The perception of non –
existence is obviously rendered
by the means of knowledge known
as anupalabdhi. This pramana or
right means of knowledge has to
be admitted because it is
claimed that this is a case of
kevalavyatireki as a matter of
fact for in the example ‘when
there is no vision of an object
there is no existence of it also
since where there is vision of
an object there is its
existence. But it is seen that
there is no manner by which one
can grasp the want of vision or
want of existence. This negative
conjunction, if we may so say is
a case of kevalavyatireki and it
can never be really a method of
arriving at an invariable
concomitance. Negative being is
held to be not an object of
perception though Naiyayikas
have held that non-existence is
perceived as when we do not a
fruit on a table where it was
before. There is no doubt that
we see a place empty of a thing
we look out for. Thus
non-existence is dependent only
in respect of objects which are
objects of perception, or
revelation.
One of the most important
defects of medieval logistics is
that it does not see that its
illustrations aim at proving the
truth of revelation from the
observance of ordinary
experiences or perceptions.
Understood in the sense, that
the main motive of these
scholars was to accept the
pramanas which indirectly can
prove their metaphysical
assumptions from revelation, we
can find that non-perception is
used as a pramana to
substantiate the non-existence
of an object. “Non-perception of
a sensible object generates the
notion of negation immediately
and not through other
negations”. (Das Gupta. Vol
I.p399). Advaita utilizes this
anupalabdhi of the Mimamsakas
(Kumarila school) to hold that
negation is not a perception but
merely the absence of
perception. Thus abhava is an
inference based on the absence
of perception.
However let us ask ourselves in
what context this pramana is
being used even as pratyaksa,
anumana and sabda are being
used.
The logic of Negation in Advaita
Vedanta proceeds on the ground
of fundamental contrariety
between perception facts and
revelational facts. The word
‘facts’ is used to designate the
reality and existence of these
kinds – the phenomenal and the
noumenal. This basic difference
has to rest on the reality or
existence of both kinds of
realities, the sensate and the
non-sensate (Brahmic). The two
are in a sense related to each
other as a appearance and
reality. If the two realms are
held to be equally present as
facets or faces of one reality
it would follow that we grant to
the appearance a permanence that
cannot be removed. This is
indeed a difficulty for the
general purpose of knowledge
which assumes that there is a
wide divergence between the two
and seeks to get rid of
appearance as equivalent to
non-existence.
Thus it assumes that there is
contrariety between Brahman and
the world including the souls,
and if the one is positive the
other is negative and this
logical assertion is based on
the psychological experience of
non-presence of the
characteristics of the one in
the other. Thus the world has
qualities, has change, has
motion and differentiation or
plurality, and contrarily
Brahman has the non-presence of
these. However whilst we see the
world, we do not see inferential
one so long as there is no
intuitive anubhava of Brahman.
The contrariety then ceases to
be just logical but becomes
psychological. That this
experience of Brahman should
lead to the denial of the
characteristics of the world and
the souls of it is but natural
but not inevitable. The
experience of Brahman as
existence, intelligence, bliss
is a positive one, whereas the
experience of its being without
the qualities of nature or its
characteristics is a negative
one in relation to the known
world and self. The former is
intuitive and transcendental to
the inferential and perceptual
and as such ‘other’ than these
but need not be contradictory
but only an other: the latter is
a logical hypostatis of the
non-existence of the perception
as the Brahman – an inferential
conclusion based on the
correlativity of negational
predications.
Advaita thus in so far as it
uses anupalabdhi or
non-perception of the
non-existence as a means of
proof or right knowledge
concerns itself with the field
of non-perceived existents but
how it could pass to
non-existence is a mystery.
Non-perception of non-existence
is not capable of yielding any
real positive knowledge of the
existents. The question then to
be considered is how we can
speak of Maya as a existence or
non-existence or both at once or
as indescribable in logical
alternatives (kotis). Further to
hold that anupalabdhi is capable
of being the proof for
non-existence almost amounts to
the solipsistic view of esse ist
percipi which is its
polar-opposite-criterion.
That this is certainly not the
view of Advaita we can
immediately realize and
therefore it is necessary to
inspect a little more carefully
what anupalabdhi means. It is
the most important part of our
investigation to ask whether
upalabdhi means just sensory
perception or all experience of
anubhava. By parity of reasoning
which we adopted in respect of
upamana and Upanishad, upalabdhi
refers to the concept of near or
correspondential or similar
identity. The non-existence of
that correspondential or
similarity is what is strictly
meant by anupalabdhi. In respect
of the real transcendental which
is beyond all perceptions and
mindings and language, which
cannot be grasped by any of
these modes of knowings, it is
clear that it must be seized by
a mode which is not like other
pramanas. Thus it follows the
existence of the transcendent is
known negatively by denial of
the known characteristics in
every sense of these. It is not
therefore that anupalabdhi
(non-perception) is
non-experience of the
non-existence, which is the
significance of the negation of
the
nirvana
concept of the Buddhists. On the
other hand, the anupalabdhi
reveals the existence of the
transcendent, however much in a
negative way.
The mimamsa explanation (of
kumarila) for the acceptance of
this pramana lies in his trying
to explain the dynamic nature of
negative perception or
non-perception or perception of
the non-existent as in the case
of the apurva or the potency
that works later rather than
immediately as in causation,
through arthapatti or
presumption is sufficient, yet
in respect of the dynamic nature
of negation to which Buddhism
had called attention, regarding
even the efficacy of the rites
or karmas.
Though anupalabdhi is a species
of inference in the sense of our
making an immediate inference
yet it is not strictly an
inference based on vyapti or
invariable concomitance,
observed in perception. Though a
logical instrument it is yet
seriously dependent on the
necessity to substantiate the
theory of the transcendent which
is beyond all perception, which
sabda cannot by itself as
aptavacana do. Indeed one is
forced to the conclusion that
arthapatti and anupalabdhi and
upamana as represented by the
Naiyayika and Purva mimamsa are
assumed as the principles of the
‘Logic of the Infinite’ or the
transcendent which help the
communication of the truths of
the transcendent or the real
infinite to the finite
consciousness.
‘A logic of the Infinite’ thus
requires the adaptation of the
same principles of our ordinary
finitised and atomized and
sensate thinking to the levels
of the Infinite. If we
understand the technique of the
liaison performed by these
principles without, as it has
been unfortunately done even by
the expositors of these
principles reducing them to the
level of mechanical sensate
explanation or exposition, they
would regain the flexibility and
mobility and suggestibility that
is the nature of the Infinite
consciousness. The sabda as
revelation tries to convey the
truths of the transcendent and
the Infinite to the finite
sensate mind through these
triple pramanas of Upamana,
Anupalabdhi and Arthapatti.