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Appendix 2 - Intellectual context

from Background information

Amber Carpenter
Affiliation:
University of York
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Summary

Writing and speaking

India of the Buddha's time, and the centuries following, was predominantly an oral culture. Script was known, but writing was not common. Instead a highly sophisticated and literary culture was transmitted orally. This included an analysis of the phonetics and grammar of Sanskrit, by the grammarian Pāṇini (probably around the sixth century BCE) unparalleled in any Indo-European language until the twentieth century. Even in the centuries following the Buddha, as writing became more widespread, practices of memorization and recitation, of debate and personal dialogue – in teaching, learning and intellectual life – remained preferred.

Texts and teaching

The Vedas are the oldest texts in India. They contain mostly hymns, myths and ritual formulae. Written in an older form of Sanskrit (now aptly called ‘Vedic Sanskrit’), by the time of Pāṇini the language of these texts was distant enough from spoken Sanskrit to require interpretation at times.

Attached to the Vedas are several related texts of three sorts, Brahmāṇas, Aranyakas and Upaniṣads. The first of these are essentially commentaries on the Vedas; the second sort, “The Wilderness Books”, also have largely to do with religious practice. In both of these, views about the nature of the universe are implicit. In the Upaniṣads, especially, we see speculative thought in earnest – reflection on the nature of human beings, the structure and origin of the universe and life, its purposes and meaning.

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Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2013

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