Philosophers From India

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April 10, 2026

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"Their almost simultaneous appearance in Bengal and Central India represents an ‘unusually strong current of similar ideas and sentiments! through- out the country. ‘Vallabhacharya was the son of Lakshmana Bhatt, a Telingana Brahman, and was born at Varanasi in a. D. 1479. At twelve, Vallabha had already discovered a new Vaishnava religion, and started on a pilgrimage to preach it. He is said to have gone to the court of Krishna Dévariya of Vijayanagar, where he defeated some Shaiva pandits in discussion. It is said that while at Vrindavan, he was visited by Krishna in person. Vallabha insisted on the ‘‘complete identity of both soul and world with the Supreme Spirit”. His monism was known as Suddhaadwaita or “Pure Non-Duality”. According to him Bhakti was both ‘the means and the end; it is given by God; it comes by His grace. He conceived of Brahma as the material cause of the world, and believed that through His grace salvation could be achieved. His was the Pushti-Marg, or path of salvation through His Grace (anugraha). Pushti in its highest form enabled one to attain God; in the ordinary way it enabled one to attain the objects of one’s desires. Vallabha regarded the teacher on earth as divine, receiving divine honours. Vallabha differed from Ramanuja in so far that he believed in Suddha-adwaita, recognising no distinction between Soul and God— Soul was not His part but Him. Otherwise he also followed in the footsteps of the twelfth century master. Rimanuja’s advocacy of intense devotion to Vishnu is fully realised in Vallabh’s faith. According to both, Gurii was comparable to God. Above all, to both of them, God was full of grace, and love for His creation In essence Vallabh’s teachings were good, in practice they became “wordly". Eliot thinks that with Vallabh the vision which is generally directed Godwards and forgets the flesh, turned earth- wards and forgot God. The literature of the Vallabhacharis re- peatedly states that the Guri is the same as the deity, and often the ‘worship tended to be licentious when women worshipped the deity in the form of the priest, In the sixteenth century the Radhi- ‘Vallabhis, who gave pre-eminence to Radha, made the worship a farce bordering on obscenity. In the words of Monier Williams, “Vallabhacharyaism became in its degenerate form the Epicureanism of the East”,"

- Vallabha

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"The atomistic theory of matter appears in well established and elaborated form in various systems of Hindu philosophy... The oldest of these systems... appears to be that of the Vaiseshika, attributed to Kanada... Whether or no the... theory antedated Democritus... is... uncertain. Professor Garbe's opinion is that beyond a doubt the Indian theory is a long time after the theory of Leucippus and Democritus. L. Mabilleau, on the other hand, considers the Vaiseshika system as several centuries earlier than Democritus. ...This theory recognizes nine distinct entities constituting the universe. These are earth, water, fire, air (or wind), ether (akasa), time, space, soul, and "manas." ...Time, space, and soul are not material, though existent. The "manas" is the medium through which impressions of sense are conveyed to the soul. The first four, therefore, correspond to the four elements of Empedocles; the fifth, ether, can be compared with little similarity to the ether of Aristotle. The first four elements are composed of atoms which are eternal, never created nor destroyed. Each of these four elements exists as atoms and also as aggregates of atoms. As atoms, they are imperishable. The elements which we see or feel are aggregates of atoms and as such are subject to change, but the atoms, which are invisible, do not change. ...Akasa, or ether, is assumed not to consist of atoms, but is infinite in extent, continuous and eternal. It cannot be apprehended by the senses, but is the carrier of sound. It is also described... as all-pervasive, occupying the same space that is occupied by the various forms of matter, and therefore devoid of the property of impenetrability, characterizing the atoms of other elements."

- Kaṇāda

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