- Apaurusheyatva
In
Hinduism , Apaurusheyatva (IAST : IAST|Apauruṣeya),Sanskrit , "being unauthored", is used to describe theVedas , the main scripture inHinduism . This implies that the Vedas are not authored by any agency, be it human or divine. "Apaurusheya shabda" ("unauthored word") is an extension of "apaurusheya" which refers to the Vedas."Apaurusheyatva" is a central concept in the
Vedanta andMimamsa schools ofHindu philosophy . These schools accept the "Vedas" as "svatah pramana" ("self-evident means of knowledge"). These schools accept that the Vedas were "heard" by theRishi s. The Mimamsa school asserts that since the Vedas are composed of words (shabda ) and the words are composed of phonemes, the phonemes being eternal, the Vedas are also eternal. To this, if asked whether all words and sentences are eternal, the Mimamsa philosophers reply that the rules behind combination of phonemes are fixed and pre-determined for the Vedas, unlike other words and sentences. The Vedanta school also accepts this line of argument.ee also
*
shruti
*acheiropoieta
*revelation
*shabda External links
* [http://www.dvaita.net/pdf/papers/veda.pdf Vedâpauruseyatva] An overview of the concept, by Prof. D. Prahladachar, presented with the author's permission. 58855 bytes. (PDF)
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