Statements A, B, D and E accurately state Nyayaās four pramÄį¹as and their exam relevance, while C is false. Classical Nyaya recognises pratyakį¹£a, anumÄna, upamÄna and Åabda as pramÄį¹as, and reserves arthÄpatti and anupalabdhi mainly for other schools such as MÄ«mÄį¹sÄ and Advaita VedÄnta. Åabda is indeed reliable testimony, and UGC NET questions often ask candidates to recall this list. Thus A, B, D, E only comprises the correct set of statements.
Option A:
Option A is incomplete because it omits E, failing to link this doctrinal point directly to UGC NET question patterns. A, B, D only therefore does not fully address the exam focus of the stem.
Option B:
Option B is correct since it includes all true claims and excludes C, which wrongly extends Nyayaās list of pramÄį¹as. This option reflects standard Indian logic textbooks used for UGC NET preparation.
Option C:
Option C is wrong as it leaves out A, losing the explicit enumeration of Nyayaās four pramÄį¹as, and thus B, D, E only presents an incomplete picture of the system.
Option D:
Option D is incorrect because it includes C along with A, B and D, wrongly suggesting that Nyaya adds arthÄpatti and anupalabdhi as separate pramÄį¹as. A, B, C, D only therefore mixes a false claim with true ones.
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