Thank you Matthew for your comments. I will respectfully defend the notion of a 
real and significant philosophical link between Anselm and Rupa, and perhaps 
other medieval Indian thinkers.

I realize that this is an Indology group and not a forum on European 
scholasticism, however I think the connection between a major Scholastic 
thinker and medieval Indian apologetics is worth pursing a little farther here.

I suggest that the major problem with the argument against an Anselm-Rupa link 
is that it takes Anselm out of his 11c historical context and portrays him 
almost as a modern analytic philosopher, concerned with ontology for its own 
sake. Thus the claim that “He is sneakily making a purely logical point,” does 
not seem consistent with historical evidence. Anselm includes the argument in 
his Proslogion, a “meditative prayer” where he declares his intention as “faith 
seeking understanding.” ("fides quaerens intellectum" or "faith seeking 
understanding”). It would be balanced and accurate to see Anselm as keenly 
interested in logic, but sincerely engaging that study in God’s service, a view 
entirely consistent with his historical period.

You mention the opposition of Thomas Aquinas, but Thomas' objection was that 
Anselm’s argument is a priori, based on reason alone. Thomas favored posteriori 
arguments since he believed that our knowledge, even of God,  begins with 
sensory experience and proceeds to reason. 

Rūpa, like Anselm, makes an a priori argument, since he a assumes a priori the 
existence of Kṛṣṇa, Nāṛāyṇa, Śiva etc. He does not infer their existence from 
his experience of the world. Thus the opposition of Thomas reinforces the link 
between Anselm and Rupa, rather than refuting it.

Best wishes,
Howard
 

> On Jun 24, 2024, at 4:06 AM, Matthew Kapstein <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Dear all,
> 
> It seems to me that there may be some uncertainties about the precise nature 
> of Anselm's argument in this thread. It is not to be identified as an 
> argument about "maximal greatness" per se, a topic that was very well 
> investigated in the Buddhist context by Paul Griffiths in his book On Being 
> Buddha
> https://sunypress.edu/Books/O/On-Being-Buddha2
> and that seems to me, in one way or another, to be at stake in many of the 
> interesting comments made by contributors to thus thread, which concern the 
> bigger and better qualities ascribed to the divinity.
> 
> This is not what Anslem is doing, however. He is sneakily making a purely 
> logical point.
> First, the very conception of "that than which no greater can be conceived" 
> must include the concept of being, for that which lacks being is less great 
> that that which does not. Note that this premise is not at all about 
> superadding or magnifying all sorts of qualities - it concerns, in pure 
> abstraction, a logical entailment of the concept "that than which no greater 
> can be conceived."
> If we then suppose, as Anselm does, that God alone fills this concept - and 
> again it is a purely logical point that "that than which no greater can be 
> conceived" must be unque; this follows from the concept itself, call it God 
> or what you like - then it follows that the concept of God includes the 
> concept of being.
> 
> The problem is, of course, that even if we buy into this conceptually (which 
> St. Thomas, and I. Kant, for example, did not), it seems to imply only 
> something about the concept of God, and not about its real existence. This is 
> where the second iteration in terms of necessary being comes in, for the 
> concept of necessary being, it would seem, can only apply to a being that 
> really is. A necessary being cannot be something that is not. QED
> 
> None of the arguments that have so far been adduced in this thread as 
> "resembling" Anselm's seem to me to resemble it in fact in its central 
> concerns with the logical entailments of conceivability and necessity. I have 
> been trying for years to find something in Indian philosophy that might prove 
> otherwise, but have not so far succeeded. But Indian philosophy is a vast 
> domain, approaching maximal greatness, so something may well turn up. I hope 
> that someone will respond to Dan Lusthaus's suggestion about Vallabha, for 
> instance, to see whether there might be something there. It is certainly true 
> that Indian philosophy knew the main elements from which the ontological 
> argument is forged - this much seems true for the Vedantic idea of 
> sac-cid-Ananda, which shows us that the very concept of Brahman entails its 
> being - but were the few additional steps taken by Anselm ever really 
> paralleled?
> 
> I suggest that we distinguish clearly between the general idea of maximal 
> greatness and Anselm's very precise assertion that any such idea, without the 
> explicit assumption of being and the logical entailments thereof, remains 
> incomplete.
> 
> best to all,
> Matthew
> 
> Matthew T. Kapstein
> Professor emeritus
> Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, PSL Research University, Paris
> 
> Associate
> The University of Chicago Divinity School
> 
> https://ephe.academia.edu/MatthewKapstein
> 
> https://vajrabookshop.com/product/the-life-and-work-of-auleshi/
> 
> https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/9781501716218/tibetan-manuscripts-and-early-printed-books-volume-i/#bookTabs=1
> 
> https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/9781501771255/tibetan-manuscripts-and-early-printed-books-volume-ii/#bookTabs=1
> 
> https://brill.com/edcollbook/title/60949
> 
> Sent with Proton Mail <https://proton.me/> secure email.
> 
> On Monday, June 24th, 2024 at 8:16 AM, dmitry shevchenko via INDOLOGY 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Dear Jeffery,
>> 
>> In the Yogasūtra-bhāṣya, attributed to Vyāsa, there is a following argument, 
>> which is somewhat akin to the ontological argument. We observe in the world 
>> creatures with various cognitive capacities. Some perceive very small 
>> things, other very large things, some very remote things, etc. The fact that 
>> there are various degrees in cognitive capacities suggests that there must 
>> be the highest cognitive degree, i.e., omniscience. And the omniscient being 
>> is īśvara. 
>> It is not entirely clear whether the purpose of the argument is to prove the 
>> existence of God. I believe it is primarily meant to establish the 
>> possibility of omniscience, against which argue some Mīmāṃsakas. 
>> Nevertheless, it is based on a similar usage of the idea of "greatness" and 
>> on conceivability of its possession in the greatest measure...
>> I'm attaching Larson's translation of this argument from the YSBh on the YS 
>> 1.25, with an elaboration by Vācaspati Miśra, who further atttempts to 
>> establish that omniscience can only be ascribed to God, and not to human 
>> teachers such as the Buddha and Mahāvīra.
>> 
>> Best wishes,
>> Dimitry 
>> 
>> On Monday, June 24, 2024 at 01:11:44 AM GMT+3, Jeffery Long via INDOLOGY 
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> That is extremely helpful, Howard. Thank you!
>> 
>> All the best,
>> Jeff
>> 
>> 
>> Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone 
>> <https://mail.onelink.me/107872968?pid=nativeplacement&c=Global_Acquisition_YMktg_315_Internal_EmailSignature&af_sub1=Acquisition&af_sub2=Global_YMktg&af_sub3=&af_sub4=100000604&af_sub5=EmailSignature__Static_>
>> 
>> On Sunday, June 23, 2024, 6:07 PM, Howard Resnick <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Dear Jeff,
>> 
>> There is a passage in the Bhakti-rasāmṛta-sindhu by Rūpa Gosvāmī which is a 
>> sort of variation on Anselm’s argument. Anselm of course is making an 
>> ontological argument for the existence itself of God, whereas Rūpa argues 
>> that Kṛṣṇa must be the most complete form or conception of God, in 
>> comparison to Nārāyaṇa, Śīva etc, because he possesses the greatest number 
>> of divine qualities.
>> 
>> What somehow connects Anselm and Rūpa, is that both assume that if God is 
>> infinitely great, then the greatest conception of God is closest to the 
>> truth. Anselm deploys this argument, of course, in assuming that existence 
>> itself is a positive attribute which must therefore be possessed by God.
>> 
>> Rūpa assumes existence and then argues in terms of other attributes. But 
>> both share the assumption that if God is infinitely great, then then 
>> greatest conception is closest to the truth. That is what connects them, in 
>> my view.
>> 
>> Thanks for the topic!
>> 
>> Best wishes,
>> Howard
>> 
>>> On Jun 23, 2024, at 12:17 PM, Jeffery Long via INDOLOGY 
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> 
>> 
>> Dear Colleagues,
>> 
>> Forgive me if this question has already been raised at some point on this 
>> list.
>> 
>> Are any of you aware of arguments developed in Indian philosophical systems 
>> akin to the ontological arguments for the existence of God raised by St. 
>> Anselm? The closest thing I can think of is Śaṅkara’s argument that 
>> existence is self-evident.
>> 
>> With much gratitude in advance,
>> 
>> Jeff
>> 
>> 
>> Dr. Jeffery D. Long
>> Carl W. Zeigler Professor of Religion, Philosophy, & Asian Studies
>> School of Arts & Humanities
>> Elizabethtown College
>> Elizabethtown, PA
>>  
>> https://etown.academia.edu/JefferyLong
>>  
>> Series Editor, Explorations in Indic Traditions: Ethical, Philosophical, and 
>> Theological
>> Lexington Books
>>  
>> “One who makes a habit of prayer and meditation will easily overcome all 
>> difficulties and remain calm and unruffled in the midst of the trials of 
>> life.”  (Holy Mother Sarada Devi)
>>  
>> “We are a way for the Cosmos to know itself.” (Carl Sagan)
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>  
>> 
>> 
>> 
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