Namaste! Welcome to Advaita.info

I offer my profound salutations to two Swamis who have been
instrumental in my understanding of Vedanta: Sri Swami
Dayananda Saraswati and Sri Swami Sadvi Chaitanya. Swamiji
Dayananda has deeply affected me and it is to Him that I
offer my efforts in compiling the information found in this
website. Swamiji Sadhviji has been able to open my eyes and
allow me to see things and understadnt hings that have eluded
me previously and it is to Her that I offer my continued
maintenence and updating of the information found in this
website. This site is dedicated to traditional Advaita-Vedanta
according to the Upanishads and sacred Vedic
texts.
The purpose of this site is to have a place on the web where
people can come to learn about the tradition of
Advaita-Vedanta. There are many places on the web that offer
neo-Advaita information. While that may be of benefit to some,
it has been my experience that Vedanta offers a rich teaching
history that, when studied with the asistance
of a proper teacher, clears the way for
discovery.
Please feel free to Quieten the Mind, Relax the Body, and
Contemplate the Wonders within.
What is Advaita
Vedanta?
The doctrine of advaita vedanta as expounded by
Sankara can be summed up in half a verse:
“Brahma Satyam Jagan Mithya Jivo Brahmaiva Na
Aparah" — Brahman (the Absolute) is alone real; this
world is unreal; and the Jiva or the individual soul is
non-different from Brahman. This is the quintessence of
his philosophy.
According to Sri Sankara, whatever is, is Brahman. Brahman
Itself is absolutely homogeneous. All difference and plurality
are illusory.
Tenets of Advaita
Vedanta
- Brahman (the Absolute) is alone real; this
world is unreal; and the Jiva or the individual soul
is non-different from Brahman.
- The Atman is self-evident (Svatah-siddha).
It is not established by extraneous proofs. It is not
possible to deny the Atman, because It is the very
essence of the one who denies It.
- Brahman is not an object, as It is Adrisya,
beyond the reach of senses, mind or intellect. It is
not another. It is all-full, infinite, changeless,
self-existent, self-delight, self-knowledge and
self-bliss. It is Svarupa, essence. It is the essence
of the knower. It is the Seer (Drashta), Transcendent
(Turiya) and Silent Witness (Sakshi). It is always
the Witnessing Subject. It can never become an object
as It is beyond the reach of the senses. Brahman is
non-dual, one without a second. It has no other
beside It.
- Sat-Chit-Ananda constitute the very essence
or Svarupa of Brahman, and not just Its
attributes.
- The world is not an illusion according to
Sankara. The world is relatively real (Vyavaharika
Satta), while Brahman is absolutely real
(Paramarthika Satta). The unchanging Brahman appears
as the changing world because of a superimposition of
non-Self (objects) on Self (subject - Brahman). This
is called Avidya.
- The Jiva or the individual soul is only
relatively real. Its individuality lasts only so long
as it is subject to unreal Upadhis or limiting
conditions due to Avidya. The Jiva identifies itself
with the body, mind and the senses, when it is
deluded by Avidya or ignorance. Just as the bubble
becomes one with the ocean when it bursts, so also
the Jiva or the empirical self becomes one with
Brahman when it gets knowledge of Brahman. When
knowledge dawns in it through annihilation of Avidya,
it is freed from its individuality and finitude and
realizes its essential Satchidananda nature. It
merges itself in the ocean of bliss. The river of
life joins the ocean of existence. This is the
Truth.
- Because samsara (or duality) exists due to
ignorance or Avidya, Knowledge (Jnana) alone can make
an individual realize his true nature. Karma Yoga,
Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga etc., are necessary only to
purify the individual and to help remove this Avidya.
All other paths culminate in Jnana.
- Brahma Jnana is not about acquiring any
external knowledge (as Brahman can't be an object of
knowledge), it just about removing the Avidya or
Maya.
(excerpts taken from the book "All about
Hinduism", written by Sri Swami Sivananda)
The Advaita Philosophy Of Sri
Sankara
Introduction
The first systematic exponent of the Advaita is Gaudapada, who
is the Parama-Guru (preceptor’s preceptor) of Sri Sankara.
Govinda was the disciple of Gaudapada. He became the preceptor
of Sankara. Gaudapada has given the central teaching of Advaita
Vedanta in his celebrated Mandukya Karikas. But it was Sankara
who brought forth the final beautiful form of Advaita
philosophy, and gave perfection and finishing touch to it.
Carefully go through Sri Sankara’s commentaries on the
principal Upanishads, the Brahma Sutras and the Bhagavad-Gita.
You will clearly understand his Advaita philosophy. The
commentary on the Vedanta Sutras by Sankara is known as
Sariraka Bhashya.
The teachings of Sankara can be summed up in half a verse:
“Brahma Satyam Jagan Mithya Jivo Brahmaiva Na
Aparah—Brahman (the Absolute) is alone real; this world is
unreal; and the Jiva or the individual soul is non-different
from Brahman.” This is the quintessence of his
philosophy.
The Advaita taught by Sri Sankara is a rigorous, absolute one.
According to Sri Sankara, whatever is, is Brahman. Brahman
Itself is absolutely homogeneous. All difference and plurality
are illusory.
Brahman—The One Without A
Second
The Atman is self-evident (Svatah-siddha). It is not
established by extraneous proofs. It is not possible to deny
the Atman, because It is the very essence of the one who denies
It. The Atman is the basis of all kinds of knowledge,
presuppositions and proofs. Self is within, Self is without;
Self is before, Self is behind; Self is on the right, Self is
on the left; Self is above and Self is below.
Brahman is not an object, as It is Adrisya, beyond the reach of
the eyes. Hence the Upanishads declare: “Neti Neti—not this,
not this....” This does not mean that Brahman is a negative
concept, or a metaphysical abstraction, or a nonentity, or a
void. It is not another. It is all-full, infinite, changeless,
self-existent, self-delight, self-knowledge and self-bliss. It
is Svarupa, essence. It is the essence of the knower. It is the
Seer (Drashta), Transcendent (Turiya) and Silent Witness
(Sakshi).
Sankara’s Supreme Brahman is impersonal, Nirguna (without Gunas
or attributes), Nirakara (formless), Nirvisesha (without
special characteristics), immutable, eternal and Akarta
(non-agent). It is above all needs and desires. It is always
the Witnessing Subject. It can never become an object as It is
beyond the reach of the senses. Brahman is non-dual, one
without a second. It has no other beside It. It is destitute of
difference, either external or internal. Brahman cannot be
described, because description implies distinction. Brahman
cannot be distinguished from any other than It. In Brahman,
there is not the distinction of substance and attribute.
Sat-Chit-Ananda constitute the very essence or Svarupa of
Brahman, and not just Its attributes.
The Nirguna Brahman of Sankara is impersonal. It becomes a
personal God or Saguna Brahman only through Its association
with Maya.
Saguna Brahman and Nirguna Brahman are not two different
Brahmans. Nirguna Brahman is not the contrast, antithesis or
opposite of Saguna Brahman. The same Nirguna Brahman appears as
Saguna Brahman for the pious worship of devotees. It is the
same Truth from two different points of view. Nirguna Brahman
is the higher Brahman, the Brahman from the transcendental
viewpoint (Paramarthika); Saguna Brahman is the lower Brahman,
the Brahman from the relative viewpoint
(Vyavaharika).
The World—A Relative
Reality
The world is not an illusion according to Sankara. The world is
relatively real (Vyavaharika Satta), while Brahman is
absolutely real (Paramarthika Satta). The world is the product
of Maya or Avidya. The unchanging Brahman appears as the
changing world through Maya. Maya is a mysterious indescribable
power of the Lord which hides the real and manifests itself as
the unreal: Maya is not real, because it vanishes when you
attain knowledge of the Eternal. It is not unreal also, because
it exists till knowledge dawns in you. The superimposition of
the world on Brahman is due to Avidya or ignorance.
Nature Of The Jiva And The Means To
Moksha
To Sankara, the Jiva or the individual soul is only relatively
real. Its individuality lasts only so long as it is subject to
unreal Upadhis or limiting conditions due to Avidya. The Jiva
identifies itself with the body, mind and the senses, when it
is deluded by Avidya or ignorance. It thinks, it acts and
enjoys, on account of Avidya. In reality it is not different
from Brahman or the Absolute. The Upanishads declare
emphatically: “Tat Tvam Asi—That Thou Art.” Just as the bubble
becomes one with the ocean when it bursts, just as the
pot-ether becomes one with the universal ether when the pot is
broken, so also the Jiva or the empirical self becomes one with
Brahman when it gets knowledge of Brahman. When knowledge dawns
in it through annihilation of Avidya, it is freed from its
individuality and finitude and realises its essential
Satchidananda nature. It merges itself in the ocean of bliss.
The river of life joins the ocean of existence. This is the
Truth.
The release from Samsara means, according to Sankara, the
absolute merging of the individual soul in Brahman due to
dismissal of the erroneous notion that the soul is distinct
from Brahman. According to Sankara, Karma and Bhakti are means
to Jnana which is Moksha.
Vivarta Vada Or The Theory Of
Superimposition
To Sankara the world is only relatively real (Vyavaharika
Satta). He advocated Vivarta-Vada or the theory of appearance
or superimposition (Adhyasa). Just as snake is superimposed on
the rope in twilight, this world and body are superimposed on
Brahman or the Supreme Self. If you get knowledge of the rope,
the illusion of snake in the rope will vanish. Even so, if you
get knowledge of Brahman or the Imperishable, the illusion of
body and world will disappear. In Vivarta-Vada, the cause
produces the effect without undergoing any change in itself.
Snake is only an appearance on the rope. The rope has not
transformed itself into a snake, like milk into curd. Brahman
is immutable and eternal. Therefore, It cannot change Itself
into the world. Brahman becomes the cause of the world through
Maya, which is Its inscrutable mysterious power or
Sakti.
When you come to know that it is only a rope, your fear
disappears. You do not run away from it. Even so, when you
realise the eternal immutable Brahman, you are not affected by
the phenomena or the names and forms of this world. When Avidya
or the veil of ignorance is destroyed through knowledge of the
Eternal, when Mithya Jnana or false knowledge is removed by
real knowledge of the Imperishable or the living Reality, you
shine in your true, pristine, divine splendour and
glory.
The Advaita—A Philosophy Without A
Parallel
The Advaita philosophy of Sri Sankaracharya is lofty, sublime
and unique. It is a system of bold philosophy and logical
subtlety. It is highly interesting, inspiring and elevating. No
other philosophy can stand before it in boldness, depth and
subtle thinking. Sankara’s philosophy is complete and
perfect.
Sri Sankara was a mighty, marvellous genius. He was a master of
logic. He was a profound thinker of the first rank. He was a
sage of the highest realisation. He was an Avatara of Lord
Siva. His philosophy has brought solace, peace and illumination
to countless persons in the East and the West. The Western
thinkers bow their heads at the lotus-feet of Sri Sankara. His
philosophy has soothed the sorrows and afflictions of the most
forlorn persons, and brought hope, joy, wisdom, perfection,
freedom and calmness to many. His system of philosophy commands
the admiration of the whole world.
(taken from http://www.dlshq.org web
site)
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