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Advaita Vedanta

Advaita Vedanta (/ʌdˈvtə vɛˈdɑːntə/; Sanskrit: अद्वैत वेदान्त, IAST: Advaita Vedānta) is a Hindu sādhanā, a path of spiritual discipline and experience.[note 1] In a narrow sense it refers to the oldest extant scholarly tradition of the orthodox Hindu school Vedānta, writing in Sanskrit;[note 2] in a broader sense it refers to a popular, syncretic tradition, blending Vedānta with other traditions and producing works in vernacular.[4]

Adi Shankara, the most prominent exponent of Advaita Vedānta tradition.
Narayana Guru on Advaita Vedanta in his work Atmopadesa Śatakam

അതുമിതുമല്ല സദര്‍ത്ഥമല്ലഹം സ- ച്ചിതമൃതമെന്നു തെളിഞ്ഞു ധീരനായി സദസദിതി പ്രതിപത്തിയറ്റു സത്തോ- മിതിമൃദുവായ് മൃദുവായമര്‍ന്നിടേണം!

Neither that, nor this, nor the meaning of existence am I, but existence, consciousness, joy immortal; thus attaining clarity, emboldened, discarding attachment to being and non-being, one should gently, gently merge in SAT-AUM.

The term Advaita (literally "non-secondness", but usually rendered as "nondualism",[5][6] and often equated with monism[note 3]) refers to the idea that Brahman alone is ultimately real, while the transient phenomenal world is an illusory appearance (maya) of Brahman. In this view, jivatman, the experiencing self, is ultimately non-different ("na aparah") from Ātman-Brahman, the highest Self or Reality.[3][7][8][note 4] The jivatman or individual self is a mere reflection or limitation of singular Ātman in a multitude of apparent individual bodies.[9]

In the Advaita tradition, moksha (liberation from suffering and rebirth)[10][11] is attained through recognizing this illusoriness of the phenomenal world and disidentification from the body-mind complex and the notion of 'doership',[note 5] and acquiring vidyā (knowledge)[12] of one's true identity as Atman-Brahman,[13] self-luminous (svayam prakāśa)[note 6] awareness or Witness-consciousness.[14][note 7] Upanishadic statements such as tat tvam asi, "that['s how] you are," destroy the ignorance (avidyā) regarding one's true identity by revealing that (jiv)Ātman is non-different from immortal[note 8] Brahman.[note 4] While the prominent 8th century Vedic scholar and teacher (acharya)[15] Adi Shankara emphasized that, since Brahman is ever-present, Brahman-knowledge is immediate and requires no 'action' or 'doership', that is, striving (to attain) and effort,[16][17][18] the Advaita tradition also prescribes elaborate preparatory practice, including contemplation of the mahavakyas[17][19][20][21][note 9] and accepting yogic samadhi as a means to knowledge, posing a paradox which is also recognized in other spiritual disciplines and traditions.[17][22][note 10]

Advaita Vedānta adapted philosophical concepts from Buddhism, giving them a Vedantic basis and interpretation,[23] and was influenced by, and influenced, various traditions and texts of Indian philosophy.[24][25][26] While Adi Shankara is generally regarded as the most prominent exponent of the Advaita Vedānta tradition,[27] his early influence has been questioned,[28][29][note 9] as his prominence started to take shape only centuries later in the 14th century, with the ascent of Sringeri matha and its jagadguru Vidyaranya (Madhava, 14th cent.) in the Vijayanagara Empire.[note 11] While Shankara did not embrace Yoga,[38] the Advaita Vedānta tradition in medieval times explicitly incorporated elements from the yogic tradition and texts like the Yoga Vasistha and the Bhagavata Purana,[39] culminating in Swami Vivekananda's full embrace and propagation of Yogic samadhi as an Advaita means of knowledge and liberation.[40][41] In the 19th century, due to the influence of Vidyaranya's Sarvadarśanasaṅgraha,[42] the importance of Advaita Vedānta was overemphasized by Western scholarship,[43] and Advaita Vedānta came to be regarded as the paradigmatic example of Hindu spirituality, despite the numerical dominance of theistic Bhakti-oriented religiosity.[44][45][43][note 12] In modern times, Advaita views appear in various Neo-Vedānta movements.[47]

Etymology and nomenclature

Etymology

The word Advaita is a composite of two Sanskrit words:

  • Prefix "a-" (अ), meaning "non-"
  • "Dvaita" (द्वैत), which means 'duality' or 'dualism'.[48]

Advaita is often translated as "non-duality," but a more apt translation is "non-secondness."[3] Advaita has several meanings:

  • Nonduality of subject and object[49][50][web 1] As Gaudapada states, when a distinction is made between subject and object, people grasp to objects, which is samsara. By realizing one's true identity as Brahman, there is no more grasping, and the mind comes to rest.[50]
  • Nonduality of Atman and Brahman, the famous diction of Advaita Vedanta that Atman is not distinct from Brahman; the knowledge of this identity is liberating.
  • Monism: there is no other reality than Brahman, that "Reality is not constituted by parts," that is, ever-changing 'things' have no existence of their own, but are appearances of the one Existent, Brahman; and that there is in reality no duality between the "experiencing self" (jiva) and Brahman, the Ground of Being.[note 4]

The word Vedānta is a composition of two Sanskrit words: The word Veda refers to the whole corpus of vedic texts, and the word "anta" means 'end'. The meaning of Vedānta can be summed up as "the end of the vedas" or "the ultimate knowledge of the vedas". Vedānta is one of six orthodox schools of Hindu philosophy.

Advaita Vedanta

While "a preferred terminology" for Upanisadic philosophy "in the early periods, before the time of Shankara" was Puruṣavāda,[51][note 13] the Advaita Vedānta school has historically been referred to by various names, such as Advaita-vada (speaker of Advaita), Abheda-darshana (view of non-difference), Dvaita-vada-pratisedha (denial of dual distinctions), and Kevala-dvaita (non-dualism of the isolated).[52] It is also called māyāvāda by Vaishnava opponents, akin to Madhyamaka Buddhism, due to their insistence that phenomena ultimately lack an inherent essence or reality,[53][54][55][56]

According to Richard King, a professor of Buddhist and Asian studies, the term Advaita first occurs in a recognizably Vedantic context in the prose of Mandukya Upanishad.[52]

According to Frits Staal, a professor of philosophy specializing in Sanskrit and Vedic studies, the word Advaita itself is from the Vedic era, and the Vedic sage Yajnavalkya (8th or 7th-century BCE[57][58]) is credited to be the one who coined it.[59] Stephen Phillips, a professor of philosophy and Asian studies, translates the Advaita containing verse excerpt in Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, as "An ocean, a single seer without duality becomes he whose world is Brahman."[note 15]

Advaita tradition

While the term "Advaita Vedanta" in a strict sense may refer to the scholastic tradition of textual exegesis established by Shankara, "advaita" in a broader sense may refer to a broad current of advaitic thought, which incorporates advaitic elements with yogic thought and practice and other strands of Indian religiosity, such as Kashmir Shaivism and the Nath tradition.[61] The first connotation has also been called "Classical Advaita"[62][63] and "doctrinal Advaita,"[64] and its presentation as such is due to mediaeval doxographies,[41] the influence of Orientalist Indologists like Paul Deussen,[65] and the Indian response to colonial influences, dubbed neo-Vedanta by Paul Hacker, who regarded it as a deviation from "traditional" Advaita Vedanta.[62] Yet, post-Shankara Advaita Vedanta incorporated yogic elements, such as the Yoga Vasistha, and influenced other Indian traditions, and neo-Vedanta is based on this broader strand of Indian thought.[62] This broader current of thought and practice has also been called "greater Advaita Vedanta,"[66] "vernacular advaita,"[62] and "experiential Advaita."[64] It is this broader advaitic tradition which is commonly presented as "Advaita Vedanta," though the term "advaitic" may be more apt.[62][note 16]

Monism

The nondualism of Advaita Vedānta is often regarded as an idealist monism.[note 3] According to King, Advaita Vedānta developed "to its ultimate extreme" the monistic ideas already present in the Upanishads.[note 17] In contrast, states Milne, it is misleading to call Advaita Vedānta "monistic," since this confuses the "negation of difference" with "conflation into one."[67] Advaita is a negative term (a-dvaita), states Milne, which denotes the "negation of a difference," between subject and object, or between perceiver and perceived. [67]

According to Deutsch, Advaita Vedānta teaches monistic oneness, however without the multiplicity premise of alternate monism theories.[68] According to Jacqueline Suthren Hirst, Adi Shankara positively emphasizes "oneness" premise in his Brahma-sutra Bhasya 2.1.20, attributing it to all the Upanishads.[69]

Nicholson states Advaita Vedānta contains realistic strands of thought, both in its oldest origins and in Shankara's writings.[70]

Darśana (view) – central concerns

 
A drop merging in the Ocean, an analogy for the Jivatman merging into Brahman

Advaita is a subschool of Vedānta, the latter being one of the six classical Hindu darśanas, an integrated body of textual interpretations and religious practices which aim at the attainment of moksha, release or liberation from transmigratory existence.[71][72][note 18] Traditional Advaita Vedānta centers on the study and what it believes to be correct understanding of the sruti, revealed texts, especially the Principal Upanishads,[74][75] along with the Brahma Sutras and the Bhagavad Gitā, which are collectively called as Prasthantrayi.

A main question in all schools of Vedanta is the relation between the individual self (jiva) and Atman/Brahman.[76] Shankara and his followers regard Atman/Brahman to be the ultimate Real, and jivanatman "ultimately [to be] of the nature of Atman/Brahman."[77][8] This truth is established from a literal reading of selected parts[78] of the oldest Principal Upanishads and Brahma Sutras, and is also found in parts of the Bhagavad Gitā and numerous other Hindu texts,[3] and is regarded to be self-evident,[79][note 19] though great effort is made to show the correctness of this reading, and its compatibility with reason and experience, by criticizing other systems of thought.[79] Vidya, correct knowledge or understanding of the identity of jivan-ātman and Brahman, destroys or makes null avidya ('false knowledge'), and results in liberation.[81][note 20]

According to the contemporary Advaita tradition, this knowledge can be obtained by svādhyāya, study of the self and of the Vedic texts, which consists of four stages of samanyasa: virāga ('renunciation'), sravana ('listening to the teachings of the sages'), manana ('reflection on the teachings') and nididhyāsana, introspection and profound and repeated meditation on the mahavakyas, selected Upanishadic statements such as tat tvam asi ('that art thou' or 'you are That') which are taken literal, and form the srutic evidence for the identity of jivanatman and Atman-Brahman.[82][83][web 4] This meditation negates the misconceptions, false knowledge, and false ego-identity, rooted in maya, which obfuscate the ultimate truth of the oneness of Brahman, and one's true identity as Atman-Brahman.[78] This culminates in what Adi Shankara refers to as anubhava, immediate intuition, a direct awareness which is construction-free, and not construction-filled. It is not an awareness of Brahman, but instead an awareness that is Brahman.[84] Although the threefold practice is broadly accepted in the Advaita tradition, and affirmed by Mandana Misra,[85] it is at odds with Shankara,[86] who took a subitist position,[87] arguing that moksha is attained at once when the mahavakyas, articulating the identity of Atman and Brahman, are understood.[88][18][note 21]

While closely related to Samkhya,[89] the Advaita Vedānta tradition rejects the dualism of Samkhya purusha (primal consciousness) and prakriti (nature), instead stating that Brahman is the sole Reality,[77][90] "that from which the origination, subsistence, and dissolution of this universe proceed."[91] Samkhya argues that Purusha is the efficient cause of all existence while Prakriti is its material cause.[91] Advaita, like all Vedanta schools, states that Brahman is both the efficient and the material cause. What created all existence is also present in and reflected in all beings and inert matter, the creative principle was and is everywhere, always.[92] By accepting this postulation, various theoretical difficulties arise which Advaita and other Vedānta traditions offer different answers for.[93][77][90] First, how did Brahman, which is sat ('existence'), without any distinction, become manifold universe? Second, how did Brahman, which is cit ('consciousness'), create the material world? Third, if Brahman is ananda ('bliss'), why did the empirical world of sufferings arise? The Brahma Sutras do not answer these philosophical queries, and later Vedantins including Shankara had to resolve them.[93] To solve these questions, Shankara introduces the concept of "Unevolved Name-and-Form," or primal matter corresponding to Prakriti, from which the world evolves,[94] coming close to Samkhya dualism.[95] Shankara's notion of "Unevolved Name-and-Form" was not adopted by the later Advaita tradition; instead, the later tradition turned avidya into a metaphysical principle, namely mulavidya or "root ignorance," a metaphysical substance which is the "primal material cause of the universe (upadana)."[96] Prakasatmans (13th c.) defense of vivarta to explain the origin of the world, which declared phenomenal reality to be an illusion,[97] became the dominant explanation, with which the primacy of Atman/Brahman can be maintained.[77][90]

Reality and ignorance

 
The swan is an important motif in Advaita. The swan symbolises the ability to discern Satya (Real, Eternal) from Mithya (Unreal, Changing), just like the mythical swan Paramahamsa discerns milk from water.

Classical Advaita Vedānta states that all reality and everything in the experienced world has its root in Brahman, which is unchanging Consciousness.[3] To Advaitins, there is no duality between a Creator and the created universe.[3][98] All objects, all experiences, all matter, all consciousness, all awareness are somehow also this one fundamental reality Brahman.[3] Yet, the knowing self has various experiences of reality during the waking, dream and dreamless states,[99] and Advaita Vedānta acknowledges and admits that from the empirical perspective there are numerous distinctions.[100] Advaita explains this by postulating different levels of reality,[101][102][103][99] and by its theory of errors (anirvacaniya khyati).[104][3]

Three levels of Reality/truth

Shankara proposes three levels of reality, using sublation as the ontological criterion:[101][102][103]

  • Pāramārthika (paramartha, absolute), the Reality that is metaphysically true and ontologically accurate. It is the state of experiencing that "which is absolutely real and into which both other reality levels can be resolved". This reality is the highest; it can't be sublated (assimilated) by any other.[101][105]
  • Vyāvahārika (vyavahara), or samvriti-saya,[106] consisting of the empirical or pragmatical reality. It is ever changing over time, thus empirically true at a given time and context but not metaphysically true. It is "our world of experience, the phenomenal world that we handle every day when we are awake". It is the level in which both jiva (living creatures or individual Selfs) and Iswara are true; here, the material world is also true but this is incomplete reality and is sublatable.[105][107]
  • Prāthibhāsika (pratibhasika, apparent reality, unreality), "reality based on imagination alone". It is the level of experience in which the mind constructs its own reality. Well-known examples of pratibhasika is the imaginary reality such as the "roaring of a lion" fabricated in dreams during one's sleep, and the perception of a rope in the dark as being a snake.[105][108][109]

Absolute and relative reality are valid and true in their respective contexts, but only from their respective particular perspectives.[99][100][110] John Grimes explains this Advaita doctrine of absolute and relative truth with the example of light and darkness.[100] From the sun's perspective, it neither rises nor sets, there is no darkness, and "all is light". From the perspective of a person on earth, sun does rise and set, there is both light and darkness, not "all is light", there are relative shades of light and darkness. Both are valid realities and truths, given their perspectives. Yet, they are contradictory. What is true from one point of view, states Grimes, is not from another. To Advaita Vedānta, this does not mean there are two truths and two realities, but it only means that the same one Reality and one Truth is explained or experienced from two different perspectives.[100][111]

As they developed these theories, Advaita Vedānta scholars were influenced by some ideas from the Nyaya, Samkhya and Yoga schools of Hindu philosophy.[112][103] These theories have not enjoyed universal consensus among Advaitins, and various competing ontological interpretations have flowered within the Advaita tradition.[3][113][note 22]

Pāramārthika - Sat (True Reality)

Ātman

Ātman (IAST: ātman, Sanskrit: आत्मन्) is the "real self"[114][115][116][117][note 23] or "essence"[web 5][note 24] of the individual. It is caitanya, Pure Consciousness,[118] a consciousness, states Sthaneshwar Timalsina, that is "self-revealed, self-evident and self-aware (svaprakashata),"[117] and, states Payne, "in some way permanent, eternal, absolute or unchanging."[note 24] It is self-existent awareness, limitless and non-dual.[119] It is "a stable subjectivity, or a unity of consciousness through all the specific states of individuated phenomenality."[120] Ātman, states Eliot Deutsch, is the "pure, undifferentiated, supreme power of awareness", it is more than thought, it is a state of being, that which is conscious and transcends subject-object divisions and momentariness.[121] According to Ram-Prasad, "it" is not an object, but "the irreducible essence of being [as] subjectivity, rather than an objective self with the quality of consciousness."[122]

According to Shankara, it is self-evident and "a matter not requiring any proof" that Atman, the 'I', is 'as different as light is from darkness' from non-Atman, the 'you' or 'that', the material world whose characteristics are mistakingly superimposed on Atman, resulting in notions as "I am this" and "This is mine."[123] One's real self is not the constantly changing body, not the desires, not the emotions, not the ego, nor the dualistic mind,[124][125][126] but the introspective, inwardly self-conscious "on-looker" (saksi),[127] which is in reality completely disconnected from the non-Atman.[123]

The jivatman or individual self is a mere reflection of singular Atman in a multitude of apparent individual bodies.[9] It is "not an individual subject of consciousness,"[120] but the same in each person and identical to the universal eternal Brahman,[128] a term used interchangeable with Atman.[129]

Atman is often translated as soul,[note 25] though the two concepts differ significantly, since "soul" includes mental activities, whereas "Atman" solely refers to detached witness-consciousness.

Three states of consciousness and Turiya

Advaita posits three states of consciousness, namely waking (jagrat), dreaming (svapna), deep sleep (suṣupti), which are empirically experienced by human beings,[130][131] and correspond to the Three Bodies Doctrine:[132]

  1. The first state is the waking state, in which we are aware of our daily world.[133] This is the gross body.
  2. The second state is the dreaming mind. This is the subtle body.[133]
  3. The third state is the state of deep sleep. This is the causal body.[133]

Advaita also posits "the fourth," Turiya, which some describe as pure consciousness, the background that underlies and transcends these three common states of consciousness.[web 6][web 7] Turiya is the state of liberation, where states Advaita school, one experiences the infinite (ananta) and non-different (advaita/abheda), that is free from the dualistic experience, the state in which ajativada, non-origination, is apprehended.[134] According to Candradhara Sarma, Turiya state is where the foundational Self is realized, it is measureless, neither cause nor effect, all pervading, without suffering, blissful, changeless, self-luminous,[note 6] real, immanent in all things and transcendent.[135] Those who have experienced the Turiya stage of self-consciousness have reached the pure awareness of their own non-dual Self as one with everyone and everything, for them the knowledge, the knower, the known becomes one, they are the Jivanmukta.[136][137][138]

Advaita traces the foundation of this ontological theory in more ancient Sanskrit texts.[139] For example, chapters 8.7 through 8.12 of Chandogya Upanishad discuss the "four states of consciousness" as awake, dream-filled sleep, deep sleep, and beyond deep sleep.[139][140] One of the earliest mentions of Turiya, in the Hindu scriptures, occurs in verse 5.14.3 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad.[note 26] The idea is also discussed in other early Upanishads.[141]

Svayam prakāśa (self-luminosity)

In the Advaita tradition, consciousness is svayam prakāśa, "self-luminous,"[142][3][note 6] which means that "self is pure awareness by nature."[143] According to Dasgupta, it is "the most fundamental concept of the Vedanta."[144]

T. R. V. Murti, the Vedanta concept is explained as follows:

The point to be reached is a foundational consciousness that is unconditional, self-evident, and immediate (svayam-prakāśa). It is that to which everything is presented, but is itself no presentation, that which knows all, but is itself no object. The self should not be confused with the contents and states which it enjoys and manipulates. If we have to give an account of it, we can describe it only as what it is not, for any positive description of it would be possible only if it could be made an object of observation, which from the nature of the case it is not. We "know" it only as we withdraw ourselves from the body with which we happen to be identified, in this transition.[145][note 27]

According to Jonardon Ganeri, the concept was introduced by the Buddhist philosopher Dignāga (c.480–c.540 CE), and accepted by the Vedanta tradition;[143] according to Zhihua Yao, the concept has older roots in the Mahasanghika school.[146]

Brahman

According to Advaita Vedānta, Brahman is the true Self, consciousness, awareness, and the only Reality (Sat).[147][148][149][note 28] Brahman is Paramarthika Satyam, "Absolute Truth"[150] or absolute Real.[151] It is That which is unborn and unchanging,[148][152] and immortal.[note 8] Other than Brahman, everything else, including the universe, material objects and individuals, are ever-changing and therefore maya. Brahman is "not sublatable",[147] which means it cannot be superseded by a still higher reality:[153]

the true Self, pure consciousness [...] the only Reality (sat), since It is untinged by difference, the mark of ignorance, and since It is the one thing that is not sublatable".[147]

In Advaita, Brahman is the substrate and cause of all changes.[148][152] Brahman is considered to be the material cause[note 29] and the efficient cause[note 30] of all that exists.[154][155][156] The Brahma Sutras I.1.2 state that Brahman is:

...that from which the origination, subsistence, and dissolution of this universe proceed.[157] [note 31]

Advaita's Upanishadic roots state Brahman's qualities[note 32] to be Sat-cit-ānanda,[159][160][161] "true being-consciousness-bliss,"[161][162] or "Eternal Bliss Consciousness".[163][note 33] A distinction is made between nirguna Brahman, formless Brahman, and saguna Brahman, Brahman with form, that is, Ishvara, God. Nirguna Brahman is undescrible, and the Upanishadic neti neti ('not this, not that' or 'neither this, nor that') negates all conceptualizations of Brahman.[83][164]

Vyāvahārika (conventional reality) – Avidya and Māyā

Avidyā (ignorance)

Avidyā is a central tenet of Shankara's Advaita, and became the main target of Ramanuja's criticism of Shankara.[165][166] In Shankara's view, avidyā is adhyasa, "the superimposition of the qualities of one thing upon another."[167] As Shankara explains in the Adhyasa-bhasya, the introduction to the Brahmasutrabhasya:

Owing to an absence of discrimination, there continues a natural human behaviour in the form of 'I am this' or 'This is mine'; this is avidya. It is a superimposition of the attributes of one thing on another. The ascertainment of the nature of the real entity by separating the superimposed thing from it is vidya (knowledge, illumination).

Due to avidya, we're steeped in loka drsti, the empirical view.[168] From the beginning we only perceive the empirical world of multiplicity, taking it to be the only and true reality.[168][169] Due to avidyā there is ignorance, or nescience, of the real Self, Atman-Brahman, mistakingly identifying the Self with the body-mind complex.[web 8] With parmartha drsti ignorance is removed and vidya is acquired, and the Real, distinctionless Brahman is perceived as the True reality.[168]

The notion of avidyā and its relationship to Brahman creates a crucial philosophical issue within Advaita Vedānta thought: how can avidyā appear in Brahman, since Brahman is pure consciousness?[170] For Shankara, avidya is a perceptual or psychological error.[96] According to Satchidanandendra Saraswati, for Shankara "avidya is only a technical name to denote the natural tendency of the human mind that is engaged in the act of superimposition."[171] The later tradition diverged from Shankara by turning avidya into a metaphysical principle, namely mulavidya or "root ignorance," a metaphysical substance which is the "primal material cause of the universe (upadana)," thereby setting aside Shankara's 'Unevolved Name-and-Form' as the explanation for the existence of materiality.[96][172] According to Mayeda, "[i]n order to save monism, they characterized avidya as indefinable as real or unreal (sadasadbhyam anirvacanya), belonging neither to the category of being nor to that of non-being."[96] In the 20th century, this theory of mulavidya became a point of strong contention among Advaita Vedantins, with Satchidanandendra Saraswati arguing that Padmapada and Prakasatman had misconstrued Shanakara's stance.[173]

Shankara did not give a 'location' of avidya, giving precedence to the removal of ignorance.[174][note 34] Sengaku Mayeda writes, in his commentary and translation of Adi Shankara's Upadesasahasri:

Certainly the most crucial problem which Sankara left for his followers is that of avidyā. If the concept is logically analysed, it would lead the Vedanta philosophy toward dualism or nihilism and uproot its fundamental position.[175]

The later Advaita-tradition diverged from Shankara, trying to determinate a locus of avidya,[176] with the Bhamati-school locating avidya in the jiva c.q. prakriti, while the Vivarana-school locates it in Brahman.[177][176]

Māyā (appearance)

In Advaita Vedanta, the perceived empirical world, "including people and other existence," is Māyā, "appearance."[178][179] Jiva, conditioned by the human mind, is subjected to experiences of a subjective nature, and misunderstands and interprets the physical, changing world as the sole and final reality.[178] Due to avidya, we take the phenomenal world to be the final reality,[180] while in Reality only Sat ( True Reality, Brahman) is Real and unchanging.[181]

While Shankara took a realistic stance, and his explanations are "remote from any connotation of illusion," the 13th century scholar Prakasatman, founder of the influential Vivarana school, introduced the notion that the world is illusory.[97][77][90] According to Hacker, maya is not a prominent theme for Shankara, in contrast to the later Advaita tradition, and "the word maya has for [Shankara] hardly any terminological weight."[182]

Five koshas (sheaths)

Due to avidya, atman is covered by koshas (sheaths or bodies), which hide man's true nature. According to the Taittiriya Upanishad, the Atman is covered by five koshas, usually rendered "sheath".[183] They are often visualized like the layers of an onion.[184] From gross to fine the five sheaths are:

  1. Annamaya kosha, physical/food sheath
  2. Pranamaya kosha, life-force sheath
  3. Manomaya kosha, mental sheath
  4. Vijnanamaya kosha, discernment/wisdom sheath
  5. Anandamaya kosha, bliss sheath (Ananda)

Parinamavada and vivartavada - causality and change

Cause and effect are an important topic in all schools of Vedanta.[note 35] Two sorts of causes are recognised, namely Nimitta kāraṇa, the efficient cause, that which causes the existence of the universe, and Upādāna kāraṇa, the material cause, that from which the matery of this universe comes.[186] All schools of Vedānta agree that Brahman is both the material and the efficient cause, and all subscribe to the theory of Satkāryavāda,[web 10] which means that the effect is pre-existent in the cause.[187][note 36]

There are different views on the origination of the empirical world from Brahman. All commentators "agree that Brahman is the cause of the world," but disagree on how exactly Brahman is the cause of the world.[187] According to Nicholson, "Mediaeval Vedantins distinguisghed two basic positions." Parinamavada is the idea that the world is a real transformation (parinama) of Brahman.[187] Vivartavada is the idea that

the world is merely an unreal manifestation (vivarta) of Brahman. Vivartavada states that although Brahman appears to undergo a transformation, in fact no real change takes place. The myriad of beings are unreal manifestation, as the only real being is Brahman, that ultimate reality which is unborn, unchanging, and entirely without parts.[187]

20th verse of Brahmajnanavalimala, attributed to Shankara:

ब्रह्म सत्यं जगन्मिथ्या
जीवो ब्रह्मैव नापरः

Brahman is real, the world is an illusion
Brahman and Jiva are not different.

Brahmajnanavalimala 1.20[188]

The Brahma Sutras, the ancient Vedantins, most sub-schools of Vedānta,[187][web 10] as well as Samkhya argue for parinamavada.[web 10] The "most visible advocates of Vivartavada," states Nicholson, are the Advaitins, the followers of Shankara.[187] "Although the world can be described as conventionally real", adds Nicholson, "the Advaitins claim that all of Brahman's effects must ultimately be acknowledged as unreal before the individual self can be liberated".[web 10][note 37]

Yet, Adi Shankara himself most likely explained causality through parinamavada.[web 10][190][187][97] In Shankara's works "Brahman constitutes the basic essence (svabhava) of the universe (BS Bh 3.2.21) and as such the universe cannot be thought of as distinct from it (BS Bh 2.1.14)." In Shankara's view, then, "The world is real, but only in so far as its existence is seen as totally dependent upon Brahman."[190]

Shankara introduced the concept of "Unevolved Name-and-Form," or primal matter corresponding to Prakriti, from which the world evolves,[94] but this concept was not adopted by the later Advaita tradition.[97] Vivartavada became the dominant explanation, with which the primacy of Atman/Brahman can be maintained.[77][90] Scholars such as Hajime Nakamura and Paul Hacker already noted that Adi Shankara did not advocate Vivartavada, and his explanations are "remote from any connotation of illusion".[97][note 38]

It was the 13th century scholar Prakasatman, who founded the influential Vivarana school, who gave a definition to vivarta, introducing the notion that the world is illusory. It is Prakasatman's theory that is sometimes misunderstood as Adi Shankara's position.[97] Andrew Nicholson concurs with Hacker and other scholars, adding that the vivarta-vada isn't Shankara's theory, that Shankara's ideas appear closer to parinama-vada, and the vivarta explanation likely emerged gradually in Advaita subschool later.[web 10][note 39]

Moksha – liberating knowledge of Brahman

Knowledge is liberating

 
Ramana Maharshi, the Indian sage who was widely regarded as a Jivanmukta

The soteriological goal, in Advaita, is to gain self-knowledge as being in essence (Atman), awareness or witness-consciousness, and complete understanding of the identity of jivan-ātman and Brahman.[193] Correct knowledge of Atman and Brahman is the attainment of Brahman, immortality,[194] and leads to moksha (liberation) from suffering[note 40] and samsara, the cycle of rebirth[193] This is stated by Shankara as follows:

I am other than name, form and action.
My nature is ever free!
I am Self, the supreme unconditioned Brahman.
I am pure Awareness, always non-dual.

— Adi Shankara, Upadesasahasri 11.7, [193]

According to Advaita Vedānta, liberation can be achieved while living, and is called Jivanmukti.[195] [196][note 41] in contrast to Videhamukti (moksha from samsara after death) in theistic sub-schools of Vedānta.[197][better source needed] The Atman-knowledge, that is the knowledge of true Self and its relationship to Brahman is central to this liberation in Advaita thought.[note 42] Atman-knowledge, to Advaitins, is that state of full awareness, liberation and freedom which overcomes dualities at all levels, realizing the divine within oneself, the divine in others and all beings, the non-dual Oneness, that Brahman is in everything, and everything is Brahman.[119][128][note 43]

According to Anantanand Rambachan, in Advaita, this state of liberating self-knowledge includes and leads to the understanding that "the self is the self of all, the knower of self sees the self in all beings and all beings in the self."[198]

Attaining vidhya (knowledge)

Advaita Vedānta regards the liberated state of being Atman-Brahman as one's true identity and inherent to being human. According to Shankara and the Vivarana-school, no human action can 'produce' this liberated state, as it is what one already is.[17] As Swami Vivekananda stated:

The Vedas cannot show you Brahman, you are That already. They can only help to take away the veil that hides truth from our eyes. The cessation of ignorance can only come when I know that God and I are one; in other words, identify yourself with Atman, not with human limitations. The idea that we are bound is only an illusion [Maya]. Freedom is inseparable from the nature of the Atman. This is ever pure, ever perfect, ever unchangeable.

— Adi Shankara's commentary on Fourth Vyasa Sutra, Swami Vivekananda[199]

Yet, the Advaita-tradition also emphasizes human effort, the path of Jnana Yoga, a progression of study and training to realize one's true identity as Atman-Brahman and attain moksha.[17][19][20] According to critics of neo-Advaita, which also emphasizes direct insight, traditional Advaita Vedanta entails more than self-inquiry or bare insight into one's real nature, but also includes self-restraint, textual studies and ethical perfection. It is described in classical Advaita books like Shankara's Upadesasahasri[200] and the Vivekachudamani, which is also attributed to Shankara.

Sruti (scriptures), proper reasoning and meditation are the main sources of knowledge (vidya) for the Advaita Vedānta tradition.[201][202][21] It teaches that correct knowledge of Atman and Brahman is achievable by svādhyāya,[203] study of the self and of the Vedic texts, and three stages of practice: sravana (perception, hearing), manana (thinking) and nididhyasana (meditation),[21] a three-step methodology that is rooted in the teachings of chapter 4 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad.[204][205]

Preparation: the fourfold qualities

The Advaita student has to develop the fourfold qualities,[206] or behavioral qualifications (Samanyasa, Sampattis, sādhana-catustaya):[207][208][209][note 44] A student is Advaita Vedānta tradition is required to develop these four qualities -

  1. Nityānitya vastu viveka (नित्यानित्य वस्तु विवेकम्) – Viveka is the ability to correctly discriminate between the real and eternal (nitya) and the substance that is apparently real, illusory, changing and transitory (anitya).[207][82]
  2. Ihāmutrārtha phala bhoga virāga (इहाऽमुत्रार्थ फल भोगविरागम्) – The renunciation (virāga) of all desires of the mind (bhoga) for sense pleasures, in this world (iha) and other worlds. Willing to give up everything that is an obstacle to the pursuit of truth and self-knowledge.[82][210]
  3. Śamādi ṣatka sampatti (शमादि षट्क सम्पत्ति) – the sixfold virtues or qualities -
    1. Śama - mental tranquility, ability to focus the mind.[82][210]
    2. Dama - self-restraint,[note 45] the virtue of temperance.[82][210] restraining the senses.
    3. Uparati - dispassion, lack of desire for worldly pleasures, ability to be quiet and disassociated from everything;[82] discontinuation of all religious duties and ceremonies[210]
    4. Titikṣa - endurance, perseverance, putting up with pairs of opposites (like heat and cold, pleasure and pain), ability to be patient during demanding circumstances[82][210]
    5. Śraddhā - having faith in teacher and the Sruti scriptural texts[82]
    6. Samādhāna - contentedness, satisfaction of mind in all conditions, attention, intentness of mind[82][210]
  4. Mumukṣutva (मुमुक्षुत्वम्) – An intense longing for freedom, liberation and wisdom, driven to the quest of knowledge and understanding. Having moksha as the primary goal of life[82][206]

The threefold practice: sravana (hearing), manana (thinking) and nididhyasana (meditation)

The Advaita tradition teaches that correct knowledge, which destroys avidya, psychological and perceptual errors related to Atman and Brahman,[214] is obtained in jnanayoga through three stages of practice,[208] sravana (hearing), manana (thinking) and nididhyasana (meditation).[21] This three-step methodology is rooted in the teachings of chapter 4 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad:[204][205]

  • Sravana, which literally means hearing. The student listens and discusses the ideas, concepts, questions and answers.[21][204] of the sages on the Upanishads and Advaita Vedānta, studying the Vedantic texts, such as the Brahma Sutras, aided by discussions with the guru (teacher, counsellor).[207][215][21]
  • Manana refers to thinking on these discussions and contemplating over the various ideas based on svadhyaya and sravana.[204][215][216] It is the stage of reflection on the teachings;[204][215]
  • Nididhyāsana, the stage of meditation and introspection.[82][web 12] This stage of practice aims at realization and consequent conviction of the truths, non-duality and a state where there is a fusion of thought and action, knowing and being.[217][204]

Although the threefold practice is broadly accepted in the Advaita tradition, Shankara's works show an ambivalence toward it: while accepting its authenticity and merits, as it is based in the scriptures, he also takes a subitist position,[87] arguing that moksha is attained at once when the mahavakyas, articulating the identity of Atman and Brahman, are understood.[88][18][note 46] According to Rambachan, "it is not possible to reconcile Sankara's views with this seemingly well-ordered system."[86]

Mandana Misra, on the other hand, explicitly affirms the threefold practice as the means to acquire knowledge of Brahman, referring to meditation as dhyana.[218] He states that these practices, though conceptual, 'can eliminate both ignorance and coneptuality at the same time, leaving only the "pure, transparent nature" of self-awareness'.[219]

Bilimoria states that these three stages of Advaita practice can be viewed as sadhana practice that unifies Yoga and Karma ("action," referring here to ritual) ideas, and was most likely derived from these older traditions.[220][215]

Guru

Advaita Vedānta school has traditionally had a high reverence for Guru (teacher), and recommends that a competent Guru be sought in one's pursuit of spirituality, though this is not mandatory.[221] Reading of Vedic literature and reflection is the most essential practice.[221] Adi Shankara, states Comans, regularly employed compound words "such as Sastracaryopadesa (instruction by way of the scriptures and the teacher) and Vedāntacaryopadesa (instruction by way of the Upanishads and the teacher) to emphasize the importance of Guru".[221] According to Comans, this reflects the Advaita tradition which holds a competent teacher as important and essential to gaining correct knowledge, freeing oneself from false knowledge, and to self-realization.[222] Nevertheless, in the Bhamati-school the guru has a less essential role, as he can explain the teachings, but the student has to venture its further study.[223]

A guru is someone more than a teacher, traditionally a reverential figure to the student, with the guru serving as a "counselor, who helps mold values, shares experiential knowledge as much as literal knowledge, an exemplar in life, an inspirational source and who helps in the spiritual evolution of a student.[224] The guru, states Joel Mlecko, is more than someone who teaches specific type of knowledge, and includes in its scope someone who is also a "counselor, a sort of parent of mind and soul, who helps mold values and experiential knowledge as much as specific knowledge, an exemplar in life, an inspirational source and who reveals the meaning of life."[224]

Pramana (means of knowledge)

In classical Indian thought, pramana (means of knowledge) concerns questions like how correct knowledge can be acquired; how one knows, how one doesn't; and to what extent knowledge pertinent about someone or something can be acquired.[225][226] In contrast to other schools of Indian philosophy, early Vedanta paid little attention to pramana.[227] The Brahmasutras are not concerned with pramana, and pratyaksa (sense-perception) and anumana (inference) refer there to sruti and smriti respectively.[227] Shankara recognized the means of knowledge,[228][note 47] but his thematic focus was upon metaphysics and soteriology, and he took for granted the pramanas.[233] For Shankara, sabda is the only means of knowledge for attaining Brahman-jnana.[234] According to Sengaku Mayeda, "in no place in his works [...] does he give any systematic account of them,"[233] taking Atman-Brahman to be self-evident (svapramanaka) and self-established (svatahsiddha), and "an investigation of the means of knowledge is of no use for the attainment of final release."[233]

Nevertheless, the Advaita tradition accepts altogether six kinds of pramāṇas.[235][236][237][234] While Adi Shankara emphasized Śabda (शब्द), relying on word, testimony of past or present reliable experts with regard to religious insights,[226][238][235][239] and also accepted pratyakṣa (प्रत्यक्षाय), perception; and anumāṇa (अनुमान), inference — Classical Advaita Vedānta, just like the Bhatta Purvamimamsaka school, also accepts upamāṇa (उपमान), comparison, analogy; arthāpatti (अर्थापत्ति), postulation, derivation from circumstances;[226][240] and anupalabdhi (अनुपलब्धि), non-perception, negative/cognitive proof.[238][235]

Samadhi

The Advaita tradition emphasizes that, since Brahman is ever-present, Brahman-knowledge is immediate and requires no 'action', that is, striving and effort, as articulated by Shankara;[16] yet, it also prescribes elaborate preparatory practice, including yogic samadhi, posing a paradox which is also recognized in other spiritual disciplines and traditions.[241][22][note 10]

Shankara regarded the srutis as the means of knowledge of Brahman, and he was ambivalent about yogic practices and meditation, which at best may prepare one for Brahma-jnana.[web 13] According to Rambachan, criticising Vivekananda, Shankara states that the knowledge of Brahman can only be obtained from inquiry of the Shruti, and not by Yoga or samadhi, which at best can only silence the mind.[242] The Bhamati school and the Vivarana school differed on the role of contemplation, but they both "deny the possibility of perceiving supersensuous knowledge through popular yoga techniques."[243] Later Advaita texts like the Dṛg-Dṛśya-Viveka (14th century) and Vedāntasara (of Sadananda) (15th century) added samādhi as a means to liberation, a theme that was also emphasized by Swami Vivekananda.[39] The Vivekachudamani, traditionally attributed to Shankara but post-dating him,[244] "conceives of nirvikalpa samadhi as the premier method of Self-realization over and above the well-known vedantic discipline of listening, reflection and deep contemplation."[61] Koller states that yogic concentration is an aid to gaining knowledge in Advaita.[79]

Anubhava ('experience')

The role of anubhava, anubhuti ("experience," "intuition"[245]) as "experience" in gaining Brahman-jnana is contested. While neo-Vedanta claims a central position for anubhava as "experience," Shankara himself regarded reliance on textual authority as sufficient for gaining Brahman-jnana,[246][note 48] "the intuition of Brahman,"[245] and used anubhava interchangeably with pratipatta, "understanding".[247] Arvind Sharma argues that Shankara's own "direct experience of the ultimate truth" guided him in selecting "those passages of the scriptures that resonate with this experience and will select them as the key with which to open previously closed, even forbidden, doors."[248][note 49]

The Vivekachudamani "explicit[ly] declar[es] that experience (anubhuti) is a pramana, or means of knowing (VCM 59),"[61] and neo-Vedanta also accepts anubhava ("personal experience") as a means of knowledge.[249] Dalal and others state that anubhava does not center around some sort of "mystical experience," but around the correct knowledge of Brahman.[202][250] Nikhalananda conquers, stating that (knowledge of) Atman and Brahman can only be reached by buddhi, "reason,"[251] stating that mysticism is a kind of intuitive knowledge, while buddhi is the highest means of attaining knowledge.[252]

Adhyaropa Apavada - imposition and negation

Since Gaudapada,[253] who adopted the Buddhist four-cornered negation which negates any positive predicates of 'the Absolute',[254][255][note 50] a central method in Advaita Vedanta to express the inexpressable is the method called Adhyaropa Apavada.[253] In this method, which was highly estimated by Satchidanandendra Saraswati, a property is imposed (adhyaropa) on Atman to convince one of its existence, whereafter the imposition is removed (apavada) to reveal the true nature of Atman as nondual and undefinable.[257] In this method, "That which cannot be expressed is expressed through false attribution and subsequent denial."[258] As Shankara writes, "First let me bring them on the right path, and then I will gradually be able to bring them round to the final truth afterwards."[258] For example, Atman, the real "I," is described as witness, giving "it" an attribute to separate it from non-self. Since this implies a duality between observer and observed, next the notion of "witness" is dropped, by showing that the Self cannot be seen and is beyond qualifications, and only that what is remains, without using any words:[web 14]

After one separates oneself i.e. 'I' or Atman from the sense objects, the qualities superimposed on Self are also negated by saying that which not being and not non-being, cannot be described by words, without beginning and end (BG 13.32) or as in Satyam Jnanam Anantam Brahman, beyond words, beyond mind and speech, etc. Here there is an attempt to negate the earlier attribute like being witness, bliss, most subtlest, etc. After this negation of false superimposition, Self Alone shines. One enters into the state of Nirvikalp Samadhi, where there is no second, no one to experience and hence this state cannot be described in words.[web 14]

The Mahavyakas - the identity of Ātman and Brahman

Moksha, liberation from suffering and rebirth and attaining immortality, is attained by disidentification from the body-mind complex and gaining self-knowledge as being in essence Atman, and attaining knowledge of the identity of Atman and Brahman.[193][194] According to Shankara, the individual Ātman and Brahman seem different at the empirical level of reality, but this difference is only an illusion, and at the highest level of reality they are really identical.[259] The real self is Sat, "the Existent," that is, Atman-Brahman.[260][261][note 4] Whereas the difference between Atman and non-Atman is deemed self-evident, knowledge of the identity of Atman and Brahman is revealed by the shruti, especially the Upanishadic statement tat tvam asi.

Mahavakyas

According to Shankara, a large number of Upanishadic statements reveal the identity of Atman and Brahman. In the Advaita Vedanta tradition, four of those statements, the Mahavakyas, which are taken literal, in contrast to other statements, have a special importance in revealing this identity.[78][262] They are:

That you are

The longest chapter of Shankara's Upadesasahasri, chapter 18, "That Art Thou," is devoted to considerations on the insight "I am ever-free, the existent" (sat), and the identity expressed in Chandogya Upanishad 6.8.7 in the mahavakya (great sentence) "tat tvam asi", "that thou art."[275][276] In this statement, according to Shankara, tat refers to 'Sat,[276] "the Existent"[266][267][277][278] Existence, Being,[web 16] or Brahman,[279] the Real, the "Root of the world,"[276][note 53] the true essence or root or origin of everything that exists.[267][277][web 16] "Tvam" refers to one's real I, pratyagatman or inner Self,[280] the "direct Witness within everything,"[14] "free from caste, family, and purifying ceremonies,"[281] the essence, Atman, which the individual at the core is.[282][283] As Shankara states in the Upadesasahasri:

Up.I.174: "Through such sentences as "Thou art That" one knows one's own Atman, the Witness of all the internal organs." Up.I.18.190: "Through such sentences as "[Thou art] the Existent" [...] right knowledge concerning the inner Atman will become clearer." Up.I.18.193-194: "In the sentence "Thou art That" [...] [t]he word "That" means inner Atman."[284]

The statement "tat tvam asi" sheds the false notion that Atman is different from Brahman.[285] According toNakamura, the non-duality of atman and Brahman "is a famous characteristic of Sankara's thought, but it was already taught by Sundarapandya"[286] (c.600 CE or earlier).[287] Shankara cites Sundarapandya in his comments to Brahma Sutra verse I.1.4:

When the metaphorical or false atman is non-existent, [the ideas of my] child, [my] body are sublated. Therefore, when it is realized that 'I am the existent Brahman, atman', how can anyduty exist?[288]

From this, and a large number of other accordances, Nakamura concludes that Shankar was not an original thinker, but "a synthesizer of existing Advaita and the rejuvenator, as well as a defender, of ancient learning."[289]

Direct perception versus contemplation of the Mahavakyas

In the Upadesasahasri Shankara, Shankara is ambivalent on the need for meditation on the Upanishadic mahavakya. He states that "right knowledge arises at the moment of hearing,"[18] and rejects prasamcaksa or prasamkhyana meditation, that is, meditation on the meaning of the sentences, and in Up.II.3 recommends parisamkhyana,[290] separating Atman from everything that is not Atman, that is, the sense-objects and sense-organs, and the pleasant and unpleasant things and merit and demerit connected with them.[291] Yet, Shankara then concludes with declaring that only Atman exists, stating that "all the sentences of the Upanishads concerning non-duality of Atman should be fully contemplated, should be contemplated."[292] As Mayeda states, "how they [prasamcaksa or prasamkhyana versus parisamkhyana] differ from each other in not known."[293]

Prasamkhyana was advocated by Mandana Misra,[294] the older contemporary of Shankara who was the most influential Advaitin until the 10th century.[29][31][note 54] "According to Mandana, the mahavakyas are incapable, by themselves, of bringing about brahmajnana. The Vedanta-vakyas convey an indirect knowledge which is made direct only by deep meditation (prasamkhyana). The latter is a continuous contemplation of the purport of the mahavakyas.[295] Vācaspati Miśra, a student of Mandana Misra, agreed with Mandana Misra, and their stance is defended by the Bhamati-school, founded by Vācaspati Miśra.[296] In contrast, the Vivarana school founded by Prakasatman (c. 1200–1300)[297] follows Shankara closely, arguing that the mahavakyas are the direct cause of gaining knowledge.[298]

Shankara's insistence on direct knowledge as liberating also differs from the asparsa yoga described in Gaudapada's Mandukyakarika III.39-46.[299] In this practice of 'non-contact' (a-sparśa), the mind is controlled and brought to rest, and does not create "things" (appearances) after which it grasps; it becomes non-dual, free from the subject-[grasping]-object dualism.[300][50] Knowing that only Atman-Brahman is real, the creations of the mind are seen as false appearances (MK III.31-33). When the mind is brought to rest, it becomes or is Brahman (MK III.46).[299]

Renouncement of ritualism

In the Upadesasahasri Shankara discourages ritual worship such as oblations to Deva (God), because that assumes the Self within is different from Brahman.[note 55][note 56] The "doctrine of difference" is wrong, asserts Shankara, because, "he who knows the Brahman is one and he is another, does not know Brahman".[305][306] The false notion that Atman is different from Brahman[285] is connected with the novice's conviction that (Upadesasaharsi II.1.25)

...I am one [and] He is another; I am ignorant, experience pleasure and pain, am bound and a transmigrator [whereas] he is essentially different from me, the god not subject to transmigration. By worshipping Him with oblation, offerings, homage and the like through the [performance of] the actions prescribed for [my] class and stage of life, I wish to get out of the ocean of transmigratory existence. How am I he?[307]

Recognizing oneself as "the Existent-Brahman," which is mediated by scriptural teachings, is contrasted with the notion of "I act," which is mediated by relying on sense-perception and the like.[308] According to Shankara, the statement "Thou art That" "remove[s] the delusion of a hearer,"[309] "so through sentences as "Thou art That" one knows one's own Atman, the witness of all internal organs,"[310] and not from any actions.[311][note 57] With this realization, the performance of rituals is prohibited, "since [the use of] rituals and their requisites is contradictory to the realization of the identity [of Atman] with the highest Atman."[313]

Ethics

Some claim, states Deutsch, "that Advaita turns its back on all theoretical and practical considerations of morality and, if not unethical, is at least 'a-ethical' in character".[314] However, Deutsch adds, ethics does have a firm place in this philosophy. Its ideology is permeated with ethics and value questions enter into every metaphysical and epistemological analysis, and it considers "an independent, separate treatment of ethics are unnecessary".[314][315] According to Advaita Vedānta, states Deutsch, there cannot be "any absolute moral laws, principles or duties", instead in its axiological view Atman is "beyond good and evil", and all values result from self-knowledge of the reality of "distinctionless Oneness" of one's real self, every other being and all manifestations of Brahman.[316] Advaitin ethics includes lack of craving, lack of dual distinctions between one's own Self and another being's, good and just Karma.[317]

The values and ethics in Advaita Vedānta emanate from what it views as inherent in the state of liberating self-knowledge. This state, according to Rambachan, includes and leads to the understanding that "the self is the self of all, the knower of self sees the self in all beings and all beings in the self."[198] Such knowledge and understanding of the indivisibility of one's and other's Atman, Advaitins believe leads to "a deeper identity and affinity with all". It does not alienate or separate an Advaitin from his or her community, rather awakens "the truth of life's unity and interrelatedness".[198] These ideas are exemplified in the Isha Upanishad – a sruti for Advaita, as follows:

One who sees all beings in the self alone, and the self of all beings,
feels no hatred by virtue of that understanding.
For the seer of oneness, who knows all beings to be the self,
where is delusion and sorrow?

— Isha Upanishad 6–7, Translated by A Rambachan[318]

Adi Shankara, in verse 1.25 to 1.26 of his Upadeśasāhasrī, asserts that the Self-knowledge is understood and realized when one's mind is purified by the observation of Yamas (ethical precepts) such as Ahimsa (non-violence, abstinence from injuring others in body, mind and thoughts), Satya (truth, abstinence from falsehood), Asteya (abstinence from theft), Aparigraha (abstinence from possessiveness and craving) and a simple life of meditation and reflection.[319] Rituals and rites can help focus and prepare the mind for the journey to Self-knowledge,[320] but can be abandoned when moving on to "hearing, reflection, and meditation on the Upanishads."[321]

Elsewhere, in verses 1.26–1.28, the Advaita text Upadesasahasri states the ethical premise of equality of all beings. Any Bheda (discrimination), states Shankara, based on class or caste or parentage is a mark of inner error and lack of liberating knowledge.[322] This text states that the fully liberated person understands and practices the ethics of non-difference.[322]

One, who is eager to realize this highest truth spoken of in the Sruti, should rise above the fivefold form of desire: for a son, for wealth, for this world and the next, and are the outcome of a false reference to the Self of Varna (castes, colors, classes) and orders of life. These references are contradictory to right knowledge, and reasons are given by the Srutis regarding the prohibition of the acceptance of difference. For when the knowledge that the one non-dual Atman (Self) is beyond phenomenal existence is generated by the scriptures and reasoning, there cannot exist a knowledge side by side that is contradictory or contrary to it.

— Adi Shankara, Upadesha Sahasri 1.44, [323][note 58]

Texts

The Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gitā and Brahma Sutras are the central texts of the Advaita Vedānta tradition, providing doctrines about the identity of Atman and Brahman and their changeless nature.[324][325]

Adi Shankara gave a nondualist interpretation of these texts in his commentaries. Adi Shankara's Bhashya (commentaries) have become central texts in the Advaita Vedānta philosophy, but are one among many ancient and medieval manuscripts available or accepted in this tradition.[326] The subsequent Advaita tradition has further elaborated on these sruti and commentaries. Adi Shankara is also credited for the famous text Nirvana Shatakam.

Prasthanatrayi

The Vedānta tradition provides exegeses of the Upanishads, the Brahma Sutras, and the Bhagavadgita, collectively called the Prasthanatrayi, literally, three sources.[2][324][325]

  1. The Upanishads,[note 59] or Śruti prasthāna; considered the Śruti (Vedic scriptures) foundation of Vedānta.[note 60][72][329][330] Most scholars, states Eliot Deutsch, are convinced that the Śruti in general, and the Upanishads in particular, express "a very rich diversity" of ideas, with the early Upanishads such as Brihadaranyaka Upanishad and Chandogya Upanishad being more readily amenable to Advaita Vedānta school's interpretation than the middle or later Upanishads.[331][332] In addition to the oldest Upanishads, states Williams, the Sannyasa Upanishads group composed in pre-Shankara times "express a decidedly Advaita outlook".[333]
  2. The Brahma Sutras, or Nyaya prasthana / Yukti prasthana; considered the reason-based foundation of Vedānta. The Brahma Sutras attempted to synthesize the teachings of the Upanishads. The diversity in the teachings of the Upanishads necessitated the systematization of these teachings. The only extant version of this synthesis is the Brahma Sutras of Badarayana. Like the Upanishads, Brahma Sutras is also an aphoristic text, and can be interpreted as a non-theistic Advaita Vedānta text or as a theistic Dvaita Vedānta text. This has led, states Stephen Phillips, to its varying interpretations by scholars of various sub-schools of Vedānta.[334] The Brahmasutra is considered by the Advaita school as the Nyaya Prasthana (canonical base for reasoning).[335]
  3. The Bhagavad Gitā, or Smriti prasthāna; considered the Smriti (remembered tradition) foundation of Vedānta.[335] It has been widely studied by Advaita scholars, including a commentary by Adi Shankara.[249][336]

Textual authority

The Advaita Vedānta tradition considers the knowledge claims in the Vedas to be the crucial part of the Vedas, not its karma-kanda (ritual injunctions).[324] The knowledge claims about self being identical to the nature of Atman-Brahman are found in the Upanishads, which Advaita Vedānta has regarded as "errorless revealed truth."[324] Nevertheless, states Koller, Advaita Vedantins did not entirely rely on revelation, but critically examined their teachings using reason and experience, and this led them to investigate and critique competing theories.[324]

Advaita Vedānta, like all orthodox schools of Hindu philosophy, accepts as an epistemic premise that Śruti (Vedic literature) is a reliable source of knowledge.[72][329][330] The Śruti includes the four Vedas including its four layers of embedded texts – the Samhitas, the Brahmanas, the Aranyakas and the early Upanishads.[337] Of these, the Upanishads are the most referred to texts in the Advaita school.

The possibility of different interpretations of the Vedic literature, states Arvind Sharma, was recognized by ancient Indian scholars.[338][336] The Brahmasutra (also called Vedānta Sutra, composed in 1st millennium BCE) accepted this in verse 1.1.4 and asserts the need for the Upanishadic teachings to be understood not in piecemeal cherrypicked basis, rather in a unified way wherein the ideas in the Vedic texts are harmonized with other means of knowledge such as perception, inference and remaining pramanas.[338][335] This theme has been central to the Advaita school, making the Brahmasutra as a common reference and a consolidated textual authority for Advaita.[338][339]

The Bhagavad Gitā, similarly in parts can be interpreted to be a monist Advaita text, and in other parts as theistic Dvaita text. It too has been widely studied by Advaita scholars, including a commentary by Adi Shankara.[249][336]

Other texts

A large number of texts are attributed to Shankara; of these texts, the Brahma Sutra Bhasya (commentary on the Brahma Sutras), the commentaries on the principal Upanishads, and the Upadesasahasri are considered genuine and stand out.

Post-Shankara Advaita saw the composition of both scholarly commentaries and treatises, as well as, from late medieaval times (14th century) on, popular works and compositions which incorporate Yoga ideas. These include notable texts mistakenly attributed to Shankara, such as the Vivekachudamani, Atma bodha, and Aparokshanubhuti; and other texts like Advaita Bodha Deepika and Dŗg-Dŗśya-Viveka. Texts which influenced the Advaita tradition include the Avadhuta Gita, the Yoga Vasistha, and the Yoga Yajnavalkya.

Sampradaya and Smarta tradition

Monastic order - Mathas

 
(Vidyashankara temple) at Sringeri Sharada Peetham, Shringeri

Advaita Vedānta is not just a philosophical system, but also a tradition of renunciation. Philosophy and renunciation are closely related:[web 18]

Most of the notable authors in the advaita tradition were members of the sannyasa tradition, and both sides of the tradition share the same values, attitudes and metaphysics.[web 18]

According to tradition, around 740 AD Gaudapada founded Shri Gaudapadacharya Math[note 61], also known as Kavaḷē maṭha. It is located in Kavale, Ponda, Goa,[web 19] and is the oldest matha of the South Indian Saraswat Brahmins.[340][web 20]

Shankara, himself considered to be an incarnation of Shiva,[web 18] is credited with establishing the Dashanami Sampradaya, organizing a section of the Ekadandi monks under an umbrella grouping of ten names.[web 18] Several Hindu monastic and Ekadandi traditions, however, remained outside the organisation of the Dasanāmis.[341][342][343]

Sankara is said to have organised the Hindu monks of these ten sects or names under four Maṭhas (Sanskrit: मठ) (monasteries), called the Amnaya Mathas, with the headquarters at Dvārakā in the West, Jagannatha Puri in the East, Sringeri in the South and Badrikashrama in the North.[web 18] According to tradition, each math was first headed by one of his four main disciples, and the tradition continues since then. Yet, according to Paul Hacker, no mention of the mathas can be found before the 14th century CE.[344] Until the 15th century, the timespan of the directors of Sringeri Math are unrealistically long, spanning 60+ and even 105 years. After 1386, the timespans become much shorter.[345] According to Hacker, these mathas may have originated as late as the 14th century, to propagate Shankara's view of Advaita.[346][note 62][note 63] According to another tradition in Kerala, after Sankara's samadhi at Vadakkunnathan Temple, his disciples founded four mathas in Thrissur, namely Naduvil Madhom, Thekke Madhom, Idayil Madhom and Vadakke Madhom.

Monks of these ten orders differ in part in their beliefs and practices, and a section of them is not considered to be restricted to specific changes attributed to Shankara. While the dasanāmis associated with the Sankara maths follow the procedures attributed to Adi Śankara, some of these orders remained partly or fully independent in their belief and practices; and outside the official control of the Sankara maths. The advaita sampradaya is not a Saiva sect,[web 18][350] despite the historical links with Shaivism.[note 64] Nevertheless, contemporary Sankaracaryas have more influence among Saiva communities than among Vaisnava communities.[web 18]

Smarta Tradition

The Smarta tradition of Hinduism is a synthesis of various strands of Indian religious thought and practice, which developed with the Hindu synthesis, dating back to the early first century CE.[note 65] It is particularly found in south and west India, and revers all Hindu divinities as a step in their spiritual pursuit.[352][353][354] Their worship practice is called Panchayatana puja.[355][352] The worship symbolically consists of five deities: Shiva, Vishnu, Devi or Durga, Surya and an Ishta Devata or any personal god of devotee's preference.[353][356]

In the Smarta tradition, Advaita Vedānta ideas combined with bhakti are its foundation. Adi Shankara is regarded as the greatest teacher[354] and reformer of the Smarta.[357] According to Alf Hiltebeitel, Shankara's Advaita Vedānta and practices became the doctrinal unifier of previously conflicting practices with the smarta tradition.[note 66]

Philosophically, the Smarta tradition emphasizes that all images and statues (murti), or just five marks or any anicons on the ground, are visibly convenient icons of spirituality saguna Brahman.[359][355] The multiple icons are seen as multiple representations of the same idea, rather than as distinct beings. These serve as a step and means to realizing the abstract Ultimate Reality called nirguna Brahman. The ultimate goal in this practice is to transition past the use of icons, then follow a philosophical and meditative path to understanding the oneness of Atman (Self) and Brahman – as "That art Thou".[359][360]

Buddhist influences

Similarities

Advaita Vedānta and various other schools of Hindu philosophy share numerous terminology, doctrines and dialectical techniques with Buddhism.[361][362] According to a 1918 paper by the Buddhism scholar O. Rozenberg, "a precise differentiation between Brahmanism and Buddhism is impossible to draw."[361] Murti notices that "the ultimate goal" of Vedanta, Samkhya and Mahayana Buddhism is "remarkably similar"; while Advaita Vedanta postulates a "foundational self," "Mahayana Buddhism implicitly affirms the existence of a deep underlying reality behind all empirical manifestations in its conception of sunyata (the indeterminate, the void), or vijnapti-matrata (consciousness only), or tathata (thatness), or dharmata (noumenal reality)."[145] According to Frank Whaling, the similarities between Advaita Vedānta and Buddhism are not limited to the terminology and some doctrines, but also includes practice. The monastic practices and monk tradition in Advaita are similar to those found in Buddhism.[363]

Mahayana influences

The influence of Mahayana Buddhism on Advaita Vedānta has been significant.[363][364] Sharma points out that the early commentators on the Brahma Sutras were all realists, or pantheist realists. He states that they were influenced by Buddhism, particularly during the 5th-6th centuries CE when Buddhist thought developing in the Yogacara school.[365]

Von Glasenap states that there was a mutual influence between Vedanta and Buddhism.[note 67] Dasgupta and Mohanta suggest that Buddhism and Shankara's Advaita Vedānta represent "different phases of development of the same non-dualistic metaphysics from the Upanishadic period to the time of Sankara."[366][note 68]

The influence of Buddhist doctrines on Gauḍapāda has been a vexed question.[369][370] Modern scholarship generally accepts that Gauḍapāda was influenced by Buddhism, at least in terms of using Buddhist terminology to explain his ideas, but adds that Gauḍapāda was a Vedantin and not a Buddhist.[369]

Adi Shankara, states Natalia Isaeva, incorporated "into his own system a Buddhist notion of maya which had not been minutely elaborated in the Upanishads".[361] According to Mudgal, Shankara's Advaita and the Buddhist Madhyamaka view of ultimate reality are compatible because they are both transcendental, indescribable, non-dual and only arrived at through a via negativa (neti neti). Mudgal concludes therefore that "the difference between Sunyavada (Mahayana) philosophy of Buddhism and Advaita philosophy of Hinduism may be a matter of emphasis, not of kind.[371] Similarly, there are many points of contact between Buddhism's Vijnanavada and Shankara's Advaita.[372] According to S.N. Dasgupta,

Shankara and his followers borrowed much of their dialectic form of criticism from the Buddhists. His Brahman was very much like the sunya of Nagarjuna [...] The debts of Shankara to the self-luminosity[note 6] of the Vijnanavada Buddhism can hardly be overestimated. There seems to be much truth in the accusations against Shankara by Vijnana Bhiksu and others that he was a hidden Buddhist himself. I am led to think that Shankara's philosophy is largely a compound of Vijnanavada and Sunyavada Buddhism with the Upanisad notion of the permanence of self superadded.[373]

Differences from Buddhism

The Advaita Vedānta tradition has historically rejected accusations of crypto-Buddhism highlighting their respective views on Atman, Anatta and Brahman.[374] Yet, some Buddhist texts chronologically placed in the 1st millennium of common era, such as the Mahayana tradition's Tathāgatagarbha sūtras suggest self-like concepts, variously called Tathāgatagarbha or Buddha nature.[375][376] In modern era studies, scholars such as Wayman and Wayman state that these "self-like" concepts are neither self nor sentient being, nor soul, nor personality.[377][378] Some scholars posit that the Tathāgatagarbha Sutras were written to promote Buddhism to non-Buddhists.[379][380][381]

The epistemological foundations of Buddhism and Advaita Vedānta are different. Buddhism accepts two valid means to reliable and correct knowledge – perception and inference, while Advaita Vedānta accepts six (described elsewhere in this article).[235][382][383] However, some Buddhists in history, have argued that Buddhist scriptures are a reliable source of spiritual knowledge, corresponding to Advaita's Śabda pramana, however Buddhists have treated their scriptures as a form of inference method.[384]

Advaita Vedānta posits a substance ontology, an ontology which holds that underlying the change and impermanence of empirical reality is an unchanging and permanent absolute reality, like an eternal substance it calls Atman-Brahman.[385] In its substance ontology, as like other philosophies, there exist a universal, particulars and specific properties and it is the interaction of particulars that create events and processes.[386] In contrast, Buddhism posits a process ontology, also called as "event ontology".[387][386] According to the Buddhist thought, particularly after the rise of ancient Mahayana Buddhism scholarship, there is neither empirical nor absolute permanent reality and ontology can be explained as a process.[387][388][note 69] There is a system of relations and interdependent phenomena (pratitya samutpada) in Buddhist ontology, but no stable persistent identities, no eternal universals nor particulars. Thought and memories are mental constructions and fluid processes without a real observer, personal agency or cognizer in Buddhism. In contrast, in Advaita Vedānta, like other schools of Hinduism, the concept of self (atman) is the real on-looker, personal agent and cognizer.[390]

Criticisms of concurring Hindu schools

Some Hindu scholars criticized Advaita for its Maya and non-theistic doctrinal similarities with Buddhism.[391][363] sometimes referring to the Advaita-tradition as Māyāvāda.[392]

Ramanuja, the founder of Vishishtadvaita Vedānta, accused Adi Shankara of being a Prachanna Bauddha, that is, a "crypto-Buddhist",[393] and someone who was undermining theistic Bhakti devotionalism.[363] The non-Advaita scholar Bhaskara of the Bhedabheda Vedānta tradition, similarly around 800 CE, accused Shankara's Advaita as "this despicable broken down Mayavada that has been chanted by the Mahayana Buddhists", and a school that is undermining the ritual duties set in Vedic orthodoxy.[363]

Relationship with other forms of Vedānta

The Advaita Vedānta ideas, particularly of 8th century Adi Shankara, were challenged by theistic Vedānta philosophies that emerged centuries later, such as the 11th-century Vishishtadvaita (qualified nondualism) of Ramanuja, and the 14th-century Dvaita (theistic dualism) of Madhvacharya.[394] Their application of Vedanta philosophy to ground their faith turned Vedanta into a major factor in India's religious landscape.[395]

Vishishtadvaita

Ramanuja's Vishishtadvaita school and Shankara's Advaita school are both nondualism Vedānta schools,[396][397] both are premised on the assumption that all Selfs can hope for and achieve the state of blissful liberation; in contrast, Madhvacharya and his Dvaita subschool of Vedānta believed that some Selfs are eternally doomed and damned.[398][399] Shankara's theory posits that only Brahman and causes are metaphysical unchanging reality, while the empirical world (Maya) and observed effects are changing, illusive and of relative existence.[400][401] Spiritual liberation to Shankara is the full comprehension and realization of oneness of one's unchanging Atman (Self) as the same as Atman in everyone else as well as being identical to the nirguna Brahman.[397][402][403] In contrast, Ramanuja's theory posits both Brahman and the world of matter are two different absolutes, both metaphysically real, neither should be called false or illusive, and saguna Brahman with attributes is also real.[401] God, like man, states Ramanuja, has both soul and body, and all of the world of matter is the glory of God's body.[396] The path to Brahman (Vishnu), asserted Ramanuja, is devotion to godliness and constant remembrance of the beauty and love of personal god (saguna Brahman, Vishnu), one which ultimately leads one to the oneness with nirguna Brahman.[396][400][401]

Shuddhadvaita

Vallabhacharya (1479–1531 CE), the proponent of the philosophy of Shuddhadvaita Brahmvad enunciates that Ishvara has created the world without connection with any external agency such as Maya (which itself is his power) and manifests Himself through the world.[404] That is why shuddhadvaita is known as 'Unmodified transformation' or 'Avikṛta Pariṇāmavāda'. Brahman or Ishvara desired to become many, and he became the multitude of individual Selfs and the world. Vallabha recognises Brahman as the whole and the individual as a 'part' (but devoid of bliss).[405]

Dvaita

Madhvacharya was also a critic of Advaita Vedānta. Advaita's nondualism asserted that Atman (Self) and Brahman are identical (both in bondage and liberation[406]), there is interconnected oneness of all Selfs and Brahman, and there are no pluralities.[407][408] Madhva in contrast asserted that Atman (Self) and Brahman are different (both in bondage and liberation[406]), only Vishnu is the Lord (Brahman), individual Selfs are also different and depend on Vishnu, and there are pluralities.[407][408] Madhvacharya stated that both Advaita Vedānta and Mahayana Buddhism were a nihilistic school of thought.[409] Madhvacharya wrote four major texts, including Upadhikhandana and Tattvadyota, primarily dedicated to criticizing Advaita.[409]

Followers of ISKCON are highly critical of Advaita Vedānta, regarding it as māyāvāda, identical to Mahayana Buddhism.[web 21][web 22]

Influence on other traditions

Within the ancient and medieval texts of Hindu traditions, such as Vaishnavism, Shaivism and Shaktism, the ideas of Advaita Vedānta have had a major influence.[note 70] Advaita Vedānta influenced Krishna Vaishnavism in the different parts of India.[410] One of its most popular text, the Bhagavata Purana, adopts and integrates in Advaita Vedānta philosophy.[411][412][413] The Bhagavata Purana is generally accepted by scholars to have been composed in the second half of 1st millennium CE.[414][415]

In the ancient and medieval literature of Shaivism, called the Āgamas, the influence of Advaita Vedānta is once again prominent.[416][417][418] Of the 92 Āgamas, ten are Dvaita texts, eighteen are Bhedabheda, and sixty-four are Advaita texts.[419][420] According to Natalia Isaeva, there is an evident and natural link between 6th-century Gaudapada's Advaita Vedānta ideas and Kashmir Shaivism.[421]

Shaktism, the Hindu tradition where a goddess is considered identical to Brahman, has similarly flowered from a syncretism of the monist premises of Advaita Vedānta and dualism premises of Samkhya–Yoga school of Hindu philosophy, sometimes referred to as Shaktadavaitavada (literally, the path of nondualistic Shakti).[422][423][424]

Other influential ancient and medieval classical texts of Hinduism such as the Yoga Yajnavalkya, Yoga Vashishta, Avadhuta Gitā, Markandeya Purana and Sannyasa Upanishads predominantly incorporate premises and ideas of Advaita Vedānta.[425][426][427]

History of Advaita Vedānta

 
Gaudapada, one of the most important pre-Śaṅkara philosophers in Advaita tradition

Historiography

The historiography of Advaita Vedanta is coloured by Orientalist notions,[428][note 72] while modern formulations of Advaita Vedānta, which developed as a reaction to western Orientalism and Perennialism[430] have "become a dominant force in Indian intellectual thought."[431] According to Michael S. Allen and Anand Venkatkrishnan, "scholars have yet to provide even a rudimentary, let alone comprehensive account of the history of Advaita Vedānta in the centuries leading up to the colonial period."[432]

Early Vedānta

The Upanishads form the basic texts, of which Vedānta gives an interpretation.[433] The Upanishads do not contain "a rigorous philosophical inquiry identifying the doctrines and formulating the supporting arguments".[434][note 73] This philosophical inquiry was performed by the darsanas, the various philosophical schools.[436][note 74]

The Brahma Sutras of Bādarāyana, also called the Vedānta Sutra,[438] were compiled in its present form around 400–450 CE,[439] but "the great part of the Sutra must have been in existence much earlier than that".[439] Estimates of the date of Bādarāyana's lifetime differ between 200 BCE and 200 CE.[440] The Brahma Sutra is a critical study of the teachings of the Upanishads, possibly "written from a Bhedābheda Vedāntic viewpoint."[web 10] Bādarāyana was not the first person to systematise the teachings of the Upanishads.[441] He refers to seven Vedantic teachers before him.[441]

Early Advaita Vedānta

Two Advaita writings predating Maṇḍana Miśra and Shankara were known to scholars such as Nakamura in the first half of 20th-century, namely the Vākyapadīya, written by Bhartṛhari (second half 5th century[442]), and the Māndūkya-kārikā written by Gauḍapāda (7th century).[443] Later scholarship added the Sannyasa Upanishads (first centuries CE[444]) to the earliest known corpus, some of which are of a sectarian nature,[445] and have a strong Advaita Vedānta outlook.[446][447][448]

According to Nakamura, "there must have been an enormous number of other writings turned out in this period [between the Brahma Sutras and Shankara], but unfortunately all of them have been scattered or lost and have not come down to us today".[443] In his commentaries, Shankara mentions 99 different predecessors of his Sampradaya.[223] In the beginning of his commentary on the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad Shankara salutes the teachers of the Brahmavidya Sampradaya.[web 23] Pre-Shankara doctrines and sayings can be traced in the works of the later schools, which does give insight into the development of early Vedānta philosophy.[443]

Gauḍapāda and Māṇḍukya Kārikā

According to tradition, Gauḍapāda (6th century)[449] was the teacher of Govinda Bhagavatpada and the grandteacher of Shankara. Gauḍapāda wrote or compiled[450] the Māṇḍukya Kārikā, also known as the Gauḍapāda Kārikā or the Āgama Śāstra.[451] The Māṇḍukya Kārikā is a commentary in verse form on the Māṇḍūkya Upanishad, one of the shortest Upanishads consisting of just 13 prose sentences. Of the ancient literature related to Advaita Vedānta, the oldest surviving complete text is the Māṇḍukya Kārikā.[452] The Māṇḍūkya Upanishad was considered to be a Śruti before the era of Adi Shankara, but not treated as particularly important.[451] In later post-Shankara period its value became far more important, and regarded as expressing the essence of the Upanishad philosophy. The entire Karika became a key text for the Advaita school in this later era.[453][note 75]

Gaudapada took over the Yogachara teaching of vijñapti-mātra, "representation-only," which states that the empirical reality that we experience is a fabrication of the mind, experienced by consciousness-an-sich,[254][note 76] and the four-cornered negation, which negates any positive predicates of 'the Absolute'.[254][255][note 77] Gaudapada "wove [both doctrines] into the philosophy of Mandukaya Upanisad, which was further developed by Shankara".[456][note 78] In this view,

the ultimate ontological reality is the pure consciousness, which is bereft of attributes and intentionality. The world of duality is nothing but a vibration of the mind (manodṛśya or manaspandita). The pluralistic world is imagined by the mind (saṁkalpa) and this false projection is sponsored by the illusory factor called māyā.[web 24]

Gauḍapāda uses the concepts of Ajātivāda to explain that 'the Absolute' is not subject to birth, change and death. The Absolute is aja, the unborn eternal.[458] The empirical world of appearances is considered unreal, and not absolutely existent.[458]

Early medieval period - Maṇḍana Miśra and Adi Shankara

Maṇḍana Miśra

Maṇḍana Miśra, an older contemporary of Shankara,[459] was a Mimamsa scholar and a follower of Kumarila, but also wrote a seminal text on Advaita that has survived into the modern era, the Brahma-siddhi.[460][461] According to Fiordalis, he was influenced by the Yoga-tradition, and with that indiractly by Buddhism, given the strong influence of Buddhism on the Yoga-tradition.[38] For a couple of centuries he seems to have been regarded as "the most important representative of the Advaita position,"[29][31][note 79] and the "theory of error" set forth in the Brahma-siddhi became the normative Advaita Vedanta theory of error.[462]

Adi Shankara

Very little is known about Shankara. According to Dalal, "Hagiographical accounts of his life, the Śaṅkaravijayas ("Conquests of Śaṅkara"), were composed several centuries after his death,"[web 13] in the 14th to 17th century, and established Shankara as a rallying symbol of valuesin a time when most of India was conquered by Muslims.[28] He is often considered to be the founder of the Advaita Vedānta school, but was actually a systematizer, not a founder.[web 13][463]

Systematizer of Advaita thought

Shankara was a scholar who synthesized and systematized Advaita-vāda thought which already existed at his lifetime.[463] According to Nakamura, comparison of the known teachings of the early Vedantins and Shankara's thought shows that most of the characteristics of Shankara's thought "were advocated by someone before Śankara".[463] According to Nakamura, after the growing influence of Buddhism on Vedānta, culminating in the works of Gauḍapāda, Adi Shankara gave a Vedantic character to the Buddhistic elements in these works,[464] synthesising and rejuvenating the doctrine of Advaita.[465] According to Koller, using ideas in ancient Indian texts, Shankara systematized the foundation for Advaita Vedānta in the 8th century, reforming Badarayana's Vedānta tradition.[466] According to Mayeda, Shankara represents a turning point in the development of Vedānta,[464] yet he also notices that it is only since Deussens's praise that Shankara "has usually been regarded as the greatest philosopher of India."[467] Mayeda further notes that Shankara was primarily concerned with moksha, "and not with the establishment of a complete system of philosophy or theology,"[467] following Potter, who qualifies Shankara as a "speculative philosopher."[468] Lipner notes that Shankara's "main literary approach was commentarial and hence perforce disjointed rather than procedurally systematic [...] though a systematic philosophy can be derived from Samkara's thought."[469]

Writings

Adi Shankara is best known for his reviews and commentaries (Bhasyas) on ancient Indian texts. His Brahmasutrabhasya (literally, commentary on Brahma Sutra) is a fundamental text of the Vedānta school of Hinduism.[339] His commentaries on ten Mukhya (principal) Upanishads are also considered authentic by scholars.[339][470] Other authentic works of Shankara include commentaries on the Bhagavad Gitā (part of his Prasthana Trayi Bhasya).[249] He also authored Upadesasahasri, his most important original philosophical work.[466][471] The authenticity of Shankara being the author of Vivekacūḍāmaṇi[472] has been questioned, and "modern scholars tend to reject its authenticity as a work by Shankara."[473]

Influence of Shankara

While Shankara has an unparalleled status in the history of Advaita Vedanta, scholars have questioned the traditional narrative of Shankara's early influence in India.[28][29][31] Until the 10th century Shankara was overshadowed by his older contemporary Maṇḍana Miśra, who was considered to be the major representative of Advaita.[29][31] Only when Vacaspati Misra, an influential student of Maṇḍana Miśra, harmonised the teachings of Shankara with those of Maṇḍana Miśra, Shankara's teachings gained prominence.[474] Some modern Advaitins argue that most of post-Shankara Advaita Vedanta actually deviates from Shankara, and that only his student Suresvara, who's had little influence, represents Shankara correctly.[30] In this view, Shankara's influential student Padmapada misunderstood Shankara, while his views were manitained by the Suresvara school.[30] According to Satchidanandendra Sarasvati, "almost all the later Advaitins were influenced by Mandana Misra and Bhaskara."[475][note 80] Until the 11th century, Vedanta itself was a peripheral school of thought;[476] Vedanta became a major influence when Vedanta philosophy was utilized by various sects of Hinduism to ground their doctrines,[395] such as Ramanuja (11th c.), who aligned bhakti, "the major force in the religions of Hinduism," with philosophical thought, meanwhile rejecting Shankara's views.[web 25]

The cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedanta started only centuries later, in the Vijayanagara Empire in the 14th century,[28][477][478] when Sringeri matha started to receive patronage from the kings of the Vijayanagara Empire and became a powerful institution.[32] Vidyaranya, also known as Madhava, who was the Jagadguru of the Śringeri Śarada Pītham from ca. 1374–1380 to 1386[32] played a central role in this growing influence of Advaita Vedanta, and the deification of Shankara as a ruler-renunciate.[28][477][35][36] From 1346 onwards Sringeri matha received patronage from the Vijayanagara kings, and its importance and influence grew rapidly in the second half of the 14th century.[32][note 81] Vidyaranya and the Sringeri matha competed for royal patronage and converts with Srivaisnava Visistadvaita, which was dominant in territories conquered by the Vijayanagara Empire,[33] and Madhava (the pre-ordination name of Vidyaranya) presented Shankara's teachings as the summit of all darsanas, portraying the other darsanas as partial truths which converged in Shankara's teachings.[346] The subsequent Shankara Digvijayam genre, following the example of the earlier Madhva Digvijayam,[480] presented Shankara as a ruler-renunciate, conquering the four quarters of India and bringing harmony.[35][36] The genre created legends to turn Shankara into a "divine folk-hero who spread his teaching through his digvijaya ("universal conquest") all over India like a victorious conqueror."[346][479]

Shankara's position was further established in the 19th and 20th century, when neo-Vedantins and western Orientalists, following Vidyaranya, elevated Advaita Vedanta "as the connecting theological thread that united Hinduism into a single religious tradition."[481] Shankara became "an iconic representation of Hindu religion and culture," despite the fact that most Hindus do not adhere to Advaita Vedanta.[482]

Advaita Vedanta sub-schools

Two defunct schools are the Pancapadika and Istasiddhi, which were replaced by Prakasatman's Vivarana school.[297] The still existing Bhāmatī and Vivarana developed in the 11th-14th century.[web 26][223] These schools worked out the logical implications of various Advaita doctrines. Two of the problems they encountered were the further interpretations of the concepts of māyā and avidya.[web 26]

Padmapada (c. 800 CE),[483] the founder of the defunct Pancapadika school, was a direct disciple of Shankara. He wrote the Pancapadika, a commentary on the Sankara-bhaya.[483] Padmapada diverged from Shankara in his description of avidya, designating prakrti as avidya or ajnana.[484]

Sureśvara (fl. 800–900 CE)[485] was a contemporary of Shankara,[459] and often (incorrectly) identified with Maṇḍana Miśra.[459][note 82] Sureśvara has also been credited as the founder of a pre-Shankara branch of Advaita Vedānta.[485]

Mandana Mishra's student Vachaspati Miśra (9th/10th century CE),[486][487][488] who is believed to have been an incarnation of Shankara to popularize the Advaita view,[489] wrote the Bhamati, a commentary on Shankara's Brahma Sutra Bhashya, and the Brahmatattva-samiksa, a commentary on Mandana Mishra's Brahma-siddhi. His thought was mainly inspired by Mandana Miśra, and harmonises Shankara's thought with that of Mandana Miśra.[490][web 26] The Bhamati school takes an ontological approach. It sees the Jiva as the source of avidya.[web 26] It sees contemplation as the main factor in the acquirement of liberation, while the study of the Vedas and reflection are additional factors.[491][492]

Vimuktatman (c. 1200 CE)[493] wrote the Ista-siddhi.[493] It is one of the four traditional siddhi, together with Mandana's Brahma-siddhi, Suresvara's Naiskarmya-siddhi, and Madusudana's Advaita-siddhi.[494] According to Vimuktatman, absolute Reality is "pure intuitive consciousness".[495] His school of thought was eventually replaced by Prakasatman's Vivarana school.[297]

Prakasatman (c. 1200–1300)[297] wrote the Pancapadika-Vivarana, a commentary on the Pancapadika by Padmapadacharya.[297] The Vivarana lends its name to the subsequent school. According to Roodurmun, "[H]is line of thought [...] became the leitmotif of all subsequent developments in the evolution of the Advaita tradition."[297] The Vivarana school takes an epistemological approach. It is distinguished from the Bhamati school by its rejection of action and favouring Vedic study and "a direct apprehension of Brahma."[491] Prakasatman was the first to propound the theory of mulavidya or maya as being of "positive beginningless nature",[496] and sees Brahman as the source of avidya. Critics object that Brahman is pure consciousness, so it cannot be the source of avidya. Another problem is that contradictory qualities, namely knowledge and ignorance, are attributed to Brahman.[web 26]

Late medieval India - incorporating yoga

Michael S. Allen and Anand Venkatkrishnan note that Shankara is very well-studied, but "scholars have yet to provide even a rudimentary, let alone comprehensive account of the history of Advaita Vedānta in the centuries leading up to the colonial period."[432]

While indologists like Paul Hacker and Wilhelm Halbfass took Shankara's system as the measure for an "orthodox" Advaita Vedānta, the living Advaita Vedānta tradition in medieval times was influenced by, and incorporated elements from, the yogic tradition and texts like the Yoga Vasistha and the Bhagavata Purana.[39] Yoga and samkhya had become minor schools of thought since the time of Shankara, and no longer posed a thread for the sectarian identity of Advaita, in contrast to the Vaishnava traditions.[478] The Yoga Vasistha became an authoritative source text in the Advaita vedānta tradition in the 14th century, and the "yogic Advaita"[497][498] of Vidyāraņya's Jivanmuktiviveka (14th century) was influenced by the (Laghu-)Yoga-Vasistha, which in turn was influenced by Kashmir Shaivism.[499] Vivekananda's 19th century emphasis on nirvikalpa samadhi was preceded by medieval yogic influences on Advaita Vedānta. In the 16th and 17th centuries, some Nath and hatha yoga texts also came within the scope of the developing Advaita Vedānta tradition.[61]

According to Nicholson, it was with the arrival of Islamic rule, first in the form of Delhi Sultanate and later the Mughal Empire, and the subsequent persecution of Indian religions, that Hindu scholars began a self-conscious attempts to define an identity and unity.[500][501] Between the twelfth and the fourteenth century, according to Andrew Nicholson, this effort emerged with a classification of astika and nastika systems of Indian philosophies.[500] Certain thinkers, according to Nicholson, began to retrospectively classify ancient thought into "six systems" (saddarsana) of mainstream Hindu philosophy.[502]

Vidyāraṇya

It is only during this period that the historical fame and cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedanta was established.[28][477][478] Advaita Vedanta's position as most influential Hindu darsana took shape as Advaitins in the Vijayanagara Empire competed for patronage from the royal court, and tried to convert others to their sect.[33] Central in this repositioning was Vidyāraṇya,[28][477] also known as Madhava, who was the Jagadguru of the Śringeri Śarada Pītham from 1380 to 1386[503] and a minister in the Vijayanagara Empire.[504] He inspired the re-creation of the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire of South India, in response to the devastation caused by the Islamic Delhi Sultanate,[28][477][478][504] but his efforts were also targeted at Srivaisnava groups, especially Visistadvaita, which was dominant in territories conquered by the Vijayanagara Empire.[505] Sects competed for patronage from the royal court, and tried to convert others to their own sectarian system, and Vidyaranya efforts were aimed at promoting Advaita Vedanta.[33] Most of Shankara's biographies were created and published from the 14th to the 17th century, such as the widely cited Śankara-vijaya, in which legends were created to turn Shankara into a "divine folk-hero who spread his teaching through his digvijaya ("universal conquest") all over India like a victorious conqueror."[346][479][506]

Vidyaranya and his brothers wrote extensive Advaitic commentaries on the Vedas and Dharma to make "the authoritative literature of the Aryan religion" more accessible.[346] In his doxography Sarvadarśanasaṅgraha ("Summary of all views") Vidyaranya presented Shankara's teachings as the summit of all darsanas, presenting the other darsanas as partial truths which converged in Shankara's teachings, which was regarded to be the most inclusive system.[507][346] The Vaishanava traditions of Dvaita and Visitadvaita were not classified as Vedanta, and placed just above Buddhism and Jainism, reflecting the threat they posed for Vidyaranya's Advaita allegiance.[42] Bhedabheda wasn't mentioned at all, "literally written out of the history of Indian philosophy."[508] Vidyaranya became head of Sringeri matha, proclaiming that it was established by Shankara himself.[346][479] Vidyaranya enjoyed royal support,[504] and his sponsorship and methodical efforts helped establish Shankara as a rallying symbol of values, spread historical and cultural influence of Shankara's Vedānta philosophies, and establish monasteries (mathas) to expand the cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedānta.[28]

Modern Advaita

Niścaldās and "Greater" Advaita

Michael S. Allen has written on the influence and popularity of Advaita Vedanta in early modern north India, especially on the work of the Advaita Dādū-panthī monk Niścaldās (ca. 1791–1863), author of The Ocean of Inquiry (Hindi: Vicār-sāgar), a vernacular compendium of Advaita.[4] According to Allen, the work of Niścaldās "was quite popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: it was translated into over eight languages and was once referred to by Vivekananda as having 'more influence in India than any [book] that has been written in any language within the last three centuries.'"[4]

Allen highlights the widespread prominence in early modern India of what he calls "Greater Advaita Vedānta" which refers to popular Advaita works, including "narratives and dramas, “eclectic” works blending Vedānta with other traditions, and vernacular works such as The Ocean of Inquiry."[4] Allen refers to several popular late figures and texts which draw on Advaita Vedanta, such as the Maharashtrian sant Eknāth (16th c.), the popular Adhyātma-rāmāyaṇa (ca. late 15th c.), which synthesizes Rama bhakti and advaita metaphysics and the Tripurā-rahasya (a tantric text that adopts an advaita metaphysics).[4] Other important vernacular Advaita figures include the Hindu authors Manohardās and Māṇakdās (who wrote the Ātma-bodh). Advaita literature was also written in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada, Marathi, Gujarati, Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali, and Oriya.[4]

Neo-Vedanta

 
Mahatma Gandhi stated "I am an advaitist".[509][510]

According to King, with the consolidation of the British imperialist rule the new rulers started to view Indians through the "colonially crafted lenses" of Orientalism. In response Hindu nationalism emerged, striving for socio-political independence and countering the influence of Christian missionaries.[511] Among the colonial era intelligentsia the monistic Advaita Vedānta has been a major ideological force for Hindu nationalism,[512] with Hindu intellectuals formulating a "humanistic, inclusivist" response, now called Neo-Vedānta, attempting to respond to this colonial stereotyping of "Indian culture [as] backward, superstitious and inferior to the West."[513]

Due to the influence of Vidyaranya's Sarvadarśanasaṅgraha, early Indologists regarded Advaita Vedanta as the most accurate interpretation of the Upanishads.[42] Vedānta came to be regarded, both by westerners as by Indian nationalists, as the essence of Hinduism, and Advaita Vedānta came to be regarded as "then paradigmatic example of the mystical nature of the Hindu religion" and umbrella of "inclusivism".[514] Colonial era Indian thinkers, such as Vivekananda, presented Advaita Vedānta as an inclusive universal religion, a spirituality that in part helped organize a religiously infused identity. It also aided the rise of Hindu nationalism as a counter weight to Islam-infused Muslim communitarian organizations such as the Muslim League, to Christianity-infused colonial orientalism and to religious persecution of those belonging to Indian religions.[515][501][516] Neo-Vedānta subsumed and incorporated Buddhist ideas thereby making the Buddha a part of the Vedānta tradition, all in an attempt to reposition the history of Indian culture.[430] This view on Advaita Vedānta, according to King, "provided an opportunity for the construction of a nationalist ideology that could unite Hindus in their struggle against colonial oppression".[517]

Vivekananda discerned a universal religion, regarding all the apparent differences between various traditions as various manifestations of one truth.[518] Vivekananda emphasised nirvikalpa samadhi as the spiritual goal of Vedānta, he equated it to the liberation in Yoga and encouraged Yoga practice which he called Raja yoga.[519][note 83] With the efforts of Vivekananda, modern formulations of Advaita Vedānta have "become a dominant force in Indian intellectual thought", though Hindu beliefs and practices are diverse.[431]

Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, first a professor at Oxford University and later a President of India, further popularized Advaita Vedānta, presenting it as the essence of Hinduism.[web 27] According to Michael Hawley, Radhakrishnan saw other religions, as well as "what Radhakrishnan understands as lower forms of Hinduism," as interpretations of Advaita Vedānta, thereby "in a sense Hindusizing all religions".[web 27] Radhakrishnan metaphysics was grounded in Advaita Vedānta, but he reinterpreted Advaita Vedānta for contemporary needs and context.[web 27][note 84]

Gandhi declared his allegiance to Advaita Vedānta, and was another popularizing force for its ideas.[522]

Contemporary Advaita Vedānta

Contemporary teachers are the orthodox Jagadguru of Sringeri Sharada Peetham; the more traditional teachers Sivananda Saraswati (1887–1963), Chinmayananda Saraswati (1916-1993),[web 28] Dayananda Saraswati (Arsha Vidya) (1930-2015), Swami Paramarthananda, Swami Tattvavidananda Sarasvati, Carol Whitfield (Radha), Sri Vasudevacharya (previously Michael Comans) [web 28] and less traditional teachers such as Narayana Guru.[web 28] According to Sangeetha Menon, prominent names in 20th century Advaita tradition are Shri Chandrashekhara Bharati Mahaswami, Chandrasekharendra Saraswati Swamigal, Sacchidānandendra Saraswati.[web 29]

Influence on New religious movements

Advaita Vedānta has gained attention in western spirituality and New Age as nondualism, where various traditions are seen as driven by the same non-dual experience.[523] Nonduality points to "a primordial, natural awareness without subject or object".[web 30] It is also used to refer to interconnectedness, "the sense that all things are interconnected and not separate, while at the same time all things retain their individuality".[web 31]

Neo-Advaita is a New Religious Movement based on a popularised, western interpretation of Advaita Vedānta and the teachings of Ramana Maharshi.[524] Neo-Advaita is being criticised[525][note 85][526][note 86][note 87] for discarding the traditional prerequisites of knowledge of the scriptures[527] and "renunciation as necessary preparation for the path of jnana-yoga".[527][528] Notable neo-advaita teachers are H. W. L. Poonja,[529][524] his students Gangaji[530] Andrew Cohen[note 88], and Eckhart Tolle.[524]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Philosophy and spiritual experience:
    • Deutsch 1988, p. 4: "Advaita Vedanta is more than a philosophical system, as we understand these terms in the West today; it is also a practical guide to spiritual experience and is intimately bound up with spiritual experience."
    • Puligandla 1997, p. 11: "Any philosophy worthy of its title should not be a mere intellectual exercise but should have practical application in enabling man to live an enlightened life. A philosophy which makes no difference to the quality and style of our life is no philosophy, but an empty intellectual construction."
  2. ^ Literally: end or the goal of the Vedas, referring to the Upanishads and their interpretation; it is a tradition of interpretation of the Upanishads,[1] the Brahma Sutras, and the Bhagavad Gitā.[2][3]
  3. ^ a b Form of monism:
    • Malkovsky 2000, p. 71: "The interpretation of advaita that is the most common equates non-duality with monism and acosmic illusionism. Only the Absolute, or the paraa brahma, is said to exist; everything else is but an illusory appearance."
    • Menon 2012: "The essential philosophy of Advaita is an idealist monism, and is considered to be presented first in the Upaniṣads and consolidated in the Brahma Sūtra by this tradition."
    • King 1995, p. 65: "The prevailing monism of the Upanishads was developed by the Advaita Vedanta to its ultimate extreme."
    • Mohanty 1980, p. 205: "Nyaya-Vaiseshika is realistic; Advaita Vedanta is idealistic. The former is pluralistic, the latter monistic."
  4. ^ a b c d Highest self:
    • Shankara, Upadesasahasri I.18.3: "I am ever-free, the existent" (Sat). I.18.6: "The two [contradictory] notions "I am the Existent-Brahman" and "I act," have Atman as their witness. It is considered more reasonable to give up only [that one] of the two [notions] which arises from ignorance. I.18.7: "The notion, "I am the Existent," arises from right means of knowledge [while] the other notion has its origin in fallacious means of knowledge." (Mayeda 1992, p. 172)
    • Brahmajnanavalimala Verse 20: "Brahman is real, the universe is mithya (it cannot be categorized as either real or unreal). The jiva is Brahman itself and not different." Translation by S. N. Sastri [1]
    • Sivananda 1993, p. 219: "Brahman (the Absolute) is alone real; this world is unreal; and the Jiva or individual soul is non-different from Brahman."
    • Menon 2012: "The experiencing self (jīva) and the transcendental self of the Universe (ātman) are in reality identical (both are Brahman), though the individual self seems different as space within a container seems different from space as such. These cardinal doctrines are represented in the anonymous verse "brahma satyam jagan mithya; jīvo brahmaiva na aparah" (Brahman is alone True, and this world of plurality is an error; the individual self is not different from Brahman)."
    • Deutsch 1973, p. 54: "[the] essential status [of the individual human person] is that of unqualified reality, of identity with the Absolute [...] the self (jiva) is only misperceived: the self is really Brahman."
    • Koller 2013, pp. 100–101: "Atman, which is identical to Brahman, is ultimately the only reality and [...] the appearance of plurality is entirely the work of ignorance [...] the self is ultimately of the nature of Atman/Brahman [...] Brahman alone is ultimately real."
    • Bowker 2000a, "Advaita Vedanta": "There is only Brahman, which is necessarily undifferentiated. It follows that there cannot even be a difference, or duality, between the human subject, or self, and Brahman, for Brahman must be that very self (since Brahman is the reality underlying all appearance). The goal of human life and wisdom must, therefore, be the realization that the self (ātman) is Brahman."
    • Hacker (1995, p. 88) notes that Shankara uses two groups of words to denote 'atman': "One group - principally jiva, vijnanatman, and sarira - expresses the illusory aspect of the soul [...] But in addition there are the two expressions atman and pratyagatman. These also designate the individual soul, but in its real aspect." Mayeda (1992, pp. 11, 14) uses the word pratyagatman; Sivananda1993, p. 219), Deutsch (1973, p. 54), and Menon (2012) use the term jiva when referring to the identity of atman and Brahman.
  5. ^ According to Shankara, in Adhyasa-bhasya (pre-amble to Brahma Sutra Bhashya I.1.1), it is self-evident that Ātman, pure awareness or the witness-consciousness, is completely different from non-Atman, the thinking and acting self and the material world.
  6. ^ a b c d Self-luminosity; see Deutsch 1973, p. 48; Dasgupta 1975, pp. 148–149; Indich 2000, pp. 24, 28; Menon 2012; Ganeri 2019, p. 103; Murti 1983, p. 339; Isaeva 1993, p. 102.
    For the translation and meaning of svayam prakāśa:
    • svayam: "himself, autonomous, in person" (Sanskrit Dictionary for Spoken Sanskrit, svayam)
    • prakāśa: "manifestation," literally "light" or "illumination"; "the capacity to disclose, present, or make manifest" (Fasching 2021 note 1, referring to "MacKenzie 2017, 335; cf. also Ram-Prasad 2007, 53")
    Svayam prakāśa can be translated as: On the meaning of svayam prakāśa:
    • Menezes 2017, p. 198: "Self-luminosity (svayam prakāśa) means self is pure awareness by nature"; idem Ganeri 2019: "self is pure awareness by nature."
    • Murti 1983, p. 339: "a foundational consciousness [...] to which everything is presented, but is itself no presentation, that which knows all, but is itself no object."
    For a detailed treatment, see Mackenzie 2012; Fasching 2011.
  7. ^ For pure Consciousness, also included in the phrase sat-cit-ananda, see Mayeda 1992, p. 103 (verse 1), p.105 (note 1); p.126, verse 7; Deutsch 1973, pp. 48–51; Davis 2010, pp. 34–35; Rambachan 2006, pp. 7, 99–103; Menon 2012; Fasching 2021; Sinha 2016, p. 42.
    • Shankara, Upadeśasāhasrī I.1.1, translated in Mayeda 1992, p. 103: "Salutation to the all-knowing Pure Consciousness [note 1] which pervades all, is all, abides in the hearts of all beings, and is beyond all objects [of knowledge]. [Note 1 by Mayeda: "The Sanskrit term caitanya translated here as "Pure Consciousness" is used as a synonym for Brahman-Atman, indicating the nature of It."]
    • Shankara, Upadeśasāhasrī I.11.7, translated in Mayeda 1992, p. 126: "Being different from name, form, and action and by nature constantly free, I am Atman, ie. the highest Brahman; I am Pure Consciousness only and always non-dual."
    • Deutsch 1973, p. 48: "Atman (or paramatman, the highest Self), for Advaita vedanta, is that pure, undifferentiated, self-shining consciousness, timeless, spaceless, and unthinkable, that is non-different from Brahman and that underlies and supports the individual human person."
    • Menon 2012: "For classical Advaita Vedānta, Brahman is the fundamental reality underlying all objects and experiences. Brahman is explained as pure existence, pure consciousness and pure bliss. All forms of existence presuppose a knowing self. Brahman or pure consciousness underlies the knowing self. Consciousness according to the Advaita School, unlike the positions held by other Vedānta schools, is not a property of Brahman but its very nature. Brahman is also one without a second, all-pervading and the immediate awareness."
    • Fasching 2021: "According to Advaita Vedānta, the absolute is pure, qualityless and unchanging consciousness. Our consciousness (the consciousness of individual conscious entities) is not distinct from it, but is nothing other than this absolute itself, (seemingly) modified by the mental states of respective individual minds."
    • Sinha 2016, p. 42: "According to the Advaita Vedānta, the Atman is pure, eternal, undifferenced consciousness, while the jīva is the pure consciousness limited or determined by the internal organ (antahkarana)."
  8. ^ a b Potter (2008, p. 136); see Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 2.51-14; Chandogya Upanishad 8.3.4.
  9. ^ a b Some modern Advaitins argue that most of post-Shankara Advaita Vedanta actually deviates from Shankara, an argument deemed correct by Potter.[30][31]
  10. ^ a b Compare, in Buddhism: Subitism, Hongaku ("original enlightenment"), Post-satori practice. See also Nisargadatta Maharaj on 'the bird's way and the ant's way'.
  11. ^ Sringeri matha received patronage from the kings of the Vijayanagara Empire,[32] competing with Srivaisnava Visistadvaita groups for royal patronage and converts.[33] The works of the influential Advaitin Vidyaranya (Madhava, 14th cent.), jagadguru of Sringeri matha from ca. 1374–1380 to 1386, presented Advaita teachings as the summit of the Indian darśanam,[34] while the subsequent Shankara Digvijayam genre deified him as a ruler-renunciate who conquered the four quarters.[35][36] Shankara's prominence was further established in the 19th and 20th century, gaining worldwide fame, in a "confluence of interests" of Western Christian missionaries, the British Raj, and Indian nationalists.[37]
  12. ^ Critical scholarship has identified a number of key concepts used in contemporary Advaita Vedānta which differ from Shankara's views, revealing a discrepancy between the nominal adherence to Shankara and the actual alliance with his views.[46][30]
  13. ^ See also Purusha.
  14. ^ For an alternate English translation: Robert Hume, The Thirteen Principal Upanishads, BU 4.3.32, Oxford University Press, p. 138.
  15. ^

    A reference to Non-duality is also made in the Chandogya Upanishad, within a dialogue between the Vedic sage Uddalaka Aruni and his son Svetaketu, as follows :

  16. ^ Many of these traditions, which were influential among Neo-Vedantins, did not derive from Vedantic lineages, i.e., the "Advaita Vedanta" of Shankara. As Madaio (2017, p. 4) points out "...it is possible to speak of sanskritic and vernacular advaitic texts (which are either explicitly non-dualistic or permit a non-dualistic reading) and 'Advaita Vedanta' texts which originate within sampradayas that claim an Advaita Vedantic lineage. This, then, avoids the obfuscating tendency to subsume advaitic but non-vedantic works under a 'Vedanta' or 'Advaita Vedanta' umbrella."
  17. ^ King 1995, p. 65: "The prevailing monism of the Upanishads was developed by the Advaita Vedanta to its ultimate extreme."
  18. ^ It is not a philosophy in the western meaning of the word, according to Milne.[73]
  19. ^ Reason clarifies the truth and removes objections, according to the Advaita school, however it believes that pure logic cannot lead to philosophical truths and only experience and meditative insights do. The Sruti, it believes is a collection of experience and meditative insights about liberating knowledge,[80]
  20. ^ Sharma 1993, pp. 72–83: "According to Advaita, the pure subject is our true self whose knowledge is liberative, (...) If the subject could be realised in its purity then all misery would cease: this is called self-knowledge"
  21. ^ See also kelamuni (2006), The Philosophy of Adi Shankaracharya, section "II. The Threefold Means," on Brahma Sutra Bhashya 4.1.2 and subitism.
  22. ^ Timalsina 2008, p. xvii: "Advaita can be approached from various angles. Not only are there multiple interpretations of Advaita, there are different starting points from which one can arrive at the conclusion of non-duality".
  23. ^ , Oxford Dictionaries, Oxford University Press (2012), Quote: "1. real self of the individual; 2. a person's soul"
  24. ^ a b Richard Payne (2005). K. Bulkeley (ed.). Soul, Psyche, Brain. Palgrave Macmillan/Springer. pp. 199–200 with p. 215 notes 5, 6. ISBN 978-1-4039-7923-0.: "A fourth metaphor is the monistic equation of the true or absolute self (atman) with absolute being (Brahman). In general, then, the conception of the self that emerges is one in which the self is in some way permanent, eternal, absolute or unchanging. It is also simultaneously universal and individual. The view is that there is an essence and that it can be known."
  25. ^ Soul:
    • , Oxford Dictionaries, Oxford University Press (2012), Quote: "1. real self of the individual; 2. a person's soul"
    • David Lorenzen (2004), The Hindu World (Editors: Sushil Mittal and Gene Thursby), Routledge, ISBN 0-415215277, pp. 208–209, Quote: "Advaita and nirguni movements, on the other hand, stress an interior mysticism in which the devotee seeks to discover the identity of individual soul (atman) with the universal ground of being (brahman) or to find god within himself";
    • Richard King (1995), Early Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism, State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0791425138, p. 64, Quote: "Atman as the innermost essence or soul of man, and Brahman as the innermost essence and support of the universe. (...) Thus we can see in the Upanishads, a tendency towards a convergence of microcosm and macrocosm, culminating in the equating of atman with Brahman".
    • Chad Meister (2010), The Oxford Handbook of Religious Diversity, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195340136, p. 63; Quote: "Even though Buddhism explicitly rejected the Hindu ideas of Atman (soul) and Brahman, Hinduism treats Sakyamuni Buddha as one of the ten avatars of Vishnu."
  26. ^ Olivelle (1998, p. 77);
    Sanskrit (Wikisource): प्राणोऽपानो व्यान इत्यष्टावक्षराणि अष्टाक्षर ह वा एकं गायत्र्यै पदम् एतदु हैवास्या एतत् स यावदिदं प्राणि तावद्ध जयति योऽस्या एतदेवं पदं वेद अथास्या एतदेव तुरीयं दर्शतं पदं परोरजा य एष तपति यद्वै चतुर्थं तत्तुरीयम् दर्शतं पदमिति ददृश इव ह्येष परोरजा इति सर्वमु ह्येवैष रज उपर्युपरि तपत्य् एव हैव श्रिया यशसा तपति योऽस्या एतदेवं पदं वेद ॥ ३ ॥
  27. ^ Compare Fasching 2021: For Advaita Vedānta, consciousness is to be distinguished from all contents of consciousness that might be introspectively detectable: It is precisely consciousness of whatever contents it is conscious of and not itself one of these contents. Its only nature is, Advaita holds, prakāśa (manifestation); in itself it is devoid of any content or structure and can never become an object.
  28. ^ Brahman is also defined as:
    • The unchanging, infinite, immanent, and transcendent reality which is all matter, energy, time, space, being, and everything beyond in this Universe; that is the one supreme, universal spirit without a second.(Brodd (2003); Vachatimanont (2005, pp. 47–48))
    • Bowker 2003, "Brahman": "(Skt., literally, 'growth' or 'expansion'). The one supreme, all pervading Spirit that is the origin and support of the phenomenal universe."
    • Puligandla 1997, p. 222 The supreme self. Puligandla states it as "the unchanging reality amidst and beyond the world."
    • The Self-existent, the Absolute and the Imperishable. Brahman is indescribable.Fowler 2005, p. 30: "Upanisadic thought is anything but consistent; nevertheless, there is a common focus on the acceptance of a totally transcendent Absolute, a trend which arose in the Vedic period. This indescribable Absolute is called Brahman [...]."
  29. ^ It provides the "stuff" from which everything is made
  30. ^ It sets everything into working, into existence
  31. ^ Gambhirananda: "That (is Brahman) from which (are derived) the birth etc. of this (universe)."[158]
  32. ^ Svarupalakshana, qualities, definition based on essence
  33. ^ The Advaitin scholar Madhusudana Sarasvati explained Brahman as the Reality that is simultaneously an absence of falsity (sat), absence of ignorance (cit), and absence of sorrow/self-limitation (ananda).[161]
  34. ^ Compare Parable of the Poisoned Arrow
  35. ^ These concepts are discussed in ancient and medieval texts of Hinduism, and other Indian religions, using synonymous terms. Cause is referred to as kāraṇa (कारण), nidana (निदान), hetu (हेतु) or mulam (मूलम्), while effect is referred to as kārya (कार्य), phala (फल), parinam (परिणाम) or Shungam (शुङ्ग).[web 9][185]
  36. ^ Advaita furthermore states that effect (kārya) is non-different from cause (kāraṇa), but the cause is different from the effect. This principle is called kārya-kāraṇa ananyatva. When the cause is destroyed, the effect will no longer exist. For example, cotton cloth is the effect of the cotton threads, which is the material cause. Without threads there will be no cotton cloth. Without cotton there will be no thread. According to Swami Sivananda, in his comments on the Brahmasūtra-Bhāṣya 2.1.9, Adi Shankara describes this as follows:

    ananyatve'pi kāryakāraṇayoḥ kāryasya kāraṇātmatvaṃ na tu kāraṇasya kāryātmatvaṃ
    Despite the non-difference of cause and effect, the effect has its self in the cause but not the cause in the effect.
    The effect is of the nature of the cause and not the cause the nature of the effect.
    Therefore the qualities of the effect cannot touch the cause.[web 11]

  37. ^ According to Eliot Deutsch, Advaita Vedānta states that from "the standpoint of Brahman-experience and Brahman itself, there is no creation" in the absolute sense, all empirically observed creation is relative and mere transformation of one state into another, all states are provisional and a cause-effect driven modification.[189]
  38. ^ According to Hugh Nicholson, "the definitive study on the development of the concept of vivarta in Indian philosophy, and in Advaita Vedanta in particular, remains Hacker's Vivarta.[191] According to Hacker, "the word maya has for [Shankara] hardly any terminological weight."[192]
  39. ^ Compare the misunderstanding of Yogacharas concept of vijñapti-mātra, 'representation-only', as 'consciousness-only'.
  40. ^ The suffering created by the workings of the mind entangled with physical reality
  41. ^ Jivanmukti is a state that transforms the nature, attributes and behaviors of an individual.After this transformation, the liberated individual shows attributes such as:(Aiyar 1914, pp. 140–147);(Nikhilananda 1958, pp. 53–79); (Fort 1998)
    • he is not bothered by disrespect and endures cruel words, treats others with respect regardless of how others treat him;
    • when confronted by an angry person he does not return anger, instead replies with soft and kind words;
    • even if tortured, he speaks and trusts the truth;
    • he does not crave for blessings or expect praise from others;
    • he never injures or harms any life or being (ahimsa), he is intent in the welfare of all beings;
    • he is as comfortable being alone as in the presence of others;
    • he is as comfortable with a bowl, at the foot of a tree in tattered robe without help, as when he is in a mithuna (union of mendicants), grama (village) and nagara (city);
    • he does not care about or wear sikha (tuft of hair on the back of head for religious reasons), nor the holy thread across his body. To him, knowledge is sikha, knowledge is the holy thread, knowledge alone is supreme. Outer appearances and rituals do not matter to him, only knowledge matters;
    • for him there is no invocation nor dismissal of deities, no mantra nor non-mantra, no prostrations nor worship of gods, goddess or ancestors, nothing other than knowledge of Self;
    • he is humble, high spirited, of clear and steady mind, straightforward, compassionate, patient, indifferent, courageous, speaks firmly and with sweet words.
  42. ^ The true Self is itself just that pure consciousness, without which nothing can be known in any way.(...) And that same true Self, pure consciousness, is not different from the ultimate world Principle, Brahman  (...) Brahman (=the true Self, pure consciousness) is the only Reality (sat), since It is untinged by difference, the mark of ignorance, and since It is the one thing that is not sublimatable.[147]
  43. ^ Fowler 2002, pp. 30–31, 260–264: "As a philosophical and metaphysical term it [monism] refers to the acceptance of one single, ultimate, principle as the basis of the cosmos, the unity and oneness of all reality (...) [monism] has a model par excellence in that put forward by the eighth-century Indian philosopher Shankara, who is associated with the school of thought of Advaita Vedanta. (p. 263) – "In Shankara's words: 'the notions oneself and one's own are indeed falsely constructed (upon Atman) through nescience. When there is (the knowledge of) the oneness of Atman, these notions certainly do not exist. If the seed does not exist, whence shall the fruit arise?".
  44. ^ These characteristics and steps are described in various Advaita texts, such as by Shankara in Chapter 1.1 of Brahmasutrabhasya,[82] and in the Bhagavad Gita Chapter 10
  45. ^ Example self-restraints mentioned in Hindu texts: one must refrain from any violence that causes injury to others, refrain from starting or propagating deceit and falsehood, refrain from theft of other's property, refrain from sexually cheating on one's partner, and refrain from avarice.[211][212][213]
  46. ^ See also kelamuni (2006), The Philosophy of Adi Shankaracharya, section "II. The Threefold Means," on Brahma Sutra Bhashya 4.1.2 and subitism.
  47. ^ Mayeda refers to statements from Shankara regarding epistemology (pramana-janya) in section 1.18.133 of Upadesasahasri, and section 1.1.4 of Brahmasutra-bhasya.[229][230] NB: some manuscripts list Upadesasahasri verse 1.18.133 as 2.18.133, while Mayeda lists it as 1.18.133, because of interchanged chapter numbering.[231][232]
  48. ^ See also ramesam, AtmA anubhava / anubhUti (blog).
  49. ^ Sharma 2000, p. 177 refers to Brahma Sutra Bhashya 4.1.15, "which tradition views as an allusion to his own direct experience of the ultimate truth." It runs as follows: [...] How can one contest the heart-felt cognition of another as possessing brahman-knowledge, even though bearing a body?
  50. ^ 1. Something is. 2. It is not. 3. It both is and is not. 4. It neither is nor is not.[256]
  51. ^ "Consciousness",[273][web 15] "intelligence",[274][272] "wisdom"
  52. ^ "the Absolute",[273][web 15] "infinite",[web 15] "the Highest truth"[web 15]
  53. ^ While the Vedanta tradition equates sat ("the Existent") with Brahman, the Chandogya Upanishad itself does not refer to Brahman.[267][265] Deutsch & Dalvi (2004, p. 8): "Although the text does not use the term brahman, the Vedanta tradition is that the Existent (sat) referred to is no other than Brahman."
  54. ^ King 2002, p. 128: "Although it is common to find Western scholars and Hindus arguing that Sankaracarya was the most influential and important figure in the history of Hindu intellectual thought, this does not seem to be justified by the historical evidence."
  55. ^ Shankara, himself, had renounced all religious ritual acts;[301]
    For an example of Shankara's reasoning "why rites and ritual actions should be given up",[302] Elsewhere, Shankara's Bhasya on various Upanishads repeat "give up rituals and rites".[303]
  56. ^ Compare Mookerji 2011 on Svādhyāya (Vedic learning). Mookerji (2011, pp. 29–31) notes that the Rigveda, and Sayana's commentary, contain passages criticizing as fruitless mere recitation of the Ŗik (words) without understanding their inner meaning or essence, the knowledge of dharma and Parabrahman. Mookerji (2011, pp. 29, 34) concludes that in the Rigvedic education of the mantras "the contemplation and comprehension of their meaning was considered as more important and vital to education than their mere mechanical repetition and correct pronunciation." Mookerji (2011, p. 35) refers to Sayana as stating that "the mastery of texts, akshara-praptī, is followed by artha-bodha, perception of their meaning." (Artha may also mean "goal, purpose or essence," depending on the context.[304][web 17]) According to Mookerji (2011, p. 36), "the realization of Truth" and the knowledge of paramatman as revealed to the rishis is the real aim of Vedic learning, and not the mere recitation of texts.
  57. ^ Up.I.18.219: "The renunciation of all actions becomes the means for discriminating the meaning of the word "Thou" since there is an [Upanisadic] teaching, "Having become calm, self-controlled [..., one sees Atman there in oneself]" (Bhr. Up. IV, 4, 23)."[312]
  58. ^ Śaṅkarācārya 1949, p. 32;
    Sanskrit: तच् चैतत् परमार्थदर्शनं प्रतिपत्तुमिच्छता वर्णाश्रमाद्यभिमान-कृतपाञ्क्तरूपपुत्रवित्तलोकैषणादिभ्यो व्युत्थानं कर्तव्यम् । सम्यक्प्रत्ययविरोधात् तदभिमानस्य भेददर्शनप्रतिषेधार्थोपपत्तिश्चोपपद्यते । न ह्येकस्मिन्नात्मन्यसंसारित्वबुद्धौ शास्त्रन्यायोत्पादितायां तद्विपरीता बुद्धिर्भवति । न ह्य् अग्नौ शितत्वबुद्धिः, शरीरे वाजरामरणबुद्धिः । तस्मादविद्याकार्यत्वात् सर्वकर्मणां तत्साधनानां च यज्ञोपवीतादीनां परमार्थदर्शनिष्टेन त्यागः कर्तव्यः ॥ ४४॥
  59. ^ Many in number, the Upanishads developed in different schools at various times and places, some in the Vedic period and others in the medieval or modern era (the names of up to 112 Upanishads have been recorded).[327] All major commentators have considered the twelve to thirteen oldest of these texts as the principal Upanishads and as the foundation of Vedanta.
  60. ^ The Śruti includes the four Vedas including its four layers of embedded texts – the Samhitas, the Brahmanas, the Aranyakas, and the early Upanishads.[328]
  61. ^ Sanskrit: श्री संस्थान गौडपदाचार्य मठ, Śrī Sansthāna Gauḍapadācārya Maṭha
  62. ^ Nakamura also recognized the influence of these mathas, which he argues contributed to the influence of Shankara, which was "due to institutional factors". The mathas which he established remain active today, and preserve the teachings and influence of Shankara, "while the writings of other scholars before him came to be forgotten with the passage of time".[347]
  63. ^ According to Pandey, these Mathas were not established by Shankara himself, but were originally ashrams established by Vibhāņdaka and his son Ŗșyaśŗnga.[348] Shankara inherited the ashrams at Dvārakā and Sringeri, and shifted the ashram at Śŗngaverapura to Badarikāśrama, and the ashram at Angadeśa to Jagannātha Purī.[349]
  64. ^ Sanskrit.org: "Advaitins are non-sectarian, and they advocate worship of Siva and Visnu equally with that of the other deities of Hinduism, like Sakti, Ganapati and others."[web 18]
  65. ^ Archeological evidence suggest that the Smarta tradition in India dates back to at least 3rd-century CE.[351][352]
  66. ^ Practically, Shankara fostered a rapprochement between Advaita and smarta orthodoxy, which by his time had not only continued to defend the varnasramadharma theory as defining the path of karman, but had developed the practice of pancayatanapuja ("five-shrine worship") as a solution to varied and conflicting devotional practices. Thus one could worship any one of five deities (Vishnu, Siva, Durga, Surya, Ganesa) as one's istadevata ("deity of choice").[358]
  67. ^ Helmuth Von Glasenapp (1995), Vedanta & Buddhism: A comparative study, Buddhist Publication Society, pages 2-3, Quote: "Vedanta and Buddhism have lived side by side for such a long time that obviously they must have influenced each other. The strong predilection of the Indian mind for a doctrine of universal unity has led the representatives of Mahayana to conceive Samsara and Nirvana as two aspects of the same and single true reality; for Nagarjuna the empirical world is a mere appearance, as all dharmas, manifest in it, are perishable and conditioned by other dharmas, without having any independent existence of their own. Only the indefinable "Voidness" (Sunyata) to be grasped in meditation, and realized in Nirvana, has true reality [in Buddhism]".
  68. ^ This development did not end with Advaita Vedanta, but continued in Tantrism and various schools of Shaivism. Non-dual Kashmir Shaivism, for example, was influenced by, and took over doctrines from, several orthodox and heterodox Indian religious and philosophical traditions.[367] These include Vedanta, Samkhya, Patanjali Yoga and Nyayas, and various Buddhist schools, including Yogacara and Madhyamika,[367] but also Tantra and the Nath-tradition.[368]
  69. ^ Kalupahana describes how in Buddhism there is also a current which favours substance ontology. Kalupahanan sees Madhyamaka and Yogacara as reactions against developments toward substance ontology in Buddhism.[389]
  70. ^ Scholars are divided on the historical influence of Advaita Vedānta. Some Indologists state that it is one of the most studied Hindu philosophy and the most influential schools of classical Indian thought:
    • Indich 2000, pp. 57–60
    • Brannigan 2009, p. 19: "Advaita Vedanta is the most influential philosophical system in Hindu thought."
    • Deutsch 1969, p. 3: "[Advaita Vedānta] has been and continues to be the most widely accepted system of thought among philosophers in India, and it is, we believe, one of the greatest philosophical achievements to be found in the East or the West."
  71. ^ See also Devdutt Pattanaik (August 30, 2020), Who is a Hindu? - What they don't tell you about Advaita, Mumbai Mirror.
  72. ^ In the Orientalist view, the medieval Muslim period was a time of stagnation and cultural degeneration, in which the original purity of the Upanisadic teachings, systematized by philosophers like Shankara, was lost. In this view, "the genuine achievements of Indian civilization" were recovered during the British colonial rule of India, due to the efforts of western Indologists, who viewed Advaita Vedanta as the authentic philosophy of the Upanishads, and Shankara as its greatest exponent.[428][note 71] While this view has been criticised by postcolonial studies and critiques of Orientalism, "in some corners of the academy, the Orientalists' understanding of premodern Indian history has so far escaped thorough reexamination."[429]
  73. ^ Nevertheless, Balasubramanian argues that since the basic ideas of the Vedanta systems are derived from the Vedas, the Vedantic philosophy is as old as the Vedas.[435]
  74. ^ Deutsch and Dalvi point out that, in the Indian context, texts "are only part of a tradition which is preserved in its purest form in the oral transmission as it has been going on."[437]
  75. ^ Nakamura notes that there are contradictions in doctrine between the four chapters.[450]
  76. ^ It is often used interchangeably with the term citta-mātra, but they have different meanings. The standard translation of both terms is "consciousness-only" or "mind-only." Several modern researchers object this translation, and the accompanying label of "absolute idealism" or "idealistic monism".[454] A better translation for vijñapti-mātra is representation-only.[455]
  77. ^ 1. Something is. 2. It is not. 3. It both is and is not. 4. It neither is nor is not.[256][page needed] The 'four-cornered negation' is an English gloss of the Sanskrit, Chatushkoti.[citation needed]
  78. ^ The influence of Mahayana Buddhism on other religions and philosophies was not limited to Vedanta. Kalupahana notes that the Visuddhimagga – a Theravada Buddhist tradition, contains "some metaphysical speculations, such as those of the Sarvastivadins, the Sautrantikas, and even the Yogacarins".[457]
  79. ^ King 2002, p. 128: "Although it is common to find Western scholars and Hindus arguing that Sankaracarya was the most influential and important figure in the history of Hindu intellectual thought, this does not seem to be justified by the historical evidence."[29]
  80. ^ Potter (2006, pp. 6–7): "...these modern interpreters are implying that most Advaitins after Samkara's time are confused and basically mistaken, and that 99% of the extant classical interpretive literature on Samkara's philosophy is off the mark. This is clearly a remarkably radical conclusion. Yet, there is good reason to think that it may well be true.
  81. ^ The insignificance of Srineri matha before this time was such, that Hacker and Kulke & Rothermund have argued that Sringeri matha may have been founded by Vidyaranya himself, proclaiming that it was established by Shankara himself.[346][479]
  82. ^ Potter 2008, pp. 346–347, 420–423: "There is little firm historical information about Suresvara; tradition holds Suresvara is same as Mandanamisra."
  83. ^ According to Comans, this approach is missing in historic Advaita texts.[520]
  84. ^ Neo-Vedanta seems to be closer to Bhedabheda-Vedanta than to Shankara's Advaita Vedanta, with the acknowledgement of the reality of the world. Nicholas F. Gier: "Ramakrsna, Svami Vivekananda, and Aurobindo (I also include M.K. Gandhi) have been labeled "neo-Vedantists," a philosophy that rejects the Advaitins' claim that the world is illusory. Aurobindo, in his The Life Divine, declares that he has moved from Sankara's "universal illusionism" to his own "universal realism" (2005: 432), defined as metaphysical realism in the European philosophical sense of the term."[521]
  85. ^ Marek: "Wobei der Begriff Neo-Advaita darauf hinweist, dass sich die traditionelle Advaita von dieser Strömung zunehmend distanziert, da sie die Bedeutung der übenden Vorbereitung nach wie vor als unumgänglich ansieht. (The term Neo-Advaita indicating that the traditional Advaita increasingly distances itself from this movement, as they regard preparational practicing still as inevitable)[525]
  86. ^ Alan Jacobs: Many firm devotees of Sri Ramana Maharshi now rightly term this western phenomenon as 'Neo-Advaita'. The term is carefully selected because 'neo' means 'a new or revived form'. And this new form is not the Classical Advaita which we understand to have been taught by both of the Great Self Realised Sages, Adi Shankara and Ramana Maharshi. It can even be termed 'pseudo' because, by presenting the teaching in a highly attenuated form, it might be described as purporting to be Advaita, but not in effect actually being so, in the fullest sense of the word. In this watering down of the essential truths in a palatable style made acceptable and attractive to the contemporary western mind, their teaching is misleading.[526]
  87. ^ See for other examples Conway [web 32] and Swartz[web 33]
  88. ^ Presently Cohen has distanced himself from Poonja, and calls his teachings "Evolutionary Enlightenment".[531] What Is Enlightenment, the magazine published by Choen's organisation, has been critical of neo-Advaita several times, as early as 2001. See.[web 34][web 35][web 36]

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advaita, vedanta, advaita, redirects, here, other, uses, advaita, disambiguation, this, article, contains, indic, text, without, proper, rendering, support, question, marks, boxes, misplaced, vowels, missing, conjuncts, instead, indic, text, ɑː, sanskrit, अद, . Advaita redirects here For other uses see Advaita disambiguation This article contains Indic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks or boxes misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text Advaita Vedanta ʌ d ˈ v aɪ t e v ɛ ˈ d ɑː n t e Sanskrit अद व त व द न त IAST Advaita Vedanta is a Hindu sadhana a path of spiritual discipline and experience note 1 In a narrow sense it refers to the oldest extant scholarly tradition of the orthodox Hindu school Vedanta writing in Sanskrit note 2 in a broader sense it refers to a popular syncretic tradition blending Vedanta with other traditions and producing works in vernacular 4 Adi Shankara the most prominent exponent of Advaita Vedanta tradition Narayana Guru on Advaita Vedanta in his work Atmopadesa Satakam അത മ ത മല ല സദര ത ഥമല ലഹ സ ച ച തമ തമ ന ന ത ള ഞ ഞ ധ രന യ സദസദ ത പ രത പത ത യറ റ സത ത മ ത മ ദ വ യ മ ദ വ യമര ന ന ട ണ Neither that nor this nor the meaning of existence am I but existence consciousness joy immortal thus attaining clarity emboldened discarding attachment to being and non being one should gently gently merge in SAT AUM The term Advaita literally non secondness but usually rendered as nondualism 5 6 and often equated with monism note 3 refers to the idea that Brahman alone is ultimately real while the transient phenomenal world is an illusory appearance maya of Brahman In this view jivatman the experiencing self is ultimately non different na aparah from Atman Brahman the highest Self or Reality 3 7 8 note 4 The jivatman or individual self is a mere reflection or limitation of singular Atman in a multitude of apparent individual bodies 9 In the Advaita tradition moksha liberation from suffering and rebirth 10 11 is attained through recognizing this illusoriness of the phenomenal world and disidentification from the body mind complex and the notion of doership note 5 and acquiring vidya knowledge 12 of one s true identity as Atman Brahman 13 self luminous svayam prakasa note 6 awareness or Witness consciousness 14 note 7 Upanishadic statements such as tat tvam asi that s how you are destroy the ignorance avidya regarding one s true identity by revealing that jiv Atman is non different from immortal note 8 Brahman note 4 While the prominent 8th century Vedic scholar and teacher acharya 15 Adi Shankara emphasized that since Brahman is ever present Brahman knowledge is immediate and requires no action or doership that is striving to attain and effort 16 17 18 the Advaita tradition also prescribes elaborate preparatory practice including contemplation of the mahavakyas 17 19 20 21 note 9 and accepting yogic samadhi as a means to knowledge posing a paradox which is also recognized in other spiritual disciplines and traditions 17 22 note 10 Advaita Vedanta adapted philosophical concepts from Buddhism giving them a Vedantic basis and interpretation 23 and was influenced by and influenced various traditions and texts of Indian philosophy 24 25 26 While Adi Shankara is generally regarded as the most prominent exponent of the Advaita Vedanta tradition 27 his early influence has been questioned 28 29 note 9 as his prominence started to take shape only centuries later in the 14th century with the ascent of Sringeri matha and its jagadguru Vidyaranya Madhava 14th cent in the Vijayanagara Empire note 11 While Shankara did not embrace Yoga 38 the Advaita Vedanta tradition in medieval times explicitly incorporated elements from the yogic tradition and texts like the Yoga Vasistha and the Bhagavata Purana 39 culminating in Swami Vivekananda s full embrace and propagation of Yogic samadhi as an Advaita means of knowledge and liberation 40 41 In the 19th century due to the influence of Vidyaranya s Sarvadarsanasaṅgraha 42 the importance of Advaita Vedanta was overemphasized by Western scholarship 43 and Advaita Vedanta came to be regarded as the paradigmatic example of Hindu spirituality despite the numerical dominance of theistic Bhakti oriented religiosity 44 45 43 note 12 In modern times Advaita views appear in various Neo Vedanta movements 47 Contents 1 Etymology and nomenclature 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Advaita Vedanta 1 3 Advaita tradition 1 4 Monism 2 Darsana view central concerns 3 Reality and ignorance 3 1 Three levels of Reality truth 3 2 Paramarthika Sat True Reality 3 2 1 Atman 3 2 1 1 Three states of consciousness and Turiya 3 2 1 2 Svayam prakasa self luminosity 3 2 2 Brahman 3 3 Vyavaharika conventional reality Avidya and Maya 3 3 1 Avidya ignorance 3 3 2 Maya appearance 3 3 3 Five koshas sheaths 3 4 Parinamavada and vivartavada causality and change 4 Moksha liberating knowledge of Brahman 4 1 Knowledge is liberating 4 2 Attaining vidhya knowledge 4 2 1 Preparation the fourfold qualities 4 2 2 The threefold practice sravana hearing manana thinking and nididhyasana meditation 4 2 3 Guru 4 2 4 Pramana means of knowledge 4 2 4 1 Samadhi 4 2 4 2 Anubhava experience 4 2 5 Adhyaropa Apavada imposition and negation 4 2 6 The Mahavyakas the identity of Atman and Brahman 4 2 6 1 Mahavakyas 4 2 6 2 That you are 4 2 6 3 Direct perception versus contemplation of the Mahavakyas 4 2 6 4 Renouncement of ritualism 5 Ethics 6 Texts 6 1 Prasthanatrayi 6 2 Textual authority 6 3 Other texts 7 Sampradaya and Smarta tradition 7 1 Monastic order Mathas 7 2 Smarta Tradition 8 Buddhist influences 8 1 Similarities 8 2 Mahayana influences 8 3 Differences from Buddhism 8 4 Criticisms of concurring Hindu schools 9 Relationship with other forms of Vedanta 9 1 Vishishtadvaita 9 2 Shuddhadvaita 9 3 Dvaita 9 4 Influence on other traditions 10 History of Advaita Vedanta 10 1 Historiography 10 2 Early Vedanta 10 3 Early Advaita Vedanta 10 3 1 Gauḍapada and Maṇḍukya Karika 10 4 Early medieval period Maṇḍana Misra and Adi Shankara 10 4 1 Maṇḍana Misra 10 4 2 Adi Shankara 10 4 2 1 Systematizer of Advaita thought 10 4 2 2 Writings 10 4 2 3 Influence of Shankara 10 4 3 Advaita Vedanta sub schools 10 5 Late medieval India incorporating yoga 10 5 1 Vidyaraṇya 10 6 Modern Advaita 10 6 1 Niscaldas and Greater Advaita 10 6 2 Neo Vedanta 10 6 3 Contemporary Advaita Vedanta 10 6 4 Influence on New religious movements 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksEtymology and nomenclatureEtymology The word Advaita is a composite of two Sanskrit words Prefix a अ meaning non Dvaita द व त which means duality or dualism 48 Advaita is often translated as non duality but a more apt translation is non secondness 3 Advaita has several meanings Nonduality of subject and object 49 50 web 1 As Gaudapada states when a distinction is made between subject and object people grasp to objects which is samsara By realizing one s true identity as Brahman there is no more grasping and the mind comes to rest 50 Nonduality of Atman and Brahman the famous diction of Advaita Vedanta that Atman is not distinct from Brahman the knowledge of this identity is liberating Monism there is no other reality than Brahman that Reality is not constituted by parts that is ever changing things have no existence of their own but are appearances of the one Existent Brahman and that there is in reality no duality between the experiencing self jiva and Brahman the Ground of Being note 4 The word Vedanta is a composition of two Sanskrit words The word Veda refers to the whole corpus of vedic texts and the word anta means end The meaning of Vedanta can be summed up as the end of the vedas or the ultimate knowledge of the vedas Vedanta is one of six orthodox schools of Hindu philosophy Advaita Vedanta While a preferred terminology for Upanisadic philosophy in the early periods before the time of Shankara was Puruṣavada 51 note 13 the Advaita Vedanta school has historically been referred to by various names such as Advaita vada speaker of Advaita Abheda darshana view of non difference Dvaita vada pratisedha denial of dual distinctions and Kevala dvaita non dualism of the isolated 52 It is also called mayavada by Vaishnava opponents akin to Madhyamaka Buddhism due to their insistence that phenomena ultimately lack an inherent essence or reality 53 54 55 56 According to Richard King a professor of Buddhist and Asian studies the term Advaita first occurs in a recognizably Vedantic context in the prose of Mandukya Upanishad 52 According to Frits Staal a professor of philosophy specializing in Sanskrit and Vedic studies the word Advaita itself is from the Vedic era and the Vedic sage Yajnavalkya 8th or 7th century BCE 57 58 is credited to be the one who coined it 59 Stephen Phillips a professor of philosophy and Asian studies translates the Advaita containing verse excerpt in Brihadaranyaka Upanishad as An ocean a single seer without duality becomes he whose world is Brahman note 15 Advaita tradition While the term Advaita Vedanta in a strict sense may refer to the scholastic tradition of textual exegesis established by Shankara advaita in a broader sense may refer to a broad current of advaitic thought which incorporates advaitic elements with yogic thought and practice and other strands of Indian religiosity such as Kashmir Shaivism and the Nath tradition 61 The first connotation has also been called Classical Advaita 62 63 and doctrinal Advaita 64 and its presentation as such is due to mediaeval doxographies 41 the influence of Orientalist Indologists like Paul Deussen 65 and the Indian response to colonial influences dubbed neo Vedanta by Paul Hacker who regarded it as a deviation from traditional Advaita Vedanta 62 Yet post Shankara Advaita Vedanta incorporated yogic elements such as the Yoga Vasistha and influenced other Indian traditions and neo Vedanta is based on this broader strand of Indian thought 62 This broader current of thought and practice has also been called greater Advaita Vedanta 66 vernacular advaita 62 and experiential Advaita 64 It is this broader advaitic tradition which is commonly presented as Advaita Vedanta though the term advaitic may be more apt 62 note 16 Monism See also Metaphysics and Ontology The nondualism of Advaita Vedanta is often regarded as an idealist monism note 3 According to King Advaita Vedanta developed to its ultimate extreme the monistic ideas already present in the Upanishads note 17 In contrast states Milne it is misleading to call Advaita Vedanta monistic since this confuses the negation of difference with conflation into one 67 Advaita is a negative term a dvaita states Milne which denotes the negation of a difference between subject and object or between perceiver and perceived 67 According to Deutsch Advaita Vedanta teaches monistic oneness however without the multiplicity premise of alternate monism theories 68 According to Jacqueline Suthren Hirst Adi Shankara positively emphasizes oneness premise in his Brahma sutra Bhasya 2 1 20 attributing it to all the Upanishads 69 Nicholson states Advaita Vedanta contains realistic strands of thought both in its oldest origins and in Shankara s writings 70 Darsana view central concerns A drop merging in the Ocean an analogy for the Jivatman merging into Brahman Further information Hindu philosophy Advaita is a subschool of Vedanta the latter being one of the six classical Hindu darsanas an integrated body of textual interpretations and religious practices which aim at the attainment of moksha release or liberation from transmigratory existence 71 72 note 18 Traditional Advaita Vedanta centers on the study and what it believes to be correct understanding of the sruti revealed texts especially the Principal Upanishads 74 75 along with the Brahma Sutras and the Bhagavad Gita which are collectively called as Prasthantrayi A main question in all schools of Vedanta is the relation between the individual self jiva and Atman Brahman 76 Shankara and his followers regard Atman Brahman to be the ultimate Real and jivanatman ultimately to be of the nature of Atman Brahman 77 8 This truth is established from a literal reading of selected parts 78 of the oldest Principal Upanishads and Brahma Sutras and is also found in parts of the Bhagavad Gita and numerous other Hindu texts 3 and is regarded to be self evident 79 note 19 though great effort is made to show the correctness of this reading and its compatibility with reason and experience by criticizing other systems of thought 79 Vidya correct knowledge or understanding of the identity of jivan atman and Brahman destroys or makes null avidya false knowledge and results in liberation 81 note 20 According to the contemporary Advaita tradition this knowledge can be obtained by svadhyaya study of the self and of the Vedic texts which consists of four stages of samanyasa viraga renunciation sravana listening to the teachings of the sages manana reflection on the teachings and nididhyasana introspection and profound and repeated meditation on the mahavakyas selected Upanishadic statements such as tat tvam asi that art thou or you are That which are taken literal and form the srutic evidence for the identity of jivanatman and Atman Brahman 82 83 web 4 This meditation negates the misconceptions false knowledge and false ego identity rooted in maya which obfuscate the ultimate truth of the oneness of Brahman and one s true identity as Atman Brahman 78 This culminates in what Adi Shankara refers to as anubhava immediate intuition a direct awareness which is construction free and not construction filled It is not an awareness of Brahman but instead an awareness that is Brahman 84 Although the threefold practice is broadly accepted in the Advaita tradition and affirmed by Mandana Misra 85 it is at odds with Shankara 86 who took a subitist position 87 arguing that moksha is attained at once when the mahavakyas articulating the identity of Atman and Brahman are understood 88 18 note 21 While closely related to Samkhya 89 the Advaita Vedanta tradition rejects the dualism of Samkhya purusha primal consciousness and prakriti nature instead stating that Brahman is the sole Reality 77 90 that from which the origination subsistence and dissolution of this universe proceed 91 Samkhya argues that Purusha is the efficient cause of all existence while Prakriti is its material cause 91 Advaita like all Vedanta schools states that Brahman is both the efficient and the material cause What created all existence is also present in and reflected in all beings and inert matter the creative principle was and is everywhere always 92 By accepting this postulation various theoretical difficulties arise which Advaita and other Vedanta traditions offer different answers for 93 77 90 First how did Brahman which is sat existence without any distinction become manifold universe Second how did Brahman which is cit consciousness create the material world Third if Brahman is ananda bliss why did the empirical world of sufferings arise The Brahma Sutras do not answer these philosophical queries and later Vedantins including Shankara had to resolve them 93 To solve these questions Shankara introduces the concept of Unevolved Name and Form or primal matter corresponding to Prakriti from which the world evolves 94 coming close to Samkhya dualism 95 Shankara s notion of Unevolved Name and Form was not adopted by the later Advaita tradition instead the later tradition turned avidya into a metaphysical principle namely mulavidya or root ignorance a metaphysical substance which is the primal material cause of the universe upadana 96 Prakasatmans 13th c defense of vivarta to explain the origin of the world which declared phenomenal reality to be an illusion 97 became the dominant explanation with which the primacy of Atman Brahman can be maintained 77 90 Reality and ignorance The swan is an important motif in Advaita The swan symbolises the ability to discern Satya Real Eternal from Mithya Unreal Changing just like the mythical swan Paramahamsa discerns milk from water Classical Advaita Vedanta states that all reality and everything in the experienced world has its root in Brahman which is unchanging Consciousness 3 To Advaitins there is no duality between a Creator and the created universe 3 98 All objects all experiences all matter all consciousness all awareness are somehow also this one fundamental reality Brahman 3 Yet the knowing self has various experiences of reality during the waking dream and dreamless states 99 and Advaita Vedanta acknowledges and admits that from the empirical perspective there are numerous distinctions 100 Advaita explains this by postulating different levels of reality 101 102 103 99 and by its theory of errors anirvacaniya khyati 104 3 Three levels of Reality truth See also Three Bodies Doctrine Vedanta and Two truths doctrine Shankara proposes three levels of reality using sublation as the ontological criterion 101 102 103 Paramarthika paramartha absolute the Reality that is metaphysically true and ontologically accurate It is the state of experiencing that which is absolutely real and into which both other reality levels can be resolved This reality is the highest it can t be sublated assimilated by any other 101 105 Vyavaharika vyavahara or samvriti saya 106 consisting of the empirical or pragmatical reality It is ever changing over time thus empirically true at a given time and context but not metaphysically true It is our world of experience the phenomenal world that we handle every day when we are awake It is the level in which both jiva living creatures or individual Selfs and Iswara are true here the material world is also true but this is incomplete reality and is sublatable 105 107 Prathibhasika pratibhasika apparent reality unreality reality based on imagination alone It is the level of experience in which the mind constructs its own reality Well known examples of pratibhasika is the imaginary reality such as the roaring of a lion fabricated in dreams during one s sleep and the perception of a rope in the dark as being a snake 105 108 109 Absolute and relative reality are valid and true in their respective contexts but only from their respective particular perspectives 99 100 110 John Grimes explains this Advaita doctrine of absolute and relative truth with the example of light and darkness 100 From the sun s perspective it neither rises nor sets there is no darkness and all is light From the perspective of a person on earth sun does rise and set there is both light and darkness not all is light there are relative shades of light and darkness Both are valid realities and truths given their perspectives Yet they are contradictory What is true from one point of view states Grimes is not from another To Advaita Vedanta this does not mean there are two truths and two realities but it only means that the same one Reality and one Truth is explained or experienced from two different perspectives 100 111 As they developed these theories Advaita Vedanta scholars were influenced by some ideas from the Nyaya Samkhya and Yoga schools of Hindu philosophy 112 103 These theories have not enjoyed universal consensus among Advaitins and various competing ontological interpretations have flowered within the Advaita tradition 3 113 note 22 Paramarthika Sat True Reality Atman Main article Atman Hinduism See also Samadhi Buddha nature Sunyata and Choiceless awareness Atman IAST atman Sanskrit आत मन is the real self 114 115 116 117 note 23 or essence web 5 note 24 of the individual It is caitanya Pure Consciousness 118 a consciousness states Sthaneshwar Timalsina that is self revealed self evident and self aware svaprakashata 117 and states Payne in some way permanent eternal absolute or unchanging note 24 It is self existent awareness limitless and non dual 119 It is a stable subjectivity or a unity of consciousness through all the specific states of individuated phenomenality 120 Atman states Eliot Deutsch is the pure undifferentiated supreme power of awareness it is more than thought it is a state of being that which is conscious and transcends subject object divisions and momentariness 121 According to Ram Prasad it is not an object but the irreducible essence of being as subjectivity rather than an objective self with the quality of consciousness 122 According to Shankara it is self evident and a matter not requiring any proof that Atman the I is as different as light is from darkness from non Atman the you or that the material world whose characteristics are mistakingly superimposed on Atman resulting in notions as I am this and This is mine 123 One s real self is not the constantly changing body not the desires not the emotions not the ego nor the dualistic mind 124 125 126 but the introspective inwardly self conscious on looker saksi 127 which is in reality completely disconnected from the non Atman 123 The jivatman or individual self is a mere reflection of singular Atman in a multitude of apparent individual bodies 9 It is not an individual subject of consciousness 120 but the same in each person and identical to the universal eternal Brahman 128 a term used interchangeable with Atman 129 Atman is often translated as soul note 25 though the two concepts differ significantly since soul includes mental activities whereas Atman solely refers to detached witness consciousness Three states of consciousness and Turiya Advaita posits three states of consciousness namely waking jagrat dreaming svapna deep sleep suṣupti which are empirically experienced by human beings 130 131 and correspond to the Three Bodies Doctrine 132 The first state is the waking state in which we are aware of our daily world 133 This is the gross body The second state is the dreaming mind This is the subtle body 133 The third state is the state of deep sleep This is the causal body 133 Advaita also posits the fourth Turiya which some describe as pure consciousness the background that underlies and transcends these three common states of consciousness web 6 web 7 Turiya is the state of liberation where states Advaita school one experiences the infinite ananta and non different advaita abheda that is free from the dualistic experience the state in which ajativada non origination is apprehended 134 According to Candradhara Sarma Turiya state is where the foundational Self is realized it is measureless neither cause nor effect all pervading without suffering blissful changeless self luminous note 6 real immanent in all things and transcendent 135 Those who have experienced the Turiya stage of self consciousness have reached the pure awareness of their own non dual Self as one with everyone and everything for them the knowledge the knower the known becomes one they are the Jivanmukta 136 137 138 Advaita traces the foundation of this ontological theory in more ancient Sanskrit texts 139 For example chapters 8 7 through 8 12 of Chandogya Upanishad discuss the four states of consciousness as awake dream filled sleep deep sleep and beyond deep sleep 139 140 One of the earliest mentions of Turiya in the Hindu scriptures occurs in verse 5 14 3 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad note 26 The idea is also discussed in other early Upanishads 141 Svayam prakasa self luminosity Main article prakasa In the Advaita tradition consciousness is svayam prakasa self luminous 142 3 note 6 which means that self is pure awareness by nature 143 According to Dasgupta it is the most fundamental concept of the Vedanta 144 T R V Murti the Vedanta concept is explained as follows The point to be reached is a foundational consciousness that is unconditional self evident and immediate svayam prakasa It is that to which everything is presented but is itself no presentation that which knows all but is itself no object The self should not be confused with the contents and states which it enjoys and manipulates If we have to give an account of it we can describe it only as what it is not for any positive description of it would be possible only if it could be made an object of observation which from the nature of the case it is not We know it only as we withdraw ourselves from the body with which we happen to be identified in this transition 145 note 27 According to Jonardon Ganeri the concept was introduced by the Buddhist philosopher Dignaga c 480 c 540 CE and accepted by the Vedanta tradition 143 according to Zhihua Yao the concept has older roots in the Mahasanghika school 146 Brahman Main articles Brahman and Satcitananda According to Advaita Vedanta Brahman is the true Self consciousness awareness and the only Reality Sat 147 148 149 note 28 Brahman is Paramarthika Satyam Absolute Truth 150 or absolute Real 151 It is That which is unborn and unchanging 148 152 and immortal note 8 Other than Brahman everything else including the universe material objects and individuals are ever changing and therefore maya Brahman is not sublatable 147 which means it cannot be superseded by a still higher reality 153 the true Self pure consciousness the only Reality sat since It is untinged by difference the mark of ignorance and since It is the one thing that is not sublatable 147 In Advaita Brahman is the substrate and cause of all changes 148 152 Brahman is considered to be the material cause note 29 and the efficient cause note 30 of all that exists 154 155 156 The Brahma Sutras I 1 2 state that Brahman is that from which the origination subsistence and dissolution of this universe proceed 157 note 31 Advaita s Upanishadic roots state Brahman s qualities note 32 to be Sat cit ananda 159 160 161 true being consciousness bliss 161 162 or Eternal Bliss Consciousness 163 note 33 A distinction is made between nirguna Brahman formless Brahman and saguna Brahman Brahman with form that is Ishvara God Nirguna Brahman is undescrible and the Upanishadic neti neti not this not that or neither this nor that negates all conceptualizations of Brahman 83 164 Vyavaharika conventional reality Avidya and Maya Avidya ignorance Avidya is a central tenet of Shankara s Advaita and became the main target of Ramanuja s criticism of Shankara 165 166 In Shankara s view avidya is adhyasa the superimposition of the qualities of one thing upon another 167 As Shankara explains in the Adhyasa bhasya the introduction to the Brahmasutrabhasya Owing to an absence of discrimination there continues a natural human behaviour in the form of I am this or This is mine this is avidya It is a superimposition of the attributes of one thing on another The ascertainment of the nature of the real entity by separating the superimposed thing from it is vidya knowledge illumination Due to avidya we re steeped in loka drsti the empirical view 168 From the beginning we only perceive the empirical world of multiplicity taking it to be the only and true reality 168 169 Due to avidya there is ignorance or nescience of the real Self Atman Brahman mistakingly identifying the Self with the body mind complex web 8 With parmartha drsti ignorance is removed and vidya is acquired and the Real distinctionless Brahman is perceived as the True reality 168 The notion of avidya and its relationship to Brahman creates a crucial philosophical issue within Advaita Vedanta thought how can avidya appear in Brahman since Brahman is pure consciousness 170 For Shankara avidya is a perceptual or psychological error 96 According to Satchidanandendra Saraswati for Shankara avidya is only a technical name to denote the natural tendency of the human mind that is engaged in the act of superimposition 171 The later tradition diverged from Shankara by turning avidya into a metaphysical principle namely mulavidya or root ignorance a metaphysical substance which is the primal material cause of the universe upadana thereby setting aside Shankara s Unevolved Name and Form as the explanation for the existence of materiality 96 172 According to Mayeda i n order to save monism they characterized avidya as indefinable as real or unreal sadasadbhyam anirvacanya belonging neither to the category of being nor to that of non being 96 In the 20th century this theory of mulavidya became a point of strong contention among Advaita Vedantins with Satchidanandendra Saraswati arguing that Padmapada and Prakasatman had misconstrued Shanakara s stance 173 Shankara did not give a location of avidya giving precedence to the removal of ignorance 174 note 34 Sengaku Mayeda writes in his commentary and translation of Adi Shankara s Upadesasahasri Certainly the most crucial problem which Sankara left for his followers is that of avidya If the concept is logically analysed it would lead the Vedanta philosophy toward dualism or nihilism and uproot its fundamental position 175 The later Advaita tradition diverged from Shankara trying to determinate a locus of avidya 176 with the Bhamati school locating avidya in the jiva c q prakriti while the Vivarana school locates it in Brahman 177 176 Maya appearance In Advaita Vedanta the perceived empirical world including people and other existence is Maya appearance 178 179 Jiva conditioned by the human mind is subjected to experiences of a subjective nature and misunderstands and interprets the physical changing world as the sole and final reality 178 Due to avidya we take the phenomenal world to be the final reality 180 while in Reality only Sat True Reality Brahman is Real and unchanging 181 While Shankara took a realistic stance and his explanations are remote from any connotation of illusion the 13th century scholar Prakasatman founder of the influential Vivarana school introduced the notion that the world is illusory 97 77 90 According to Hacker maya is not a prominent theme for Shankara in contrast to the later Advaita tradition and the word maya has for Shankara hardly any terminological weight 182 Five koshas sheaths Due to avidya atman is covered by koshas sheaths or bodies which hide man s true nature According to the Taittiriya Upanishad the Atman is covered by five koshas usually rendered sheath 183 They are often visualized like the layers of an onion 184 From gross to fine the five sheaths are Annamaya kosha physical food sheath Pranamaya kosha life force sheath Manomaya kosha mental sheath Vijnanamaya kosha discernment wisdom sheath Anandamaya kosha bliss sheath Ananda Parinamavada and vivartavada causality and change See also Satkaryavada Ajativada and Vivartavada Cause and effect are an important topic in all schools of Vedanta note 35 Two sorts of causes are recognised namely Nimitta karaṇa the efficient cause that which causes the existence of the universe and Upadana karaṇa the material cause that from which the matery of this universe comes 186 All schools of Vedanta agree that Brahman is both the material and the efficient cause and all subscribe to the theory of Satkaryavada web 10 which means that the effect is pre existent in the cause 187 note 36 There are different views on the origination of the empirical world from Brahman All commentators agree that Brahman is the cause of the world but disagree on how exactly Brahman is the cause of the world 187 According to Nicholson Mediaeval Vedantins distinguisghed two basic positions Parinamavada is the idea that the world is a real transformation parinama of Brahman 187 Vivartavada is the idea that the world is merely an unreal manifestation vivarta of Brahman Vivartavada states that although Brahman appears to undergo a transformation in fact no real change takes place The myriad of beings are unreal manifestation as the only real being is Brahman that ultimate reality which is unborn unchanging and entirely without parts 187 20th verse of Brahmajnanavalimala attributed to Shankara ब रह म सत य जगन म थ य ज व ब रह म व न पर Brahman is real the world is an illusion Brahman and Jiva are not different Brahmajnanavalimala 1 20 188 The Brahma Sutras the ancient Vedantins most sub schools of Vedanta 187 web 10 as well as Samkhya argue for parinamavada web 10 The most visible advocates of Vivartavada states Nicholson are the Advaitins the followers of Shankara 187 Although the world can be described as conventionally real adds Nicholson the Advaitins claim that all of Brahman s effects must ultimately be acknowledged as unreal before the individual self can be liberated web 10 note 37 Yet Adi Shankara himself most likely explained causality through parinamavada web 10 190 187 97 In Shankara s works Brahman constitutes the basic essence svabhava of the universe BS Bh 3 2 21 and as such the universe cannot be thought of as distinct from it BS Bh 2 1 14 In Shankara s view then The world is real but only in so far as its existence is seen as totally dependent upon Brahman 190 Shankara introduced the concept of Unevolved Name and Form or primal matter corresponding to Prakriti from which the world evolves 94 but this concept was not adopted by the later Advaita tradition 97 Vivartavada became the dominant explanation with which the primacy of Atman Brahman can be maintained 77 90 Scholars such as Hajime Nakamura and Paul Hacker already noted that Adi Shankara did not advocate Vivartavada and his explanations are remote from any connotation of illusion 97 note 38 It was the 13th century scholar Prakasatman who founded the influential Vivarana school who gave a definition to vivarta introducing the notion that the world is illusory It is Prakasatman s theory that is sometimes misunderstood as Adi Shankara s position 97 Andrew Nicholson concurs with Hacker and other scholars adding that the vivarta vada isn t Shankara s theory that Shankara s ideas appear closer to parinama vada and the vivarta explanation likely emerged gradually in Advaita subschool later web 10 note 39 Moksha liberating knowledge of BrahmanKnowledge is liberating Ramana Maharshi the Indian sage who was widely regarded as a Jivanmukta See also Jnana Prajna and Prajnanam Brahma The soteriological goal in Advaita is to gain self knowledge as being in essence Atman awareness or witness consciousness and complete understanding of the identity of jivan atman and Brahman 193 Correct knowledge of Atman and Brahman is the attainment of Brahman immortality 194 and leads to moksha liberation from suffering note 40 and samsara the cycle of rebirth 193 This is stated by Shankara as follows I am other than name form and action My nature is ever free I am Self the supreme unconditioned Brahman I am pure Awareness always non dual Adi Shankara Upadesasahasri 11 7 193 According to Advaita Vedanta liberation can be achieved while living and is called Jivanmukti 195 196 note 41 in contrast to Videhamukti moksha from samsara after death in theistic sub schools of Vedanta 197 better source needed The Atman knowledge that is the knowledge of true Self and its relationship to Brahman is central to this liberation in Advaita thought note 42 Atman knowledge to Advaitins is that state of full awareness liberation and freedom which overcomes dualities at all levels realizing the divine within oneself the divine in others and all beings the non dual Oneness that Brahman is in everything and everything is Brahman 119 128 note 43 According to Anantanand Rambachan in Advaita this state of liberating self knowledge includes and leads to the understanding that the self is the self of all the knower of self sees the self in all beings and all beings in the self 198 Attaining vidhya knowledge Main article Jnana Yoga Advaita Vedanta regards the liberated state of being Atman Brahman as one s true identity and inherent to being human According to Shankara and the Vivarana school no human action can produce this liberated state as it is what one already is 17 As Swami Vivekananda stated The Vedas cannot show you Brahman you are That already They can only help to take away the veil that hides truth from our eyes The cessation of ignorance can only come when I know that God and I are one in other words identify yourself with Atman not with human limitations The idea that we are bound is only an illusion Maya Freedom is inseparable from the nature of the Atman This is ever pure ever perfect ever unchangeable Adi Shankara s commentary on Fourth Vyasa Sutra Swami Vivekananda 199 Yet the Advaita tradition also emphasizes human effort the path of Jnana Yoga a progression of study and training to realize one s true identity as Atman Brahman and attain moksha 17 19 20 According to critics of neo Advaita which also emphasizes direct insight traditional Advaita Vedanta entails more than self inquiry or bare insight into one s real nature but also includes self restraint textual studies and ethical perfection It is described in classical Advaita books like Shankara s Upadesasahasri 200 and the Vivekachudamani which is also attributed to Shankara Sruti scriptures proper reasoning and meditation are the main sources of knowledge vidya for the Advaita Vedanta tradition 201 202 21 It teaches that correct knowledge of Atman and Brahman is achievable by svadhyaya 203 study of the self and of the Vedic texts and three stages of practice sravana perception hearing manana thinking and nididhyasana meditation 21 a three step methodology that is rooted in the teachings of chapter 4 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 204 205 Preparation the fourfold qualities The Advaita student has to develop the fourfold qualities 206 or behavioral qualifications Samanyasa Sampattis sadhana catustaya 207 208 209 note 44 A student is Advaita Vedanta tradition is required to develop these four qualities Nityanitya vastu viveka न त य न त य वस त व व कम Viveka is the ability to correctly discriminate between the real and eternal nitya and the substance that is apparently real illusory changing and transitory anitya 207 82 Ihamutrartha phala bhoga viraga इह ऽम त र र थ फल भ गव र गम The renunciation viraga of all desires of the mind bhoga for sense pleasures in this world iha and other worlds Willing to give up everything that is an obstacle to the pursuit of truth and self knowledge 82 210 Samadi ṣatka sampatti शम द षट क सम पत त the sixfold virtues or qualities Sama mental tranquility ability to focus the mind 82 210 Dama self restraint note 45 the virtue of temperance 82 210 restraining the senses Uparati dispassion lack of desire for worldly pleasures ability to be quiet and disassociated from everything 82 discontinuation of all religious duties and ceremonies 210 Titikṣa endurance perseverance putting up with pairs of opposites like heat and cold pleasure and pain ability to be patient during demanding circumstances 82 210 Sraddha having faith in teacher and the Sruti scriptural texts 82 Samadhana contentedness satisfaction of mind in all conditions attention intentness of mind 82 210 Mumukṣutva म म क ष त वम An intense longing for freedom liberation and wisdom driven to the quest of knowledge and understanding Having moksha as the primary goal of life 82 206 The threefold practice sravana hearing manana thinking and nididhyasana meditation The Advaita tradition teaches that correct knowledge which destroys avidya psychological and perceptual errors related to Atman and Brahman 214 is obtained in jnanayoga through three stages of practice 208 sravana hearing manana thinking and nididhyasana meditation 21 This three step methodology is rooted in the teachings of chapter 4 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 204 205 Sravana which literally means hearing The student listens and discusses the ideas concepts questions and answers 21 204 of the sages on the Upanishads and Advaita Vedanta studying the Vedantic texts such as the Brahma Sutras aided by discussions with the guru teacher counsellor 207 215 21 Manana refers to thinking on these discussions and contemplating over the various ideas based on svadhyaya and sravana 204 215 216 It is the stage of reflection on the teachings 204 215 Nididhyasana the stage of meditation and introspection 82 web 12 This stage of practice aims at realization and consequent conviction of the truths non duality and a state where there is a fusion of thought and action knowing and being 217 204 Although the threefold practice is broadly accepted in the Advaita tradition Shankara s works show an ambivalence toward it while accepting its authenticity and merits as it is based in the scriptures he also takes a subitist position 87 arguing that moksha is attained at once when the mahavakyas articulating the identity of Atman and Brahman are understood 88 18 note 46 According to Rambachan it is not possible to reconcile Sankara s views with this seemingly well ordered system 86 Mandana Misra on the other hand explicitly affirms the threefold practice as the means to acquire knowledge of Brahman referring to meditation as dhyana 218 He states that these practices though conceptual can eliminate both ignorance and coneptuality at the same time leaving only the pure transparent nature of self awareness 219 Bilimoria states that these three stages of Advaita practice can be viewed as sadhana practice that unifies Yoga and Karma action referring here to ritual ideas and was most likely derived from these older traditions 220 215 Guru Main article Guru Advaita Vedanta school has traditionally had a high reverence for Guru teacher and recommends that a competent Guru be sought in one s pursuit of spirituality though this is not mandatory 221 Reading of Vedic literature and reflection is the most essential practice 221 Adi Shankara states Comans regularly employed compound words such as Sastracaryopadesa instruction by way of the scriptures and the teacher and Vedantacaryopadesa instruction by way of the Upanishads and the teacher to emphasize the importance of Guru 221 According to Comans this reflects the Advaita tradition which holds a competent teacher as important and essential to gaining correct knowledge freeing oneself from false knowledge and to self realization 222 Nevertheless in the Bhamati school the guru has a less essential role as he can explain the teachings but the student has to venture its further study 223 A guru is someone more than a teacher traditionally a reverential figure to the student with the guru serving as a counselor who helps mold values shares experiential knowledge as much as literal knowledge an exemplar in life an inspirational source and who helps in the spiritual evolution of a student 224 The guru states Joel Mlecko is more than someone who teaches specific type of knowledge and includes in its scope someone who is also a counselor a sort of parent of mind and soul who helps mold values and experiential knowledge as much as specific knowledge an exemplar in life an inspirational source and who reveals the meaning of life 224 Pramana means of knowledge In classical Indian thought pramana means of knowledge concerns questions like how correct knowledge can be acquired how one knows how one doesn t and to what extent knowledge pertinent about someone or something can be acquired 225 226 In contrast to other schools of Indian philosophy early Vedanta paid little attention to pramana 227 The Brahmasutras are not concerned with pramana and pratyaksa sense perception and anumana inference refer there to sruti and smriti respectively 227 Shankara recognized the means of knowledge 228 note 47 but his thematic focus was upon metaphysics and soteriology and he took for granted the pramanas 233 For Shankara sabda is the only means of knowledge for attaining Brahman jnana 234 According to Sengaku Mayeda in no place in his works does he give any systematic account of them 233 taking Atman Brahman to be self evident svapramanaka and self established svatahsiddha and an investigation of the means of knowledge is of no use for the attainment of final release 233 Nevertheless the Advaita tradition accepts altogether six kinds of pramaṇas 235 236 237 234 While Adi Shankara emphasized Sabda शब द relying on word testimony of past or present reliable experts with regard to religious insights 226 238 235 239 and also accepted pratyakṣa प रत यक ष य perception and anumaṇa अन म न inference Classical Advaita Vedanta just like the Bhatta Purvamimamsaka school also accepts upamaṇa उपम न comparison analogy arthapatti अर थ पत त postulation derivation from circumstances 226 240 and anupalabdhi अन पलब ध non perception negative cognitive proof 238 235 Samadhi The Advaita tradition emphasizes that since Brahman is ever present Brahman knowledge is immediate and requires no action that is striving and effort as articulated by Shankara 16 yet it also prescribes elaborate preparatory practice including yogic samadhi posing a paradox which is also recognized in other spiritual disciplines and traditions 241 22 note 10 Shankara regarded the srutis as the means of knowledge of Brahman and he was ambivalent about yogic practices and meditation which at best may prepare one for Brahma jnana web 13 According to Rambachan criticising Vivekananda Shankara states that the knowledge of Brahman can only be obtained from inquiry of the Shruti and not by Yoga or samadhi which at best can only silence the mind 242 The Bhamati school and the Vivarana school differed on the role of contemplation but they both deny the possibility of perceiving supersensuous knowledge through popular yoga techniques 243 Later Advaita texts like the Dṛg Dṛsya Viveka 14th century and Vedantasara of Sadananda 15th century added samadhi as a means to liberation a theme that was also emphasized by Swami Vivekananda 39 The Vivekachudamani traditionally attributed to Shankara but post dating him 244 conceives of nirvikalpa samadhi as the premier method of Self realization over and above the well known vedantic discipline of listening reflection and deep contemplation 61 Koller states that yogic concentration is an aid to gaining knowledge in Advaita 79 Anubhava experience The role of anubhava anubhuti experience intuition 245 as experience in gaining Brahman jnana is contested While neo Vedanta claims a central position for anubhava as experience Shankara himself regarded reliance on textual authority as sufficient for gaining Brahman jnana 246 note 48 the intuition of Brahman 245 and used anubhava interchangeably with pratipatta understanding 247 Arvind Sharma argues that Shankara s own direct experience of the ultimate truth guided him in selecting those passages of the scriptures that resonate with this experience and will select them as the key with which to open previously closed even forbidden doors 248 note 49 The Vivekachudamani explicit ly declar es that experience anubhuti is a pramana or means of knowing VCM 59 61 and neo Vedanta also accepts anubhava personal experience as a means of knowledge 249 Dalal and others state that anubhava does not center around some sort of mystical experience but around the correct knowledge of Brahman 202 250 Nikhalananda conquers stating that knowledge of Atman and Brahman can only be reached by buddhi reason 251 stating that mysticism is a kind of intuitive knowledge while buddhi is the highest means of attaining knowledge 252 Adhyaropa Apavada imposition and negation See also Neti Neti Since Gaudapada 253 who adopted the Buddhist four cornered negation which negates any positive predicates of the Absolute 254 255 note 50 a central method in Advaita Vedanta to express the inexpressable is the method called Adhyaropa Apavada 253 In this method which was highly estimated by Satchidanandendra Saraswati a property is imposed adhyaropa on Atman to convince one of its existence whereafter the imposition is removed apavada to reveal the true nature of Atman as nondual and undefinable 257 In this method That which cannot be expressed is expressed through false attribution and subsequent denial 258 As Shankara writes First let me bring them on the right path and then I will gradually be able to bring them round to the final truth afterwards 258 For example Atman the real I is described as witness giving it an attribute to separate it from non self Since this implies a duality between observer and observed next the notion of witness is dropped by showing that the Self cannot be seen and is beyond qualifications and only that what is remains without using any words web 14 After one separates oneself i e I or Atman from the sense objects the qualities superimposed on Self are also negated by saying that which not being and not non being cannot be described by words without beginning and end BG 13 32 or as in Satyam Jnanam Anantam Brahman beyond words beyond mind and speech etc Here there is an attempt to negate the earlier attribute like being witness bliss most subtlest etc After this negation of false superimposition Self Alone shines One enters into the state of Nirvikalp Samadhi where there is no second no one to experience and hence this state cannot be described in words web 14 The Mahavyakas the identity of Atman and Brahman Moksha liberation from suffering and rebirth and attaining immortality is attained by disidentification from the body mind complex and gaining self knowledge as being in essence Atman and attaining knowledge of the identity of Atman and Brahman 193 194 According to Shankara the individual Atman and Brahman seem different at the empirical level of reality but this difference is only an illusion and at the highest level of reality they are really identical 259 The real self is Sat the Existent that is Atman Brahman 260 261 note 4 Whereas the difference between Atman and non Atman is deemed self evident knowledge of the identity of Atman and Brahman is revealed by the shruti especially the Upanishadic statement tat tvam asi Mahavakyas According to Shankara a large number of Upanishadic statements reveal the identity of Atman and Brahman In the Advaita Vedanta tradition four of those statements the Mahavakyas which are taken literal in contrast to other statements have a special importance in revealing this identity 78 262 They are तत त वमस tat tvam asi Chandogya VI 8 7 Traditionally rendered as That Thou Art that you are 263 264 265 with tat in Ch U 6 8 7 referring to sat the Existent 266 267 268 correctly translated as That s how thus you are 263 265 269 with tat in Ch U 6 12 3 its original location from where it was copied to other verses 263 referring to the very nature of all existence as permeated by the finest essence 270 271 अह ब रह म स म aham brahmasmi Brhadaranyaka I 4 10 I am Brahman or I am Divine 272 प रज ञ न ब रह म prajnanam brahma Aitareya V 3 Prajnanam note 51 is Brahman note 52 अयम त म ब रह म ayamatma brahma Mandukya II This Atman is Brahman That you are The longest chapter of Shankara s Upadesasahasri chapter 18 That Art Thou is devoted to considerations on the insight I am ever free the existent sat and the identity expressed in Chandogya Upanishad 6 8 7 in the mahavakya great sentence tat tvam asi that thou art 275 276 In this statement according to Shankara tat refers to Sat 276 the Existent 266 267 277 278 Existence Being web 16 or Brahman 279 the Real the Root of the world 276 note 53 the true essence or root or origin of everything that exists 267 277 web 16 Tvam refers to one s real I pratyagatman or inner Self 280 the direct Witness within everything 14 free from caste family and purifying ceremonies 281 the essence Atman which the individual at the core is 282 283 As Shankara states in the Upadesasahasri Up I 174 Through such sentences as Thou art That one knows one s own Atman the Witness of all the internal organs Up I 18 190 Through such sentences as Thou art the Existent right knowledge concerning the inner Atman will become clearer Up I 18 193 194 In the sentence Thou art That t he word That means inner Atman 284 The statement tat tvam asi sheds the false notion that Atman is different from Brahman 285 According toNakamura the non duality of atman and Brahman is a famous characteristic of Sankara s thought but it was already taught by Sundarapandya 286 c 600 CE or earlier 287 Shankara cites Sundarapandya in his comments to Brahma Sutra verse I 1 4 When the metaphorical or false atman is non existent the ideas of my child my body are sublated Therefore when it is realized that I am the existent Brahman atman how can anyduty exist 288 From this and a large number of other accordances Nakamura concludes that Shankar was not an original thinker but a synthesizer of existing Advaita and the rejuvenator as well as a defender of ancient learning 289 Direct perception versus contemplation of the Mahavakyas In the Upadesasahasri Shankara Shankara is ambivalent on the need for meditation on the Upanishadic mahavakya He states that right knowledge arises at the moment of hearing 18 and rejects prasamcaksa or prasamkhyana meditation that is meditation on the meaning of the sentences and in Up II 3 recommends parisamkhyana 290 separating Atman from everything that is not Atman that is the sense objects and sense organs and the pleasant and unpleasant things and merit and demerit connected with them 291 Yet Shankara then concludes with declaring that only Atman exists stating that all the sentences of the Upanishads concerning non duality of Atman should be fully contemplated should be contemplated 292 As Mayeda states how they prasamcaksa or prasamkhyana versus parisamkhyana differ from each other in not known 293 Prasamkhyana was advocated by Mandana Misra 294 the older contemporary of Shankara who was the most influential Advaitin until the 10th century 29 31 note 54 According to Mandana the mahavakyas are incapable by themselves of bringing about brahmajnana The Vedanta vakyas convey an indirect knowledge which is made direct only by deep meditation prasamkhyana The latter is a continuous contemplation of the purport of the mahavakyas 295 Vacaspati Misra a student of Mandana Misra agreed with Mandana Misra and their stance is defended by the Bhamati school founded by Vacaspati Misra 296 In contrast the Vivarana school founded by Prakasatman c 1200 1300 297 follows Shankara closely arguing that the mahavakyas are the direct cause of gaining knowledge 298 Shankara s insistence on direct knowledge as liberating also differs from the asparsa yoga described in Gaudapada s Mandukyakarika III 39 46 299 In this practice of non contact a sparsa the mind is controlled and brought to rest and does not create things appearances after which it grasps it becomes non dual free from the subject grasping object dualism 300 50 Knowing that only Atman Brahman is real the creations of the mind are seen as false appearances MK III 31 33 When the mind is brought to rest it becomes or is Brahman MK III 46 299 Renouncement of ritualism In the Upadesasahasri Shankara discourages ritual worship such as oblations to Deva God because that assumes the Self within is different from Brahman note 55 note 56 The doctrine of difference is wrong asserts Shankara because he who knows the Brahman is one and he is another does not know Brahman 305 306 The false notion that Atman is different from Brahman 285 is connected with the novice s conviction that Upadesasaharsi II 1 25 I am one and He is another I am ignorant experience pleasure and pain am bound and a transmigrator whereas he is essentially different from me the god not subject to transmigration By worshipping Him with oblation offerings homage and the like through the performance of the actions prescribed for my class and stage of life I wish to get out of the ocean of transmigratory existence How am I he 307 Recognizing oneself as the Existent Brahman which is mediated by scriptural teachings is contrasted with the notion of I act which is mediated by relying on sense perception and the like 308 According to Shankara the statement Thou art That remove s the delusion of a hearer 309 so through sentences as Thou art That one knows one s own Atman the witness of all internal organs 310 and not from any actions 311 note 57 With this realization the performance of rituals is prohibited since the use of rituals and their requisites is contradictory to the realization of the identity of Atman with the highest Atman 313 EthicsSome claim states Deutsch that Advaita turns its back on all theoretical and practical considerations of morality and if not unethical is at least a ethical in character 314 However Deutsch adds ethics does have a firm place in this philosophy Its ideology is permeated with ethics and value questions enter into every metaphysical and epistemological analysis and it considers an independent separate treatment of ethics are unnecessary 314 315 According to Advaita Vedanta states Deutsch there cannot be any absolute moral laws principles or duties instead in its axiological view Atman is beyond good and evil and all values result from self knowledge of the reality of distinctionless Oneness of one s real self every other being and all manifestations of Brahman 316 Advaitin ethics includes lack of craving lack of dual distinctions between one s own Self and another being s good and just Karma 317 The values and ethics in Advaita Vedanta emanate from what it views as inherent in the state of liberating self knowledge This state according to Rambachan includes and leads to the understanding that the self is the self of all the knower of self sees the self in all beings and all beings in the self 198 Such knowledge and understanding of the indivisibility of one s and other s Atman Advaitins believe leads to a deeper identity and affinity with all It does not alienate or separate an Advaitin from his or her community rather awakens the truth of life s unity and interrelatedness 198 These ideas are exemplified in the Isha Upanishad a sruti for Advaita as follows One who sees all beings in the self alone and the self of all beings feels no hatred by virtue of that understanding For the seer of oneness who knows all beings to be the self where is delusion and sorrow Isha Upanishad 6 7 Translated by A Rambachan 318 Adi Shankara in verse 1 25 to 1 26 of his Upadesasahasri asserts that the Self knowledge is understood and realized when one s mind is purified by the observation of Yamas ethical precepts such as Ahimsa non violence abstinence from injuring others in body mind and thoughts Satya truth abstinence from falsehood Asteya abstinence from theft Aparigraha abstinence from possessiveness and craving and a simple life of meditation and reflection 319 Rituals and rites can help focus and prepare the mind for the journey to Self knowledge 320 but can be abandoned when moving on to hearing reflection and meditation on the Upanishads 321 Elsewhere in verses 1 26 1 28 the Advaita text Upadesasahasri states the ethical premise of equality of all beings Any Bheda discrimination states Shankara based on class or caste or parentage is a mark of inner error and lack of liberating knowledge 322 This text states that the fully liberated person understands and practices the ethics of non difference 322 One who is eager to realize this highest truth spoken of in the Sruti should rise above the fivefold form of desire for a son for wealth for this world and the next and are the outcome of a false reference to the Self of Varna castes colors classes and orders of life These references are contradictory to right knowledge and reasons are given by the Srutis regarding the prohibition of the acceptance of difference For when the knowledge that the one non dual Atman Self is beyond phenomenal existence is generated by the scriptures and reasoning there cannot exist a knowledge side by side that is contradictory or contrary to it Adi Shankara Upadesha Sahasri 1 44 323 note 58 TextsThe Upanishads the Bhagavad Gita and Brahma Sutras are the central texts of the Advaita Vedanta tradition providing doctrines about the identity of Atman and Brahman and their changeless nature 324 325 Adi Shankara gave a nondualist interpretation of these texts in his commentaries Adi Shankara s Bhashya commentaries have become central texts in the Advaita Vedanta philosophy but are one among many ancient and medieval manuscripts available or accepted in this tradition 326 The subsequent Advaita tradition has further elaborated on these sruti and commentaries Adi Shankara is also credited for the famous text Nirvana Shatakam Prasthanatrayi The Vedanta tradition provides exegeses of the Upanishads the Brahma Sutras and the Bhagavadgita collectively called the Prasthanatrayi literally three sources 2 324 325 The Upanishads note 59 or Sruti prasthana considered the Sruti Vedic scriptures foundation of Vedanta note 60 72 329 330 Most scholars states Eliot Deutsch are convinced that the Sruti in general and the Upanishads in particular express a very rich diversity of ideas with the early Upanishads such as Brihadaranyaka Upanishad and Chandogya Upanishad being more readily amenable to Advaita Vedanta school s interpretation than the middle or later Upanishads 331 332 In addition to the oldest Upanishads states Williams the Sannyasa Upanishads group composed in pre Shankara times express a decidedly Advaita outlook 333 The Brahma Sutras or Nyaya prasthana Yukti prasthana considered the reason based foundation of Vedanta The Brahma Sutras attempted to synthesize the teachings of the Upanishads The diversity in the teachings of the Upanishads necessitated the systematization of these teachings The only extant version of this synthesis is the Brahma Sutras of Badarayana Like the Upanishads Brahma Sutras is also an aphoristic text and can be interpreted as a non theistic Advaita Vedanta text or as a theistic Dvaita Vedanta text This has led states Stephen Phillips to its varying interpretations by scholars of various sub schools of Vedanta 334 The Brahmasutra is considered by the Advaita school as the Nyaya Prasthana canonical base for reasoning 335 The Bhagavad Gita or Smriti prasthana considered the Smriti remembered tradition foundation of Vedanta 335 It has been widely studied by Advaita scholars including a commentary by Adi Shankara 249 336 Textual authority The Advaita Vedanta tradition considers the knowledge claims in the Vedas to be the crucial part of the Vedas not its karma kanda ritual injunctions 324 The knowledge claims about self being identical to the nature of Atman Brahman are found in the Upanishads which Advaita Vedanta has regarded as errorless revealed truth 324 Nevertheless states Koller Advaita Vedantins did not entirely rely on revelation but critically examined their teachings using reason and experience and this led them to investigate and critique competing theories 324 Advaita Vedanta like all orthodox schools of Hindu philosophy accepts as an epistemic premise that Sruti Vedic literature is a reliable source of knowledge 72 329 330 The Sruti includes the four Vedas including its four layers of embedded texts the Samhitas the Brahmanas the Aranyakas and the early Upanishads 337 Of these the Upanishads are the most referred to texts in the Advaita school The possibility of different interpretations of the Vedic literature states Arvind Sharma was recognized by ancient Indian scholars 338 336 The Brahmasutra also called Vedanta Sutra composed in 1st millennium BCE accepted this in verse 1 1 4 and asserts the need for the Upanishadic teachings to be understood not in piecemeal cherrypicked basis rather in a unified way wherein the ideas in the Vedic texts are harmonized with other means of knowledge such as perception inference and remaining pramanas 338 335 This theme has been central to the Advaita school making the Brahmasutra as a common reference and a consolidated textual authority for Advaita 338 339 The Bhagavad Gita similarly in parts can be interpreted to be a monist Advaita text and in other parts as theistic Dvaita text It too has been widely studied by Advaita scholars including a commentary by Adi Shankara 249 336 Other texts A large number of texts are attributed to Shankara of these texts the Brahma Sutra Bhasya commentary on the Brahma Sutras the commentaries on the principal Upanishads and the Upadesasahasri are considered genuine and stand out Post Shankara Advaita saw the composition of both scholarly commentaries and treatises as well as from late medieaval times 14th century on popular works and compositions which incorporate Yoga ideas These include notable texts mistakenly attributed to Shankara such as the Vivekachudamani Atma bodha and Aparokshanubhuti and other texts like Advaita Bodha Deepika and Dŗg Dŗsya Viveka Texts which influenced the Advaita tradition include the Avadhuta Gita the Yoga Vasistha and the Yoga Yajnavalkya Sampradaya and Smarta traditionMonastic order Mathas See also Dashanami Sampradaya Vidyashankara temple at Sringeri Sharada Peetham Shringeri Advaita Vedanta is not just a philosophical system but also a tradition of renunciation Philosophy and renunciation are closely related web 18 Most of the notable authors in the advaita tradition were members of the sannyasa tradition and both sides of the tradition share the same values attitudes and metaphysics web 18 According to tradition around 740 AD Gaudapada founded Shri Gaudapadacharya Math note 61 also known as Kavaḷe maṭha It is located in Kavale Ponda Goa web 19 and is the oldest matha of the South Indian Saraswat Brahmins 340 web 20 Shankara himself considered to be an incarnation of Shiva web 18 is credited with establishing the Dashanami Sampradaya organizing a section of the Ekadandi monks under an umbrella grouping of ten names web 18 Several Hindu monastic and Ekadandi traditions however remained outside the organisation of the Dasanamis 341 342 343 Sankara is said to have organised the Hindu monks of these ten sects or names under four Maṭhas Sanskrit मठ monasteries called the Amnaya Mathas with the headquarters at Dvaraka in the West Jagannatha Puri in the East Sringeri in the South and Badrikashrama in the North web 18 According to tradition each math was first headed by one of his four main disciples and the tradition continues since then Yet according to Paul Hacker no mention of the mathas can be found before the 14th century CE 344 Until the 15th century the timespan of the directors of Sringeri Math are unrealistically long spanning 60 and even 105 years After 1386 the timespans become much shorter 345 According to Hacker these mathas may have originated as late as the 14th century to propagate Shankara s view of Advaita 346 note 62 note 63 According to another tradition in Kerala after Sankara s samadhi at Vadakkunnathan Temple his disciples founded four mathas in Thrissur namely Naduvil Madhom Thekke Madhom Idayil Madhom and Vadakke Madhom Monks of these ten orders differ in part in their beliefs and practices and a section of them is not considered to be restricted to specific changes attributed to Shankara While the dasanamis associated with the Sankara maths follow the procedures attributed to Adi Sankara some of these orders remained partly or fully independent in their belief and practices and outside the official control of the Sankara maths The advaita sampradaya is not a Saiva sect web 18 350 despite the historical links with Shaivism note 64 Nevertheless contemporary Sankaracaryas have more influence among Saiva communities than among Vaisnava communities web 18 Smarta Tradition Main article Smarta Tradition The Smarta tradition of Hinduism is a synthesis of various strands of Indian religious thought and practice which developed with the Hindu synthesis dating back to the early first century CE note 65 It is particularly found in south and west India and revers all Hindu divinities as a step in their spiritual pursuit 352 353 354 Their worship practice is called Panchayatana puja 355 352 The worship symbolically consists of five deities Shiva Vishnu Devi or Durga Surya and an Ishta Devata or any personal god of devotee s preference 353 356 In the Smarta tradition Advaita Vedanta ideas combined with bhakti are its foundation Adi Shankara is regarded as the greatest teacher 354 and reformer of the Smarta 357 According to Alf Hiltebeitel Shankara s Advaita Vedanta and practices became the doctrinal unifier of previously conflicting practices with the smarta tradition note 66 Philosophically the Smarta tradition emphasizes that all images and statues murti or just five marks or any anicons on the ground are visibly convenient icons of spirituality saguna Brahman 359 355 The multiple icons are seen as multiple representations of the same idea rather than as distinct beings These serve as a step and means to realizing the abstract Ultimate Reality called nirguna Brahman The ultimate goal in this practice is to transition past the use of icons then follow a philosophical and meditative path to understanding the oneness of Atman Self and Brahman as That art Thou 359 360 Buddhist influencesMain article Buddhist influences on Advaita Vedanta Similarities Advaita Vedanta and various other schools of Hindu philosophy share numerous terminology doctrines and dialectical techniques with Buddhism 361 362 According to a 1918 paper by the Buddhism scholar O Rozenberg a precise differentiation between Brahmanism and Buddhism is impossible to draw 361 Murti notices that the ultimate goal of Vedanta Samkhya and Mahayana Buddhism is remarkably similar while Advaita Vedanta postulates a foundational self Mahayana Buddhism implicitly affirms the existence of a deep underlying reality behind all empirical manifestations in its conception of sunyata the indeterminate the void or vijnapti matrata consciousness only or tathata thatness or dharmata noumenal reality 145 According to Frank Whaling the similarities between Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism are not limited to the terminology and some doctrines but also includes practice The monastic practices and monk tradition in Advaita are similar to those found in Buddhism 363 Mahayana influences The influence of Mahayana Buddhism on Advaita Vedanta has been significant 363 364 Sharma points out that the early commentators on the Brahma Sutras were all realists or pantheist realists He states that they were influenced by Buddhism particularly during the 5th 6th centuries CE when Buddhist thought developing in the Yogacara school 365 Von Glasenap states that there was a mutual influence between Vedanta and Buddhism note 67 Dasgupta and Mohanta suggest that Buddhism and Shankara s Advaita Vedanta represent different phases of development of the same non dualistic metaphysics from the Upanishadic period to the time of Sankara 366 note 68 The influence of Buddhist doctrines on Gauḍapada has been a vexed question 369 370 Modern scholarship generally accepts that Gauḍapada was influenced by Buddhism at least in terms of using Buddhist terminology to explain his ideas but adds that Gauḍapada was a Vedantin and not a Buddhist 369 Adi Shankara states Natalia Isaeva incorporated into his own system a Buddhist notion of maya which had not been minutely elaborated in the Upanishads 361 According to Mudgal Shankara s Advaita and the Buddhist Madhyamaka view of ultimate reality are compatible because they are both transcendental indescribable non dual and only arrived at through a via negativa neti neti Mudgal concludes therefore that the difference between Sunyavada Mahayana philosophy of Buddhism and Advaita philosophy of Hinduism may be a matter of emphasis not of kind 371 Similarly there are many points of contact between Buddhism s Vijnanavada and Shankara s Advaita 372 According to S N Dasgupta Shankara and his followers borrowed much of their dialectic form of criticism from the Buddhists His Brahman was very much like the sunya of Nagarjuna The debts of Shankara to the self luminosity note 6 of the Vijnanavada Buddhism can hardly be overestimated There seems to be much truth in the accusations against Shankara by Vijnana Bhiksu and others that he was a hidden Buddhist himself I am led to think that Shankara s philosophy is largely a compound of Vijnanavada and Sunyavada Buddhism with the Upanisad notion of the permanence of self superadded 373 Differences from Buddhism The Advaita Vedanta tradition has historically rejected accusations of crypto Buddhism highlighting their respective views on Atman Anatta and Brahman 374 Yet some Buddhist texts chronologically placed in the 1st millennium of common era such as the Mahayana tradition s Tathagatagarbha sutras suggest self like concepts variously called Tathagatagarbha or Buddha nature 375 376 In modern era studies scholars such as Wayman and Wayman state that these self like concepts are neither self nor sentient being nor soul nor personality 377 378 Some scholars posit that the Tathagatagarbha Sutras were written to promote Buddhism to non Buddhists 379 380 381 The epistemological foundations of Buddhism and Advaita Vedanta are different Buddhism accepts two valid means to reliable and correct knowledge perception and inference while Advaita Vedanta accepts six described elsewhere in this article 235 382 383 However some Buddhists in history have argued that Buddhist scriptures are a reliable source of spiritual knowledge corresponding to Advaita s Sabda pramana however Buddhists have treated their scriptures as a form of inference method 384 Advaita Vedanta posits a substance ontology an ontology which holds that underlying the change and impermanence of empirical reality is an unchanging and permanent absolute reality like an eternal substance it calls Atman Brahman 385 In its substance ontology as like other philosophies there exist a universal particulars and specific properties and it is the interaction of particulars that create events and processes 386 In contrast Buddhism posits a process ontology also called as event ontology 387 386 According to the Buddhist thought particularly after the rise of ancient Mahayana Buddhism scholarship there is neither empirical nor absolute permanent reality and ontology can be explained as a process 387 388 note 69 There is a system of relations and interdependent phenomena pratitya samutpada in Buddhist ontology but no stable persistent identities no eternal universals nor particulars Thought and memories are mental constructions and fluid processes without a real observer personal agency or cognizer in Buddhism In contrast in Advaita Vedanta like other schools of Hinduism the concept of self atman is the real on looker personal agent and cognizer 390 Criticisms of concurring Hindu schools Some Hindu scholars criticized Advaita for its Maya and non theistic doctrinal similarities with Buddhism 391 363 sometimes referring to the Advaita tradition as Mayavada 392 Ramanuja the founder of Vishishtadvaita Vedanta accused Adi Shankara of being a Prachanna Bauddha that is a crypto Buddhist 393 and someone who was undermining theistic Bhakti devotionalism 363 The non Advaita scholar Bhaskara of the Bhedabheda Vedanta tradition similarly around 800 CE accused Shankara s Advaita as this despicable broken down Mayavada that has been chanted by the Mahayana Buddhists and a school that is undermining the ritual duties set in Vedic orthodoxy 363 Relationship with other forms of VedantaThe Advaita Vedanta ideas particularly of 8th century Adi Shankara were challenged by theistic Vedanta philosophies that emerged centuries later such as the 11th century Vishishtadvaita qualified nondualism of Ramanuja and the 14th century Dvaita theistic dualism of Madhvacharya 394 Their application of Vedanta philosophy to ground their faith turned Vedanta into a major factor in India s religious landscape 395 Vishishtadvaita Main article Vishishtadvaita Ramanuja s Vishishtadvaita school and Shankara s Advaita school are both nondualism Vedanta schools 396 397 both are premised on the assumption that all Selfs can hope for and achieve the state of blissful liberation in contrast Madhvacharya and his Dvaita subschool of Vedanta believed that some Selfs are eternally doomed and damned 398 399 Shankara s theory posits that only Brahman and causes are metaphysical unchanging reality while the empirical world Maya and observed effects are changing illusive and of relative existence 400 401 Spiritual liberation to Shankara is the full comprehension and realization of oneness of one s unchanging Atman Self as the same as Atman in everyone else as well as being identical to the nirguna Brahman 397 402 403 In contrast Ramanuja s theory posits both Brahman and the world of matter are two different absolutes both metaphysically real neither should be called false or illusive and saguna Brahman with attributes is also real 401 God like man states Ramanuja has both soul and body and all of the world of matter is the glory of God s body 396 The path to Brahman Vishnu asserted Ramanuja is devotion to godliness and constant remembrance of the beauty and love of personal god saguna Brahman Vishnu one which ultimately leads one to the oneness with nirguna Brahman 396 400 401 Shuddhadvaita Main article Shuddhadvaita Vallabhacharya 1479 1531 CE the proponent of the philosophy of Shuddhadvaita Brahmvad enunciates that Ishvara has created the world without connection with any external agency such as Maya which itself is his power and manifests Himself through the world 404 That is why shuddhadvaita is known as Unmodified transformation or Avikṛta Pariṇamavada Brahman or Ishvara desired to become many and he became the multitude of individual Selfs and the world Vallabha recognises Brahman as the whole and the individual as a part but devoid of bliss 405 Dvaita Main article Dvaita Madhvacharya was also a critic of Advaita Vedanta Advaita s nondualism asserted that Atman Self and Brahman are identical both in bondage and liberation 406 there is interconnected oneness of all Selfs and Brahman and there are no pluralities 407 408 Madhva in contrast asserted that Atman Self and Brahman are different both in bondage and liberation 406 only Vishnu is the Lord Brahman individual Selfs are also different and depend on Vishnu and there are pluralities 407 408 Madhvacharya stated that both Advaita Vedanta and Mahayana Buddhism were a nihilistic school of thought 409 Madhvacharya wrote four major texts including Upadhikhandana and Tattvadyota primarily dedicated to criticizing Advaita 409 Followers of ISKCON are highly critical of Advaita Vedanta regarding it as mayavada identical to Mahayana Buddhism web 21 web 22 Influence on other traditions Within the ancient and medieval texts of Hindu traditions such as Vaishnavism Shaivism and Shaktism the ideas of Advaita Vedanta have had a major influence note 70 Advaita Vedanta influenced Krishna Vaishnavism in the different parts of India 410 One of its most popular text the Bhagavata Purana adopts and integrates in Advaita Vedanta philosophy 411 412 413 The Bhagavata Purana is generally accepted by scholars to have been composed in the second half of 1st millennium CE 414 415 In the ancient and medieval literature of Shaivism called the Agamas the influence of Advaita Vedanta is once again prominent 416 417 418 Of the 92 Agamas ten are Dvaita texts eighteen are Bhedabheda and sixty four are Advaita texts 419 420 According to Natalia Isaeva there is an evident and natural link between 6th century Gaudapada s Advaita Vedanta ideas and Kashmir Shaivism 421 Shaktism the Hindu tradition where a goddess is considered identical to Brahman has similarly flowered from a syncretism of the monist premises of Advaita Vedanta and dualism premises of Samkhya Yoga school of Hindu philosophy sometimes referred to as Shaktadavaitavada literally the path of nondualistic Shakti 422 423 424 Other influential ancient and medieval classical texts of Hinduism such as the Yoga Yajnavalkya Yoga Vashishta Avadhuta Gita Markandeya Purana and Sannyasa Upanishads predominantly incorporate premises and ideas of Advaita Vedanta 425 426 427 History of Advaita Vedanta Gaudapada one of the most important pre Saṅkara philosophers in Advaita tradition Main article History of Advaita Vedanta Historiography The historiography of Advaita Vedanta is coloured by Orientalist notions 428 note 72 while modern formulations of Advaita Vedanta which developed as a reaction to western Orientalism and Perennialism 430 have become a dominant force in Indian intellectual thought 431 According to Michael S Allen and Anand Venkatkrishnan scholars have yet to provide even a rudimentary let alone comprehensive account of the history of Advaita Vedanta in the centuries leading up to the colonial period 432 Early Vedanta The Upanishads form the basic texts of which Vedanta gives an interpretation 433 The Upanishads do not contain a rigorous philosophical inquiry identifying the doctrines and formulating the supporting arguments 434 note 73 This philosophical inquiry was performed by the darsanas the various philosophical schools 436 note 74 The Brahma Sutras of Badarayana also called the Vedanta Sutra 438 were compiled in its present form around 400 450 CE 439 but the great part of the Sutra must have been in existence much earlier than that 439 Estimates of the date of Badarayana s lifetime differ between 200 BCE and 200 CE 440 The Brahma Sutra is a critical study of the teachings of the Upanishads possibly written from a Bhedabheda Vedantic viewpoint web 10 Badarayana was not the first person to systematise the teachings of the Upanishads 441 He refers to seven Vedantic teachers before him 441 Early Advaita Vedanta Two Advaita writings predating Maṇḍana Misra and Shankara were known to scholars such as Nakamura in the first half of 20th century namely the Vakyapadiya written by Bhartṛhari second half 5th century 442 and the Mandukya karika written by Gauḍapada 7th century 443 Later scholarship added the Sannyasa Upanishads first centuries CE 444 to the earliest known corpus some of which are of a sectarian nature 445 and have a strong Advaita Vedanta outlook 446 447 448 According to Nakamura there must have been an enormous number of other writings turned out in this period between the Brahma Sutras and Shankara but unfortunately all of them have been scattered or lost and have not come down to us today 443 In his commentaries Shankara mentions 99 different predecessors of his Sampradaya 223 In the beginning of his commentary on the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad Shankara salutes the teachers of the Brahmavidya Sampradaya web 23 Pre Shankara doctrines and sayings can be traced in the works of the later schools which does give insight into the development of early Vedanta philosophy 443 Gauḍapada and Maṇḍukya Karika Main article Gaudapada According to tradition Gauḍapada 6th century 449 was the teacher of Govinda Bhagavatpada and the grandteacher of Shankara Gauḍapada wrote or compiled 450 the Maṇḍukya Karika also known as the Gauḍapada Karika or the Agama Sastra 451 The Maṇḍukya Karika is a commentary in verse form on the Maṇḍukya Upanishad one of the shortest Upanishads consisting of just 13 prose sentences Of the ancient literature related to Advaita Vedanta the oldest surviving complete text is the Maṇḍukya Karika 452 The Maṇḍukya Upanishad was considered to be a Sruti before the era of Adi Shankara but not treated as particularly important 451 In later post Shankara period its value became far more important and regarded as expressing the essence of the Upanishad philosophy The entire Karika became a key text for the Advaita school in this later era 453 note 75 Gaudapada took over the Yogachara teaching of vijnapti matra representation only which states that the empirical reality that we experience is a fabrication of the mind experienced by consciousness an sich 254 note 76 and the four cornered negation which negates any positive predicates of the Absolute 254 255 note 77 Gaudapada wove both doctrines into the philosophy of Mandukaya Upanisad which was further developed by Shankara 456 note 78 In this view the ultimate ontological reality is the pure consciousness which is bereft of attributes and intentionality The world of duality is nothing but a vibration of the mind manodṛsya or manaspandita The pluralistic world is imagined by the mind saṁkalpa and this false projection is sponsored by the illusory factor called maya web 24 Gauḍapada uses the concepts of Ajativada to explain that the Absolute is not subject to birth change and death The Absolute is aja the unborn eternal 458 The empirical world of appearances is considered unreal and not absolutely existent 458 Early medieval period Maṇḍana Misra and Adi Shankara Maṇḍana Misra Maṇḍana Misra an older contemporary of Shankara 459 was a Mimamsa scholar and a follower of Kumarila but also wrote a seminal text on Advaita that has survived into the modern era the Brahma siddhi 460 461 According to Fiordalis he was influenced by the Yoga tradition and with that indiractly by Buddhism given the strong influence of Buddhism on the Yoga tradition 38 For a couple of centuries he seems to have been regarded as the most important representative of the Advaita position 29 31 note 79 and the theory of error set forth in the Brahma siddhi became the normative Advaita Vedanta theory of error 462 Adi Shankara Main article Adi Shankara See also Late Classical Age and Hinduism in the Middle Ages Very little is known about Shankara According to Dalal Hagiographical accounts of his life the Saṅkaravijayas Conquests of Saṅkara were composed several centuries after his death web 13 in the 14th to 17th century and established Shankara as a rallying symbol of valuesin a time when most of India was conquered by Muslims 28 He is often considered to be the founder of the Advaita Vedanta school but was actually a systematizer not a founder web 13 463 Systematizer of Advaita thought Shankara was a scholar who synthesized and systematized Advaita vada thought which already existed at his lifetime 463 According to Nakamura comparison of the known teachings of the early Vedantins and Shankara s thought shows that most of the characteristics of Shankara s thought were advocated by someone before Sankara 463 According to Nakamura after the growing influence of Buddhism on Vedanta culminating in the works of Gauḍapada Adi Shankara gave a Vedantic character to the Buddhistic elements in these works 464 synthesising and rejuvenating the doctrine of Advaita 465 According to Koller using ideas in ancient Indian texts Shankara systematized the foundation for Advaita Vedanta in the 8th century reforming Badarayana s Vedanta tradition 466 According to Mayeda Shankara represents a turning point in the development of Vedanta 464 yet he also notices that it is only since Deussens s praise that Shankara has usually been regarded as the greatest philosopher of India 467 Mayeda further notes that Shankara was primarily concerned with moksha and not with the establishment of a complete system of philosophy or theology 467 following Potter who qualifies Shankara as a speculative philosopher 468 Lipner notes that Shankara s main literary approach was commentarial and hence perforce disjointed rather than procedurally systematic though a systematic philosophy can be derived from Samkara s thought 469 Writings Main article Adi Shankara bibliography Adi Shankara is best known for his reviews and commentaries Bhasyas on ancient Indian texts His Brahmasutrabhasya literally commentary on Brahma Sutra is a fundamental text of the Vedanta school of Hinduism 339 His commentaries on ten Mukhya principal Upanishads are also considered authentic by scholars 339 470 Other authentic works of Shankara include commentaries on the Bhagavad Gita part of his Prasthana Trayi Bhasya 249 He also authored Upadesasahasri his most important original philosophical work 466 471 The authenticity of Shankara being the author of Vivekacuḍamaṇi 472 has been questioned and modern scholars tend to reject its authenticity as a work by Shankara 473 Influence of Shankara While Shankara has an unparalleled status in the history of Advaita Vedanta scholars have questioned the traditional narrative of Shankara s early influence in India 28 29 31 Until the 10th century Shankara was overshadowed by his older contemporary Maṇḍana Misra who was considered to be the major representative of Advaita 29 31 Only when Vacaspati Misra an influential student of Maṇḍana Misra harmonised the teachings of Shankara with those of Maṇḍana Misra Shankara s teachings gained prominence 474 Some modern Advaitins argue that most of post Shankara Advaita Vedanta actually deviates from Shankara and that only his student Suresvara who s had little influence represents Shankara correctly 30 In this view Shankara s influential student Padmapada misunderstood Shankara while his views were manitained by the Suresvara school 30 According to Satchidanandendra Sarasvati almost all the later Advaitins were influenced by Mandana Misra and Bhaskara 475 note 80 Until the 11th century Vedanta itself was a peripheral school of thought 476 Vedanta became a major influence when Vedanta philosophy was utilized by various sects of Hinduism to ground their doctrines 395 such as Ramanuja 11th c who aligned bhakti the major force in the religions of Hinduism with philosophical thought meanwhile rejecting Shankara s views web 25 The cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedanta started only centuries later in the Vijayanagara Empire in the 14th century 28 477 478 when Sringeri matha started to receive patronage from the kings of the Vijayanagara Empire and became a powerful institution 32 Vidyaranya also known as Madhava who was the Jagadguru of the Sringeri Sarada Pitham from ca 1374 1380 to 1386 32 played a central role in this growing influence of Advaita Vedanta and the deification of Shankara as a ruler renunciate 28 477 35 36 From 1346 onwards Sringeri matha received patronage from the Vijayanagara kings and its importance and influence grew rapidly in the second half of the 14th century 32 note 81 Vidyaranya and the Sringeri matha competed for royal patronage and converts with Srivaisnava Visistadvaita which was dominant in territories conquered by the Vijayanagara Empire 33 and Madhava the pre ordination name of Vidyaranya presented Shankara s teachings as the summit of all darsanas portraying the other darsanas as partial truths which converged in Shankara s teachings 346 The subsequent Shankara Digvijayam genre following the example of the earlier Madhva Digvijayam 480 presented Shankara as a ruler renunciate conquering the four quarters of India and bringing harmony 35 36 The genre created legends to turn Shankara into a divine folk hero who spread his teaching through his digvijaya universal conquest all over India like a victorious conqueror 346 479 Shankara s position was further established in the 19th and 20th century when neo Vedantins and western Orientalists following Vidyaranya elevated Advaita Vedanta as the connecting theological thread that united Hinduism into a single religious tradition 481 Shankara became an iconic representation of Hindu religion and culture despite the fact that most Hindus do not adhere to Advaita Vedanta 482 Advaita Vedanta sub schools Two defunct schools are the Pancapadika and Istasiddhi which were replaced by Prakasatman s Vivarana school 297 The still existing Bhamati and Vivarana developed in the 11th 14th century web 26 223 These schools worked out the logical implications of various Advaita doctrines Two of the problems they encountered were the further interpretations of the concepts of maya and avidya web 26 Padmapada c 800 CE 483 the founder of the defunct Pancapadika school was a direct disciple of Shankara He wrote the Pancapadika a commentary on the Sankara bhaya 483 Padmapada diverged from Shankara in his description of avidya designating prakrti as avidya or ajnana 484 Suresvara fl 800 900 CE 485 was a contemporary of Shankara 459 and often incorrectly identified with Maṇḍana Misra 459 note 82 Suresvara has also been credited as the founder of a pre Shankara branch of Advaita Vedanta 485 Mandana Mishra s student Vachaspati Misra 9th 10th century CE 486 487 488 who is believed to have been an incarnation of Shankara to popularize the Advaita view 489 wrote the Bhamati a commentary on Shankara s Brahma Sutra Bhashya and the Brahmatattva samiksa a commentary on Mandana Mishra s Brahma siddhi His thought was mainly inspired by Mandana Misra and harmonises Shankara s thought with that of Mandana Misra 490 web 26 The Bhamati school takes an ontological approach It sees the Jiva as the source of avidya web 26 It sees contemplation as the main factor in the acquirement of liberation while the study of the Vedas and reflection are additional factors 491 492 Vimuktatman c 1200 CE 493 wrote the Ista siddhi 493 It is one of the four traditional siddhi together with Mandana s Brahma siddhi Suresvara s Naiskarmya siddhi and Madusudana s Advaita siddhi 494 According to Vimuktatman absolute Reality is pure intuitive consciousness 495 His school of thought was eventually replaced by Prakasatman s Vivarana school 297 Prakasatman c 1200 1300 297 wrote the Pancapadika Vivarana a commentary on the Pancapadika by Padmapadacharya 297 The Vivarana lends its name to the subsequent school According to Roodurmun H is line of thought became the leitmotif of all subsequent developments in the evolution of the Advaita tradition 297 The Vivarana school takes an epistemological approach It is distinguished from the Bhamati school by its rejection of action and favouring Vedic study and a direct apprehension of Brahma 491 Prakasatman was the first to propound the theory of mulavidya or maya as being of positive beginningless nature 496 and sees Brahman as the source of avidya Critics object that Brahman is pure consciousness so it cannot be the source of avidya Another problem is that contradictory qualities namely knowledge and ignorance are attributed to Brahman web 26 Late medieval India incorporating yoga Michael S Allen and Anand Venkatkrishnan note that Shankara is very well studied but scholars have yet to provide even a rudimentary let alone comprehensive account of the history of Advaita Vedanta in the centuries leading up to the colonial period 432 While indologists like Paul Hacker and Wilhelm Halbfass took Shankara s system as the measure for an orthodox Advaita Vedanta the living Advaita Vedanta tradition in medieval times was influenced by and incorporated elements from the yogic tradition and texts like the Yoga Vasistha and the Bhagavata Purana 39 Yoga and samkhya had become minor schools of thought since the time of Shankara and no longer posed a thread for the sectarian identity of Advaita in contrast to the Vaishnava traditions 478 The Yoga Vasistha became an authoritative source text in the Advaita vedanta tradition in the 14th century and the yogic Advaita 497 498 of Vidyaranya s Jivanmuktiviveka 14th century was influenced by the Laghu Yoga Vasistha which in turn was influenced by Kashmir Shaivism 499 Vivekananda s 19th century emphasis on nirvikalpa samadhi was preceded by medieval yogic influences on Advaita Vedanta In the 16th and 17th centuries some Nath and hatha yoga texts also came within the scope of the developing Advaita Vedanta tradition 61 According to Nicholson it was with the arrival of Islamic rule first in the form of Delhi Sultanate and later the Mughal Empire and the subsequent persecution of Indian religions that Hindu scholars began a self conscious attempts to define an identity and unity 500 501 Between the twelfth and the fourteenth century according to Andrew Nicholson this effort emerged with a classification of astika and nastika systems of Indian philosophies 500 Certain thinkers according to Nicholson began to retrospectively classify ancient thought into six systems saddarsana of mainstream Hindu philosophy 502 Vidyaraṇya It is only during this period that the historical fame and cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedanta was established 28 477 478 Advaita Vedanta s position as most influential Hindu darsana took shape as Advaitins in the Vijayanagara Empire competed for patronage from the royal court and tried to convert others to their sect 33 Central in this repositioning was Vidyaraṇya 28 477 also known as Madhava who was the Jagadguru of the Sringeri Sarada Pitham from 1380 to 1386 503 and a minister in the Vijayanagara Empire 504 He inspired the re creation of the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire of South India in response to the devastation caused by the Islamic Delhi Sultanate 28 477 478 504 but his efforts were also targeted at Srivaisnava groups especially Visistadvaita which was dominant in territories conquered by the Vijayanagara Empire 505 Sects competed for patronage from the royal court and tried to convert others to their own sectarian system and Vidyaranya efforts were aimed at promoting Advaita Vedanta 33 Most of Shankara s biographies were created and published from the 14th to the 17th century such as the widely cited Sankara vijaya in which legends were created to turn Shankara into a divine folk hero who spread his teaching through his digvijaya universal conquest all over India like a victorious conqueror 346 479 506 Vidyaranya and his brothers wrote extensive Advaitic commentaries on the Vedas and Dharma to make the authoritative literature of the Aryan religion more accessible 346 In his doxography Sarvadarsanasaṅgraha Summary of all views Vidyaranya presented Shankara s teachings as the summit of all darsanas presenting the other darsanas as partial truths which converged in Shankara s teachings which was regarded to be the most inclusive system 507 346 The Vaishanava traditions of Dvaita and Visitadvaita were not classified as Vedanta and placed just above Buddhism and Jainism reflecting the threat they posed for Vidyaranya s Advaita allegiance 42 Bhedabheda wasn t mentioned at all literally written out of the history of Indian philosophy 508 Vidyaranya became head of Sringeri matha proclaiming that it was established by Shankara himself 346 479 Vidyaranya enjoyed royal support 504 and his sponsorship and methodical efforts helped establish Shankara as a rallying symbol of values spread historical and cultural influence of Shankara s Vedanta philosophies and establish monasteries mathas to expand the cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedanta 28 Modern Advaita Niscaldas and Greater Advaita Michael S Allen has written on the influence and popularity of Advaita Vedanta in early modern north India especially on the work of the Advaita Dadu panthi monk Niscaldas ca 1791 1863 author of The Ocean of Inquiry Hindi Vicar sagar a vernacular compendium of Advaita 4 According to Allen the work of Niscaldas was quite popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries it was translated into over eight languages and was once referred to by Vivekananda as having more influence in India than any book that has been written in any language within the last three centuries 4 Allen highlights the widespread prominence in early modern India of what he calls Greater Advaita Vedanta which refers to popular Advaita works including narratives and dramas eclectic works blending Vedanta with other traditions and vernacular works such as The Ocean of Inquiry 4 Allen refers to several popular late figures and texts which draw on Advaita Vedanta such as the Maharashtrian sant Eknath 16th c the popular Adhyatma ramayaṇa ca late 15th c which synthesizes Rama bhakti and advaita metaphysics and the Tripura rahasya a tantric text that adopts an advaita metaphysics 4 Other important vernacular Advaita figures include the Hindu authors Manohardas and Maṇakdas who wrote the Atma bodh Advaita literature was also written in Tamil Telugu Malayalam Kannada Marathi Gujarati Hindi Punjabi Bengali and Oriya 4 Neo Vedanta Mahatma Gandhi stated I am an advaitist 509 510 Main articles Neo Vedanta and Hindu nationalism According to King with the consolidation of the British imperialist rule the new rulers started to view Indians through the colonially crafted lenses of Orientalism In response Hindu nationalism emerged striving for socio political independence and countering the influence of Christian missionaries 511 Among the colonial era intelligentsia the monistic Advaita Vedanta has been a major ideological force for Hindu nationalism 512 with Hindu intellectuals formulating a humanistic inclusivist response now called Neo Vedanta attempting to respond to this colonial stereotyping of Indian culture as backward superstitious and inferior to the West 513 Due to the influence of Vidyaranya s Sarvadarsanasaṅgraha early Indologists regarded Advaita Vedanta as the most accurate interpretation of the Upanishads 42 Vedanta came to be regarded both by westerners as by Indian nationalists as the essence of Hinduism and Advaita Vedanta came to be regarded as then paradigmatic example of the mystical nature of the Hindu religion and umbrella of inclusivism 514 Colonial era Indian thinkers such as Vivekananda presented Advaita Vedanta as an inclusive universal religion a spirituality that in part helped organize a religiously infused identity It also aided the rise of Hindu nationalism as a counter weight to Islam infused Muslim communitarian organizations such as the Muslim League to Christianity infused colonial orientalism and to religious persecution of those belonging to Indian religions 515 501 516 Neo Vedanta subsumed and incorporated Buddhist ideas thereby making the Buddha a part of the Vedanta tradition all in an attempt to reposition the history of Indian culture 430 This view on Advaita Vedanta according to King provided an opportunity for the construction of a nationalist ideology that could unite Hindus in their struggle against colonial oppression 517 Vivekananda discerned a universal religion regarding all the apparent differences between various traditions as various manifestations of one truth 518 Vivekananda emphasised nirvikalpa samadhi as the spiritual goal of Vedanta he equated it to the liberation in Yoga and encouraged Yoga practice which he called Raja yoga 519 note 83 With the efforts of Vivekananda modern formulations of Advaita Vedanta have become a dominant force in Indian intellectual thought though Hindu beliefs and practices are diverse 431 Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan first a professor at Oxford University and later a President of India further popularized Advaita Vedanta presenting it as the essence of Hinduism web 27 According to Michael Hawley Radhakrishnan saw other religions as well as what Radhakrishnan understands as lower forms of Hinduism as interpretations of Advaita Vedanta thereby in a sense Hindusizing all religions web 27 Radhakrishnan metaphysics was grounded in Advaita Vedanta but he reinterpreted Advaita Vedanta for contemporary needs and context web 27 note 84 Gandhi declared his allegiance to Advaita Vedanta and was another popularizing force for its ideas 522 Contemporary Advaita Vedanta Contemporary teachers are the orthodox Jagadguru of Sringeri Sharada Peetham the more traditional teachers Sivananda Saraswati 1887 1963 Chinmayananda Saraswati 1916 1993 web 28 Dayananda Saraswati Arsha Vidya 1930 2015 Swami Paramarthananda Swami Tattvavidananda Sarasvati Carol Whitfield Radha Sri Vasudevacharya previously Michael Comans web 28 and less traditional teachers such as Narayana Guru web 28 According to Sangeetha Menon prominent names in 20th century Advaita tradition are Shri Chandrashekhara Bharati Mahaswami Chandrasekharendra Saraswati Swamigal Sacchidanandendra Saraswati web 29 Influence on New religious movements Advaita Vedanta has gained attention in western spirituality and New Age as nondualism where various traditions are seen as driven by the same non dual experience 523 Nonduality points to a primordial natural awareness without subject or object web 30 It is also used to refer to interconnectedness the sense that all things are interconnected and not separate while at the same time all things retain their individuality web 31 Neo Advaita is a New Religious Movement based on a popularised western interpretation of Advaita Vedanta and the teachings of Ramana Maharshi 524 Neo Advaita is being criticised 525 note 85 526 note 86 note 87 for discarding the traditional prerequisites of knowledge of the scriptures 527 and renunciation as necessary preparation for the path of jnana yoga 527 528 Notable neo advaita teachers are H W L Poonja 529 524 his students Gangaji 530 Andrew Cohen note 88 and Eckhart Tolle 524 See alsoCause and effect in Advaita Vedanta Kashmir Shaivism Pandeism PantheismNotes Philosophy and spiritual experience Deutsch 1988 p 4 Advaita Vedanta is more than a philosophical system as we understand these terms in the West today it is also a practical guide to spiritual experience and is intimately bound up with spiritual experience Puligandla 1997 p 11 Any philosophy worthy of its title should not be a mere intellectual exercise but should have practical application in enabling man to live an enlightened life A philosophy which makes no difference to the quality and style of our life is no philosophy but an empty intellectual construction Literally end or the goal of the Vedas referring to the Upanishads and their interpretation it is a tradition of interpretation of the Upanishads 1 the Brahma Sutras and the Bhagavad Gita 2 3 a b Form of monism Malkovsky 2000 p 71 The interpretation of advaita that is the most common equates non duality with monism and acosmic illusionism Only the Absolute or the paraa brahma is said to exist everything else is but an illusory appearance Menon 2012 The essential philosophy of Advaita is an idealist monism and is considered to be presented first in the Upaniṣads and consolidated in the Brahma Sutra by this tradition King 1995 p 65 The prevailing monism of the Upanishads was developed by the Advaita Vedanta to its ultimate extreme Mohanty 1980 p 205 Nyaya Vaiseshika is realistic Advaita Vedanta is idealistic The former is pluralistic the latter monistic a b c d Highest self Shankara Upadesasahasri I 18 3 I am ever free the existent Sat I 18 6 The two contradictory notions I am the Existent Brahman and I act have Atman as their witness It is considered more reasonable to give up only that one of the two notions which arises from ignorance I 18 7 The notion I am the Existent arises from right means of knowledge while the other notion has its origin in fallacious means of knowledge Mayeda 1992 p 172 Brahmajnanavalimala Verse 20 Brahman is real the universe is mithya it cannot be categorized as either real or unreal The jiva is Brahman itself and not different Translation by S N Sastri 1 Sivananda 1993 p 219 Brahman the Absolute is alone real this world is unreal and the Jiva or individual soul is non different from Brahman Menon 2012 The experiencing self jiva and the transcendental self of the Universe atman are in reality identical both are Brahman though the individual self seems different as space within a container seems different from space as such These cardinal doctrines are represented in the anonymous verse brahma satyam jagan mithya jivo brahmaiva na aparah Brahman is alone True and this world of plurality is an error the individual self is not different from Brahman Deutsch 1973 p 54 the essential status of the individual human person is that of unqualified reality of identity with the Absolute the self jiva is only misperceived the self is really Brahman Koller 2013 pp 100 101 Atman which is identical to Brahman is ultimately the only reality and the appearance of plurality is entirely the work of ignorance the self is ultimately of the nature of Atman Brahman Brahman alone is ultimately real Bowker 2000a Advaita Vedanta There is only Brahman which is necessarily undifferentiated It follows that there cannot even be a difference or duality between the human subject or self and Brahman for Brahman must be that very self since Brahman is the reality underlying all appearance The goal of human life and wisdom must therefore be the realization that the self atman is Brahman Hacker 1995 p 88 notes that Shankara uses two groups of words to denote atman One group principally jiva vijnanatman and sarira expresses the illusory aspect of the soul But in addition there are the two expressions atman and pratyagatman These also designate the individual soul but in its real aspect Mayeda 1992 pp 11 14 uses the word pratyagatman Sivananda1993 p 219 Deutsch 1973 p 54 and Menon 2012 use the term jiva when referring to the identity of atman and Brahman According to Shankara in Adhyasa bhasya pre amble to Brahma Sutra Bhashya I 1 1 it is self evident that Atman pure awareness or the witness consciousness is completely different from non Atman the thinking and acting self and the material world a b c d Self luminosity see Deutsch 1973 p 48 Dasgupta 1975 pp 148 149 Indich 2000 pp 24 28 Menon 2012 Ganeri 2019 p 103 Murti 1983 p 339 Isaeva 1993 p 102 For the translation and meaning of svayam prakasa svayam himself autonomous in person Sanskrit Dictionary for Spoken Sanskrit svayam prakasa manifestation literally light or illumination the capacity to disclose present or make manifest Fasching 2021 note 1 referring to MacKenzie 2017 335 cf also Ram Prasad 2007 53 Svayam prakasa can be translated as self luminous Ganeri 2019 Menon 2012 self revealing Dasgupta 1975 self manifesting Chatterjea 2003 p 1 Self aware Wood 1992 p 102 Immediate Murti 1983 p 339 On the meaning of svayam prakasa Menezes 2017 p 198 Self luminosity svayam prakasa means self is pure awareness by nature idem Ganeri 2019 self is pure awareness by nature Murti 1983 p 339 a foundational consciousness to which everything is presented but is itself no presentation that which knows all but is itself no object For a detailed treatment see Mackenzie 2012 Fasching 2011 For pure Consciousness also included in the phrase sat cit ananda see Mayeda 1992 p 103 verse 1 p 105 note 1 p 126 verse 7 Deutsch 1973 pp 48 51 Davis 2010 pp 34 35 Rambachan 2006 pp 7 99 103 Menon 2012 Fasching 2021 Sinha 2016 p 42 Shankara Upadesasahasri I 1 1 translated in Mayeda 1992 p 103 Salutation to the all knowing Pure Consciousness note 1 which pervades all is all abides in the hearts of all beings and is beyond all objects of knowledge Note 1 by Mayeda The Sanskrit term caitanya translated here as Pure Consciousness is used as a synonym for Brahman Atman indicating the nature of It Shankara Upadesasahasri I 11 7 translated in Mayeda 1992 p 126 Being different from name form and action and by nature constantly free I am Atman ie the highest Brahman I am Pure Consciousness only and always non dual Deutsch 1973 p 48 Atman or paramatman the highest Self for Advaita vedanta is that pure undifferentiated self shining consciousness timeless spaceless and unthinkable that is non different from Brahman and that underlies and supports the individual human person Menon 2012 For classical Advaita Vedanta Brahman is the fundamental reality underlying all objects and experiences Brahman is explained as pure existence pure consciousness and pure bliss All forms of existence presuppose a knowing self Brahman or pure consciousness underlies the knowing self Consciousness according to the Advaita School unlike the positions held by other Vedanta schools is not a property of Brahman but its very nature Brahman is also one without a second all pervading and the immediate awareness Fasching 2021 According to Advaita Vedanta the absolute is pure qualityless and unchanging consciousness Our consciousness the consciousness of individual conscious entities is not distinct from it but is nothing other than this absolute itself seemingly modified by the mental states of respective individual minds Sinha 2016 p 42 According to the Advaita Vedanta the Atman is pure eternal undifferenced consciousness while the jiva is the pure consciousness limited or determined by the internal organ antahkarana a b Potter 2008 p 136 see Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 2 51 14 Chandogya Upanishad 8 3 4 a b Some modern Advaitins argue that most of post Shankara Advaita Vedanta actually deviates from Shankara an argument deemed correct by Potter 30 31 a b Compare in Buddhism Subitism Hongaku original enlightenment Post satori practice See also Nisargadatta Maharaj on the bird s way and the ant s way Sringeri matha received patronage from the kings of the Vijayanagara Empire 32 competing with Srivaisnava Visistadvaita groups for royal patronage and converts 33 The works of the influential Advaitin Vidyaranya Madhava 14th cent jagadguru of Sringeri matha from ca 1374 1380 to 1386 presented Advaita teachings as the summit of the Indian darsanam 34 while the subsequent Shankara Digvijayam genre deified him as a ruler renunciate who conquered the four quarters 35 36 Shankara s prominence was further established in the 19th and 20th century gaining worldwide fame in a confluence of interests of Western Christian missionaries the British Raj and Indian nationalists 37 Critical scholarship has identified a number of key concepts used in contemporary Advaita Vedanta which differ from Shankara s views revealing a discrepancy between the nominal adherence to Shankara and the actual alliance with his views 46 30 See also Purusha For an alternate English translation Robert Hume The Thirteen Principal Upanishads BU 4 3 32 Oxford University Press p 138 सल ल एकस द रष ट अद व तस भवत एष ब रह मल कस सम र ट त ह एनम उव च अन शश स य ज ञवल क यस एष अस य परम गत स एष स य परम सम पद An ocean a single seer without duality becomes he whose world is Brahman O King Yajnavalkya instructed This is his supreme way This is his supreme achievement Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4 3 32 web 2 Transl Stephen Phillips 60 note 14 A reference to Non duality is also made in the Chandogya Upanishad within a dialogue between the Vedic sage Uddalaka Aruni and his son Svetaketu as follows सद व स म य दमग र आस त एकम व अद व त यम तद ध क आह रसद व दमग र आस द कम व द व त य तस म दसत सज ज यत Somya before this world was manifest there was only existence one without duality On this subject some maintain that before this world was manifest there was only non existence one without a second Out of that non existence existence emerged Chandogya Upanishad 6 2 1 web 3 Chandogya Upanishad Many of these traditions which were influential among Neo Vedantins did not derive from Vedantic lineages i e the Advaita Vedanta of Shankara As Madaio 2017 p 4 points out it is possible to speak of sanskritic and vernacular advaitic texts which are either explicitly non dualistic or permit a non dualistic reading and Advaita Vedanta texts which originate within sampradayas that claim an Advaita Vedantic lineage This then avoids the obfuscating tendency to subsume advaitic but non vedantic works under a Vedanta or Advaita Vedanta umbrella King 1995 p 65 The prevailing monism of the Upanishads was developed by the Advaita Vedanta to its ultimate extreme It is not a philosophy in the western meaning of the word according to Milne 73 Reason clarifies the truth and removes objections according to the Advaita school however it believes that pure logic cannot lead to philosophical truths and only experience and meditative insights do The Sruti it believes is a collection of experience and meditative insights about liberating knowledge 80 Sharma 1993 pp 72 83 According to Advaita the pure subject is our true self whose knowledge is liberative If the subject could be realised in its purity then all misery would cease this is called self knowledge See also kelamuni 2006 The Philosophy of Adi Shankaracharya section II The Threefold Means on Brahma Sutra Bhashya 4 1 2 and subitism Timalsina 2008 p xvii Advaita can be approached from various angles Not only are there multiple interpretations of Advaita there are different starting points from which one can arrive at the conclusion of non duality Atman Oxford Dictionaries Oxford University Press 2012 Quote 1 real self of the individual 2 a person s soul a b Richard Payne 2005 K Bulkeley ed Soul Psyche Brain Palgrave Macmillan Springer pp 199 200 with p 215 notes 5 6 ISBN 978 1 4039 7923 0 A fourth metaphor is the monistic equation of the true or absolute self atman with absolute being Brahman In general then the conception of the self that emerges is one in which the self is in some way permanent eternal absolute or unchanging It is also simultaneously universal and individual The view is that there is an essence and that it can be known Soul Atman Oxford Dictionaries Oxford University Press 2012 Quote 1 real self of the individual 2 a person s soul David Lorenzen 2004 The Hindu World Editors Sushil Mittal and Gene Thursby Routledge ISBN 0 415215277 pp 208 209 Quote Advaita and nirguni movements on the other hand stress an interior mysticism in which the devotee seeks to discover the identity of individual soul atman with the universal ground of being brahman or to find god within himself Richard King 1995 Early Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791425138 p 64 Quote Atman as the innermost essence or soul of man and Brahman as the innermost essence and support of the universe Thus we can see in the Upanishads a tendency towards a convergence of microcosm and macrocosm culminating in the equating of atman with Brahman Chad Meister 2010 The Oxford Handbook of Religious Diversity Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195340136 p 63 Quote Even though Buddhism explicitly rejected the Hindu ideas of Atman soul and Brahman Hinduism treats Sakyamuni Buddha as one of the ten avatars of Vishnu Olivelle 1998 p 77 Sanskrit Wikisource प र ण ऽप न व य न इत यष ट वक षर ण अष ट क षर ह व एक ग यत र य पदम एतद ह व स य एतत स य वद द प र ण त वद ध जयत य ऽस य एतद व पद व द अथ स य एतद व त र य दर शत पद पर रज य एष तपत यद व चत र थ तत त र यम दर शत पदम त दद श इव ह य ष पर रज इत सर वम ह य व ष रज उपर य पर तपत य एव ह व श र य यशस तपत य ऽस य एतद व पद व द ३ Compare Fasching 2021 For Advaita Vedanta consciousness is to be distinguished from all contents of consciousness that might be introspectively detectable It is precisely consciousness of whatever contents it is conscious of and not itself one of these contents Its only nature is Advaita holds prakasa manifestation in itself it is devoid of any content or structure and can never become an object Brahman is also defined as The unchanging infinite immanent and transcendent reality which is all matter energy time space being and everything beyond in this Universe that is the one supreme universal spirit without a second Brodd 2003 Vachatimanont 2005 pp 47 48 Bowker 2003 Brahman Skt literally growth or expansion The one supreme all pervading Spirit that is the origin and support of the phenomenal universe Puligandla 1997 p 222 The supreme self Puligandla states it as the unchanging reality amidst and beyond the world The Self existent the Absolute and the Imperishable Brahman is indescribable Fowler 2005 p 30 Upanisadic thought is anything but consistent nevertheless there is a common focus on the acceptance of a totally transcendent Absolute a trend which arose in the Vedic period This indescribable Absolute is called Brahman It provides the stuff from which everything is made It sets everything into working into existence Gambhirananda That is Brahman from which are derived the birth etc of this universe 158 Svarupalakshana qualities definition based on essence The Advaitin scholar Madhusudana Sarasvati explained Brahman as the Reality that is simultaneously an absence of falsity sat absence of ignorance cit and absence of sorrow self limitation ananda 161 Compare Parable of the Poisoned Arrow These concepts are discussed in ancient and medieval texts of Hinduism and other Indian religions using synonymous terms Cause is referred to as karaṇa क रण nidana न द न hetu ह त or mulam म लम while effect is referred to as karya क र य phala फल parinam पर ण म or Shungam श ङ ग web 9 185 Advaita furthermore states that effect karya is non different from cause karaṇa but the cause is different from the effect This principle is called karya karaṇa ananyatva When the cause is destroyed the effect will no longer exist For example cotton cloth is the effect of the cotton threads which is the material cause Without threads there will be no cotton cloth Without cotton there will be no thread According to Swami Sivananda in his comments on the Brahmasutra Bhaṣya 2 1 9 Adi Shankara describes this as follows ananyatve pi karyakaraṇayoḥ karyasya karaṇatmatvaṃ na tu karaṇasya karyatmatvaṃ Despite the non difference of cause and effect the effect has its self in the cause but not the cause in the effect The effect is of the nature of the cause and not the cause the nature of the effect Therefore the qualities of the effect cannot touch the cause web 11 According to Eliot Deutsch Advaita Vedanta states that from the standpoint of Brahman experience and Brahman itself there is no creation in the absolute sense all empirically observed creation is relative and mere transformation of one state into another all states are provisional and a cause effect driven modification 189 According to Hugh Nicholson the definitive study on the development of the concept of vivarta in Indian philosophy and in Advaita Vedanta in particular remains Hacker s Vivarta 191 According to Hacker the word maya has for Shankara hardly any terminological weight 192 Compare the misunderstanding of Yogacharas concept of vijnapti matra representation only as consciousness only The suffering created by the workings of the mind entangled with physical reality Jivanmukti is a state that transforms the nature attributes and behaviors of an individual After this transformation the liberated individual shows attributes such as Aiyar 1914 pp 140 147 Nikhilananda 1958 pp 53 79 Fort 1998 he is not bothered by disrespect and endures cruel words treats others with respect regardless of how others treat him when confronted by an angry person he does not return anger instead replies with soft and kind words even if tortured he speaks and trusts the truth he does not crave for blessings or expect praise from others he never injures or harms any life or being ahimsa he is intent in the welfare of all beings he is as comfortable being alone as in the presence of others he is as comfortable with a bowl at the foot of a tree in tattered robe without help as when he is in a mithuna union of mendicants grama village and nagara city he does not care about or wear sikha tuft of hair on the back of head for religious reasons nor the holy thread across his body To him knowledge is sikha knowledge is the holy thread knowledge alone is supreme Outer appearances and rituals do not matter to him only knowledge matters for him there is no invocation nor dismissal of deities no mantra nor non mantra no prostrations nor worship of gods goddess or ancestors nothing other than knowledge of Self he is humble high spirited of clear and steady mind straightforward compassionate patient indifferent courageous speaks firmly and with sweet words The true Self is itself just that pure consciousness without which nothing can be known in any way And that same true Self pure consciousness is not different from the ultimate world Principle Brahman Brahman the true Self pure consciousness is the only Reality sat since It is untinged by difference the mark of ignorance and since It is the one thing that is not sublimatable 147 Fowler 2002 pp 30 31 260 264 As a philosophical and metaphysical term it monism refers to the acceptance of one single ultimate principle as the basis of the cosmos the unity and oneness of all reality monism has a model par excellence in that put forward by the eighth century Indian philosopher Shankara who is associated with the school of thought of Advaita Vedanta p 263 In Shankara s words the notions oneself and one s own are indeed falsely constructed upon Atman through nescience When there is the knowledge of the oneness of Atman these notions certainly do not exist If the seed does not exist whence shall the fruit arise These characteristics and steps are described in various Advaita texts such as by Shankara in Chapter 1 1 of Brahmasutrabhasya 82 and in the Bhagavad Gita Chapter 10 Example self restraints mentioned in Hindu texts one must refrain from any violence that causes injury to others refrain from starting or propagating deceit and falsehood refrain from theft of other s property refrain from sexually cheating on one s partner and refrain from avarice 211 212 213 See also kelamuni 2006 The Philosophy of Adi Shankaracharya section II The Threefold Means on Brahma Sutra Bhashya 4 1 2 and subitism Mayeda refers to statements from Shankara regarding epistemology pramana janya in section 1 18 133 of Upadesasahasri and section 1 1 4 of Brahmasutra bhasya 229 230 NB some manuscripts list Upadesasahasri verse 1 18 133 as 2 18 133 while Mayeda lists it as 1 18 133 because of interchanged chapter numbering 231 232 See also ramesam AtmA anubhava anubhUti blog Sharma 2000 p 177 refers to Brahma Sutra Bhashya 4 1 15 which tradition views as an allusion to his own direct experience of the ultimate truth It runs as follows How can one contest the heart felt cognition of another as possessing brahman knowledge even though bearing a body 1 Something is 2 It is not 3 It both is and is not 4 It neither is nor is not 256 Consciousness 273 web 15 intelligence 274 272 wisdom the Absolute 273 web 15 infinite web 15 the Highest truth web 15 While the Vedanta tradition equates sat the Existent with Brahman the Chandogya Upanishad itself does not refer to Brahman 267 265 Deutsch amp Dalvi 2004 p 8 Although the text does not use the term brahman the Vedanta tradition is that the Existent sat referred to is no other than Brahman King 2002 p 128 Although it is common to find Western scholars and Hindus arguing that Sankaracarya was the most influential and important figure in the history of Hindu intellectual thought this does not seem to be justified by the historical evidence Shankara himself had renounced all religious ritual acts 301 For an example of Shankara s reasoning why rites and ritual actions should be given up 302 Elsewhere Shankara s Bhasya on various Upanishads repeat give up rituals and rites 303 Compare Mookerji 2011 on Svadhyaya Vedic learning Mookerji 2011 pp 29 31 notes that the Rigveda and Sayana s commentary contain passages criticizing as fruitless mere recitation of the Ŗik words without understanding their inner meaning or essence the knowledge of dharma and Parabrahman Mookerji 2011 pp 29 34 concludes that in the Rigvedic education of the mantras the contemplation and comprehension of their meaning was considered as more important and vital to education than their mere mechanical repetition and correct pronunciation Mookerji 2011 p 35 refers to Sayana as stating that the mastery of texts akshara prapti is followed by artha bodha perception of their meaning Artha may also mean goal purpose or essence depending on the context 304 web 17 According to Mookerji 2011 p 36 the realization of Truth and the knowledge of paramatman as revealed to the rishis is the real aim of Vedic learning and not the mere recitation of texts Up I 18 219 The renunciation of all actions becomes the means for discriminating the meaning of the word Thou since there is an Upanisadic teaching Having become calm self controlled one sees Atman there in oneself Bhr Up IV 4 23 312 Saṅkaracarya 1949 p 32 Sanskrit तच च तत परम र थदर शन प रत पत त म च छत वर ण श रम द यभ म न क तप ञ क तर पप त रव त तल क षण द भ य व य त थ न कर तव यम सम यक प रत ययव र ध त तदभ म नस य भ ददर शनप रत ष ध र थ पपत त श च पपद यत न ह य कस म न न त मन यस स र त वब द ध श स त रन य य त प द त य तद व पर त ब द ध र भवत न ह य अग न श तत वब द ध शर र व जर मरणब द ध तस म दव द य क र यत व त सर वकर मण तत स धन न च यज ञ पव त द न परम र थदर शन ष ट न त य ग कर तव य ४४ Many in number the Upanishads developed in different schools at various times and places some in the Vedic period and others in the medieval or modern era the names of up to 112 Upanishads have been recorded 327 All major commentators have considered the twelve to thirteen oldest of these texts as the principal Upanishads and as the foundation of Vedanta The Sruti includes the four Vedas including its four layers of embedded texts the Samhitas the Brahmanas the Aranyakas and the early Upanishads 328 Sanskrit श र स स थ न ग डपद च र य मठ Sri Sansthana Gauḍapadacarya Maṭha Nakamura also recognized the influence of these mathas which he argues contributed to the influence of Shankara which was due to institutional factors The mathas which he established remain active today and preserve the teachings and influence of Shankara while the writings of other scholars before him came to be forgotten with the passage of time 347 According to Pandey these Mathas were not established by Shankara himself but were originally ashrams established by Vibhandaka and his son Ŗșyasŗnga 348 Shankara inherited the ashrams at Dvaraka and Sringeri and shifted the ashram at Sŗngaverapura to Badarikasrama and the ashram at Angadesa to Jagannatha Puri 349 Sanskrit org Advaitins are non sectarian and they advocate worship of Siva and Visnu equally with that of the other deities of Hinduism like Sakti Ganapati and others web 18 Archeological evidence suggest that the Smarta tradition in India dates back to at least 3rd century CE 351 352 Practically Shankara fostered a rapprochement between Advaita and smarta orthodoxy which by his time had not only continued to defend the varnasramadharma theory as defining the path of karman but had developed the practice of pancayatanapuja five shrine worship as a solution to varied and conflicting devotional practices Thus one could worship any one of five deities Vishnu Siva Durga Surya Ganesa as one s istadevata deity of choice 358 Helmuth Von Glasenapp 1995 Vedanta amp Buddhism A comparative study Buddhist Publication Society pages 2 3 Quote Vedanta and Buddhism have lived side by side for such a long time that obviously they must have influenced each other The strong predilection of the Indian mind for a doctrine of universal unity has led the representatives of Mahayana to conceive Samsara and Nirvana as two aspects of the same and single true reality for Nagarjuna the empirical world is a mere appearance as all dharmas manifest in it are perishable and conditioned by other dharmas without having any independent existence of their own Only the indefinable Voidness Sunyata to be grasped in meditation and realized in Nirvana has true reality in Buddhism This development did not end with Advaita Vedanta but continued in Tantrism and various schools of Shaivism Non dual Kashmir Shaivism for example was influenced by and took over doctrines from several orthodox and heterodox Indian religious and philosophical traditions 367 These include Vedanta Samkhya Patanjali Yoga and Nyayas and various Buddhist schools including Yogacara and Madhyamika 367 but also Tantra and the Nath tradition 368 Kalupahana describes how in Buddhism there is also a current which favours substance ontology Kalupahanan sees Madhyamaka and Yogacara as reactions against developments toward substance ontology in Buddhism 389 Scholars are divided on the historical influence of Advaita Vedanta Some Indologists state that it is one of the most studied Hindu philosophy and the most influential schools of classical Indian thought Indich 2000 pp 57 60 Brannigan 2009 p 19 Advaita Vedanta is the most influential philosophical system in Hindu thought Deutsch 1969 p 3 Advaita Vedanta has been and continues to be the most widely accepted system of thought among philosophers in India and it is we believe one of the greatest philosophical achievements to be found in the East or the West See also Devdutt Pattanaik August 30 2020 Who is a Hindu What they don t tell you about Advaita Mumbai Mirror In the Orientalist view the medieval Muslim period was a time of stagnation and cultural degeneration in which the original purity of the Upanisadic teachings systematized by philosophers like Shankara was lost In this view the genuine achievements of Indian civilization were recovered during the British colonial rule of India due to the efforts of western Indologists who viewed Advaita Vedanta as the authentic philosophy of the Upanishads and Shankara as its greatest exponent 428 note 71 While this view has been criticised by postcolonial studies and critiques of Orientalism in some corners of the academy the Orientalists understanding of premodern Indian history has so far escaped thorough reexamination 429 Nevertheless Balasubramanian argues that since the basic ideas of the Vedanta systems are derived from the Vedas the Vedantic philosophy is as old as the Vedas 435 Deutsch and Dalvi point out that in the Indian context texts are only part of a tradition which is preserved in its purest form in the oral transmission as it has been going on 437 Nakamura notes that there are contradictions in doctrine between the four chapters 450 It is often used interchangeably with the term citta matra but they have different meanings The standard translation of both terms is consciousness only or mind only Several modern researchers object this translation and the accompanying label of absolute idealism or idealistic monism 454 A better translation for vijnapti matra is representation only 455 1 Something is 2 It is not 3 It both is and is not 4 It neither is nor is not 256 page needed The four cornered negation is an English gloss of the Sanskrit Chatushkoti citation needed The influence of Mahayana Buddhism on other religions and philosophies was not limited to Vedanta Kalupahana notes that the Visuddhimagga a Theravada Buddhist tradition contains some metaphysical speculations such as those of the Sarvastivadins the Sautrantikas and even the Yogacarins 457 King 2002 p 128 Although it is common to find Western scholars and Hindus arguing that Sankaracarya was the most influential and important figure in the history of Hindu intellectual thought this does not seem to be justified by the historical evidence 29 Potter 2006 pp 6 7 these modern interpreters are implying that most Advaitins after Samkara s time are confused and basically mistaken and that 99 of the extant classical interpretive literature on Samkara s philosophy is off the mark This is clearly a remarkably radical conclusion Yet there is good reason to think that it may well be true The insignificance of Srineri matha before this time was such that Hacker and Kulke amp Rothermund have argued that Sringeri matha may have been founded by Vidyaranya himself proclaiming that it was established by Shankara himself 346 479 Potter 2008 pp 346 347 420 423 There is little firm historical information about Suresvara tradition holds Suresvara is same as Mandanamisra According to Comans this approach is missing in historic Advaita texts 520 Neo Vedanta seems to be closer to Bhedabheda Vedanta than to Shankara s Advaita Vedanta with the acknowledgement of the reality of the world Nicholas F Gier Ramakrsna Svami Vivekananda and Aurobindo I also include M K Gandhi have been labeled neo Vedantists a philosophy that rejects the Advaitins claim that the world is illusory Aurobindo in his The Life Divine declares that he has moved from Sankara s universal illusionism to his own universal realism 2005 432 defined as metaphysical realism in the European philosophical sense of the term 521 Marek Wobei der Begriff Neo Advaita darauf hinweist dass sich die traditionelle Advaita von dieser Stromung zunehmend distanziert da sie die Bedeutung der ubenden Vorbereitung nach wie vor als unumganglich ansieht The term Neo Advaita indicating that the traditional Advaita increasingly distances itself from this movement as they regard preparational practicing still as inevitable 525 Alan Jacobs Many firm devotees of Sri Ramana Maharshi now rightly term this western phenomenon as Neo Advaita The term is carefully selected because neo means a new or revived form And this new form is not the Classical Advaita which we understand to have been taught by both of the Great Self Realised Sages Adi Shankara and Ramana Maharshi It can even be termed pseudo because by presenting the teaching in a highly attenuated form it might be described as purporting to be Advaita but not in effect actually being so in the fullest sense of the word In this watering down of the essential truths in a palatable style made acceptable and attractive to the contemporary western mind their teaching is misleading 526 See for other examples Conway web 32 and Swartz web 33 Presently Cohen has distanced himself from Poonja and calls his teachings Evolutionary Enlightenment 531 What Is Enlightenment the magazine published by Choen s organisation has been critical of neo Advaita several times as early as 2001 See web 34 web 35 web 36 References Nakamura 1990 p 112 a b Grimes 1990 pp 6 7 a b c d e f g h i j Menon 2012 a b c d e f Allen Michael S Greater Advaita Vedanta The Case of Niscaldas International Journal of Hindu Studies 21 3 275 297 2017 https philpapers org rec ALLGAV Deutsch 1988 p 3 Milne 1997 Deutsch 1973 p 3 note 2 p 54 a b Koller 2013 p 100 101 a b Indich 2000 p 50 Sharma 1995 pp 8 14 31 34 44 45 176 178 Fost 1998 pp 387 405 Nakamura 2004 p page needed Comans 2000 p 183 Deutsch 1973 pp 48 52 Mayeda 2006 pp 78 79 Lipner 2000 p 68 a b Lipner 2000 p 60 Suthren Hirst 2005 p 1 a b Dubois 2013 p xvii a b c d e Barua 2015 p 262 a b c d Mayeda 1992 p 182 Up I 18 103 104 a b Deutsch 1988 pp 104 105 a b Comans 2000 pp 125 142 a b c d e f Mayeda 1992 p xvii a b Fiordalis 2021 Nakamura 2004 p 13 691 Novetzke 2007 pp 255 272 Goodall 1996 p xli Davis 2014 pp 13 167 with note 21 Olivelle 1992 pp x xi 8 10 17 18 Phillips 1998 p 332 note 68 Nakamura 2004 pp 221 680 Madaio 2017 a b c d e f g h i Hacker 1995 p 29 30 a b c d e f King 2002 p 128 a b c d Potter 2006 p 6 7 a b c d e Roodurmun 2002 pp 33 34 a b c d Goodding 2013 p 89 a b c d Stoker 2016 p 55 56 Hacker 1995 pp 29 30 Blake Michael 1992 pp 60 62 with notes 6 7 and 8 King 2002 p 128 Roodurmun 2002 pp 33 34 a b c Nowicka 2016 p 147 a b c Bader 2001 p vii King 2002 pp 129 135 a b Fiordalis 2021 p 24 note 12 a b c Madaio 2017 pp 4 5 Rambachan 1994 a b Nicholson 2010 p page needed a b c Nicholson 2010 pp 160 a b Suthren Hirst 2005 p 3 Sharma 2006 p 38 43 68 75 King 2013 p 128 132 Suthren Hirst 2005 p 4 King 2002 pp 119 133 Britannica The Editors of Encyclopaedia Dvaita Encyclopedia Britannica 19 Feb 2015 https www britannica com topic Dvaita Accessed 13 March 2022 Loy 1988 a b c Reddy Juturi 2021 Timalsina 2017 a b King 1995 p 268 with note 2 Hacker 1995 p 78 Lorenzen 2015 Baird 1986 Goswami Abhay Charan Bhaktivedanta 1956 Scharfstein 1998 p 9 11 Olivelle 1998 p xxxvi with footnote 20 Staal 2008 p 365 note 159 Phillips 2009 p 295 note 24 a b c d Madaio 2017 p 5 a b c d e Madaio 2017 King 1995 p 9 a b Sharma 1993 p xiv Madaio 2017 pp 2 note 6 Allen 2017 a b Milne 1997 p 168 Deutsch 1988 pp 3 10 13 14 with footnotes Suthren Hirst 2005 p 79 Nicholson 2010 p 68 Mayeda 1992 p 73 a b c Klostermaier 2007 p 26 Milne 1997 p 166 Isaeva 1993 p 237 Dalal 2009 pp 16 26 27 Mayeda 1992 p 25 a b c d e f Koller 2006 a b c Long 2020 p 245 a b c Koller 2013 p 101 Koller 2006 p xii Koller 2013 pp 99 106 a b c d e f g h i j k l Deutsch 1980 p 105 108 a b Derrida 1992 p 203 Davis 2010 p 34 35 Fiordalis 2021 p 18 19 a b Rambachan 1991 p 97 a b Fiordalis 2021 p 6 a b Fiordalis 2021 p 9 Scheepers 2010 p 126 128 a b c d e Koller 2013 a b Mayeda 1992 p 19 Mayeda 1992 pp 18 20 a b Mayeda 1992 pp 20 22 a b Mayeda 1992 p 20 Mayeda 1992 p 22 a b c d Mayeda 1992 p 78 a b c d e f Mayeda 2006 pp 25 27 Sharma 2008 p 5 14 a b c Nicholson Hugh 2011 pp 171 172 191 a b c d Grimes 2004 pp 31 33 a b c Puligandla 1997 p 232 a b Sharma 1995 pp 174 178 a b c Fowler 2002 pp 246 247 Thrasher 1993 p 1 7 a b c Sharma 1995 pp 176 178 Renard 2010 p 131 Malkovsky 2001 p 42 44 Hiriyanna 1993 p 359 363 Sharma 1997 p 1 16 Murti 1996 p 294 296 194 195 John Grimes 1994 Problems and Perspectives in Religious Discourse Advaita Vedanta Implications State University of New York Press pp 35 38 ISBN 978 0 7914 1791 1 Jadunath Sinha 2013 Indian Psychology Perception Routledge pp 306 314 ISBN 978 1 136 34605 7 Chakravarthi Ram Prasad 2013 Advaita Epistemology and Metaphysics An Outline of Indian Non Realism Taylor amp Francis pp 190 194 ISBN 978 1 136 86897 9 R Dalal 2011 The Religions of India A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths Penguin ISBN 978 0143415176 p 38 Johnson WJ 2009 Atman self A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198610250 Bowker 2000c Atman a b Timalsina 2014 pp 3 23 Mayeda 1992 p 103 verse 1 p 105 note 1 a b Rambachan 2006 pp 7 99 103 a b Ram Prasad 2013 p 235 Deutsch 1973 pp 48 51 Ram Prasad 2013 p 237 a b Shankara Adhyasa bhasya pre amble to Brahma Sutra Bhashya I 1 1 Sharma 2007 p 44 45 90 Deutsch 1973 pp 50 51 101 107 Jeaneane D Fowler 2002 Perspectives of Reality An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hinduism Sussex Academic Press pp 256 258 261 263 ISBN 978 1 898723 94 3 Raju 1985 pp 448 449 a b Sharma 2007 pp 9 13 29 30 45 47 79 86 Mayeda 1992 Sharma 2004 p 3 Indich 2000 pp 57 60 Wilber 2000 p 132 a b c Sharma 2004 pp 15 40 49 72 King 1995 p 300 note 140 Sarma 1996 pp 122 137 Sarma 1996 pp 126 146 Comans 2000 pp 128 131 5 8 30 37 Indich 2000 pp 106 108 Bruce M Sullivan 1997 Historical Dictionary of Hinduism Scarecrow pp 59 60 ISBN 978 0 8108 3327 2 Bina Gupta 1998 The Disinterested Witness A Fragment of Advaita Vedanta Phenomenology Northwestern University Press pp 26 30 ISBN 978 0 8101 1565 1 a b Raju 1985 pp 32 33 Robert Hume Chandogya Upanishad Eighth Prathapaka Seventh through Twelfth Khanda Oxford University Press pp 268 273 Indich 2000 pp 58 67 106 108 Indich 2000 p 24 28 a b Ganeri 2019 p 103 Dasgupta 1975 p 148 149 a b Murti 1983 p 339 Zhihua Yao 2005 The Buddhist Theory of Self Cognition p 2 a b c d Potter 2008 pp 6 7 a b c Lochtefeld 2002a p 122 Raju 2006 p 426 Conclusion chapter part XII Venkatramaiah 2000 p xxxii Padiyath 2014 p 177 a b Brodd 2009 p 43 47 Puligandla 1997 p 231 Raju 2006 p 426 and Conclusion chapter part XII Mariasusai Dhavamony 2002 Hindu Christian Dialogue Theological Soundings and Perspectives Rodopi Press ISBN 978 9042015104 pp 43 44 B Martinez Bedard 2006 Types of Causes in Aristotle and Sankara Thesis Department of Religious Studies Georgia State University pp 18 35 Mayeda 1992 p 18 19 Gambhirananda 2021 p 13 Raju 1992 p 228 Deutsch 1980 p 9 a b c John Arapura 1986 Hermeneutical Essays on Vedantic Topics Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120801837 pp 12 13 18 Deutsch 1980 p 9 10 with footnote 2 Werner 1994 Pradhan Basant 5 November 2014 Yoga and Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy A Clinical Guide Springer ISBN 978 3 319 09105 1 Murthi 2009 p 152 Grimes 1990 p page needed Mayeda 1992 p 77 a b c Murthi 2009 p 157 Rambachan 2006 pp 114 122 Kaplan Stephen April 2007 Vidya and Avidya Simultaneous and Coterminous A Holographic Model to Illuminate the Advaita Debate Philosophy East and West 2 57 2 178 203 doi 10 1353 pew 2007 0019 JSTOR 4488090 S2CID 144344856 Murthi 2009 p 160 Murthi 2009 p 149 Murthi 2009 p 150 Doherty 2005 p 209 210 Mayeda 1992 p 82 a b Potter 2006 p 7 8 Murthi 2009 pp 155 156 a b HM Vroom 1989 Religions and the Truth Philosophical Reflections and Perspectives Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0802805027 pp 122 123 Shastri 1911 pp 5 and ix Encyclopedia Britannica Maya Shastri 1911 pp 58 73 Nicholson Hugh 2011 p 266 note 21 Roeser Robert W 2005 An introduction to Hindu India s contemplative psychological perspective on motivation self and development pdf ed p 15 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 582 4733 Belling Noa 2006 Yoga for ideal weight and shape Sydney Australia New Holland Publishers Australia P L ISBN 978 1 74110 298 7 Gadjin M Nagao 1991 Madhyamika and Yogacara A Study of Mahayana Philosophies State University of New York Press pp 127 128 ISBN 978 0 7914 0187 3 Lipner Julius J 1996 Ancient Banyan an Inquiry into the Meaning of Hinduness Religious Studies Cambridge University Press 32 1 109 126 doi 10 1017 s0034412500024100 S2CID 170138813 a b c d e f g Nicholson 2010 p 27 Sanskrit Sanskrit documents Brahmajnanalimala 1 20 Deutsch 1973 pp 40 43 a b King 1999 p 221 Nicholson Hugh 2011 pp 266 note 20 167 170 Nicholson Hugh 2011 p 266 note 21 a b c d Comans 2000 p 183 a b Rambachan 2006 p 26 Lochtefeld 2002 p 320 Comans 2000 pp 183 184 Deussen 1980 a b c Rambachan 2006 pp 109 111 S Vivekananda The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda at Google Books Volume 7 pages 63 65 Mayeda 2006 Rambachan 1984 a b Dalal 2009 p 22 Sivananda 1977 p viii a b c d e f Rao amp Paranjpe 2015 p 6 7 177 178 215 a b Grimes 1996 pp 98 99 a b Maharaj A 2014 Sri Harṣa contra Hegel Monism Skeptical Method and the Limits of Reason Philosophy East and West Johns Hopkins University Press 64 1 88 context pp 82 108 doi 10 1353 pew 2014 0010 S2CID 170532752 a b c Puligandla 1997 pp 251 254 a b Leesa S Davis 2010 Advaita Vedanta and Zen Buddhism Deconstructive Modes of Spiritual Inquiry Bloomsbury Academic pp 38 39 ISBN 978 0 8264 2068 8 Deutsch 1980 p 105 108 a b c d e f George Thibaut The Sacred Books of the East The Vedanta Sutras Part 1 p 12 at Google Books Oxford University Press Editor Max Muller p 12 with footnote 1 Heim M 2005 Differentiations in Hindu ethics in William Schweiker Editor The Blackwell companion to religious ethics ISBN 0 631 21634 0 Chapter 35 pp 341 354 James Lochtefeld The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism Rosen Publishing New York ISBN 0 8239 2287 1 p 777 Rao G H 1926 The Basis of Hindu Ethics International Journal of Ethics 37 1 pp 19 35 Mayeda 2006 pp 78 79 a b c d Deutsch 1973 pp 106 110 Robert P Waxler Maureen P Hall 2011 Transforming Literacy Changing Lives Through Reading and Writing Emerald pp 105 106 ISBN 978 0 85724 628 8 Dalal 2009 p 16 Fiordalis 2021 p 18 Fiordalis 2021 p 19 P P Bilimoria 2012 Sabdapramaṇa Word and Knowledge Springer pp 299 301 ISBN 978 94 009 2911 1 a b c Comans 2000 p 182 Comans 2000 pp 182 183 a b c Roodurmun 2002 p page needed a b Joel Mlecko 1982 The Guru in Hindu Tradition Numen Volume 29 Fasc 1 pp 33 61 Potter Karl 2002 Presuppositions of India s Philosophies Motilal Banarsidass pp 25 26 ISBN 81 208 0779 0 a b c Bhawuk DPS 2011 Anthony Marsella ed Spirituality and Indian Psychology Springer p 172 ISBN 978 1 4419 8109 7 a b Mayeda 1992 p 46 Mayeda 2006 pp 46 Mayeda 2006 pp 46 47 Brahmasutra bhasya 1 1 4 PDF Translated by S Vireswarananda 1936 p 35 Saṅkaracarya 1949 Verse 2 8 133 p 258 Potter 2014 p 249 a b c Mayeda 2006 pp 47 a b Suthren Hirst 2005 p 49 50 a b c d Grimes 1996 p 238 Datta 1932 pp 221 253 Puligandla 1997 p 228 a b Deutsch 2000 p 245 248 King 1999 p 14 Flood1996 p 225 Barua 2015 Rambachan 1994 pp 124 125 Cenkner 1995 p 96 Grimes 2004 p 23 a b Bowker 2000b Anubhava Halbfass 2017 p 387 Suthren Hirst 2005 p 68 Sharma 2000 p 177 a b c d Rambachan 1991 pp xii xiii Rambachan 1991 pp 1 14 Nikhalananda 1931 p viii Nikhalananda 1931 pp viii ix a b Nelson 1996 p 29 a b c Raju 1971 p 177 a b Sarma 2007 pp 126 143 144 a b Garfield amp Priest 2003 Murthi 2009 pp 158 159 a b Shah Kazemi 2006 p 5 Mayeda 1992 p 14 Mayeda 1992 p 12 172 Deutsch 1973 p 49 Braue 1984 p 81 a b c Brereton 1986 Olivelle 2008 p 349 note 8 7 16 3 a b c Black 2012 p 36 a b Lipner 2000 pp 55 note 9 57 a b c d Deutsch amp Dalvi 2004 p 8 Olivelle 2008 p 151 152 p 349 note 8 7 16 3 Olivelle 1998 p 152 Bhatawadekar 2013 p 203 note 14 Brereton 1986 p 107 a b Braue 1984 p 80 a b Grimes 1996 p 234 Sivaraman 1973 p 146 Mayeda 1992 p 50 172 a b c Lipner 2000 p 57 a b Olivelle 2008 p 151 152 Mayeda 1992 p 172 Up 18 3 18 6 18 7 Mayeda 1992 p 172 Up 18 6 Lipner 2000 pp 60 62 Mayeda 1992 p 218 up II 1 24 Max Muller Chandogya Upanishad 6 1 6 16 The Upanishads Part I Oxford University Press pages 92 109 with footnotes Goodall 1996 pp 136 137 Mayeda 1992 p 190 192 a b Mayeda 1992 p 91 219 Up II 1 28 Nakamura 1999 p 675 Nakamura 1999 p 176 Nakamura 1999 p 178 Nakamura 1999 p 679 Mayeda 1992 p 173 174 Up I 18 9 19 p 196 note 13 Mayeda 1992 p 251 253 Up II 3 Mayeda 1992 p 253 Up II 3 Mayeda 1992 p 196 note 13 Rambachan 1991 p 155 Rambachan 1991 pp 155 156 Rambachan 1991 p 156 a b c d e f Roodurmun 2002 p 40 Cenkner 1995 p 95 a b Nakamura 2004 p 367 Nakamura 2004 pp 365 366 Potter 2008 p 16 Karl Potter on p 220 full citation needed Shankara s Bhasya on Brihadaranyaka Upanishad Translated by S Madhavananda 1950 pp 348 350 754 757 Potter 1998 p 610 note 17 Saṅkaracarya 1949 pp 16 17 Potter 2008 pp 219 221 Mayeda 1992 p 91 218 Mayeda 1992 p 172 173 Up I 18 3 8 Mayeda 1992 p 183 Up I 18 99 100 Mayeda 1992 p 190 Up I 18 174 Mayeda 1992 p 192 Up I 18 196 197 p 195 Up I 18 2019 Mayeda 1992 p 195 Up I 18 2019 Mayeda 1992 p 85 220 Up II 1 30 a b Deutsch 1973 p 99 Bauer Nancy F 1987 Advaita Vedanta and Contemporary Western Ethics Philosophy East and West University of Hawaii Press 37 1 36 50 doi 10 2307 1399082 JSTOR 1399082 Deutsch 1973 p 100 Deutsch 1973 pp 101 102 with footnotes Rambachan 2006 p 109 Mayeda 2006 pp 88 89 Mayeda 2006 p 92 Nicholson 2010 p 33 a b Saṅkaracarya 1949 pp 17 19 Sankara 2006 pp 226 227 a b c d e Koller 2013 pp 100 101 a b Isaeva 1993 p 35 Nakamura 2004 pp 221 680 Dasgupta 1955 p 28 Wendy Doniger O Flaherty 1988 Textual Sources for the Study of Hinduism Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 1867 6 pp 2 3 a b Coburn 1984 p 439 a b Deutsch 2000 p 245 248 Deutsch 1988 pp 4 6 with footnote 4 Sharma 2007 pp 18 19 Stephen Phillips 1998 Classical Indian Metaphysics Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814899 p 332 note 68 Stephen Phillips 1998 Classical Indian Metaphysics Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814899 p 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a b Doniger 1999 p 1017 a b Gudrun Buhnemann 2003 Mandalas and Yantras in the Hindu Traditions BRILL Academic pp 60 61 ISBN 978 9004129023 Diana L Eck 1998 Darsan Seeing the Divine Image in India Columbia University Press p 49 ISBN 978 0 231 11265 9 Rosen 2006 p 166 Hiltebeitel 2013 a b The Four Denominations of Hinduism Basics of Hinduism Kauai Hindu Monastery Falk Reitz 1997 Pancayatana Komplexe in Nordindien Entstehung Entwicklung und regionale Besonderheiten einer indischen Architekturform PhD Thesis in German Awarded by Freie Universitat Berlin a b c Isaeva 1993 p 172 Deutsch amp Dalvi 2004 pp 126 157 a b c d e Whaling 1979 pp 1 42 Grimes 1998 pp 684 686 Sharma B N 2000 p 60 63 Dasgupta amp Mohanta 1998 p 362 a b Muller Ortega 2010 p 25 Muller Ortega 2010 p 26 a b Potter 1981 p 105 Comans 2000 p 2 Mudgal 1975 p 4 Isaeva 1993 p 174 Dasgupta 1997 p 494 Isaeva 1993 pp 60 145 154 Williams 2008 pp 104 125 127 Hookham 1991 pp 100 104 Williams 2008 pp 107 112 Hookham 1991 p 96 Williams 2008 pp 104 105 108 109 it refers to the Buddha using the term Self in order to win over non Buddhist ascetics Merv Fowler 1999 Buddhism Beliefs and Practices Sussex Academic Press pp 101 102 ISBN 978 1 898723 66 0 John W Pettit 1999 Mipham s Beacon of Certainty Illuminating the View of Dzogchen the Great Perfection Simon and Schuster pp 48 49 ISBN 978 0 86171 157 4 D Sharma 1966 Epistemological negative dialectics of Indian logic Abhava versus Anupalabdhi Indo Iranian Journal 9 4 291 300 doi 10 1163 000000066790086530 John Clayton 2010 Religions Reasons and Gods Essays in Cross cultural Philosophy of Religion Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521126274 p 54 Alex Wayman 1999 A Millennium of Buddhist Logic Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120816466 pp xix xx Puligandla 1997 pp 49 50 60 62 a b Christopher Bartley 2011 An Introduction to Indian Philosophy Bloomsbury Academic pp 90 91 ISBN 978 1 84706 449 3 a b Williams Tribe amp Wynne 2000 p 92 Puligandla 1997 pp 40 50 60 62 97 Kalupahana 1994 Christopher Bartley 2011 An Introduction to Indian Philosophy Bloomsbury Academic pp 90 91 96 204 208 ISBN 978 1 84706 449 3 Julius Lipner 1986 The Face of Truth A Study of Meaning and Metaphysics in the Vedantic Theology of Ramanuja State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0887060397 pp 120 123 Hacker 1995 p 78 Lorenzen 2015 Baird 1986 Goswami Abhay Charan Bhaktivedanta 1956 Biderman 1978 pp 405 413 Fowler 2002 pp 238 243 288 294 340 342 a b Nakamura 2004 pp 691 693 a b c J A B van Buitenen 2008 Ramanuja Hindu theologian and Philosopher Encyclopaedia Britannica a b Christopher Etter 2006 A Study of Qualitative Non Pluralism iUniverse pp 57 60 63 65 ISBN 978 0 595 39312 1 Sarma 1994 pp 374 375 Bryant Edwin 2007 Krishna A Sourcebook Chapter 15 by Deepak Sarma Oxford University Press pp 361 362 ISBN 978 0195148923 a b Jon Paul Sydnor 2012 Ramanuja and Schleiermacher Toward a Constructive Comparative Theology Casemate pp 84 87 ISBN 978 0227680247 a b c Joseph P Schultz 1981 Judaism and the Gentile Faiths Comparative Studies in Religion Fairleigh Dickinson University Press pp 81 84 ISBN 978 0 8386 1707 6 Indich 2000 pp 1 2 97 102 Deutsch 2013 p 247 248 Devarshi Ramanath Shastri Shuddhadvaita Darshan Vol 2 Published by Mota Mandir Bhoiwada Mumbai India 1917 Brahmavad Saṅgraha Pub Vaishnava Mitra Mandal Sarvajanik Nyasa Indore India 2014 a b Tapasyananda Swami Bhakti Schools of Vedanta pg 180 181 a b Stoker Valerie 2011 Madhva 1238 1317 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2 February 2016 a b Stafford Betty 2010 Dvaita Advaita and Visiṣṭadvaita Contrasting Views of Mokṣa Asian Philosophy An International Journal of the Philosophical Traditions of the East Volume 20 Issue 2 pp 215 224 a b SMS Chari 1999 Advaita and Visistadvaita Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120815353 pp 5 7 Neog 1980 pp 243 244 Kumar Das 2006 pp 172 173 Brown 1983 pp 553 557 Sheridan 1986 pp 1 2 17 25 Sheridan 1986 p 6 van Buitenen J A B 1966 The Archaism of the Bhagavata Purana In Milton Singer ed Krishna Myths Rites and Attitudes pp 23 40 Smith 2003 pp 126 128 Flood 1996 pp 162 167 Klostermaier 1984 pp 177 178 Davis 2014 p 167 note 21 Dyczkowski 1989 pp 43 44 Isaeva 1995 pp 134 135 McDaniel 2004 pp 89 91 Brooks 1990 pp 35 39 li, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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