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Darshan vs Philosophy: The Sovereignty of the Eye — What India's Ancient Tradition Knows That Western Philosophy Has Forgotten

Authors: Rout, Narayan;

Darshan vs Philosophy: The Sovereignty of the Eye — What India's Ancient Tradition Knows That Western Philosophy Has Forgotten

Abstract

This article examines the distinction between Darshan — the Indian philosophical tradition whose name derives from the Sanskrit root for direct seeing or vision — and Western philosophy as a system of conceptual analysis and argumentation. The article argues that this distinction is not merely terminological but reflects a fundamentally different epistemological orientation: while Western philosophy primarily seeks truth through rational argument and conceptual analysis, Darshan seeks truth through direct perception — the systematic cultivation of a quality of awareness that can perceive reality directly rather than through the mediating filter of conceptual thought. The historical development of Indian philosophical inquiry is traced through the Vedic, Upanishadic, and classical periods. The article examines what this distinction means for the contemporary encounter between Indian and Western philosophical traditions, and argues that Darshan's epistemological approach — treating contemplative perception as a valid and primary means of knowledge — represents a contribution to global philosophy that has been systematically undervalued in the Western academic tradition.

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