Guest guest Posted July 11, 2004 Report Share Posted July 11, 2004 Om Gurubhyo Namah DREAM AND REALITY According to Shri Shankaracharya, the world cannot be said to be false on the basis of the dream analogy: "It has been said by those who deny the existence of the external things that perception of things like a pillar etc. in the waking state occur even in the absence of external things, just as they do in a dream; for as perceptions, they are similar. That has to be refuted. With regard to this we say, the perceptions of the waking state cannot be classed with those in a dream." (BSB,II,II,v,29). The dream analogy presents us with an enigma. While Shankara affirms the existence of the world in the Brahma Sutra Bhashya, his commentary on the Gaudapada Karika seems to corroborate the view that the world is unreal like the world of a dream. I suspect that, more often than not, this seeming contradiction is resolved by assuming that the bhashya speaks from a position of provisional or vyavaharika sathya. While this thesis may not be entirely false, it would be a deflection from the intent of the Acharya's words if we abstain from examining the arguments provided. For, Shankara denies that the appearance of objects can arise without there being real objects. In order to reveal the full import of Shankara's words, we shall cite here the three reasons given in the bhashya to show specifically that the waking state is not like the dream state, alongwith one other quote taken from a slightly different context, but equally applicable to the case. 1. The objects of the waking state are not sublated under any condition unlike those of the dream state. "To a man arisen from sleep, the object perceived in a dream becomes sublated, for he says, 'Falsely did I imagine myself in contact with great men. In fact I never came in contact with great men; only my mind became overpowered by sleep; and thus this delusion arose.' So also in the case of magic etc., adequate sublation takes place. But a thing seen in the waking state, a pillar for instance, is not thus sublated under any condition." (BSB,II,II,v,29). 2. Dream vision is a kind of memory whereas those of the waking state are perceptions of objects. "Moreover, dream vision is a kind of memory, whereas the visions of the waking state are forms of perception (through valid means of knowledge). And the difference between perception and memory, consisting in the presence or absence of objects, can be understood by oneself, as for instance when one says: 'I remember my beloved son, but I do not see him, though I want to see'." (BSB,II,II,v,29). 3. Objects cannot appear from mere internal impressions. "And the assertion has to be refuted that even in the absence of objects, the diversity of experience can be explained on the strength of the variety of tendencies (or impressions). To this we say: The tendencies cannot logically exist; for according to you, objects are not perceived externally. It is precisely owing to the perception of objects that a variety of (mental) tendencies corresponding to the diverse objects can arise. But how can a variety of tendencies arise when no object is perceived? Even if these tendencies have no beginning (on the analogy of the seed and sprout), this infinite regress will amount to a baseless assumption leading us nowhere like the blind leading the blind, and it will thus cut at the roots of all human dealings, so that your aim will remain unfulfilled. And it is to be noted that the positive and negative instances that were adduced by those who would deny the existence of external objects by saying, 'All these experiences are caused by tendencies and not objects' – those instances also stand refuted from this standpoint; for no tendency can arise unless there be a perception of some object. Moreover, from the admission that apprehension of objects is possible even in the absence of past tendencies, and from the non- apprehension that tendencies are possible in the absence of perception of object, it follows that such positive and negative instances (adduced by you) also prove the existence of objects. Besides, what you call a tendency is a kind of impression (or predisposition); and from common experience it is known that a disposition cannot be imagined to exist unless it has some basis to stand on, whereas you have nothing to supply this need; for nothing can be found (by following your view) to stand as an abode for dispositions." (BSB,II,II,v,30). 4. Objects are not unreal because they have distinguishing characteristics. "There is no distinction, as regards the nature of non-existence, between the non-existence arising from the destruction of the seed and the rest and the horns of a hare, both being equally unsubstantial….. If, again, distinctive attributes be ascribed to non- existence on the analogy of the lotus having blueness etc., then on that very analogy of the lotus etc., non-existence will turn into existence by the very fact of possessing distinctive qualities." (BSB,II,II,iv,26). Objects of the waking state are not like those of a dream. What remains empirically valid cannot be superseded by a mere analogy. In Shankara's words: "Moreover, one who cannot speak of the waking experience as naturally baseless, just because that would contradict experience, wants to speak of them as such on the strength of their similarity with dream experiences. But anything that cannot be the characteristic of something in its own right cannot certainly be so because of a similarity with another. For fire, which is felt to be warm, does not become cold because of some similarity with water. As for the difference between dream and waking states, this has already been shown." (BSB,II,II,v,29). These are not provisional statements. They are to be resolved with other statements in the bhashya through samanvaya, reconciliation, by finding the higher truth in which the seeming contradictions are resolved. I believe that the dream analogy has been used with a certain lack of caution to 'prove' that the world is unreal. It is true that in Advaita the world is considered unreal in a certain sense, but it is this very meaning that is to be illuminated in the light of the discriminative knowledge of the real and the unreal. Until then the meaning of unreality lies hidden by darkness, as much as does the meaning of reality. THE INFERENCE USED IN THE KARIKA The Karika does not derive the unreality of the world on the basis of the dream analogy. The Karika bases its proof on the method of syllogistic inference (anumama) and not on upamana (comparision). The dream analogy appears in the syllogism as an adaharana (example) to illustrate the vyapti (invariable concomitance) that provides the hetu (ground or reason) for deriving the conclusion. The hetu here is the fact of 'being perceived' – the waking world is unreal because 'it is perceived' just as is the dream world. If we closely examine this inference, we find that there is something the matter with the vyapti, or the invariable concomitance, that is used in the Karika, because, for an invariable concomitance to be valid, it must be an apriori perceived fact. It must be remembered that in all Vedic philosophies there is a Platonic element in the 'attainment' of knowledge i.e., the knowledge that is to be attained is in a sense prior to the attainment. Thus, the knowledge derived from inference is not something new or alien, but is the application of a prior knowledge to the particular instance of observation. For example, the smoke, the fire, and the invariable concomitance between smoke and fire must have been perceived apriori for the fire to be inferred from the smoke because such inference is based on the invariable concomitance: 'where there is fire, there is smoke'. The syllogism only employs the prior knowledge to establish the presence of one of the elements based on the observation of the other in the instance where the former is hidden. If we examine the vyapti that is employed in the Karika, it is obvious that the invariance of the relation between 'being perceived' and 'the unreality of objects' is violated in the waking state because objects in the waking state are perceived to be real. Thus, the vyapti used in the syllogism to prove the unreality of the world is NOT VALID for a person who sees the world as real in the waking state. I think the entire argument calls for a closer scrutiny. Vyapti is an invariable concomitance between two perceived objects. But there is a peculiarity to the vyapti used in the Karika because the component 'being perceived' is not a perceived object. And it is this peculiarity that provides us with a clue to the entire riddle. If 'being perceived' is fit to be an object, then the perceiver must abide as a witness not merely of the object of perception, but also of the apperception of perception. Such a 'perception' is possible only for the Self that remains as the unmoving witness - it is the Turiya that is spoken of. Therefore, we must recognise that we are here in the presence of an extra-normal cognition. The entire Karika speaks from a standpoint of extra-normal perception in which the unreality of the world is seen as a prior truth and it is thus that 'being perceived' bears an invariable relation to 'the unreality of what is perceived' and becomes a vyapti for the syllogism. The validity of the syllogism is thus preserved in the Karika based on an extra-normal vyapti as would obtain from a yogi or jnani (for it is said that their perception is not through the sense organs). But this does not really provide us with the meaning of 'the unreality of the world' as seen in the extra-normal perception. For that, we turn to the Brahma Sutra Bhashya. IILUSION AND REALITY - THE SURFACE AND THE DEEP According to Shankara, the unreality of the world, and world- sublation, has no meaning in isolation from knowledge of the Self: "Here our question is: What is meant by sublation of the universe of manifestations? Is the world to be annihilated like the destruction of the solidity of ghee by coming into contact with fire; or is it that the world of name and form, created in Brahman by nescience like many moons created in the moon by the eye disease called timara, has to be destroyed through knowledge? Now if it be said that this existing universe of manifestation, consisting of the body etc. on the corporeal plane and externally of the earth etc., is to be annihilated, that is a task impossible for any man, and hence the instruction about its extirpation is meaningless. Moreover (even supposing that such a thing is possible, then) the universe, including the earth etc., having been annihilated by the first man who got liberation, the present universe should have been devoid of the earth etc. Again, if it be said that this universe of manifestations superimposed on the one Brahman alone through ignorance has to be sublated by enlightenment, then it is Brahman Itself that has to be presented through a denial of the manifestation superimposed by ignorance by saying, 'Brahman is one without a second' (Ch.VI.ii.1), 'That is truth, That is the Self, That thou art (O Svetaketu)' (Ch.VI.viii.7-16). When Brahman is taught thus, knowledge dawns automatically, and by that knowledge ignorance is removed. As a result of that, this whole manifestation of name and form, superimposed by ignorance, vanishes away like things seen in a dream. But unless Brahman is (first) taught, neither does the knowledge of Brahman dawn nor is the universe sublated even though the instruction, 'Know Brahman, sublate the world', be imparted a hundred times." (BSB,III,II,v,21). These words point to the subtle and perplexing nature of negation that is involved in Advaita. The 'unreal' truly has to be a 'nothing' if Advaita is not to devolve into a kind of duality. Yet it is not possible to negate without having a distinctive thing to negate, and if there is such a distinction, then that distinguished thing 'will turn into existence by the very fact of possessing distinctive qualities'. The answer to this riddle lies in carefully discriminating what it is that Advaita negates. The object of negation being both 'something' as well as 'nothing' is resolved only if we recognise that the denial of the world is a denial of the surface when the surface itself is seen as constituting the depth of its true nature. When the depth is known the surface is not false, but the falsity of taking the surface as the true nature is negated. Thus, the object of negation is the surface, and in the ultimate analysis, there is nothing that is negated because the surface is ultimately subsumed in the Reality. Therefore, the sublation of the world is nothing but the knowledge of the Self that subsumes the world. Therein lies the meaning of world-negation. This view is reinforced by the following words of Shankara's commentary in the Advaita Prakarana (Chapter II of the Karika): "Thus the definite conclusion arrived at by hundreds of Vedic texts is that the reality of the Self that is a CO-EXTENSIVE WITH ALL that exists within and without, and is birthless, is one without a second, and there is nothing besides. It is now said that this very fact is established by reason as well." And then follows these pregnant words of the Karika: Verse #27: "The birth of a thing that exists can reasonably be possible only through Maya and not in reality. For one who holds that things take birth in a real sense, there can only be the birth of what is already born." Verse #28: "There can be no birth for a non-existing object either through Maya or in reality, for the son of a barren woman is born neither through Maya nor in reality." What is striking here – and it appears again and again in Advaita – is the significant assertion that the 'unreality of the world is not like the son of a barren woman' for such a thing is possible 'neither through Maya nor in reality'. Maya can possibly only 'give birth' to what is already existent. Again, if we read this in juxtaposition with Shankara words that the Self is 'co-extensive with all that exists within and without..', the meaning that emerges is surely that the denial of the world is a denial of the surface as constituting the true depth of its nature in which it abides in identity with its substratum. The Mandukya Upanishad says (I,2): "All this is surely Brahman. This Self is Brahman. The Self, such as it is, is possessed of four quarters." And commenting on this, Shankara says that "Turiya is realised by successively merging the earlier three, starting from Visva." How can Visva be merged with Taijasa, and Taijasa with Prajna, and Prajna with Turiya if each is not in reality subsumed in the next? Knowing objects in truth is to know the depth of objects and not their surface. It is the seeing into the heart of things, and the heart of an object is its 'self'. Therefore is the suffix 'self' attached to a thing to describe its true nature – for then we say that it is it-self. Negation is the negation of a thing's surface posturing as the thing it-Self. In other words, the truth of the world is its soul, and the seemingly soulless world is a superficial façade of its reality. It is this 'corpse' of the world, this death as it were, that is what is negated! The SLEEP OF DEATH characterises the three states of jagrat, swapna, and susupti, whereas the Self is ETERNALLY AWAKE. The Self never sleeps because its nature is Consciousness. And in that consciousness shines the REAL LIVING WORLD! THE CONTEXT OF ADHYASA There is an objection that rises up here: If the validity of the syllogism in the Karika is preserved based on an extra normal vyapti, then how can it be sustained in the light of the assertion that when the Truth is seen the entire world is Real? For there must be a component of unreality in the perceived world if the invariable concomitance between 'being perceived' and 'the unreality of that which is perceived' is to be valid. In order to counter this objection, we need to analyse what adhyasa is, for it is in the context of adhyasa that Advaita says 'jagat is mithya' or that the entire world is a superimposition on Brahman like the snake on the rope. What exactly is the superimposition that is spoken about in Advaita? A slightly different analogy than the snake-rope analogy is here used to illustrate the superimposition. Imagine that you are sitting by a lake on a perfectly calm and pleasant day. You become aware of something floating on the water, and as it drifts closer, you see its course brown surface barely visible above the water and take it to be a log of wood. You go back to my thoughts, and after a while, you hear a splash in the water. When you turn towards the source of the sound you catch a glimpse of a thrashing crocodile before it disappears into the water. What you had taken to be a log was actually a crocodile! What was the superimposed thing here? It was the log that was never there. But the features that you saw of the thing – the coarse, brown surface - were not false, but what you imputed to the features - as that object to which it belonged - was a superimposition. And then, when you saw that it was a crocodile, the superimposition of the log disappeared and the truth of the crocodile, which was what it always was, became revealed. The coarse brown attribute remained throughout, both before and after. Here the crocodile is Brahman. The log that you saw in the water is the superimposed world. The cause of the superimposition is the concealment of avidya regarding the true nature of what was there. The features that you saw – the coarse brown surface - are the features of the world. They are not false or an illusion. The illusion is the false log that was 'seen'. What is often missed out while considering the snake-rope error is that the attribute that was responsible for the error – the coil – is not sublated when the error is sublated. That similarity on account of which the mistake took place persists through the error and continues to be seen after the real thing is revealed because it is what the real thing has as its attribute. It cannot disappear with the disappearance of the unreal. Therefore, when the world is said to be a superimposition on Brahman, like the snake on the rope, it calls for a sifting of the elements involved in the error. What is it that is 'the snake of the world' on the Reality of Brahman? When something is seen, what is seen of the thing is its attributes. The name of the thing, say 'rope', points to the core existential which is described as this or that wherein the 'this' and 'that' are the predicates seen as belonging to it and as being coterminous with it because they are the descriptions of the existential itself. In the perception of the world, the attributes discerned are not false, but the core that is grasped of the world is grasped as a self- subsisting thing. In other words, the existence of the world is seen to be independent. This independence cannot be sustained in the vision of non-dual Truth, but it is nevertheless a characteristic seen of the world. It is this `independence' that is the falseness, the 'snake' that is superimposed on Reality and is the 'unreality' that no more deludes but is seen when the Truth is seen. It is the unreality that forms a component of the extra-normal vyapti used in the Karika. The negation of the superimposition of the world on Brahman does not negate the world in so far as the world is the attributive mode of Brahman, but negates the world in so far as it is perceived as independently subsisting. Therefore, the negation is truly the negation of duality. The vision that it presents at this stage of our enquiry is non-duality as in Vishistadvaita. To move to Advaita, we need to examine the nature of 'bheda' or 'difference'. Difference is the most difficult topic of all, and I believe that it is due to this difficulty that the conception of Brahman as Nirguna becomes one of the biggest stumbling blocks in our attempts to understand Advaita. I am of the conviction that there is a way to sameness through understanding the nature of difference. God willing, we shall attempt an enquiry into the mysteries of 'difference' later on in these discussions. RECONCILIATION - THE HISTORICAL CONTEXT Before we close this section, it would be in order to look for the reasons why the Karika takes a different perspective on the dream than does the Brahma Sutra Bhashya. For this, I think we must see the Karika in a historical context. The Karika was written before the Mimamsa philosophers had pulled down the citadels of the Buddhist fort, and there seems to be an overriding emphasis in its pages to refute the nihilism of the Buddhists. If we go back to the tradition of tarka-shastra, we find that one of the accepted ways of refutation is to begin with a common tenet with the opponent – called the siddhanta - and then proceed to demolish the conclusion of the purva- paksha. I believe that this is the approach taken by the Karika. Such a thesis is supported by the following words of Shankara (Karika IV.27): "The text starting with, 'In accord with the perception of its cause, knowledge..' and ending with the previous verse, which represents the view of the subjective-idealists among the Buddhists, is approved by the teacher (Gaudapada) in so far as it refutes the view of those who believe in the external world. Now he makes use of that very argument as a ground of inference for demolishing their own points of view". Again, it is significant that immediately after establishing the illusoriness of the world in the first ten verses of the Vaitathya Prakarana, the Karika moves on directly to a refutation of the Buddhists: Sutra #11: "If the objects cognised in both the conditions (of dream and of waking) be illusory, who cognises all these (illusory objects) and who again imagines them?" Sutra #12: "Atman, the self-luminous, through the power of his own Maya, imagines in himself by himself (all objects that the subject experiences within and without). He alone is the cogniser of objects (so created). That is the decision of Vedanta." These words are obviously aimed at the nihilists. The demonstration of the reality of Self by accepting the siddhanta of world-unreality is a succinct and effective way of achieving the goal. As for Sri Shankaracharya's Sariraka Bhashya, it takes the traditional approach of leading to the Truth through a path that does not ignore tattwa- jnana as is evident from these words: "But anything that cannot be the characteristic of something in its own right cannot certainly be so because of a similarity with another. For fire, which is felt to be warm, does not become cold because of some similarity with water." (BSB,II,II,v,29). _______________ With regards, Chittaranjan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 12, 2004 Report Share Posted July 12, 2004 Namaste Shri Ranjeetji, I feel that the real difference between us lies in the way we are approaching the question of nama-rupa. But this question will have to wait a while because if we falsify words and forms at this stage, we will not be able to proceed with this discusion. :-) > Maybe you ended up in vishiShTadvaita because of your reluctance > to accept unreality of the world. If there is reluctance on my part to accept the truth, then that propensity must be checked. For enquiry is not about reluctance to accept or reject, but to go where the truth leads us. When I accept the shruti, where does that acceptance, merely by the act of acceptance, lead me? I may stay in that state of acceptance for an eternity, but it doesn't really help me unless I enquire about it through the weighments of nyaya. You see me as having reached Vishistadvaita due to what you believe is my non-acceptance of the falsity of nama-rupa. But I am looking for the invisible path of Advaita and have stopped over for a while in the wonderland of Vishistadvaita where it said that the world is the body of Brahman. You may even say that I am in the wonderland of Dvaita if you take my statements on the falsity of the world's independent existence as meaning the world's dependent existence on Brahman. But if I do lose my way from here, please help me. If you see me as having taken the wrong road altogether, then allow me for a while this adventure before I'm guided back to the path. :-) > Chittaranjanji, is the name and form real? If you are dealing > with the topic in your future installments, let us leave this > question for the moment. I will try to attempt this topic later - to whatever extent I understand it. But tell me Ranjeetji, why is the cloth false when the yarn is true? Why is the whiteness of milk false when the milk is true? Warm regards, Chittaranjan advaitin, "Ranjeet Sankar" <thefinalsearch> wrote: > Namaste Chittaranjanji, > > The 4th installment was a real treat for us all. We don't get much of Shri > sha~Nkara here to read! I envy the way you handle the language!! > > Now coming to the subject.. > I will just mention a few things which crossed my mind. Since you are in > planet vishiShTadvaita at the moment, the comments on adhyAsa can wait until > you reach advaita. > > First of all, the 3rd point you mentioned viz. 'Objects cannot appear from > mere internal impressions' is a bit inappropriate. What we are refuting here > is the existence of external objects. Your point presupposes the existence > of objects. So something like 'Mental impressions cannot arise in the > absence of objects' would have been more appropriate. This is just my > opinion. After all, this is your show :-) > > The 4th point viz. 'Objects are not unreal because they have distinguishing > characteristics' and the supporting quotes needs further attention. The > quote from BSB-2-2-26 is primarily concerned with the rebuttal of the view > that existence can come out of non-existence. Against this, Shri sha~Nkara > lists down some examples which we see in the empirical dealings. The line of > arguments followed is thus: > > a) Causality which is observed in the world (such as sprout coming from the > seed alone and curd coming out of milk alone) is possible only if there is > any distinction in the cause. > > b) Non-existence cannot have any distinctions. Shri sha~Nkara gives the > example of the similarity between the non-existence arising from the > destruction of seed and that from the horn of a hare. > > c) Since (a) and (b) are true, existence cannot come out of non- existence. > > Here, the examples are quoted from the empirical dealings to show that > nothing can ever come out of non-existence. In my humble opinion, this > cannot be used to substantiate the claim that objects have distinguishing > characteristics and so they are not unreal. > > Also, I didn't understand how the second quote, which is from BSB-2- 2-29, > supports the 4th point. I request an explanation. > > > Further you said, > " Verse #28: There can be no birth for a non-existing object either through > Maya or in reality, for the son of a barren woman is born neither through > Maya nor in reality. > > What is striking here - and it appears again and again in Advaita - is the > significant assertion that the 'unreality of the world is not like the son > of a barren woman' for such a thing is possible 'neither through Maya nor in > reality'. " > > > Chittaranjanji, if you are to say that this backs up about the reality of > the world (as in 'real' snakes), then I would have to object. This verse is > a rebuttal of the nihilist's view that everything is void, a non- existence. > > Finally regarding the paradox, well I don't see any! ;-) > In BSB, Shri sha~Nkara is saying that external objects exist. The point is > that perception cannot come out of nowhere. It presupposes a substratum. In > kArikA, Shri sha~Nkara is comparing the dream object with the 'perceived' > object, the unreal name and form, and not with the substratum. If you go > further to 2-16, 17, 18, you will see that the reality of the substratum is > asserted. So the two contexts are different and are not in conflict. Maybe > you ended up in vishiShTadvaita because of your reluctance to accept > unreality of the world. Chittaranjanji, is the name and form real? If you > are dealing with the topic in your future installments, let us leave this > question for the moment. > > hara hara sha~Nkara jaya jaya sha~Nkara > > Hari Om Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 12, 2004 Report Share Posted July 12, 2004 Namaste Chittaranjanji, >we shall cite here the three reasons given in the bhashya >to show specifically that the waking state is not like the >dream state > 1. The objects of the waking state are not sublated under any > condition unlike those of the dream state. First of all, the word 'sublate' is vague, notwithstanding previous discussion. In this context we may suppose that it means 'shown to be unreal' due to disappearance. Shankara seems to be saying that we do not 'wake up' from the waking state in such a way that the shapes and colors of the waking state disappear, as they do when we wake from the dream. I totally agree. Even Ramana saw the people and trees around him The issue is not whether what manifests does or does not disappear. The issue is that whatever manifests, whether in waking or dreaming state, merely manifests, and hence is in consciousness. And Brahman IS consciousness, so that the equation of reality with manifestation in consciousness cannot be denied, according to the sole reality of Brahman. Regarding Shankara's denial of 'external objects', I said something on this in a previous message, and I haven't found where you might have addressed this issue or responded to my argument. (Admitedly, I have been out of touch with this list due to finishing my WAVES paper.) Anyhow I said (quoting from my paper): QUOTE However, there is a subtlety regarding the illusion of objectivity which must be clarified. On the one hand, the word 'object' may refer to the hypothetical material entity distinct from consciousness to which our perceptions supposedly refer. We may call this the 'gross object'. But on the other hand, it is common experience that the perceptions themselves may appear as objects. If one contemplates one's perceptions, they too may seem distinct and 'out there', much like a hologram. We may call this the 'subtle object'. This distinction neutralizes a common objection to the subjective idealistic interpretation of Shankara. Authors such as Eliot Deutsch quote the notorious passage II.2.28 from Shankara's Brahma Sutra Bashya refuting the Buddhist Vijnanavadins (idealists), where Shankara says, "There could be no non-existence (of external entities) because external entities are actually perceived..." Leaving aside that Shankara misunderstands the alleged 'nihilism' of the Buddhists (both Madhyamika and Vijnanavada), his argument in this case is invalid. By referring directly to perception, he only confirms the truth of subjective idealism as described here, but he does make the correct point that the perceptions appear as though objective when we are in the ordinary dualistic frame of mind (which he calls vyavaharika). END QUOTE >2. Dream vision is a kind of memory whereas those of the >waking state are perceptions of objects. This is true. The dream usually consists of memories of perceptions in the waking state. The point is that both memories of perceptions and perceptions occur (manifest) in consciousness, and in THIS sense they are similar. >3. Objects cannot appear from mere internal impressions. As Shankara says later >It is precisely owing to the perception of objects that a >variety of (mental) tendencies corresponding to the >diverse objects can arise. This is similar to the message I quoted above. Shankara is talking only of 'perceptions' as the cause of tendencies. The 'perception of objects' is the holographic illusion WITHIN consciousness to which Shankara refers. In the vyavaharika state, those perceptions APPEAR as though objects. In other words, whatever Shankara may have been thinking, he has provided no argument in favor of the existence of material objects a la Newton existing totally 'outside' of consciousness. There is no indication that he even thinks in those terms. His language always refers back to perceptions, which are in consciousness. To him 'external' means the *appearance* of externality of the perceptions, which are within consciousness. This is vyavaharika dualism. He is talking from the gut level of ordinary experience, where people are confusing their perceptions with the 'things other than me'. (This is ordinary naive realism, which is different from the more theoretical dualism of Newtonian and Lockean matter.) That is, it is a purely phenomenological discussion. At the same time, there ARE qualitative differences between the waking and dream states, and Shankara is right to mention these. Anyhow, why do we make such a fetish out of this text? As Dennis points out, there are other equally authentic texts which use the dream analogy in a straightforward way. And then, what of less 'authentic' texts like the Vivekachudamani? Are we going to simply ignore them, even though they are an important part of the Advaitic tradition, used by leading Swamis everywhere? BUT THE REAL QUESTION IS THIS. Suppose you could prove that Shankara said that objects exist 'externally' to consciousness, i.e. OTHER than consciousness. How would you reconcile this with the definition of Brahman as 'consciousness' and 'one without a second'? I have raised this issue many times, and nobody ever tries to answer it. The logic is too irrefutable. Hari Om! Benjamin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 12, 2004 Report Share Posted July 12, 2004 - "Ranjeet Sankar" <thefinalsearch <advaitin> Monday, July 12, 2004 9:11 PM Re: The Real and the Unreal - Part IV - The Dream Analogy Just a small correction here.. > First of all, the 3rd point you mentioned viz. 'Objects cannot appear from > mere internal impressions' is a bit inappropriate. What we are refuting here > is the existence of external objects. Your point presupposes the existence > of objects. So something like 'Mental impressions cannot arise in the > absence of objects' would have been more appropriate. This is just my > opinion. After all, this is your show :-) > The sentence above should have been 'What we are proving here is the existence of external objects.' Sorry for the confusion caused, if any. Hari Om Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2004 Report Share Posted July 13, 2004 Namaste Shri Ranjeet-ji, > The sentence above should have been 'What we are proving > here is the existence of external objects.' Sorry for the > confusion caused, if any. It is proved here only to be wiped out by the language of vyavaharika sathya and paramarthika sathya! It is the problem of nama-rupa in another guise. We may disagree on these matters, but I am thankful to you for livening up the discussion. :-) Warm regards, Chittaranjan advaitin, "Ranjeet Sankar" <thefinalsearch> wrote: > > - > "Ranjeet Sankar" <thefinalsearch> > <advaitin> > Monday, July 12, 2004 9:11 PM > Re: The Real and the Unreal - Part IV - The Dream > Analogy > > > Just a small correction here.. > > > First of all, the 3rd point you mentioned viz. 'Objects cannot appear from > > mere internal impressions' is a bit inappropriate. What we are refuting > here > > is the existence of external objects. Your point presupposes the existence > > of objects. So something like 'Mental impressions cannot arise in the > > absence of objects' would have been more appropriate. This is just my > > opinion. After all, this is your show :-) > > > > > The sentence above should have been 'What we are proving here is the > existence of external objects.' Sorry for the confusion caused, if any. > > Hari Om Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2004 Report Share Posted July 13, 2004 2. Dream vision is a kind of memory whereas those of the waking state are perceptions of objects. "Moreover, dream vision is a kind of memory, whereas the visions of the waking state are forms of perception (through valid means of knowledge). And the difference between perception and memory, consisting in the presence or absence of objects, can be understood by oneself, as for instance when one says: 'I remember my beloved son, but I do not see him, though I want to see'." (BSB,II,II,v,29) praNAm Sri CN prabhuji Hare Krishna Due to official obligations I am not following this thread completely....but, after looking your shankara quotes on dream state, I'd like to share shankara's view point on dream state elsewhere in sUtra bhAshya itself. This would be an interesting reading for those who believe that dreams are only product of vAsana-s created in the waking world. 2-1-14 : prasiddhaM cha idaM lOkE anvayavyatirEkakushalAnAm EdrushEna svapna darshanEna sAdhvAgamaH sUchyatE, EdrushEna asAdhvAgamaH iti. He also says *atha svapnAH purushaM krushNam, krushNadaNtaM pashyati sa yEnam hanti* na chiramiva jIvishyadIti vidyAt* Why shankara telling like this prabhuji?? if svapnA are only vAsana of waking world, how can this svapna can indicate future happening to us in socalled waking state?? please clarify this point. Further, see ItarEya upanishad where shruti mAta telling us Atman has only three avastha-s & all these three avasthA are mere dreams *tasya traya AvasatAH trayaH svapnAH*, while commenting on this shruti kindly look what shankara says : nanu jAgaritaM prabhOdha rUpatvAt na svapnaH naivam *svapna Eva* katham?? *paramArthasvAtmaprabhOdhAbhAvAt, svapnavat asadvastu darshanAccha* (I donot want to translate this in english prabhuji, I leave it to you to look at some translation work & give your opinion on it) Now you tell me prabhuji, from which view point shankara was arguing in 2-2-29 & upholding the unwarranted reality to the waking world. Before passing any concluding remarks on reality of the waking world as against dreaming world, we've to analyse our three avasthA from three different view points. 01. Loukika or vyAvahArika drushti 02. shAstra drushti 03. sAkshi drushti based on our day to day experience. that is what shankara did in all through his prasthAna trayi bhAshya...more of this later ...till then Hari Hari Hari Bol!!! bhaskar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2004 Report Share Posted July 13, 2004 Namaste Chittaranjanji, >The world is external without it being existentially >independent from Brahman. The language of 'external >world' and 'internal appearance' is an artificial divide. >This is what I had tried to address in the second part >(Part II -The Reality Divide). Thank you for directing me to this. As you may have noticed, I had to drop out of the discussion to finish a paper. I will now read your Part II. As I read it, your erudition and eloquence are remarkable. Still, I sometimes feel that there are some unnecessary complications. I will respond to some points you make. >It is not surprising therefore that contemporary cognitive science >talks about two worlds, the world of qualia-filled consciousness, and >the world of independently subsisting entities. In contrast to this >duality, there is of course the duality, or plurality, that is seen >in the observed world itself Good. It seems that you are aware of the two kinds of duality: (i) the duality of consciousness (including perception) and gross unconscious matter utterly distinct from consciousness (a mere theoretical construct with no justification); and (ii) the phenomenological appearance of duality within consciousness (where the perceptions themselves appear as objects - the 'seen' as opposed to the 'seer'). So far, so good. When you get to Berkeley, you say >It is necessary to emphasise here that even in the conception >of idealism, there is the notion of the independent world - a >world that it goes about to deny. This is the schism. As long as >this notion remains, the world has lost something of its intrinsic >character and remains as one pole of a tensional duality that it >has artificially constructed. If this independent material world is denied, then it does not exist. You say that there is still the 'notion'. There most certainly is. Many people believe that this notion corresponds to something real. But once the notion is shown to be false, to be an illusion, the 'schism' no longer remains. The mere presence of a notion in the mind has no kind of 'existential potency', unless we actually believe it. So it seems to me that you are getting off on a wrong track here. Let us read further. Skipping Husserl and Wittgenstein, we get to >Why does this reality-divide not appear as a theme in Indian Philosophy? It DOES appear. The Sankyan purusha and prakriti correspond to the Cartesisan/Lockean divide of consciousness and material object. That is why Shankara so vigorously refutes it. Unfortunately, due to texts like the Bhagavad Gita, the Sankya is sometimes mixed up uncritically with the nonduality of the Upanishads (e.g. Yaynavalkya's famous talk with Maitreyi in Brihadaranyaka). From a strict philosophical point of view, this is untenable, but the Gita is more concerned with soteriology, so it jumps between dualistic common sense and the Advaitic perspective of the sage. >Yet, idealism did arise in later Advaita. The reality-divide may >have been absent as a theme, but an unarticulated "parallel >universe" lurked behind the language of the illusory world. Again, the 'parallel universe' does not exist if it is denied. You seem to think that even *supposing* this parallel world as a hypothesis to be refuted is illegitimate. But the fact that many people DO suppose it, and even believe it, shows that it can be at least supposed. Your reasoning is unclear to me. Skipping the part on science we get to >The metaphysics of illusion is fraught with danger. Yet we >must admit that "illusion" has its use. The vision of the world >as illusion brings home the truth that the world is not >independent of the perceiving consciousness. When the idealist or Advaitin says that the world is 'illusion', he means illusion insofar as it is conceived as other than consciousness. The shapes and colors are not denied; they are perceptions in consciousness, which are perfectly real insofar as they manifest. It is the further conceptual interpretation of these perceptions as other than consciousness ('objects') that is being denied, whether it is the subtle objectivity of the 'phenomenological object' or the gross objectivity of the 'material object'. In brief, you seem to be raising a straw man against idealism, namely that it is creating some shadowy world which it then denies while still somehow believing that it exist... This line of reasoning is confused. You finish by saying >It is time we went back to the reality that we see and experience, >the healthy and lusty reality that is joyful and painful... This IS idealism, to the extent that the only reality is conscious experience. However, we must not then impose any kind of subtle phenomenological objectivity within this experience, as when we take even the perceptions to be objects - the 'seen' as opposed to the 'seer'. Getting back to your later response to me, I said > ... it is common experience that the perceptions themselves > may appear as objects. and you replied >It is this that Shankara objects to. The denotation of the >word 'perception' is not the object, but perception. The >object is the percept, the destination of perception and >not the perception itself. Good. Then Shankara is rejecting even the subtle phenomenological object that seems to appear *within* perception (in which case the gross material object is utterly untenable). To say that the 'object is the percept', is more confirmation of idealism, but then you contradict yourself by saying that the object 'is the destination of perception and not the perception itself'. So which is it? >The gross material object is not separate from consciousness - >it is a question of acknowledging the object as it presents itself >exactly in experience and not as it presents itself when we >contemplate it in an investigative mode Right. To say that the 'gross material object is not separate from consciousness' is pure idealism. Likewise for 'acknowledging the object as it presents itself exactly in experience'. And yes, it is mere abstract and erroneous theory which hypothesizes about 'external material reality'. So much that you say does sound exactly like idealism, to the extent that the only meaningful reality is immediate experience, yet you cling to this straw man conception of idealism as maintaining some kind of ghostly world outside of consciousness, which it erects, and refutes, yet all the while somehow maintaining it. This part of your thinking seems quite unclear and untenable to me. Basically, though it seems you accept idealism, to the extent that 'consciousness is reality', which is nothing but a key mahavkya and fundamental principle of Advaita. Hari Om! Benjamin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2004 Report Share Posted July 13, 2004 Namaste Chittaranjanji, I hope I am not becoming a speed-breaker in this discussion. :-) You said: " If there is reluctance on my part to accept the truth, then that propensity must be checked. For enquiry is not about reluctance to accept or reject, but to go where the truth leads us. When I accept the shruti, where does that acceptance, merely by the act of acceptance, lead me? I may stay in that state of acceptance for an eternity, but it doesn't really help me unless I enquire about it through the weighments of nyaya. " Did Shri sha~Nkara make any attempt in his prastAnatraya bhAshyam-s to venture into the complexities involved in explaining advaita with the help of nyAya? You said: " But if I do lose my way from here, please help me. If you see me as having taken the wrong road altogether, then allow me for a while this adventure before I'm guided back to the path. :-) " Chittaranjanji, I am not the qualified one here in this forum for such a task. But I do feel that we can explain advaita without setting our foot in the wonderland of vishiShTadvaita or dvaita and then taking a flight back home through an over-dose of nyAya. However, I really would like to read your nyAya explorations. As the bookmarker I use says, 'Don't follow the path set by others. Explore new paths and leave a trial behind for others to follow!' Please continue with your adventure!! You said: " But tell me Ranjeetji, why is the cloth false when the yarn is true? Why is the whiteness of milk false when the milk is true? " ' yathA somyaikena mRRItpiNDena sarvaM mRRInmayaM vij~nAta{\m+} syAdvAchArambhaNaM vikAro nAmadheyaM mRRIttiketyeva satyam || '-Ch.Up-6-1-4 [ O good looking one, as by knowing a lump of clay, all things made of clay become known: All transformation has speech as its basis, and it is name only. Clay as such is the reality. ] Isn't the shruti wonderful? :-) hara hara sha~Nkara jaya jaya sha~Nkara Hari Om Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2004 Report Share Posted July 13, 2004 Namaste Shri Bhaskar-ji, You are interpreting the bhashya from a perspective wherein the vyavaharika world is considered to be entirely false and where the Truth is formless and bereft of the world. Whereas I am interpreting the bhashya from a perspective wherein the vyavaharika world is the Truth Itself that is seen through avidya. How do we decide which of these two perspectives are correct? The cloth is nothing but the yarn. Isn't then the world nothing but Brahman? Let us assume for arguments sake that the cloth is false on account of it being by name only. Now tell me, when you look at the cloth, are you not looking at the yarn even if you should say that the cloth is false? Are you not looking at the truth itself and seeing falsehood in the appearance of difference that it puts forth? Similarly, even if you deny that the entire world of difference is false, you are still looking at Brahman only when you see the world. Therefore, whatever is seen in vyavaharika is not simply false, but is the Truth seen through falsity. > This would be an interesting reading for those who believe > that dreams are only product of vAsana-s created in the > waking world. Why shankara telling like this prabhuji?? > if svapnA are only vAsana of waking world, how can this > svapna can indicate future happening to us in socalled > waking state?? please clarify this point. I'm not sure if I have understood the question you are asking. If you are asking about signs - prediction from dreams - then there is no problem because that character of being a sign is given to it by the same Brahman that has given this world the entire character of causality. > Now you tell me prabhuji, from which view point shankara was > arguing in 2-2-29 & upholding the unwarranted reality to the > waking world. Shankara was not upholding the unwarranted reality of the waking world. He was upholding the warranted reality of the waking world. :-) > Further, see ItarEya upanishad where shruti mAta telling us > Atman has only three avastha-s & all these three avasthA are > mere dreams *tasya traya Yes, all three avastha-s do not have existence in independence from the Self just like the dream world has no existence from the self, and hence all three may all be said to be like a dream in this respect. But the dream world is said to be unreal because it is seen that it is impossible for it to be contained within the confines of the body. What is it that is seen that makes the waking world impossible? Warm regards, Chittaranjan advaitin, bhaskar.yr@i... wrote: > > 2. Dream vision is a kind of memory whereas those of the waking state > are perceptions of objects. > > "Moreover, dream vision is a kind of memory, whereas the visions of > the waking state are forms of perception (through valid means of > knowledge). And the difference between perception and memory, > consisting in the presence or absence of objects, can be understood > by oneself, as for instance when one says: 'I remember my beloved > son, but I do not see him, though I want to see'." (BSB,II,II,v,29) > > praNAm Sri CN prabhuji > Hare Krishna > > Due to official obligations I am not following this thread > completely....but, after looking your shankara quotes on dream state, I'd > like to share shankara's view point on dream state elsewhere in sUtra > bhAshya itself. This would be an interesting reading for those who believe > that dreams are only product of vAsana-s created in the waking world. > > 2-1-14 : > prasiddhaM cha idaM lOkE anvayavyatirEkakushalAnAm EdrushEna svapna > darshanEna sAdhvAgamaH sUchyatE, EdrushEna asAdhvAgamaH iti. > > He also says *atha svapnAH purushaM krushNam, krushNadaNtaM pashyati sa > yEnam hanti* na chiramiva jIvishyadIti vidyAt* > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2004 Report Share Posted July 13, 2004 Namaste Shri Ranjeetji, > I hope I am not becoming a speed-breaker in this > discussion. :-) Not at all, Ranjeetji. It is my office work that is somewhat of a speed-breaker at the moment. > Did Shri sha~Nkara make any attempt in his prastAnatraya > bhAshyam-s to venture into the complexities involved in > explaining advaita with the help of nyAya? No, but he did venture, using nyaya (reason), into dismantling the complexities built by the constructions of the mind. Unfortunately, we have equipped ourselves with so may ideas and concepts that we subconsciously apply them to the things around us as we go about our lives. Whether we like it or not, this is how it is. If we are to dispossess ourselves of these complexities, one of the ways to do it is through nyaya. That is not much different from manana. Nyaya is an arm of the Vedas, and It is the supporting platform on which the philosophies of Vedanta are sought to be explicated. Shruti is the prime pramana, but nyaya is its handmaiden. I am not saying that the way of nyaya is the only way, but it is one way. Radha, on the other hand, reached Truth through pure Love. Shankara of course did not need any nyaya because Shankara (Lord Shiva) is Himself the Truth. > But I do feel that we can explain advaita without setting our > foot in the wonderland of vishiShTadvaita or dvaita and then > taking a flight back home through an over-dose of nyAya. I agree, but I am personally of the belief that Vishistadvaita and Dvaita have much to contribute in the endeavour to understand Advaita. > However, I really would like to read your nyAya explorations. > As the bookmarker I use says, 'Don't follow the path set by > others. Explore new paths and leave a trial behind for others > to follow!' Please continue with your adventure!! Thank you for the encouragement, Ranjeetji . > [ O good looking one, as by knowing a lump of clay, all things > made of clay become known: All transformation has speech as > its basis, and it is name only. Clay as such is the reality. ] > > Isn't the shruti wonderful? :-) Yes it is, but you didn't answer my question asking why the pot should be false when the clay is true. You merely tell me that it is by name (speech) only. If it is by name only, it is its nature to be by name only, and what is of its own nature cannot be false. The clay is true, and so is the pot - unless the clay-nature is hidden when the pot is taken to be the truth. The Truth, it seems, is hidden in the mysteries of Vak. Warm regards, Chittaranjan advaitin, "Ranjeet Sankar" <thefinalsearch> wrote: > Namaste Chittaranjanji, > > I hope I am not becoming a speed-breaker in this discussion. :-) > > You said: > " If there is reluctance on my part to accept the truth, then that > propensity must be checked. For enquiry is not about reluctance to accept or > reject, but to go where the truth leads us. When I accept the shruti, where > does that acceptance, merely by the act of acceptance, lead me? I may stay > in that state of acceptance for an eternity, but it doesn't really help me > unless I enquire about it through the weighments of nyaya. " > > Did Shri sha~Nkara make any attempt in his prastAnatraya bhAshyam-s to > venture into the complexities involved in explaining advaita with the help > of nyAya? > > > You said: > " But if I do lose my way from here, please help me. If you see me as having > taken the wrong road altogether, then allow me for a while this adventure > before I'm guided back to the path. :-) " > > Chittaranjanji, I am not the qualified one here in this forum for such a > task. But I do feel that we can explain advaita without setting our foot in > the wonderland of vishiShTadvaita or dvaita and then taking a flight back > home through an over-dose of nyAya. However, I really would like to read > your nyAya explorations. As the bookmarker I use says, 'Don't follow > the path set by others. Explore new paths and leave a trial behind for > others to follow!' Please continue with your adventure!! > > > You said: > " But tell me Ranjeetji, why is the cloth false when the yarn is true? Why > is the whiteness of milk false when the milk is true? " > > > ' yathA somyaikena mRRItpiNDena sarvaM mRRInmayaM vij~nAta{\m+} > syAdvAchArambhaNaM vikAro nAmadheyaM mRRIttiketyeva satyam || '- Ch.Up-6-1-4 > > [ O good looking one, as by knowing a lump of clay, all things made of clay > become known: All transformation has speech as its basis, and it is name > only. Clay as such is the reality. ] > > Isn't the shruti wonderful? :-) > > hara hara sha~Nkara jaya jaya sha~Nkara > > Hari Om Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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