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Indian foreign policy

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Waltair; Scientific Book Agency; 1964Description: 172 pSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 327 MUR
Summary: It is less characteristic of Indian than of Western philosophy to assume that universal ideas or principles can be discovered by which all observations can be explai ned, all contingencies foreseen, all inconsistencies recon ciled, and all problems solved. Indian philosophy, less affected by the Platonic insistence on the reality of universal ideas, has been more inclined to believe that inconsistency, conflict, and change are the essence of things. The uni verse may not be a logical construction, consequently Dr. Murty may be justified in "presuming that truth is multiple and that several different ways of the good life are possible both in politics and in social organization.
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It is less characteristic of Indian than of Western philosophy to assume that universal ideas or principles can be discovered by which all observations can be explai ned, all contingencies foreseen, all inconsistencies recon ciled, and all problems solved. Indian philosophy, less affected by the Platonic insistence on the reality of universal ideas, has been more inclined to believe that inconsistency, conflict, and change are the essence of things. The uni verse may not be a logical construction, consequently Dr. Murty may be justified in "presuming that truth is multiple and that several different ways of the good life are possible both in politics and in social organization.

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