Guest guest Posted May 25, 2007 Report Share Posted May 25, 2007 , " jagbir singh " <adishakti_org wrote: > > " The wretchedness of human life is not owing to a divine punishment > or to an original sin, but to ignorance. Not any and every kind of > ignorance, but only ignorance of the true nature of Spirit, the > ignorance that makes us confuse Spirit with our psychomental > experience, that makes us attribute " qualities " and predicates to > the eternal and autonomous principle that is Spirit -- in short, a > metaphysical ignorance... > > Human suffering is rooted in illusion, for man believes that his > psychomental life -- activity of the senses, feelings, thoughts, and > volitions -- is identical with Spirit, with the Self. He thus > confuses two wholly autonomous and opposed realities, between which > there is no real connection but only an illusory relation, for > psychomental experience does not belong to Spirit, it belongs to > nature (prakriti); states of consciousness are the refined products > of the same substance that is at the base of the physical world and > the world of life. " > > Mircea Eliade, Yoga: Immortality and Freedom > Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1971. (Originally > published, 1954.) > ISBN13: 978-0-691-01764-8 > > " In this landmark book the renowned scholar of religion Mircea > Eliade lays the groundwork for a Western understanding of Yoga, > exploring how its guiding principle, that of freedom, involves > remaining in the world without letting oneself be exhausted by > such " conditionings " as time and history. " > > Review > " t states with clarity and precision what the beliefs and > practices of yoga are, and how they originated from the primeval > Indic religions. " --The New Yorker > Brahman and Atman (by Hari Prasad Shastri) by Hari Prasad Shastri In the Upanishads and the writings of the great and holy Bhagavan Shankaracharya, there are two words used that often bring confusion to Western minds. These two words are `Brahman' and `Atman'. A short time ago, a professor of the University of Milan contributed an article showing the difference of meaning between the two words, but in fact it is not so: they mean one and the same thing. And now I will endeavour to make clear the meaning of the word `Brahman', and then it will be very easy to know the meaning of `Atman'. Let us be all attention so that we may understand the meaning once and for all. Etymologically the word `Brahman' comes from the root `bhri' meaning great or majestic. Perhaps long, long ago, when the holy Rishis were in their Brahmachard (discipleship), they looked around and they saw the sun, the moon and the stars; they saw the seasons changing, the sun eclipsed, the moon waxing and waning, and they saw that there was a principle underlying all this change, and when they understood the universal immortal principle on which these changes take place they expressed it by the word `Brahman' — great or majestic. That is Brahman. Now Atman. The human consciousness, when it acquires its perfection in identity with that immortal principle (Brahman) is called `Atman'. The individual consciousness, when it is known to be identical with that principle in its individual capacity, is spoken of to others as Atman. Atman is local, Brahman universal. We can call the sun as it is known to the whole world, Brahman, and we can call the sun as it is known from England, Atman. Atman relates to the individual, Brahman to the universal. When the universal is spoken of in relation to the individual, (i.e. when the individual is known to be universal), it is known as Brahman. Often people are confused, but it is quite clear. When I speak of clay in general, it can be called clay absolute; but when I refer to an individual pot of clay as `my pot of clay', then there is the universal clay and there is my pot of clay which represents Atman: the clay universal is Brahman. Atman and Brahman are exactly the same, but by Atman is meant that aspect of the universal consciousness that is encased in the five sheaths (body, vital force, mind, intellect and bliss sheath) and spoken of in relation to those sheaths. When the pot understands it is clay, identical with the clay universal, then the Atman of the pot is Brahman, and in this sense the individual is universal. They are interchangeable words: Atman means essence, and the essence of the human personality is Brahman. Atman is Brahman. Tat twam asi — That thou art, immutable, eternal. Once more let us dwell on the meaning of these two words, Brahman and Atman, and every one of these statements is taken from some great classic — they are not my words. Do not worry if you do not understand the whole of the exposition. When a doctor prescribes for a patient, the patient understands only a little of the prescription, little beyond whether it is liquid or solid; perhaps it may seem to contain peppermint, but he does not understand the whole of it. But if he takes it he may be cured. The same with the holy teachings: these psychological bullets go to undermine the fortress of spiritual ignorance, of duality and suffering, therefore do not worry if you do not understand the whole — expose yourself to these bullets: First statement: `Brahman is the existence (not existent) on which the appearance of the cosmos takes place'. The appearance and disappearance are both objects, and have no independent existence: they are unreal. If there were no principle on which the appearance and disappearance of the cosmos takes place, the appearance disappears and the disappearance disappears. Therefore the reality can only be that principle on which the appearance and disappearance takes place, and that is Brahman. How can the appearance and disappearance of the cosmos take place? The cosmos disappears, individually, when we go to sleep, and in the universal way when we have known God. At the end of a kalpa (world- period), when all the cosmos becomes akasha (ether) and is finally absorbed, then Brahman is left. The individual aspect? The pot of clay says that the universal clay is behind it, or `my essence' is behind all the pots that are. That is the same as saying, `My Atman is in all'. `The world has design, and it cannot come out of blind force'. Look at these flowers. Can they have come out of blind force, although Kant tried to prove they did? If twenty chimpanzees sat down at twenty typing machines for twenty thousand years, would they be able to produce one sonnet of Shakespeare? No, there is no reason behind them. The universe cannot come from blind force, although there are scientists who say that everything, even the mind of man, comes out of blind force. Let us leave them. Shri Shankaracharya says: `Behind empirical order is a rational power or conscious principle'. Look at these leaves. In each and every one are millions of cells, and no- one in the world could create one of them. There is a rational cause behind the universe, although people known as materialists and atheists have prejudices against this, and Shri Shankaracharya says: `That rational cause is Brahman'. `He is the cause of the Scriptures'. When we turn to the holy Vedas, we find such profundity of thought, the whole of logic, Mimamsa, Vedanta, poetry and so forth. These are encyclopaedias, and only from the Omniscient could they have come forth, and that Omniscient One is Brahman. From those fishermen like Luke whom He inspired, all the ethics and philosophy have come which people study to obtain degrees, all come from the Scriptures. Therefore it is said: `The Scriptures are Brahman'. These three main statements are made by Shri Shankaracharya in his Vedanta Sutra commentary. Here now are some subsidiary statements: `Brahman cannot be said to be this'. Brahman is not objective. Brahman is infinity, and you cannot say: `This is it'. `Self-consciousness is the final evidence', this is similar to the dictum of St Anselm of Canterbury. `I am' is the final evidence, and it is that `am-ness' and `I-ness' which expresses Brahman. No-one can deny `I am', but as the holy Acharya says, `These arguments are useless for the ignorant'. `He is absolute and cannot be defined by attributes.' An objector says: When you say `He is omnipotent', you attribute personality, and then the absoluteness of Brahman is gone. This is a serious point, worthy of study. If you say, `He is absolute', you say nothing to limit Him. When it is said: `He (Brahman the Absolute) is omnipotent, all- pervasive and omniscient', then you attribute personality to Him. Omniscience implies time and space, which does not apply to Brahman. Space prevents us from knowing an object: I have no knowledge of Everest from here — what prevents it? Space. Time also prevents us from knowing: I cannot see the march of Alexander from India — time prevents it. Therefore our knowledge of objects is negated by two factors, space and time, that is Maya. But time and space that limit our knowledge do not apply to Brahman, He is the Lord of time and space and is therefore limitless. It is in this sense that the holy Acharya calls Brahman omniscient. There are two theological approaches to the understanding of Brahman. First, He is absolute and we cannot say a word about Him. Second, we can make some rough approach to definition. This is the way we adopt when we say `He is omniscience', not omniscient but omniscience itself. We make some approach in this way. By omniscience is meant that Maya cannot obscure his vision. What limits us and makes us weak? Ignorance is the limiting adjunct, and the term `Maya' means the totality of all limitations and conditions; and as He is above Maya it is said, `He is omniscience', that is, above time and space — and these characteristics are very well applied to Him. `Brahman is not subject to the conscious process', that is, He is above inference, deduction, observation, experiment and so forth. The holy Acharya puts it all in one word, sarvajna (all-knowing). Personality limits Him, it only expresses a little thing, and so impersonality is retained in the conception. Vidyaranya says: `Omniscience exists in the capacity to express everything'. Brahman expresses Himself as cosmos, and hence Vidyaranya in this sense says, `He is omniscience which is like a lamp that expresses everything that is near it'. So Consciousness Universal expresses everything in the universe. Omniscience is of two kinds: one, omniscience that is natural, inherent in an object; that is, it requires no proof. In this sense it is said, `Brahman is omniscient by his innate (natural) capacity'. Two, relative omniscience, which makes use of the conscious process — thought, reasoning, deduction, experiment, analysis, authority and so forth. Brahman does not obtain knowledge in this way, he has no need of the conscious process. Therefore it is said, `He is sarvajna, all- knowing'. Now another, lower plane of thought. `Brahman is associated with Maya, underlying the finite modes of experience'. The term `mode' is borrowed from the philosophy of Spinoza, who defines it as `transitory phenomena which appear in the nature of existence, which is not changed by them'. All the universe is existence, and this existence has millions of modes, but it is not changed by them. This bell is made of brass. It has its origin in brass, and by becoming this it has not changed the nature of brass. Brahman underlies these millions of modes and is beyond the mind, thought and speech. He who works through the mind is Brahman. He who underlies the created universe is Brahman. `Tat twam asi' (That thou art) refers to Brahman. It often seems that these statements contradict each other, but no: they are meant to suit the different mental capacities of the pupils. You have to speak in their own language, and in this way it is seen that these statements are not contradictory, but different approaches. So it is said: `Brahman is all- pervasive, the root of all, the substratum of all'. Sometimes it seems that only the personal aspect is meant, in reference to his shakti or power, but this is due to different theological attitudes of mind. It is the object of the Rishis to bring the highest truth; then the personal aspect is defined. But when the mind of the pupil is broken down, he is told only, `Tat twam asi', That thou art. He is the principle underlying the cosmos, underlying the existence of the whole universe. That is Brahman, and He is infinitely more than the totality of the consciousness of all living beings. In the same way as water underlies all waves, spray, drops, vapour and so forth, and as in whatever is sweet the sweetness is due to the sugar in it, so He is the consciousness of all living beings and far transcends them all. Vedanta is called the `transcendental philosophy', that is, you cannot set a limit anywhere, but go on to infinity. Friends, I have been talking of Brahman. Brahman is you, it is your description, Tat twam asi, this you are. You are not the little body, you are above all causation, immutable, immortal, your Atman is Brahman, this and nothing else. Brahman and Atman by Hari Prasad Shastri http://www.self-knowledge.org/latest/05sum/brahmanAndAtman.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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