Guest guest Posted July 9, 2003 Report Share Posted July 9, 2003 Namaste I just posted the following article, which I wrote, to my new nondual discussion group at clearvoid/ I won't often post the same article to two groups like this, but I felt that this article helps to clarify something that confused me a lot when I first started to study Advaita. Hopefully, this won't seem like a cheap publicity shot. We're not corporations competing for profits, are we? There should be a spirit of brotherhood and cooperation. My group has a different purpose than this one, as reading the homepage description as well as the Introduction (first message of the archive) over there will reveal. I will be quite happy to have a small cozy group with similar interests, and indeed such a group is already there. If a few more wish to join, you are most welcome. Finally, there has been criticism in the past on this list of foisting off one's mere opinion as the truth of the sages. Of course everything we write is our opinion, unless we quote sources. And even then, we are interpreting those sources. This much should be taken for granted. But I believe that the following is quite elementary and orthodox Advaita. Hopefully, it will still be useful to some confused beginners! Om! Benjamin Now here is the article: Greetings and blessings! One should not always expect scientific clarity when reading the spiritual literature of the world. Science deals with geometric descriptions and quantifiable facts, and spirituality deals with the Infinite and Transcendent. These are two different realms, though the former is contained in the latter. Rather, when reading spiritual literature, especially of the 'mystical' kind, one must use wisdom and intuition to interpret the spirit behind the words, which may sometimes appear not only obscure but even inconsistent and self-contradictory. As a prime example, let us consider some of the essential pillars of Advaita: (1) The first pillar is that the only real 'being' is Brahman, which is 'one without a second' (Advaita) and hence without multiplicity or parts. It is frequently repeated that the essence of Brahman is Sat (Being), Chit (Consciousness) and Ananda (Bliss). (2) The second pillar is that our Self or Atman (the true self beneath the illusion of the egoistic self) is identical with Brahman. Hence the mighty Mahavakyas (great sayings): 1. Prajnanam Brahma - Consciousness is Brahman. 2. Aham Brahmasmi - I am Brahman. 3. Tat Tvam Asi - That Thou Art. 4. Ayam Atma Brahma - This Self is Brahman. (3) Finally, a third pillar of Advaita is the 'Neti, neti' (not this, not that), as stated by the sage Yajnavalkya to his wife Maitreyi in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad [see below]. This is the insistence that Brahman should not be identified with any particular object, nor should we identify with any object, such as body, mind, family, property, etc. Moksha (liberation) cannot be obtained as long as such identification persists. Now (1) and (2) seem logically consistent, but (3) seems to clash with (1) and (2). If 'everything' is Brahman, then does this not include our body, mind, etc.? One common answer is that we should not identify with any *particular* thing. By implication, we may identify with *everything*, and indeed this would be consistent with (1). In my opinion, a deeper though related explanation is as follows. First, it is essential to distinguish between a true nondualistic level of consciousness and an illusory dualistic level of consciousness. These are also called 'paramarthika' (or absolutely real) and 'vyavaharika' (or relatively real), respectively. We are in either one or the other. Note that the vyavaharika is not considered entirely false like the 'horns of a hare'. It has a certain degree of reality but is not the supreme truth that provides liberation. Now the key point I wish to make is that it is only when we are in a dualistic state of consciousness that we can even discriminate objects such as body, mind, etc. The dualistic state of consciousness is the state in which the conceptual mind superposes 'subject' and 'object' upon the Infinite Consciousness, which is the substratum of both ourselves and the apparent world, as described in the Introduction (first message of the archive in the other group mentioned above). This dualistic mind must be transcended in order to reach the nondual state of enlightenment and liberation. This is the principal theme of all nondual paths. It is simply the common experience of countless sages of all times and ages. Therefore, there is no contradiction between (3), on the one hand, and (1) and (2) on the other. The assertions of (1) and (2) are made from the nondualistic state of consciousness, and (3) is made from the dualistic state of consciousness. When we are 'trapped' in the ordinary dualistic state and see a plethora of objects, some of which we identify with, and some of which we have an aversion to, then the only way out is to untangle the knot of illusion by methodically rejecting the various identifications which are caused by the dualistic view and which in turn feed it with powerful psychic energy (by developing the ego sense). That is what (3) is telling us. Once we have achieved the purgation of dualistic distinctions and identifications through 'Neti, neti', then the truth of (1) and (2) will shine forth of its own light. Finally, one can hardly overemphasize that this 'annihilation of objects' does not mean that the world disappears into a black hole so that nothing remains. No valid spiritual path teaches this kind of insanity, though it may sometimes appear that way if we fail to read between the lines. The enlightened sages see the same sky, trees, flowers and people that we do, but their attitude is profoundly different. They see none of this as *different* from themselves, nor do they see God or you as different from themselves. It is in *that* sense that objects 'disappear'. Without the distinction and difference, one can no longer speak of the subject/object dichotomy. All of reality melts, as it were, into one vast unified Consciousness. Of course, I am merely repeating the fundamental wisdom of the nondual tradition. My own experience is vastly more limited, though I think I may have had a few flashes of insight from time to time. And so have you. Keeping this discussion in mind will help with many of the apparent inconsistencies and paradoxes found throughout the mystical (and particularly nondual) literature. To conclude, here is a relevant excerpt from the Brihadaranyaka mentioned above. The sage Yajnavalkya is speaking to his wife Maitreyi. The translation is by Swami Nikhilananda and can be found at http://sanatan.intnet.mu/upanishads/brihadaranyaka.htm Take care Benjamin BRIHADARANYAKA UPANISHAD Part Four, Chapter V, Section 15 For when there is duality, as it were, then one sees another, one smells another, one tastes another, one speaks to another, one hears another, one thinks of another, one touches another, one knows another. But when to the knower of Brahman everything has become the Self, then what should he see and through what, what should he smell and through what, what should he taste and through what, what should he speak and through what, what should he hear and through what, what should he think and through what, what should he touch and through what, what should he know and through what? Through what should one know That Owing to which all this is known? This Self is That which has been described as 'Not this, not this.' It is imperceptible, for It is never perceived; undecaying, for It never decays; unattached, for It never attaches Itself; unfettered, for It never feels pain and never suffers injury. Through what, O Maitreyi, should one know the Knower? Thus you have the instruction given to you. This much, indeed, is the means to Immortality. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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