Who was Krishnaram Bhattacharya ?
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Explanation:
The logical period of Indian thought began with the Kushan dynasty (1st–2nd centuries CE). Gautama (author of the Nyaya-sutras; probably flourished at the beginning of the Christian era) and his 5th-century commentator Vatsyayana established the foundations of the Nyaya as a school almost exclusively preoccupied with logical and epistemological issues. The Madhyamika (“Middle Way”) school of Buddhism—also known as the Shunyavada (“Way of Emptiness”) school—arose, and the analytical investigations of Nagarjuna (c. 200), the great propounder of Shunyavada (dialectical thinking), reached great heights. Though Buddhist logic in the strict sense of the term had not yet come into being, an increasingly rigorous logical style of philosophizing developed among the proponents of these schools of thought.
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Explanation:
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Krishna Chandra Bhattacharya, also known as K.C. Bhattacharya . He was born on 12 May 1857 and dead on 11 December 1949 . He was a philosopher at the University of Calcutta known for his method of "constructive interpretation" through which relations and problematics of ancient Indian philosophical systems are drawn out and developed so that they can be studied like problems of modern philosophy.
Krishnaram Bhattacharjya (Nyayavagish) or Parbatiya Gosain was a Shakta priest brought from Nabadwip in West Bengal by Ahom king Swargadeo Rudra Singha’s son Siba Singha who assumed the Ahom name Sutanphaa after ascending the throne.
Siba Singha gave the management of Kamakhya temple to Krishnaram Bhattacharjya. Since Krisnaram’s residence was on the top of Nilachal hill top, he was also known as Parbatiya Gosain. Parbatiya Gosain was the royal priest of Ahom dynasty.
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