o sante-efF
thtt's faxtrt utterer wsfft t r ispretitsfsta, qt fww-t ;Ctrs-
rm.* a.TftWTal cts wists *'441 wwsratsi wet
qtra.
* 9stts1 wl gufw4
fitsztt arnk t fw k is21131q
1"3
;miff, TTTM % EMI* fiTuTT
as srfc-ws t, ITTITTK jt4 k
a7 t,
F4Tal # kir ssttit
MITT TT TqlqW I tWts SMIT aft ITTT;T tOr ?g tistsft ws,
firsaga t zstt SW( TTM 41 TffTT Tqz1/T ITTIPTIT
Trq
4Trqtr I TrI: TITIff Aft 3TTT fatzum AMT ITTIT fTTufq
aft
Tc eTTTITTit it TT aTesic at, fa; fwsr
CI
TR Teti' T
TenT1 TT TTTIff if eta
et
TTeT 4 341 SITT7 aflUH
Trezit aT qt st
4
WIT TIM I tff ;MIT TM' IR TTITT
ac writ t
1 2 ti4
ITTT971 stk wt 14, t fr sarl Has
vir alai it tt ga srswt< TraTIT t aa air wmws'Y ;sr VA
* EITTR ITT tiTT * t
2 79 4
iTer 471 TTATTI WTI eifTTITTTI
,WT ffa aaT MTTff, VA TT ri T al Tat] o f
t, TM
sti-wfsa.
t? Tar K TgiT ITT9I ret TiTaT quIfT elq7
maw s r sH;
g4147.a
wt4 t WFMT t I
E. tifT9 f/EITTT
mat aHaNtiafR ;Wm t
!manta%
Far t PEIRT/Tedeff iTITET/m:?
inn 9-g rat* Ertmt
RT4Tqf
aHYrd
MIT MITIfttsfa
preintlfirathrfa tozrq arifTMTIfTafT
tiaTi 9-44% fqtrnwil r srivrar th-rfrn at Id/67qm I
3. " That Shankar regards the world in the ordinary sense
as
illusory and the result of error just in the same
way
as
a snake, while there is a rope only and also
as
something which can be sublated by the experiences
of true knowledge is clear from his writings here and
elsewhere ," Indian Epistemoloy. P, 314. by Jwala
Prasad ( The Punjab Oriental Series No. XXX — 1939)