taxonomy question

Herman Tull hwtull at MSN.COM
Fri Aug 5 17:26:40 UTC 2011


CU 5.10.8 sets up a taxonomy of sorts in its reference to the “small things” (kshudrANi) that continually live and die in the round of rebirth, in distinction to men who attain one of the two paths after death (path of the gods, path of the fathers).

Herman Tull

From: James Hartzell 
Sent: Friday, August 05, 2011 12:05 PM
To: INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk 
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] taxonomy question

Thanks Adheesh, I'd forgotten about "carācara" (mobile/immobile), and thanks for the reference.

Can we state then that what we modern folks call inanimate objects, as well as plants, fit the acara category, and then all animals and humans fit the cara category?  Or are there other distinctions?

My linguist colleague has clarified that she's looking specifically for the linguistic taxonomy of this.

Cheers
James


On Fri, Aug 5, 2011 at 12:01 PM, Adheesh Sathaye <adheesh1 at gmail.com> wrote:

  Dear James,

  In the epics, the phrase "carācara" (mobile/immobile) is quite common--see for example Bhagavad-gītā 10.39:
  yac cāpi sarvabhūtānāṃ bījaṃ tad aham arjuna |
  na tad asti vinā yat syān mayā bhūtaṃ carācaram ||


  All best wishes,

  Adheesh


  ----
  Adheesh Sathaye
  Department of Asian Studies
  University of British Columbia


  On Aug 5, 2011, at 8:36 AM, James Hartzell wrote:

  > HI
  >
  > A colleague has asked me the following question, and I thought some on this list might readily know the answer:
  >
  > 'Do you have in Sanskrit a conceptual dichotomy that corresponds to living/non-living or animate/inanimate?
  > What exactly does the taxonomy look like? (is the opposition something like human vs. animals vs plants vs material objects, or human and animal vs. plants vs material objects or human and animal and plant vs. material objects, or otherwise?)'
  >
  > Cheers
  > James Hartzell
  > Guest Researcher
  > CIMeC, Center for Mind/Brain Sciences
  > University of Trento
  > Mattarello, TN, Italy
  >
  >




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