Amalananda was a south Indian Sanskrit scholar who lived during the reign of
Mahadeva, the Yadava ruler of
Devagiri
Daulatabad Fort, also known as Devagiri Fort or Deogiri Fort, is a historic fortified citadel located in Daulatabad village near Aurangabad, Maharashtra, India. It was the capital of the Yadava dynasty (9th century–14th century CE), for a br ...
who ruled from 1260 to 1271. Not much is known about his life and background. Anubhavānanda is believed to have been his preceptor.
Amalānanda wrote ''Vedānta Kalpatarū'' sometime before 1297. This book is a commentary on ''
Bhāmatī '' of
Vācaspati Miśra which text in its own turn is a commentary on
Sankara's commentary on the
Brahma Sutras
The ''Brahma Sūtras'' ( sa, ब्रह्मसूत्राणि) is a Sanskrit text, attributed to the sage bādarāyaṇa or sage Vyāsa, estimated to have been completed in its surviving form in approx. 400–450 CE,, Quote: "...we c ...
of
Badarayana. His other works are – ''Śastra-darpana'' which is explanations of the Brahma Sutras, and ''Pancapādikā-darpana'' which is a commentary on
Padmapādācārya's ''Pancapādika''. The language of these works is chaste and the thought-content is serious. Vācaspati Miśra, the author of ''Bhāmatī'' lived around 841.
Appayya Dikshita
Appayya Dikshita (IAST ', often "Dikshitar"), 1520–1593 CE, was a performer of yajñas as well as an expositor and practitioner of the Advaita Vedanta school of Hindu philosophy but with a focus on Shiva or Shiva Advaita.
Life
Appayya ...
(1520–1593), son of Rangarājādhvarindra of
Kānci, and a prolific writer, wrote his ''Kalpataruparimala'', a commentary on Amalānanda's ''Vedanta-Kalpataru''.
Sankara explains ''Yadrecchāvadā'', referred to by the
Shvetashvatara Upanishad, as the doctrine of accidental effects which are due to chance; Amalānanda explains it as the doctrine that effects are produced at any time depending on definite causes. The same Upanishad mentions nature (''svabhava'') as the cause of the world. Sankara explains it as the natural powers inherent in different things. Amalānanda explains nature as that which exists so long as things exists e.g. breathing as the nature of the living body exists so long as the body exists.
References
13th-century Indian philosophers
Advaitin philosophers
Indian logicians
Indian Medieval linguists
Medieval Sanskrit grammarians
Hindu philosophical concepts
Vedanta
Advaita Vedanta
13th-century Indian mathematicians
Indian Sanskrit scholars
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