- It
consists of: The Upanishads,
known as Upadeśa
Prasthāna (****ctive texts), and the Śruti
Prasthāna (the
starting point or
axiom of revelation), especially...
- The Paṭṭhāna (Pali: paṭṭhāna, Sanskrit:
prasthāna, Jñāna-
prasthāna, Mahā-Pakaraṇa, Paṭṭhāna-Pakaraṇa, "Book of
Causal Relationships") is a
Buddhist scripture...
- Śruti
prasthāna;
considered the Sruti, the "heard" (and repeated)
foundation of Vedanta. The
Brahma Sūtras, or
Nyaya prasthana /
Yukti prasthana; considered...
-
constitute the Nyāya
prasthāna or the "starting
point of
reasoning canonical base",
while the prin****l
Upanishads constitute the
Sruti prasthāna or the "starting...
-
constitute the
Sruti prasthāna or "starting
point of
heard scriptures,"
while the
Bhagavad Gita
constitutes the
Smriti prasthāna or the "starting point...
-
works of
Shankara include commentaries on the
Bhagavad Gita (part of his
Prasthana Trayi Bhasya). His
Vivarana (tertiary notes) on the
commentary by Vedavyasa...
- "express a
decidedly Advaita outlook". The
Brahma Sutras, or
Nyaya prasthana /
Yukti prasthana;
considered the reason-based
foundation of Vedānta. The Brahma...
- is
considered as the
Nyaya Prasthana (canonical base for reasoning). The
Bhagavad Gita is
considered as the
Smriti Prasthana. The text
relies on other...
- (Prasthānatrayī) is the
combination of the
Sanskrit words prasthana (
prasthāna) and
trayi (trayī).
Prasthana means a starting-point or source, and specifically...
- (Brahmasiddhi) Śankara bhagavatpāda (Adi Shankara) (788–820) (Commentary on the
Prasthana-traya and Upadesha-Sahasri)
Sureswara (8th century), also
known as Vartikakara...