The Parakhyatantra A Scripture of the Saiva Siddhanta: A Critical Edition and Annotated Text
Book Specification
Item Code: | IDK187 |
Author: | Dominic Goodall |
Publisher: | Institut Francais De Pondichery |
Edition: | 2004 |
ISBN: | 2855396425 |
Pages: | 669 + CXXV |
Cover: | Hardcover |
Other Details | 10.0" X 6.9" |
Book Description
The rediscovery of a large part of the Parakhyatantra made possible by this edition furnishes one more document of the pre-tenth-century thought-world of the Saiva Siddhanta, a religion that was spread across and beyond the Indian subcontinent at the probable time of this work's composition. For our text dates from the period before the appearance of the most significant body of theological exegesis in the history of the Bhatta Ramakantha II. The addition of the Parakhya to the still small corpus of published early Saiddhantika writings should be a welcome event to the student of classical Indian religions.
What is presented here, however, is not the whole text but only those chapters of it that deal with doctrine and yoga. Those on ritual and other aspects of religious practice were left aside by the unknown compiler responsible for the selection of materials found in the unique codex a beautiful palm-leaf manuscript in minute Nandinagari script and are therefore lost. Many quotations from the text have been located in later literature, and a fully positive apparatus reports the readings of all sources. A diplomatic transcription records features of the manuscript that the apparatus cannot contain (its orthographies, page-and line-breaks, etc.).
A complete English translation the first to appear of an early siddhantatantra - accompanies the Sanskrit text. Copious notes discuss textual difficulties and problems of interpretation. In doing so, they draw on parallels with other Saiddhantika writings, both published and unpublished. The introduction places the Parakhya in its context, gives a resume of the work, characterizes its language and concludes with a detailed discussion of the sources and of how they have been used.
Dominic Goodall studied Sanskrit at Oxford (BA 1990, DPhil. 1996) and in Hamburg (Habilitation 2002). He is currently head of the Pondicherry Centre of the Ecole francaise d'Extreme-Orient, where he is engaged in editing Saiva texts.
Acknowledgements | v |
Preface | xiii |
Explanatory remarks about the Saiva Siddhanta and its treatment in modern secondary literature | xiii |
Introduction | xxxv |
The Parakhyatantra and its place in the Saiddhantika canon | xxxv |
Two early Parakhyatantras? | xxxviii |
Relative chronology | xlii |
Excursus upon the Raurava and the Rauravasutrasangraha | xliv |
Dates and the Saiva cannon | xlvi |
The sources and the date of the Parakhya | xlviii |
Excursus upon the Pauskaras | lii |
Parallels with other Siddhantatantras | liv |
The lost commentary | lviii |
A resume of the text | lxii |
Chapter 1. The soul | lxiii |
Chapter 2. The Lord | lxiv |
Chapter 3. Scripture and the pure universe | lxvi |
Chapter 4. The evolutes of primal matter | lxvii |
Chapter 5. The cosmos | lxxi |
Chapter 6. Mantras | lxxii |
Chapter 14. Yoga | lxxiv |
Chapter 15. Liberation and the means to its attainment | lxxvi |
The language of the Parakhyatantra | lxxviii |
Some remarks on the treatment of metre | lxxxv |
Does the Parakhya tell us anything new? | lxxxvii |
The nature of this edition | lxxxix |
Sources for the constitution of the text | xcv |
The Mysore Manuscript | xcv |
Antecedents | xcviii |
Deviant orthography | c |
Transcription | ci |
Condition | ci |
Apographs | cii |
Transcription conventions | civ |
Other editorial conventions | cv |
Independent testimonia | cvi |
Sanskrit Text | 1 |
Chapter One, pasupadarthavicara | 1 |
Chapter Tow, patipadarthavicara | 17 |
Chapter Three, vidyapadarthavicara | 37 |
Chapter Four, yonipadarthavicara 1 (karyasrstih) | 47 |
Chapter Five, yonipadarthavicara 2 (bhuvanani) | 71 |
Chapter Six, mantravicara | 95 |
Chapter Fourteen, yoga | 109 |
Chapter Fifteen, muktipadartha | 123 |
Translation | 135 |
Chapter One | 137 |
Chapter Two | 165 |
Chapter Three | 205 |
Chapter Four | 227 |
Chapter Five | 279 |
Chapter Six | 321 |
Chapter Fourteen | 347 |
Chapter Fifteen | 387 |
Appendix I. Quotations not found in the manuscript | 411 |
Appendix II. Diplomatic Transcription | 441 |
Appendix III. Sataratnollekhini ad sutra 18 | 515 |