Re: Different States of jiva
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Mani Varadarajan • Mon Jun 07 1999 - 18:13:46 PDT
Sri B. Narasimhan, a new member of our group, has posed
a question concerning the Mandukya Upanishad and its
meaning according to Visishtadvaita.
It is indeed a pleasure to have this question before us.
This Upanishad is likely to boggle the mind, no matter
what one's philosophical persuasion is. It is extremely
cryptic, as it is shorter than any other Upanishad. The entire
text can easily fit on one page; yet volumes have been written
about it by scholars over the years.
I want to first make a few brief comments, and then followup
in a later post with something more substantial.
a) As Sri Narasimhan and Sri Anand have mentioned, the
Mandukya refers to the four states of consciousness
of the self, and their corresponding relation
to the highest reality, Brahman.
The four states are:
a) awake -- when we are normally conscious
b) dreaming -- when we are conscious of things
in our dream
c) deep sleep -- when we are apparently
conscious of nothing
d) fourth (turIya) -- exact meaning is debated by
various philosophers, but generally
refers to moksha or moksha-like state
These four states are discussed several times in the
Upanishads and other texts.
[ Note: As Anand mentioned, the Pancaratra texts associate
four forms of Narayana with four states. However, in
some Pancaratra texts, the fourth state is taken to
be 'mUrchcha' or swooning, leaving moksha as yet
a further state not included in this classification.
These classification that includes 'mUrchcha' is
different and should _not_ be confused with the
Mandukya classification. I think Anand may have
done so; Sri Uttamur Swami himself writes,
"AtmA tAvat catushpAt sphuTabahiranubhUH suptisushvApa-
moksha-sthAnaH..." (Vedanta Pushpanjali) and
translates in Tamil that moksha is the fourth state. ]
The exact relation between these four states and Brahman is
what is debated by the different philosophical schools.
b) Ramanuja's position
-------------------
Since the Mandukya is not discussed by Badarayana in the
Brahma-Sutras, Ramanuja has not left us any direct thoughts
on the text. However, the Mandukya very closely parallels
a section of the jyotir-brAhmaNa of the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad.
In fact, some have held that the key to understanding the
Mandukya is first understanding the jyotir-brAhmaNa. Ramanuja
has left some thoughts on this text and we can draw parallels
therefrom.
c) Post-Ramanuja commentators
--------------------------
Since Ramanuja did not author any direct commentaries
on the Upanishads, and the works of earlier Visishtadvaita
philosophers such as Tanka and Dramida were no longer
extant, it was left to later acharyas to explain the
Upanishads word for word.
Vedanta Desika would have been ideally suited for the task,
but for reason not quite clear, he chose to comment only
on the Isa Upanishad.
We do however have two Visishtadvaita commentaries on the
Mandukya by outstanding scholars. The first is by Kuranarayana
Muni, grandson (?) of the legendary Kurattalvan. The second
is by Ranga Ramanujacharya (16th century), who wrote commentaries
on all the principal Upanishads and is therefore known as
"Upanishad Bhashyakara" in our sampradAya. These two
commentaries differ here and there, but their overall trend is
the same.
I will elaborate further based on what little I know in a
future post.
adiyEn rAmAnuja dAsan
Mani
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