Hello friends and colleagues,

I recently defended my PhD dissertation, and although I will properly publish at least some part of it hopefully soon, and although there is always room for improvement, I think I should share the materials (PDF + websites) now, while the iron is relatively hot, in case anyone can make use of them in the meantime:
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa2-826296
(full-text PDF download link at the bottom of the page)

Part 1 contains an edition, translation, and analysis of Nyāyabhūṣaṇa 104–154, which mainly battles Buddhist views relating to the idea of the ontological whole (avayavin) and many related topics like error (bhrānti, viparyaya) and reflexive awareness (svasaṃvedana). The translation also contains hyperlinks to Part 2...

Part 2 documents an experimental text-mining system called Vātāyana, online now as a web app at vatayana.info. Basically, it uses a suite of NLP methods to automatically find parallels within a corpus, which so far is the PramāṇaNLP corpus (on GitHub), of mostly Nyāya and Bauddha philosophical affiliation. If you're interested in exploring the web app, please know that it's very much in "alpha" status, meaning it is buggy and has not yet been tested by many people. (And alas! No how-to tutorial yet.) I'm interested in gentle feedback, but please know that I am short on time these days.

Oh, and if it helps, here's a link to a recording of my dissertation defense, in which I explain some more things. Best to follow along with the PDF; I forgot to share-screen at one point while referencing pp. 136–138.

Hopefully by sharing these things openly, they'll be of more use to some of you out there.

Kind regards,
Tyler Neill 
(LinkedIn)