- Vyakarana
The
Sanskrit grammatical tradition of IAST|vyākaraṇa is one of the sixVedanga disciplines. It has its roots in lateVedic India , and includes the famous work, IAST|"Aṣṭādhyāyī", ofPāṇini (ca.4th century BCE ).The impetus for linguistic analysis and grammar in India originates in the need to be able to obtain a strict interpretation for the Vedic texts. The work of the very early Indian grammarians have been lost; for example, the work of
Sakatayana (roughly 8th c. BCE) is known only from cryptic references byYaska (ca. 6th-5th c. BCE) and Panini. One of the views of Sakatayana that was to prove controversial in coming centuries was that most nouns are etymologically derivable from verbs.In his monumental work on
etymology , "Nirukta", Yaska supported this claim based on the large number of nouns that were derived from verbs through a derivation process that became known as "krit-pratyaya"; this relates to the nature of the rootmorphemes .Yaska also provided the seeds for another debate, whether textual meaning inheres in the word (Yaska's view) or in the sentence (see Panini, and later grammarians such as
Prabhakara orBhartrihari ). This debate continued into the 14th and 15th c. CE, and is relevant even today perhaps, with the debate on the
Dynamic Turn in Semantics, which says that meaning in language is dynamically created and it may not be possible to compose the meaning from those of the wordscite book
author =Bimal Krishna Matilal
title = The word and the world: India's contribution to the study of language
publisher = Oxford
year = 1990 Chapter 8 deals with the compositionality vs holistic debate in linguistics. ] .IAST|Pāṇini's school
A few centuries after
Yaska , IAST|Pāṇini's extensive analysis of the processes ofphonology , morphology andsyntax , the "IAST|Aṣṭadhyāyī", laid down the basis for centuries of commentaries and expositions by following Sanskrit grammarians. IAST|Pāṇini's approach was amazingly formal; hisproduction rule s for deriving complex structures and sentences represent modernfinite state machine s. Indeed many of the developments inIndian Mathematics , especially theplace value notational system may have originated from IAST|Pāṇinian analysis. Panini's grammar consists of four parts:
* Śivasūtra:phonology (notations for phonemes specified in 14 lines)
* IAST|Aṣṭadhyāyī: morphology (construction rules for complexes)
* IAST|Dhātupāṭha: list of roots (classes ofverb al roots)
* IAST|Gaṇapāṭha: lists classes of primitivenominal stemsCommentators on Panini and some of their views:
* Kātyāyana (linguist and mathematician, c. 300 BCE): that the word-meaning relation is "siddha", i.e. given and non-decomposable, an idea that the SanskriticistFerdinand de Saussure called "arbitrary". Word meanings refer to universals that are inherent in the word itself (close to anominalist position).
*Patanjali (linguist and yoga sutras, c. 200 BCE) - author ofMahabhashya . The notion of "shabdapramânah" - that the evidentiary value of words is inherent in them, and not derived externally. Not to be confused with the founder of theYoga system.
* TheNyaya school, close to the realist position (as inPlato ). Considers the word-meaning relation as created through human convention. Sentence meaning is principally determined by the main noun.uddyotkara , Vachaspati (sound-universals or phonemes)
* TheMimamsa school. E.g. sentence meaning relies mostly on the verb (corresponds to the modern notion of linguistic head).Kumarila Bhatta (7th c.),prabhakara (7th c. CE).
*Bhartrihari (c. 5th c. CE) that meaning is determined by larger contextual units than the word alone (holism).
* TheBuddhist school, includingNagarjuna (logic/philosophy, c. 150 CE)Dignaga (semantics and logic, c.5th c. CE),Dharmakirti .Predecessors referred to in Ashtadhyayi include
Sakatayana , andGargya .Early Modern Indian linguists who revived Panini's school include
Bhattoji Dikshita andVaradaraja .Preceding Eleven Schools
Panini's "Ashtadhyayi", which is said to have eclipsed all other contemporary schools of grammar, mentions the names of eleven schools of Sanskrit grammar that preceded it.
These schools, most of which are now extinct are
* "Aindra"
* "Shaakataayana"
* "Apisali"
* "Sakalya"
* "Kasakrtsna"
* "Gargya"
* "Galava"
* "Kaasyapa"
* "Senaka"
* "Sphotayana"
* "Chandravarmana"Medieval Accounts
The earliest external historical accounts of Indian grammatical tradition is from Chinese
Buddhist pilgrims to India from the7th century [Frits Staal , "A Reader on the Sanskrit Grammarians", Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1972), reprint byMotilal Banarsidass , Delhi (1985), ISBN 81-208-0029-X.] .*
Xuanzang (602-664)
*I Ching (634-713)
*Fazang (643-712)The "Indica" of
Al-Biruni (973-1048), dating to ca.1030 contains detailed descriptions of all branches of Hindu science.Similar to the Chinese Buddhists,
Tibetan Buddhism aroused interest in India among its followers.Taranatha (born 1573) in his treatise of the history of Buddhism in India (completed around1608 ) speaks about Panini and provides some information about grammars, but not in the manner of a person familiar with their content.Gaudiya Vaishnava Sanskrit grammar is outlined byJiva Goswami in his IAST|Hari-nāmāmṛta-vyākaraṇam. [ [http://www.granthamandira.org/categories.php?cat_id=40 Sri Jiva] - IAST|Hari-nāmāmṛta-vyākaraṇam]Modern Sanskrit grammarians
Beginning of Western scholarship
*
Jean Francois Pons
*Henry Thomas Colebrooke
*August Wilhelm von Schlegel
*Wilhelm von Humboldt
*Dimitrios Galanos 19th century
*
Ramakrishna Gopal Bhandarkar
*Franz Kielhorn
*William Dwight Whitney
*Bruno Liebich
*Otto Boehtlingk
*Georg Bühler
*Franz Bopp
*Jacob Wackernagel , "Altindische Grammatik "20th century to present
*
Bernhard Geiger
*Leonard Bloomfield
*Paul Thieme
*Karl Hoffmann
*Louis Renou
*Herman Buiskool
*Bimal Krishna Matilal
*Paruthiyur Krishna Sastri
*Johannes Bronkhorst
*George Cardona
*Madhav Deshpande
*SD Joshi
*Paul Kiparsky
*Frits Staal
*Michael Witzel
*Kshetresa Chandra Chattopadhyaya
*Vagish Shastri
*Sri Sribhuti Krishna Goswami
*Sri Pundrik Goswami References
*Coward, Harold G., and K. Kunjunni Raja, eds., "The Philosophy of the Grammarians", Volume V of Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, ed. Karl Potter, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1990.
ee also
*
Schools of Sanskrit grammar
*Aindra school of grammar
*Sanskrit in the West
*Hari-namamrta-vyakarana
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