Umaswati
Umaswati | |
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Personal | |
Born | 1st to 5th century |
Died | 2nd to 5th century |
Religion | Jainism |
Notable work(s) | Tattvartha Sutra |
Religious career | |
Teacher | Kundakunda |
Part of a series on |
Jainism |
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Umaswati, also spelled as Umasvati and known as Umaswami, was an Indian scholar, possibly between 2nd-century and 5th-century CE, known for his foundational writings on
Umaswati is claimed by both the
Umaswati, was an
Biography
Umaswati was born in Nyagrodhika village. His father was Svati and his mother was Uma.[8] Umaswati was thus called as Svatitanaya after his father's name and as Vatsisuta after his mother's lineage. His name is a combination of the names of his parents.[8] Umaswati is also known as Vacaka-sramana and Nagaravacaka.[8] Digambara call him Umasvamin.[14]
According to Vidyabhusana's book published in 1920, Umaswati died in 85 CE. More recent scholarship, such as by Padmanabh Jaini on the other hand, places him later, likely in the 2nd-century.[15][2] Modern scholars such as Walter Slaje state that there are disagreements in dating Umaswati, and even whether Umaswati and Umaswami were two different persons, who lived sometime between 2nd- to 5th-century CE.[16] Paul Dundas agrees that Tattvartha Sutra is among the oldest surviving Jaina philosophy text along with Bhagavati Sutra and the older Rsibhasitani, but dates Umaswati and the text to the 4th- to 5th-century.[6]
Umaswati authored his scriptural work the Tattvartha Sutra when he was in Pataliputra or Kusumapura (now known as Patna, Bihar).[8][17] He was the first Jain thinker to have written a philosophical work in the sutra style.[18]
Umaswati, along with Kundakunda, is one of the two revered ancient scholars of Jainism. In Digambara tradition that reveres Kundakunda, Umaswati is considered as a disciple of Kundakunda.[9] However, they differ in two ways. One, Kundakunda wrote in Prakrit, while Umaswati used Sanskrit.[19] Second, their doctrines differ in the details, such as those about anekantavada.[20] Neither mentions the other in his writings, and scholars have debated if there was any link between the two, and who preceded the other.[10][21][22]
Philosophy
Umaswati in his Tattvartha Sutra, an aphoristic
His sutra have been variously translated. The first verse of Tattvartha Sutra has been translated as follows:
"The enlightened
darsana (world view), enlightened knowledge and enlightened conduct are the path to liberation" – Translated by Nathmal Tatia[25]
"Right faith, right knowledge and right conduct constitute the path to liberation" – Translated by Vijay Jain[26]— Umaswati, Tattvartha Sutra 1.1
Seven categories of truth
The core theology of Umaswati in Tattvartha Sutra presents seven categories of truth in sutra 1.4:[27]
- Souls exist (Jīva)
- Non-sentient matter exists (ajiva)
- Karmic particles exist that inflow to each soul (asrava)
- Karmic particles bind to the soul which transmigrate with rebirth (bandha)
- Karmic particles inflow can be stopped (samvara)
- Karmic particles can fall away from soul (nirjara)
- Complete release of karmic particles leads to liberation from worldly bondage (moksha)
Umaswati categorizes the types of knowledge to be
Ethics
In chapter 7, Umaswati presents the Jaina vows and explains their value in stopping karmic particle inflow to the soul. The vows, translates Nathmal Tatia, are
Karma and rebirths
Umaswati, in chapter 8 of Tattvartha Sutra presents his sutras on how karma affects rebirths. He asserts that accumulated karma in life determine the length of life and realm of rebirth for each soul in each of four states – infernal beings, plants and animals, human beings and as gods.[32][33] Further, states Umaswati, karma also affects the body, the shape, the characteristics as well as the status of the soul within the same species, such as Ucchi (upper) or Nicchi (lower) status.[32][33] The accumulated and new karma are material particles, states Umaswati, which stick to the soul and these travel with the soul from one life to the next as bondage, where each ripens.[34][35] Once ripened, the karmic particles fall off, states Umaswati.[34][35]
Shedding karma and liberation
The chapter 9 of Tattvartha Sutra by Umaswati describe how karmic particles can be stopped from attaching to the soul and how these can be shed.[36][37] He asserts that gupti (curbing activity), dharma (virtues such as forbearance, modesty, purity, truthfulness, self-restraint, austerity, renunciation), contemplation, endurance in hardship (he lists twenty two hardships including hunger, thirst, cold, heat, nakedness, injury, lack of gain, illness, praise, disrespect), and with good character towards others (he lists five – equanimity, reinitiation, non-injury (ahimsa), slight passion and fair conduct), a soul stops karmic accumulations.[37] External austerities such as fasting, reduced diet and isolated habitation, while internal austerities such as expiation, reverence, service, renunciation and meditation, according to Umaswati, along with respectful service to teachers and ailing ascetics help shed karma.[37]
The state of liberation is presented in Chapter 10 by Umaswati.[38][39] It is achieved when deluding and obstructive karmas have been destroyed.[38][39] This leads to the state of quietism and potentiality, and the soul then moves to the end of the universe, states Umaswati.[39]
Works
The Tattvartha Sutra has been the most important work of Umaswati. However, this text exists in at least two overlapping versions. The Svetambara version and the Digambara versions differ, for example, in sutras 1.33 and 1.34, with the Svetambara version listing five nayas and the Digambara version listing seven.[40]
Along with Tattvartha Sutra, he also wrote Prasamarati, a guide for the aspirant on the path of peace and liberation from karmic bondage.[17]
Reception
Umaswati was an influential, authoritative scholar in Indian history, particularly within Jainism.
Umaswati's text Tattvartha Sutra was composed in Sanskrit, making it, according to Johnson, the earliest extant Sanskrit language literature related to Jainism.[49] His text was cherished not only by the Jaina traditions, but widely distributed and preserved by the Hindus for centuries. The Hindu theistic scholar Madhvacharya praised Umaswati's ideas in the 13th-century, calling him Umasvati Vachakacharya (literally "expressive teacher"), as Madhvacharya developed his sub-school of dualism.[50]
See also
Notes
- ^ a b Jain 2011, p. vi.
- ^ a b c d Umāsvāti 1994, p. xiii.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, p. xi–xiii.
- ^ a b c Jones & Ryan 2007, pp. 439–440.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-19-977507-1.
- ^ Jaini 1998, p. 82.
- ^ a b c d e Vidyabhusana 1920, pp. 168–69.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-913729-43-4.
- ^ a b B Faddegon; F W Thomas (1935). The Pravacana sara of kunda Kunda Acarya together with the commentary, Tattva-dipika. Cambridge University Press. pp. xv–xvi.
- ^ DastiBryant 2014, p. 72.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994.
- ^ Lloyd 2009, p. 142.
- ^ Balcerowicz 2003, p. 26.
- ^ Jaini 1998, p. 81.
- ISBN 978-3-447-05645-8.
- ^ a b c Natubhai Shah 2004, p. 48.
- ^ Balcerowicz 2003, p. 25.
- ISBN 978-81-208-1977-1.
- ISBN 978-81-208-1977-1.
- ISBN 978-81-215-0931-2.
- ISBN 978-81-208-1309-0.
- ISBN 978-81-208-0658-0.
Quote: Thus, there is a vast literature available but it seems that Tattvartha Sutra of Umasvati can be regarded as the main philosophical text of the religion and is recognized as authoritative by all Jains."
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, pp. xiii–xvii.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 5–6.
- ^ Jain 2011, p. 2.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, p. xviii–xx, 2–3, 6.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 12–15.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 33–62.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 7–168.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 169–170.
- ^ a b Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 195–199.
- ^ a b Jain 2011, pp. 118–119.
- ^ a b Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 200–203.
- ^ a b Jain 2011, pp. 121–124.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 213–248.
- ^ a b c Jain 2011, pp. 126–145.
- ^ a b Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 250–263.
- ^ a b c Jain 2011, pp. 146–151.
- ^ Balcerowicz 2003, pp. 30–31.
- ISBN 978-81-208-1254-3.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, pp. 297, also back flap.
- ^ Umāsvāti 1994, p. XLV, 206.
- ISBN 978-81-208-0063-2.
- ISBN 978-3-447-05645-8.
- ISBN 978-81-208-0565-1.
- OCLC 718313318., Quote: "Vidyananda, Tattvarthasutra-Slokavarttika"
- ISBN 978-0-521-63188-4.
- ISBN 978-81-208-1309-0.
- ^ Sarva-Darsana-Samgraha by Madhavacharya, EB Cowell (Translator), Trubner & Co, pages 46–60
References
- Dasti, Matthew R.; Bryant, Edwin F. (2014), Free Will, Agency, and Selfhood in Indian Philosophy, OUP US, ISBN 978-0-19-992275-8
- Jain, Vijay K. (2011), Acharya Umasvami's Tattvarthsutra: With Hindi and English Translation, Vikalp Printers, ISBN 978-81-903639-2-1
- Lloyd, Christopher (2009), What on Earth Happened?, Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN 978-1-4088-0597-8
- Jones, Constance; Ryan, James D. (2007), Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Infobase Publishing, ISBN 978-0816054589
- ISBN 81-208-1977-2
- Umāsvāti, Umaswami (1994), That which is (Translator: Nathmal Tatia), Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 978-0-06-068985-8
- ISBN 81-208-1578-5
- ISBN 81-208-1938-1
- Vidyabhusana, Satis Chandra (1920), A History of Indian Logic: Ancient, Mediaeval, and Modern Schools, ISBN 978-81-208-0565-1