Vol. I, No. 8.] History of Nyayasastra. 179 
[N. 8.] 
another Vatsyayana, however, who 
may be identical with or a relation of, or at leas 
the 2nd Century A.D. And the geographical information gleaned 
from his book cannot refer to a period later than the rise of the 
Gupta family. 
We glean one historical information from the Brahmanical 
m 
m false (¢.c., the system of Aksapada), some form of Yoga. 
® peculiar character. How the section on Yoga was adopted into 
the Nyayasastra, it is is difficult to say, because Yoga does not be- 
long to the sixteen topics which Aksapada, in the first siitra, pro- 
muses to expatiate upon. Whether properly or improperly intro- 
duced, it forms a part of Hindu Nyfyasastra and also of Buddhist 
Nydyasastra. The Buddhists say that Mirok introduced it, but 
the Hindus cannot say who introduced it, ee 
erve the result of my examination of the Nyayasttras 
y id ® . 
Cage 80, that the discovery of a Tibetan translation of one of Din- 
naga's works, was regarded by scholars as a matter of congratula- 
tion, it is still studied and commented upon in China, Japan, Corea, 
