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ADVAITA
PHILOSOPHY
(Sanskrit:
"Nondualism," or "Monism"),
most influential of the schools of Vedanta, an orthodox
philosophy of India. While its followers find its main tenets
already fully expressed in the Upanisads and systematized by
the Vedanta-sutras, it has its historical beginning with the
7th-century thinker Gaudapada, author of theMandukya-karika, a
commentary in verse form on the late Mandukya Upanisad.
Gaudapada
builds further on the Mahayana Buddhist philosophy of
Shunyava-da ("Emptiness"). He argues that there is
no duality; the mind, awake or dreaming, moves through maya
("illusion"); and only nonduality (advaita) is the
final truth.
This
truth is concealed by the ignorance of illusion. There is no
becoming, either of a thing by itself or of a thing out of
some other thing. There is ultimately no individual self or
soul (jiva), only the atman
(all-soul), in which individuals may be temporarily delineated
just as the space in a jar delineates a part of main space:
when the jar is broken, the individual space becomes once more
part of the main space.
The
medieval Indian philosopher
Shankara, or Shankaracarya (Master Shankara, c.
700-750), builds further on Gaudapada's foundation,
principally in his commentary on the Vedanta-sutras, the
Shari-raka-mimamsa-bhasya ("Commentary on the Study of
the Self "). Shankara in his philosophy does not start
from the empirical world with logical analysis but, rather,
directly from the absolute (Brahman).
If
interpreted correctly, he argues, the Upanisads teach the
nature of Brahman.
In making this argument, he develops a complete epistemology
to account for the human error in taking the phenomenal world
for real. Fundamental for Shankara is the tenet that the
Brahman is real and the world is unreal. Any change, duality,
or plurality is an illusion. The self is nothing but Brahman.
Insight into this identity results in spiritual release.
Brahman
is outside time, space, and causality, which are simply forms
of empirical experience. No distinction in Brahman or from
Brahman is possible.
Shankara
points to scriptural texts, either stating identity
("Thou art that") or denying difference ("There
is no duality here"), as declaring the true meaning of a
Brahman without qualities
(nirguna). Other texts that ascribe qualities (saguna)
to Brahman refer not to the true nature of Brahman but to its
personality as God (Ishvara).
Human
perception of the unitary and infinite Brahman as the plural
and infinite is due to human beings' innate habit of
superimposition (adhyasa),
by which a thou is ascribed to the I (I am tired; I am
happy; I am perceiving). The habit stems from human ignorance
(ajñana, avidya), which can be avoided only by the
realization of the identity of Brahman.
Nevertheless,
the empirical world is not totally unreal, for it is a
misapprehension of the real Brahman. A rope is mistaken for a
snake; there is only a rope and no snake, but, as long as it
is thought of as a snake, it is one.
Shankara
had many followers who continued and elaborated his work,
notably the 9th-century philosopher Vacaspati Mishra. The
Advaita literature is extremely extensive, and its influence
is still felt in modern Hindu thought.
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