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People don't like crude propaganda. Please take it back.
You are discrediting your own ideology.
The 'Bias' section reads like a brainwashing session at some Hindutva rally.
—The preceding
unsigned comment was added by
212.199.22.124 (
talk •
contribs) 04:27, 24 Jun 2006 (UTC)
All in the modern world know that the Indian culture is far superior than the rest of the world. Thats the reason that even in this centuary Indians holds family and social values high. And some wise westerners are learning more about it and practicing. But the fools still remains in the dark. —The preceding
unsigned comment was added by
147.252.238.119 (
talk)
16:59, 4 January 2007 (UTC).reply
Are you trying to hint something? Anonymous, realize that Indology is somewhat personal to Indians and Hindu Scholars like Talageri are inherently superior to Witzel because they can truly analyze the Vedas and deduce the messages.
—The preceding
unsigned comment was added by
Bakasuprman (
talk •
contribs) 03:17, 27 Jul 2006 (UTC)
No, I am not trying to hint, I am saying it directly - the 'criticism' section of the article (that is sadly the largest section) as it stands now (August 4 2006) is mostly shameless propaganda and personal point of view that has no place in Wikipedia. I understand that more and more millions of
Hindutva followers are getting Internet connection these days so any attempt to stop them is futile (see, I don't even try to edit the article?). So you can pile this garbage here as you please. The problem is that people that were not conditioned by propaganda will turn away in disgust and will not accept your point of view, so whom exactly are you trying to convince? You have a cause to fight for, good. But what will be the net result of your crude tactics? Zero. No outsiders convinced.
212.199.22.3719:54, 4 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Who exactly cares what outsiders think? The "Indologists" write the textbooks, which (I have used them in school) portray the three C's (by sound) (C)Karma, Cows, and Caste. They talk about Islamic philosophy and Xtian philosophy but nothing about Hindu philosophy. They also nevermention Vedas, Upanishads, Gita or anything that is a hallmark to Hindu culture. Instead they treat it like some bizarre tribal society, instead of teaching that its the world's oldest religion, and talking about the beliefs.
Bakaman%%
15:58, 5 August 2006 (UTC)reply
--- said the internet propagandists. Care to back this up by any sort of evidence, or indeed evidence that "the Indologists" have a single simplistic opinion (as opposed to constituting a wide field of scholarly debate)? Care to back up the ludicrous claim that "Indologists never mention the Vedas, Upanishads"? (while in reality, there probably wouldn't exist printed editions of these works without academia)?
dab(𒁳)09:49, 22 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I observe that links to pages on
David Frawley,
Koenraad Elst and
Srinivasan Kalyanaraman have been removed while those on
Romila Thapar and
Michael Witzel continue to stay. Well, David Frawley is a scholar on Sanskrit and Indian astrology who is widely known for strongly contesting Witzel's take on the
Aryan Invasion Theory.He has authored a book The Myth of the Aryan Invasion wherein he challenges existing views on the Aryan Invasion Theory. Sinivasan Kalyanaraman is an acclaimed Indologist and linguist who has prepared a lexicon of ancient Indian languages and has authored several scholarly book on the Indus script. Could the person who has reverted those edits explain the basis upon which he has removed these entries while retaining Romila Thapar and Michael Witzel? Thanks -
Ravichandar8409:35, 16 September 2007 (UTC)reply
"Indology" implies peer-reviewed academia. Elst is in fact an Indologist (but not active in academia, he just got a degree and went freelance). Frawley is no such thing. He is well at home in
Category:American Hindus, but he has no academic background whatsoever. We don't list him here any more than we list Witzel at
List of teachers of Vedanta. Do not attempt to turn this article on a respectable field of the humanities into a platform for covering internet flamewars over Hindutva propaganda stunts (
Wikipedia:Recentism). Concerning
Srinivasan Kalyanaraman, surely you must be joking? This is an amateur author who started to dabble in Indology after his retirement, embarking on "deciphering" the Indus script and similar pranks. --
dab(𒁳)09:54, 16 September 2007 (UTC)reply
in my view indology can be easily divided into four categories, one which was born out of tarikh al hind of al beruni which presented neutral perspectives on indian history, another was one encyclopedia written but a chalukya south indian king which presented indian perspective in 1200 AD and which was followed by scholars like S.S. Misra, S.R. Rao and B.B. Lal, and then there were two undesirable ones which arouse from the ideals set by catholic crusader and templar vasco di gama his exploitation and indian accounts, from here the things turned for the worst and the subsequent western perspectives turned upside down for worse for india and western indologists were most interested in ideals set by crusader vasco di gama and his indian accounts unlike the positive ideals set by marco polo who was not a crusader but an explorer and sinology was born from such positive output. Now vasco di gama and evangelist british and western scholars was totally countered by people like subhash kak, Rajiv malhotra, david frawley etc, there are people like michael danino who dont go one level up and become an academic scholar and choose to remain independent writers etc. Because of JNU scholars like romila thapar who are following on the british colonial models the true al beruni type scholars or scholars like B.B. Lal, misra etc get completely sidelined and become unknown, i never knew arguments of S.S. Misra if not for Edwin Bryant's book introducing a some what balanced indology. In an article
Bronze Age i complained why SOuth asian bronze age description was shoved well below the article with only sparing three liner descriptions on it when SA was probably the first to enter the bronze age as the first user of lost wax casting 6000 years ago, the reply was that
nobody was interested or knowledgable about SA's bronze age, the westernology presents western perspectives on select areas of indian history and indian historical studies and avoids, neglects the rest. If you go to wikipedia article on david anthony you will find a lengthy article on his book while zero interest from foreign languages, there definitely seems western centric interests when it comes to indology and their cherry picking and choosing the topics of their desire and neglecting any area which doesnt interest western indologists, their faourite ones being invaders and invasions.
115.135.130.182 (
talk)
12:17, 30 November 2018 (UTC)reply
I expanded and cleaned up the list. Under "living" Indologists, we list eight individuals at the moment. Surely this can be expanded, but only senior academics who have left their mark on their respective fields should be considered (list with institution where they are tenured). --
dab(𒁳)11:06, 16 September 2007 (UTC)reply
If "academic qualifications" form the main criteria upon which it is to be decided who are
Indologists and who are not, then what about
Robert Caldwell who was simply a bishop of Tinnevely "dabbling" in the study of Dravidian Languages. Besides, the article on
Iranology mentions
Firdausi as the "Father of Iranian Studies". From which University did Firdausi obtain his degree? -
Ravichandar8410:31, 23 September 2007 (UTC)reply
Premier Indologist? Wow, I've never heard of him! Must show how ignorant I am. I think the tone of your message is a bit suspect. -
Sitush (
talk)
20:20, 24 January 2016 (UTC)reply
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Should we re-title this article "South Asian Studies"? Indology is not a name used commonly anymore to describe this field, as SAS is the more common alternative. It better describes the field as well, one which is not limited to India but to the entire region, as noted in the introductory paragraph of the article itself. — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Jwalk47 (
talk •
contribs)
05:00, 14 December 2016 (UTC)reply
Discussion on the neutrality template on the Indology and the modern world section.