Nyaya (nyä'yu) [key]: see Hindu philosophy.
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Related content from HighBeam Research on: Nyaya
AGAINST IMMACULATE PERCEPTION: SEVEN REASONS FOR ELIMINATING NIRVIKALPAKA PERCEPTION FROM NYAYA. (Philosophy East and West)
PERCEPTUAL COGNITION: A NYAYA-KANTIAN APPROACH.(Critical Essay) (Philosophy East and West)
Epistemology in Pracina and Navya Nyaya.(Book review) (Philosophy East and West)
There's Nothing Wrong with Raw Perception: A Response to Chakrabarti's Attack on Nyaya's Nirvikalpaka Pratyaksa.(response to article by Arindam Chakrabarti, Philosophy East and West, vol. 50, p. 1, January 2000) (Philosophy East and West)
Perceiving particulars blindly: remarks on a Nyaya-Buddhist controversy. (Philosophy East and West)
Reply to Stephen Phillips.(article in this issue, p. 104, on perception according to Nyaya)(Brief Article) (Philosophy East and West)
Response to Roy W. Perrett's review of Classical Indian Philosophy of Mind: the Nyaya dualist tradition.(response to review in Philosophy East and West, vol. 52, 2002 ) (Philosophy East and West)
(book review) (Philosophy East and West)
IS WHATEVER EXISTS KNOWABLE AND NAMEABLE? (Philosophy East and West)
Semantic Powers: Meaning and the Means of Knowing in Classical Indian Philosophy.(Review) (Philosophy East and West)
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