Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Gaudapada Karikas

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Dear Prapatti Group Members:

 

Here is some info. on the above subject that one of my Madhva Sampradaya friend

was kind enough to pass on. Since I am not very familiar with the subject, I

am unable to evaluate its usefulness. However, I thought this might answer

some of Mr. Vidya Sankar's questions on Gaudapada Karikas.

 

MaaNDuukyopanishhad

===================

 

This Upanishad is in four sections. In each, there is a portion in prose,

followed by verses which explain and support the points made in prose earlier.

Some verses which are considered part and parcel of

the Upanishad by Sri Madhva, are considered as part of the Gaudapada-karika, in

the Advaita tradition. B N K Sharma has discussed the controversy whether they

form part of the Upanishad in detail in several papers, and has conclusively

proved that they are indeed a part. The main points to be noted in this context

are :

 

1. Sri Ramanuja also quotes some of these verses as Shruti and interprets them.

 

2. A number of Advaita commentators such as Anandagiri, Brahmananda, and

Appayya Dixita, etc., also quote these texts as Shruti.

 

3. Sri Shankara himself quotes these as Shruti elsewhere.

 

It is clear that these form part of the Upanishad text. Gaudapada must have

considered these as his source texts and put them together as `Agama-prakaraNa'

at the commencement of his Karika. The very

description of these as Agama-prakaraNa also shows that these were not his

compositions, but were verses revealed to Chaturmukha Brahma (Brahma d.rshhTa).

It is noteworthy, that some of these appear to be supportive of Advaita, and

the Dvaita tradition would not have taken the trouble to elevate them to the i

mpregnable status of the Shruti and interpret them in a different manner,

unless they were indeed a

part of the Upanishad.

 

Meaning of Omkaara

 

This Upanishad makes the opening statement that "Om" means Akshara. Three

important points are mentioned about OM or Akshara. It is `guNapUrNa' (full of

auspicious attributes), `trikAlAtIta' (beyond

the three modes of time) and `Atma' or `sarvaniyAmaka' (controller of all

else). The expressions `sarva' and `brahma' convey `guNapUrnatva', and the term

`akshara' conveys `trikAlAtItatva'. `AtmA' conveys

`sarvaniyAmakatva'. The implication of `trikAlAtItatva' is that it does not

undergo any modification or change at any time (`shAshvadekaprakAra').

`shrItatva' or Lakshmi also has the same characteristic by the grace of God.

 

Vijayaraghavan Srinivasan

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...