Guest guest Posted August 29, 2002 Report Share Posted August 29, 2002 Om Namo Bhagavathe Vasudevaya! I need a clarification on what exactly is meant by the Sanskrit word "Chiththa". I have heard it being mentioned in Adi Sankara's Atma Shatkam in the line "Mano Buddhi Ahamkara Chitta... " and in Patanajali's Yoga - "Chitta Vritti Nirodaha iti yogaha". What is the exact difference between Manas and Chitta? Can anyone please shed some light on what exactly chitta means? Thanking You. Regards, Deepa. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 29, 2002 Report Share Posted August 29, 2002 Deepa - Greetings. Chitta normally means mind - in Vedanata 'mind' is used in both generic sense as well as specific sense and one should take the meaning depending on the context. Chitta Vritti - are essentally the thoughts in the mind or by the mind. Hence Patanjali defines yoga - as the mental action involving controlling the throught pattern. In Vedanta, it is recognized that one cannot control the mind and stop it from thinking - a better way is to redirect the mind to higher - that is considered as yoga - that leads to karma yoga, bhakti yoga and j~naana yoga and it is yoga shaasra - as Krishna calls his discourse to Arjuna. But if one desects the mind further - one can make four further subclassifications - that is what Shankara does - it is manas (mind), buddhi (intellect), ahankaraa(ego) and Chitta(can be traslated as memory -or conditioned consciousness in some cases), In VivekachuuDamani - Shankara says: nigadyate antakaraNam manodhiiH ahankRitiH chittam iti svavRittibhiH| manassu saMkalpavikalpanaadibhiH buddhiH padaarthaadhyavasaayadharmataH| atraabhimaanat aham iti ahankRitiH swaartha anusandhaana guNena chittam|| antaHkaraNam or the inner subtler equipemnt (mind in a general sense) consits of four types depending on their functionality. one is mind or manas, which is consists of vagauring thoughts (we say people do not make up their minds!), buddhi is the intellectual thoughts or discriminative thoughts -decissive thoughts- nishchaatmikam. Attachment to these - (cosisting of I thought and my thought etc) is called ahankaara (or ego) and finally chitta - here it is defined as swaartha guNena anusandhaanam - contemplation on ones own qualities - but that includes contemplation on the stored thoughts or memory - or also swaartha anusandhaana guNam - constant reflection of ones own self - that I am this and I am that - which includes ego, manas and intellect - on that constant reflection - which is essentially a conscious entity identifying with these thought patterns - hence also called 'conditioned consciousness' I the jiiva. Bhagavaan Ramana uses in this sense in his Upadesha saara- dRisyavaaritam chittam aatmanaH, chitta darshaNam tatva darshaNam. when one removes the 'naama and ruupa' of the objects thoughts (dRisyebhaH vaaritam manaH), then what is left of the thoughts (when one removes the names and forms in the thought partern and look at the essence of the thoughts), what remains is the chittasya tatvam - the vision of the conditioned consiouness with the conditioned removed is nothing but the essence of the truth - that is the vision of ones true self - tatva darshanam. This is infact a medition sloka. In summary- the word is used in the sense of memory or in the sense of conditioned consciousness. Hari OM! Sadananda --- deepa_1729 <dhandeep wrote: > Om Namo Bhagavathe Vasudevaya! > > I need a clarification on what exactly is meant by the Sanskrit > word "Chiththa". I have heard it being mentioned in Adi Sankara's > Atma Shatkam in the line "Mano Buddhi Ahamkara Chitta... " and in > Patanajali's Yoga - "Chitta Vritti Nirodaha iti yogaha". What is > the exact difference between Manas and Chitta? > > Can anyone please shed some light on what exactly chitta means? > > Thanking You. > > Regards, > Deepa. > > ===== What you have is His gift to you and what you do with what you have is your gift to Him - Swami Chinmayananda. Finance - Get real-time stock quotes http://finance. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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