LEARNING AND EDUCATION
The highly esteemed
Vedas have come to down to us. They existed for nearly 2000 years before they
were known in India. It was the knowledge of acustics that enabled ancient
Indians to orally transmit the Vedas from generation to generation.
Institutional form of imparting learning came into existence in the early
centuries of the Christian era. The approach to learning was to study logic and
epistemology.
The study of logci was
followed by Hindus, Buddhists and Jains, one of the most important topics of
Indian thoughts was pramana or means of reliable knowledge. The nyaya schools
upheld four pramanas - perceptions of areliable by anology or comparison, word
(Sabda), and pronounciation of a reliable authority such as the Vedas. The Vedanta
school added one more to it i.e. intution.
It is probably while
studying the process of inference that the schools of true logic arose. Ancient
Indian postulated syllogism though not as accurate as that of Aristotle. Yet,
they recognize some of the major fallacies of logic like reduction and
absurdom, circular argument, infinite regression, dilemma, and ignoratio
elenchi.
In the field
epistemology, Jains contriubuted the most for the Jains there was not only two
possibilities of existence and non-existence but seven more. Although the
modern logicians might laugh at this pedantic system of ontological and
epistemological reality they concede that the world is more complex and subtle
than we think it to be.
Regarding
institutional form of education the first was the guru-sishya system. According
to sacred texts, the training of the Brahmin pupil took place at the home of a
Brahmin teacher. In some texts the guru is depicted as the poor ascetic and it
is the duty of the student to beg for his teacher. The first lesson that was
taught to the student was the performance of sandhya and also reciting of
gayatri.
The family functioned
as a domestic school, an asrama or a hermitage where the mental faculties of
the pupils were developed by the teacher's constant attention and personal
instruction. Education, treatant as a matter of individual concern, did not
admit of the method of mass production applicable in industry. The making of
man was fegarded as an artistic and not a mechanical process. Indeed, the aim
of education was the developing of the pupil's personality, his innate and
latent capacities. This view of education as a process of one's inner growth
and self-fulfilment evolved its own technique, its rules, methods and
practices.
The thinking principle,
manana sakti was reckoned higher than the subject of thinking. So the primary
subject of education was the mind itself. According to the ancient Indian
theory of education, the training of the mind and the process of thinking, are
essential for the acquisition of knowledge. The chase counts more than the
game. So the pupil had mainly to educed himself and achieve his own mental
growth. Education ws reduced to the three simple processes of Sravana, Manana
and Niddhyaasana. Sravana was listening to the truths as they fell from the
lips of the teacher. Knowledge was technically called sruti or what was heard
by the ear and not what was seen in writing.
The second process of
knowledge called Manana implies that the pupil has to think out for himself the
meaning of the leassons imparted to him orally by his teacher so that they may
be assimilate fully. The third step known as Nidhyasana means complete
comprehension by the pupil of the truth that is taught so that he may live the
truth and not merely explain it by word. Knowledge must cultimate in
realization.
The admission was made
bythe formal ceremony upanayana or initiation by which the pupil left the home
of his natural parents for that of the preceptor. In this new home he had a
second birth and was called Dvijya. Twice-born.
Besides these regular
schools of instructions, there were special institutions for the promotion of
advance study and research. These are called in the Rig Veda as
Brahmana-Sangha, Academies of learned most its discussions hammered into shape
the very languageofthe country, the refined language of Sanksrit (Samkrata) as
the Vehicle of highest thought. These Academics were called prisads, there is a
reference to the Pancala parisad in the Upnishads, in whose proceedings even
kings participated, learning was also prompted by discussions at public
meetings which were a regular of rural life, and were addressed by wandering
scholars known as Carakas, These scholars toured the country to deliver public
discourses and invite discussion.
What might count as
earliest literary congress of the world was the congress of philoshophers which
was codification of Brahmanical philoshophy by discussing the subject under the
direction of the master philosopher, Yajnavalkya. In these deliberations at the
highest level, a lady- philoshopher named Gargi was a prominent participant
beside men like Uddalaka Arni. Obviously, in those days women were admitted to
the highest knowledge and did not suffer from any education disabilities. There
was equality between the sexes in the filed of knowledge. The Rig Veda mentions
women Rais called Brahmanavadinis.
To begin with, in
ancient India, the main subject was the Veda. The teacher would instruct
handful of students seated on ground. For many hours daily they would repeat
verses after verses of the Vedas till they attainmastery of at least one of
them. To ensure correctness of memory, the hymns were taught inmore than one
way.
Soon the curricula was
expanded. The limbs of the Veda or the six Vedangas were taught - the performance
of sacrifice, correct pronounciation, knowledge of prosody, etymology, grammer,
and jyotisha or the science of calender. Also in the post-Vedic era, teachers
often instructed their students in the six schools of Philoshophy.
The writers of smititis
maintain that young women of upper class updrewent this kind of training. This
is a dboutful contention. Princes and other leading Kshatriyas were tained in
all the manifold sciences to make them fit for government. Most boys of the
lower orders learnt their trades from their fathers.
Some cities became
renewned because of their teachers. Chief among them were - Varanasi, Taxila
from the day of Buddha and Kanchi in the beginning of the Christian era.
Varanasi was famous for its religious teachers. Taxila was known for its
secular studies. Among the famous men connected with Taxila were Panini, the
grammarian of the fifth or fourth century B.C. : Kautilya, the Brahmin minister
of Chandragupta Maurya and Charaka one of the two leading authorities of Indian
medical sciences. The institutions imparting vedic knowledge that exists even
today. There were also universities like Taxila and Ujjain for medicine and
learning incuding mathematics and astronomy respectively. In the south Kanchi
became an important center of learning. Hiuen remarks that vallabhi was as
great as Nalanda and Vikramashila.
Although the smirits
maintained that a small number of students study under a single teacher,
university turned towns came into existence like Varanasi, Taxila etc. At Varanasi
there were 500 students and a number of teachers. The whole estalisment was
maintained by charitable people Ideally, the teacher asked no fee, but the
students repaid his debt by their service to the teacher. A Jataka story tells
of how a teacher of Taxila treated well the students who paid him money while
keeping other waiting. It is also interesting to note that in Taxila even
married people were admitted as students.
Out of all the
Universities, Nalanda and imposed structures. Eight Colleges were built by
different patterns including one by the king of Sri Vijaya (Sumatra). One of
the colleges was four storeyed high as stated by Hiuen-Tsang. Every facility
existed for studying various kinds of subjects in the University. There were
three great libraries as per Tibetan records.
Nalanda attracted
students not only from different parts of India but also from Tibet and China.
The standards of examination were stiff, and only those who could pass the test
prescribed by the dvarapandita or the scholar at the gate were admitted to this
university. Also, for being admitted to the university, candidates were
required to be familiar with old and new books.
Nalanda was one of the
earliest examples ofa residential cum-teaching institutions which housed
thousands of monks devoted to learning, philoshophy and meditation. Over 10,000
students including teachers lived and studied at the university. The came from
various parts of the world apart from India-Cental Asia, China and Korea.
Though Nalanda was
primarily a Buddhist university its curricula included Hindu scriptures,
Philoshophy and medicine as recorded by Hiuen-Tsang. Logic and exagetics wre
pre-emenent because thes students were expected to enter into dialogue with
visiting doctors of all schools. This compulsion of public debate made both
teachers and students become familiar with all systems of thought in accurate
summary.
The university had
also succession of brilliant teachers. Dharmapala was a Tamil noble from Kanchi
in the south. Janamitra come from another country. Silabhadra, the saintly guru
of Hiuen-Tsang, came from Assam and he was a converted Brahmin. A great
achievements of the University was that it was able to continuously rejuvenate
Buddhism in far off countries. Tibetan records mention a succession of learned
monks who visited their country. It is also said that Sudhakara Simha went to
China and worked there on the translation of Buddhist texts.
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