04-02-2007, 01:16 AM
Husky,
What an interesting reply. It is interesting how ambigious language is, and how the original meaning can become something so completely different in the mind of another. This is the problem with the English language; it is too open to interpretation.
There was no political intent in my question. I am simply trying to adapt Indian wisdom to improve my English for academic study. I am interested in rules of grammar on how to construct perfect sentences, paragraphs. I understand Sanskrit Grammar is the most advanced system of Grammar, and I am wandering if I can use that.
Also how Indian logic can be used to construct essays and argue properly. I do not like the Western logical system. I cannot explain why, but there is something wrong about it, in the sense that it does not seem to be interested in finding truth.
I will learn Sanskrit later on. I hope to do my Postgraduate in Indian Phillosophy in India(probably Banaras Hindu University) and study Sanskrit as well. The Indians were far ahead of the Western Philosophers, and much of Western Philosophy is derived from Indians.
What an interesting reply. It is interesting how ambigious language is, and how the original meaning can become something so completely different in the mind of another. This is the problem with the English language; it is too open to interpretation.
There was no political intent in my question. I am simply trying to adapt Indian wisdom to improve my English for academic study. I am interested in rules of grammar on how to construct perfect sentences, paragraphs. I understand Sanskrit Grammar is the most advanced system of Grammar, and I am wandering if I can use that.
Also how Indian logic can be used to construct essays and argue properly. I do not like the Western logical system. I cannot explain why, but there is something wrong about it, in the sense that it does not seem to be interested in finding truth.
I will learn Sanskrit later on. I hope to do my Postgraduate in Indian Phillosophy in India(probably Banaras Hindu University) and study Sanskrit as well. The Indians were far ahead of the Western Philosophers, and much of Western Philosophy is derived from Indians.
