Guest guest Posted March 9, 2000 Report Share Posted March 9, 2000 Thank you for Sadaji for this brilliant exposition to Patrick's question. The Advaita list is fortunate for your gifted presence and that of many others here. I will take the liberty to pass on this part of the conversations to those who might be interested on and NondualitySalon. For those who don't know on the other lists, Sadaji is one of the most profound exponents of nonduality as well as a sanskrit scholar and a brilliant scientist. His intellectual power would be quite overwhelming if it was not for his spiritual insight, loving heart, and a benevolent presence. We are grateful for such elevated company. Harsha K. Sadananda [sada] Thursday, March 09, 2000 11:54 AM advaitin Re: Re: the mind does too see the Self "K. Sadananda" <sada >Patrick Kenny <pkenny > >Greetings Sadananda, Greetings to you too Patrick - Here is my understanding for the issues you have raised. > >thanks for taking the trouble to address >the concerns that I have raised in such >detail. >Your account of the ego and the mind >makes perfect sense to me but of course >I would >be interested to know if you maitain >that the mind can see the Self, and if >not, by what >means can the Self be seen? The answer lies in correct understanding of the mind and the self. If you classify the mind as 'this' - and since I am different from this - then 'this' is inert and object; and I am the conscious entity and the subject. Obviously object can not become the subject and the subject cannot become an object. In principle mind can only see the objects as the thoughts and subject cannot be objectified as a thought. Hence in one way a direct answer to your question is no - the mind cannot see the self. Then who sees the self. Inquiry into seer-seen distinction itself is invalid for this case. Let me give you a simple example. Partick you are in very pitch dark room. and I call out from outside - Hai! Patrick are you there? - What would be your answer? - You cannot say that I cannot see a thing here and I donot know if I am here or not! - That is, your presence is known to you but not by means of perception - like the way all the objects are known. Nor you cannot say that - yes I hear you therefore I must be here somewhere in the room! - That is your existence as well as the knowledge of your existence are not established by logic. Now answer me - by what means you know that you exist and as well as you are conscious of your existence. - No means is required to know that I am - I standing for conscious entity and am standing for existent entity. Thus no pramaaNa or means of knowledge can establish nor is required to establish that I exist and I am conscious entity. I do not need scriptures to tell me that either - In fact all the scriptures and pramaaNa-s are valid as well as applicable only because I exist and I am conscious entity. Hence 'self' is called -self-effulgent entity - or swayam prakaashatvam - you donot need a light to see the light - It is called joytirjoytiH - light of all lights. If you go an Indian Temple they to Vedic aarati and chant - natatra suuryo bhaati na chadra taarakam nemaa vidhyuto bhaanti kotoyamagniH| tvameva bhaanti anubhaati sarvam tasyabhaasaa sarvamidam vibhaati|| While showing the light to the Lord, one reminds oneself the fact that - neither sun shines there nor the moon nor the electricity - none of them can illuminate you since you are not an object for illumination. Then what to talk of this silly lamp that I am showing. Everything is illumined after you and by your illumination only. It is like I can see the Sun as luminous body only because my consciousness illumines the sun too so that I can say 'this is the sun'. - Not only that - it illumines even the darkness too without destroying it since I can say - ' I see it is very dark here' - I see that I cannot see anything here since it is pitch dark. - Yet I know that I am there to see 'nothing'. To see myself I donot need any means - Hence who sees oneself - Here the seer-seen distinction is dissolved. I am the seer and I am the seen since I know myself I exist and I am consciousness - how - because I am self-consciousness. I am aware of myself. Normally only I know myself partially - that I am there (sat) and consciousness (chit). But I donot know that I am ananda too. Hence I go after things to gain happiness. This is where scripture comes to our rescue - it says you are anada - limitless is ananda - you are that - that which everyone is seeking - that is happiness or state of limitlessness. Tat tvam asi is the declaration of the Veda-s. Brahman means infiniteness and 'aham brahmaasmi' is the true knowledge. Actually the notions in the mind as "I am this' etc drops out and pure knowledge ' I am' raises in the mind only - but this 'I am' is without any attributes since attributes belong to objects and not to subject. Hence even if Lord comes and we ask who he is - he can only say "I am that I am" as was revealed to Moses. Mind that dissolves is the mind with notions - all the notions about myself drop out once I know myself. 'who really knows that self' - the one who is asking the question - He is the conscious entity since he is asking the question - but he has right now a notion that he is ignorant since he is identifies that he is only the body, mind and intellect different from the rest of the world. He realizes himself that He is not just the body, mind and intellect but everything else - the whole world raises from him, sustained by him and goes back in to him - I am the waker, I am the dreamer and I am the deep sleeper and yet I am these three states yet beyond the three states - a stateless state that pervades all the three states - that I am. But in the realization "I am" without limitations - one automatically realizes that I am everything too. Hence mind is not different from me. Hence one can say in a way that mind realizes - since mind is not different from the self in that understanding. Hence Krishna's statement from Ch. 6. that I quoted ' All being are in me and I am in all beings" - There is no more subject-object distinction in that knowledge - no more seer-seen distinction or knower-known distinctions. All distinctions are only apparent and not real. Analysis is self-consistent. I hope it is clear now in terms of seer-seen problem where there is only one without a second. > >As far as I know (but this is only >second-hand knowledge) *in the Gita* the >word maya >does not mean illusion; rather it >is best translated by a phrase such as >'divine creativity' with the >understanding that this creativity is >so overwhelmingly powerful that it >routinely causes the minds of contingent >beings to be deluded. Don't your >citations tend to support this >rendering? Depend how you interpret the word maaya - in the talk summery of which Prof. VK provided I touched base exactly on this creation aspect. Definition of maaya - ya maa saa maayaa - that which appears to be there but not there upon inquiry. Creation is only modification of what is already there - sat - This is what is implied in the description of the creation in Chadogya Upanishad - starting from 'sadeva soumya .... etc' - I wrote an article 'advaita Vedanta by Shankara Bhagavadpaada' some time back -last June-July time - it may be in the archives of the list serve. There these aspects are discussed exhaustively. Hari Om! Sadananda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2000 Report Share Posted March 9, 2000 > > K. Sadananda > [sada] > Thursday, March 09, 2000 11:54 > AM > advaitin > Re: Re: the mind > does too see the Self > > "K. Sadananda" > <sada > > >Patrick Kenny <pkenny > Obviously object can not become > the subject and the subject > cannot become an object. Why is that? An object.... Antoine > In principle mind can only see the objects > as the thoughts and subject > cannot be objectified as a thought. > Hence in one way a direct answer to > your question is no - the mind cannot see > the self. > Mind that dissolves is the mind with > notions - all the notions about myself > drop out once I know myself. > Depend how you interpret the word maaya - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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