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ANEKANTVAD
According to Jain metaphysics, the reality is
constituted by innumerable material and spiritual substances, each of which is
the locus of innumerable qualities. Not only are there innumerable substances,
each with innumerable quality, but each quality is susceptible to an infinite
number of modifications. Clearly ordinary knowledge (non-omniscient) cannot
comprehend this complex reality, for ordinary knowledge is limited not only by
the limited power of the senses and reason, but also by the perspectives adopted
by the knower as well as by the conditions of the space, time, light, and so on.
Recognizing the incredibly rich and complex
nature of reality, Jains developed the concept of notion of the "Many-sidedness"
(anekant) of existence in opposition to their opponent’s claims that Brahman
alone, because it is permanent and unchanging, is ultimately and absolutely real
or that, as the Buddhist claimed, nothing is permanent, and the changing process
are the only reality. This concept of the many-sidedness of existence enabled
Jain thinkers to affirm both permanence and change. What things are in the
substance are in themselves, as substance, is permanent. But the forms or modes
of these substances are continuously changing.
Emphasizing the limits of ordinary knowledge,
Jainism developed the theory that truth is relative to the perspective (naya)
from which it is known. Furthermore, because of reality is many sided and
knowledge true only from a limited perspective, all knowledge claims are only
tentative (syat) having the form, "X may be Y," rather than "X is Y."
Limiting Perspectives.
The limitations of knowledge are illustrated with a popular Jain story,
involving five blind man and elephant. A king once brought five blind men into
his courtyard where he had fastened a large elephant and asked them to tell him
what it was. Each man touched the elephant, and on the basis of their
perspective, told the king that he knew this thing to be. The fist felt the
trunk and declared that it was a huge snake. The second touched the tail and
said it was a rope. The third felt the leg and called it a tree trunk. The
fourth took hold of and ear and called it a winnowing fan, while the fifth felt
the side of elephant and declared it to be a wall. Because each insisted that
his claim was correct and truly described the object in question, the five men
were soon in the middle of heated argument, unable to resolve the dispute
because they failed to recognize that each of their claims was true only from
limited perspective.
Like the blind men, each person perceives
things only from their own perspective. These perspectives are determined by
many factors, including sociocultural conditioning, particular place, time,
light, hopes, fears and, of course, subject to the limitation of our sensory
receptors and reasoning power. A person seeking profit sees everything in terms
of gains and losses; and insecure person sees threats everywhere and person
devoted to God sees everything as God’s blessed creation.
When it is understood that knowledge is
limited by the particular perspectives from which id is achieved, it becomes
easy to see that knowledge claims are conditioned by the limitation of the
perspective that is assumes and should always be expressed as only tentatively
true. Just as the blind men should have been more circumspect, saying for
example, "Standing here, feeling the object with my hands, it feels like a
winnowing fan. It may be a winnowing fan," so should everyone understand that
their knowledge claims should be asserted only conditionally.
Conditional Predications.
Analyzing the logic of conditional assertion, the Jains came up with a sevenfold
schema for making a truth claim about any particular object. For example, the
following assertions are possible with respect to, say, the temperature of a
glass of water:
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It may be warm (to someone coming from the
cold)
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It may not be warm (to someone coming from a
very warm room it felt cold)
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It may be both warm and not warm, depending
upon certain conditions.
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Independent of all conditions, the water is
indescribable (all knowledge rest on certain conditions)
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Indescribable in itself, the water may be
said to be warm subject to certain (a combination of 1 and 4)
-
Indescribable in itself, the water may be
said not to be warm, subject to certain conditions (a combination of 2 and 4).
-
Indescribable in itself, the water may be
said to be warm and not warm depending upon certain conditions (a combination
of 3 and 4).
The reason why the last three assertions all
begin with the claim "Indescribable in itself" is that every substance known and
described possesses an infinite number of qualities -- each of which also
possesses an infinite number of modifications. Although ordinary knowledge
reveals some of these qualities and modifications, it cannot reveal them all.
Thus, all descriptions of reality are only partial. The substance itself, with
its infinite qualities and modifications, can be fully known only when all the
limitations to knowledge are overcome.
The sevenfold scheme of conditional assertion
forces us to recognize the partial and incomplete nature of ordinary human
knowledge. This is very important initial step in overcoming the passions,
because desire, hatred, pride, anger and greed stem from partial one-sided
understanding of things dogmatically presumed to be the whole truth. How many
times have we embarrassingly realized the inappropriateness of our anger,
jealousy, pride, or greed when we came to see the "full picture"? Greed for
money vanishes when it is understood that money can’t buy health, friends or
happiness. Excessive pride gives way to humility when we come to appreciate the
wonderful qualities and accomplishments of others. Anger and hatred disappear
when we realize that other objects, situations, or persons are no threat to us.
To the extent that we appreciate that the knowledge from which the destructive
passions arise is partial, we are encouraged to restrain ourselves until our
understanding increases.
Awakening Vision.
Understanding the partial nature of ordinary knowledge makes Jains more
appreciative of the knowledge of the Ford-makers (Tirthankars). It encourages
faith in their teachings and motivates efforts to emulate their lives in the
hope of achieving similar omniscience, purity, and bliss. This in turn awakens a
deep longing for true insight and knowledge which may serve as a catalyst to
activate the soul’s natural inclination to freedom and direct its energies
toward recovery of its omniscience. |