The Lost Age of Reason

Philosophy in Early Modern India 1450-1700

Jonardon Ganeri author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:27th Mar '14

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

The Lost Age of Reason cover

The Lost Age of Reason deals with a fascinating and rich episode in the history of philosophy, one from which those who are interested in the nature of modernity and its global origins have a great deal to learn. Early modernity in India consists in the formation of a new philosophical self, one which makes it possible meaningfully to conceive of oneself as engaging the ancient and the alien in conversation. The ancient texts are now not thought of as authorities to which one must defer, but regarded as the source of insight in the company of which one pursues the quest for truth. This new attitude implies a change in the conception of one's duties towards the past. After reconstructing the historical intellectual context in detail, and developing a suitable methodological framework, Ganeri reviews work on the concept of knowledge, the nature of evidence, the self, the nature of the categories, mathematics, realism, and a new language for philosophy. A study of early modern philosophy in India has much to teach us today - about the nature of modernity as such, about the reform of educational institutions and its relationship to creative research, and about cosmopolitan identities in circumstances of globalisation.

[The Lost Age of Reason] is a book that Indologists and students of Indian philosophy should read with great interest and cannot afford to ignore.

  • Winner of Awarded the Specialist Publication Accolade, by the the ICAS Reading Committee.

ISBN: 9780198701507

Dimensions: 236mm x 157mm x 16mm

Weight: 422g

304 pages