Pāṇini's Perfect Rule - cover

Pāṇini's Perfect Rule

Rishi Rajpopat

  • 16 december 2025
  • 9780674297647
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Samenvatting:

Linguist Rishi Rajpopat solves an ancient puzzle, showing that Pāṇini’s Sanskrit grammar is self-sufficient. Centuries of commentators, having misunderstood it, created tools to overcome its supposed flaws, but to no avail. By reinterpreting some key Pāṇinian rules, Rajpopat shows that the language machine is in fact entirely free of such glitches.



A new interpretation of a 2,500-year-old Sanskrit text upends millennia of debate and affirms an ancient linguist’s remarkably sophisticated grammatical system.

Around 500 BCE, the Indian scholar Pāṇini wrote a treatise on Sanskrit, the Aṣṭādhyāyī, describing a kind of language machine: an algebraic system of rules for producing grammatically correct word forms. The enormity and elegance of that accomplishment—and the underlying computational methodology—cemented Pāṇini’s place as a founder of linguistics. Even so, centuries of commentators have insisted that there are glitches in the machine’s ability to tackle rule conflict (that is, a situation in which two or more rules are simultaneously applicable) and have responded with complex rules and tools aimed at resolving the issues apparently besetting the ancient system.

In one fell swoop, this book renders the overwhelming majority of that work obsolete. Linguist Rishi Rajpopat lays out a novel interpretation of Pāṇini’s grammar, focusing on Pāṇini’s only rule dealing with rule conflict, known as 1.4.2. Pāṇini’s Perfect Rule shows that the Aṣṭādhyāyī indeed functions like a well-oiled machine, capable of handling challenges without any of the complications introduced by later scholars.

Rajpopat thus solves an ancient and important problem in Indology and linguistics that will fascinate anyone interested in how language systems—including those of computer programming—operate. In addition, Pāṇini’s Perfect Rule offers meditations on the history of the early Pāṇinian tradition, its philosophy, the relationship between rule conflict and accentuation, and aspects of theoretical phonology. A nontechnical preface lays out key findings and foregrounds the deep history of Sanskrit scholarship. This volume opens new horizons for the study of Sanskrit, inviting seasoned experts and novices alike to behold its majesty.

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