Raghunatha tarkikacudamani bhattacarya, Raghunātha tārkikacūḍāmaṇi bhaṭṭācārya: 1 definition
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Source: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Aufrecht Catalogus CatalogorumRaghunātha tārkikacūḍāmaṇi bhaṭṭācārya (रघुनाथ तार्किकचूडामणि भट्टाचार्य) as mentioned in Aufrecht’s Catalogus Catalogorum:—with the epithet Tārkikaśiromaṇi, or usually Śiromaṇi. He was a pupil of Vāsudeva Sārvabhauma, and father of Rāmakṛṣṇa (Guṇaśiromaṇiprakāśa). Tradition alleges that he was a contemporary of Raghunandana, the author of the Smṛtitattva. He is quoted in Saṃkṣepaśārīraka 2, 182: Ātmatattvavivekaṭīkā. Khaṇḍanakhaṇḍakhādyaṭīkā. Guṇakiraṇāvalīprakāśadīdhiti. Tattvacintāmaṇidīdhiti. It seems doubtful whether Raghunātha explained the Upamānakhaṇḍa and Śabdakhaṇḍa. Nyāyakusumāñjaliṭīkā. Sb. 160. Nyāyalīlāvatīprakāśadīdhiti. Nyāyalīlāvatīvibhūti. Padārthatattvanirūpaṇa. Padārtharatnamālā. Probably the same work as the last. B. 4, 26. Brahmasūtravṛtti (?). K. 124. Advaiteśvaravāda. Bp. 266. Apūrvavādarahasya. L. 1131. 1538. Avayavagrantha. Oppert. 1387. 1756. Ākāṅkṣāvāda. Oppert. 1389. 3948. 7702. Ākhyātavāda. Paris. (B 147 d). Hall. p. 58. K. 140. B. 4, 12. Ben. 165. 225. Pheh. 14. Rādh. 11. NW. 354. Burnell. 120^b. H. 251. Oppert. 3251. 4679. 7657. 7703. 7836. Rice. 122. Kevalavyatireki. Oudh. Xv, 96. Guṇanirūpaṇa. K. 148. Dharmitāvachedakapratyāsatti. Oudh. Xv, 98. Nañarthavāda L. 1211. K. 150. Rādh. 13. Bh. 35. Bhr. 741. H. 260. Niyojyānvayārthanirūpaṇa. Hall. p. 193. K. 150. Oudh. Xv, 102. Nirodhalakṣaṇa. B. 4, 62. Pakṣatā. Oudh. Xv, 96. Pañcalakṣaṇīkroḍa (?). Oppert. Ii, 9167. Prāmāṇyavāda. Hall. p. 50. Oppert. 1924. Sb. 178. Yogyatārahasya. L. 1130. Vākyavāda. L. 1692. K. 158. Vyāptivāda. NW. 332. Peters. 3, 390. Śabdavādārtha. Oudh. Xv, 102. Sāmānyanirukti. Bhr. 739. Sāmānyalakṣaṇā. Oudh. Xv, 96. Raghunāthīya [nyāya] Oppert. 212. 939. 2002. 2066 -68. 3234. 3280. 3505. 4698. 4865. 5378. 8010. 8011. Ii, 216. 675. 2279. 5582. 6861. 7246. 8965. 9370. 9676. 9997.
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Raghunātha tārkikacūḍāmaṇi bhaṭṭācārya (रघुनाथ तार्किकचूडामणि भट्टाचार्य):—the author of the Tattvacintāmaṇidīdhiti: Ākhyātavāda. Stein 135. Nañarthavāda. Peters. 4, 16. Stein 147. Vyāptisvarūpanirūpaṇa. Stein 137 (inc.).
Sanskrit, also spelled संस्कृतम् (saṃskṛtam), is an ancient language of India commonly seen as the grandmother of the Indo-European language family (even English!). Closely allied with Prakrit and Pali, Sanskrit is more exhaustive in both grammar and terms and has the most extensive collection of literature in the world, greatly surpassing its sister-languages Greek and Latin.
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Partial matches: Bhattacarya, Tarkikacudamani, Raghunatha.
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