I hope this is not to suggest that the matter should be decided by acclamation. I merely asked Professor Hart to specify a point "that should be seriously considered by indologists". My interest does not go beyond that.
R.G.
If you search the book at Amazon, you can read significant parts of it (“Look inside this book”). The authors are serious, well-read scholars and have put a colossal amount of work into their effort. The book strikes me as an important contribution whose ideas should be seriously considered by indologists. George Hart
On Jun 12, 2015, at 5:48 AM, Dominik Wujastyk <wujastyk@gmail.com> wrote:
_______________________________________________On 12 June 2015 at 14:15, Philipp Maas <philipp.a.maas@gmail.com> wrote:
In reading these lines, I get quite puzzled. Are historical-critical methods in general flawed, or only when practiced by Germans?
Only when practised by Germans, as any Italian would certainly answer :-)
(This refers to a running joke between some of us British, German and Italian philologists here at the Vienna department.)
I suppose the Adluri & Bagchee book deserves a more serious response, but I'm not interested personally. How did this get by the commissioning editor at OUP NY?
Best,
Dominik Wujastyk
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