Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 advaitin , " V. Krishnamurthy " <profvk> wrote: Namaste. This is a repost from advaita-L, for the benefit of the readers on this list ________ The eight limbs (aShTAN^ga) of yoga, traditionally counted, are yama, niyama, Asana, prANAyAma, pratyAhAra, dhAraNA, dhyAna and samAdhi. I will take up references to these limbs (aN^ga-s) in the bhagavad gItA bhAShya (BGBh) and other commentaries, in sequential order. In this post, we will see how and where SankarAchArya refers to the first two, yama-s and niyama-s. The yogasUtra lists tapas (penance), svAdhyAya (self-study) and ISvara-praNidhAna (meditation on the Lord) as the three limbs of kriyA-yoga (sUtra 2. 1). The same three, along with Sauca (purity) and santoSha (happiness/contentment), are listed as kinds of niyama-s (sUtra 2. 32). The yama-s are listed (sUtra 2. 30) as ahi.msA (non-violence), satya (truth), asteya (non-stealing), brahmacharya (chastity) and aparigraha (non-acquisition). We may also note that the taittirIya upaniShat (TU) gives great importance to tapas and svAdhyAya too (tapaS ca svAdhyAya-pravacane ca .... tapa iti taponiShThaH pauruSiShTiH ... taddhi tapas taddhi tapaH - TU SIxAvallI; tapo brahmeti sa tapo.atapyata - TU bhR^iguvallI). bhagavad gItA (BG) 4.28 (dravya-yaGYas tapo-yaGYA ...) refers to tapas and svAdhyAya. In the bhAShya, SankarAchArya leaves tapas to be understood and doesn't describe it in greater detail. However, he explains svAdhyAya as " yathAvidhi R^ig-Ady-abhyAsaH " i.e. study (and practice of chanting) of the Vedas. I refer to the Vedas in plural here, because of the term Adi in the compound R^ig-Adi, i.e. the R^igveda and so forth. BG 17. 14-16 lists the kinds of physical, verbal and mental tapas. I will take up these verses and the commentary thereon for the next post in this series. Vidyasankar Prof. V. Krishnamurthy New on my website, particularly for beginners in Hindu philosophy: Empire of the Mind: http://www.geocities.com/profvk/HNG/ManversusMind.html Free will and Divine will - a dialogue: http://www.geocities.com/profvk/HNG/FWDW.html --- End forwarded message --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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