The Ramayan of Valmiki & The Sánkhya Aphorisms of Kapila Buy on Amazon

https://www.ebooknetworking.net/books_detail-B007FI05V4.html

The Ramayan of Valmiki & The Sánkhya Aphorisms of Kapila

Book Details

ISBN / ASINB007FI05V4
ISBN-13978B007FI05V0
Sales Rank2,349,768
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

The Ramayan of Valmiki

Author: Va¯lmi¯ki
Translated by Ralph T. H. Griffith

The Ramayana is one of the two epic Hindu poems, the other being the Mahabharata. The Ramayana describes a love story between Rama, an ancient King, and Sita, who is captured by Ravan, the King of Ceylon. Rama lays siege to Ceylon and wins back Sita. The parallels to the Iliad are obvious, but the details are very different.


The Sánkhya Aphorisms of Kapila

Author:Kapila
Translated by James R. Ballantyne

THE great body of Hindu Philosophy is based upon six sets of very concise Aphorisms. Without a commentary, the Aphorisms are scarcely intelligible; they being designed, not so much to communicate the doctrine of the particular school, as to aid, by the briefest possible suggestions, the memory of him to whom the doctrine shall have been already communicated. To this end they are admirably adapted; and, this being their end, the obscurity which must needs attach to them, in the eyes of the uninstructed, is not chargeable upon them as a fault.

For various reasons it is desirable that there should be an accurate translation of the Aphorisms, with so much of gloss as may be required to render them intelligible. A class of pandits in the Benares Sanskrit College having been induced to learn English, it is contemplated that a version of the Aphorisms, brought out in successive portions, shall be submitted to the criticism of these men, and, through them, of other learned Bráhmans, so that any errors in the version may have the best chance of being discovered and rectified. The employment of such a version as a class-book is designed to subserve, further, the attempt to determine accurately the aspect of the philosophical terminology of the East, as regards that of the West.

These pages, now submitted to the criticism of the pandits who read English, are to be regarded as proof-sheets awaiting correction. They invite discussion.(J. R. B.)
Donate to EbookNetworking
Prev
Next