Guest guest Posted January 18, 2010 Report Share Posted January 18, 2010 9. The Susbstance of Advaita philosophy thasya vaibhavaprathipaadhanaparaaNaam eshaam saamnaaDhikarNyaadheenaam vivaraNepravrtthaaH kechana Some trying to explain the passages which extol the glory of Brahman and profess the identity of Brahman and jiva say thus: Passages which extol the glory of Brahman referred to here are the bhedhasruti, denoting the difference between Brahman and the jeeva such as `dhvaa suparNaa sayujaa sakhaayaa,'(Mund.up.-3.1.1) describing the jeevathma and paramathma as two birds perching on the same tree, the abhedhasruthis like `thathvamasi,' (Chandhogya up.6) expressing unity of the two and the ghataka sruthis which reconcile the two such as `yasya aathaam sareeram,' etc. (Brhd.up.5.7), which establishes Brahman as the Self of all which make His sareera. nirviSeshajnaanamaathram eva brahma; thasya nithya mukthathva svaprakaaSa svabhaavam api thatthvamasyaadhi saamaanaDhikaraNya avagatha jeevaaikyam brhamaiva ajnam baDhyathe muchyathe cha; The Brahman is pure undifferentiated consciousness; The real nature of Brahman as eternal, ever free, self-luminous yet the identity of it with the individual self is understood from the sruti texts such as `thath thvam asi etc., Brahman itself through ignorance gets bound and. freed . In the first line of second sloka at the outset, param brahmaaiva ajnam bhramparigathamsamsarathi Ramanuja has given the view of Advaita briefly and here he expands the same. Pure undifferentiated consciousness means that there is no differentiation such as knower, known and the knowledge. Brahman is one only without a second and hence the differences such as above could not exist in Brahman as the knower is different from the known and the knowledge about what is known. Brahman is nithya muktha, ever free, svaprakaaSa, self luminous because there is no other light that illumines Brahman. But the text such as thath thvam asi speak of the identity of Brahman with the jeeva which is finite and in bondage. This has to be explained. It would mean that the Brahman ever free , of the nature of pure consciousness should experience ignorance in order to get bound as jeeva. To explain this the following statement is advanced. nirviSesha chinmaathra athireka eeSa eSithavyaadhi ananthavikalpasvaroopam krthsnam jagath miThyaa; Apart from the undifferentiated Brahman the whole universe consisting of infinite differences and the distinctness of Eesvara, the controller and those controlled by Him is delusion. The real nature of jeeva being ever free because of its identity with Brahman the concept of bondage which crates the idea of the differences between jeevas and between jeeva and the world are all said to be unreal, being delusion, maya. Hence the difference between the controller, eesa and the controlled , eeSithavya is also unreal. kaSchith badDhaH kaSchith mukthaH ithi iyam vyavasThaa na vidhyathe. ithaH poorvam kechana mukthaaH ithi ayam arThaH api miThyaa; There is no distinction as one who is bound and one who is free, exists in reality,. Even to say some are liberated earlier is not true. As such there is no such thing as some one is bound and some other is free etc. because all are free only in the real sense. The idea that ithaH poorvam kechanamukthaH , some one was free earlier is also false. This means that the individual self is always free and there is no meaning in saying that one was free earlier and got bound or one who is bound now will get freed later through acquiring knowledge etc.which is also a delusion. ekam eva Sareeram jeevavath nirjeevaani itharaaNi SareeraaNi;thasya Sareeram kim ithi na vyavasThitham; There is only one body which is ensouled and all the others are without soul. But it is not known which of the bodies is ensouled. This refers to the theory known as ekajivavada, in which it is believed that there is only one soul and the world is his imagination and when the real knowledge dawns the world exists no more. But it remains to be told that which is the real soul and which are imaginary. This theory is criticised strongly by Mahdva, in whose philosophy there are multitudes of souls and they are real. aachaaryo jnaana vyapadheshtaa miThyaa, pramaathaa miThyaa, Saasthram cha miThyaa, Saasthrajnayajnaanam cha miThyaa ethath sarvam miThyaabhoothenaiva saaSthreNa avagatham" ithi varnayanthi. The instruction by the preceptor is unreal, the one who knows is unreal, the sasthras are unreal, the knowledge obtained by the sastras is unreal, and all this are understood from the sastra itself which is unreal." Thus they speak. When the world itself is unreal, the concept of acharya, sishya and also the instruction by the acharya , all must be a delusion. So too are the sastras based on which the instruction is given. Thus the knowledge created by the study of sastras is also a delusion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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