Swaveda

Arthashastra · Chapter 2

Book 1 (Concerning Discipline), Chapter II: THE END OF SCIENCES

Translated by R. Shamasastry (1915, public domain), 1915. Public domain.

  1. 1

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    Determination of the place of Anvikshaki.

  2. 2

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    ANVIKSHAKI, the triple Védas (Trayi), Varta (agriculture, cattle-breeding and trade), and Danda-Niti (science of government) are what are called the four sciences.

  3. 3

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    The school of Manu (Manava) hold that there are only three sciences: the triple Vedas, Varta and the science of government,

  4. 4

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    inasmuch as the science of Anvikshaki is nothing but a special branch of the Vedas.

  5. 5

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    The school of Brihaspati say that there are only two sciences: Varta and the science of government, inasmuch as the Triple Vedas are merely an abridgment (Samvarana, pretext?) for a man experienced in affairs temporal (Lokayatravidah).

  6. 6

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    The school of Usanas declare that there is only one science, and that the science of government; for, they say, it is in that science that all other sciences have their origin and end.

  7. 7

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    But Kautilya holds that four and only four are the sciences; wherefore it is from these sciences that all that concerns righteousness and wealth is learnt, therefore they are so called.

  8. 8

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    Anvikshaki comprises the Philosophy of Sankhya, Yoga, and Lokayata (Atheism ?).

  9. 9

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    Righteous and unrighteous acts (Dharmadharmau) are learnt from the triple Vedas; wealth and non-wealth from Varta; the expedient and the inexpedient (Nayanayau), as well as potency and impotency (Balabale) from the science of government.

  10. 10

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    When seen in the light of these sciences, the science of Anvikshaki is most beneficial to the world, keeps the mind steady and firm in weal and woe alike, and bestows excellence of foresight, speech and action.

  11. 11

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    Light to all kinds of knowledge, easy means to accomplish all kinds of acts and receptacle of all kinds of virtues, is the Science of Anvikshaki ever held to be.

Commentary

Book 1 of Kauṭilya's Arthaśāstra, Chapter II. 11 paragraphs from Shamasastry's 1915 English translation. The Arthaśāstra is a treatise on statecraft, economic policy, and military strategy attributed to Kauṭilya (Cāṇakya), advisor to Chandragupta Maurya. Shamasastry's translation, the first into English, was published from his discovery of a 4th-century manuscript at the Government Oriental Library in Mysore. Modern critical editions (Olivelle 2013, Kangle 1965) are more philologically rigorous; we cite them but do not reproduce.