Guest guest Posted June 14, 2009 Report Share Posted June 14, 2009 Puranamji - PraNAms I must say you have raised some interesting and important points. Personally I am not interested in learning how and to what extent Buddhism agrees with advaita, but what is exactly is the nature of the truth and how to know it. Yes, you are absolutely right. Vedanta provides not only negation of duality but assertion of Brahman with positive swaruupa laxaNas - satyam, Jnaanam and anantam. Consciousness is not just absence of non-consciousness but that because of which one is conscious of the non-conscious entities too. In fact, I have discussed earlier Brahman alone has swaruupa laxaNa since it is part-less while all other objects in the world (except space) can be parted and hence have no swaruupa laxaNa of their own. Hence Kena slokas provide the positive definition - that which mind cannot think of, but because of which mind has the capacity to think of - that alone is Brahman not this that you worship here, etc. It is jyotir jyotiH - light of lights - the consciousness because of which one is conscious of everything - including both knowledge and ignorance. Jagat mithyaa can be intellectually ascertained by defining real is that which remains the same in all periods of time and unreal is that which does not have a locus for existence. But abidance in that knowledge occurs only when I abide in the knowledge that I am Brahman, the infinite existence-consciousness. Existence is not suunyam, when I say the object exists. It is because of which I am able to transact with. Krishna says that which exists cannot cease to exist and that which is non-existence cannot come into existence. If it is suunyam, there is no difference between existence and non-existence to validate the above statement. The law of conservation is absolute and creation is only modification of what is there. Hence Vedanta says - vaachaarambanam vikaaro naamadheyam - the creation is transformation of kaaraNam or cause into kaaryam or products of just name and form just as gold into ornaments. This is the reason why Vedanta addresses that knowing one thing one knows as though everything else - eka vijnaanena sarva vijnaanam bhavati. Knowledge of Brahman occurs only via the mind - it is defined as akhandaakaara vRitti - Sree Sastriji has provided an explanation of what that means. Hari Om! Sadananda --- On Sun, 6/14/09, putranm <putranm wrote: Naturally the question arises: what do we mean by ultimate reality? 1. IF in the Upanishads, the only thing said about " Brahman " is " Not this, Not this " - it is not existence or non-existence, etc - shall we conclude that the Mahavakyas " Aham Brahmasmi " , " Pragnyanam Brahma " etc follow from this? Why is the latter considered essential for invoking *right* knowledge? Of course, we can simply assert " Neti, Neti " is the only " mahavakya " we need - and all is proved! 2. In fact, rightly so, using a term Brahman practically synonymously with negation-of- duality gives no real reason to conclude Brahman denotes the ultimate Reality behind that duality. In fact, at face value, we have to stop and conclude our ultimate reality/truth is the negation-of- duality (or indeterminateness) - nothing more can be said. Really! 3. Of course, as Vedantins, we say more: we conclude that this negation-of- duality affirms an ultimate Reality that is the substratum, essence, what-Is behind that apparent duality. You may complain as to the usage of such descriptions - but unfortunately, if I am not clear that " Brahma Satyam " , I cannot simply claim that " Jagan Mithya " will imply it necessarily. It may, it may not - what about " Jagat sunya " ? So " Brahma Satyam, Jagan Mithya, jivo brahmaiva naparaha " - each part is important, and together it is Advaita-Vedanta. Whether " Brahman is Neti,Neti " + " Jagat is sunya " is the same as the advaita triple is quite a big question - we have to create bridges and modifications to achieve this. But by no means, can we demand our triple is the same that this sum-pair intended. 4. As a followup to the above, is the immanence of Brahman in jagat achieved necessarily through the sum-pair? The Upanishads (and our advaita triple) are clear on such metaphysical issues. Well, can we excuse a system that fails to develop the metaphysics properly and simply claim that its founders meant the same, or close enough? Are these points to be taken lightly or arbitrarily by a mumukshu? thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2009 Report Share Posted June 14, 2009 advaitin , kuntimaddi sadananda <kuntimaddisada wrote: > Sadaji, thanks for the clarifying perspectives. Although I made the points, I still need the conviction that you have - but going through these thorough discussions (I think) does help in that. I hope to use this session as a stepping board to focussing on Advaita in a systematic manner. For others, there is a nice response of Rishiji 35103 to an early post of mine, when I myself was arguing for the " Buddha intended this " . It is interesting that now I find myself in his shoes. See also his last paragraph. thollmelukaalkizhu > > Puranamji - PraNAms > > I must say you have raised some interesting and important points. > > Personally I am not interested in learning how and to what extent Buddhism agrees with advaita, but what is exactly is the nature of the truth and how to know it. > > Yes, you are absolutely right. Vedanta provides not only negation of duality but assertion of Brahman with positive swaruupa laxaNas - satyam, Jnaanam and anantam. Consciousness is not just absence of non-consciousness but that because of which one is conscious of the non-conscious entities too. In fact, I have discussed earlier Brahman alone has swaruupa laxaNa since it is part-less while all other objects in the world (except space) can be parted and hence have no swaruupa laxaNa of their own. Hence Kena slokas provide the positive definition - that which mind cannot think of, but because of which mind has the capacity to think of - that alone is Brahman not this that you worship here, etc. It is jyotir jyotiH - light of lights - the consciousness because of which one is conscious of everything - including both knowledge and ignorance. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2009 Report Share Posted June 15, 2009 There seems to be a conflict between advaita and buddhism as the latter gives positive descriptions of Brahman along with negative ones and the latter uses only negative language. First, of all, Brahman is called Sat Chit Ananda in the Upanisads. What does this mean? These describe the nature of Brahman. In contrast to the world Brahman's essence is unchanging existence. This existence is itself such that it cannot be described by words. The reason for this given by Sri Sankara is that Brahman does not belong to any genus, action, quality, relationship etc. Thus Tai Up 2.4.1 says that words turn back from Brahman. But words like satyam etc are used to convey that, " Brahman can only be negatively described, though it is not a negative indeterminate principle " . (S. Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy) Brahman is essentially inconceivable and thus to clear the misunderstanding that Brahman is non existent it is called as existence etc. Another point to note is that Brahman is not 'existent' but 'existence' itself. It points out to the inconcievablility of nirgun Brahman. Such statements are thus not in conflict with 'neti, neti'. Sri Ramakrishna narrates a story where a father sends his two sons to learn about Brahman. After many years they return and the father asks one of them to describe Brahman. He says that Brahman is beyond all relativity etc. Then the second is asked the same question. He remained silent. The father says that he has truly understood Brahman. Swami Vivekananda says that we can talk about Brahman by only dragging him to the level of the relative. In Brahma Sutra Bhashya 3.2.17, Sri Sankara narrates the episode of Bahva when he was asked by King Vaskali about Brahman, He remained silent. On repeated quries he replies, " Atman is silence verily " . Thus Kena Upanisad 2.3 says, " It is unknwon to those who know and known to those who do not know. " The human intellect always loves to understand things by dividing it into categories. But the non dual Brahman cannot be given the same treatment. S. Radhakrishnan further says, " The negative descriptions point out how positive attributes known to us are inadequate to the highest. Contradictory predicates are attached to Brahman to indicate that so long as we are obliged to use negative conceptions so long as we employ the dialectics of intellect, though positive features are revealed when Brahman is intuited. " Existence etc are moreover not different conceptions of Brahman, for Brahman is a unity. They are synonymous with Brahman and these positive descriptions themselves reveal the imposiibility to conceptualize Brahman as pure existence etc. are unimaginable. They can only be contrasted by relativity. Hence Yajur Veda says, " There is no measure of Him whose glory is great. " Thus Brahman is totally indescribable, can be indicated only by negative features but is a something that essentially 'is'. Keeping this in mind the Vedantin discriminates the unreal world from the real Brahman. But the limitation of these concepts should also be borne in mind lest we forget that Brahman is beyond words etc. Now was Buddha's silence, his timidness, his ignorance? That silence is itself not such a determination for ignorance has been pointed out in Brahma Sutra Bhashya 3.2.17. Through his many sayings, specially his sermon at Benares it gets clear that Buddha believed in an absolute reality. In his famous Kaccayanagotta Sutta, Buddha says, " Everything exists and nothing exists are two extremes. Without approaching any extreme, Buddha gives you a doctrine by the middle. " Th descriptions given of the absolute in Buddha's terms is such, " neither existent nor non existent, neither both etc " . I have indicated the four kotis earlier. Nagarjuna nowhere says, " existence is sunyata. " Sunyata is used for the world to denote its relativity, its unreality in exactly the same sense we use the word mithya. Further it is said that all entities in their ultimate nature are tathata. Tathata is the ground of the conditioned world. Now, the ultimate truth truly cannot be said 'non existent' in Buddhist terms as indicated earlier. Again there cannot be negative substratum of the world. So the notion of tathata removes the doubt that according to the Buddhists the ultimate is sunya. The ultimate is never designated as Sunya. Buddha was totally unwilling to use any empirical category to decribe Brahman. Thus he uses the negative description too often. But this nowhere indicates that the ultimate according to him was sunya, on the contrary, it was for him unspeakable. Why? This can be understood by the following quote where he says that when an arrow has stuck a person does he refuse the treatment saying, 'first I wish to know who has stuck this arrow and from where' or should he first seek the treatment of his illness. It is said in the Buddhists literature that at the time of Buddha sixty two doctrines were prevalent. These doctrines were the two extremes of existence and non existence pointed out above. Reading all these sixty two views, the Upanisadic idea of Brahman is nowhere to be found. They were the views of the creationists ie the theists or of the materialists. Avoiding these two, was the middle path of Buddha. That Buddha adopted different methods and concepts to expalain his realization is nowhere the reason to reject him as nastika. Are'nt they just different ways of stating the same truth. Are the doctrines of Buddha so irreconciable? Sneaking beneath the surface of words we find the same Brahman being described by both the advaitins and the buddhists. Further I was aksed to reconcile the theory of dependent origination with the theory of pre existence of the effect in the cause. That this latter theory was of the Sankhyas and was refuted in Gaudapada's Karika is well known. Advaitins adopt this theory only for the sake of vyavharik reality. Dependent origination does no harm to the theory. It just means that an effect comes due to a particular cause under certain conditions. Then an exhaustive list is given describing ignorance as the root of all klesas, rebirth etc. and this chain can be broken by eliminating the former named in the list ending with ignorance (ie taking the reverse order). This can be found in the Kaccayanagotta Sutta. Again the Sankhya view is not totally accepted. They believe that the cause ad effect are totally identical. In Brahma Sutra Bhashya Sri Sankara points out to an objection that the world should also have the same characteristics of Brahman being the latters effect, that there cannot be absolute identity between a cause and effect. So this question was irrelevant to me. It is significant to note that one of the most hard critic of Buddhism like the great Purva Mimamsa scholar Kumarila in his Tantravartika 1.3.2 says that Buddhist views of subjectivism, momentariness, and not self theory derive their inspiration from the Upanisads. I am not endorsing this viewing but it is not wholly wrong even. Between Advaita and Buddhism there is only the difference of concepts. Advaita is not a sampraday. It is the meeting point of all systems. It is a unity that embraces all. An unnecessary intolerant attitude against Buddhism does not behove us. Religion only represents man's thirst for the real. It is his attempt to comprehend the incomprehensible reality. Thus all these attempts deserve respect. That one such attempt which comes so closer to our own should inspire us to open our doors and not close them. This age old rivalry should end now. So I pray for the great future of both Advaita and Buddhism. REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > > advaitin , kuntimaddi sadananda <kuntimaddisada@> wrote: > > > > Sadaji, thanks for the clarifying perspectives. Although I made the points, I still need the conviction that you have - but going through these thorough discussions (I think) does help in that. I hope to use this session as a stepping board to focussing on Advaita in a systematic manner. > > For others, there is a nice response of Rishiji 35103 to an early post of mine, when I myself was arguing for the " Buddha intended this " . It is interesting that now I find myself in his shoes. See also his last paragraph. > > thollmelukaalkizhu > > > > > Puranamji - PraNAms > > > > I must say you have raised some interesting and important points. > > > > Personally I am not interested in learning how and to what extent Buddhism agrees with advaita, but what is exactly is the nature of the truth and how to know it. > > > > Yes, you are absolutely right. Vedanta provides not only negation of duality but assertion of Brahman with positive swaruupa laxaNas - satyam, Jnaanam and anantam. Consciousness is not just absence of non-consciousness but that because of which one is conscious of the non-conscious entities too. In fact, I have discussed earlier Brahman alone has swaruupa laxaNa since it is part-less while all other objects in the world (except space) can be parted and hence have no swaruupa laxaNa of their own. Hence Kena slokas provide the positive definition - that which mind cannot think of, but because of which mind has the capacity to think of - that alone is Brahman not this that you worship here, etc. It is jyotir jyotiH - light of lights - the consciousness because of which one is conscious of everything - including both knowledge and ignorance. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2009 Report Share Posted June 15, 2009 sadaji, I think that on the topic of the positive and negative definition of Brahman we are on the same boat. You tried to say that Brahman is positive inspite of all negative defintions and I was trying to say that insipte of all positive descriptions Brahman can best be negatively described. May be we are saying the saying the same thing in two different ways. Do you think the same? (leaving aside for a moment the topic of buddhism). REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > > advaitin , kuntimaddi sadananda <kuntimaddisada@> wrote: > > > > Sadaji, thanks for the clarifying perspectives. Although I made the points, I still need the conviction that you have - but going through these thorough discussions (I think) does help in that. I hope to use this session as a stepping board to focussing on Advaita in a systematic manner. > > For others, there is a nice response of Rishiji 35103 to an early post of mine, when I myself was arguing for the " Buddha intended this " . It is interesting that now I find myself in his shoes. See also his last paragraph. > > thollmelukaalkizhu > > > > > Puranamji - PraNAms > > > > I must say you have raised some interesting and important points. > > > > Personally I am not interested in learning how and to what extent Buddhism agrees with advaita, but what is exactly is the nature of the truth and how to know it. > > > > Yes, you are absolutely right. Vedanta provides not only negation of duality but assertion of Brahman with positive swaruupa laxaNas - satyam, Jnaanam and anantam. Consciousness is not just absence of non-consciousness but that because of which one is conscious of the non-conscious entities too. In fact, I have discussed earlier Brahman alone has swaruupa laxaNa since it is part-less while all other objects in the world (except space) can be parted and hence have no swaruupa laxaNa of their own. Hence Kena slokas provide the positive definition - that which mind cannot think of, but because of which mind has the capacity to think of - that alone is Brahman not this that you worship here, etc. It is jyotir jyotiH - light of lights - the consciousness because of which one is conscious of everything - including both knowledge and ignorance. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2009 Report Share Posted June 15, 2009 Vaibhavji - PraNAms I am going to answer the point you have raised with little details about what self-realization in advaita involves for the benefit of others who may be interested. Please bear with me. First, let me say I am enjoying your posts pertaining to advaita part. Buddhism part I am just glancing over since your arguments to show that the end that is pointed out in both systems is the same. Not knowing those scriptures and giving a benefit of doubt, it again comes down to the same essence that advaita Vedanta provides the undisputed pramANa for adhyaatma, since the ultimate teaching in Buddhism is not different from what Vedanta says, as per your posts. If the ultimate truth pointed out is the same then let that be, as we are interested in the truth and means is valuable to reach the true understanding; This ultimate truth in terms of moksha is different for the other two Vedantic traditions, dvaita and vishiShTaadvaita, which also criticize Buddhist thoughts. Now relating the point of the positive definition in the advaita - in the analysis of the Tai. Up. Brahmaananda valli - incidentally we have been covering the definition part in our class for the past two weeks - from the point of absolute it can only be nirguNa, nirvisheSha as Shree Sastriji recent post explains. But Vedanta intended to teach an ignorant person to realize his true nature. Hence all the discussion pertains to the ignorant one to recognize or realize that which cannot be described by words. Silence cannot teach; and if one is capable of learning from silence, he does not need teaching nor Vedanta, or Buddhism, as VevekachUDAmaNi says - vijnaatepi pare tatve shaastraadiistu niShphalaa - once one has realized there is no need for Shaastras too. Satyam jnaanam and anantam - or instructions with positive definitive descriptive pointers of Brahman (which is laxyam) to discriminate or recognize Brahman from or in and through the ephemeral objective conceptualized knowledge that is finite. tat vijnaasaswa and brahma jignaasaa, implies an inquiry into the nature of Brahman by the mind only. Let me go into detail how this is done. The perception of any object possible because it exists, to start with, and the attributes of the objects also exists. We cannot perceive non-existent objects, even though existence itself cannot be perceived. Existence and non-existence of a particular known object can be perceived via senses which gather the attributive content of the object. Similarly the knowledge of the object is possible when the attributive content of the object is projected as vRitti in the mind that again exists as a part of subtle body. Without the vRitti that forms and without that vRitti that is illumined by the light of consciousness, the knowledge or jnaana of the object cannot occur. In the knowledge of the object, we are combining, as though, the consciousness of the subject and the existence of the object, as transformed in the form of the vRitti as the attributive content, both become united to form the consciousness of the existence of the object. Meditation, as we discussed in our class, is to shift the attention from the attributive content of the vRitti, which is idam or this thought, to the light of consciousness that is reflected by the vRitti, because of which jnaanam of the vRitti takes place. It is positive shift in the attention of the vigilant mind from the contents of the vRitti to the light of illumination of that vRitti. Consciousness is not the reflected light but without reflection one cannot recognize the consciousness also. To appreciate this process, let us take an example of object in a lighted room. When we see the object we are only seeing the reflected light from the object which forms an image in the mind. That is the vRitti. If light is shining without the object, that light in the place where the object would be have been, cannot be seen, since there is no object to reflect that light. Hence it is interesting to know two things - 1. Without the light illumining the object we cannot see the object and 2. without the object reflecting we cannot see or recognize the light too. It is the same thing in the mind too. Without a vRitti (idam vRitti) or the back ground mind (aham vRitti) reflecting the light of consciousness, the ever present all illuminating consciousness can never be recognized or realized. The point is mind being inert cannot realize, and aatma being all pervading and ever shining cannot realize or more correctly need not have to realize. samasaara comes when the reflection of the consciousness occurs and one not knowing I am the light that is reflecting and get carried away the contents of the vRitti. All isms are only to teach ajnaani how to become jnaani. We need a postive teaching for the mind to shift its attention from the contents of the vRttti as not this but to that because of which the vRitti is known. That is shifting the attention to the light of consciouseness that is gettting reflected by the vRitti. Here two things in analogy of the outside light happen. 1. The existence of the object cannot be established without the knowledge of the existence - by the process described above 2. The consciousness of the subject cannot also be established without the reflection of that consciousness by a vRitti. Absolute existence and absolute consciousness are anantam and cannot be described and they are nirguNa and nirvisheSha; but that is paaramaarthika and no words can reach there as the Upanishad itself declares. Silence is just absence of the vRitti, but yet the mind with silence has to be there that is reflecting the light of consciousness and that reflected light only forms the akhaDaarkaara vRitti or unbroken knowledge reflected. Hence Vedanta says - it is upahita chaitanya - or conditioned consciousness only that can be recognized or realized - but just as from the reflected light one understands that there is general light which is locally getting reflected by the object and from which we know there is a general light, similarly from the reflected consciousness or upahita chaitanya, I understand that I am the pure consciousness that is getting reflected in the pool of the mind as akhaDaarkaara vRitti. This is the positive shift in understanding. If we just say suunyam and nothing can be described about, that kind of teaching is useless for an ajnnani and for jnaani any teaching is useless. This is where advaita Vedanta teaching rests; as I understand and as I was taught and as I am convinced. Sorry for the long answer but that is trait passed on by my teacher, Swami Chinmayanandaji; Shree Gurubhyo namaH. Hari Om! Sadananda --- On Mon, 6/15/09, vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: sadaji, I think that on the topic of the positive and negative definition of Brahman we are on the same boat. You tried to say that Brahman is positive inspite of all negative defintions and I was trying to say that insipte of all positive descriptions Brahman can best be negatively described. May be we are saying the saying the same thing in two different ways. Do you think the same? (leaving aside for a moment the topic of buddhism). REGARDS, VAIBHAV. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2009 Report Share Posted June 15, 2009 Namaste dear Vaibhavji: I like your statement - " Advaita is the meeting point of all systems. It is a unity that embraces all. " At the same time I do not believe that Vedantins have intolerant attitude against Buddhism. Those of us who have strong conviction with the advaita philosophy, we have the right to express why we disagree with other systems. This does not imply that we do not respect others with other beliefs and convictions. Respect doesn't necessarily mean that we need to accept everything what is being stated by other systems and beliefs. We have respect for dwaitans, visistadvaitins, buddhists, christians, jains, and muslims. At the same time we do have disagreements with their system of beliefs and these disagreements come relative to what we believe. Great futures are there (just like the past) for advaitins, dwaitins, visistadvaitins, buddhists, etc. and agreements and disagreements will likely coexist and this is the law of Nature. I just noiced that Sadaji have provided a very detailed answers to your other questions. The fact that this list discusses the merits and demerits of Buddhism do suggest that we have respect for Bhagwan Buddha and Buddhism. Since you seem to be more familiar with buddhism, let me ask you a simple question - can you please find out how many of mailing lists with buddhist theme seriously discuss the concepts of Vedanta? With my warmest regards, Ram Chandran advaitin , " vaibhav_narula21 " <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: > > Between Advaita and Buddhism there is only the difference of concepts. Advaita is not a sampraday. It is the meeting point of all systems. It is a unity that embraces all. An unnecessary intolerant attitude against Buddhism does not behove us. Religion only represents man's thirst for the real. It is his attempt to comprehend the incomprehensible reality. Thus all these attempts deserve respect. That one such attempt which comes so closer to our own should inspire us to open our doors and not close them. This age old rivalry should end now. So I pray for the great future of both Advaita and Buddhism. > > REGARDS, > VAIBHAV. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2009 Report Share Posted June 15, 2009 sadaji, thank you for yor reply. I was only interested to know that you are in agreement with me on the advaita part which you have confirmed. Also your statement, " Absolute existence and absolute consciousness are anantam and cannot be described and they are nirguNa and nirvisheSha; but that is paaramaarthika and no words can reach there as the Upanishad itself declares. " supplements what I said earlier on the same topic. As for Buddhism, we may beg to differ on this and also after a very long and tiring arguement I feel weary to push on the issue. REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , kuntimaddi sadananda <kuntimaddisada wrote: > > > Vaibhavji - PraNAms > > I am going to answer the point you have raised with little details about what self-realization in advaita involves for the benefit of others who may be interested. Please bear with me. > > First, let me say I am enjoying your posts pertaining to advaita part. Buddhism part I am just glancing over since your arguments to show that the end that is pointed out in both systems is the same. Not knowing those scriptures and giving a benefit of doubt, it again comes down to the same essence that advaita Vedanta provides the undisputed pramANa for adhyaatma, since the ultimate teaching in Buddhism is not different from what Vedanta says, as per your posts. If the ultimate truth pointed out is the same then let that be, as we are interested in the truth and means is valuable to reach the true understanding; This ultimate truth in terms of moksha is different for the other two Vedantic traditions, dvaita and vishiShTaadvaita, which also criticize Buddhist thoughts. > > Now relating the point of the positive definition in the advaita - in the analysis of the Tai. Up. Brahmaananda valli - incidentally we have been covering the definition part in our class for the past two weeks - from the point of absolute it can only be nirguNa, nirvisheSha as Shree Sastriji recent post explains. > > But Vedanta intended to teach an ignorant person to realize his true nature. Hence all the discussion pertains to the ignorant one to recognize or realize that which cannot be described by words. Silence cannot teach; and if one is capable of learning from silence, he does not need teaching nor Vedanta, or Buddhism, as VevekachUDAmaNi says - vijnaatepi pare tatve shaastraadiistu niShphalaa - once one has realized there is no need for Shaastras too. > > Satyam jnaanam and anantam - or instructions with positive definitive descriptive pointers of Brahman (which is laxyam) to discriminate or recognize Brahman from or in and through the ephemeral objective conceptualized knowledge that is finite. tat vijnaasaswa and brahma jignaasaa, implies an inquiry into the nature of Brahman by the mind only. Let me go into detail how this is done. > > The perception of any object possible because it exists, to start with, and the attributes of the objects also exists. We cannot perceive non-existent objects, even though existence itself cannot be perceived. Existence and non-existence of a particular known object can be perceived via senses which gather the attributive content of the object. > > Similarly the knowledge of the object is possible when the attributive content of the object is projected as vRitti in the mind that again exists as a part of subtle body. Without the vRitti that forms and without that vRitti that is illumined by the light of consciousness, the knowledge or jnaana of the object cannot occur. In the knowledge of the object, we are combining, as though, the consciousness of the subject and the existence of the object, as transformed in the form of the vRitti as the attributive content, both become united to form the consciousness of the existence of the object. Meditation, as we discussed in our class, is to shift the attention from the attributive content of the vRitti, which is idam or this thought, to the light of consciousness that is reflected by the vRitti, because of which jnaanam of the vRitti takes place. It is positive shift in the attention of the vigilant mind from the contents of the vRitti to the light of > illumination of that vRitti. Consciousness is not the reflected light but without reflection one cannot recognize the consciousness also. > > To appreciate this process, let us take an example of object in a lighted room. When we see the object we are only seeing the reflected light from the object which forms an image in the mind. That is the vRitti. If light is shining without the object, that light in the place where the object would be have been, cannot be seen, since there is no object to reflect that light. Hence it is interesting to know two things - 1. Without the light illumining the object we cannot see the object and 2. without the object reflecting we cannot see or recognize the light too. It is the same thing in the mind too. Without a vRitti (idam vRitti) or the back ground mind (aham vRitti) reflecting the light of consciousness, the ever present all illuminating consciousness can never be recognized or realized. The point is mind being inert cannot realize, and aatma being all pervading and ever shining cannot realize or more correctly need not have to realize. samasaara comes > when the reflection of the consciousness occurs and one not knowing I am the light that is reflecting and get carried away the contents of the vRitti. All isms are only to teach ajnaani how to become jnaani. We need a postive teaching for the mind to shift its attention from the contents of the vRttti as not this but to that because of which the vRitti is known. That is shifting the attention to the light of consciouseness that is gettting reflected by the vRitti. > > Here two things in analogy of the outside light happen. > 1. The existence of the object cannot be established without the knowledge of the existence - by the process described above > 2. The consciousness of the subject cannot also be established without the reflection of that consciousness by a vRitti. > Absolute existence and absolute consciousness are anantam and cannot be described and they are nirguNa and nirvisheSha; but that is paaramaarthika and no words can reach there as the Upanishad itself declares. > > Silence is just absence of the vRitti, but yet the mind with silence has to be there that is reflecting the light of consciousness and that reflected light only forms the akhaDaarkaara vRitti or unbroken knowledge reflected. > > Hence Vedanta says - it is upahita chaitanya - or conditioned consciousness only that can be recognized or realized - but just as from the reflected light one understands that there is general light which is locally getting reflected by the object and from which we know there is a general light, similarly from the reflected consciousness or upahita chaitanya, I understand that I am the pure consciousness that is getting reflected in the pool of the mind as akhaDaarkaara vRitti. This is the positive shift in understanding. If we just say suunyam and nothing can be described about, that kind of teaching is useless for an ajnnani and for jnaani any teaching is useless. > > This is where advaita Vedanta teaching rests; as I understand and as I was taught and as I am convinced. > > Sorry for the long answer but that is trait passed on by my teacher, Swami Chinmayanandaji; Shree Gurubhyo namaH. > > Hari Om! > Sadananda > > --- On Mon, 6/15/09, vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: > > sadaji, > I think that on the topic of the positive and negative definition of Brahman we are on the same boat. You tried to say that Brahman is positive inspite of all negative defintions and I was trying to say that insipte of all positive descriptions Brahman can best be negatively described. May be we are saying the saying the same thing in two different ways. Do you think the same? (leaving aside for a moment the topic of buddhism). > > REGARDS, > VAIBHAV. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2009 Report Share Posted June 15, 2009 dear ram chandranji, after the sheep and the wolf analogy used by a member earlier, you cannot blame me for saying that we are intolerant towards buddhism. May be I generalized but some intolerance can still be seen. Again I have been recieving a few abusive messages backstage which led me write this. My insistence on opening the doors for Buddhism meant that Buddhism should not be seen as a rival, nastika school. The case of dvaitins, etc are different. They are still regarded as Vedantins, belonging to the Vedanta school. The case with Buddhism is different. In days of yore there was wide spread antagonism for them. Ofcourse it was on both sides, but part of this antagonism continues to present times also. Thus my use of the word, 'intolerance'. If I have hurt your sentiments through this then I apologize for it. REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , " Ram Chandran " <ramvchandran wrote: > > Namaste dear Vaibhavji: > > I like your statement - " Advaita is the meeting point of all systems. It is a unity that embraces all. " At the same time I do not believe that Vedantins have intolerant attitude against Buddhism. Those of us who have strong conviction with the advaita philosophy, we have the right to express why we disagree with other systems. This does not imply that we do not respect others with other beliefs and convictions. Respect doesn't necessarily mean that we need to accept everything what is being stated by other systems and beliefs. We have respect for dwaitans, visistadvaitins, buddhists, christians, jains, and muslims. At the same time we do have disagreements with their system of beliefs and these disagreements come relative to what we believe. Great futures are there (just like the past) for advaitins, dwaitins, visistadvaitins, buddhists, etc. and agreements and disagreements will likely coexist and this is the law of Nature. > > I just noiced that Sadaji have provided a very detailed answers to your other questions. The fact that this list discusses the merits and demerits of Buddhism do suggest that we have respect for Bhagwan Buddha and Buddhism. Since you seem to be more familiar with buddhism, let me ask you a simple question - can you please find out how many of mailing lists with buddhist theme seriously discuss the concepts of Vedanta? > > With my warmest regards, > > Ram Chandran > > advaitin , " vaibhav_narula21 " <vaibhav_narula21@> wrote: > > > > Between Advaita and Buddhism there is only the difference of concepts. Advaita is not a sampraday. It is the meeting point of all systems. It is a unity that embraces all. An unnecessary intolerant attitude against Buddhism does not behove us. Religion only represents man's thirst for the real. It is his attempt to comprehend the incomprehensible reality. Thus all these attempts deserve respect. That one such attempt which comes so closer to our own should inspire us to open our doors and not close them. This age old rivalry should end now. So I pray for the great future of both Advaita and Buddhism. > > > > REGARDS, > > VAIBHAV. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2009 Report Share Posted June 15, 2009 Hari OM~ Shri Sada ji, Pranams, Again without going much into details, I would want to clarify few points you have articulated. First of all I do not contest your points on the subject as the consciousness which is beyond desa, kala paricinnatva. Let me remind you that the dispute here is not about the subject (sadhya) not being subjected to spatio-temporal conditions but about the means and its validity. Since you have touched the particle of Sadhya in your I may charge you with what is called the 'Hetu-garbha-visesana-Dosah'. Anyway, let me putforth the premise to insist that Veda-s are region and people ‘specific’. A Vedantin (who is familiar with Tarka) would refine the clause ‘desa-kala Paricinnatvam’ contextually; where ‘paricinnatvam’ here indicates ‘iyatta rahityam’ and not the ‘condition’ per se. ‘Iyatta rahityam’ is a paribhasika sabda, which only means that Veda-s are dynamic in the sense that it is fixed within all quarters of the spatio-temporal plane to which it belongs. Also that the clause ‘Iyatta-rahityam’ in connotation with the element ‘paricinnatvam’ implies the very nature of ‘abAdyatva’ alone and nothing more than that. It has nothing to do with individuality or personality in generic sense as you had stated. Moreover, when you do samkalpa, you say ‘Jambudvipe bharata varse bharata kande’ and you owe this to ‘bagavatAgnyA srIman Narayana PrIthyartham’ which categorically reveals that Veda-s are prescribed to Astika-Arya-vartas. Further, regarding Pramanya to Vedas, Advaitin-s classify pramAnya into two-fold. Vyaharika-tattva-vedakatvam and Paramartika-tattva-vedakatvam iti. Here Paramartika-tattva-vedakatva prAmaNyaM invariably involves PratipAdya-pratipAdaka sambandaH (in the process of tat-tvam padartha sodana) until the Bodhya pratipatti is accomplished. Bodhya 'the revealed', is revealed by the vAcya-vAcaka relation; Vacya is brahmAtmaikya anubhuti. So Bodhya and Vacya share the Samanadhikarana while Bodhaka and Vacaka are discarded as vyavahara after realization takes place. Yet the bodhaka and Vacaka are Vaidika sabda-s that hold pramanya only when they are employed in a particular krama. In case of Atma-vidya; Vacaka reveals the aikya bodha only when the seeker sits for the course of Sravana-Manana-Nidhidyasana. The eligibility for this course is that the seeker ‘must’ be a ‘Dvija’, who alone can perform Nitya-karma, a mandatory pre-requisite for citta-suddhi to be called as a Pramata. Pramata, a knower, according to Advaita is defined as follows ‘nitya-naimittika-prAyascitta-upAsanAnena nirgatha nikhila kalmasataya-nitAnta-nirmalasvAntaH- Sadhana catuStaya sampannaH pramAta’ and he is the one who will be qualified to hold to SamitpAnih to approach a Brahma-nisTaH So it is needless to say that Pramata must undergo nitya-naimittika karma-s which are apparently karma-bhumi specific. Hence the term ‘desa-kala-paricinnatvam’ I meant holds a totally significant meaning than in the common terms in which it is usually conceived. With Narayana Smrti, Devanathan.J Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 advaitin , " Ram Chandran " <ramvchandran wrote: Some internet findings. (Look at wikipedia for " Buddha nature " , " Tathagata-garbha " , " History of Mahayana Buddhism " , " Atman (Buddhism) " etc) 1. Mahayana (madhyamika included) sutras are considered by scholars to be made centuries after the Buddha - starting 1st century BC or Ad with some sutras being modified to the 8th century. The Theravada school which holds to the earlier Pali scriptures do not accept the Mahayana interpretations as rightly representative of Buddha. 2. The notion of shunyata-of-all-phenomena is universally accepted in Madhyamika as ultimate reality. The Absolute as ontological substratum-Reality is not universally accepted in Madhyamika schools, or by independent scholars of Madhyamika. 3. The notion of Absolute (called Tathagata or Buddha-Nature) in manners akin to the Upanishadic Brahman appears in sutras like the Mahayana Mahaparinirvana sutra and other so-called Tathagata-garbha sutras. These are considered to be of later dates and are suspected by some scholars, etc. of assimilating Upanishadic/Hindu thought. However they seem to have closest resemblance to the Upanishadic Brahman. (See also: http://www.spiritandflesh.com/Buddha_nature.htm) QUOTE Although Takasaki notes that there is a difference between the nature of monism in the Ratnagotravibhaga and in the Upanishads, for the Absolute taught in the Ratnagotravibhaga is the manifestion of 'sunyata' which is of a quite different character from the substantial Absolute of the Upanishads, still he believes " there was an influence from the Upanishadic thought for the 'astivada' of the Ratna to establish its monistic doctrine See: http://zencomp.com/greatwisdom/ebud/ebdha191.htm UNQUOTE 4. The exponents of Tathagata-garbha are not universally in alignment with Nagarjuna's teachings (i.e. with Madhyamika). One may expect the viseversa. Read this quote of a Western Buddhist scholar Stephen Hodge: QUOTE In addition to the falling standards within the Sa & #7749;gha, there were perceived misinterpretations of the very Dharma itself from the perspective of the compilers of the [Tibetan version of the]Mahaparinirvana sutras. We have already noted their hostility to the reductionist positions associated with the Mahîúâsakas, Sarvâstivâdins and Theravâdins, but additionally, the teachings on the novel form of emptiness espoused by Nâgârjuna and his ilk are particularly singled out for criticism, since they were considered to be extremely pernicious and destructive both to the individuals who adopt them and to others – they are described as moths falling to their deaths in the lamp-flame – since they lead to the denial of the true nature of the Buddha and of the tathâgata-garbha. http://www.nirvanasutra.net/historicalbackground2.htm UNQUOTE I doubt the scholar would use this language unless there were strongly polar interpretations/understandings of Nagarjuna within Buddhism. However this may not be the best-quote. 5. There are some scholars who consider the Tathagatagarbha doctrines as merely " positive " language to denote the shunyata-of-all-phenomena. (See also: http://zencomp.com/greatwisdom/ebud/ebdha191.htm). Others are very clear that Tathagata has ontological reality. 6. A quote of the 14th Dalai Lama on Buddha-Nature (2005): `… when we look at [the] interdependence of mental and physical constituents from the perspective of Highest Yoga Tantra, there are two concepts of a person. One is the temporary person or self, that is as we exist at the moment, and this is labeled on the basis of our coarse or gross physical body and conditioned mind, and, at the same time, there is a subtle person or self which is designated in dependence on the subtle body and subtle mind. This subtle body and subtle mind are seen as a single entity that has two facets. The aspect which has the quality of awareness, which can reflect and has the power of cognition, is the subtle mind. Simultaneously, there is its energy, the force that activates the mind towards its object – this is the subtle body or subtle wind. These two inextricably conjoined qualities are regarded, in Highest Yoga Tantra, as the ultimate nature of a person and are identified as buddha nature, the essential or actual nature of mind.' Apparently, he is *not* identifying here Buddha-Nature as Brahman but perhaps something like prana, etc. I personally would not take this lightly; I had recently mentioned of other Buddhists who said that the Dalai Lama does not think our Advaitic understanding (or the Shengtong's even) is final. See Wiki for other ideas on this that seem to me much more clearly like our references to Brahman. However the sutras (like Lankavatara) will explicitly deny that what they say is same as Atman (possibly not knowing " Ayam Atma Brahma " ). thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 Those interested in this topic should do independent research. Some of these arguments can be one-sided and misleading. Vaibhavji in a recent post defines Tathata as ultimate nature of entities, then adds that it denotes the ground of the conditioned world. If you read my Dalai Lama quote below, I had pointed out how he does *not* refer to the " Buddha Nature " (ultimate nature, I believe same as tathata) of entities as " ground " , but rather as ~ ~prana, etc. The internet defines Tathata as " suchness " , then adds that the " ground " definition is followed in far-east countries like China etc (where the Tathagatagarbha group may have a stronger influence). So there is no need to think all Madhyamikas agree in such things. Vaibhavji says " The ultimate nature is never designated as Sunya " . P.T. Raju in the book-link (see 45726) says " If the world is identical with the Tathagata and with Nirvana, which is the same as Sunya [pure Void], then it follows that the *Tathagata is the same as Sunya* " . Vaibhavji says " Sunyata is used for the world to denote its relativity " . Raju says that is not enough. He continues " ...the truth of all determinations is indeterminateness... As existence is a determination according to the Buddhists, sunya is neither existence nor non-existence. ***This Sunya as indeterminateness is Tathataa, the same as the Tathaagata or the Dharmakaaya of the school. [WOW!!] *** As we have seen, Nagarjuna goes even further in his dialectic, and says that even the idea of the Sunya is not adequate to express the truth which is inexpressible. As the Tathagata is the truth, he should be called neither sunya nor asunya, nor both, nor neither. He is beyond every determination and name. " Some logic can make this Advaita. For instance, identify/combine Existence/Brahman with Sunya/Void (call it Maya), then say Brahman is neither sunya or asunya... Only thing is that the quote in itself does not indicate that the Tathagata is " ground " or Existence. He may as well be " Void-Reality of the world " rather than " Ground-Reality that appears as the world " . Both phrases may mislead the reader, but lets not naively demand that they are equivalent. It needs to be asserted on the basis of some Pramana. (What is our pramana/guide for that decision where the Buddhist schools disagree and logic cannot answer for sure?) I am sure there are many Buddhists who will choose the former as correct. In fact Raju soon says that *if* we are to think of the Tathagata as beyond sunyata, *then* we may identify sunyata with relativity, which is the definition of Vaibhavji. The author also says that he believes Nagarjuna to be following not this but the previous one (that suggests Tathagata is Void-Reality), but says he will leave the issue to the Chinese and Japanese (maybe the Tathagatagarbha group!!) This shows that there are multiple viewpoints within Buddhism. We should not get misled by the one-sided constructions of the Buddhist scholars here. Take with full reservations. The discussions should make us aware of common elements and differences, without undermining the significance of the details. If words are different (diametrically!), so are the meanings until we can convince ourselves otherwise. thollmelukaalkizhu advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > > 6. A quote of the 14th Dalai Lama on Buddha-Nature (2005): > > `… when we look at [the] interdependence of mental and physical constituents from the perspective of Highest Yoga Tantra, there are two concepts of a person. One is the temporary person or self, that is as we exist at the moment, and this is labeled on the basis of our coarse or gross physical body and conditioned mind, and, at the same time, there is a subtle person or self which is designated in dependence on the subtle body and subtle mind. This subtle body and subtle mind are seen as a single entity that has two facets. The aspect which has the quality of awareness, which can reflect and has the power of cognition, is the subtle mind. Simultaneously, there is its energy, the force that activates the mind towards its object – this is the subtle body or subtle wind. These two inextricably conjoined qualities are regarded, in Highest Yoga Tantra, as the ultimate nature of a person and are identified as buddha nature, the essential or actual nature of mind.' > > Apparently, he is *not* identifying here Buddha-Nature as Brahman but perhaps something like prana, etc. I personally would not take this lightly; I had recently mentioned of other Buddhists who said that the Dalai Lama does not think our Advaitic understanding (or the Shengtong's even) is final. See Wiki for other ideas on this that seem to me much more clearly like our references to Brahman. However the sutras (like Lankavatara) will explicitly deny that what they say is same as Atman (possibly not knowing " Ayam Atma Brahma " ). > > > > thollmelukaalkizhu > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 > In closing I would like to point out these words from the very > Lankavatara Sutra you quoted: > " All such notions > as....personal soul, Supreme Spirit, ...are all figments of > the imagination and manifestations of mind. No, Mahamati, the > Tathagatagarbha is not the same as the philosopher’s Atman. " > > Please note the specific reference is not to the > " conventional soul " which you would readily dismiss as > referring to the Ego or " i " , but to the Supreme Atman which > is Satyam Jnanam Anantam. Dear Shyamji, You left out some important parts in your quote from the Lankavatara Sutra above. I've included these as capitals below. It should read as follows: " All such notions as CAUSATION, SUCCESSION, ATOMS, PRIMARY ELEMENTS, THAT MAKE UP PERSONALITY, personal soul, Supreme Spirit, SOVEREIGN GOD, CREATOR, are all figments of the imagination and manifestations of mind. No, Mahatmi, the Tathagatagarbha is not the same as the philosopher's Atman. " All the above " notions " are seen as attempts by the mind, which believes itself to be an independent entity (or ego substance in the buddhist sense of the word 'atman') separate from others to conceptualise the ultimate truth and as a result this leads to the erroneous perception of the world to be made up independent entities whether these be causes, atoms, personal souls, a Supreme Spirit or a Creator. The ignorant mind has a tendency to attribute a separate ego substance (or independent entity status) to all of these. No matter how refined and noble some of these are they are regarded as conceptual designations, ie " manifestations of mind " . The above is what is refuted. What is affirmed is that realisation " is beyond the path and usage of philosophers; which is devoid of all predicates such as being and non-being, one-ness and otherness, bothness and non-bothness, existence and non-existence, eternity and non-eternity; which has nothing to do with individuality and generality, nor false imagination, nor any illusion arising from the mind itself; but which manifests itself as the Truth of Highest Reality. " (See earlier part of the text.) This is the nature of Tathagatagarbha. In his commentary, D.T.Suzuki says of such realization that it is like a precious gem concealed under a soiled garment. Take the garment (ignorance) off and the shining stone will begin to shed its natural light over things as they are. " The illumination thus obtained is a state of self-realisation .. . . The Lankavatara calls it Avikalpa, or Nirvikalpa-jnana, meaning knowledge of non-judgement or non-discrimination, a kind of direct perception, or again knowledge of thusness or suchness (tathaatajnana). " (Studies in Lankavatara Sutra, p106) Best wishes Peter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 (Studies in Lankavatara Sutra, p106) praNAms Sri Peter prabhuji Hare Krishna Very interesting quotes from the Lankavatara sUtra, had it not mentioned that it is very Lankavatara, I'd have thought this quote is from one of the advaita books!! BTW, I am just wondering what would be the significance of this name 'Lankavatara' in buddhistic terminology..Is these sUtra-s originally written in pali or Sanskrit language?? who is the author of these sUtra-s?? Can anyone help me out with more details please... Hari Hari Hari Bol!!! bhaskar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 Bhaskarji! I admire and salute your courage and straightforwardness! Best regards. MN __________ advaitin , Bhaskar YR <bhaskar.yr wrote: > > > (Studies in Lankavatara Sutra, p106) > > > praNAms Sri Peter prabhuji > > > Hare Krishna > > > Very interesting quotes from the Lankavatara sUtra, had it not mentioned > that it is very Lankavatara, I'd have thought this quote is from one of the > advaita books!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 advaitin , " Peter " <not_2 wrote: > In his commentary, D.T.Suzuki says of such realization that it is like a > precious gem concealed under a soiled garment. Take the garment (ignorance) > off and the shining stone will begin to shed its natural light over things > as they are. " The illumination thus obtained is a state of self-realisation > . . . The Lankavatara calls it Avikalpa, or Nirvikalpa-jnana, meaning > knowledge of non-judgement or non-discrimination, a kind of direct > perception, or again knowledge of thusness or suchness (tathaatajnana). " > (Studies in Lankavatara Sutra, p106) ________________ Dear Peterji, WOW! Wasn't what Anandaji said in his 45770, which I vainly tried to clarify later, something similar to this!? Best regards. Madathil Nair Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 Dear Bhaskarji, In Suzuki's " Studies in the Lankavatara Sutra " , he states Lankavatara literally means " entering into Lanka " . Lanka might be Sri Lanka, this is not quite certain. Suzuki says it is one of the nine principle Mahayana texts in Nepalese Buddhism. Apparently the Sanskrit text was translated into Chinese around 420 CE. I don't know if there was ever a pali text. Like many of these texts dating around that time authorship is debated as also whether it was originally one text of a number of different texts brought together at some point. As you know there is a similar debate about Gaudapada's Karika. Hope that helps. Best wishes, Peter > > advaitin > [advaitin ] On Behalf Of Bhaskar YR > 16 June 2009 11:54 > advaitin > RE: Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism > > > (Studies in Lankavatara Sutra, p106) > > > praNAms Sri Peter prabhuji > > > Hare Krishna > > > Very interesting quotes from the Lankavatara sUtra, had it > not mentioned that it is very Lankavatara, I'd have thought > this quote is from one of the advaita books!! BTW, I am > just wondering what would be the significance of this name > 'Lankavatara' in buddhistic terminology..Is these sUtra-s > originally written in pali or Sanskrit language?? who is the > author of these sUtra-s?? Can anyone help me out with more > details please... > > > Hari Hari Hari Bol!!! > > > bhaskar > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 praNAms Sri MN prabhuji Hare Krishna // quote // such realization that it is like a precious gem concealed under a soiled garment. Take the garment (ignorance) off and the shining stone will begin to shed its natural light over things as they are. " The illumination thus obtained is a state of self-realisation .. . . The Lankavatara calls it Avikalpa, or Nirvikalpa-jnana, meaning knowledge of non-judgement or non-discrimination, a kind of direct perception, or again knowledge of thusness or suchness // unquote// prabhuji, I dont think anyone dare to say above is not an advaitic realization...It is really surprising to see the striking similarities between these quotes & advaita doctrine...Interestingly, my parama guruji Sri SSS himself refuted mAdhyamika kArika of Nagarjuna contrasting advaita vedanta as presented in mAdUkya kArika of gaudapAda. Anyway, I ought to study it in depth, before passing any conclusion. Hari Hari Hari Bol!!! bhaskar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 Namaste: I am sending this post to inform those who may not be familiar with the previous discussions on this subject matter during the past years. This will help all of us to remind once again that it is impossible to intellectually grasp the relationship between Advaita and Buddhism. We have had lengthy discussions before and no clear relationship could ever be established. The following may be of interest to those who follow the discussios on Advaita and Buddhism: In post # 5315, Sri Nanda Chandran (a long-time member of this list who is currently in England and staying away from all academic discussions) made this observation: " The subject of the relationship between Advaita and Buddhism is a highly controversial topic and this is what this series of articles is about. This article is actually a product of a discussion in the Advaita list and I apologize to the members for not posting it earlier. " Link: advaitin/message/5315 The next four of a series of 5 articles on Understanding MAdhyamaka can be accessed by s: advaitin/message/5329 advaitin/message/5372 advaitin/message/5373 advaitin/message/5378 The next of the serious discussions started during March 2003 with serious discussions on Two topics – Consciousness is one and Lankavatara Sutra. The contributors include Sri Benjamin Root, Sri Nanda Chandran and others. The first of the series of discussions on the Meaning of Consciousness is one started with the posting: advaitin/message/16093 The first of the series of discussions on the Lankavatara Sutra started with the posting: advaitin/message/16233 The above topics and other related topics comparing advaita and Buddhism continue all through these years and will probably never end! But I do agree with the wisdom of thought expressed by our dear Nandaji – " The subject of the relationship between Advaita and Buddhism is a highly controversial topic. " The subject matter of our discussion is the " subject " and it is paradoxical and we poor sadhakas try so inadequately to discuss it (as correctly pointed out by our dear Anandaji). The purpose of all these discussions is to help us to assimilate what we have read and learnt. While discussing with others we should remind ourselves once again the unwritten ethical rule for Internet Discussions. The list guidelines have very clearly stated the importance of being civil and polite we are responsible to keep our discussions focusing on the subject matter and avoid pointing fingers at each other. The list has posted several times some golden rules for the discussants and they are repeated once for our attention: Swami Sivananda states the following quotation from the Manu Smriti: " One should speak what is true; one should speak what is pleasant; one should not speak what is true if it is not pleasant, nor what is pleasant if it is false. This is the ancient Dharma " . To be an austerity speech should combine all the attributes mentioned in the above verse. Here is the Sanskrit verse that summarizes the rule for communication and it is good for speaking, listening and writing. Sathyam Bruyath (speak the Truth) Priyam Bruyath (speak courteosuly what is pleasant) Na Bruyath Sathyamapriyam (never utter the truth that causes unpleasantness) I also find the following eternal law outlined by Thiruvalluvar a great Tamil Poet in Thirukkural (a collection of 1330 short poems on human morality and ethics) quite appropriate for our list communications. Valluvar describes the law through ten short verses and one of the key verse is the following: " Iniya ulavaka innatha kooral kani iruppa kai kavarthandatru " (Tamil verse # 100) Tranlation: Our communication with others by using unpleasant words nstead of pleasant words is comparable to eating an un-ripened fruit with a bitter taste when fully ripened sweet fruit is readily available. This verse provides a simple but a very practical rule for communicating with our fellow members during the list discussions. With my warm regards, Ram Chandran Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 Bhaskarji, yes. I am also seeing interpretations coming from many schools that resemble Advaita. Of course, there are always details where we can wage wars; but this cannot be done with logic alone since the details will then seem minor. Let me ask a question. How is Brahman known to be the Reality, in whatever sense that it Is? Is It by logic or " experience " (understand as realization, etc - don't get picky on this word) or Vedas? Logic cannot prove conclusively. Experience makes us *one with Knowledge*. But it is Veda that gives the exact parameters of that Knowledge - which are beyond " experience " or exact-expression and are the fundamental Truths of the THING_AS_IT_IS. Otherwise one jnani will express one way and another another way - but we will be left with no info about which way is correctly representing the Truth, although both are referring to the same - the problem being that they will choose the conceptual parameters for expression, all of which must fall away in the " experience " and cannot really be said to be the " Right " way. So we just say that both are valid ways - although unbeknown to us, one may be actually *right*. The Shunyata of the Buddhist-logicians (supposing they are not positively aiming for nihilism) is in my opinion actually the right conclusion to have via experience+logic. They cannot make any further ontological conclusions as to the nature of that Reality - even whether it IS or IS NOT. The far-east schools that do so are making a logical-mistake of concluding from their experience the fundamental ontological Reality in positive terms. (Unless they openly state that their sutras are their pramana as we say of Vedas - this seems highly non-Buddhistic.) When we do so, it is because we start with the pramana of the Veda - therefore we 'know' exactly WHAT-IS our Reality that our " experience " /Silence/Peace denotes - the logical conundrum of Nagarjuna is avoided only due to our pramana of Veda - and he will of course not accept our usage of Veda in that sense. Veda for us is apaureshya; it is our axiom base that tells us of the Truth with specific " correct " parameters - you may tell why we place such importance in words of the Vedas, etc. It is all in our methodology of gaining Knowledge - simply saying " Veda is a compilation of the discoveries of the Rishis " is actually not doing justice to its importance in our sampradaya. (If you understand this, you can also see why Nagarjuna need not have been unaware of the Upanishads. He was actually being true to the principle of not using Veda as pramana for Knowledge.) thollmelukaalkizhu > > prabhuji, I dont think anyone dare to say above is not an advaitic > realization...It is really surprising to see the striking similarities > between these quotes & advaita doctrine...Interestingly, my parama guruji > Sri SSS himself refuted mAdhyamika kArika of Nagarjuna contrasting advaita > vedanta as presented in mAdUkya kArika of gaudapAda. Anyway, I ought to > study it in depth, before passing any conclusion. > > > Hari Hari Hari Bol!!! > > > bhaskar > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > The Shunyata of the Buddhist-logicians (supposing they are not positively aiming for nihilism) is in my opinion actually the right conclusion to have via experience+logic. They cannot make any further ontological conclusions as to the nature of that Reality - even whether it IS or IS NOT. The far-east schools that do so are making a logical-mistake of concluding from their experience the fundamental ontological Reality in positive terms. (Unless they openly state that their sutras are their pramana as we say of Vedas - this seems highly non-Buddhistic.) > > When we do so, it is because we start with the pramana of the Veda - therefore we 'know' exactly WHAT-IS our Reality that our " experience " /Silence/Peace denotes - the logical conundrum of Nagarjuna is avoided only due to our pramana of Veda - and he will of Some of this is debatable, since I have not properly discerned the distinction of experience and logic. For example, that " I AM " is constant and undeniable experience. So Existence may be implied here by experience. So Nagarjuna may be seen as working strictly with logic and the " this " aspect (in " I am this " ) of experience. That he does not even affirm " I AM " in explicit terms should give a different plane for debate, on what he intended and what he considered valid Knowledge, etc. However the importance of Veda as Pramana is clear once any question of " What am I? " etc come into the picture. " What am I? " will require the Vedas to finalize in exact terms - and (we may argue) as per our sampradaya, that Knowledge is also essential for liberation in vyavahaara-sense. thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 2009/6/16 putranm <putranm << The far-east schools that do so are making a logical-mistake of concluding from their experience the fundamental ontological Reality in positive terms.>> IMO, it is not quite correct to portray brahman purely as a fundamental ontological reality. The whole discipline of ontology presumes a knower who is apart from the objects being studied and classified as existent or non-existent. brahman involves a " collapse " (for lack of a better word) of ontology and epistemology. Hence the statement that brahman is neither being nor non-being. In other words, ontology applies only to empirical or phenomenal reality (vyavahAra). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: >> > Some of this is debatable, since I have not properly discerned the distinction of experience and logic. For example, that " I AM " is constant and undeniable experience. So Existence may be implied here by experience. So Nagarjuna may be seen as working strictly with logic and the " this " aspect (in " I am this " ) of experience. That he does not even affirm " I AM " in explicit terms should give a different plane for debate, on what he intended and what he considered valid Knowledge, etc. > However it seems to me that the Buddhists are rather clear that the " I AM " experience is invalid; so its undeniability is not logically provable, according to them, and they won't use it as its own pramana. That we accept this experience as fundamentally representing Truth is because it is validated through (and conforms to) our Vedic knowledge (or we could (as opposed to Buddhists) take it as giving valid Knowledge of Reality/Existence in itself). Based on this, one can argue that Nagarjuna's Shunyata precludes even the conclusion of IS or IS-NOT, in its ultimate sense. The topic of Existence is not broached; it is not a question of merely not denying it. He is correct if logic is the only means for deciphering experience. Of course, this brings in the importance of our pramanas for Knowledge, etc, etc. (One can debate if in truth he believed in the Absolute or not, etc.; maybe giving some quotes to the effect. For now, this seems to me the right perspective on Nagarjuna's approach.) thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 advaitin , Ramesh Krishnamurthy <rkmurthy wrote: > > 2009/6/16 putranm <putranm > << The far-east schools that do so are making a logical-mistake of > concluding from their experience the fundamental ontological Reality > in positive terms.>> > > IMO, it is not quite correct to portray brahman purely as a > fundamental ontological reality. The whole discipline of ontology > presumes a knower who is apart from the objects being studied and > classified as existent or non-existent. brahman involves a " collapse " > (for lack of a better word) of ontology and epistemology. Hence the > statement that brahman is neither being nor non-being. > > In other words, ontology applies only to empirical or phenomenal > reality (vyavahAra). > Sorry, take it in the right sense, if there is any. I am using these words a bit carelessly and ignorantly (got their use from Sri Kotekalji!!) - probably, I am also not representing the far-east schools correctly then. However I have given some points in the past three posts that I think are important, in spite of this objection. thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2009 Report Share Posted June 16, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > Based on this, one can argue that Nagarjuna's Shunyata precludes even the conclusion of IS or IS-NOT, in its ultimate sense. The topic of Existence is not broached; it is not a question of merely not denying it. Better than saying " Existence is not broached " , we should recognize this strictly logical approach of Nagarjuna as fundamental to conclusions such as " Sunya as indeterminateness is the Tathata... " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2009 Report Share Posted June 17, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: >> > Logic cannot prove conclusively. Experience makes us *one with Knowledge*. But it is Veda that gives the exact parameters of that Knowledge - which are beyond " experience " or exact-expression and are the fundamental Truths of the THING_AS_IT_IS. Otherwise one jnani will express one way and another another way - but we will be left with no info about which way is correctly representing the Truth, although both are referring to the same - the problem being that they will choose the conceptual parameters for expression, all of which must fall away in the " experience " and cannot really be said to be the " Right " way. So we just say that both are valid ways - although unbeknown to us, one may be actually *right*. > To add here lest I simplified it, the Veda's role is not merely to enable a " right expression " of Brahman (such as 'Satyam, Jnanam, Anantam'); the idea is that only by aligning our minds to such specifications (such as 'Brahman IS' & " Aham Brahmasmi " ) and guidelines in the Veda will we attain to " right or complete Knowledge " - therefore, those give the right expression. See also post 45756 of Sadaji. All knowledge pertains to the same Existence or Brahman - even the nihilist's. Not all denotes complete or correct Knowledge of Brahman. Also for those trying to figure out Shunyata vs Brahman (Shunyata in the purely logical-sense), I find the movie-screen analogy somewhat helpful. Shunyata denotes the Movie taken wholly unto itself (wherein all is void of being and determinateness), whereas Brahman denotes the Screen that appears (due to ignorance, maya, etc) as the movie - we need Veda to claim such a " Ground " . thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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