'Akshara' etc. in the BhG
From the Bhakti List Archives
• April 3, 2002
I would like, if I may, to take a slightly different angle on this topic and discuss it not on the basis of Ramanuja's Gitabhashya, but on the text of the Bhagavadgita itself. Like the Svetasvatara Upanishad, the BhG upholds the doctrine of three ontological categories (tattvatraya). In 7.4-5, we find that Krishna has two 'natures' (prakriti), the higher comprising the living beings (jiva), the lower comprising the material elements. In the 13th chapter, matter is termed prakriti while the self is designated as purusha, and God is a 'higher purusha' and the 'supreme self' (paramatman). Finally, in 15.16-18 the doctrine is presented in its most explicit form, with all three categories designated as 'beings' (purusha) -- namely, kshara-purusha, akshara-purusha, and purushottama. Viewing the BhG as an internally consistent whole, it seems clear that: 1. (apara)-prakriti = kshara-purusha = matter or the material aspect of living beings; 2. para-prakriti = (akshara)-purusha = the living being in itself, i.e., the self; 3. paramatman = purushottama = God as the supreme being and self of all. In 15.16-18, the akshara or 'indestructible' being is defined as kutastha 'aloft' or 'immovable'. The same epithet appears in 12.3 along with akshara, anirdesya 'undefinable', avyakta 'unmanifest', sarvatraga 'omnipresent', acintya 'inconceivable', acala 'immovable', and dhruva 'permanent'. Compare this list to 2.24-25, which is undisputably a description of the self: nitya 'eternal', sarvagata 'omnipresent', sthanu 'permanent', acala 'immovable', sanatana 'ancient', avyakta 'unmanifest', acintya 'inconceivable', avikarya 'unchangeable'. >From these obvious similarities, it seems clear to me that BhG 2.24-25, 12.3, and 15.16 refer to one and the same entity, namely, the individual self. The answer to the question of what scripture refers to the individual self as 'akshara' is therefore: the BhG itself. It also definitely refers to this self as omnipresent, however one cares to interpret that statement. (Incidentally, BhG 4.35 also states that the jnanin will see 'all beings' or 'all creation' first within himself, and then in God.) Finally, if one takes the words 'jiva' and 'atman' as synonymous, as Ramanuja generally does, there is no mystery about 'upasana of the jiva', since meditation on the self is a common enough theme in the scriptures. Ramanuja himself explains (in his Vedantadipa?) that meditation on God as the self of the jiva, or on the jiva as the body of God, are both acceptable since they ultimately contain the same elements. Only if 'jiva' is construed as a less than real entity does this pose a problem. Ramanujadasa: Martin Gansten -------------------------------------------------------------- - SrImate rAmAnujAya namaH - To Post a message, send it to: bhakti-list@yahoogroups.com Group Home: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/bhakti-list 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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