Reading, Writing, Philosophising in Medieval India
9 June 2026

Photo: Carolina Lehan/HEPMASITE
The HEPMASITE project would like to invite you to a lecture on Tuesday, 9 June 2026, at 17:15. Isabelle Ratié (Collége de France) will talk about "Reading, Writing, Philosophising in Medieval India."
Convenors
- Yoav Meyrav (University of Hamburg)
- Hanna Gentili (University of Hamburg)
- José Maksimczuk (University of Hamburg)
Abstract
The primacy of orality in Indian culture and the Brahmanical tendency to deprecate writing as a means of transmitting knowledge have often been emphasised – with good reason. Yet writing technologies were used early on by Indian scholars and they arguably played a crucial role in the development of philosophy in particular, notably by enabling competing religious movements to study their rivals’ systems. Moreover, although the Indian speculations on language largely focus on oral speech, contrary to what is often assumed, writing and reading were not altogether absent from the field of philosophical inquiries. South Asian thinkers did not just use manuscripts as a medium for the preservation and circulation of their ideas: they discussed the cognitive mechanisms at work when we read, the ontological status of the written signs, and their relationship with the phonemes for which they stand.
Isabelle Ratié is Professor at the Collège de France (Chair of History of Indian Systems of Thought) and a Senior Fellow of the Institut Universitaire de France. She has authored or co-authored six monographs and numerous articles on the history of Indian philosophy, with a particular focus on the manuscript tradition of Kashmir.
Venue
in person and online
Institute for Jewish Studies
Further information
For registration and further information please write an e-mail to: hepmasite.reli@uni-hamburg.de
Invitation poster: PDF download

