Anumāna
| Key Term | anumāna |
|---|---|
| Hover Popup Choices | inference; inferential cognition; logical inference; reasoning; deduction |
| In Tibetan Script | རྗེས་དཔག་ |
| Wylie Tibetan Transliteration | rjes dpag |
| Devanagari Sanskrit Script | अनुमान |
| Romanized Sanskrit | anumāna |
| Romanized Pali | anumāna |
| Tibetan Phonetic Rendering | jepak |
| Chinese Script | 比量 |
| Chinese Pinyin | bǐliàng |
| Japanese Transliteration | hiryō |
| Korean Script | biryang |
| English Standard | inference |
| Alternate Spellings | rjes su dpag pa; rjes dpag tshad ma |
| Term Type | Noun |
| Source Language | Sanskrit |
| Basic Meaning | a form of conceptual cognition that does not apprehend its object directly, but by using logical signs and valid reasons to infer the existence of more subtle phenomena that are not immediately accessible to our sense consciousnesses |
| Has the Sense of | a conceptual cognition that uses evidence and reasoning to imply or infer the existence of phenomena not directly manifest to us |
| Simon's Dharma Corner Explanation |
Inference (Skt. anumāna; T. rjes dpag) is a way of knowing something indirectly, using logic and reasoning to access rather than direct experience. It is used in the Buddhist tradition to gain insight into deeper levels of reality of self and phenomena. In the Buddhist tradition of logic and epistemology, valid cognition (pramāṇa; T. tshad ma) is required to validate phenomena and to establish their existence. There are principal forms of this valid cognition– direct perception (pratyakṣa; T. mngon sum) and inference, or inferential valid cognition (Skt. anumāna; T. rjes dpag). In contrast to non-conceptual direct perception, inference is a conceptual cognition that uses mental images of phenomena to apprehend things that are hidden from our senses and therefore not directly accessible to us. Inference is particularly used in the Buddhist tradition to establish the existence of slightly hidden phenomena (T. cung zad lkog gyur), using correct logical reasons (liṅga) or signs (hetu). In the classical examples, we use these logical structures to infer simple examples, such as the existence of fire hidden behind a hill using the presence of smoke as evidence. Logical statements with deeper meaning are then used to prove the subtle impermanence of conditioned phenomena with the reason of being produced by causes and conditions; or proving the lack of true existence with the reason of being interdependent. Inference is the conceptual cognition that apprehends these less manifest objects, and is the consciousness that is the product of the reasoning process. The system of Buddhist epistemology using inference was particularly developed and systematized by the Indian masters Dignāga and Dharmakīrti. |
| NEW: Context Descriptions (Glossary-DefinitionTsadra) |
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| NEW: Glossary-PopUpBeginnerDefinition | Inference (Skt. anumāna; T. rjes dpag) is a way of knowing something indirectly, using logic and reasoning rather than direct experience. For example, if you see smoke rising from a distant mountain, you can infer that there is a fire there, even if you can't see the fire directly yourself. It's a key way to understand things that are hidden from our senses. It is used in the Buddhist tradition to gain insight into deeper levels of reality of self and phenomena. |
| NEW: Glossary-PopUpScholarDefinition | Anumāna (T. rjes dpag) is one of the two principal means of valid cognition (pramāṇa; T. tshad ma) in Buddhist epistemology, contrasted with direct perception (pratyakṣa; T. mngon sum). It is a conceptual cognition that ascertains an unperceived or hidden object (e.g., fire on a mountain, impermanence of a sound) through the force of a logical reason or mark (liṅga or hetu; T. rtags) which is invariably connected to it. The etymology of both the Sanskrit anumāna (anu- "after" + māna "measuring/knowing") and the Tibetan rjes dpag ("inferring after") indicates that inference follows perception—one first perceives a sign and then infers what is not directly observed. This connection is established through the three characteristics of a valid reason (trairūpya; T. tshul gsum). Key forms include inference for oneself (svārthānumāna; T. rang don rjes dpag) and inference for others (parārthānumāna; T. gzhan don rjes dpag), which involves a formal syllogistic statement. |
| NEW: Glossary-DefinitionBodhicittaWiki | Inferential cognition (anumāna; T. rjes dpag) is vital on the bodhisattva's path, particularly for developing the wisdom that understands emptiness (śūnyatā). While direct, non-conceptual realization of emptiness is the ultimate goal, the initial understanding and conviction are often cultivated through inference. By relying on the teachings of the Buddha and the logical reasonings elucidated by masters like Nāgārjuna, a bodhisattva uses inference to analyze phenomena and deconstruct the illusion of inherent existence. This inferential understanding—a form of wisdom arising from contemplation("cintāmayī prajñā")—creates a stable foundation for meditative practice (bhāvanāmayī prajñā), which can then lead to the direct perception of emptiness. Thus, inference is an indispensable tool for sharpening wisdom, overcoming doubts, and progressively realizing the profound nature of reality necessary for attaining Buddhahood for the sake of all beings. It helps in understanding concepts like impermanence, suffering, and selflessness at a deeper level, which fuels the motivation of bodhicitta. The transition from conceptual understanding established through anumāna to non-conceptual wisdom marks the bodhisattva's attainment of the path of seeing (darśanamārga; T. mthong lam), where emptiness is directly realized. Furthermore, parārthānumāna (inference for others) becomes a skillful means (upāya) for teaching and guiding other beings toward liberation. |
| NEW: Glossary-DefinitionLotsawas | inference; inferential cognition; logical inference; reasoning; deduction |
| Definitions | |
| Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism | anumāna (T. rjes su dpag pa; C. tuiliang; J. suiryō; K. churyang fēn). In Sanskrit and Pāli, “inference.” In Buddhist logic and epistemology, inference is considered to be one of the two forms of valid knowledge (pramāṇa), along with direct perception (pratyakṣa). Inference allows us to glean knowledge concerning objects that are not directly evident to the senses. In the Buddhist logical traditions, inferences may be drawn from logical signs (hetu, liṅga); e.g., there is a fire on the mountain (sādhya), because there is smoke (sādhana), like a stove (sapakṣa), unlike a lake (vipakṣa). |
| Tshig mdzod Chen mo | རྟགས་མཐོང་ཞིང་འབྲེལ་བ་ངེས་པའི་རྗེས་སུ་སྒྲུབ་བྱ་དཔོག་པའམ་གཞལ་བྱ་ལྐོག་གྱུར་འཇལ་བ་སྟེ། དུ་བ་དང་ཆུ་སྐྱར་གྱི་རྟགས་ལས་མེ་དང་ཆུ་ཡོད་པར་དཔོག་པ་ལྟ་བུའོ།། |