER VI
Of the many problems that come under the title of this sym-
posium, two stand out as the most important. These are: 'How is
language related to reality?' and 'Is language a suitable medium
for knowing reality?'. This paper shall have something to say
about each of these problems. However, each of these questions
reveals an ambiguity that is due to the ambiguity of the word
'reality'. By 'reality' is sometimes meant real things, events,
facts and persons which go to constitute what we in common
parlance call the real world. But 'reality' is also sometimes,
especially in metaphysical discourse, taken to mean ultimate
or metaphysical reality in which case it denotes something that
stands behind and beyond the world of things and persons which
is but its appearance. One who asks the first question, namely
'What is the relation between language and reality?' may be
asking 'How is language related to the real things and persons
which constitute the real world?', or he may be asking 'How is
language related to the ultimate metaphysical reality, to the
Absolute or Brahman ?'. Similarly, the second question may mean
either the same as 'Is language a suitable medium for knowing
the nature of the empirical world of things and persons?' or the
same as 'Is language a suitable medium for apprehending the
nature of the ultimate metaphysical reality?'.
Now of these two sets of questions it seems extremely dif-
ficult to tackle those concerning ultimate metaphysical reality.
In order to be able even to make a start with them one should
have a conception of that reality, which raises a metaphysical
problem of the highest order and importance. The term 'meta-
* Read at the Centre of Advanced Study in Philosophy, Banaras Hindu University
in November, 1965.
LANGUAGE & REALITY 6r
ON REFERENCE*
1 G. Frege, "Dber Sinn und Bedeutung"., Zt. /. Philos. Kritik, NF :roo (:r892), p.
29. Now also in G. Frege, Funktion, Begriff, Bedeutung, G6ttingen, 1962, p. 42.
74 ON REFERENCE
for this is that they also have an aspect of meaning whose gene-
rality transcends the unique referent.
4-5. The key points in the above analysis may be stated thus:
in the first place, linguistic discourse appears to succeed in
making unique reference only because it is not self-sufficient,
but is tagged on to a non-linguistic, non-theoretical participation
in, or communion with the world of objects and persons. Second-
ly, this latter participation or communion would have been
equally ineffective, though in an opposite sense, were it not
for the fact that it finds itself within a linguistic discourse.
Finally every individual object or person presents itself from with-
in a field which again is possible only within the world. Sub-
jectively speaking, a non-thetic, non-linguistic consciousness of
the world is the background from which language serves to cut
off a field which is further narrowed down by the linguistic
mechanism till the last gap is bridged by a thetic but practical
relationship. Uniqueness is the objective counterpart of this
practical relationship, and the unique reference of language,
even of the' this', is derived from it.
CHAPTER VIII
II
III
We have shown earlier that that in knowledge which makes it
amenable to logical analysis is the content. Now this is likely to
2 Cpo J. N. Mohanty, "The Given" in the Proceedings 0/ tke Delhi Philosophical
Colloquium, Indian International Centre, Delhi, 1964. [Reprinted in this volume].
REMARKS ON THE CONTENT THEORY
I. PHILOSOPHICAL METHOD
dealt with this problem fall back upon such words as 'this',
here', 'now'. But the mere fact that even these words have an
aspect of sense distinguishable from their reference makes it
possible that one can understand them without knowing what
precisely is being uniquely referred to. We have to recognise
that a knowledge of the unique individual is far from being a
contemplative affair. It is necessary to recognise the distinction
between two basic modes of givenness: the theoretical and the
practical. The unique particular (physical object) and the unique
individual (person) are identified not through theoretic con-
templation but through practical relationships.
In theory of perception this distinction saves us from much
embarrassment. It is well known how the vexed question of the
perception of physical objects has been treated in contemporary
philosophy. Starting with the sense-data, the qualities or the
essences as the only given elements, philosophers have found
themselves compelled to regard the physical object either as
totally unknown (but believed on 'animal faith') or as
merely inferred or even as a construction out of those elements.
N one of these consequences has proved acceptable for one reason
amongst others that they all go against that primary evidence
with which things are given in unreflective experience. Things
are not given in that theoretical attitude in which one discovers
sense-data or essences. Philosophers, as Whitehead rightly saw,
have erred in regarding perception as a contemplative experience,
and the percipient person as a passive epistemological subject
which he is not. In the reflective and contemplative attitude,
the stubborn brute physical objects recede to the background
and in thejr place we are confronted with sense-data and essences.
This, and not the much discussed argument from illusion, is the
real source of the sense datum approach, which is destined to failure
as it surreptitiously seeks to replace the data of one mode by
those of another. It is not true to contend that the sense datum
theory is only an alternate linguistic recommendation, the
physical object language being another such possibility. The
truth seems to be that they are not co-ordinate possibilities
but are rooted in two successive modes of disclosure, the phy-
sical object being given in the primary, unreflective practical
mode and the sense-data in a subsequent reflective and theo-
PHENOMENOLOGY AND ONTOLOGY IOI
retical mode. Each theory, or each language if you like, has thus
its own justification. Given the physical object, it can of course
be analysed into sense-data and essences. 11 But the theoretician's
attempt to recompose that original pre-theoretical unity out
of these data is bound to fail.
As with the problem of our perception of physical objects, so
also with the problem of our knowledge of other persons. Here
again it is an erroneous procedure to begin with my awareness of
myself and then to search for some means (inference, empathy or
Einfuhlung) by which I could reach, apprehend or realise other
selves. It is again through a system of practical relationships
that I discover others as well as myself, in fact both together and
as inseparable. This is the element of truth in Heidegger's con-
tention that the person is, in his essential structure, 'with others'.
As the practical relationships reveal the person-with-other-
persons, so does theoretical reflection lead through various
stages to the transcendental subjectivity of Kant and Husserl.
Husserl was right when he insisted that even the transcen-
dental subjectivity is intentional, so that the Advaita conception
of a pure non-intentional consciousness is beyond phenomenolo-
gy. Such a purely non-intentional consciousness is not given at all
in any of the modes of givenness, theoretical or practical. The
notion of pure consciousness represents the limiting point of
our turning away from the ontological attitude, and since the
phenomenological mode has always its correlative ontology,
the supposed pure non-intentional consciousness cannot even
be a phenomenological datum. It can therefore be postulated
only by an act of faith.
The practical mode thus reveals on the one hand the world of
things and on the other a community of persons, the 'It' and the
'Thou'. Corresponding to this we may draw the distinction,
following Kant,12 between the technically practical and the
morally practical. Both present real existence and conceptually
* First published in the Proceedings of the Indian Philosophical Congress, Cut tack,
1959·
1 Cpo my Nicolai Hartmann and A. N. Whitehead: A Study in Recent Platonism,
Calcutta, 1957.
I08 A NOTE ON MODERN NOMINALISM
II
III
IV
always 'wisdom of .... '; 'this specific shade of red' is also 'this
specific shade of red of .... '
Nothing that Quine has said serves the purnpose of demolishing
platonism.
I would conclude this note by referring again to that peculiar,
and often perplexing, blurring of the distinction between indivi-
duals and universals that we find not only in modern platonism,
but also in modern nominalism. Also, we have seen in part how
the position advocated by Goodman is a "meeting of extremes",
universalism and nominalism. I would now urge that the same
strain is also there in Quine's thinking. But for substantiating this
point, I can do no better than quote from Strawson's "Singular
Terms, Ontology and Identity" .19 Strawson rightly detects in
Quine, on the one hand, "a professed nominalism, the acknow-
ledged preference for an ontology of concrete particulars" and,
on the other, an "unconscious drive towards platonism, showing
itself in the consequences - not, of course, envisaged by Quine
himself - of the attempt to discard singular terms as fundamen-
tally superfluous" .
This perplexing situation, in which the controversy between
realism and nominalism finds itself today, demands that some
fundamentally new way of establishing the difference between
individuals and universals be found out. But to do that is not
the purpose of this note; to have drawn attention to the situ-
ation is enough for my purpose.
II
I. The distinction between the ideal sphere and the real sphere
is not the same as the distinction between Form and Matter.
Neither is the ideal sphere a realm of mere Forms, nor is the real
that of mere Matter. The idealities are also material in character
and the real is also formed content. The Form-Matter distinction
thus reappears within each of the two primary spheres and so
cannot be identified with the distinction between the spheres.
which the real is a selected actualisation. The ideal sphere has its
own modes of possibility and actuality, just as the real world has
its own. There are the modes of 'ideal-actuality' and 'real-possi-
bility' which the tradition overlooks. And, the real-actual is an
actualisation of 'real-possibility', but not of 'ideal-possibility'.
N either in the real world nor in the ideal, is there mere possi-
bility, that is to say, possibility which is not actualised. In the
real world, an event is possible only when the series of con-
ditions is completely given. But when this series is complete, the
event is also actual. That is to say, what is 'real-possible' is si-
multaneously, at that very instant, also 'real-actual'. Similarly,
in the ideal sphere actuality being only a secondary mode, a
mere shadow of the mode of possibility, what is 'ideal-possible' is
already 'ideal-actual'. As such, the usual notion that the range of
possibility is wider than that of actuality is false. It does not
hold good of either of the primary spheres of being.
By rejecting the above errors of tradition, Hartmann gives a new
form to the two-world theory which ever since Plato has been a
recurrent philosophical motive. This novelty may be stated with
regard to the problem of the relation between the two spheres.
The alternatives in terms of which the tradition of philosophy
has formulated its answer are the following: -
Either, the relation is one of determination, the precise na-
ture of the determination being conceived mainly in two ways.
The ideal sphere may determine the real world as the categories
determine the concretum they constitute. Or, the ideal sphere
may be the telos, the perfection towards which the real aspires.
Both forms of determination - whether categorial or teleolo-
gical - are rejected by Hartmann as being distortions of the si-
tuation. The identification of idealities with categories has al-
ready been shown to be erroneous. Teleological determination a-
gain is out of place in a purely ontological situation. The ideal
and the real are two primary spheres of being and there is no
degree of being, no scale of perfection in order of being. Not only
is the ideal sphere not more perfect than the real, but one can
rather say the reverse, if one can at all speak of more or less
perfection. Hartmann does suggest a reversal of the usual judg-
ment of value by demonstrating the superiority (?) of the real
world over the ideal.
FOUNDATIONS OF HARTMANN'S ONTOLOGY I2I
III
The significance of all this for ontology is great. The separa-
tion between the two spheres is now complete. The autonomy
and independence of each from the other is established. With the
radical separation between the modalities of the spheres, the
crux of the situation is reached. The modalities are the most
fundamental categories. They are the categories which along
with the inter-modal relations bring into concrete relief the mode
of being (Seinsweise) of each sphere. With demonstration of the
radical difference between the modal categories of the two spheres,
absolute separation between the spheres is set on a sure footing.
This is further strengthened by rejection of the possibility of
any 'influence' or 'determination' of the one by the other.
1ZZ FOUNDATIONS OF HARTMANN'S ONTOLOGY
IV
v
Comparison with the cosmology of A. N. Whitehead affords us
with an important case of the principle involved here. White-
head's distinction between actual entities and eternal objects is a
parallel to Hartmann's two sphere theory. But also like Hart-
mann, Whitehead recognises two secondary spheres of 'hybrid'
entities: propositions (corresponding to Hartmann's sphere of
logic) and feeling (which includes Hartmann's sphere of know-
ledge). Thus the ontology and the cosmology present the same
external pattern. But their inner motives and executions show
great differences and these differences illustrate the principle of
criticism suggested in the above section.
To bring this out, the course of development of Whitehead's
platonism must be mentioned. The early works on natural phi-
losophy had introduced the distinction between 'events' and
'objects'. 'Objects' were those elements in nature which were
'recognisable', which are the same. 'Events' on the other hand
I26 FOUNDATIONS OF HARTMANN'S ONTOLOGY
6 The Process and Reality also makes a distinction between 'general' possibilities
and 'real' possibility, but the latter is not an independent and autonomous mode,
but only a limitation of the former.
Iz8 FOUNDATIONS OF HARTMANN'S ONTOLOGY
7 This suggestion was given to the author by Josef Konig inthe course of a private
conversation, although the responsibility of using it in the present form is the pre-
sent author's own.
CHAPTER XII
1 I. Kant, Kritik der reinen Vernuntt, Kant Werke III, p. 206, ed. by Cassirer.
REMARKS ON NICOLAI HARTMANN'S MODAL DOCTRINE I3I
II
III
4 Ibid., p. 155.
REMARKS ON NICOLAI HARTMANN'S MODAL DOCTRINE 135
THE 'OBJECT' IN
EDMUND HUSSERL'S PHENOMENOLOGY*
II
III
? Ideas, p. 366.
8 Ideas, p. 367.
9 Ideas, p. 367.
10 Ideas, p. 366.
11 1. Kant, Kritik der reinen Vernun/t, KW III, edited by Cassirer, p. 264: "Ich
verstehe unter der Idee einen notwendigen Vernunftbegriff, dem kein kongruierender
Gegenstand in den Sinnen gegeben werden kann".
144 'OBJECT' IN EDMUND HUSSERL'S PHENOMENOLOGY
IV
12 Ideas, p. I66.
'OBJECT' IN EDMUND HUSSERL'S PHENOMENOLOGY 145
v
In this section, we are to consider the philosophical signi-
ficance of what Husserl calls 'phenomenological reduction'.
Phenomenological reduction 'brackets' the entire natural world.
Things of the outer world and events of the psychological world -
all go together. All objective formations, aesthetic, cultural,
social- suffer the same fate. The phenomenologist is relentless in
the use of his weapon, till he attains to pure immanent experience.
The least shade of transcendence is repugnant to this motive.
We need to examine the arguments that underlie Husserl's
censure of the objective world. Are they new or are they only
old wine put into a new bottle? Novelty in philosophical argu-
ment is a rare treat; and what passes for novelty is, in most cases,
not so in fact. There are two main arguments in Husserl's sketch
of phenomenological reduction in his I deen; and with regard to
both of them, doubt arises if they are but modern versions of the
same old idealistic arguments, that had drawn Kant's attention.
2. The second argument follows from the first and has more
obvious affiliation with the idealistic thought of the past. Here is
a revival of the Cartesian doubt, may be, as its author claims,
with profounder implications. Phenomenological reduction starts
with something like the Cartesian doubt, but it is not exactly that.
Nor is it a negation of the starting point. Midway between thesis
and antithesis is the neutral. Phenomenological reduction 'brac-
kets' the thesis, sets it 'out of action', 'disconnects' it, makes no
use of it, suspends belief in it without yet generating disbelief.
Since we are not to pass straight off into the antithesis of the
naturalistic thesis, we are not required to doubt all Being. To
doubt the Being of anything, Husserl recognizes, is a self-con-
tradiction. I can doubt any object of awareness only in respect
of its being actually there. This amended form of doubt necessi-
tates not a negation of Being, but a suspension of the natura-
listic thesis.
The whole philosophy of doubt, of which the present is a
modern version, is based on the faith, examined above, that inner
experience alone yields certain and indubitable knowledge. 17
Kant's Refutation of Idealism is a direct challenge to this belief.
But there is quite another way in which the very fundamentals
of Kantianism throw out a challenge to this type of philosophi-
zing. According to Husserl, as according to most idealists, no
awareness of objects gives anything absolute. That may be cor-
rect. But from this to pass over to the contention that the non-
17 "To every stream of experience, and to every Ego as such, there belongs ,in prin·
ciple the possibility of securing this selfevidence: each of us bears in himself the war-
rant of his absolute existence (Daseins) as a fundamental possibility ... That which
floats before the mind may be a mere fiction; the floating itself, the fiction-producing
consciousness, is not itself imagined, and the possibility of a perceiving reflection
which lays hold on absolute existence belongs to its essence as it does to every experi-
ence. (Ideas, p. 130). Is this not Cartesian?
'OBJECT' IN EDMUND HUSSERL'S PHENOMENOLOGY I49
VI
24 Ideas, p. 345-46.
CHAPTER XIV
12 Ibid., p. 387.
13 Ibid., p. 13.
14 Logische Untersuchungen, Vol. II, Part I, p. 240.
15 Ibid., p. 2S1.
16 Ibid., p. 248'
17 Ibid., p. 248; also compare Ideen, Vol. I, p. IS.
IS6 INDIVIDUAL FACT AND ESSENCE IN HUSSERL
35 Die Krisis der europiiischen Wissenscha/ten (Husserliana, Vol. VI), pp. 28, 36.
CHAPTER XV
thing else up there ?", "Are you sure you are seeing one or are you
imagining one?" etc.
The second group of questions is of course answered, and the
answer vindicated, without appealing to the self-luminousness of
consciousness. Further, Mr. A need not - now I am answering
Ryle - vindicate his assertion of the fact that there is a bird's
nest up there by appealing to any direct deliverance of conscious-
ness. He says, and need say even on the self-luminousness theory,
that he sees one. But the sophisticated question "How do you
know that you know?" has to be answered, if we are to avoid an
infinite regress, by admitting at some point of the answer that
something is known without being an object of another knowled-
ge. The self-luminousness theory says that my knowing that I
am seeing is not another act synchronous with seeing or indis-
solubly welded with it (Ryle, to be fair, sees thjs), but that my
knowing 0 and my knowing that I am knowing 0 are one and the
same act. The Vedantist is well aware that when the self-lu-
minous consciousness is said to be 'known' by itself, this word
'known' is used in a pickwickian sense and not in the same sense
in which one says of a proposition that it is known. That which
makes possible all knowledge cannot itself be an object of know-
ledge: this was also the point Kant wanted to make out against
the rationalist psychology of his time.
ON G. E. MOORE'S DEFENCE OF
COMMON SENSE*
* First published in the Indian Journal of Philosophy, II, 1960, NO.4, 1-10.
1 J.
H. Muirhead (ed.), Contemporary British Philosophy (Second Series), London,
1925, pp. 193-223.
2 G. Ryle, Dilemmas, Cambridge, 1954, p. 3.
ON G. E. MOORE'S DEFENCE OF COMMON SENSE I7I
2.I. In reply to the above, one may quite well agree to dis-
pense with the word 'common sense' while appealing instead to
the beliefs that are common to the plain men of Europe and
North America! This is in fact what Thomas Reid means when
in his Reflections on the Common Theory of Ideas, he says, re-
ferring to Berkeley's philosophy:
If a plain man, uninstructed in Philosophy, has faith to
receive these mysteries, how great must be his astonish-
ment! ... After his mind is somewhat composed it will
be natural for him to ask his philosophical instructor:
Pray, Sir, are there then no substantial and permanent
beings called the sun and moon, which continue to exist
whether we think of them or not? ... 3
It is the beliefs of 'the plain man, uninstructed in Philosophy'
which, it might be suggested, Moore was defending. This how-
ever cannot be Moore's intention. For, firstly, Moore certainly
does not believe in all that the plain man, uninstructed in phi-
losophy, believes to be true. And he seeks to defend the truth
only of some of the beliefs of the plain man. Secondly, the beliefs
of the plain man, depending largely upon his religious and cul-
tural background, may - and, in fact, do - include a large num-
ber of beliefs which Moore, I presume, would not undertake to
defend. 4
3 I am indebted to my friend Eberhard Bubser for pointing out this passage to me.
4 When the words 'common sense', 'commonsense beliefs' are used in the rest of
this paper, they are to be understood in the light of the remarks in para. 2.
I72 ON G. E. MOORE'S DEFENCE OF COMMON SENSE
though one loves one's homeland in spite of all her faults, one
can transcend that love to reach a wider love of humanity. What
however is more important is that one understands one's love
only when one can contemplate it from a distance. What I
wish to suggest ;s this: the true character of common sense belief
as a belief cannot be revealed to me unless I can look at it from
outside, as a neutral spectator - that is to say, unless in so far as
I philosophize, I suspend my beliefs, neutralize them as it were,
do not live in them, do not let myself to be merged in them, and
so on. It is true that I have thereby to experience an existential
paradox to which I have just now referred.
There are certain limitations that fall within that whose limi-
tations they are: they fall within it in the sense that you can
grasp them while confining yourself to the same level of exper-
ience. But there are certain other limitations - which are really
fundamental - which you can grasp only when there is a radical
transcendence of the level of experience concerned. The inac-
curacies, inadequacies, hesitations, ambiguities and the vague-
ness of common sense belong to the first group of limitations. I
would even say that when science corrects common sense, it
improves upon limitations of the first kind. Science does not
therefore bring about a radical reformulation of the notions of
common sense. A radical transcendence, and therefore a funda-
mental understanding, of common sense requires what has been
characterized as a neutralization of common sense beliefs or
what Husserl would have called a 'phenomenological bracketing'
of them. Moore - should I say even at the risk of appearing
audacious? - has not given us a genuine philosophy of common
sense, for he has not gone into the roots of common sense be-
liefs. He has not exhibited these beliefs as beliefs. He has not
been able to do this, for he wanted to defend common sense.
Thereby he played the role of a partisan and not of an enquirer.
REFLECTIONS ON THE NY A Y A
THEORY OF A VA Y A VIPRA TY AK$A *
3 Nyayasutra 2.1.34.
4 Commentary on NyayasUtra 2.1.35.
5 Uddyotakara, Vartika on Nyayasurta 2.I.35.
THE NYAYA THEORY OF AVAYAVIPRATYAK!?A 187
"do we not refer to a wood or to an army as one object, although
the wood or the army really is a mere aggregate of many dif-
ferent things? Why then would it not be possible in a similar
manner to refer to a tree as one object though in reality it is a
mere aggregate ?"6 To this, the Nyaya replies in the following
manner. It is true that we mistake from a distance, or on account
of other dO$as, a mere aggregate or a plurality for a unity, so that
instead of saying 'These are many', we say 'This is one'. Such a
sense of unity is no doubt erroneous. But such an erroneous
sense of unity is possible, only if there are other cases, where our
sense of unity is right.7 But if, as the Buddhist contends, all sense
of unity is erroneous, then even those cases where, all are agreed,
a plurality is mistaken as a unity would remain unexplained. 8
Vatsayana anticipates the modern phenomenalists' view that we
do have a right sense of unity, not of course in the case of our
apprehension of a tree, but certainly in the case of our apprehen-
sion of a sense-datum, and has two replies to offer. First, since we
have one instance of a sense of unity being right (e.g. 'This is one
sound') and another instance of unity being wrong, i.e. mis-
placed(e.g. 'This wood is one object'), some satisfactory reason
needs to be advanced, before assimilating the case under con-
sideration ('This is one tree') to the one rather than to the other:
the phenomenalist has given no satisfactory reason for assim-
ilating it to the latter type. Secondly, the phenomenalist has
no satisfactory reason for regarding what we call sound as one
entity. Leaving apart Vacaspati's reminder that some of the
Vaibha~ikas in fact did regard even a sound as an aggregate of
atoms, we have to remember the extreme difficulty - perhaps
impossibility - of identifying a sense-datum as one sense-datum.
Even if we are ever rightly able so to identify, the proper pro-
cedure would be to assimilate 'This is one sound' type of state-
ment to 'This is one tree' - type rather than go the other way
about. Vatsayana however has his own special reason for regard-
ing 'This is one tree' as a right application of the concept of
unity and not as a case of error. For we also say, 'This is a single,
6 Nyiiyasutra 2.I.36.
7 Vatsayana, "Atasminstaditi pratyayasya pradhiiniipek§itatviit pradhaniisidhi[r,"
commentary on Nyayasutra 2.I.36.
8 Uddyotakara, "Mithyiipratyaya apyete na bhavanti pradhiiniibhiiviit" Viirtika
on Nyiiyasutra 2.I.36.
ISS THE NYAYA THEORY OF AVAYAVIPRATYAK;>A
14 This case is different from the case of doubt or error where I perceive a part, no
doubt, but there are also certain vitiating factors (do$as) that render the perception of
the whole impossible, or there are conditions that render certain knowledge impossible
and give rise, instead, to doubt.
THE NYAYA THEORY OF AVAYAVIPRATYAK~A I9I
II
Thus far it was our task to elaborate the arguments of Gauta-
ma and his commentator, with a view to exhibiting their re-
levance to the contemporary discussions of the problem of per-
ception. What has been said would suffice, it is hoped, to show
that the Nyaya distinction between avayavin and avayava is a
most valuable means of rehabilitating the physical object lan-
guage. It is now left for us to ask what precisely is the nature of
the unity of the avayavin? The Nyaya, of course, tells us two
things about it. It is in the first place something other than the
mere assemblage of parts. And secondly the unity of the whole
resides in each of the parts in the relation of samavaya, while it is
wrong to say that the parts reside in the whole. In the following, we
shall attempt a phenomenological interpretation of these two
points, and in doing so, we shall, of course, depart from the naive-
ontological attitude of the Nyaya-Vaise;;ika system. Before,
however, we undertake this, it is necessary to draw attention to
certain unsatisfactory features of the Nyaya account.
In the first place, it should be borne in mind - and this is not
exactly pointing out a drawback of the theory - that Nyaya
does not bring out the exact difference between the mode of
perceiving the part and the mode of perceiving the whole. One of
the ways of doing this would have been to say that whereas the
part is perceived through the relation of samyoga, the whole
I92 THE NYAYA THEORY OF AVAYAVIPRATYAK$A
The real difficulty with the Nyaya account does not lie here.
It has to be sought in the arbitrary way it seeks to limit the con-
ception of avayavin. Firstly, not all conjunctions of parts, it is
said, give rise to true wholes. It is only a special kind of con-
junction that is regarded as giving rise to a true whole. Now it
seems to me that the N yaya- Vaise~ika theory is not quite clear
about the precise nature of this special kind of conjunction. It
also further seems to me that no strict line of demarcation can be
drawn between that conjunction of substances that gives rise to
a true whole and that conjunction which does not, for one reason,
amongst others, that the Nyaya-Vaise~ika philosophy believes in
the separability of the parts of even an avayavin (For the last
mentioned reason, the unity of the avayavin cannot be regarded
as what has come to be called an organic unity). No strict line of
demarcation, in that case, could be drawn amongst physical
objects, between genuine wholes and pseudo-wholes. The Nyaya-
Vaise~ika philosopher supposedly has, in mind, the idea that
genuine wholes are produced in a manner or in a sense in which
the pseudo-wholes are not. What precisely this manner is, in
what sense the idea of production applies to one and not to the
other case, and how precisely the conjunction of parts in the one
case differs from that in the other, - these are questions on which
no further light could be thrown except by referring to the way a
potter makes a pot or a carpenter a table. Perhaps the maker
alone knows the secret, but who then can be sure that some
whole has a maker and some others have not? Certainly the
separate physical objects are conceived by Nyaya as true ava-
yavins, in so far as the system believes in a maker for them all
on the analogy of a potter. But why, then, are we debarred from
treating the world as a whole as the ultimate avayavin? Nyaya
a voids this consequence by taking God's authorship of the world to
mean not that God has produced the world as a whole, regarded
as one single entity, as the potter produces a pot, but only that
His authorship pertains to each physical object taken sepa-
rately.
We thus notice the extreme difficulty of limiting the concept
posite relation like samyukta-samaviiya, yet in that relation it is given all by itself
and is not contacted through any of its parts (though again the gu'{/-a is contacted
through a substance, and a universal through its instances).
I94 THE NYAYA THEORY OF AVAYAVIPRATYAK~A
III
* First published in the Visva Bharati Journal of Philosophy, III, 1966, 15-35.
1 Viitsiiyana for example defines Nyaya as Pratyak$dgamdsritamanumdnam
(Bha~ya on NyayaSl1tra 1.1.1.).
2 What is more, the Nyiiya goes to the extent of holding that a formally invalid
inference is even psychologically impossible, the socalled hetvdbhdsas being, not
errors in inference, but conditions which render an inference psychologically as well
as logically impossible.
NYAYA THEORY OF DOUBT I99
the nature of the object with the help of the various sources of
true knowledge) presupposes a prior state of doubt; though the
Nyaya allows for the case where we make an inference even when
there is prior certainty, there being however a special desire to
infer. The fact remains however that apart from such cases of
intellectual curiosity to provide reasons for what one already
knows for certain the most important stimulation for making an
inference is provided by a doubt about the presence of the
siidhya in the pak$a (e.g. of the fire in the hill).
It is further important to bear in mind the fact that for the
N yaya, as for most systems of Indian philosophy, doubt is a species
of knowledge, so that if I have a doubt of the form 'Is S p or not?",
most Indian logicians would say that I am having a knowledge-
though not a valid one about S. This rather strange contention,
so much at variance with both the philosophical and the ordi-
nary usages of the English word 'knowledge' may be accounted
for in either of two ways. It may be either that the Indian phi-
losophers, supported by the conventions of the Sanskrit language,
are using the word in such a wide sense as to include even doubt
and error. Or, it may be - and this seems to me to be the more
reasonable account - that the Sanskrit word 'Jiiiina' should not
be rendered into the English word 'knowledge', so that doubt and
error are species of]iiiina but not of knowledge. 'Jiiiina' means any
conscious state which is characterised by a reference to an object
beyond it, and surely doubt and error are states in which we are
conscious of something. To be conscious of something amounts,
according to the Nyaya, to having a jiiiina about that object.
There are various classifications of jiiiina, the most usual one
being into anubhuti and smrti (memory). The former may conve-
niently be defined as all jiiiina other than memory. Anubhuti
again is usually subdivided into pramii (or true) and apramii (or
false). A true jiiiina is one in which the object is known exactly as
it is, and a false one is one in which the object is known as what it
is not. 3 False jiiiina is either doubt or error. It may be noted that
the exact equivalent of the English word 'knowledge', in this
scheme, is 'pramiijiiiina'. Doubt is a kind of false jiiiina.
Since it has now been pointed out that 'jiiiina' is not strictly
synonymous with 'knowledge', we shall henceforth in this paper
8 Memory also is apramii, but not in the sense in which doubt or error is so.
200 NYAYA THEORY OF DOUBT
II
4 For a more detailed account of this and the allied concepts see Mohanty, Gan·
geSa's Theory 0/ Truth, Santiniketan, 1966, Introduction. See also Ingalls, Materials
/01' the Study 0/ Navya Nyaya Logic, Harvard, 1951.
NYAYA THEORY OF DOUBT 20I
nevertheless point out that the above analysis still misses some-
thing essential to doubt qua doubt.
There were amongst the Naiyayikas some who sought to reduce
a doubt-sentence to the compresence of two contradictory asser-
tions 'S is p' and'S is not p'. This view traditionally ascribed to
the author of Ratnako$a is voiced by GangeSa, when he in course
of an argumentation with the Mimamsakas, contends that doubt
is nothing but such joint predication.13 Happily, this view is not
shared by GangeSa himself, for he tells us soon after that doubts
are characterised by Kotyutkatatva, i.e. difference in the relative
strength of the alternative predicates. In a mere compresence of
two predications, the question of relative strength of the alter-
natives would not arise. Vacaspati refers to three possibilities
from this point of view: either the affirmative predicate (p) is
relatively stronger, or the negative predicate ('"" p) is the stronger
one, or it may be that both the alternatives are equally strong. 14
In any case, doubt would involve an oscillation of the mind be-
tween the two alternatjves: it is this which he has in mind when
Vardhamana so aptly characterises doubt as doliiyitiinekakotika,15
i.e. as a knowledge where there is, as it were, an oscillation be-
tween the alternatives. I think, it is this state of the mind, this
doliiyitatva that is an essential character of doubt and should be
added to the structural analysis explained above, - unless of
course it could be shown that such a character follows from the
structure revealed in (4). I do not know however how this could
be shown.
Distinction should nevertheless be drawn between doubt and
question. Doubt is no doubt one of the sources of enquiry, though
not all doubt is so. There are doubts that are not important
enough and are just set aside and do not initiate any enquiry
whatsoever.16
III
before him as a this, and may be along with some other generic
characters. Gangesa suggests two reasons why this factor should
be regarded as an essential precondition of all doubt qua doubt.
If dharmijfiiina were not required for all doubts, there ought not to
have been the rule that all doubts must have some substantive.l7
In fact, however, doubts are of the form K [{s} (p). {s} (,....., p)],
and not of the form K [(p). ('"" p)]. Further, the property that in
doubts one of the alternatives may be stronger than the other
(kotyutkatatva) cannot be explained otherwise, for in the know-
ledge K [(p). (,....., p)], 'p' and ''"'' p' should have no difference in
status; any difference which they may have must be in their
relation to the's' which is being apprehended as's'.
(ii) Mere dharmijfiiina is not enough to produce a doubt. More-
over mere knowledge of's' as's' does not explain why the doubt
should have the predicates 'p' and' '"" p' and not the predicates,
let us say, 'q' and ',....., q'. We need therefore another positive,
general condition, namely a remembrance of the two alternatives
'p' and ',....., p'. This is what is called vise~asmrti, 'p' and ',....., p'
being the vise~as or specific characters. It may also be called
kotismrti for they are also called the kotis or alternatives.
(b) The negative general condition necessary for all doubts
qua doubt is non-perception of the specific characters as belong-
ing to the substantive (vise~a-adarsana). Definite knowledge of
the presence of any of the specific characters in the substantive is
a hindrance to doubt. If the supposed doubter knew for certain
that s has p, or if he knows for certain that s has,....., p, then the
doubt 'Is s p or ,....., p?' would not obviously arise. Hence the ab-
sence of such specific knowledge is a necessary condition of all
doubt qua doubt.1 8
B. While the conditions listed under A are necessary for there
being any doubt at all, there are however other special causes of
ledge having 0 for its object. If for any reason I have a doubt of
the form 'Is K true or not?' this would generate a further doubt
of the form 'Is 0 real or not?'
There is again a nice point of difference between (d) and (d").
In case of (d) what causes doubt about the reality or unreality of
o is not a prior doubt in the truth of K but the perception of the
generic character of 0 as an object of knowledge, this character
being consistent with both the reality and unreality of O.
The importance of the rule (d") - and one reason why it cannot
be reduced to any other - is that though a prior certainty about
an object (arthaniscaya) rules out the possibility of doubt about
the same object, nevertheless such doubt may be caused by an
intervening doubt in the truth of that initial certainty. The
sequence in such cases may be set down thus:
1. Certainty, 'K', about O. 2. Doubt: 'Is K true'?
3. Doubt: 'Is 0 real?'
In the absence of (2), (3) cannot take place when (r) has al-
ready been there, the general rule being that though doubt does
not obstruct certainty (for otherwise doubt would never be
resolved), yet certainty does exclude doubt except in the case
coming under (d' ') .
(e) Another rule, which according to many comes under the
'ea' of Gotama's sutra 1.1.23, is to the effect that a doubt about
the pervaded gives rise to a doubt about the pervader (vyiiPY-
asandehiit vyiipakasandeha).23 Smoke, for example, is pervaded
(vyiipya) by fire which is the pervader (vyiipaka) in relation to it.
Wherever there is smoke, there is fire. Smoke is never present
in any locus of the absence of fire. If a person who knows this
relationship between smoke and fire perceives smoke in a distant
hill and recognises the smoke as the vyiipya of fire, he would
naturally infer, and so arrive at a certainty that the hill also
possesses fire. If however such a person, for whatever reason,
comes to have the doubt whether what looks like smoke is really
smoke or not, he would be led to the further doubt whether the
hill possesses fire or not. Of course, here as before in the case of
inference, it is necessary that smoke should have been earlier
known and in the present recognised to be a vyiipya of fire. It
IV
30 The only rule which bears a certain semblance to the Cartesian case under
consideration is the Nyaya rule that the factor of desire (iccha) overpowers any other
set of factors tending to produce a contrary result.
218 NYAYA THEORY OF DOUBT