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450 pages, Hardcover
First published April 10, 1986
Perception is an incredibly dense and closely-argues work of philosophical scholarship. This is both it’s strength and its weakness. On the one hand, Matital succeeds in demonstrating that the millennia-long debate between Nyāya and Buddhist philosophers is rich and inspiring philosophy. On the other hand, the argument is extremely intricate and frequently, for this read at least, quite boring.
Any Westerner who has grown up on the Byron-Schopenhauer-Beatles version of “the Orient” should consider reading Perception. Matilal was an Oxford don, and a thoroughgoing hard-nosed analytic philosopher in the British tradition. His version of Indian thought is not remotely mystical or psychedelic. He covers all the major topics in logic, personal identity, ontology and epistemology, showing how Indian thinkers anticipated most of the debates of contemporary analytic philosophy and have much of value to say on all of them. Despite his rather narrow interests when it comes to Western philosophy, Matilal is extraordinarily broad and open-minded when it comes to Indian thought. He freely admits that he inclined towards the Nyāya-Vaishesika school, but Perception is far from a Nyayayika apologia. He shows throughout the book how Buddhist sceptics pushed the philosophical debate in new and fruitful directions, and brings it Advaitins and other thinkers frequently where they present interesting challenges or alternatives.
This may not be the greatest work of literature in the philosophical tradition, but it is a magnificent edifice of scholarship and a fine introduction to Indian thought for a Western-educates reader.