Guest guest Posted January 12, 2010 Report Share Posted January 12, 2010 ubhe sathyam kshthriya aadhyapravrtthe moho mrthyuH sammatho yaH kaveenaam pramaadham vai mrthyum aham braveemi sadhaa apramaadham amrthathvam braveemi Both are considered as being true from the time of creation. The wise cite the delusion as the death. But I say that the slipping of memory is death. Ever being in remembrance is for immortality." What is meant here is not self contradicting as it seems to be. The death normally understood is the leaving of the body by the soul. That is not the connotation of the word mrthyu here. The view that death can be avoided by vedic rites is that of ignorant in the sense that karma always gives rise to result and that is not immortality. But the karma done with detachment and inner purification secures jnana that one is not the body results in the identification with the Self when there is no death. In this sense sanatkumara says that both the views that death exists and can be conquered by vedic karma and the view that there is no death are both correct. Next sanathkumara defines what is death. The wise say that the delusion of real nature of oneself born out of identification with the body is death, because it results in going through the cycle of birth and death. But Sanatkumara says that it is not the delusion but the cause of delusion which is forgetting one's real nature which is termed as pramadha. Though the word has got different connotations such as negligence, inattentiveness, inadvertence etc. the meaning of slipping in memory seems to be more apt in the context, as Sankara terms it as svaabhaavika svabhaavaath prachyuthiH. Hence to remain always in the true state of the Self is immortality. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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