Chapter
        
        
            
                    
        
                
                
                    
                
                
            
            
                
            
            
            
            
            
            
        
    
    
    Licensed
                
                    
                    Unlicensed
                    
                    Requires Authentication
                
            
    
                
        
        8. Dārā Shukoh and the Transmission of the Upaniṣads to Islam
- 
            
            
        Jonardon Ganeri
        
 
                                    
                                    You are currently not able to access this content.
                                
                                
                                
                                                
                                                You are currently not able to access this content.
                                            
                                            
                                            Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
 - Table of Contents v
 - Preface ix
 - Introduction: What Does It Mean for Texts and Traditions to Migrate? 1
 - 
                            Part I: From the West
 - 1. The Migration of Aristotelian Philosophy to China in the 17th Century 21
 - 2. The Reformulation of the Philoponean Proofs in Mediaeval Jewish Thought 39
 - 3. Putting Islam and ‘The West’ Together Again: The Philosophy of M. M. Sharif 61
 - 4. British Idealism as a Migrating Tradition 79
 - 5. The Migration of Ideas and Afrikaans Philosophy in South Africa 105
 - 6. Heidegger, Japanese Aesthetics, and the Idea of a ‘Dialogue’ between East and West 121
 - 7. Hermeneutics and the Migration of Philosophical Traditions in East Asia 155
 - 
                            Part II: From the East and the South
 - 8. Dārā Shukoh and the Transmission of the Upaniṣads to Islam 177
 - 9. A Buddhist ‘good life’ Theory: Śāntideva’s Bodhicaryāvatāra 189
 - 10. Sharing Insights: Buddhism and Recent Aristotelian Ethics 201
 - 11. Process Concepts of Text, Practice, and No Self in Buddhism 221
 - 12. On Being Enabled to Say What Is “Truly Real” 233
 - 13. The Philosophers of Al Andalus and European Modernity 251
 - 14. Radhakrishnan and the Construction of Philosophical Dialogue across Cultural Traditions 267
 - 
                            Part III: Theoretical Issues
 - 15. Philosophy-in-Place and Texts Out of Place 287
 - 16. Migrating Texts: A Hermeneutical Perspective 305
 - 17. Text, Rationality, and Knowledge in Indian Philosophy 321
 - Afterword: Migration: Explanation, Analysis, and Directions 331
 - Index 337
 - Contributors 347
 
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
 - Table of Contents v
 - Preface ix
 - Introduction: What Does It Mean for Texts and Traditions to Migrate? 1
 - 
                            Part I: From the West
 - 1. The Migration of Aristotelian Philosophy to China in the 17th Century 21
 - 2. The Reformulation of the Philoponean Proofs in Mediaeval Jewish Thought 39
 - 3. Putting Islam and ‘The West’ Together Again: The Philosophy of M. M. Sharif 61
 - 4. British Idealism as a Migrating Tradition 79
 - 5. The Migration of Ideas and Afrikaans Philosophy in South Africa 105
 - 6. Heidegger, Japanese Aesthetics, and the Idea of a ‘Dialogue’ between East and West 121
 - 7. Hermeneutics and the Migration of Philosophical Traditions in East Asia 155
 - 
                            Part II: From the East and the South
 - 8. Dārā Shukoh and the Transmission of the Upaniṣads to Islam 177
 - 9. A Buddhist ‘good life’ Theory: Śāntideva’s Bodhicaryāvatāra 189
 - 10. Sharing Insights: Buddhism and Recent Aristotelian Ethics 201
 - 11. Process Concepts of Text, Practice, and No Self in Buddhism 221
 - 12. On Being Enabled to Say What Is “Truly Real” 233
 - 13. The Philosophers of Al Andalus and European Modernity 251
 - 14. Radhakrishnan and the Construction of Philosophical Dialogue across Cultural Traditions 267
 - 
                            Part III: Theoretical Issues
 - 15. Philosophy-in-Place and Texts Out of Place 287
 - 16. Migrating Texts: A Hermeneutical Perspective 305
 - 17. Text, Rationality, and Knowledge in Indian Philosophy 321
 - Afterword: Migration: Explanation, Analysis, and Directions 331
 - Index 337
 - Contributors 347