Re: Could Somebody Clarify This?
From the Bhakti List Archives
• September 26, 2001
K. Sadananda writes: > >>I may be missing something here - but if Iishwara is sarvajnana and Jeeva is > >>alpajnaana, there exists at least one factor that distinguishes these two - a > >>clear indication of duality. How then is it that advaita claims non-duality? > > With Shreeman Mani's approval I am posting this to the list just to > clarify the position of advaita as I understand. [...] reality is > different from that what appears as plurality - the concept of > 'maaya' is brought in to explain why plurality that appears is > mistaken as reality. [...] > Iswara is defined as the creator -from T. UP. - yatova imaani > bhuutani jaayante, yena jaatani jiivanti, yat prayam tyabhisam > vishhaanti - tat vij~naanasaswa -tat brahma iti. That which the whole > universe is originated, sustained and goes back into - this is what > is called 'tatasha lakshana' by which Iswara is recognized. - That > is the incidental qualification. The swaruupa lakshana of Brahman is > - satyam j~naanam anatam brahma. Dear Sri Sadananda, I read your explanation of this fundamental question with interest. I also do not want to engage in extensive Advaita vs. Visishtadvaita debates, since email is an inappropriate forum to discuss these intricacies. However, I would like to present a few reasons as to why on the face of it, the answers you provide are unconvincing. The question Sri Ramakrishna asks is very simple. When two dissimilar things -- the Supreme Soul and the individual soul, one infinite and blissful, the other finite and not currently blissful -- are accepted, how can the two be equated? Advaita's answer, as you have explained it, is that the creatorship and fundamental rootedness of the universe in the Supreme Self is an 'incidental' (taTastha) characteristic, despite being so elaborately spoken of in the Upanishads. You have also said that the 'mAyA' concept must be brought in to explain why plurality is "mistakenly" taken for reality. If you see all your explanations, they posit ideas which are taken from *outside* the core texts themselves and which seem opposed to logic. You must be familiar with the principle of Occam's razor -- when you have two competing theories that explain the same situation, the one that is simpler is better. We have several statements cited by you yourself in the Upanishads that the Supreme Principle is the cause of the origin, sustenance, and dissolution of the universe. The same Supreme Principle is described as infinite, conscious, and full of bliss in the same text. Why not agree that the two refer to *exactly* the same principle, without positing an external adjunct (mAyA)? It appears that the author the Brahma-Sutras would agree. As we are agreed, the Brahma-Sutras codify and clarify the philosophy of the Upanishads. The first sUtra declares that the discussion is about 'Brahman', the Supreme Principle. The second sUtra immediately declares that this Supreme Principle is defined as the *cause*, etc., of the universe. From this perspective, it's very straightforward. Creation is real, for we perceive it and its reality is not denied anywhere. Isvara is the same as the Supreme Principle, because the Upanishad and the Sutras equate the two, and do not assume any distinction, even notional. The jIva is finite and under the sway of karma, so therefore confuses the body with the self and is unaware of the truth that Isvara is the underlying ground of the universe, both materially and instrumentally. Is this not more easily understood? For example, your explanation of creation as involving ... 'thought' process - With total mind the creator is Iswara and with the individual mind it is jiiva - Gold can identity itself I am the one that pervades all the ornaments - I am one without a second, but a golden ring without inquiring properly may think I am only ring (naama, ruupa) undergoing all the six modifications associated by being a ring - birth, death and all the suffering in between ... seems needlessly complex and convoluted, and once again has little basis in the Upanishads. Visishtadvaita agrees that there is unity in the universe, and that the jIva is ignorant when it thinks that it is separate and independent. The Supreme Self and the individual self are one in that the Supreme Self forms the essential ground and inseparable substratum for the individual self. The individual self is totally pervaded and controlled by the Supreme Self. Any thought of the individual self *must* include the thought of the Supreme Self to be correct, because the individual self is an attribute, a mode, of the Supreme Self. This seems on the whole a simpler and more consistent explanation. Mani -------------------------------------------------------------- - SrImate rAmAnujAya namaH - To Post a message, send it to: bhakti-list@yahoogroups.com Archives: http://ramanuja.org/sv/bhakti/archives/ Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
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