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Introduction to Vedanta
SDMCNYS UJIRE 1
• Vedanta (derived from veda, knowledge; anta,
end), literally means end or completion of
knowledge.
• Veda is also the term that
designates the ancient
scriptures (shastras) of India,
the earliest of which date to
circa 1,500 – 1,200 BCE.
• Vedanta, then, also means
“end of the Veda,” and in this sense can refer
technically to the final sections of the four-fold
Vedas, the so-called Upanishads (600 – 300 BCE)
SDMCNYS UJIRE 2
Vedanta Philosophy
“Vedanta” most commonly refers to one of the
six schools of Orthodox Indian Darshanas
(viewpoints or ways of seeing) that emerged
between the 7th
and 8th
century CE.
This was the period of an important revival of
“Dharma” in India in response to the increasing
pluralism of traditions rooted in the Vedas and
others – Buddhism and Jainism – that were not.
“Dharma” here is an umbrella term for a great
diversity of religious traditions that share an
allegiance to the Vedas as authoritive scripture.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 3
At the popular level, the revival of Hinduism
took the form of various movements of intense
religious devotion (bhakti), for example, the
Vishnu-Krishna worship of the Alvars of South
India.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 4
At the scholarly level, the revival of Hinduism
took the form of Vedanta: the attempt to unify
and systematize the teachings of the Vedas and
the spiritual practices rooted in the insights of
the Vedic scriptural heritage of India.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 5
Vedanta focuses on the prasthana-traya, the
three-fold scriptural canon:
The Upanishads (600-300 BCE)
Bhagavad Gita (circa 200 BCE)
Brahma Sutras (circa 200-100 BCE)
Gaudapada (left), 7th
or 8th
century, is regarded as the
earliest formulator of Vedanta,
but Sankara (right), 8th
century,
is considered the first great
expounder of Vedanta.
Gaudipada allegedly taught
Govinda, Sankara’s guru.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 6
Sri
Sampradaya
Ramanuja
12th
Century
Sri
Sampradaya
Ramanuja
12th
Century
Hamsa
Sampradaya
Nimbarka
13th
century
Hamsa
Sampradaya
Nimbarka
13th
century
Brahma
Sampradaya
Madhva
13th
Century
Brahma
Sampradaya
Madhva
13th
Century
Rudha
Sampradaya
Vallabha
15th
and 16th
Century
Rudha
Sampradaya
Vallabha
15th
and 16th
Century
Caitanya
Sampradaya
Caitanya
16th
Century
Caitanya
Sampradaya
Caitanya
16th
Century
Advaita
Vedanta
Sankara
8th
-9th
Century
Advaita
Vedanta
Sankara
8th
-9th
Century
Multiple schools of Vedanta emerged between the
8th
and 16th
century under the guidance of highly
influential gurus.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 7
Each school of Vedanta aimed to
systematically explain the nature of ultimate
reality and the goal of human life in accordance
with the teachings of the Upanishads.
All schools of Vedanta maintain that the goal of
human life is to realize Brahman (the ultimate
reality), to be united with the transcendental
ground of the universe.
Schools of Vedanta differ with respect to how
they conceive of Brahman, what realization of
and union with Brahman involves, and how
this is achieved.SDMCNYS UJIRE 8
Exploring the Upanishads
SDMCNYS UJIRE 9
Upanishad
Upa- (near), ni- (down), sad (to sit):
sitting near the teacher
SDMCNYS UJIRE 10
The Upanishads
• Composed between 600-300 BCE by
various rishis (seers)
• Added as the final sections of the divisions
of Veda texts. (Vedanta = end of the vedas)
• Upanishads are classified as sruti (“that
which is heard”) and are authoritative texts.
• Philosophical commentary on the early
portions of the Vedas but grounded in the
direct experiences of the rishis.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 11
What is vedantha?
SDMCNYS UJIRE 12
Six Primary Concepts of
the Upanishads
SDMCNYS UJIRE 13
I.
BRAHMAN
SDMCNYS UJIRE 14
The Upanishads emphasize the
impermanence of the empirical world,
physical reality as we experience it
through our senses.
Maya
SDMCNYS UJIRE 15
Beyond Maya, there is an
unchanging reality called
Brahman
(lit. “to expand”)
SDMCNYS UJIRE 16
Four Claims about Brahman
• Brahman is the fundamental principle of
the universe. (Kena Upanishad IV and V)
• Brahman is the reality in all, and all things
are in Brahman. (Svetasvatara Upanishad,
IV. 2–4)
• Brahman is the state of non-duality.
(Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, IV.v.14–15)
• Brahman is Ineffable. (Kena Upanishad,
I.5-9) SDMCNYS UJIRE 17
Brahman as the Impersonal
Absolute
These central claims of the Upanishads about
Brahman suggest that Brahman is not a personal
being, not a being with attributes that
characterize “persons” (e.g., self-awareness,
perspectival experience, deliberative rationality,
and being the subject of intentional states).
On this view, Brahman is formless or
attributeless (nirguna) and not a personal God.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 18
If Brahman is without form, then “gods” represent
different provisional manifestations of Brahman in maya.
The Trimurti (three forms) represent Brahman
manifested in the processes of creation, preservation,
and dissolution and recreation of the cosmos.
Brahma Vishnu Shiva
SDMCNYS UJIRE 19
Brahman as Personal God
• The Upanishads also refer to Brahman under
various attributes (saguna Brahman), including
those indicative of personhood: knowledge, will,
and moral goodness (Svetasvatara Upanishad,
VI.1-23).
• Some passages in Mundaka Upanishad
subordinate imperishable (impersonal) Brahman
to the supreme “Purusha” (person).
• Other later Upanishads emphasize personal
theism (e.g. Katha, Isa, and Svetasvatara).
SDMCNYS UJIRE 20
Brahman as Creator?
The Upanishads speak of Brahman as
creator.
However, even where Brahman is conceived
of in personal terms, “creation” refers to a
necessary emanation of the universe from
the being of Brahman, like the flowing of a
web from a spider.
The Upanishads affirm eternal, cyclical
processes of the origination of order, its
evolution, and eventual dissolution.SDMCNYS UJIRE 21
"Bliss [ananda] is Brahman, for
from bliss all beings are born; by
bliss, when born, they live; and into
bliss they enter at their death."
(Taittiriyaka Upanishad, III.6)
SDMCNYS UJIRE 22
II.
ATMAN
SDMCNYS UJIRE 23
The True Self (Atman)
The Upanishads teach the existence
of a true Self called Atman.
Atman is distinguished from the individual
personality or ego formed through
attachments to sense objects.
The true Self of each person is not identical
with the body or a person’s mind as
conditioned by sense experience.SDMCNYS UJIRE 24
“That Self (Atman) is not this, it is not that (neti,
neti). It is unseizable, for it cannot be seized;
indestructible, for it cannot be destroyed;
unattached, for it does not attach itself; is unbound,
does not tremble, is not injured.”
Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, iv.v.15
SDMCNYS UJIRE 25
Relation between
Brahman and Atman
SDMCNYS UJIRE 26
Tat Tvam Asi
“Thou [Atman] art That [Brahman]”
(Chandogya Upanishad, VI)
A famous and controversial passage from
the Upanishads.
Atman and Brahman are identical?
Atman and Brahman are united in some
way without being entirely identical?
SDMCNYS UJIRE 27
III. AVIDYA
SDMCNYS UJIRE 28
The human
perspective is
characterized by
ignorance (avidya)
of the true nature of
reality and the self.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 29
Human persons identify
themselves with their
body or with their
individual states of
consciousness formed
through contact with
and attachment to
sense objects.
This is the false ego or
false self.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 30
The false ego is the source of human
suffering or unhappiness because the
false ego is a product of attachments
to what is non-enduring.SDMCNYS UJIRE 31
IV.
SAMSARA
and
KARMA
SDMCNYS UJIRE 32
The Upanishads
teach that all life
forms move
through repeated
cycles of birth,
death, and rebirth,
until final
liberation from this
cycle.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 33
The cycle of death and rebirth is called
Samsara.
Its fuel or energy is called
Karma.
The termination of the cycle is called
Moksha.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 34
“Where one’s mind is attached – the inner self
Goes thereto with action, being attached to it alone.
Obtaining the end of his action,
Whatever he does in this world,
He comes again from that world
To this world of action.
- So the man who desires.”
Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, iv.iv.6
SDMCNYS UJIRE 35
Rebirth is fueled and directed
by karma
(sanskrit root kri, meaning “action”).
Broadly stated, karma is a law of cause and
effect according to which actions in one
lifetime influence actions in a subsequent life.SDMCNYS UJIRE 36
Attachment to material forms of existence
(modes of false ego) is the basic karmic energy
that fuels samsara.
The form of one’s karma is shaped by the
specific nature of one’s attachments.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 37
Rebirth is not restricted to rebirth as a
human being, but it extends to the animal
world and other realms of existence.
The form of one’s karma (good or bad)
determines the realm of existence into which
one is reborn.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 38
Rebirth is not desirable.
It implies that a person is still
trapped in ignorance about the
nature of reality through various
attachments to sense objects.
Suffering, associated with material
existence, has not yet been
transcended.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 39
V. MOKSHA
SDMCNYS UJIRE 40
Moksha is the state of release from
samsara.
Attachments => False Ego => Karma => Samsara
What is required is a dismantling or
dissolution of the false ego. Therefore, we
must let go of our attachments to sense
objects or material forms of existence.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 41
Destruction of the False Ego
Spiritual discipline
dismantles the false ego:
Spiritual Practice
Consists in . . .
Observing Moral Laws
(aimed at renunciation of
material attachments)
and Meditation
SDMCNYS UJIRE 42
Meditation
Having heard and reflected
on the word of Brahman in
the scriptures, one must
practice concentration on
the truth of Brahman and
the Self, repeating mantras
such as OM (which
signifies the cosmic power
of Brahman) or
Aham Brahmasmi
(I am Brahman).
SDMCNYS UJIRE 43
Moksha is absolute consciousness: “Brahman
realization” and “Self realization” since the
true nature of reality (Brahman) and the true
self (Atman) is perceived.
The Ultimate State (Moksha)
Spiritual practice leads to Moksha
(liberation)
Moksha is freedom from samsara and thus
freedom from suffering.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 44
Realization of Brahman and the Self
Sat-Chit-Ananda
Being (Sat)
Consciousness (Chit)
Bliss (Ananda)
Satchitananda is also the name of
Brahman.
So moksa is union with Brahman.SDMCNYS UJIRE 45
“As rivers flow into the sea and in so
doing lose name and form, even so
the wise man, freed from name and
form, attains the Supreme Being,
the Self-luminous, the Infinite.”
Chandogya, VI.i.5
SDMCNYS UJIRE 46
Review: Six Primary Concepts
in the Upanishads
Brahman Atman
Karma Samsara
Moksha
Avidya
SDMCNYS UJIRE 47
Beyond the Upanishads
The Evolution of the Personalist
Conception of the Absolute
SDMCNYS UJIRE 48
Review Point
The early Upanishads (circa 800 – 600 BCE):
Brahman is the ultimate, impersonal reality,
transcendent to the universe, and yet in some
sense immanent in the universe.
Some of the later Upanishads affirm the
existence of a single, transcendent personal
God (Purusha, Deva), in some cases higher
than Brahman.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 49
Bhagavad Gita
and
the Vaishnava Traditions
SDMCNYS UJIRE 50
The personalist
understanding of
Brahman is developed
further in and central to
the Bhagavad Gita
(circa 200 BCE).
Krishna is avatara (God
who “descends” in
human form). The
impersonal Brahman is
subsumed under an
aspect of Lord Krishna
(e.g., Gita, 14:27).SDMCNYS UJIRE 51
Lord Krishna
The Bhagavad Gita presents Krishna as the
manifestation of God on earth. While the Gita
emphasizes the loving friendship between Krishna
and warrior Arjuna, the text emphasizes Krishna’s
aishvarya (Lordship) qualities, his godlike qualities
that instill awe and reverence. (See Gita, ch. 11)
SDMCNYS UJIRE 52
The Gita likely reflects the existence of Vishnu-
Krishna worship (Vaishnavism) in India at the
time of its composition, but the text became a
centerpiece in the spread and eventual
ascendency of Vaishnavism in India in the
common era.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 53
Krishna as the flute playing cow
herder attracting the gopis
(milkmaids) of Vrindavana.
Srimad Bhagavatam
(4th
– 6th
centuries CE):
Krishna is presented as the
Supreme Being who descends to
earth to destroy demons and
protect the righteous, but his
madhurya (sweetness) qualities
are also emphasized, i.e., his
attractive human qualities that
engender intimacy and hence
are essential to the cultivation of
various moods of bhakti (loving
devotion to God).
SDMCNYS UJIRE 54
The Bhakti Renaissance
Between the 6th
and 9th
centuries CE devotion to
Vishnu-Krishna grew in intensity in South
India among many poets and mystics.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 55
SDMCNYS UJIRE 56
The Alvars
• The mystics of South India were called Alvars (alvar,
Tamil, one who rules the world by his love of God).
They were instrumental in the Renaissance of the
bhakti teachings of the Gita and Bhagavata Purana.
• The bhakti movement eventually made its way into
Northern India around the time Northern India came
under Islamic rule by the 13th
century.
• The Bhakti renaissance, which had a lasting impact
on the religious culture of India, would play an
important role in shaping the great medieval tradition
of Hindu philosophy called Vedanta.SDMCNYS UJIRE 57
While the “popular” axis of Hindu revival in India by
the 7th
century took the form of devotional theism,
primarily in the form of various Vaishnava and Shaivite
sects, the “scholarly” axis of the revival resulted in
Vedanta, which emerged between the 7th
and 8th
centuries.
Important Intersection between the Popular
and Scholarly Axes of the Hindu Revival
Many of the great Vedantin philosophers, e.g.,
Ramanuja and Madhva, were personally committed to
and engaged in devotional theism (bhakti), specifically
Vaishnavism.SDMCNYS UJIRE 58
Back to Vedanta Philosophy
SDMCNYS UJIRE 59
All schools of Vedanta maintain that the
goal of human life is to realize Brahman (the
ultimate reality), to be united with the
transcendental ground of the universe.
Schools of Vedanta differ with respect to
how they conceive of Brahman, what
realization of and union with Brahman
involves, and how this is achieved.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 60
Vedanta: Advaita vs. Bhakti
The main division between schools of Vedanta is
between
the Advaita Vedanta school
(developed by Sankara)
and
the various dissenting schools of Bhakti Vedanta
(e.g., represented by Ramanuja, Madhva,
Nimbarka, Caitanya).SDMCNYS UJIRE 61
Sankara’s Advaita Vedanta
(1)Brahman – construed as the impersonal Absolute – alone is real.
(2)The true self of each person (atman) is the same reality and it is
identical with Brahman
(3)Moksha involves the absorption of individual consciousness into
Brahman by way of the path of knowledge (jnana yoga).SDMCNYS UJIRE 62
Bhakti Vedanta
(1)Brahman is a real personal being endowed with auspicious
attributes.
(2)The true self of each person is distinct from the true self of
others, and each is distinct from Brahman.
(3)Bhakti (love of God) brings about union of the individual soul
with the personal Supreme God and moksha.SDMCNYS UJIRE 63
The representatives of Bhakti Vedanta are
Vaishnavas in their religious orientation.
Vaishnavas worship Vishnu or any of the avatars
associated with Vishnu (such as Rama or Krishna)
as the Supreme being.
SDMCNYS UJIRE 64
Vedanta philosophy is thus divided along
seemingly opposite ends of the metaphysical
spectrum:
1.Metaphysical Monism: the apparent dualities
of the world are ultimately dissolved into pure
undifferentiated consciousness.
1. Theistic Personalism: the dualities of the
world are transcended by the perfection of a
relation between a true, individual self and the
Supreme personal being that is the ground of
the existence of all souls and all worlds.SDMCNYS UJIRE 65
References
• Steven Rosen, Essential Hinduism (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2006).
• Gavin Food, Introduction to Hinduism (Cambridge, 1996)
• R.C. Zaehner, Hindu and Muslim Mysticism (New York: Schocken
Books, 1969), Chapters 2-4.
• R.C. Zaehner, Hinduism (New York: Oxford University Press, 1972).
• Swami Prabhavanda, The Spiritual Heritage of India: A Clear
Summary of Indian Philosophy and Religion (Hollywood, CA:
Vedanta Press, 1979), Chapters 1-3.
• Keith Ward, Concepts of God: Images of the Divine in Five Religious
Traditions (Oneworld, 1998), Chapters 1-2.
• Hans Torwesten, Vedanta: Heart of Hinduism (New York: Grove
Press, 1991), Chapter 1.
• Dominic Goodall (ed.), Hindu Scriptures (Berkeley, CA: University of
California Press, 1996).
• Edwin Bryant (ed., trans.), Krishna: The Beautiful Legend of God
(Srimad Bhagavata Purana, Book X) (Penguin Books, 2003),
“Introduction,” pp. xvii-xviii.SDMCNYS UJIRE 66

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Vedanta philosophy sdmcnys

  • 2. • Vedanta (derived from veda, knowledge; anta, end), literally means end or completion of knowledge. • Veda is also the term that designates the ancient scriptures (shastras) of India, the earliest of which date to circa 1,500 – 1,200 BCE. • Vedanta, then, also means “end of the Veda,” and in this sense can refer technically to the final sections of the four-fold Vedas, the so-called Upanishads (600 – 300 BCE) SDMCNYS UJIRE 2
  • 3. Vedanta Philosophy “Vedanta” most commonly refers to one of the six schools of Orthodox Indian Darshanas (viewpoints or ways of seeing) that emerged between the 7th and 8th century CE. This was the period of an important revival of “Dharma” in India in response to the increasing pluralism of traditions rooted in the Vedas and others – Buddhism and Jainism – that were not. “Dharma” here is an umbrella term for a great diversity of religious traditions that share an allegiance to the Vedas as authoritive scripture. SDMCNYS UJIRE 3
  • 4. At the popular level, the revival of Hinduism took the form of various movements of intense religious devotion (bhakti), for example, the Vishnu-Krishna worship of the Alvars of South India. SDMCNYS UJIRE 4
  • 5. At the scholarly level, the revival of Hinduism took the form of Vedanta: the attempt to unify and systematize the teachings of the Vedas and the spiritual practices rooted in the insights of the Vedic scriptural heritage of India. SDMCNYS UJIRE 5
  • 6. Vedanta focuses on the prasthana-traya, the three-fold scriptural canon: The Upanishads (600-300 BCE) Bhagavad Gita (circa 200 BCE) Brahma Sutras (circa 200-100 BCE) Gaudapada (left), 7th or 8th century, is regarded as the earliest formulator of Vedanta, but Sankara (right), 8th century, is considered the first great expounder of Vedanta. Gaudipada allegedly taught Govinda, Sankara’s guru. SDMCNYS UJIRE 6
  • 8. Each school of Vedanta aimed to systematically explain the nature of ultimate reality and the goal of human life in accordance with the teachings of the Upanishads. All schools of Vedanta maintain that the goal of human life is to realize Brahman (the ultimate reality), to be united with the transcendental ground of the universe. Schools of Vedanta differ with respect to how they conceive of Brahman, what realization of and union with Brahman involves, and how this is achieved.SDMCNYS UJIRE 8
  • 10. Upanishad Upa- (near), ni- (down), sad (to sit): sitting near the teacher SDMCNYS UJIRE 10
  • 11. The Upanishads • Composed between 600-300 BCE by various rishis (seers) • Added as the final sections of the divisions of Veda texts. (Vedanta = end of the vedas) • Upanishads are classified as sruti (“that which is heard”) and are authoritative texts. • Philosophical commentary on the early portions of the Vedas but grounded in the direct experiences of the rishis. SDMCNYS UJIRE 11
  • 13. Six Primary Concepts of the Upanishads SDMCNYS UJIRE 13
  • 15. The Upanishads emphasize the impermanence of the empirical world, physical reality as we experience it through our senses. Maya SDMCNYS UJIRE 15
  • 16. Beyond Maya, there is an unchanging reality called Brahman (lit. “to expand”) SDMCNYS UJIRE 16
  • 17. Four Claims about Brahman • Brahman is the fundamental principle of the universe. (Kena Upanishad IV and V) • Brahman is the reality in all, and all things are in Brahman. (Svetasvatara Upanishad, IV. 2–4) • Brahman is the state of non-duality. (Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, IV.v.14–15) • Brahman is Ineffable. (Kena Upanishad, I.5-9) SDMCNYS UJIRE 17
  • 18. Brahman as the Impersonal Absolute These central claims of the Upanishads about Brahman suggest that Brahman is not a personal being, not a being with attributes that characterize “persons” (e.g., self-awareness, perspectival experience, deliberative rationality, and being the subject of intentional states). On this view, Brahman is formless or attributeless (nirguna) and not a personal God. SDMCNYS UJIRE 18
  • 19. If Brahman is without form, then “gods” represent different provisional manifestations of Brahman in maya. The Trimurti (three forms) represent Brahman manifested in the processes of creation, preservation, and dissolution and recreation of the cosmos. Brahma Vishnu Shiva SDMCNYS UJIRE 19
  • 20. Brahman as Personal God • The Upanishads also refer to Brahman under various attributes (saguna Brahman), including those indicative of personhood: knowledge, will, and moral goodness (Svetasvatara Upanishad, VI.1-23). • Some passages in Mundaka Upanishad subordinate imperishable (impersonal) Brahman to the supreme “Purusha” (person). • Other later Upanishads emphasize personal theism (e.g. Katha, Isa, and Svetasvatara). SDMCNYS UJIRE 20
  • 21. Brahman as Creator? The Upanishads speak of Brahman as creator. However, even where Brahman is conceived of in personal terms, “creation” refers to a necessary emanation of the universe from the being of Brahman, like the flowing of a web from a spider. The Upanishads affirm eternal, cyclical processes of the origination of order, its evolution, and eventual dissolution.SDMCNYS UJIRE 21
  • 22. "Bliss [ananda] is Brahman, for from bliss all beings are born; by bliss, when born, they live; and into bliss they enter at their death." (Taittiriyaka Upanishad, III.6) SDMCNYS UJIRE 22
  • 24. The True Self (Atman) The Upanishads teach the existence of a true Self called Atman. Atman is distinguished from the individual personality or ego formed through attachments to sense objects. The true Self of each person is not identical with the body or a person’s mind as conditioned by sense experience.SDMCNYS UJIRE 24
  • 25. “That Self (Atman) is not this, it is not that (neti, neti). It is unseizable, for it cannot be seized; indestructible, for it cannot be destroyed; unattached, for it does not attach itself; is unbound, does not tremble, is not injured.” Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, iv.v.15 SDMCNYS UJIRE 25
  • 26. Relation between Brahman and Atman SDMCNYS UJIRE 26
  • 27. Tat Tvam Asi “Thou [Atman] art That [Brahman]” (Chandogya Upanishad, VI) A famous and controversial passage from the Upanishads. Atman and Brahman are identical? Atman and Brahman are united in some way without being entirely identical? SDMCNYS UJIRE 27
  • 29. The human perspective is characterized by ignorance (avidya) of the true nature of reality and the self. SDMCNYS UJIRE 29
  • 30. Human persons identify themselves with their body or with their individual states of consciousness formed through contact with and attachment to sense objects. This is the false ego or false self. SDMCNYS UJIRE 30
  • 31. The false ego is the source of human suffering or unhappiness because the false ego is a product of attachments to what is non-enduring.SDMCNYS UJIRE 31
  • 33. The Upanishads teach that all life forms move through repeated cycles of birth, death, and rebirth, until final liberation from this cycle. SDMCNYS UJIRE 33
  • 34. The cycle of death and rebirth is called Samsara. Its fuel or energy is called Karma. The termination of the cycle is called Moksha. SDMCNYS UJIRE 34
  • 35. “Where one’s mind is attached – the inner self Goes thereto with action, being attached to it alone. Obtaining the end of his action, Whatever he does in this world, He comes again from that world To this world of action. - So the man who desires.” Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, iv.iv.6 SDMCNYS UJIRE 35
  • 36. Rebirth is fueled and directed by karma (sanskrit root kri, meaning “action”). Broadly stated, karma is a law of cause and effect according to which actions in one lifetime influence actions in a subsequent life.SDMCNYS UJIRE 36
  • 37. Attachment to material forms of existence (modes of false ego) is the basic karmic energy that fuels samsara. The form of one’s karma is shaped by the specific nature of one’s attachments. SDMCNYS UJIRE 37
  • 38. Rebirth is not restricted to rebirth as a human being, but it extends to the animal world and other realms of existence. The form of one’s karma (good or bad) determines the realm of existence into which one is reborn. SDMCNYS UJIRE 38
  • 39. Rebirth is not desirable. It implies that a person is still trapped in ignorance about the nature of reality through various attachments to sense objects. Suffering, associated with material existence, has not yet been transcended. SDMCNYS UJIRE 39
  • 41. Moksha is the state of release from samsara. Attachments => False Ego => Karma => Samsara What is required is a dismantling or dissolution of the false ego. Therefore, we must let go of our attachments to sense objects or material forms of existence. SDMCNYS UJIRE 41
  • 42. Destruction of the False Ego Spiritual discipline dismantles the false ego: Spiritual Practice Consists in . . . Observing Moral Laws (aimed at renunciation of material attachments) and Meditation SDMCNYS UJIRE 42
  • 43. Meditation Having heard and reflected on the word of Brahman in the scriptures, one must practice concentration on the truth of Brahman and the Self, repeating mantras such as OM (which signifies the cosmic power of Brahman) or Aham Brahmasmi (I am Brahman). SDMCNYS UJIRE 43
  • 44. Moksha is absolute consciousness: “Brahman realization” and “Self realization” since the true nature of reality (Brahman) and the true self (Atman) is perceived. The Ultimate State (Moksha) Spiritual practice leads to Moksha (liberation) Moksha is freedom from samsara and thus freedom from suffering. SDMCNYS UJIRE 44
  • 45. Realization of Brahman and the Self Sat-Chit-Ananda Being (Sat) Consciousness (Chit) Bliss (Ananda) Satchitananda is also the name of Brahman. So moksa is union with Brahman.SDMCNYS UJIRE 45
  • 46. “As rivers flow into the sea and in so doing lose name and form, even so the wise man, freed from name and form, attains the Supreme Being, the Self-luminous, the Infinite.” Chandogya, VI.i.5 SDMCNYS UJIRE 46
  • 47. Review: Six Primary Concepts in the Upanishads Brahman Atman Karma Samsara Moksha Avidya SDMCNYS UJIRE 47
  • 48. Beyond the Upanishads The Evolution of the Personalist Conception of the Absolute SDMCNYS UJIRE 48
  • 49. Review Point The early Upanishads (circa 800 – 600 BCE): Brahman is the ultimate, impersonal reality, transcendent to the universe, and yet in some sense immanent in the universe. Some of the later Upanishads affirm the existence of a single, transcendent personal God (Purusha, Deva), in some cases higher than Brahman. SDMCNYS UJIRE 49
  • 50. Bhagavad Gita and the Vaishnava Traditions SDMCNYS UJIRE 50
  • 51. The personalist understanding of Brahman is developed further in and central to the Bhagavad Gita (circa 200 BCE). Krishna is avatara (God who “descends” in human form). The impersonal Brahman is subsumed under an aspect of Lord Krishna (e.g., Gita, 14:27).SDMCNYS UJIRE 51
  • 52. Lord Krishna The Bhagavad Gita presents Krishna as the manifestation of God on earth. While the Gita emphasizes the loving friendship between Krishna and warrior Arjuna, the text emphasizes Krishna’s aishvarya (Lordship) qualities, his godlike qualities that instill awe and reverence. (See Gita, ch. 11) SDMCNYS UJIRE 52
  • 53. The Gita likely reflects the existence of Vishnu- Krishna worship (Vaishnavism) in India at the time of its composition, but the text became a centerpiece in the spread and eventual ascendency of Vaishnavism in India in the common era. SDMCNYS UJIRE 53
  • 54. Krishna as the flute playing cow herder attracting the gopis (milkmaids) of Vrindavana. Srimad Bhagavatam (4th – 6th centuries CE): Krishna is presented as the Supreme Being who descends to earth to destroy demons and protect the righteous, but his madhurya (sweetness) qualities are also emphasized, i.e., his attractive human qualities that engender intimacy and hence are essential to the cultivation of various moods of bhakti (loving devotion to God). SDMCNYS UJIRE 54
  • 55. The Bhakti Renaissance Between the 6th and 9th centuries CE devotion to Vishnu-Krishna grew in intensity in South India among many poets and mystics. SDMCNYS UJIRE 55
  • 57. The Alvars • The mystics of South India were called Alvars (alvar, Tamil, one who rules the world by his love of God). They were instrumental in the Renaissance of the bhakti teachings of the Gita and Bhagavata Purana. • The bhakti movement eventually made its way into Northern India around the time Northern India came under Islamic rule by the 13th century. • The Bhakti renaissance, which had a lasting impact on the religious culture of India, would play an important role in shaping the great medieval tradition of Hindu philosophy called Vedanta.SDMCNYS UJIRE 57
  • 58. While the “popular” axis of Hindu revival in India by the 7th century took the form of devotional theism, primarily in the form of various Vaishnava and Shaivite sects, the “scholarly” axis of the revival resulted in Vedanta, which emerged between the 7th and 8th centuries. Important Intersection between the Popular and Scholarly Axes of the Hindu Revival Many of the great Vedantin philosophers, e.g., Ramanuja and Madhva, were personally committed to and engaged in devotional theism (bhakti), specifically Vaishnavism.SDMCNYS UJIRE 58
  • 59. Back to Vedanta Philosophy SDMCNYS UJIRE 59
  • 60. All schools of Vedanta maintain that the goal of human life is to realize Brahman (the ultimate reality), to be united with the transcendental ground of the universe. Schools of Vedanta differ with respect to how they conceive of Brahman, what realization of and union with Brahman involves, and how this is achieved. SDMCNYS UJIRE 60
  • 61. Vedanta: Advaita vs. Bhakti The main division between schools of Vedanta is between the Advaita Vedanta school (developed by Sankara) and the various dissenting schools of Bhakti Vedanta (e.g., represented by Ramanuja, Madhva, Nimbarka, Caitanya).SDMCNYS UJIRE 61
  • 62. Sankara’s Advaita Vedanta (1)Brahman – construed as the impersonal Absolute – alone is real. (2)The true self of each person (atman) is the same reality and it is identical with Brahman (3)Moksha involves the absorption of individual consciousness into Brahman by way of the path of knowledge (jnana yoga).SDMCNYS UJIRE 62
  • 63. Bhakti Vedanta (1)Brahman is a real personal being endowed with auspicious attributes. (2)The true self of each person is distinct from the true self of others, and each is distinct from Brahman. (3)Bhakti (love of God) brings about union of the individual soul with the personal Supreme God and moksha.SDMCNYS UJIRE 63
  • 64. The representatives of Bhakti Vedanta are Vaishnavas in their religious orientation. Vaishnavas worship Vishnu or any of the avatars associated with Vishnu (such as Rama or Krishna) as the Supreme being. SDMCNYS UJIRE 64
  • 65. Vedanta philosophy is thus divided along seemingly opposite ends of the metaphysical spectrum: 1.Metaphysical Monism: the apparent dualities of the world are ultimately dissolved into pure undifferentiated consciousness. 1. Theistic Personalism: the dualities of the world are transcended by the perfection of a relation between a true, individual self and the Supreme personal being that is the ground of the existence of all souls and all worlds.SDMCNYS UJIRE 65
  • 66. References • Steven Rosen, Essential Hinduism (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2006). • Gavin Food, Introduction to Hinduism (Cambridge, 1996) • R.C. Zaehner, Hindu and Muslim Mysticism (New York: Schocken Books, 1969), Chapters 2-4. • R.C. Zaehner, Hinduism (New York: Oxford University Press, 1972). • Swami Prabhavanda, The Spiritual Heritage of India: A Clear Summary of Indian Philosophy and Religion (Hollywood, CA: Vedanta Press, 1979), Chapters 1-3. • Keith Ward, Concepts of God: Images of the Divine in Five Religious Traditions (Oneworld, 1998), Chapters 1-2. • Hans Torwesten, Vedanta: Heart of Hinduism (New York: Grove Press, 1991), Chapter 1. • Dominic Goodall (ed.), Hindu Scriptures (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1996). • Edwin Bryant (ed., trans.), Krishna: The Beautiful Legend of God (Srimad Bhagavata Purana, Book X) (Penguin Books, 2003), “Introduction,” pp. xvii-xviii.SDMCNYS UJIRE 66

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. The orthodox schools are designated astika. They all accept the authority of the vedas. The six schools are Vedanta, Yoga, Sankhya, Mimamsa, Nyana, and Vaisesika. Nastikas are those who reject the infallible authority of the Vedas.
  2. In addition to Vaishnavism (centered on Vishnu-Krishna worship), the bhakti revival also included Shaivism (Worship of Shiva as the Supreme Being), and Shaktism (Worship of the Goddess/Feminine as the Supreme Being).
  3. While only the Upanishads are de jure sruti (as revelation from God), one can plausibly argue that, de facto, the Gita has this status, being the word of Krishna and song of God. Most Vaishnava sects regard the Gita as an authority equal to the Upanishads, and in a sense even superior to the Upanishads. The Gita is often called the Gitopanishad, a summary of the Upanishads.
  4. All yellow schools are Vaishnava Bhakti Vedanta, only Sankara’s system is not Vaishnava Bhakti. Sampradaya means religious tradition or system.
  5. Transmission of knowledge by way of a guru or teacher.
  6. The 10 principal Upanishads are Isa, Kena, Katha, Prasna, Mundaka, Mandukya, Chandogya, Brhadaranyaka, Aitareya, and Taittiriya. Brhadaranyaka, Chandogya, Taittiraya, Aitareya, and Kena are likely pre 6th or 5th century BCE. Katha and Mundaka are 6th or 5th century BCE. Praana and Mandukya are 5th to early 4th century BCE.
  7. Maya = “that which is not [real or permanent],” though it appears to be.
  8. Supporting Passages from the Upanishads “This is the truth of Brahman in relation to nature: whether in the flash of the lightning, or in the wink of the eyes, the power that is shown is the power of Brahman.” Kena, IV.4 “This is the truth of Brahman in relation to men: in the motions of the mind, the power that is shown is the power of Brahman.” Kena, V. “Self-luminous is Brahman, ever present in the hearts of all. He is the refuge of all, he is the supreme goal. In him exists all that moves and breathes. In him exists all that is.” Mundaka, II.i.1-2. “Thou art the fire, the sun, the air, the moon, the starry firmament, Thou art Brahman Supreme: Thou art the waters – Thou, the creator of all! “Filled with Brahman are the things we see; Filled with Brahman are the things we see not; From out of Brahman floweth all that is; From Brahman all – yet is he still the same.” Svetasvatara, IV.2–4 “As long as there is duality, one sees the other, one hears the other, one smells the other, one speaks to the other, one thinks of the other, one knows the other; but when for the illumined soul the all is dissolved in the Self, who is there to be seen by whom, who is there to be smelt by whom, who is there to be heard by whom, who is there to be spoken by whom, who is there to be thought by whom, who is there to be known by whom.” Brhadaranyaka, IV.v.14–15 “By whom shall the knower be known? The Self is described as not this, not that. It is incomprehensible, for it cannot be comprehended; undecaying, for it never decays; unattached, for it never attaches itself; unbound, for it is never bound.” Brhadaranyaka, IV.v.14–15 “That which cannot be expressed in words but by which the tongue speaks – know to be Brahman. Brahman is not the being who is worshipped of men. “That which is not comprehended by the mind but by which the mind comprehends – know that to be Brahman. Brahman is not the being worshipped of men. . . . “That which is not seen by the eye but by which the eye sees – know that to be Brahman. Brahman is not the being worshipped of men. “That which is not heard by the ear but by which the ear hears - know that to be Brahman. Brahman is not the being who is worshipped of men. “That which is not drawn by the breath but by which the breath is drawn - know that to be Brahman. Brahman is not the being worshipped of men. ~ Kena, I.5-9
  9. The Trimurti was systematized in the Puranas composed during the Gupta Period (320-540 CE), after the ascendency of the Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva, “God forms” were widespread in Indian culture.
  10. See R.C. Zaehner, Hindu and Muslim Mysticism, chapter 2. “Heavenly, formless is the Person [Purusha], He compromises without and within, unborn is he; without breath, without mind, effulgent, higher than the high imperishable [i.e., Brahman].” Mundaka, 2.I.2 Cf. 3.I. 13.
  11. "Bliss [ananda] is Brahman, for from bliss all beings are born; by bliss, when born, they live; and into bliss they enter at their death." ~ Taittiriyaka Upanishad, III.6
  12. The individual self is subject to the laws of karma and rebirth. This can only be transcended through knowledge of the true nature of the self and reality. See subsequent power points on avidya, karama, samsara, and moksha.
  13. Sankara and the followers of his school of advaita vedanta answer “yes” to the first question; the other schools of Vedanta answer “no” to the first and “yes” to the second.
  14. More technically, karma designates a law of cosmic justice according to which every action has an effect that is proportioned to the moral quality of the action.
  15. Moral laws included the study of scripture, honesty, self-denial, practice of austerity, self-control, and cheerful fulfillment of everyday duties. The fundamental aim of the moral laws is self-abnegation and renunciation of all selfish desires. See Prabhavanada, Spiritual Heritage of India, pp. 64-67.
  16. Specific meditation techniques were passed on through one’s personal guru so there is no specific account of methods in the Upanishads.
  17. Desire for transient things limits freedom, so only that which eliminates desire can be free.
  18. “Happiness is nothing less than the Infinite, for there is no happiness in what is small.” Chandogya Upanishads, VII, xxiii.
  19. The worship of Krishna as a divine being prior to the common era is found in a variety of textual and archeological sources. Krishna is not a post-Christian Indian invention designed to mimic Christianity. See Krishna: The Beautiful Legend of God (Srimad Bhagavata Purana, Book X), trans. Edwin F. Bryant (Penguin Books, 2003), “Introduction,” pp. xvii-xviii.
  20. A parallel Bhakti movement focused on worship of Shiva was widespread in India by the 8th century CE, originating in Tamil Nadu. These were known as the nayanmars.
  21. Advaita means “non dual” or “not two.” Advaita Vedanta is the philosophy of non-duality or monism: reality is one, not two.