Upanishads – Introduction

Monday, May 21, 2012


















An Introduction to the Dasopanishads

“In the whole world there is no study so beneficial and elevating as that of
the Upanishads. It has been the solace of my life; it will be the solace of my
death.”
Schopenhauer - A German philosopher 

Upanishads are the full blossomed flowers on the tree of Vedas. They are
also called Vedanta, which really means the goal of Veda. The word
Upanishad means ‘sitting devotedly near.’ It is the secret teaching of
spiritual wisdom imparted in private to worthy pupils.
The works that go by the name Upanishad exceeds 1000 in number. But
only few are available today. MUKTIKOPANISAD gives a list of 108
Upanishads. Even the introduction to all the Upanishads, will surely
occupy many a voluminous text.
JAGADGURU SRI ADI SANKARACHARYA, the earliest commentator,
wrote his commentary on ten Upanishads (DASOPANISADS). SRIMAD
RAMANUJACHARYA tried to amplify some of their concepts in his
'Vedartha Sangraha'. SRI MADHVACHARYA wrote the brief
commentaries on these ten Upanishads.
The trend of the Upanishads is generally against ritualism and strongly
favors Upasana and Jnana (Meditation and Wisdom). Here we must note
that for the one who has transcended the worldly affairs, all rituals are but
the secondary details.
The great masters say that the study of the Dasopanishads will reveal to
the student the nature of Individual Self and the Supreme Self, and thus
help in the path of self realization. The names of the ten Upanishads
respectively are-
“Isa Kena Katha Prasna Mundaka Mandukya thithiri
Aitareyancha Chandogyam Brihadaranyakam dasa."
ISAVASYA UPANISHAD
This Upanishad is in the end of the Sukla Yajurveda Samhita. This is a
small Upanishad with 18 mantras. This Upanishad starts with the words
‘Isavsyam Idam Sarvam….’ hence the name Isavasya Upanishad. Many
scholars wrote their commentaries on this Upanishad.
It says that the whole world is pervaded by the Isa of the Supreme
Brahman. It advocates that one should not cease the actions (Karma) but
should work and live the full span of life. It beautifully describes the nature
of Atman and declares that the one who has realized this Atman
transcends sorrow and delusion.
KENA UPANISHAD
This Upanishad is in the Talavakara Brahmana of Jaimini sakha of
Samaveda. This is also called Talavakara Upanishad. This has four chapters
and 35 mantras. This Upanishad gets its name by its very first word ‘Kena’
which means ‘by what.’ The question which is the base of depth
psychology was asked in the very opening verse of this Upanishad ‘Willed
by whom does the directed mind goes towards its Object ?
This Upanishad has a beautiful exposition on the Self, which is the eye of
the eye, ear of ear, mind of the mind etc.
The Supreme Self can only be experienced. One can never become the
knower of the Self, for to know one must inevitably be separate from the
Self ! This Upanishad says- “It is known to him to whom It is unknown; he
does not know to whom It is known. It is unknown to those who know
well and known to those who do not know”.
The second half of this Upanishad has a didactical parable of the gods and
the Brahman. All gods became very much elated after being victorious in
the battle against the demons. In their joy of victory, they forgot that this
victory was due to the grace of the Brahman. To teach them a lesson the
supreme Brahman appeared before them in the form of a Yaksha. They
could not exhibit their super natural potentials before that Yaksha. Finally
Indra, the chief of gods went to inquire. From him the Yaksha vanished
away and in that very place appeared the divine mother Uma Haimavathi
and taught Indra about Brahman.
This Upanishad specially mentions the basic disciplines needed to attain
knowledge of Brahman and ends with these following words - “Any one
who knows Brahman to be supreme reality, he, having dispelled sin,
remains firmly seated in the boundless, blissful and the supreme
Brahman".
KATHOPANISHAD
This Upanishad is in the Kathaka sakha of Krishna Yajurveda. It is also
called Kathakopanishad. This Upanishad has 6 chapters and 119 mantras.
This Upanishad starts with the story of Vajassravasaan and his son
Nachiketa. This story is very symbolical. Nachiketa goes to Yamaloka, the
abode of the god of death.
The main teaching of this Upanishad is in the form of a dialogue between
the small Nachiketa and Yama raja, the god of death. Yama raja teaches his
the spiritual wisdom.
“Arise! Awake! And stop not till the goal is reached”
Swami Vivekananda’s call to the nation was a reflection of a verse of this
Upanishad.
The gist of the teachings of this Upanishad:
1. The Self cannot be known through much study or through the
intellect or through much hearing.
2. Know the Self as the master of the chariot, and the body as the
chariot. Know the intellect as the charioteer and the mind as verily
the bridle.
3. In Brahman the sun does not shine, neither do the moon and the
stars; nor do these flashes of lightning shine. How can this fire? He
shining all these shine; through His luster all these are variously
illuminated.
4. When all desires clinging to one’s heart fall off, then a mortal
becomes immortal and he attains Brahman here.
PRASNA UPANISHAD
This Upanishad belongs to the Atharvana Veda. This is in the form of
questions and answers. Hence it has been named as Prasnopanishad.
(Prasna means a “Question”)
This has 6 chapters and 67 mantras. Six aspirants approached a great sage
called 'Pippalada' and requested Him to answer their queries. The sage,
after testing their sincerity for one year, consented to answer their
questions. The six questions which this Upanishad answers are:
1. From what indeed are all these beings born?
2. How many in fact are the deities that sustain a creature? Which
among them exhibit this glory? Which again, is the chief among
them?
3. From where is this Prana born? How does it come into this body?
How again does it dwell by dividing himself? How does it deport?
How does it support the external things and how the physical?
4. Which are the organs that go to sleep in the person? Which keep
awake in him? Which deity experiences dream? To whom occurs this
happiness? In whom do all get merged?
5. Which world does one really win thereby who among men, intently
meditates on OM in that wonderful way till death?
6. Where does the Purusha exist?
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD
This Upanishad is in Atharvana Veda. It has 3 chapters with 6 sections and
64 mantras. The word ‘Mundaka’ means a cleanly shaven head. This
Upanishad might have derived this name because of its teachings which
can be comprehended only by the refined minds.
This Upanishad tells us about the Akshara Para Brahman, which is beyond
dissolution and destruction. Akshara means imperishable. Here it means
both ‘sound and letter’. OM is the origin for the both. OM is the greatest
medium to reach this Akshara Para Brahman. Hence this Upanishad says
OM is the bow, the soul is the arrow; and Brahman is called its target. It is
to be hit by an unerring man. One should become one with it just like an
arrow.
This Upanishad very beautifully gives the distinction between the
individual self and the supreme self.
Two birds that are ever associated and have similar names cling to the
same tree (body). Of these, one (the Individual Self) eats the fruit of
diverged tastes, and the other looks on without eating. The Individual Self
remains drowned in the waters of ignorance and means, being worried by
its impotence. When it sees the other the adored lord and His glory, then it
becomes liberated by the sorrow.
The great declaration that the truth alone triumphs and not untruth
(SATYAMEVA JAYATE NAANRUTHAM) is in this Upanishad.
MANDUKYA UPANISHAD
This Upanishad belongs to the Atharvana Veda. This is a very small
Upanishad comprising of only 12 mantras. Though it is very small, the
potency of its teaching has occupied a very prominent place.
‘Manduka’ means Frog. A frog will not move step by step. It jumps.
Similarly this Upanishad takes a leap from the three states of consciousness
(Jagrat, Swapna and Sushupti) and deals about the Turiya, the fourth state,
also called the transcendental state of consciousness.
Some scholars argue that this Upanishad was revealed to Varuna Deva, the
god of rains, who is in the form of a frog and hence the name Mandukya
Upanishad.
This Upanishad delves straight away into the sublime philosophy of
Pranava (Om), the Atman and the Brahman. It says that it is impossible to
describe the nature of the eternal truth called Brahman since He is
Achintya (beyond thought) and Alkshana (beyond characteristics).
TAITTRIYA UPANISHAD
This Upanishad belongs to the Krishna Yajurveda. This is the most widely
studied Upanishad. This has 3 chapters called Shikshavalli, Anandavalli
and Briguvalli.
Shikshavalli speaks about the instruction of Education. The last part of this
Shikshavalli is the parting message to the student, who, having finished his
study, is about to leave the Gurukulam. This is called Sishyanusasanam.
The teacher instructs the student about the necessary duties:
“Speak truth. Practice righteousness. Make no mistake about the study….
Do not terminate the line of progeny. There should be no inadvertence
about truth. There should be no deviation from righteous activity. There
should be no mistake about your protection. Do not neglect propitious
activities. Do not be careless about learning and teaching………. Let your
mother be a goddess unto you. Let your father, your teacher and your
guest be a god unto you.”
Anandavalli describes the eternal Bliss which shines above the
Anandamaya Kosa(the sheath of Bliss which transcends the other four
called Annamaya Kosa - the sheath of food, Pranamaya Kosa - the sheath of
mind and Vignamamaya Kosa - the sheath of intellect). It also describes the
other four sheaths.
It also says that one is not subjected to fear at any time if one knows the
Bliss that is Brahman, failing to reach which, words along with the mind
turn back.
Brighuvalli is the teaching given to sage Brighu by his father Varuna. This
teaching is not mere information but the instruction to experience the
divine by ones own efforts. He encourages his son Brighu to do penance
and get the experience of the Brahman. Brighu in course of his penance
transcends all Kosas and finally gets established in the supreme Brahman.
This Upanishad has not neglected the earthly life. It says that one, having
established in supreme Brahman should not deprecate and discard food
(i.e., the earthly life). One should make food plentiful.
AITAREYA UPANISHAD
Aitareya Upanishad is in the end of the Aitareya Aranyaka of the Rigveda.
This Upanishad has 4 chapters with 6 sections and 33 mantras. As this was
revealed to a sage called Mahidasa Aitareya, this Upanishad is called
Aitareya Upanishad.
This Upanishad says that the Supreme Lord desired to create the world
and has created this without the aid of any other thing, by Himself. It also
describes the birth, the metamorphosis, the death and the rebirth of the
Jeevatman. It contains a story of sage Vamadeva who succeeded in getting
the spiritual wisdom even while in the womb of his mother and became
free.
The last section of this Upanishad gives a clear exposition about the direct
experience of the supreme self and also on the distinction between the
mind and pure consciousness.
It declares that the pure consciousness is Brahman - (Prajnanam Brahma)
CHANDOGYA UPANISHAD
This Upanishad is in the Chandogya Brahamana of Samaveda. This has 8
chapters with 154 sections and 628 mantras.
It begins with the Upasana of OM. It speaks of so many Vidyas like Aksi
Vidya, Akasa Vidya, Madhu Vidya, Sandilya Vidya, Prana Vidya,
Panchagni Vidya etc., These Vidyas help us to realize the Paramatman or
Supreme Self. The last chapter talks about the Dahara Vidya, which is the
meditation on the self within the small space of the heart.
This Upanishad contains didactical stories of Satyakama and Swethakethu .
One of the chapters of this Upanishad is in the form of a dialogue between
sage Sanathkumara and his disciple Narada. Sanathkumara takes Narada
step by step from Ahara Suddhi (purifiction of food) to the realization of
Bhooma or Brahman.
This Upanishad concludes with a statement of a liberated soul about His
being free from all sins and attaining the abode of Brahman.
BRIHADARANYAKA UPANISHAD
This Upanishad is the Aranyaka of Sukla Yajurveda with 6 chapters, 47
sections and 435 mantras. ‘Brihat’ means very big. This Upanishad is the
biggest of all the ten Upanishads. Generally an Upanishad is seen in the
end of the Aranyaka part of the Veda. But this Upanishad is the total
Aranyaka itself.
The first two chapters of this Upanishad are called Madhu Kanda. The next
two are called Muni Kanda and the last two Khila Kanda.
Madhu means nectar. Madhu Kanda describes the Atman, which is even
beyond the gods. For the One, who has realized this Atman, the whole
world will appear as a divine entity. He enjoys constantly the nectar of
Bliss of Immortality.
Muni Kanda presents sage Yajnavalkya at His best. His teachings on
Vedanta have been very effectively presented in this Kanda. He establishes
the true nature of the Atman, by an analysis of the three states of
Consciousness, as the ever free blissful self. A description of the Jiva
suffering at the time of death and his transmigration also find a place in
these teachings, to induce Vairagya.
The last kanda contains all those teachings which are in a scattered form.
‘Khila’ means that whichis scattered. (If the scattered parts are brought
together, then it is called Akhila).This contains a number of Upasanas. It
talks about the need to have self -control, to inculcate the divine qualities
like compassion and giving gifts to the needy and Panchagni Vidya (The
doctrine of five fires).
This Upanishad ends with a long list of great Rishis.





ADVAITA VEDANTA A PRESENTATION FOR BEGINNERS -2

Wednesday, May 9, 2012















SECTIONS 18-23
PHILOSOPHY OF ADVAITA VEDANTA
AS EXPOUNDED IN THE UPANISHADS
(N.B. For the sake of continuity of presentation,
certain ideas will get repeated in this Part.)
Section 18 – Enquiry into Atma – Methodology
There are various methods adopted by the Upanishads to reveal the Consciousness
aspect of Brahman and to show that while this original consciousness cannot be
objectified, it can be recognised as the witness-consciousness behind the mind
a. The known is not yourself. This method is called “Drk Drsya Viveka”. . Whatever
you perceive or know as an object cannot be yourself, because you are the ultimate
witness or subject and no object can be the subject. Cf. Brhadaranyaka Upanishad
III.8.xi - (Also III.vii.23) – “Verily, this Absolute, O Gargi, is never seen, but It is the
Seer; It is never heard but It is the Hearer; It is never thought but It is the Thinker; It
is never known but It is the Knower. There is no other seer than It, there is no other
hearer than It, there is no other thinker than It, there is no other knower than It.”
(Sankaracarya’s commentary – “Being the consciousness Itself, It is not an object of
the intellect.”) Brhadaranyaka Upanishad III.4.ii - “…… ‘Tell me precisely about that
Brahman only which is immediate and direct – the Atma that is within all’ ‘ This is
your Atma that is within all.’ ‘Which is that within all, Yagnavalkya?’ ‘You cannot see
the Seer of the seer ( the witness of the vision), you cannot hear the Hearer of the
hearer, you cannot think the Thinker of the thinker, you cannot know the Knower of
the knower. This is your self that is within all. Everything besides this is unreal
(mithya)….” Kenopanishad II.2.- “ I don’t say that I know Brahman nor do I say
that I don’t know Brahman. I know and do not know as well. He among us who
understands that utterance ‘not that I do not know, I know and I do not know’,
knows that Brahman Kenopanishad II.3 - “ He who says that he does not know (
Brahman) knows; he who claims that he knows ( Brahman) does not know……It is
unknown to those who know and known to those who do not know ( The meaning
of these intriguing Mantras is that that the atma, the original consciousness, cannot
become the object of the pramata. The example just as fire cannot be consumed by
thee consuming fire. Pramata is antahkarana cum reflected consciousness. How can
reflected consciousness illumine its source? It being the original consciousness Itself,
there cannot be dependence on another consciousness, just as light does nor depend
on another light. But as it is said in Kenopanishad II.4, Brahman (atma, the original
consciousness) is “pratibhotaviditam” – Brahman or Atma is the consciousness
recognized as the witness of all cognitions. In this connection we can also refer to
the discussion in Sankaracarya’s introduction to his commentary on Brahmasutra,
where he refutes an opponent who says that study of Sastra is futile. The opponent’s
argument is ‘if Brahman is known, there is no need to study Sastra and if Brahman is
unknown, no definition or description of an unknown thing is possible.
Sankaracarya’s answer is that Brahman is neither totally unknown nor totally known.
No one denies that he exists and that he is a conscious being. Thus, the
consciousness that is the real I is known , but we are under the spell of the ignorance
that we are limited individuals. It is necessary to study Sastra to understand that we
are Brahman, the infinite Existence-Consciousness-Infinite.
b. Inward enquiry. Another method is “ Panca Kosa Viveka” which we learn in
Taittiriya Upanishad Brahmananda valli. It talks of “aannamaya kosa” corresponding
to the sthoola sarira, “I” corresponding to that part of the sukshma sarira consisting
of the five vital airs – prana, apana, vyana, udana, and samana – together with the
five organs of action (karmendriyas), “manomaya kosa” corresponding to that part of
the sukshma sarira consisting of mind, i.e.,. the faculty that receives stimuli from the
outer world through the organs of peception (jnanendriyas) and which is the seat of
emotions and feeling, together with the five organs of perception (jananendriyas).
“vijanamaya kosa” corresponding to that part of the sukshma sarira consisting of the
intellect,, i.e., the deciding faculty as well as that which creates a sense of doership
(ahamkara), together with the jananendriyas ( - the mind and the intellect are really
two aspects of the same thinking faculty; the nature of the intellect is cognition and
of the mind volition.), and “anandamaya kosa” corresponding to the karana sarira of
the seep sleep state in which a person experiences ignorance and bliss.. The kosas
are introduced one after the otter as Atma. First, the Upanishad describes the
annamaya kosa and says it is Atma. Then, saying that there is something interior and
subtler than that, namely pranamaya kosa, negates the annamaya kosa (that is,
dismisses it, saying that it is not Atma – it is anatma) and so on, until it negates even
anandamaya, describing its parts as “priya”, moda” and “promoda” which are grades
of experienced happiness and, ultimately, reveals the ultimate conscious principle
and avers that that is Atma, Brahman.
c. The constant consciousness of the waking, dream and deep sleep states
(i)Another method which we learn from Mandukya Upanishad is “Avasthatraya
Viveka”. This Upanishad deals with the waking state ( “jagrat awastha”), the dream
state ( “ swapna awastha”) and the deep sleep state ( sushupti awastha”) and
establishes that the consciousness that is Atma or Brahman is constantly there in all
the three states, the jagrat, the swapna and the sushupti awasthas, as the constant
conscious principle. It is only in the presence of Atma that, in jagrat avastha, the
mind which is part of the apparent creation perceives, with the aid of the reflected
consciousness, the apparent external world; it is in the presence of the Atma that, in
swapna avastha, when the mind itself has become the dream world, the dream world
is witnessed by the Atma through cidabhasa. In the sushupti awastha , though the
mind is resolved, the Atma continues as the unchanging witness ( sakshi caitanyam);
the absence of experience and absence of mental activity and feeling of happiness
are registered in the dormant ahamkara , to be recalled by the active ahamkara on
waking up (and we say “I did not know anything; I slept happily”.
(ii) In this connection we can refer to the following passage in “Upadesa Sahasri” of
Sankaracarya: - The disciple is asking “But at no time Your Holiness, have I ever seen
pure consciousness or anything else”. The teacher answers , “ Then you are seeing in
the state of deep sleep; for you deny only the seen object, not the seeing. I said that
your seeing is pure consciousness. That [ eternally] existing one by which you deny [
the existence of the seen object] when you say that nothing has been seen, [ that
precisely] is the seeing, that is pure consciousness. Thus as [It] does not depart
[from you] [Its] transcendental changelessness and eternity are established solely by
Itself without depending upon any means of knowledge.” The pupil said, “….And
there is no apprehender different from this apprehender to apprehend it.”
(iii) That consciousness continues even during the deep sleep state when all
instruments of knowledge including the mind are dormant is expressed poetically in
Brhadaranyaka Upanishad IV.iii.23 to 30 – “ That It does not see, smell, taste, speak,
hear, think. touch, or know is because although seeing, smelling, tasting, speaking,
hearing, thinking, touching and knowing then (the reference is to the continued
presence of the original consciousness as witness of the non-functioning mind) it
does not see, smell, taste, speak, hear, think, touch or know (the reference is to the
fact that since ahamkara is dormant, there is no experience of an external world of
objects or an internal dream world. It is only when the sense organs and mind are
functioning that one perceives an external world of objects and it is only when the
mind is active, even though the sense organs are dormant, that one sees a dream
world) ; for the vision of the witness can never be lost, because it is imperishable( -
the reference is to the fact that the original consciousness is eternal – there is no
interruption in the presence of the original consciousness as the witness of the mind,
whether the latter is active or dormant. ). But there is not that second thing separate
from it, which it can see. ( i.e., since the mind cum cidabhasa are dormant, there is no
triputi and there is no particular experience.)”
Section 19 –Brahman as Bliss
1. Brahman is described as Sat Cit Ananda. Ananda is translated in English as Bliss.
But the word ananda used to define Brahman’s nature, does not refer to experiential
happiness. It should be equated with anantatvam i.e. infinitude – infinitude not only
space wise, but time wise and entity-wise – indicated by the word “anantam’
occurring in the Taittiriya Upanishad mantra II.i – “ Satyam Jnanam Anantam
Brahma”. This anantatvam (or poornatvam) is reflected in the pure, calm mind of a
Jnani who has identified himself with the infinite nature Brahman. And so, he has a
sense of utter fulfilment and such a sense, we can say, is supreme happiness. Thus,
we have to distinguish between “swaroopa ananda”, ananda as the nature of
Brahman and “kosa ananda”, the ananda experienced by a jnani. (The ananda
experienced by a jnani is unconditional happiness. happiness experienced by others
is conditional and graded.) The word ananda to define Brahman is used as such in
some places in the Upanishads.–Brhadaranyaka Upanishad III.ix.28 (7) –“vijanam
anandam Brahma ....parayanam tishtam anasya tat vida’ (“Knowledge, Bliss,
Brahman ......the supreme goal of him who has realised Brahman and is established in
It.”- Taittiriya Upanishad III.vi.1 – “anando brahma iti vijanat” (“He knew Bliss as
Brahman”). Taittiriya Upanishad II.v.1– “ananda atma” (“Bliss is Atma” ,i.e.,
Brahman) Taittiriya Upanishad II.vii – “ ko hi eva anyat pranat yat esha akasa
(Brahman) ananda na syat” (“Who indeed will inhale, who will exhale, if this Bliss be
not there in the supreme space within the heart) - Taittiriya UpanishadII.iv.1 and
II.ix.1 – “anandam bramano vidwan na vibheti kadacaneti - kudascaneti” (“The
enlightened man is not afraid of anything after realising that Bliss that is Brahman”)
Chandogya VII.xxiii.1 “yo vai bhooma tat sukham” (“ The Infinite alone is Bliss”). –
Brhadaranyaka IV.iii.32 “Esha Brahmalokah....esha asya parama anandah. Eta
anandasya anya bhootani matram upajivati” (“This is the state of Brahman....This is
Its supreme bliss. On a particle of this very bliss other beings live.”) Kathopanishad
II.ii.14 refers to Brahman as supreme bliss (“paramam sukham.”) . Kaivalya
Upanishad 6 refers to Brahman as consciousness and bliss (“cidanandam “).
2. The ananda which a Jnani derives from his sense of utter fulfilment or
desirelessness is brought out in certain places in the Upanishads. In the “Ananda
mimamsa” portion in Taittiriya Upanishad ( Chapter II, Valli 2, anuvaka 8 and in
Brhadaranyaka Upanishad mantra IV.iii.33, it is equated with the absence of desire
for the happiness available in the highest world, the plane of Hiranyagarbha, which
is the highest plane of the vyavaharika satyam. In Taittiriya Upanishad Chapter 2,
Valli 2, anuvaka 7 (mantra 2), the name for Brahman is “ rasah”. “Rasah”, in Sanskrit,
in such contexts is the synonym for ananda . The mantra says, “The One described as
Self Created (i.e. Unborn) in the previous mantra, is indeed rasah (ananda
swaroopam). Attaining that rasa (identifying himself with that ananda, the Brahman)
the jivatma becomes anandi (enjoys supreme happiness.).
3. The logic of saying that Brahman’s nature is Ananda is contained in Brhadaranyaka
Upanishad in the second chapter, fourth section, fifth Mantra. Here, Yajnavalkya tells
Maitreyi, his wife ( who is such an expert in Vedic lore that she carries on a long and
wonderful debate with her husband who is a Jnani) “ Verily the husband is dear ( to
the wife ) not for the sake of the husband, my dear, but it is for her own sake that he
is dear. Verily the wife is dear ( to the husband) not for the sake of the wife, my dear,
but it is for his own sake that she is dear. Verily sons are dear ( to parents) not for
the sake of the sons, my dear, but it is for the sake of the parents themselves that
they are dear. Verily wealth is dear not for the sake of wealth, my dear, but it is for
one’s own sake that it is dear. ……..verily worlds are dear not for the sake of the
worlds, my dear, but it is for one’s own sake. Verily gods are dear not for the sake of
gods, my dear, but it is for one’s own sake that they are dear. Verily beings are dear
not for the sake of beings, my dear, but it is for one’s own sake that they are dear.
Verily all is dear not for the sake of all, my dear, but it is for one’s own sake that all is
dear………” The argument is that everyone ultimately loves only oneself and all
other love is only because it subserves the primary love of oneself. And one loves only
that which is a source of happiness. So, it is conclued that Atma is the source of
happiness and, therefore the nature of Atma is ananda. (Atma is none other than
Brahman.)
4. The nearest example to the ananda aspect of Brahman is our state of deep sleep.
Cf. Brhadaranyaka Upanishad IV.3.xxi - Just as a man embracing his beloved wife
becomes one with her and does not know anything at all, external or internal, so does
this Infinite Jivatma fully embraced by the Paramatma does not know anything at all,
external or, internal, (such as ‘I am this’, ‘I am happy’ ‘I am miserable’). By talking of
Jivatma and Paramatma becoming one, Upanishad is referring to the fact that since
ahamkara is suspended, there is no idea of difference. Since there is no perception
and there are no thoughts, there is no desire; there is no mental disturbance at all. It
is a state of happiness, though it is not evident at that time. Since there is no desire,
there is no grief. In the next mantra, it is said, “ in this state, father is no more
father, mother is no more mother, worlds are no more worlds, gods are no more
gods, Vedas are no more Vedas”. ( i.e., all relationships and the consequent samsara
are due to the notion of individuality. Since ahamkara is suspended during sushupti,
there is no notion of individuality and there is no notion of relationships. There is no
notion of means and ends, either. Vedas are means for moksha. There is no idea of
wanting to have recourse to Veda.) However, sushupti should not be mistaken to be
moksha. Sushpti is only a rough example for the state of liberation. In sushupti,
empirical dealings (vyavahara) are suspended. In the state of liberation, empirical
dealings are seen as mithya. Hence one is permanently free from all empirical
dealings..
Section 20 – Benefit of identification with Brahman
All over the Upanishads, we get statements mentioning the benefit of the knowing, “I
am Brahman” and”All that there is is Brahman” (“”sarvatmabhava”) i.e., the
understanding that even though the nama roopas are unreal appearances, they are
not separate from the substratum, Brahman that is myself; the substance of
everything is Brahman only, that is myself.) A few quotations would not be out of
place. Taittiriya Upanishad II.i.1 “The knower of Brahman attains Brahman.
(“Brahmavid apnoti param”:). Mundaka Upanishad III.2.ix. – “Anyone who knows
that supreme Brahman becomes Brahman indeed. ….He overcomes grief, rises above
punya papa; and becoming freed from the knots of the heart (i.e., overcoming selfignorance),
he attains immortality.” Kathopanishad II.ii.12 – “Eternal peace is for
those who recognize the Paramatma that is the Atma in all beings and as the
homogenous consciousness available for recognition in oneself through its
manifestation as knowledge in the intellect, like a face appearing ion the mirror – not
for others.” Kathopanishad II.ii.13 – “Eternal peace is for those who recognize the
Paramatma, the eternal among the ephemeral, the consciousness among the
conscious (i.e., it is owing to the fire that water, etc, that are not fire, come to be
possessed of the power to burn, similarly the power to manifest consciousness seen
in others is owing to the consciousness of Atma)....in their hearts – not for others.
(The paraphrase of Kathopanishad mantras III.ii.12 and 13 are based on
Sankaracarya’s bhashyam.) Chandogya Upanishad vii.i.3 – “The knower of Atma goes
beyond sorrow.” Kathopanishad I.iii.15 – “ One becomes freed from the jaws of
death by knowing That (i.e.,Brahnan) which is soundless, colourless, undiminishing,
and also tasteless, eternal, odourless, without beginning, and without end, distinct
from mahat, and ever constant.” Taittiriya Upanishad II.vii – “whenever an aspirant
gets established in this unperceivable, bodiless, inexpressible, and unsupported
Brahman, he reaches the state of fearlessness.” Svetasvatara Upanishad II.14. –
“Knowing the Atma, one becomes nondual, fulfilled and free of sorrow.” Svesvatara
Upanishad II.15 – “when one knows Brahman as Atma, i.e., knows “I am Brahman”
(“the original consciousness in me is the infinite Brahman”), the Brahman which is
unborn, whose nature is immutable, which is unaffected by avidya and its products
and which is effulgent, one becomes freed from all bonds.” Svesvatara Upanishad
III.7 – “Knowing that Brahman that is beyond the universe and Hiranyagarbha and is
infinite, that is the indweller of all beings, that encompasses the universe, men
become immortal.” Brhadaranyaka Upanishad IV.iv.23 -“This ( Brahman described as
‘not this, not this’) is the eternal glory of a knower of Brahman. It neither increases
nor decreases through work; therefore one should know the nature of that alone.
Knowing it one is not touched by evil action. Therefore he who knows it as such
becomes self-controlled, calm, withdrawn into himself, enduring and concentrated
and sees the Atma in his own body; he sees all as the Atma. Papa does not overtake
him, but he transcends all papa. Papa does not trouble him but he consumes all papa.
He becomes free of papa, taintless, free from doubts and a Brahmana ,i.e., knower of
Brahman.” Svesvatara Upanishad IV.17 - “Benefited by the teaching that negates the
Universe discriminates between Atma and anatma and reveals the unity of Jivatma
and Brahman, he who knows that Brahman becomes immortal.” Taittiriya Upanishad
II.ix.1 - _ “He who knows ananda that is Brahman has no fear.” _ Taittiriya
Upanishad II.1.i. – “Brahman is Existence-Consciousness-Infinity; he who knows
that Brahman as existing in the cave-like space of the heart (i/e., mind) (i.e., as the
consciousness behind one’s own mind) and thus having identified himself with that
infinite Brahman, enjoys, simultaneously, all the desirable things.” (“Simultaneous
enjoyment of all desirable things” implies sarvatmabhava.) Mundaka III.i.3 – “ When
the seeker recognizes the effulgent Sakshi as the all pervading Brahman, who, in the
form of Iswara, is the creator of the universe, becomes free from punya papa,
becomes taintless and attains total identity with Brahman.” Mundaka Upanishad
II.i.10 – “He who knows this supremely immortal Brahman as existing in the heart
destroys, here, the knot of ignorance.” Brhadaranyaka Upanishad IV.iv.12 – “If a man
knows the Atma as Brahman, then desiring what and for whose sake will he suffer
when the body is afflicted? “(Since he, as Brahman, is the Atma in all beings, there is
no other seer than he and there is no other knower than he; as Atma, he has nothing
to wish for and Atma being all, there is none other than himself for whose sake he
may wish anything). Kathopanishad II.ii.11 – “ Just as the sun which is the eye of
the world is not tainted by the ocular and external defects, similarly the Atma that is
one in all beings is not tainted by the sorrows of the world, it being transcendental.” (
it is through avidya superimposed on Atma and, consequently, by superimposing false
notions of karma, karta and karmaphalam, like the superimposition of snake on rope,
that people suffer the sorrows arising from desire and work and experience the
misery of birth, death etc.) Prasna Upanishad IV.10 – “he who realizes that
shadowless, pure, immutable attains the supreme immutable itself.” Kaivalya
Upanishad 4 – “Through a life of renunciation, the pure minded seekers clearly grasp
the meaning of Vedantic teaching. Having become one with the Infinite Brahman
(while living), all those seekers get totally resolved into Brahman at the time of final
death.” ( “Vedanta vijnana suniscitartha sanyasa yogat yataya suddhatatva; te
brahmalokeshu parantakale paramrutah parimucyanti sarve.” Kaivalya 9 –“He alone
is everything which was in the past , which is in the present and which will be in the
future and He alone is eternal. Having recognised Him, one crosses immortality.
There is no other means for liberation.” Kaivalya Upanishad 10 – “Clearly recognising
oneself to be present in all beings and clearly recognising all beings in oneself, the
seeker attains the supreme Brahman, not by any other means.” Kaivalya Upanishad
23 – “ Thus having recognised the nature of Paramatma which is manifest in the
mind , which is partless, non-dual, the wines of all, distinct from cause and effect and
is pure, one attains the nature of nature of Paramatma.”. In one of the Upanishads, it
is said that the jnani does not want to protect himself even from Iswara. That is
because even Iswara is of a lower order of reality than Brahman and the Jnani has
identified himself with that Brahman.. Cf. Brhadaranyaka Upanishad I.iv.2 – “From a
second entity only fear arises.”.
Section 21 – Benefit of knowing that I am all
“Sarvatmabhava” is not different from the realisation, “ Brahmasatyam jaganmithya”.
“The existence part of everything is Brahman and I am Brahman. In this sense
everything is myself. Since everything is myself, I have no sense of lacking anything.
So I am without desire. Since all cidabhasas are reflections of my original
consciousness, I can regard, as a matter of intellectual attitude, all glories and all
happiness as my glory and happiness. At the same time, there is the understanding
that the nama roopas superimposed on the Existence-Consciousness-Infinity which is
myself, are of a lesser order of reality and I cannot be disturbed by any untoward
phenomena. Moreover,.” This is the position of one who has known ‘aham
brahmasmi” and that there is no world, in essence, other than Brahman. Cf. Isavasya
Upanishad mantra 1 – “This entire universe must be clothed with Brahman (which
means that what you think is the world should be seen as Brahman; the world should
be dismissed as unreal, as mere nama roopa.) Protect yourself from samsara by
renunciation (the renunciation consists in the dismissal of mithya. The moment
Brahman is known as the only reality the world is renounced as mithya.)
(Commentary of Sankaracarya – “As the indwelling Atma of all, He is the Atma of all
beings and as such rules all. All this is to be covered by one’s own Atma that is
nondifferent from Brahman, with the realisation, ‘as the indwelling Atma of all, I am
all this’. All that is unreal, whether moving or unmoving, is covered by Brahman. The
unreal world of duality characterised by the sense of doership and enjoyership and
other effects of ignorance superimposed on Atma will be abandoned through the
recognition the supreme Truth. He who is thus engaged in the thought of Atma as
Brahman renounces desires for worldly objects.”) After “Protect yourself through
renunciation of desires.”, the mantra says “ Do not covet anybody’s wealth – your
own or of others – Whose is this wealth?” (This is interpreted as saying ‘you as Atma
nondifferent from Brahman is everything; do not hanker after the unreal.) Isavasya
Upanishad 6 – “He who sees all beings in the Atma and Atma in all beings feels no
hatred.” (“yastu sarvani bhootani atmani eva anypasyanti sarvabhhoteshu ca
atmanam tato na vijupsate.”) Isavasya Upanishad 7 – “When one understands all
beings to be his own Atma, for that seer of oneness what sorrow can there be?”
(“yasmin sarvani bhootani atma eva abhoo vijanatah tatra ko moha kah sokah
ekatvam anupasyata”). Kaivalya Upanishad 10 - “Clearly recognising oneself to be
present in all beings and clearly recognising all beings in oneself, the seeker attains
the supreme Brahman; not by any other means”. (“Sarva bhotastam atmanam sarva
bhootani ca atmani sampasyan paramamyati na anyena hetuna”). .
Section 22 – Purpose of teaching about Gods with attributes
1. The absolute reality of Advaita Vedanta is not even a single personal god, not to
speak of many gods. It is pure existence, i.e., an eternal all pervading presence
without form and without attributes which is also pure consciousness; with that as
the substratum, there is, as a lower order of reality, a superimposition of manifold
forms which appear to us as concrete objects. What makes this possible is the power
called Maya which is the unevolved form of Nama roopas. Brahma caitanyam is
reflected in Maya and that entity is called Iswara. Iswara designs creation in
accordance with the requirements of the karma of jivatmas and impels Maya to
unfold as manifest nama roopas; it is the manifest nama roopas superimposed on
Brahman that is existence that we experience as objects of the world including our
own bodies and minds. Cf. Kathopanishad II.i.11 - “There is no diversity here.” (“na
iha nana asti kincana”). Brhadranyaka Upanishad II.v.19 – “Even though Brahman is
the nondual divisionless consciousness, he appears to be many on account of the
false identification with Nama roopas. (“indro mayabhih pururoopa iyate”) Y.xxxi.19
“ Though unborn it appears to be born in diverse ways”. (“ajayamano bahudha
jayate”). While maintaining that on the paramarthika plane (i.e. as absolute reality),
there is only the nondual atrributeless Brahman (“nirguna Brahman”) Advaita
Vedanta accommodates, on the vyavaharika plane, (as a lower order of reality),
Brahman with qualities (“saguna Brahman”). Uncreated saguna Brahman is called
Iswara. “Uncreated” means, that, on the vyavaharika plane, Iswara is always there,
without beginning or end.. Iswara is omniscient ( “sarvajnah”), omnipotent
(“sarvasaktiman”) and omnipresent ( “sarvagatah”). Controlled by and as aspects of
Iswara, on the vyavaharika plane, Hindu religion talks of various deities performing
specific functions relating to and presiding over various aspects of the cosmos with
various powers of Iswara. Thus various aspects of forces and nature are personified
as gods, such as Brahmaa (pronounced with an elongated to distinguish from
Brahman), i and Siva, the creator, sustainer and destroyer of the universe described
in Hindu puranas and other gods like Indra (the presiding deity of thunder and
lightning), Agni (the presiding deity of fire and eyes), Varuna ( the presiding deity of
fire and eyes), Vayu (the presiding deity of air and pranas.) etc. Incarnations of
Iswara, (called “avataras”) like Rama, i etc. are also accepted as phenomena on the
vyavaharika plane. Avataras are Iswara descending in various worlds in various
forms and with various manifestations of his powers on critical occasions when
restoration of cosmic harmony is called for. The bodies and minds of avataras are also
mithya ( vyvahaarika satyam.) It is made clear in certain Upanishads that there is
only one absolute reality; that is called Brahman, and gods are only manifestations -
Nama roopas – on the vyavaharika plane. Mahanarayana Upanishad III.12, talking of
Brahman, say that he is Brahmaa (‘a’ elongated ), Siva and Indra. In Brhadaranyaka
Upanishad III.ix.1 to 9, in the dialogue between Vigadha and Yajnavalkya, read with
Brhadaranyaka Upanishad III.ix.xxvi, it is made clear that the various gods
mentioned in Vedas , like Vasus, Rudras, Adityas, Indra, Prajapati, Hiranyagarbha are
only manifestations of the one absolute non-dual, attributeless Brahman.
Svetasvatara Upanishad VI. 7 – “He is the ruler of all the rulers; he is the god of all
gods…” Mundaka Upanishad II. I. 7– “ From him take their origin the numerous
gods, the heavenly beings……..” Kaivalya Upanishad 8 - “ He is Brahmaa, he is Siva,
he is Indra, he is the imperishable, the supreme majesty, the self-effulgent; he is
Vishnu, he is prana, he is time, he is fire, he is the moon.” – Aitereya Upanishad
III.i.3 – “This one that is essentially consciousness is Brahma (‘a’ with elongated a);
he is Indra, he is Prajapati, he is all these gods. And he is the five elements – earth,
air, space, water, and fire – and he is all the beings in subtle seed form and all beings
born from eggs, wombs, sweat, and the soil, horses, cattle, elephants and human
beings. Including all these, whatever there is in this universe, flying beings, those
moving on the ground , those that are immoveable – have their existence only in
consciousness and everything is functioning in their own field of work or role only by
getting the requisite power and knowledge only from that consciousness. That
consciousness is the substratum of everything. (Consciousness is the one reality in
which all phenomenal things end, just as the superimposed snake ends in its base,
the rope, on the dawn of knowledge.) That consciousness is Brahman.”(Based on
Sankaracarya’s commentary.) According to Sastra the gods like Indra, Varuna, Agni,
Vayu, Surya, Candra etc are only exalted jivas, i.e., those whose prarabdha karma is
so punya-predominant that they deserve to enjoy life in the higher worlds for certain
periods; when the period is over they take rebirth on the earth or lower worlds,
depending on the punya-papa proportion of the prarabdha karma assigned for that
particular janma.
2. On analysis, it will be seen that the purpose of teaching saguna Brahman is only to
enable man to go through worship and meditation of saguna Brahman and graduate
to jnana yoga (study of Upanishads) and gain knowledge of jivabrahma aikyam. Cf.
Sankaracarya’s statement “citta avatara upaya matratvena”. Saguna Brahman and
the various presiding deities and avataras are unreal. A jnani has no need of saguna
Brahman worship or saguna Brahman meditation, but, as an example to those in the
lower stages of spiritual progress, he may do saguna Brahman worship and saguna
Brahman meditation. In this, a jnani who has gained knowledge through the
teaching of Advaita Vedanta does not make any distinction between gods of one
religion and another. He can accept Jesus and Mohamed as he does Rama and
Krishna as manifestations of saguna Brahman or as avataras in the vyavaharika plane
and he can happily worship in a church or a mosque as he does in a temple. The idea
is that, in religion, meant as the teaching of preparatory, purificatory disciplines that
qualify a seeker of liberation, there can be many paths. But when it comes to
philosophy, the Advaita Vedanta follower will adhere to his faith that the direct
means of liberation is only one and that is the knowledge of jivahbrahma aikyam. Cf.
Svetasvatara Upanishad III. 8 - (“I know that Paramatma (Brahman) that is infinite,
that is effulgent and that is beyond avidya. Knowing that, men go beyond death, i.e.,
gets liberation from the bondage of births and deaths; there is no other way.” (“Na
anya pantha vidyate ayanaya”) – - “Liberation is only through knowledge.”(“Jnanat
eva kaivalyam.”) (The source of this statement is unknown.) The jnani may also do
worship in a temple or pray to god, but he does so with the knowledge that the
mithya sarira and the mithya antahkarna are worshipping the mithya god.
Section 23 - Process of obtaining knowledge of identity with Brahman
The sadhana or process for obtaining the knowledge “ i am Brahman” consists of “
sravanam”, , “ mananam” and “nididhyasanam”. Cf. the passage in Brhadaranyaka
Upanishad II.4.5 – “atma vai are drashtavyah srotavyah nididhysasitivyah.”.
a) Sravanam is study of sastra by listening to the teaching of a competent teacher
who can interpret the scripture properly, i.e., a teacher belonging to the teacherstudent
lineage of Vedantic teaching – the guru sishya parampara. Upanishads are
full of seeming contradictions and obscurities. The problem is that any part of the
upanishadic lore can be subjected to harmonious interpretation only by a person
who knows the whole; since no student will know the whole until he reaches the end
of his study, studying by oneself will only lead to misconceptions. Also, seeming
contradictions and obscure portions can be clarified only through study of
commentaries that analyse the purport of the passages in accordance with the rules
of harmonious construction called mimamsa. There are countless commentaries and
sub-commentaries and explanatory works and there are works containing arguments
and counterarguments among philosophers of different schools of thought and only a
teacher who has himself studied under a competent teacher in a course covering the
original works, the commentaries and important prakarana granthas and works of
disputations can convey the purport and meaning of Upanishadic passages. An ideal
teacher is defined as “ strotriya brahmanishta” i.e., one who has himself learnt under
a competent teacher belonging to the guru sishya parampara and has also got the
clear and fully assimilated knowledge that he is Brahman. The idea is that unless he
himself has learnt under a competent teacher how can he teach and unless he himself
knows without any mental reservation that he is Brahman (“aham bramasmi) how
can he tell the student sincerely, “Thou art That” (“Tattvamasi”)? The mahavakya,
“Tattvamasi” (which means “You are Brahman”) should ring true in the student’s ears
when uttered by the teacher. If one cannot find a teacher who is himself a jnani,
(the difficulty is that only a jnani himself knows whether he is a jnani, there being no
valid external signs to indicate whether one is a jnani.), the next best thing is to
approach one who may or may not have reached the final stage of assimilating the
knowledge but has acquired all the knowledge necessary to teach, having himself
learnt under a competent teacher. ( i.e., a mere srotriya).
b) Mananam is the process of getting doubts arising in the course of the study
clarified by one’s own cogitation and by discussion with the teacher.
c) Even after Mananam has eradicated intellectual doubts; the habit of emotional
identification with the body mind complex acquired through the countless past
janmas may remain. Nididhyasanam is meant for the destruction of this habit.. It is
of no use if one part of the mind is saying, “ I am Brahman” while other parts are
really saying, “i am a miserable, limited individual” “ I am a husband”, “I am a
father”, “This is my house” “ I am afraid I will die” “ I want to go to heaven
(‘swarga’)” etc. To remove these notions which are related to the wrong
identification with the body mind complex ( called, “dehatmabhava”) one has to
dwell on the various important aspects of the teaching, such as, “ I am the infinite
Brahman”, “ Brahman is relationless (‘ asanga’); I am Brahman; so, I have no wife, no
children, no house. They are all nama roopas superimposed on me, the Brahman.
Since, in this janma, this particular nama roopa of a body has married that nama
roopa called wife and given birth to certain other nama roopas called children, this
nama roopa has to discharge its duties to those nama roopas but there is no place for
sorrow, worry or anxiety.” “ I am the immortal, changeless Brahman; where is the
question of any fear of death or any grief worry or anxiety? Brahman is everything
and everybody; I am Brahman. So what do I lack? Where is the question of desire for
anything? Where is the question of hatred toward anything or anybody? I may have
preferences, but I have no needs.”.. Ultimately, the entire mind has to be saturated
with the knowledge “ I am Brahman” and even while experiencing things, transacting
with persons and handling situations in the world , the “ I am Brahman” thought
should be running as a constant undercurrent in the mind and should surface
immediately if there is the slightest tendency of intrusion of any notion related to
dehatmabhava (identification with the body mind complex).
BENEDICTION
Poornamadah poornam idam poornat pooranam udacyate
Poornasya poornam adadya pooornam eva avasishyate
This Santi Mantra (benedictory verse) which belongs to the Sukla Yajur Veda gives in
a nut shell the teaching of the Upanishads, “Brahmasatyam jaganmithya”
Literal translation will read as “ that is whole, this is whole; from the whole the whole
originates. When the whole is taken away from the whole the whole remains.”
The interpretation is as follows:-
“That is whole; this is whole”. “Whole” means infinite. “That” refers to Paramatma;
“This” refers to Jivatma. Infinity can only be one . So, “That is whole; this is whole’
means identity of Paramatma and Jivatma – jivabrahma aikyam.
“From the whole, the whole originates.” Here, from the whole” means “ from
Brahman the world originates.” (Reference is to the unfolding of the universe from
Maya, impelled by Iswara).
“When the whole is taken away from the whole, the whole remains”. This can only
happen if what is taken out is unreal. So, this refers to the fact that when the world is
born, Brahman does not undergo any diminution, does not undergo any change. –
Brahmasatyam Jaganmithya
APPENDIX 1
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Note No.1 - Can Brahman be known
1. A problem faced by the Advaita preceptor is to explain the apparent contradiction
between the Taittiriya Upanishad Mantra II.1.i which says “The knower of Brahman
attains Brahman” , Brhadaranyaka Upanishad II.iv.5 which says that Brahman is to
be known, and many similar passages and, on the other hand, the later passage in
Taittiriya Upanishad itself II.9.i which says that words, along with the mind, return,
unable to reach Brahman , Kenopanishad I.5. “It cannot be known by the mind”
and various other Upanishad passages which talk of Brahman as “ aprameyam” i.e.,
unknowable. Kenopanishad I.4 – “That (Brahman) is surely different from the
known; and again, It is above the unknown.” In fact, in Brhadaranyaka Upanishad,
IV.iv.20 says “Through the mind alone It is to be realised” (“manasa eva
anudrashtavyam”) and the immediately following IV.iv.21 says “It is unknowable”
(“etat apramayam”)”. Sankaracarya says, in his Bhashyam, that, in respect of
Brahman, none of the criteria by which we know things applies. The criteria are
attributes (“guna”), species ( “jati”), relationship ( “sambandha”) and function (“
kriya”). Brahman can’t be known through any of these criteria, Brahman being
attributeless (“nirguna”), without a second (“ advayam”), relationsless, (“asanga”) ,
and actionless (“akarta”).
2. How we reconcile the apparently contradictory statements is explained below.
a) One approach is to say that Brahman cannot be known means that Brahman
cannot be known as an object but there are methods by which we are made to
recognise Brahman. (It should be known as not known. And if it is known as known,
it is not known. Before study of Vedanta, the disciple says, ‘I don’t know Brahman;
want to know Brahman’. After study of Vedanta, the disciple says, ‘I don’t know
Brahman; I don’t want to know Brahman.’) No one will deny that he exists as a
conscious being. Initially, one may mistake the mind as one’s true nature, but when a
constant “I” is invoked as the same entity witnessing the changing conditions of the
mind, one recognises the ultimate witness-consciousness (sakshi). And “knowing
Brahman” means that from the study of Sastra, we have to understand that the
Sakshi is none other than the all pervading consciousness. To put it succinctly, the
Existence and Consciousness aspects of Brahman is self-evident. But the Infinity
aspect, we have to learn from Sastra. When it is said that Brahman is different from
the known, it means that all known things are finite and since Brahman is the only
infinite entity, one has to identify with it. When it is said that Brahman is different
from the unknown, it amounts to saying that it is not a thing to be obtained; it is one’
own nature and attainment of Brahman is a matter of recognition of ones own true
nature. How to recognise Brahman without knowing It as an object is stated in
Kenopanishad II.4 – “ Being the witness of all cognitions and, by nature, being
nothing but Consciousness, Brahman is indicated by the cognitions themselves, in the
midst of cognitions, as pervading all of them. (“pratibodhaviditam matam”).
b) Another approach is to say that Sastra does not reveal Brahman in positive terms.
Cf. Brhadaranyaka Upanishad II.iii.6 – “ Now, therefore the description (of Brahman)
– ‘Not this, not this’. Because there is no other and more appropriate description than
this ‘not this, not this’”. Internally, we negate all names and forms like the body,
sense organs, the mind and intellect and arrive at the unnegatable pure
Consciousness. (Cit). Externally we negate all names and forms and arrive at the
unnegatable pure Existence (Sat). And we learn from Sastra that Sat is Cit; Cit is Sat
and through the Mahavakyas like “ Tattvamasi” one owns up one’s true nature as
“aham brahma asmi”. In other words, Mahavakyas do not reveal any new entity. The
consciousness available in us, the Atma, is self-evident. What mahavakyas do is to
remove the wrong notion that it is limited. Pot space is not different from the all
pervading space.
Elaborating the points made above further,
For defining anything, there are five methods. (1) If it is an object that is of common
experience, when we refer to it by its name, the listener understands what we are
talking about. E.g., all of us have experienced the sun. So, when anybody wants to
convey information about the sun, he does so mentioning the name, ‘sun’ and the
listener understands what object he is referring to. This is called definition by ‘rudi’.
Or we can define a thing by its attribute ( ‘guna’). E.g., Jasmine flower can be defined
by its fragrance. Or we can define a thing by its function (‘kriya’) E.g., a knife can be
defined by its the work of cutting. Or we can define a thing by the species to which it
belongs (‘jati’). E.g., we can define mango as a member of the tree species. Or we
can define a thing by its relationship with something else (‘sambandha’). E.g., we
can define Rama as Dasaratha’s son. In the case of Brahman, none of these is of any
use, because, according to Sastra, Brahman is not an object of experience
(‘aprameya’), It is attributeless (‘nirguna’), It is actionless (‘akarta’, ‘nishkriya’) it is
one without a second (’advayam’) and it is relationless (‘asanga’).
However, there is one positive method (‘vidhi mukha bodhanam’) which we can use,
with a slight modification. We said that Brahman cannot be defined by relationship,
because Brahman is asanga. While this is so, in so far as real relationship is
concerned, it is not so, when it comes to a question of unreal relationship. As an
unreal relationship between adhishtanam and adhyasa, Brahman can be defined. We
can define rope as the adhishtanam of the unreal snake perceived on the rope ; we
can define the waker’s mind as the adhishtanam of the dream world. Similarly
Brahman is defined as the adhishtanam of the unreal world – Brahman, the Existence
as the substratum of the nama roopas. This method is available to us if we accept the
basic statements of Advaita Vedanta, which, for, this method, include the doctrine
that what is real is Brahman, the Existence, and what we see as differentiated objects
are only forms with names (nama roopas) superimposed on Existence.
In this connection, there is a debate. The opponent says that if the relationship is
unreal, the definition is also unreal. The proponent answers “what does it matter if
the definition is unreal?; it gives knowledge”. The opponent asks “ if definition is
unreal, the knowledge it gives is also unreal,; what is the use of unreal knowledge?”
The proponent answers, “Because ignorance is unreal, unreal knowledge is adequate
to remove unreal ignorance. To cure dream disease, dream medicine will do; in fact,
dream medicine alone can cure dream disease. Moksha is not a real event. One is ever
liberated ( nitya mukta). What happens is that the false notion that one is limited is
negated by the knowledge that one is the infinite Brahman. ‘Aham Brahmasmi’ as
knowledge (Brahmajnanam) is unreal; it is a vyavarika vritti occurring in the mind; it
is not the paramarthika Jnanam, i.e. it is not the swaroopa jnanam - the Satyam
Jnanam anantam Brahma.” Cf. Mandukya Karika – “ There is no creation, no
dissolution….. there is no seeker; there is no one who is liberated “. ( “na nirodho na
ca utpatti….na mumukshuh na muktah”.
While the definition by unreal relationship is one method, if we accept certain basic
statements of Advaita Vedanta, there are certain other methods. Negation (‘neti,
neti,’ nishedha mukha bodhana) is one of these methods. Sastra says that Brahman
is limitless and is the unchanging consciousness. (‘anantam’, ‘nitya caitanyam’). I
am functioning as the knower (pramata). If Brahman should be limitless, It cannot be
a prameyam, because prameyam is limited by pramata; prameyam is not pramata. So
we have to negate all known objects ( all prameyams); but this is an endless job. The
best way to negate prameyams is to negate pramata. If there is no pramata, there is
no prameyam. When I sleep, I am not pramata; when there is no pramata, there is no
world – there is no prameyam for me. But even when the is no pramata, there is
consciousness. This consciousness, the I that is not pramata, the Sakshi, is to be
recognized as Brahman. This is the pramatrutva nisheda method. The recognition of
Sakshi is also the aim of the panca kosa viveka.
If we accept the Advaita Vedanta statement that Brahman is the nondual Existence
(advayam, sat ), we have to look for the unchanging element in and through the
changing objects. We say ‘pot is’, ‘cloth is’, ‘tree is ‘, ‘man is’, etc. What is
unchangingly available is the ‘is’, the existence aspect. This Existence is to be
recognized as the nondual substratum of the plurality of nama roopas, the pots,
clothes, tress, men etc., When I am holding a pot, I am holding Brahman. When I
perceive a tree or a river or a mountain. the real thing I see is Brahman. As the
susbstratum of all nama roopas which are responsible for presenting the universe to
us a plurality of differentiated objects of the universe, Brahman is unchanging
Existence. That is why in Hindu religion, we have the worship of trees like Aswatta,
rivers like the Ganga , mountains like Mount Kailasa. While a jnani can recognize the
Brahman, the Existence behind any tree, river or mountain, for the common man, the
puranas provide mythological episodes connecting certain trees, rivers, mountains
etc. with Gods and such trees, rivers and mountains become the object of common
worship.
If we accept the Advaita Vedanta statement that Brahman is the unchanging
consciousness, (‘nitya caitanyam), we have to look for the unchanging common
element in cognitions. “I know the pot’, ‘I know thee cloth”, ‘I know the tree’, ‘I
know the man’ and so on. The objects of cognition (prameyas) and the modifications
of the mind (‘vritis’) by which they are cognised by the mind assuming the shape of
the objects are unchanging. But what is unchanging is the consciousness behind the
changing vritis of the mind. This consciousness has to be recognized as Brahman.
APPENDIX 2
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Note No. 2 – Sankya and Nyaya view of creation refuted
1. In his Mandukya Karika, Gaudapada refutes two sets of philosophers – (1)
Sankhya-Yoga that hold that a real world is born out of a real cause ( as the later
Visishtadvaitins also do), and (2) the Nyaya-Vaiseshika that hold that a real world
originates independent of a cause. In Sanskrit, these are called satkarya vada and
asatkarya vada , respectively. The former is also called parinama vada. The first talks
of transformation and the second of independent origination.
2. Refutation of Satkarya vada –
a) Cause has to change to become effect. So, if Brahman or even a part of Brahman or
an aspect of Brahman transforms into the world, Brahman becomes a changing
entity (savikara). This violates clear Vedic statements that Brahman is immutable.
b) Moreover, when the cause becomes effect, cause perishes. Milk is no longer milk
when it becomes curd (yoghurt). Therefore, to say that Brahman changes to become
the world violates Vedic statements that Brahman is nityam (eternal).
c) Moreover, the Satkaryavadins postulate a beginningless and eternal cause. But our
experience is that every cause is an effect of a previous cause; there is nothing like a
beginningless and eternal cause . On the other hand, if a cause effect chain is
accepted by them, they cannot explain which came first; it is the hen-egg problem;
an infinite regress.
Objection – Advaita Vedantin also says that Brahman is the cause of the world and
that Brahman is beginningless and eternal.
Answer – Advaita Vedantin is able to say so because according to him, there are
different orders of reality; Brahman is paramartika satyam ( absolute reality) and the
world that we experience while we are awake is vyavaharika satyam (empirical
reality) – a lower order of reality than Brahman, just as the dream world is a lower
order of reality than the world experienced by us while we are awake. Really
speaking, Brahman is neither cause nor effect; Brahman is karya karana vilakshanam.
Brahman is the changeless, eternal, all pervading Existence-Consciousness-Infinity.
On this Brahman, Isvara, enjoying a lower order of reality – which Iswara is Maya in
which the Brahman-consciousness is reflected – impels Maya which is a mass of
undifferentiated names and forms to transform into a universe of differentiated
names.
Note No. 3 – Wrong definitions of reality negated
In the Mandukya Karika, Gaudapada disposes of certain wrong definitions of reality
given by opponents. The definitions are noted in brackets.
(1) (Utility.) Utility is relative. Dream water is useful to quench dream thirst. So, if we
go by utility, we have to say that the dream world is real. If jagrat prapanca is held to
be real on account of its utility, it should be useful always. You may have gone to
bed with a jug of water by your bedside, but when you feel thirsty in the dream, it
will not quench that thirst.
(2) (Normal perception; in dream, we perceive grotesque objects). Here again, the
opponent is making the mistake of looking at both the jagrat prapanca and the
swapna prapanca from the point of view of waker only. Perception depends on the
kind of sense organs and mind one possesses. The jagrat prapanca we see is not the
same as, say, a chameleon sees with eyes positioned to look at the front and rear
simultaneously or a horse or dog sees with perception of only two dimensions. The
horse will see a sphere as a mere circle, when it goes round it. We see strange
objects in dream because in that state, mind is capable of recollecting vasanas based
on experiences of previous janmas.
(3) (What is an object outside the mind is real.) The dream objects are outside the
mind of the dream individual. To make this clear, suppose in the dream itself, you go
to sleep and have a dream. When you wake up from the sub-dream in the main
dream, you will realise that the dream objects that you saw in the sub-dream were
only thoughts in the mind. But the objects in the main dream continue to be
perceived as objects outside the mind. We should substitute the sub-dream for the
jagrat prapanca and the main dream for the state of knowing the mithya status of the
world.
(4) (Continuity of objects experienced during successive days). Continuity can be
experienced in dream also if you have a series of sub-dreams during the main dream .
Note No.4 – The view that world is real refuted
1. In Brhadaranyaka Bhashyam, Sankaracarya refutes the view of Bhartrupranca that
duality and non-duality ( both dwaitam and adwaitam) are real. ( i.e., both Brahman
and the world are real.) ( Bhartruprapanca can be regarded as the forerunner of
Visishtadvaitam). Sankaracarya refutes this with the following arguments;-
(1) The view suffers from the defect of internal contradiction. Nothing can enjoy
opposite attributes at the same time.
Bhatruprapanca counters this and says co-existence of opposite attributes are
possible; in one state there may be non-duality and in another, there may be duality.
What, in the causal state is a seed, for example, becomes a tree as effect. It also
depends on the point of view. When you look at the tree as a single entity, it is nondual.
When you look at its parts – branches, leaves, etc. – it is dual. Similarly, when
you look at Brahman as the Lord, He is One. When you look at the objects of the word
- rivers, mountains, human beings etc.- Brahman is many.
Taking support from the description of Brahman in Upanishads, Sankaracarya says
that you cannot apply the example of the tree to Brahman. Tree is a changing entity.
But Brahman is not subject to change. So Brahman cannot change from causal state
to effect state. As regards the different points of view, whereas tree is an entity with
parts, Brahman is without parts. Thirdly, whatever is a changing entity and whatever
has parts are perishable. If you say that Brahman changes or has parts, Brahman will
become perishable. This will be contradictory to Upanishad statements that Brahman
is immortal, eternal. If you are prepared to accept a non-eternal Brahma,. attaining
Brahman cannot be moksha. Liberation will also be temporary.
2. Another argument of Bhartruprapanca is that duality is perceived; therefore, it is
real. Sankaracarya says that there is no rule that whatever is perceived is real. We
see the sun rising and setting every day and we see the earth as a flat surface. But
neither of this real.
Note No. 5 - Views of Buddhist schools about reality refuted
1. In Buddhism, there are two branches - Hinayana and Mahayana. There are two
schools in the Hinayana branch – Sountrantika and Vaibhashika. Both accept the
existence of a world of objects outside the mind and maintain that any object has
only momentary existence. This is called “ubhaya astitva vada”. (There is an internal
difference, between Soutrantika and Vaibhashika, which we can ignore for the
purposes of this discussion. The internal difference is - for the Sautrantika, the
acceptance of the existence of a world outside the mind is a matter of perception
and for the Vibhashika, it is a matter of inference.) In the Mahayana also, there are
two schools – Yogacara which denies the existence of the world outside the mind
and Madhyamika, called also “Sunyavada”, which denies cognition as well as object,
For this school, reality is nothingness. Sautrantika, Vaibhashika and Yogacara – all
three – say that there is only one consciousness and that it is momentary. That is to
say, one cognition arises, exists for just a moment and disappears before the next
cognition arises. This doctrine is called “Kshanika Vijnanam.” . In effect, there are
three main doctrines – (1) “Ubhaya astitva vada” - the doctrine there is a world of
objects having momentary existence), (2) “Kshanika vijnanam” - the doctrine that
there is no external world at all ; what there is only consciousness and that
consciousness is momentary and (3) “Sunyavada” – the doctrine that reality is
nothingness . In Brahmasutra, Vysacarya and in his Bhashyams, Sankaracarya
refute (1) the doctrine that there is no world outside the mind (2) the doctrine that
consciousness is momentary and (3) the doctrine that reality is nothingness.
2. The Hinayana doctrine that any object in the external world has only momentary
existence is refuted as follows:-
(1) It is contradictory to the Hinayana doctrine of cause –effect relationship (“karyakarana
sambandha”). If Hinayana philosophers want to maintain karya karana
sambandha , they have to give up the idea of momentary existence of objects or vice
versa, because the essential nature of a cause continues to inhere in the effect; for
example, clay continues to exist when pot shape is given to a lump of clay and certain
chemical elements of milk continue to exist when milk turns into curd .
(2) Our experience is – and science also tells us – that matter is never totally
destroyed. It only changes from one form into another ( law of conservation of
energy and matter.)
(3) Buddhism also believes in rebirth and the cycle of samsara. And it talks of
deliberate destruction (“prasankyana nirodha”) of samsara by the seeker pursuing
certain spiritual practices (“sadhana”). If samsara like everything else has only
momentary existence, and will in any case die a natural death, in a moment, where is
the question of deliberate destruction through sadhana? So, the doctrine of
momentary existence of objects and the concept of sadhana do not go together.
(4) If it is said that every object has only momentary existence, it means that every
object is created out of nothing; such creation is contrary to experience.
(5) The fact that for growing a mango tree, we sow mango seed and not cocoanut
seed proves that a specific material transforms into a specific product. This proves
continued existence of object in a different form, not momentariness.
(6) If nothingness is the cause of objects, since cause inheres in effect, we should be
experiencing only nothingness everywhere, but we say ‘pot is ‘ , tree is’ etc.
(7) If nothing is required for producing something, to accomplish a thing, no effort
would be needed.
3. The Mayhayana doctrine that there is no external world outside the mind is
refuted as follows:-
(1) Our experience clearly proves the existence of a world outside the mind. If there
is only consciousness and there is no external world at all, how is it that cognition is
not uniform but varied and differniated like a tree, river, mountain, a man , an animal
and so on and like colour, sound, smell etc.
(2) In sushupti, we continue to have consciousness but there is no cognition only
because contact of sense organs and mind with external objects is severed. The
moment we wake up, the contact is revived and there is cognition of external objects.
(3) To explain cognition of differentiated objects, the Mahayana philosopher says
that what appear as differentiated objects are impurities of kshanika vijnanam. This
is countered by pointing out that impurities in a substance are not the same as the
substance. Since the only thing that this Mahayana philosopher accepts is kshanika
vijnanam, there is no place for anything else such as impurities. Now, he tries to
escape by saying that impurities are also kshanika vijananams. The absurdity of this
statement is pointed out by saying that since, in this school, kshanika vijananams are
the reality, if impurities are kshanka vijnanams, impurities can never be removed –
which means that there is no moksha.
(4) Unless the existence of a world outside the mind is conceded, how can one
explain the distinction between a thought arising from the contact of the mind
through the sense organs with an object outside and a mere thought when no
external object is present? Sitting in Chennai one thinks of Varanasi. Later, one
travels to Varanasi and bathes in the Ganga. One is in office and is thinking that he
forgot to tell his wife, before leaving for office, that he was taking her to a cinema in
the evening. Later, one comes home and takes one’s wife to a theatre. One is
wondering why one’s friend has not come. Later, the friend comes and one talks to
one’s friend for half an hour. One imagines how nice it would to have ice cream when
it is so hot. In the evening, one goes to the ice cream parlour and takes ice cream.
One comes back from a holiday in the Himalayas and returning to Chennai,
remembers the cold in the Himalayas while he is walking in the scorching sun in Anna
Salai. If there is no external world, how can all this be explained? Even for a jivan
mukta, there is an external world outside the mind.
To this , the Buddhist uses a counter argument and cites the example of the dream
which is really only thoughts in the mind but which, nevertheless, are perceived as
objects. This is refuted by saying that there is a difference; objects perceived in the
dream are known to be false when we wake up but the objects of the waking world
are not negated like that. Further, whereas swapna prapanca (the dream world) is
the mental projection of vasanas based on experiences gained in jagrat avastha and
is within the mind in the form of mere thoughts, jagrat prapanca (the waker’s world)
exists outside the mind. If it is held that jagrat prapanca is a also only in the mind,
one should be able to say which is the other world the experience of which could
produce the vasanas which can be projected by the mind as the jagrat prapanca. For
this, there will be no answer.
How can you explain the distinction between erroneous perception like perception of
snake on the rope and right perception of rope as rope?
None of the above phenomena can be explained unless the existence of an external
world outside the mind is conceded. ( In Advaita Vedanta also, in formulations, , it is
said that there is no external world. But, there, a world outside the mind is not
denied. What is pointed out is that there is no world or mind of the same order of
reality as Brahman, the parmnartika satyam; both the world and the mind are
superimpositions on Brahman and are categorised as vyavaharika satyam.)
4. The doctrine that consciousness has only momentary existence (kshanika
vijnanam) is refuted as follows:-
(1) If it is held that consciousness arises, exists for just a moment only and is gone
before the next consciousness arises, one cannot explain memory (“smriti”). We
remember only what we have experienced. Experience occurs first and recollection
thereafter. Only if there is a consciousness that exists continuously from the time of
experience to the time of recollection can the mind connect the past and the present
and produce the recollection vritti. That the mind so connects is adequate proof of
the existence of a permanent consciousness. Unless the same consciousness which
was there at the time of experience is still there at the time of remembrance, one
cannot say that one remembers that one experienced a particular object in terms
such as “ I remember that I met Devadatta during the festival at the temple.” If
there is nothing like a continuous consciousness, remembrance cannot take place.
(2) If consciousness is momentary, recognition (“pratyabhinja”) cannot take place.
The difference between smriti and pratyabhinja is that in smriti, the object
experienced is not present at the time of remembrance; in pratyabhinja, the object
experienced is present at the time of recognition. Pratyabhinja also proves the
continued existence of the subject, besides proving the continued existence of the
object. Unless the same consciousness was there at the time of the first experience
and is still there at the time of the subsequent experience, one cannot recognise the
object experienced previously and being experienced currently to be the same, in
terms such as “ The Devadatta who is now in front of me is the same Devadatta
whom I met during the festival at the temple.”
To this, there is a counter-argument by the Kshanika vijanana adherents. They say
that the person you see now is not the same person you met earlier. That person
existed only at that moment. This person exists only at this moment. You are deluded
into thinking that it is the same person because the person that existed then and the
person existing now are similar. And they give the example of the flame appearing to
be the same, though, at each moment , a separate drop of oil is being burnt and the
example of the stream appearing to be a continuous entity, even though the water
molecules that were there at any given point a moment ago have been replaced by
another set of molecules already. The Vedantin refutes this by saying that even for
recognising similarity between an object that existed in the past and an object that
exists at present, the same consciousness that experienced the object in the past
should exist at present, in order to recognise the similarity. Even if one may say that
similarity of objects is possible in rare cases, how can anybody doubt the recognition
of oneself as a continuous personality? One says “I who went to bed yesterday and
slept soundly am now awake and am talking to my wife about our programme of
visits this Sunday.” Unless the same “I” consciousness that was there when one went
to bed yesterday is continuing to exist now when one is awake and talking to one’s
wife, how can this phenomenon be explained. ( The kshanika vijnanam of the
Buddhists is the ahamkara of Advaita Vedanta. In Advaita Vedanta, besides
ahamkara, which is the changing consciousness, there is Atma or Sakshi, the
unchanging witness-consciousness, witnessing the changing cognitions of the mind.
So, there is no problem in explaining the recognition of a constant I connecting the
“I” that went to bed and the “I” that is now awake.)
(3) In Advaita Makarandam, the author uses a graphic argument. A person can never
know his own birth or death. One’s birth is the last moment of one’s prior nonexistence.
One’s death is the first moment of one’s posterior non-existence. One is
not there to know either. Like that a momentary consciousness cannot know that it is
momentary. It is not there when it is born and it is not there when it dies. Another
momentary consciousness cannot know it either, because consciousness No.1 dies
before consciousness No.2 is born and consciousness No.3 is not yet born when
consciousness No2 dies. So, the question is who is there to know that consciousness
is momentary? Unless a continuous consciousness is accepted, the existence of
momentary consciousness or a series of momentary consciousnesses that succeed
one another cannot be established.
5. If all that there is momentary consciousness,
(i) there cannot be any notion of means and ends. When the thought of end comes,
the thought of means is gone.
(ii) There cannot be any notion of possessor and possessed. When the thought of
possessed comes, the thought of possessor has gone, and
(iii) there cannot be the notion of an article having a name. When the thought of
name comes, the thought of the article has gone.
6. Vyasacarya and Sankaracarya do not bother to refute the doctrine that reality is
nothingness (Sunyavada). Vidyarnya refutes it by asking the philosopher who says
that there is nothing “ You say that there is nothing. But are you there or not?” He
cannot but say “ I am”. This is enough to establish that to say that there is nothing is
absurd.
APPENDIX 3
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Note No. 6 – Concept of a real creation negated
In Brahma sutra, Vyasacarya points out the fallacies of philosophies which talk of a
real creation and of a creator who is only the intelligent cause ( “nimitta karanam”)
of the universe and not the material cause (“upadhana karanam”) . The main points
are –
(1) To contact the material, the intelligent cause must have a body and it must be a
doer. In that case, it becomes subject to pleasure and pain, desire, hatred etc’ in
short, it becomes a samsari. This is contrary to the notion of God being perfect.
(2) Since space, time and matter emerge only when creation takes place, there are
certain questions which defy answer. viz.;
(i) Where was the creator when he created the world
(ii) When did he create?
(iii) Where was the raw material which constituted how own body?
(iv) Where was the raw material which he could use to create the universe?
(3) Beings appear in the universe with different physical and mental characteristics,
finding themselves in different situations, undergoing experiences involving
enjoyment and suffering of diverse nature. A creator who creates this diversity will
be a partial and cruel creator. Even in a scheme of transmigration with karma of men
being responsible for rebirth and enjoyment and suffering ,the diversity in the first
creation will remain. This is contrary to the concept of a perfect God.
Advaita Vedanta avoids such problems, by (1) saying that there is no real creation (2)
Iswara (who is himself is unreal) is the material as well as the intelligence cause, (3)
creation, jivas and their karma are beginningless (4) creation is an alternation of
Maya in Iswara differentiating into names and forms and resolving into unmanifest
condition in Iswara and (5) the reality is Brahman, who as Existence-Consciousness-
Infinity, serves as the substratum for the unevolved as well as the evolved condition
of names and forms.
In this scheme, time, space and matter are there in unmanifest form in Iswara ,
before creation. There is no question of first creation.
Note No.7 – Significance of videha mukti
Though , for practical purposes, there is no difference between jivanmukti and
videhamukti, there is a technical difference.
Jivanmukta continues to perceive through his antahkarana, a world, which consists
of a multitude of ajnanis and a few jnanis, though it has been falsified by jnanam.
But, after videha mukti, that antahkaranam is no longer there to perceive the falsified
world. This means that, the vyavaharika world exists only for people who are still in
the world. For nirguna Brahman, there is no world and there is no Maya or Iswara. Cf.
verse 32 of Vaitathya prakaranam of Mandukya karika – “There is no dissolution, no
origination, none in bondage, none striving or aspiring for salvation, and none
liberated. This is the position from the standpoint of paramartika satyam”.
Note No. 8 – Moksha not event in time
In Mandukya Karika, Gaudapada refutes all philosophers who talk of attainment of
Moksha as an event in time. His logic is that whatever has a beginning must have an
end. So a moksha that is attained will be temporary. Unless, as Advaita Vedanta says,
being beyond samsara is our permanent nature and what is called liberation is only
the removal of the wrong notion that one is bound, moksha cannot be permanent.
Note No. 9 – Mithya not mere imagination
Apropos of mithya, a question that has been discussed in Advaita Vedanta literature,
in the context of example of rope snake to illustrate the unreality of the world is
whether there is actual perception of a snake on a rope or is it just a thought in the
mind. It is said that mere imagination of a snake cannot produce fear. Only if the
cognition itself is to the effect that there is a snake in front, the person will be
frightened. This is the basis for saying that snake is experienced but it is negated
when the rope is revealed ( thus, considering it to be other than totally non-existent
and totally existent and giving it the ontological status of pratibhasika satyam in
the mithya category). ( The example for the totally non-existent is barren woman’s
son.) Like that, the world is also mithya (vyavaharika satyam) . There is a
difference between the snake mithya and the world mithya. Snake disappears when
the rope is revealed. But the world continues to be experienced even after Brahman
is revealed. So, Advaita Vedanta cites the example of mirage, sunrise etc. Even after
we know that they are not real, we continue to experience them.
Note No. 10 – A criterion of Mithya
In Gaudapada’s Mandukya karika, it is said that one of the criteria for holding that
both the external world and the mind is mithya is mutual dependence (“anyonya
asrayatvam”) which is tantamount to absence of independent existence. The world
cannot be proved without the mind. Only when a thing is is perceived or inferred on
the basis of the knowledge of the perceived objects can we say that a thing exists?
So, mind is necessary to predicate the existence of objects. The other way about, if
there is no world as object, there is no place for mind as subject. The known is proved
by the knower and the knower is proved by the known. This is the mutual
dependence which makes us relegate both the mind and the world to the category of
mithya.
Note No. 11 – Original and reflected consciousness – An illustration
In Pancadasi, Vidyaranya gives beautiful examples for the original consciousness,
the reflecting medium and the reflected consciousness (1) at the macrocosmic level
and (2) at the microcosmic level. The examples, respectively, are (i) space pervading
the cloud, water vapour laden cloud, space reflected in the conglomerate of water
vapour droplets in the cloud and (2) space conditioned by a water filled pot, the
water in the pot and space reflected in the water in the pot. At the macrocosmic level,
Brahma caitanyam is compared to space pervading the cloud. The reflecting medium,
namely, Maya, is compared to the conglomerate of water vapour droplets in the
cloud. The reflection of the consciousness aspect of Brahman in Maya is compared to
the reflection of space in the conglomerate of water droplets in the cloud. At the
microcosmic level, Sakshi caitanyam is compared to the space pervading the pot. The
reflecting medium, namely, the sukshma sarira is compared to the water in the pot.
The reflection of consciousness in the sukshma sarira is compared to the reflection of
space pervading the pot in the water contained in the pot, (Space is everywhere. It is
in the cloud; it is in the pot also. Like that, all pervading consciousness is available in
Maya as well as the sukshma sarira.)
Note No. 12 – How Maya operates
The word, avidya, used in Sastra (translated as “nescience” in English) is a technical
term. Avidya and Maya are synonyms. (Other terms used for Maya are “avyakta”.
“avyakruta”, prakriti”. Sometimes, the word “ajnanam” which literally means
ignorance, is also used as a technical term for avidya. But none of these terms, not
even the word,”ajnanam”should be confused with the word “ignorance” used in
common parlance). Avidya (Maya) is a positive entity. Maya is constituted of three
factors, satva, rajas and tamas. Maya is matter. At the macrocosmic level, with the
Brahman-consciousness reflected in Maya, there is Isvara. Thus Isvara has two
aspects – the consciousness aspect and the matter aspect. Iswara in his
consciousness aspect visualises the pattern of creation suited to the requirements of
the karma of the jivas and impels the matter aspect containing the universe including
the sukshma sariras of jivas and the karmas of jivas in seed form to unfold into the
universe of diffentiated objects. This unfolding is the vikshepa sakti of Maya at the
samashti (macrocsomic) level. Iswara is not affected by the avarana sakti of Maya
and is therefore ever aware of his true nature being Brahman. At the vyashti
(microcosmic) level, in so far as jivas are concerned, both the avarana sakti and the
vikshepa sakti of Maya come into play. The avarana sakti makes jivas ignorant of
their true nature as Brahman and the vikshepa sakti makes them identity with the
body mind complex and regard the world with its divisions to be the reality. Avarana
Sakti is indicated in Kathopanishad mantra I.iii.12. In Pancadasi, Vidyaranya gives an
ingenious explanation for the avarana sakti being non–operative at the microcosmic
level and being operative at the microcosmic level. He says that at the macrocosmic
level, avidya is satva predominant, whereas at the microcosmic level, it is tamas rajas
predominant.
APPENDIX 4
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Note No. 13 – Karma not means of Moksha – Reasoning
In Advaita Vedanta, moksha is the discovery, with the aid of Sastra, of one’s identity
with Brahman.
Some philosophers talk of karma or upasana as the immediate means of moksha.
(Both karma and upasana are action involving motion. Karma is a movement of the
body. Upasana is thought which is a movement of the mind). This is refuted by
Sankaracarya.
Sankaracarya’s logic is as follows:-
The result of Karma is only of four types. Brahman dos not fall in any of these four.
(a) Reaching a destination. Brahman is all pervading (sarvagata) ; there is,
therefore, no question of reaching Brahman.
(b) Production. E.g., Seed is sown; crop is produced. Brahman is ever one’s
nature. Brahman is unborn and eternal (“aja” , “nitya”. The question of Brahman or
Brahman-ness (“Brahmatvam”) being produced does not arise.
(c) Modification. Brahman and one’s own nature as Brahman are changeless
(“nirvikara”); the question of modifying to become Brahman does not arise.
(d) Purification/refinement by removal of impurities or addition of properties.
Brahman and, as Brahman, one’s nature is ever pure (“nitya suddha”) and
attributeless (“nirguna”); the question of becoming Brahman by removal of
impurities or addition attributes does not arise.
(e) Moreover, by using the present tense in the statement, “You are Brahman”
(“Tattvamasi”) Upanishad makes it clear that there is no question of one becoming
Brahman, as an event in time. One being Brahman is an ever existing fact.
(e) Further, if identity with Brahman is the result of karma or upasana, it means that
prior to Karma or Upasana one had no Brahmatvam and Brahmatvam comes only
after Karma or Upasana. But whatever comes will go away after some time or other.
So Brahmatvam attained as a result of Karma or Upasana will be temporary.
Note No. 14 – Logic of “Adhyasa” (Delusion)
1. The fundamental tenets of Advaita philosophy consist of
(1) three orders of reality, with Brahman as the Existence-Consciousness-Infinity
as the highest order of reality and the substratum, the world of names and forms
appearing on that substratum as the next lower order of reality, the dream world and
erroneously perceived things like snake on the rope, as the lowest order of reality –
in Sanskrit, indicated by the technical terms, “paramartikam”, “vyavaharikam” and
“praatibhaasikam”, respectively ( the latter two which have no independent
existence being called “mithya”)
(2) identity of the consciousness of the jivatma and the all pervading
consciousness, Brahman,
(3) Avidya (Maya)
(4) Iswara and
(5) Adhyasa
2. The avarana sakti of Avidya causes ajnanam (self-ignorance), i.e., the awareness
of the true nature of Jivatma as Brahman is covered (concealed from the Jivatma).
The vikshepa sakti of Avidya misleads the jivatma into regarding the world as real
and identifying himself with the body mind complex. This is called “adhyasa”.
Adhyasa is defined as the mixing up of the real and the unreal. In the process of
adhyasa, jivatma, owing to self-ignorance, superimposes anatma (the body mind
complex) and its properties on Atma and say, “I am a father”, “ I am a husband”, “ I
am sad” etc, and is afflicted by the limitations and tribulations arising from this
superimposition. The other way, when one says “ I am a conscious being” it is
superimposition of the consciousness belonging to Atma on anatma. The example
given in Sastra for adhyasa is superimposition of snake on the rope.
3. Opponents of Advaita Vedanta argue that adhyasa is not possible, because the
requirements of adhyasa are not there for superimposition of anatma on Atma to take
place. The requirements areas follows:-
(1) The object should be perceived in front
(2) The identity of the object should not be known
(3) There must be similarity in features between the real object and the thing
that is superimposed.
(4) The person who is superimposing a thing should have experienced a real
member of the superimposed species previously so that the impression left by that
experience (“samskara”) is there in the mind when he is superimposing.
These requirements are not satisfied in the case of Atma anatma superimposition,
because unlike, the superimposition of snake on rope,
(1) Atma is not perceived as an object,
(2) Since Atma is self-evident, the identity of Atma is not unknown,
(3) There is no similarity between Atma and anatma, and
(4) anatma is unreal; so, the question of anyone having experienced a real
anatma previously does not arise and, therefore there can be no samskara of the
experience of anatma,
4. These objections are countered by Sankaracarya in his adhyasa bhashyam which is
an introductory portion of his commentary on Brahma Sutram as follows:-
(1)For adhyasa to take place, it is not essential that the object should be perceived in
front. It is sufficient if the entity is known. Atma is known in the sense the Atma is
self-evident as the sakshi (witness-consciousness).
(2) The condition required for adhyasa is not total ignorance of the identity but part
ignorance. We all say , “I am” ; that means the existence aspect ( “sat amsa”) and
the consciousness aspect (“cit amsa”) of Atma are known to us. But there is one
part that is not known to us; that “ I am infinite” is not known to us ( the anantatva
or ananda aspect of Atma is not known).
(3) Similarity is not an invariable requirement. There are cases where there is no
similarity and still, there is adhyasa, e.g., space is not similar to anything but we do
superimpose blueness and a dome like shape on it.
(4) No doubt samskara of a previous experience is necessary. But it need not be of
the experience of a real entity. Even if the samskara is of the experience of a false
entity, in the past, it is sufficient to produce the present adhyasa. If it is asked how
the first adhyasa present arose, the answer is that avidya and anatma are
beginningless (“anadi”).
5. Sastra-based logic for postulating adhyasa is as follows:-
Upanishads say that Atma is asangah, apanipadou, amanah. So Atma is akarta and
abhokta. But jivatmas identify themselves with the body mind complex and engage
themselves in worldly and religious transactions. This cannot happen, unless they
were deluded into transferring the kartrutvam, bhoktrutvam etc. belonging to
anatma on Atma
6. Sastra divides adhyasa into (1) “arthadhayasa” and (2) “jnanadhyasa”. The
appearance of a false object on the substratum of a real object is arthadhyasa. The
thought that mistakes the false object to be the real object is jnanadhyasa. The
phenomenon of mirage on sand is arthadhyasa. The thought in the mind of the
traveller in the desert that it is an oasis is arthadhyasa. In respect of the world, the
ajnani has both arthadhyasa and arthadhyasa. The jnani ceases to have jnandhyasa
and he has only arthadhyasa. The ajnani takes the world to be real and,
consequently, he has samsara. The jnani continues to perceive the world but he
knows that it is false; therefore he is free of samsara.
Note No.15 – Ignorance and knowledge of identity with Brahman - both operations
of the intellect
When Brahman is said to be “jnanam” in the mantra, “Satyam jnanam anantam
Brahma” the word “jnanam” refers to the eternal consciousness which is Brahman’s
nature. It is called “swaroopa jnanam”. It is not swaroopa jnanam that destroys self
ignorance. If that was the case, since swaroopa jnanam is eternal, nobody would
ever be ignorant. In fact swaroopa jnanam illumines ignorance as well as knowledge,
through cidabhasa. What destroys self-ignorance is vritti jnanam, the vritti that I
am Brahman. This vritti jnanam (knowledge) is gained by the ahamkara. The notion
that I am a limited individual is destroyed by the vritti that I am the infinite Brahman.
Note No.16 -Appreciation of the all pervading consciousness
During sushupti, you do not have a sense of location. You don’t have the sense that
you are in New Delhi. Based on this fact, you can conclude that what is available in
sushupti is the unlocated all pervading consciousness, the cit. This is present in jagrat
and swapna avasthas also, but you don’t recognise it, because, at these times, what
you experience is the mixture of cit and ahamkara (mind cum cidabhasa) and you are
not able to separate the cit from cidabhasa, intellectually. In Pancadasi, Vidyaranya
gives an example. On a wall, the general sunlight is falling. You bring a mirror and
place it in such a way that reflected sunlight also falls on the wall. You will notice an
increase in the brightness of the light falling on the wall. This is the incremental
brightness contributed by the reflected sunlight. While both lights are there, you do
not perceive the general sunlight separate from the reflected sunlight. If you remove
the mirror, you will notice a reduction in the brightness of the light falling on the
wall. This shows that the incremental light contributed by the reflected sunlight has
been withdrawn. What you now see is the general sunlight only. In the case of cit
and cidabhasa, you cannot physically remove the cidabhasa. You can only recollect
the state ( of sushupti) in which cidabhasa is resolved and recognise the continued
presence of consciousness as the cit. Even otherwise, you can recognise the
unlocated consciousness if you reflect deeply into our day to day experience. While
we experience the changing I, the subject factor of the triputi in the momentary
cognitions and conceptualisations, there is an unchanging I which is invoked as the
same continuing conscious entity when we connect a past experience and a present
experience of the changing I. Whereas the changing I is one with attributes., the
unchanging I is without attributes. One of the attributes of the changing I is location.
Thus we recognise the unchanging I as one without location, i.e., as the all pervading
consciousness.
Note No.17 – Brahman beyond time and space
We say that Brahman is all pervading and that Brahman is eternal. We have to note
that this is only a manner of speaking. A correct formulation would be to say that
Brahman is beyond time and space. Brahman is Infinity. The Infinite cannot be within
time and space. Brahman is nondual. Being non dual also entails being beyond time
and space. The world is within time and space. Therefore, the world has to be of a
lower order of reality.
Note No.18 - Logic of postulating cidabhasa
(1) Brahman is all pervading consciousness. Antahkarna functions as a conscious
entity but pot does not. You cannot explain this, unless you postulate that the texture
of the antakarana nama roopa superimposed on Brahman is such that it can reflect
the consciousness, whereas the pot does not have that capacity. It is somewhat like
the difference between a good conductor of electricity and magnetism and a bad
conductor.
(2) This division of certain nama roopas like the mind being made sentient by
consciousness being reflected in them and other nama roopas not having such
capacity and hence remaining to be insentient is required for bhoktru bhogya
(enjoyer-enjoyed) transaction. If such division was not there, before I begin to put
food into my mouth, it will fly away.
(3) If the eternal, unchanging consciousness alone is there, there would be nobody
who is bound and Sastra would not be taking the trouble of teaching the means to
attain moksha.. A conscious entity that is susceptible to be affected by the avarana
sakti and vikshepa sakti of Maya has to be there.
(4) The original consciousness, being changeless (nirvikara) and amanah is not
srotra (not a hearer) or a pramata (not a knower). Sastra cannot address it. Nor can
it address a mere antahkarana which is inert. So a conscious entity that is not the
original consciousness is required to listen to “tat tvam ASI” and to say “aham
Brahma asmi”. This is the antahkarana which is enabled to be such an entity owing to
the reflection of consciousness in it. (This logic is called “arthapatti’) As ahamkara, I
listen to the mahavakyam, “tat tvam asi”. By bhagatyaga lakshana, I discard the
limitedness indicated by the literal meaning of the word, “tvam” and the distance
indicated by the literal meaning of the word,” tat” and retain the implied meaning of
the two words, which is “caitanyam” and understand the jivabrahma aikyam. When I
say “ aham brahma asmi”, though the thought is in ahamkara, by “aham” I refer to
Atma.. Once I know “ aham brahmasmi” I discard ahamkara, i.e. I disidentify myself
with ahamkara and abide as Brahman.
(5) In Brhadaranyaka (III.iv.2 etc.), the Upanishad talks of Atma as the seer of the
ser (“drashterdrashta”), knower of the knower (“vijnatervijnata”) etc. From this it is
clear that there is a knower-consciousness and another consciousness which is the
substratum of that consciousness. This does not mean that Atma perceives or knows
ahamkara. To perceive anything or to know anything, the consciousness has to
undergo modification. Atma being changeless cannot be seer or knower. The meaning
is that, in the presence of Atma, cidabhasa is formed in the antahkarana. This is also
what is meant when it is said that Atma, as Sakshi, illumines the antahkarana. It is
like my standing in front of a mirror. I don’t do anything. By mere presence of mine,
reflection is formed in the mirror.
(6) The eternal unchanging consciousness cannot be said to be the instrument of
knowing specific separate objects, one after another. For having pot knowledge, tree
knowledge, tiger knowledge, one after another, and each person having different
cognitions, we need to have separate , changing consciousnesses in each person.
Antahkarana with reflected consciousness is what meets this requirement. If Atma,
the changeless, eternal consciousness, were to be the knower directly, everyone of us
would be seeing everything simultaneously and it would be a jumble – e.g., water in
fire, pot in cow etc. – it would be utter confusion. At the same time, to be aware of
the changing consciousnesses, there has to be an unchanging consciousness. Thus
we have to postulate cidabhasa, the reflected consciousness in individual minds as
well as the unchanging, all pervading consciousness, the Atma.
(7) In Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, there is a statement, “na pretya samja asti”. One
interpretation is that this refers to the disintegration of the karana sarira and
sukshma sarira of a jnani at the time of videha mukti. How this is support for
cidabhasa has been explained in the main text. Another interpretation is “In the
body, after death, there is no consciousness”. When the Upanishad says that after the
body dies, there is no consciousness in it, it cannot be referring to the eternal, all
pervading consciousness; the all pervading, eternal consciousness is there
everywhere, in everything and at all times. It is there in the dead body also. (To put
it precisely, everything, at all times, including the body after it dies, is superimposed
– as nama roopas –on the substratum, the Existence-Consciousness- Infinity,
Brahman.) If the Upanishad cannot be referring to the eternal consciousness
available in the individual, the Atma, the sakshi caitanyam, what is it that it is
referring to when it says that consciousness is not there in the body after death? It
must be referring to a consciousness which is in the body when it is alive and which
goes out when the body dies. What goes out when the body dies is the sukshma
sarira including the mind with the reflected consciousness.
(8) The existence of a changing consciousness separately in each of us by which
each of us separately cognises different objects one after another is a matter of
experience. But when we connect the pramata of a cognition involved in a past
experience and the pramata of the cognition involved in a present experience, as the
same entity, we are invoking an unchanging, constant, I, which was behind the
pramata of the past experience and is now behind the pramata of the present
experience . What is present in the changing pramatas is cidabhasa and what is
invoked as the changeless, constant I is the Atma.
APPENDIX 5
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Note No.19 – Process of cognition
When I say, “I know this,” the “I”, the “know” and “this” are not simultaneously
cognised. Each piece of knowledge requires a triputi – a pramata, pramanam and
prameya ( or, to put in another version, a karta, karanam and karma).E.g. “I know
the tree”. Tree becomes the object of knowledge. When tree is the object of
knowledge neither ‘I” nor the act of knowing be can be the object of knowledge. .
When “I” is the object of knowledge , neither “tree “ nor the act of knowing can be
the object of knowledge. When the act of knowing is not the object of knowledge, “I”
nor “tree” can be the object of knowledge. “I”, “know” and “tree” each requires,
separately, a knower, knowing and known.. So the awareness of “I’, “know” and
“tree” takes place successively, through a separate triputi in each case – such as “I
know the tree”, “I know the act of knowing” and “ I know the I that knows the tree”.
- but so quickly that it appears to be simultaneous.
Note No 20. – Samsara not for Atma
If sorrow or samsara is really in Atma, it cannot be removed or overcome by
knowledge. But the Upanishad says that the knower of Atma overcomes sorrow
“tarati sokam atmavid.”) So the sorrow or samsara falsely attributed to Atma as in
such notions as “ I am sad “ or “ I am mortal” is really not in Atma. Another
argument. When ahamkara is functioning in jagrat avastha, pain is felt. In sushupti,
when ahamkara is not functioning, pain is not felt. It is clear, therefore, that sorrow
is an attribute of ahamkara. If sorrow were to be the attribute of Atma, we should be
feeling sorrow in sushupti also, because Atma, the original consciousness continues
to shine in sushupti also.
Note No. 21. – Negation of “anatma”
In pancakosa viveka, we negate, successively, “annamaya aham”(I identified with
annamaya kosa), “pranamaya aham”, “manomaya aham’ “vijnanamaya aham” and “
anandamaya aham”. What is left is the unnegatable drk, the witness-consciousness,
and we recognise it as our real nature.
In sarira traya viveka, by negating sthoola sarira aham (I identified with sthoola
sarira), sukshma sarira aham and karana sarira aham, successively, we come to the
unnegatable pratyagatma and recognise it as our real nature.
Note No. 22 – Role of Mahavakyam
Mahavakyams do not reveal any new entity. The consciousness available in us, Atma,
is self-evident – is recognised by us already. What mahavakyam does is to remove
the wrong notion that it is limited. What is revealed by mahavakyams is the
Bramatvam status of the already recognised entity. In the story of the tenth man, the
passer-by is not bringing a tenth man; he is only revealing the tenth-man status to
the tenth man. The consciousness in me I have already recognised. What I
understand through mahavakyam is that it is infinite. You cannot create space. When
you are in a room, you may have a wrong notion that space is limited by the walls of
the room. You destroy the walls; you recognise that what you thought was roomlimited
space is in fact the all pervading space.
Note No. 23 – Form is not substance
When the football hits you it is the substance that injures you, not the shape. If the
substance is yourself, how can it hit you? If everything, as Existence, is yourself, how
can you be hit by anything?
Note No. 24 – Self-effulgence – meaning
“Self-effulgent” means self evident consciousness - what does not require an
objectifying instrument of knowledge to be known is being self-evident.
Note No.25– Appreciation of pure existence – Illustration
Pure existence is not available for perception. When you ask for water to drink, it has
to be brought to you in a container, say, a paper cup.. Pure existence has to be
conveyed to our intellect through nama roopa. Just as you drink the water and
discard the paper cup, when existence with nama roopa is revealed, you have to
discard the nama roopa and understand the reality, the pure existence. Another
example. I cannot show to you light directly. Pure light is invisible. So, I introduce my
hand in the field of the all pervading invisible light and I tell you that there is a
principle called light because of which alone the hand is visible. Then, I withdraw my
hand and ask you to understand the existence of the light, even though it is not
visible without the medium of the hand. Similarly, when Sastra talks of an existent
world, it is doing so, wanting to reveal the substance called existence. World is an
attribute; the substance is existence. Just as bangle is a name and form given to the
substance which is gold. Existence is not in water. Water is in existence. Pure
existence bereft of the incidental attributes like sound, colour, smell etc. is not
available for objectification. If pure existence cannot be objectified, what is it? There
is only one possibility. It is that which enables everything else to be objectified but
which itself cannot be objectified. To recognise it, you drop, intellectually, everything
that you know. What remains is pure existence which is the same as pure
consciousness. If all objects are negated, one may be inclined to think that there is
nothing. In fact , one of the branches of Buddhism says that nothingness is the
reality. But to say or think that nothingness is the reality – that itself requires
consciousness.
Note No.26 - Eternal awareness – Illustration
When you see a book, in this perception, you are aware of two things, book as the
object and mind as the subject. Can you say that mind ( with cidabhasa) is aware of
book as the object and I as the subject at the simultaneously? Mind knows anything
only through a thought (vritti). And mind can entertain only one vritti at a time. So,
book vritti and I vritti – idam vritti and aham vritti- cannot take place simultaneously.
Further, take the case of your listening to my talk. You re listening to one sentence
after another continuously. So the mind is engaged in one sentence vritti after
another without interruption. There is no time for it to entertain an I vritti, such as “I
am listening to the talk.” But, after the talk, if I ask you “did you listen to my talk”,
you will say “, yes, I listened.” Which is this I? Not the pramata I, because the mind
was having only vrittis corresponding to my talk falling on your ears and there was no
room for the pramata I vritti. The I that is invoked is the sakshi I, the unchanging
self-evident consciousness. that is self-evident and is shining, as it were, all the time
So there has to be a consciousness other than the mind which is witnessing the
listening you. The constant shining principle in the presence of which mind is evident
as the subject I that was listening is the Sakshi, the Atma.
Note No.27 – Punya papa not one’s nature
Existence is my nature, because I enjoy existence in all three avasthas.
Consciousness is my nature because I enjoy consciousness in all three avasthas.
Punya papa and punya papa phalam are not my nature because I don’t have them in
all avasthas. There is no punya papa or punya papa phalam in sushupti. What is
coming and going is not nature. I, the Atma am akarta, abhokta - “ asango hi ayam
atma”
Note No.28 –Consciousness has no origin
The non-dual, relationless consciousness – Brahman-Atman – is without a beginning
and end. If it be said that it has a beginning, it means that it was non-existent before
its origination. But, can we talk of prior non-existence (pragabhava), in the case of
consciousness? The crucial question is what was it that knew the prior non-existence
of consciousness? Is it consciousness itself or is it something other than
consciousness? The latter alternative has to be ruled out, because everything other
than consciousness is insentient and what is insentient can never be credited with
the knowledge function. The former alternative is also untenable. If consciousness
exists at the time of apprehending the prior non-existence of consciousness, ex
hypothesi, consciousness is not non-existent then. To say that something which
exists apprehends its own non-existence at that time is absurd.
Note No. 29. Brahman attributeless
Advaitin says, on the basis of Upanishad statements, that Brahman is nirguna
(without any attributes.) Visishtadvaitins say that Brahman is saguna ( with
attributes.) The term. “nirguna” appearing in Upanishadic statements revealing the
nature of Brahman, they interpret as “bereft of bad qualities”. Apart from the fact
that the term “ nirguna “ is used without any rider, Advaitins point out that the
Kathopanishad mantra I.ii.14 makes it clear that Brahman is devoid of even good
qualities- “anyatra dharmat anyatra adharmat” ( “different from virtue, different
from vice.” –goodness and badness”).
Note No.30 - Relationship of Brahman and world
It may be asked, “how can there be any relationship between real Brahman and the
world – we talk of adhisthana adhyasa sambandha. The answer is that the
relationship is also Mithya. Like the relationship between sand and mirage. Sand is
real; mirage is unreal. The relationship is between sand , the substratum and mirage
which is superimposition. The relationship is also mithya. Like that Brahman is the
substratum and the world of names and forms is the superimposition. Through the
unreal superimposition, the world, we obtain knowledge of the substratum, the
Existence.
Note No.31 – Existence has no origin
Existence cannot come out of Existence or non-existence. If existence is already
there, there is no question of existence originating. And nothing can come out of
non-existence.
Note No 32 - Iswara, karma and free will
As already mentioned in the main text, jivatmas who have not attained knowledge of
jivabrahmaikyam are governed by karma. Iswara is the administrator of the karma
(karmaphaladata) and, through Maya, creates the world including bodies and minds
and sets up laws of nature in accordance with the requirements of the jivatmas to go
through enjoyment or suffering as warranted by their previous karma. That is Iswara
provides the infrastructure. The physical and mental equipment one is born with, in
which family he is born, in which environment he has to lead his life and the major
situations he has to face in life will depend on his karma. But how he makes use of
the opportunities available to him to develop himself and how he faces situations,
how he reacts, all these, depend on his free will. The very fact that human beings
have a choice to do a thing, or not to do it or do it in a different way, is proof of free
will. What is more , not all situations in life arise out of one’s own karma. In the
complex interface of the karmas of myriads of living beings, there are bound to be
many situations where one will have complete freedom of action. Since no one knows
what one’s karma is, the best way to act is to do action according to Dharma. Dharma
in, the modern context, should be defined as principles of morality – not only
personal morality but what may be called social morality - such as doing or not doing
to others what you would like them to do or not to do to you, the greatest good of the
greatest number, etc. When one is in doubt in any situation whether what one is
intending to do is right or wrong, there are two ways; follow the example of great
people, if available or see that your motive is pure and do what your conscience
dictates.
APPENDIX 6
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Note No.33 – Iswara Srishti, Jiva srishti
Sastra talks of Iswara Srishti and Jiva Srishti. Whereas the universe that is presented
to us, as created by Iswara, is common to all of us, how each man makes use of the
objects and situations and how he reacts to them is special to him. In the same
school, with the same teaching faculty and library, one works hard and studies well;
another with an equally good brain wastes his time and fails to make the grade. One
loves music; another can’t stand any music. One manages his office, being a friend of
all; another manages the same office as a ring master. One loves swimming; another
does not want even to have a bath. Iswara Srishti Jiva srishti situation is another
facet of the interplay of karma and free will. From one birth to another, we not only
carry our karma, but our vasanas,. It is on account of vasanas that tastes for things
like food, music, literature, art etc. vary. Vasanas of the past can also be changed or
overcome by free will, with determination. A powerful argument for free will is that,
unless you accept free will, moksha will be impossible. Aspiring for moksha and
making use of the opportunities available for spiritual advancement are matters of
free will. Punya karma may even give you birth in a family of spiritual seekers, but
whether you yourself take to the spiritual path depends on your free will. Papa karma
may give you birth in a family of materialists, but, with your free will, you can
transcend those surroundings and , if your aspiration is intense, you will find the set
up where you can pursue your spiritual Sadhana.
Note No 34. Grace and free will
1. Apart from the enjoyment and suffering we have to undergo for our past karma,
our life gives us lot of scope for fresh action. The factors that come into play in
respect of fresh action are (1) Lord’s Grace (2) our vasanas and (3) our free will.
(1) Iswara’s Grace is in the form of laws governing the functioning of the universe.
Deliberate action is not possible if there is no law governing cause and effect. We do
action, expecting a result in accordance with such a law. For the laws of the
universe, Iswara is responsible..
(2) We carry our vasanas from one birth to another. The vasanas are formed on the
basis of previous experience. Vasanas govern our action in the sense that towards
the same objects and the same situation, different people have different likes and
dislikes. One enjoys music; another abhors it. One is helpful to others; another is selfcentred.
(3) Subject to (1) and (2), we have a choice to do a thing or not to do a thing or to do
it differently. How one acts in a given situation or reacts to a situation depends on
his free will. No outside proof is required for the existence of free will; all of us are
exercising it day in and day out.
2. If free will is not accepted, there will be two problems –
(1) The commandments and prohibitions of scripture will become meaningless.
Scripture is advising man to do good actions and avoid evil actions only because
scripture assumes that man has free will.
(2) If man has no free will and not merely our karmaphalan but fresh action is also
impelled by Iswara, Iswara becomes responsible for the good action and bad action
done by man. The problem then will be two-fold. By making some men to do good
action and some men do bad action resulting in punya and papa followed by
enjoyment or suffering as karmaphalam later, Iswara becomes partial and cruel.
Secondly, If Iswara is responsible for man’s good action and bad action, no one can
be rewarded nor can any criminal be punished. A murderer will say “ I am not
responsible for what I did. The Lord made me do it.”
Note No.35 - Miracles and karma
Apart from the physical laws governing the universe, there are divine forces in the
empirical plane. Evidence of such forces is found in certain temples, churches,
mosques, darghas etc., such as Lourdes in France, and certain places of worship in
India. We have authentic accounts of miracles in the form of the sick getting cured in
such places. There are also authentic accounts of certain persons who have acquired
or have carried forward from previous janmas Yogic powers by which they are able to
bring about changes in the life of devotees. In regard to temples etc., in certain
cases, the powers are attributed to Yogis who have attained samadhi there and have
deliberately left their powers to operate there. In Brahma Sutra, Vyasacarya does talk
of cases, where, for fulfilling certain cosmic purposes of Iswara, some who are
liberated take rebirth, even after death.
The important point to note, in all these cases, is that not all who visit and worship at
the places mentioned above get the benefit of the divine or miraculous powers. This
can only be explained by postulating that what happens in these places does not fall
outside the law of karma. Based on this premise, we should say that if a particular
person gets a benefit, by way of cure or some other material advancement, it is
predestined according to his karma itself that his suffering should be over at that
time. It is just as a matter of the medium through which that takes place. In these
cases, the medium for ending the suffering is the divine or miraculous force at such a
place, just as the medium in other cases is a skilled doctor or a generous benefactor.
Here also, free will comes into operation inasmuch as the choice of and the decision
to go to a place of worship, just as the choice of and decision to go to a skilled doctor
is a matter of free will.
(Yogis = Persons who have acquires supernatural powers by practicing certain
disciplines in the psychic plane through regulation of prana or meditation on deities.
Samadhi = the end of a Jnani’s or Yogis life. (This should not to be confused with the
Samadhi prescribed in Patanjali’s Yoga Sastra as a spiritual practice for the
attainment of Moksha.).Dargha = Place where a Muslim saint’s body, at death, is
interred.)
Note No.36 – Moksha means knowing one’s Infinite nature
Brahman is said to be infinite, space wise, time wise and entity wise. When you talk
of a thing that is attained by you, it has to be a finite thing; before attaining it, it has
to be away from you. Conversely, there can be no such event as attaining the thing
that is infinite. By definition, ‘the infinite’ precludes the existence of any second
entity. So, to talk of your being away from the infinite, to start with, and your
attaining it, later, is illogical. Therefore, ‘attainment of Brahman’ can only be a figure
of speech. One is ever Brahman; one has been ignorant of this fact and the ignorance
is removed through study of Sastra.
Note No.37 – Mind is matter
Logic of saying that mind is matter is (a) it is affected by matter; for various mental
disorders, the treatment is electric shock (2) a lie detector used and (3) there are
psychosomatic diseases.
Note No.38 – Duality – two kinds
It is not enough to know that you, the Jivatma, are none other than the Paramatma.
This removes only one kind of duality – the duality of consciousness. There is another
duality – the atma anatma duality. This removed only when you gain the knowledge
that all that there is Brahman; i.e., the substratum of everything in the form of
existence, is Brahman and what appears as anatma is only nama roopa which is of a
lower order of reality (which knowledge is called sarvatmabhava.)
Note No.39 – Effect on good actions on karma
An authority for saying that good actions, done out of free will, will have effect on
karma, is in Kathopanishad I.i.18 – “A person who performs the Nachiketas ritual and
does Upasana increases his punya and decreases his papa to such an extent that he
goes, after death, to brahma loka.”
Note No.40 – Denial of consciousness – self-contradictory
The existence of consciousness cannot be denied, because the very denial involves
the use of consciousness. This is what is meant by saying, ‘the negator cannot be
negated’.
Note No.41– Mixing up orders of reality
One should not mix up orders of reality. Suppose, one convicted of murder pleads,
“Atma neither kills nor is it killed. I am Atma, so, I did not kill and, therefore, you
should not punish me.” The judge would turn round and say “I am not punishing your
Atma; I shall punish only your body.” It is in this strain that Ramakrishna
Paramahamsa relates a story. A man, thinking that the elephant is Atma and I am
Atma; so the elephant cannot kill me. So saying he went and laid himself in front of a
rogue elephant. The body of the elephant came and crushed the body of the man.
Note No. 42 – Unreality of the world
From the Vedic statement that Brahman is neither cause nor effect ( cf.
Kathopanishad I.ii.14) we can derive the unreality of the world. Brahman is nondual.;
i.e., other than Brahman, there is no other entity. But we do have a world right
in front of us. Who created it? The only logical answer can be ‘nobody; i.e., the
creation and the creator are unreal.
Note No. 43 – Corollaries of Brahman being infinite
From the infinitude of Brahman, we can derive
(a) Formlessness (nirakaratvam) - (That which is infinite space wise cannot have any
form)
(b) Eternity (nityatvam) – (That which is infinite time wise cannot have a beginning
or end)
© Relationslessness (asangatvam) (That which in infinite entity wise cannot have
any relation with anything, there being no second entity.)
Corollaries can also be derived in the converse direction.
Note No. 44 – Sarvatmakatvam of Brahman
Kathopanishad I.ii.20 says that Atma is the greater than the greatest and subtler
than the subtlest. This seems to be a contradiction in terms. Sankaracarya argues
that the contradiction can be resolved if we take the substratum. As the substratum
of everything, Atma (Brahman) is the substratum of the greater than the greatest
and of the subtler than the subtlest. Whether it is a mountain nama roopa or a
microbe nama roopa, Atma is the Existence. Bangle cannot be in chain nor can chain
be in bangle, but gold is in bangle and chain.
Note No. 45 – Atma beyond nama roopas
When mind is active, nama roopas appear. When mind resolved, nama roopas
disappear. But, I, Atma, am there when nama roopas appear and when nama roopas
disappear. So, is clear that I, Atma, am beyond nama roopas. The appearance and
disappearance are phenomena of a lower order of reality.
Note No. 46 – Atma motionless
Kathopanishad I.ii.21, talking of Atma, says “remaining motionless, I move.” How can
this be? In the presence of Atma, reflection of consciousness is formed in the mind.
Mind moves by way of entertaining one thought after another; it is angry at one
moment; it is calm later. It was sad yesterday; today it is happy. The ignorant person
attributes these movements of the mind to the Atma which is, in reality motionless
(acala.)
Note No. 47– Atma locationless
If you are asked “where were you while you slept” you have to say “nowhere”. So,
you, the Atma, are locationless. When you are associated with the mind in the jagrat
and swapna avasthas, you appear to be located. When the association with the mind
is snapped in sushupti. there is no sense of location.
Note No.48 –Questions regarding origin etc, of world invalid.
Time and space are born with the universe. So, to ask ‘when did the universe come is
illogical; there can be no time prior to time. Similarly, to ask ‘where did universe
originate’ is illogical; there can be no space beyond space. So. Also, ‘how’ and ‘why’
are also out of court; process involves time and purpose involves time in terms of one
in the present envisaging a future. The only satisfactory answer to such questions is
the Advaita Vedanta answer that the world is unreal.
Note No. 49 – Vasana and free will
The first thought that comes to mind may be due to vasana. But whether I should
nourish it and let it get hold of me or I should replace it by a better thought through
will power is a matter of free will.
Note No. 50 – Guru and Brahman synonymous
A Jivanmukta is identifies with Brahman. So, in effect, he is Brahman. That is why
guru is glorified as Paramatma in the famous sloka “ gururbrahma gururvishnu
gururdevo maheswara; gurureva parambrahma tasmai sri gurave namaha”.
Note No. 51 – Relative immortality
An authority for saying that ‘amrutatvam’ should be taken in certain contexts as
relative immortality is found in Kathopanishad II.i.2 which talks of benefit of the
knowledge of jivabrahma aikyam as absolute immortality (“amrutatvam dhruvam).
This implies that there can be ‘relative immortality’ in the sense of enjoyment of a life
of a vastly longer duration than the human life.
Note No. 52– The unnegatable remainder
You experience your mind. So, you negate it, saying, “I am not the mind.” Then, when
you analyse, you come to know that, even when the mind is not functioning, there is
consciousness. You recognise the consciousness that exists constantly without your
experiencing as an object as yourself. That is to say, there is only one thing that can’t
be experienced but the existence of which cannot be denied; that is what is always
available as the constant I, the Atma.
APPENDIX 7
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Note No. 53 – Samsara due to sense of duality
Samsara is due to a sense of limitation, due to a notion that there are thing other
than me. I am dreaming, identified with the dream body, I think that there are things
other than me, but when I wake up that I (i.e., my mind) alone was there and there
were no others. When I identify myself with the jagrat body, I feel that, in the jagrat
prapanca, there are others beside me. When I disidentify with the jagrat prapanca
and identify myself with consciousness, there is nothing other than me.
Note No. 54 - Consciousness changeless
Consciousness is the witness of all changes. – physical changes, emotional changes,
intellectual changes, changes of space, changes of time, changes of from waking
state to dream state and from dream state to sleep state and so son. Witness of
changes has to be changeless.
Note No 55 - Atma neither the known nor the knowable
In Kenopanishad, the student says, “I don’t know Atma. I don’t want to know Atma.”
( This is the idea – not the exact words.) He says “I don’t know Atma”, because Atma
does not fall in the known category, being unobjectifiable. He says “I don’t want to
know Atma” because Atma cannot become the known (i.e., become an object) at any
time, atma being oneself.
Note No. 56 – Flowing eternity
In Advaita Vedanta, there is a concept of flowing eternity, as distinguished from
absolute eternity. Brahman is absolutely eternal, in the sense that Brahman is beyond
time. But we have to have a term where we cannot trace the beginning and end of a
thing. This is called “pravaha nityatvam” which can be translated as “flowing
eternity”. The cycle of srishti, sthiti, laya, the chain of jivatma, karma, karmaphalam
and rebirth and Maya would fall in this category.
Note No. 57 – Dependency of the world
Kathopanishad II.iii.1 says that the world is dependent (asrita) on Brahman.
Whatever is dependent is mithya (unreal). So, the world is mithya.
Note No. 58 - Who is a brahmana?
Brahadaranyaka Upanishad says that only a person who utilises the human birth to
gain knowledge of jivabrahma aikyam is a brahmana. In Gita, Krishna also talks of
“jati brahmana” (one who is born to parents belonging to the caste of brahmanas),
“karma brahmana” (one who deserves to be called a Brahmana by virtue of his
actions and conduct and “guna brahmana” (one who is deserves to be respected as a
Brahmana by virtue of his seeking of having gained the knowledge of Brahman) and
extols the guna brahmana.
Note No. 59 – Panca kosa viveka in Kathopanishad
In Kathopanishad II.iii.7 and 8, which is a kind of Panca kosa viveka, mind
(manomaya kosa) is said to be superior to the sense organs (pranamaya kosa),
intellect (vijnanamaya kosa) is said to be superior to the mind, the samashti intellect
(samashti vijanamaya kosa) is said to be superior to the vyashti intellect, samashti
avyakta (anandamaya kosa or Maya) is said to be superior to the samashti intellect
and Purusha (Brahman) is said to be superior to Maya. By linking vyashti and
samashti, the Upanishad enables us to avoid the pitfall of thinking that there is a
plurality of consciousness.
Note No. 60 – viparita bhavana obstacle to jnanam
The obstacle to knowledge of jivabrahma aikyam getting entrenched, which is
created by habitual reactions based on vasanas persisting from the past identification
with the body mind complex (called “viparita bhavana”) is twofold. (1) When you are
angry or worried, your mind is disturbed. Only a calm mind can absorb the knowledge
of jivabrahma aikyam. (2) When you are angry or worried, you are identified with the
body mind complex. You cannot identify yourself with Atma at the same time.
Identification with Atma, interrupted by identification with the body mind complex is
not adequate for liberation. The entire antahkarana must be saturated with the
knowledge of jivabrahma aikyam; identification with Brahman must be total, without
any reservation. The sadhana for achieving this is nididhyasanam, i.e., dwelling on
the various aspects of the teaching of jivabrahma aikyam.
Note No. 61 – Jnani free from raga dwesha
Jnani’s mind is not Brahman. But it is a mind that has understood “I am Brahman.
When one identifies with the body mind complex, one has the notion of being
individual. So, there are others and there is raga and dwesha arising from the notion
of duality. But a jnani is no longer identified with the body mind complex. So, he has
destroyed the notion of being an individual. So, for the Jnani, there are no others to
whom he can get attached to or have aversion for. He does continue to use the mind
as an instrument for transactions, but in that mind, there are no emotion.
Note No. 62 - Purpose of teaching creation
Creation of the universe is brought in by Upanishads, in order to lead us to Brahman.
Teaching is always from the known to the unknown. We experience a universe
around us and our bodies and minds as part of that universe.. Taking the clay and pot
example, Upanishad teaches us that the substance is only clay and pot is just a form
to which we have given a name ( what is called “nama roopa” in Sanskrit. ) This form
itself is only one of the forms existing potentially in the lump of clay and which an
intelligent agent, the carpenter, brings out. The reality is the substance, the clay. The
form is not a second entity; Pot is only a particular configuration of clay which is the
only entity. If we take away clay, there is no pot. So, pot is unreal. Thus, we arrive at
two generalizations. (1) The cause alone is real;; the effect is unreal. .(2) Not only a
material substance is required for an effect to appear but there has to be an
intelligent cause . Clay we find is itself an effect of the substance , which is a
combination of and water. Thus when we go backwards in the effect-cause chain, we
arrive at an ultimate cause, This must be a cause which is not an effect; otherwise
there would be infinite regress. Upanishad calls this cause Brahman. As the reality, it
is Existence.
We see creation as a well designed universe; so, we have to conclude that the
creator must be an intelligent principle.
Upanishad introduces reality as consciousness to show that it is ever available as I,
so that we need not go in search of it. Having shown consciousness as one’s own
nature, to see that we don’t make the mistake of supposing that it is located in one’s
mind only, it brings in the Existence , the all pervading aspect. Putting the two
aspects together, Upanishad defined reality as Existence-Consciousness -Infinity.
Infinity applies to space, time and entity. Since space and time are part of creation,
Brahman, the creator, has to be beyond time and space. “Beyond time” means that
It is eternal and “beyond space” means that it is not only all pervading in the
universe but is beyond it also and that It is formless. Since all entities come into
existence only as part of the creation, Brahman gas to be beyond all entities, that is
non-dual as the supreme order of reality. To be non-dual is to be attributeless. To
have any attribute is not to have its opposite. Each attribute excludes its opposite.
Exclusion is limitation. If Brahman is given any attribute, we will be excluding
Brahman to be an entity with the opposite attribute and thus we would be making
Brahman to be a limited entity. To be limitless, - to be infinite - entity-wise, that is to
be non-dual, the only way is not to have any attribuites. Being non-dual, Brahman
has to be the intelligent as well as the material cause. As Existence, Brahman is the
material cause and as Consciousness, Brahman is the intelligent cause. In presenting
the nature of Brahman, Advaita Vedanta also says that Brahman is apanipadou,
apranah and amanah (without sense organs and mind.) So, while it can lend
Existence and Consciousness, it cannot engage Itself in the act of creation.
Therefore, in Advaita Vedanta , Iswara, conceived as the consciousness of Brahman
reflected in a potential condition of nama roopas, called Maya, is introduced as the
actual creator. Since Brahman has been said to be infinite entity wise, that is nondual,
Iswara has to be of a lower order of reality. The created universe is conceived
as a variety of forms with names attached to them ( called, “nama roopas” in
Sanskrit.) superimposed on Brahman, the eternal and unchanging Existence. Thus,
the essence of the universe is Brahman, just as clay is of pots etc., except that, in the
case of Brahman, the essence is formless and attributeless. Thus, it is said that the
substance of the universe is Brahman, the Existence, which is there always and
everywhere; on this Existence, the substratum, Iswara visualizes the permutations
and combinations of nama roopas. and impels Maya to unfold into such nama roopas.
Brahman being nondual, the nama roopas also have to be lesser order of reality , just
as Iswara himself is. Nama roopas consist of animate and inanimate objects of the
universe. .The animate objects of the universe are nama roopas, forms superimposed
on Existence which are capable of reflecting the Consciousness aspect of Brahman.
Inanimate objects are names and forms which do not have that capacity. Living
beings ( called “jivas” in Sanskrit) are born with diverse physical and mental
characteristics and undergo enjoyment and suffering of diverse kinds. Heredity may
seem to explain the physical characteristics but it is not adequate to account for the
mental characteristics., It is therefore necessary to postulate the transmigration of
the mental entities ( called “sukshma sariras” in Sanskrit) in a cycle of births and
deaths and entry into one physical body ( called “ sthoola sarira” in Sanskrit) after
another and to regard the diversity as the recompense for their own previous
actions and thoughts (called “karma” in Sanskrit). But we cannot postulate a first life
span ( called “janma” in Sanskrit). Because in that janma also the diversity of
physical and mental characteristics and enjoyment and suffering will be there. We
cannot make the creator responsible for the diversity. If we do so, we would be
making the creator to be a partial and cruel person. Advaita Vedanta says, therefore,
that jivas and their karma are beginningless. Similarly, if we predicate a first
creation, since time and space are themselves part of the creation, we cannot explain
where the creator was at the time of creation, when he did the creation etc, So,
Advaita Vedanta says that creation is a beginningless cycle of unfolding and
resolution into a potential condition of names and forms. The universe of names and
forms exist only as an appearance from the point of view of jivas. As far as Brahman
is concerned, Brahman alone is and for Brahman, there is not even a universe of a
lower order of reality and there is no Maya or Iswara ; even Maya and Iswara are
postulated only for the sake of explaining the experience of a universe of names and
forms by jivas.
Note No. 63 - Mind and Sakshi - roles
Whereas the mind with cidabhasa, ( technically called ahamkara), expresses in the
form of changing thoughts, ahamkara itself is not mere thoughts. There is an entity
called ahamkara and it has continuous existence ; it is a part of the sukshma sarira
which survives the death of the sthoola sarira and enters another sthoola sarira in the
next janma carrying the karma of jivatmas and of the vasanas from one janma to
another. Even so, we have to discriminate between Sakshi and ahamkara. Even
though ahamkara has continuous existence (until videha mukti), it is a changing
entity. It is like the river. The river, as a collection of water molecules, continues to
exist for ages but the quantity and characteristics of the water flowing now at any
point is not the same as that which was flowing before. Similarly, the qualities of the
ahamkara in the same individual vary from time to time. At one time, it is an illtempered
ahamkara; at a later point of time, it is a calm ahamkara. At one time it is a
dull ahamkara; at a later point of time, it is a sharp ahamkara. Such a changing
ahamkara cannot account for the sense of our being the same conscious being, the
same I who was there when the ahamkara was ill tempered and who is there when
the ahamkara is calm, the same I that was there when the ahamkara was dull and
who is there when the ahamkara is sharp. We cannot but postulate an unchanging
consciousness which we sense as the constant unaltered I that we are throughout
the states of waking, dream and deep sleep, through the changes of the body from
youth to adulthood, from young age to middle age and from middle age to old age
and through the changes of the antahkarana from turbulence to placidity, from
desirousness to contentment and from dullness to sharpness.
In other words, perception, feeling, thought , registering experience, recollection and
recognition are functions of the ahamkara. But, ahamkara, in turn, is shaped by the
changing experiences, feelings and thoughts. The ahamkara of yesterday, or of last
year or of the young age is not the same as the ahamkara of today, just as the body
of yesterday, or last year of the young age is not the body of today. I was a short
tempered man in my youth. Now I am a calm person. That I and this I are not the
same . But when recollection or recognition takes place, connecting the past and the
present, say, in the form of “I who used to be agitated am now peaceful” or “ I slept
happily yesterday; I did not know anything”, I am invoking an I which is the same
throughout. The recollection or recognition is done by the ahamkara I, but the
recollected or recognised I – recollected or recognised as the same I that existed
then and continues to exist now is the sakshi I, the unchanging consciousness that is
ever there. The mind is able to invoke that I because the sakshi is self-evident.
Note No. 64 - What is temporary is mithya - Logic
A thing is temporary means that it has temporary existence. If any attribute or
nature is intrinsic to an entity, it will never be lost. If an attribute comes and goes, it
means that it is not intrinsic to it. So, temporary existence means that the existence
is borrowed. For example, whereas heat is the intrinsic nature of fire, the heat of hot
water is borrowed from fire. One of the definitions of mithya is that it has borrowed
existence. Therefore, whatever is temporary is mithya.
APPENDIX 8
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Note No. 65 Five definitions of mithya
(1) Definition given by Padmapada in Pancadipika
Falsity is the character of not being the locus of either being or non-being. The falsity
is constituted by being different from sat (being) and asat (non-being).
(2) Definition given by Prakasatmayati in Pancapadika-vivarana
The falsity of a thing consists in the thing’s being negated for all three periods of time
in the locus in which it appears.. ( The falsity (mithyatva) consists in being the
pratiyogin (negatum) of a negation (nisheda) which is traikalika (for all three
periods of time – past, present and future ) in a locus in which it appears.
This is based on the scriptural text, “There is nothing else whatsoever”. It implies
that the world of multiplicity is eternally negated in the non-dual Brahman which is
the locus of the appearance of the world and as such as, the world is false.
(3) Definition given by Prakasatmayati
The false is that which is cancelled by the knowledge of Brahman.
This is based on the scriptural text, “The enlightened is freed of names and forms.”
(4) Madhsudana Saraswati’s presentation of the definition given Citsukhacarya
The falsity of anything positive is its character of its being the
pratiyogin.(counterpart) of the absolute negation that resides in what appears to be
its own substratum. The shell silver is something positive and it is false. Why is it
false? It is false because it is eternally negated in the very shell that appears to be its
locus. The objects of the world are also false in the same sense. For example, a cloth
is a positive object and it appears to reside in the threads which constitute it. But in
those very threads the cloth is eternally negated. The cloth is therefore false.
(5) What is different from the real (sat), i.e., what is other than the real is false.
According to Advaita Vedanta, Brahman alone is real ( sat); the objects of the world,
like a pot or cloth, are different from Brahman. They are, therefore, false.
Note No. 66 – Intrinsic and incidental nature
The criterion to find out what is one’s intrinsic nature and what is incidental is
To see what comes and goes and what is permanent. The waking state is not there
when the dream state comes and neither is there when the deep sleep state comes. If
being walker was my true nature, I would be awake permanently. If being a dreamer
was my true nature, I would be dreaming permanently If being a sleeper was my
true nature, I would be sleeping permanently. So, the wakerhood, the dreamerhood
and the sleeperhood are incidental. What is constantly there during all the three
states is consciousness. So, we have to conclude that consciousness is my intrinsic
nature, my true nature.
Note No. 67 – Avastha traya viveka in Mandukya karika
In the Avastha Traya Viveka, in Mandukya Karika, the microcosm (vyashti) and the
macrocosm (samashti) are equated to show we are not limited individuals. While
talking of consciousness associated with the vyashti upadhi, the sthoola sarira)
(visva), the description jumps to the consciousness associated with the samashti
upadhi, sthoola prapanca (vaisvanara). Similarly, consciousness associated with the
vyashti sukshma sarira (taijasa) and the consciousness associated with the samashti
sukshma sarira, (Hiranyagarbha) are equated and the consciousness associated with
the vyashti karana sarira, (prajna) and the consciousness associated with the
samashti karana sarira ( Iswara) are equated. This shows that consciousness in all
bodies is the same and there is nothing like my consciousness and your
consciousness. In the definition of Brahman as Satyam Jnanam, Anantam, in
Taittiriya Upanishad, by juxtaposing Satyam, eternal existence with Jnanam,
consciousness, the same effect is achieved. It shows that the consciousness that I
recognize in me as my true nature is not a limited entity but it is the all pervading
Existence, the substratum behind all nama roopas. To show that the Existence-
Consciousness is not limited by space, time or entity, the word, anantam, is
introduced.
GLOSSARY FOR ADVAITA VEDANTA
A-H
Acala
That which is devoid of movement
Adhishtanam
Sub-stratum. In Advaita Vedanta, the real entity located in which an unreal thing is
perceived
Adhyasa
Superimposition. The wrong notion concerning a real entity, attributing to it the
nature and characteristics of an unreal thing and vice versa
Advayam
Non-dual . The only Absolute Reality
Agami karma
Punya and papa arising from action and thought in the present janma
Ahambrahmasmi
“ I am Brahman”
Ahamkara
Ahampratyaya
Mind cum reflected consciousness
The ‘I’ notion part of the mind, the changing ‘I’ as the knower, doer etc.
Ajah
That which has no birth
Akasa
Space
Akhanda caitanyam
Undivided, all pervading consciousness
Anadi
That which has no origin
Ananda
Bliss
Anandamaya kosa
Bliss sheath. The ignorance and bliss experienced by a person during deep sleep
Anantam
That which is not limited , space-wise, time-wise or entity-wise. The infinite
Anantam
That which has no end
Anavastha dosha
The fallacy of infinite regress
Anirvacaniyam
Unexplainability; Undefinability
Annamaya kosa
The physical body
Antahkarana
Mind – consisting of Manas, buddhi, ahamkara, and citta
Arthadhyasa
Perception of an unreal entity
Asanga
Unassociated.; relationless
Asuras
Demons
Atma
The Consciousness aspect of Brahman’s nature recognized as the witnessconsciousness
in individual beings.
Avarana sakti
Veiling power. The power of Maya by which Maya makes human beings forget their
real nature
Avastha traya viveka
Enquiry into one’s real nature by analyzing the states of waking, dream and deep
sleep
Avatara
Incarnation
Avidya
Avidya vritti
Maya
The mode of the dormant mind in sushupti registering the non-experiencing state.
Avyakruta
Literal meaning is ‘unevolved’. However, it is used as a technical term synonymous
with Maya
Avyakta
Literal meaning is ‘ unmanifest’. However, it is used as a technical term synonymous
with Maya
Avyavaharyam
That which is beyond transactions
Ayamatama Brahma
“This consciousness which is my real nature is none other than the all pervading
consciousness”
Bhashya
Commentary on the scriptural text
Bhokata
Enjoyer or sufferer
Bhokruttvam
The sense that one is an enjoyer or sufferer
Bhrama
(1)Erroneous knowledge (2) Illusion
Brahmaa
Creator-God. The creator aspect of Iswara
Brahman
The Absolute Reality defined as Existence-Consciousness-Bliss
Brahmana
Seeker of knowledge of Brahman; one who has known Brahman
Brahmasatyam jaganmithya
Brahman is the Reality; the universe is mithya
Buddhi
Faculty of the mind which is of the nature of decision - also, the reasoning faculty –
generally referred to as the intellect
Caitanyam
Consciousness
Cidabhasa
Reflected Consciousness
Cit
Consciousness
Dama
Control of the sense organs of perception and action
Devas
Gods. Deities
Drkdrsya viveka
Enquiry into one’s real nature by analysing the known and the knower
Dwaitam
The existence of more than one reality
Golakam
The physical part of the sense organs
Guna
Attribute
Guru
Preceptor
Hiranyagrha
(1) Brahmaa , the God embodying Iswara’s power of creation power (2) Cosmic
subtle body
====================================================
GLOSSARY FOR ADVAITA VEDANTA
I-P
Indriya
The energy of the sense organs
Iswara
Maya cum cidabhasa. Cosmic causal body.
Jagat
The universe
Jagrat avastha
The waking state
Janma
One life span; birth
Jiva
Synonym of jivatma
Jivabrama aikyam
Identity of the essential nature of Jivatma and Paramatma
Jivanmukta
One who has become liberated while living.
Jivanmukti
Liberation from Samsara in the current life itself
Jivatma
The conglomerate of body, mind and atma
Jnana kanda
The latter part of the Veda dealing with Brahman, Jivatmas and jagat
Jnanadhyasa
The wrong notion mistaking a real entity to be an unreal thing.
Jnanam
(1) Consciousness (2) Knowledge
Jnanendriyas
Sense organs of perception – sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch
Jnani
One who has gained knowledge of one’s identity with Brahman – jivabrama aikyam.
The knowledge that one’s real nature is consciousness and that that consciousness is
no different from the all pervading consciousness called Brahman
Kamya Karma
Action for selfish ends
Karana sarira
The causal body – the anandamaya kosa
Karma
Action; merit and demerit
Karma kanda
The former part of the Veda dealing with rituals
Karma Yoga
Purificatory spiritual practices as preparation for study of Jnana kanda
Karmaphalam
The enjoyment and suffering undergone by the jivatma for punya and papa
Karmendriyas
Sense organs of action – action through speech, legs, hands, anus and the genitals
Karta
Doer
Kartrutvam
The sense that one is a doer
Krama mukti
Liberation from samsara after going to the abode of Hiranyagarbha by doing
Hiranyagarbha or Iswara Upasana and being taught by Hiraanyagarbha himself
Lakshanam
Features ; characteristics ; definition.
Laya
Dissolution of the universe
Mananam
The process of getting doubts clarifies by discussion with the teacher or by one’s own
analysis and reasoning
Manas
Faculty of mind which is of the nature of indecision or doubt; also the emotional
aspect of antahkarana
Manomaya kosa
The mind and the five sense organs of perception
Maya
Unevolved names and forms resting, as a lower of reality, in Brahman
Mithya
That which is experienced but has no real existence of its own
Moksha
Liberation from samsara
Mumukshutvam
Intense yearning for moksha
Nama roopa
Name and form
Nididhyasanam
The process of dwelling on the core of the teaching to overcome the habitual
identification with the body mind complex
Nimitta karanam
Intelligent cause
Nirakara
Formless
Niravayava
That which has no parts
Nirguna
Attributeless
Nirvikalpa
Divisionless
Nirvikara
Changeless
Nitya
Eternal
Pancabhootas
The five basic compounds – space, air, fire water and earth
Pancakosa viveka
Enquiry into one’s real nature by analyzing the five kosas
Papa
Demerit, i.e., in the system of karma, the debit entry in the ledger, as it were, for bad
action or bad thought, to be discharged by imposing suffering on the jivatma in the
same birth or in some future birth.
Paramartika satyam
Absolute reality
Paramatma
Brahman
Parinama
Transformation
Prajnaam Brahma
The consciousness which is the nature of the individual is none other than the all
pervading consciousness called Brahman
Prakarana grantha
Works expounding Sruti
Prakriti
Literal meaning is ‘nature’. However, it is used as a technical term synonymous with
Maya
Prama
Right knowledge
Pramanam
The instrument of knowing
Pramata
The knower
Prameyam
The known
Prana
The energy that regulates the physiological functions of living beings – five in number
– prana, apana, vyana, samana and udana – responsible for functions such as
respiration, circulation, digestion, metabolism, ejection , locomotion, action etc. –
generally referred to as ‘vital airs’
Pranamaya kosa
The five pranas and the five sense organs of action
Prarabdha karma
The quota of punya and papa allotted to be exhausted by enjoyment or suffering in a
particular janam
Pratibhasika satyam
Subjective reality
Pratyabhinja
Recognition.
Pratyagatma
When the all pervading consciousness is referred to as the consciousness
recognizable by oneself in oneself, it is called Pratyagatma
Punya
Merit, i.e., in the system of karma, the credit entry in the ledger, as it were, for good
action or good thought – to be discharged by conferring enjoyment or comfort on the
jivatma in the same birth or in some future birth
Purushartha
(1) Goals in life – material prosperity called artha, enjoyment called kama, merit
gained by observance of one’s duties in accordance with scriptural
commandments and prohibitions called dharma and moksha (2) free will
GLOSSARY FOR ADVAITA VEDANTA
Q-Z
Sadhana catushtaya
The four fold discipline qualifying for the study of Jnana kanda, consisting of viveka,
vairagya, shatka sampatti, and mumukshutvam
Sadhanas
Spiritual practices
Sakshi
When the all pervading consciousness is referred as the consciousness that is the
source of the reflected consciousness in the mind and is present throughout when
mind has one cognition after another , it is called Sakshi
Sama
Control or mastery over the mind
Samadhana
Single-contended of the mind
Samanvaya
Harmonious interpretation of texts – Sastra mentions six criteria – what is said in the
beginning, what is said in the end, what is repeated, what is praised or condemned,
what accords with logic and what is said to bring benefit.
Samashti
Macrocosm
Samsara
The cycle of births and deaths, karma and karma phalam punya and papa and
enjoyment and suffering.
Sancita karma
The accumulated ‘bundle’ of punya and papa
Santimantra
Benedictory verse
Sarvagatam
All pervading
Sarvajnah
The omniscient
Sarvasaktiman
The omnipotent
Sarvatmabhava
The sense that one is everything
Sastra
Scripture. Spiritual literature including Sruti, Smriti, Bhashyas, Vartikas, and
Prakarana Granthas
Sat
(1)Existence; (2) essence
Satyam
That which exists in all three periods of time
Shatka Sampatti
A six fold mental training consisting of sama dama, uparama, tritiksha, sraddha and
samadhana
Siddhi
Superhuman powers
Siva
The God embodying Iswara’s power of dissolution
Smriti
Elaborations based on sruti. E.g., Bhagavat Gita. Literal meaning is memory;
remembrance
Sraddha
Faith in the teaching of the guru and scriptures
Sravanam
Listening to the teaching of Sastra by a guru
Srishti
Creation of the universe ; the unfolding of names and forms out of Maya
Sruti
Veda, in four compilations – Rg, Yajuh, Sama and Atharva
Sthiti
Maintenance of the universe
Sthoola sarira
The physical body – the annamaya kosa
Sukshma sarira
The subtle body consisting of the pranamaya, manomaya and vijanamaya kosas
Sushupti
The deep sleep state
Sutra
Scriptural work in the form aphorisms
Swapna avastha
The dreaming state
Swaroopam
Intrinsic nature
Tattvamasi
“Thou art That”. The teaching “You, Jivatma are none other than Brahman”
Titiksha
Endurance of discomforts, such as heat, cold etc .Equanimity towards the opposites
of pleasure and pain. Acceptance of things and situations without grudging or
complaint.
Triputi
The division of the knower, the known and the knowing instrument or the act of
knowing – the pramata, the prameyam and the pramanam
Upadana karanam
Material cause
Upadhi
The thing from which characteristics are falsely transferred to an entity that is close
by
Upahitam
The entity to which characteristics of a thing close by are falsely transferred
Upanishad
Vedic texts dealing with Brahman, jivatmas and the jagat
Upanishadic
Used as an adjectival form of Upanishad
Uparati
Performance of one’s duty towards himself, the parents, teacher, family, society etc.,
which involves sacrifice as opposed to insistence on rights which involves demands
on others
Upasana
Spiritual meditation
Vairagya
Dispassion – Absence of desire for enjoyment of things of this world as also of other
worlds
Vakyam
Sentence
Vartika
Commentary, in verse form ,on the scriptural text
Vasanas
Impressions formed in the mind on account of experiences.
Veda
The original Hindu religious scripture
Vedanta
Janna kanda consisting of the Upanishads
Vedantic
Used as an adjectival for of Vedanta
Videhamukti
Dissolution of the sthoola, sukshma and karana sariras of a Jivanmukta when he dies
Vijanamaya kosa
The intellect and the five sense organs of perception
Vikshepa sakti
Projecting power. The power of Maya that projects the universe of names and forms
on Brahman, the sub-stratum of pure Existence and also deludes jivatmas into
mistaking the world to be real
Virat
Cosmic physical body
Vishnu
The God embodying the Iswara’s power of maintenance of the universe
Vivarta karanam
The cause that produces effect without undergoing any change.
Viveka
Discrimination of the eternal and the ephemeral
Vritti
Thought mode
Vyashti
Microcosm
Vyavaharika satyam
Empirical reality
LOKA SAMASTHA SUKINO BAVANTHU:
SHANTIH SHANTIH SHANTIH:
SUBHAM













Om Tat Sat





(My humble salutations to Brahmasri Sreeman  D Krishna Ayyar  for the collection)