The History of the Arthasastra
The Arthaśāstra is the foundational text of Indic political thought and ancient India's most important treatise on statecraft and governance. It is traditionally believed that politics in ancient India was ruled by religion; that kings strove to fulfil their sacred duty; and that sovereignty was circumscribed by the sacred law of dharma. Mark McClish's systematic and thorough evaluation of the Arthaśāstra's early history shows that these ideas only came to prominence in the statecraft tradition late in the classical period. With a thorough chronological exploration, he demonstrates that the text originally espoused a political philosophy characterized by empiricism and pragmatism, ignoring the mandate of dharma altogether. The political theology of dharma was incorporated when the text was redacted in the late classical period, which obscured the existence of an independent political tradition in ancient India altogether and reinforced the erroneous notion that ancient India was ruled by religion, not politics.
- Proposes a new theory of the composition of the Arthaśāstra
- Demonstrates the onset of a new kind of political theology in the late classical period
- Offers a concrete historical argument about the development of political thought in ancient India, particularly charting out the rise of Brāhmaṇism as a political force
Reviews & endorsements
‘[A] meticulous analysis of one of the most important texts of the period.’ Timothy Lubin, JAOS
Product details
September 2020Paperback
9781108701747
307 pages
228 × 153 × 16 mm
0.45kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Arthaśāstra historiography
- 3. The resegmentation of the Arthaśāstra
- 4. Citation and attribution
- 5. The deep structure of the text
- 6. The history of the Arthaśāstra
- 7. The politics of the Daṇḍanīti
- 8. Varṇadharma in the Arthaśāstra
- 9. Statecraft, law, and religion in ancient India
- Appendices.