The Dṛṣṭivāda or Drishtivaad ("Disputation about views") is a lost text in the Jain religion.[1] It is the last of the 12 Jain āgamas as per Śvetámbara tradition, said to be promulgated by Māhavīra himself and composed by Ganadhara Sudharmaswami.[citation needed]
Drstivada | |
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Religion | Jainism |
The text is traditionally said to contain the entire knowledge of the Fourteen Purvas. However, its contents have been referred and explained in Nandi and Samavāyānga Sūtra.[citation needed]
Subdivisions
editThe Dristivāda was divided into five parts, according to the Sarvārthasiddhi commentary from the Digambara tradition.[2]: 291
- Parikarma, containing Jaina calculatory science
- Sūtra, containing discussion about creeds and narratives
- Prathamānuyoga (Pūrvanayoga), containing Puranic narratives, religious biographies, and illustrative tales
- Pūrvagata, with fourteen subdivisions, containing discussions about Jaina doctrines and principles and may have been composed before the time of Mahavira
- Cūlikā, containing the Purvas, knowledge prior to Mahavira which was preserved only in oral form
References
edit- ^ Dundas, Paul (2 September 2003). The Jains. Routledge. pp. 68–69. ISBN 978-1-134-50165-6.
- ^ Umāsvāti (1994). Tatia, Nathmal (ed.). That which is: Tattvārtha Sūtra. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-06-068985-8.