Hindutva

My idea of Hindutva is from what I have seen in my friends associated with RSS, VHP, etc. And that is: “Hindutva” is merely the Hindi/Sanskrit word for “Indianness”. It is just an umbrella word for everything that is “uniquely Indian and good” – our festivals, cuisine, music, dance, drama, literature, architecture, sculpture, dress, customs, religions, philosophies, etc.

The question remains on what should be the stance of people who want to follow a different culture. For example, we wear Western clothes, hear Western music, eat Western food, etc. When asked, the answer I got was that we need to be open to all cultures, without giving up our own. As long as our cultural elements are dominant in our life and the others are taken up to know and experience them as additions to our life, it is fine. As the famous Hindi movie song says: “Fir bhi dil hai Hindustani”.

Things become controversial when priests of other religions wear the clothes similar to those worn by Medieval people in the middle-east. The music and rituals are of Medieval Europe, the buildings are Gothic, etc. There have been attempt by people of those religions to follow Indian cultural elements and that too got opposition as trying to dupe the local people into conversion.

An interesting analogy to understand this complex cultural phenomenon is to relate local culture as Masala Dosa and the incoming alien culture as Pizza. Now, we can discuss at length what should be role of Masala Dosa and Pizza in our daily life, what should be supported, what should be protected, what should be given special privileges, etc. etc. and then replace the words.

The bottom line is this: There are several cultures and countries to protect and nurture other cultures. The people and institutions in this land have the special duty to protect and nurture the culture that is unique to this land. This is what is called Hindutva. It goes without saying that this has to be done in a manner that is non-violent, more so because non-violence itself is one of the specialties of the Indian culture.

The position of Mahatma Gandhi is significant and exemplary here: “I do not want my house to be walled in on all sides and my windows to be stuffed. I want the cultures of all the lands to be blown about my house as freely as possible. But I refuse to be blown off my feet by any.”  This is exactly the philosophy of Hindutva.
 
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Morning Prayer

Praata-smaranam

This morning prayer comprising three verses in which the mind, speech, and body of the devotee are directed to the Absolute. The first thoughts, words and actions of everyday exert a great influence on the daily life of a devotee. If they are consecrated, they may facilitate knowledge. This prayer in the morning is profoundly significant, in the sense that the dawn is the outer symbol of inner awakening.

***
Free translation by Swamini Atmaprajnananda Saraswati
praatah smaraami hrdi samsphurad-aatma-tattvam
sac-cit-sukham parama-hamsa-gatim turiiyam |
yat-svapna-jaagara-sussuptim-avaiti nityam
tad-brahma nisskalam-aham na ca bhuuta-sangghah ||1||
1. I remember in the morning, the Reality which is the Self, shining brilliantly in the heart (mind), which is Existence, Consciousness, Limitlessness, the goal of Paramahamsa-Sannyaasis, the ‘fourth’, which is indeed the basis of the states of waking, dream and deep-sleep. I am that Brahman which is part-less, and not the complex of the (five) elements.
praatar-bhajaami manasaa vacasaam-agamyam
vaaco vibhaanti nikhilaa yad-anugrahenna |
yan-neti-neti-vacanair-nigamaa avocam_
s-tam deva-devam-ajam-acyutam-aahur-agryam ||2||
2. I sing in the morning the praise of That, which is inaccessible by mind and speech, but by Whose grace faculty of speech functions, That which the scriptures describe as ‘not this’ ‘not this’. That God of gods, they say is unborn and unchanging.
praatar-namaami tamasah param-arka-varnnam
puurnnam sanaatana-padam purussottama-[a]akhyam |
yasminn-idam jagad-ashessam-ashessa-muurtau
rajjvaam bhujanggama iva pratibhaasitam vai ||3||
3. I bow down in the morning to That,which is called the Highest Self, who is beyond the darkness (of ignorance), of the hue of the Sun, the final goal (of all), That who is the Whole, on which this entire universe of varied and innumerable forms is made manifest, like the snake on the rope.
***
“In these three verses, Sankara also sets forth the quintessence of Advaita Vedanta. The Absolute Reality is Sat-Cit-Sukham – Existence, Consciousness, Limitlessness. Gaudapaada in his Maandookya-Kaarikaa calls it Tureeya, which is the basis of the three states of waking, dream and deep sleep. Yaajñavalkya in Brhadaaranyaka present Brahman as ‘not this’ ‘not this’; since Brahman eludes any categorization; it is not within the words or concepts. The individual jeeva is non-different from the Upanishadic Brahman, and is not to be taken as the body-mind-sense complex. The varied and multi-formed ‘jagat’ is as if the snake superimposed on the rope. (This comparison is in the whole of Maandookya-Kaarikaa and in Sankarabhaashyam as well).”
Thanks to http://greenmesg.org/mantras_slokas/brahman-pratah_smarami.php for the verses.
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Sri Ramakrishna

Today is Sri Ramakrishna’s Jayanti.
It was the time when Indian tradition, culture, civilization, values, etc. were being challenged by Western education and ideas. India had been at the top of the Human Civilization – economically, scientifically, technologically, philosophically, socially, etc. for several millenia. Repeated invasions and rule by alien culture had already weakened the indigenous culture from the top. British educational “reforms”, withdrawal of support to local educational systems and local languages, destruction of local manufacturing, export of raw material and import of finished goods, etc. had weakened the indigenous culture and economy from the bottom. There was a threat that Indian culture would be completely wiped off the face of the earth, like Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Saxon, Celtic, Bavarian, Irish, Scandinavian, Arabian, and several other cultures.
It was that time that Sri Ramakrishna lived just under the nose of the British in the capital city of the Colonial government. Being there, he attracted the best of the young college youth and reversed the tide silently in their minds. Their leader, the world famous Swami Vivekananda, took the world by storm and re-established the Indian culture within India on a strong footing. His words reignited self-worth in the people, which eventually led to political freedom. He also introduced Indian thought in the West. Though Indian thought had reached the cream of the Western society and was appreciated a lot, it was not available to the common man. Swami Vivekananda took the message of India to Europe and America. He was followed by a train of yogis and spiritual teachers to cater to the Western audience and the world has never been the same.
Here is what Swami Vivekananda wrote to one of this brother disciples (Thanks to Prasad for posting this on FB):
Any of you may join any party you like, I have no objection, no, not in the least, but travelling this world over I find that save and except his (Sri Ramakrishna) circle alone, everywhere else thought and act are at variance. For those that belong to him, I have the utmost love, the utmost confidence. I have no alternative in the matter. Call me one-sided if you will, but there you have my bona fide avowal. If but a thorn pricks the foot of one who has surrendered himself to Shri Ramakrishna, it makes my bones ache. All others I love; you will find very few men so unsectarian as I am; but you must excuse me, I have that bit of bigotry. If I do not appeal to his name, whose else shall I? It will be time enough to seek for a big Guru in our next birth; but in this, it is that unlearned Brahmin who has bought this body of mine for ever.
I give you a bit of my mind; don’t be angry, pray. I am your slave so long as you are his — step a hair’s breadth outside that, and you and I are on a par. … Surrender everything to his feet. What on earth do we want? He has given us refuge, what more do we want? Bhakti is verily its own reward — what else is needed? My brother, he who made men of us by feeding and clothing and imparting wisdom and knowledge, who opened the eyes of our self, whom day and night we found the living God — must we be traitors to him!!! And you forget the mercy of such a Lord! The lives of Buddha and Krishna and Jesus are matters of ancient history, and doubts are entertained about their historicity, and you in spite of seeing the greatness of Shri Ramakrishna’s life in flesh and blood sometimes lose your head! Fie upon you! I have nothing to say. His likeness is being worshipped in and out of your country, by godless and heartless men, and you are stranded at times on disbelief!! In a breath he will create for himself hundreds of thousands of such as you are. Blessed is your birth, blessed your lineage, and blessed your country that you were allowed to take the dust of his feet. Well I can’t help. He is protecting us, forsooth — I see it before my eyes. Insane that you are, is it through my own strength that beauty like that of fairies, and hundreds of thousands of rupees, lose their attraction and appear as nothing to me? Or is it he who is protecting me? He who has no faith in him and no reverence for the Holy Mother will be a downright loser, I tell you plainly.
This much I have understood:
Sri Ramakrishna is the ultimate perfection of all the values cherished by mankind: truth, love, chastity, renunciation, fulfillment, art, music, dance, poetry, story-telling, religion, philosophy, concentration, memory, social service, prayer, contemplation, etc. He is the ultimate ideal of what a human being can achieve. The nearest that another person has come to him is his own disciple – Swami Vivekananda.
Loving Sri Ramakrishna means valuing all that he stood for. Nurturing all that he stood for and disseminating all that he stood for. Doing every action in life as an offering to him. This is the way to reach the kind of perfection that he manifested in his life. Striving towards this human perfection is the biggest service that a person can do to humanity for this generation and the generations to come.
May Sri Ramakrishna give me the strength to follow his footsteps. Just like what Swami Vivekananda says, “I have laid down this life at the feet of Sri Ramakrishna.” Thy will be done. I have no more agenda for this life than to nurture and disseminate everything that he stood for.
Jai Ramakrishna !!!
 

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Spirituality and Scientific Temperament

(This article was published in the December 2014 issue of Vedanta Kesari, the spiritual and cultural monthly in English published from Sri Ramakrishna Math, Chennai .)

Many youth of today are very hesitant to identify themselves as religious but do not mind identifying themselves as spiritual. By religious, they mean activities like going to temples, performing ritualistic worship, sporting religious marks or clothing and visiting places of pilgrimage. By spiritual, they mean activities like practicing yoga asanas and meditation, visiting ashrams to listen to talks on personality development and ethics, reading books on disciplined life and participating in social service activities by ashrams.

Why would a person want to identify as spiritual and not religious? What is it that he is trying to identifying with? What is it that he is trying not to identify with?

The most important difference that people claim between being spiritual and being religious is the scientific temperament. They feel that by being spiritual, one need not give up one’s scientific temperament; but by being religious, one has to give it up. To understand these complex phenomena, the assumptions, apprehensions and misunderstandings, we need to dive deep.

Scientific Temperament

What is scientific temperament? It is an attitude that

  • welcomes questioning
  • tries to give logical explanations to observed phenomenon
  • presents principles free from dependence on personalities
  • prescribes actions which give the same consistent observable results irrespective of the person doing it
  • tries to give logical explanations to prescribed actions
  • keeps the doors open for more knowledge and understanding

One of the first definitions of scientific temper is by Jawaharlal Nehru: “[What is needed] is the scientific approach, the adventurous and yet critical temper of science, the search for truth and new knowledge, the refusal to accept anything without testing and trial, the capacity to change previous conclusions in the face of new evidence, the reliance on observed fact and not on pre-conceived theory, the hard discipline of the mind—all this is necessary, not merely for the application of science but for life itself and the solution of its many problems.” [The Discovery of India, page 512]

Developing a scientific temper is listed by the Indian Constitution as a fundamental duty of every citizen of India.

Spirituality

When science asks questions about the external world, spirituality asks questions about the internal world. The pursuit within, in search of the answers to the big questions of life – like “Who am I?”, “What is good?”, “Why should I be good?”, “Why is there sorrow in life?”, “Who is an ideal person?”, “What is the goal of life?” – in an open, rational and meaningful manner, in the spirit of scientific temper, is what is called the spiritual quest. As maturity comes, sooner or later, every thinking person will have to ask these questions and find their answers.

According to the French Nobel Laureate, Romain Rolland, the Vedantic spirit is scientific temper. He says, “The true Vedantic spirit does not start out with a system of preconceived ideas…. each man has been entirely free to search wherever he pleased for the spiritual explanation of the spectacle of the universe.” [“Life of Swami Vivekananda and the Universal Gospel” page 147] Mahatma Gandhi rightly said, “Hinduism is a relentless pursuit of Truth.” [“What is Hinduism”, National Book Trust]

Spirituality as the Pinnacle of Human Pursuit

The beauty of spirituality is that it seeks a comprehensive answer to the various questions, which are at best addressed or inquired only as different compartments by other branches of human knowledge. Ontology inquires into the fundamental nature of existence. Physics tries to find the theory of everything material. Psychology tries to understand the mind of man. Ethics tries to understand right and wrong. Spirituality, on the other hand, tries to find a unified integrated solution to the existential, psychological, ethical, intellectual quests of the human being. Thus, spirituality is the pinnacle of all human pursuit after knowledge, purpose and culture.

Pursuits of Spirituality

The Vedas classify human pursuit into four categories – called purusharthas.

  1. Artha – Security. Every living being has an instinct to preserve its own life. Many of human activities and pursuits are also merely to ensure the survival of self and one’s near-and-dear ones.
  2. Kama – Pleasure. Beyond the bare survival, every living being seeks pleasurable experiences and avoids painful experiences. This forms the next motivator in human beings also.

These two are common to animals and to human beings. A human being is no better than an animal if he stops with these two only. To qualify as a human being, he has to pursue two more goals.

  1. Dharma – Virtue. Human beings alone have the concept of virtues like satya (truthfulness), ahimsa (love), brahmacharya (sense-control), asteya (fairness in possession) and aparigraha (voluntary frugality). It is man alone, who can take these virtues to their fullest bloom, where a person can be willing to sacrifice his life to uphold truth or to help a fellow human being. No animal fasts on certain days or follows the voluntary restraints of brahmacharya. These are what make human beings stand apart from animals.
  2. Moksha – Freedom. Life throws its mixture of ups and downs at every one. It is only a human being who can put up a brave smile and face life head-on. No power on earth has the capability to make a human being sad, if he has decided to be cheerful. This tremendous power of the will to brave circumstances in life is a special freedom which is always there in every human being. Manifesting this freedom is called jivanmukti (free when living) [Gita 2.11, 2.55, 2.56, 2.57, 2.71].

Thus, the Vedas put forth a very simple, logical, down-to-earth list of human pursuits. The first two are animal pursuits. The last two make man into a divine being. Thus, spirituality caters to two basic questions which is very relevant to every human individual and society:

  • Inspired by what, would a human being be truthful, kind and self-controlled, even unto great inconveniences, including death?
  • Inspired by what, would a human being be undaunted in spirit even at the face of extreme ups and downs in life?

These two are the main pursuits of spirituality. They are universal, logical and undeniable. In trying to come up with a model to found these two pursuits, spirituality builds up a rational system that explains reality in a most logical manner.

Nature of the Individual

Freewill is the core of all human pursuits and purpose. Without freewill, there can be no accountability for actions. All concepts of morality, ethics, and purpose of life – everything human – will fall without a foundation. Freewill is the foundation of the concept of being human.

I am free to decide my current action and I am fully responsible for my action. I have all the knowledge, memory, tendencies and power to analyse the pros and cons of various reactions to the current situation. With all these, I am the final decision-maker. I am the individual, who holds the freewill. Now, if I, the individual, am merely a product or property of matter, there is no scope for freewill. Freewill has to be “free” for it to be meaningful. So, I should be an entity, independent of matter, and who uses the body and mind as instruments to interact with the world. Thus, I am not the body; I am not the mind. [Gita – 15.9, 18.22, 15.16, 6.5]

Nature of the Whole

For me to be able to use my freewill, there should be a constant Law connecting cause and effect, upon which I can use my freewill. If there is no constant Law of cause and effect, my freewill will be meaningless. Thus, the Law of moral causality, also called Law of Karma, has to be there to interact with my freewill. Thus, if I accept freewill, I am bound to accept Law of Karma also. Thus, I am connected with the whole Universe in a cause-and-effect relationship.

There are several cells in my body. Each cell is a living being in its own right. However, I have an individuality. Similarly, when we make a statement like “India decided to ratify the protocol”, the whole of India is considered as a single logical entity. Thus, a group of people has its own logical identity and has its own dynamics. Similarly, when we put together everything that exists, we get a logical Universal entity. That entity, to whom the entire physical universe is the physical body, all the minds of all thinking beings put together is the mind, whose dynamics is the whole history of the universe, is called as Ishvara in the Vedas. [Gita – 7.4, 7.5, 13.13-13.16]

Interacting with the Whole

Depending on the context of interaction with the Whole, I would have to invoke that aspect of Ishvara. If I consider myself as an Indian citizen, Ishvara would be Bharat Mata. If I consider myself as an earthling, Ishvara would be Bhumi Mata and Surya Narayana. When I go to take bath in Ganga, Ishvara would be Ganga Mata. When I am trying to earn money, Ishvara would be Lakshmi. When I am starting a new activity, Ishvara would be Vignesvara. When I am the wielder of freewill, Ishvara would be wielder of the Law of Karma. When I am doing social service, Ishvara would be person who accepts my service. When I am working in my profession, Ishvara would be my customer whom I serve. When I am serving my parents or children at home, it is Ishvara whom I really serve. Ishvara is the Supreme Conscious Being, whose Consciousness reflects in the heart of all conscious beings as the Self. [Gita – 10.20] Thus, there is nothing that exists in this universe other than Ishvara. [Gita – 7.7]

As Ishvara is the Supreme person who exists as everything around me and knows my innermost thoughts [Gita – 18.61], I can worship Ishvara through any form and through any ritual that I am naturally attracted to [Gita – 7.21]. Forms and rituals are needed by the human mind to express emotions. The country is all around me. If I want to show my emotion of devotion and gratitude to the country, I put a flag and salute it. The form and ritual help me to express my emotions and also deepen them. Similarly, various forms and rituals help me to interact with Ishvara, who is in-and-through everything in the universe. The all-knowing and all-capable Ishvara responds to my worship through the very same form and ritual that I use.

Spiritualizing Everyday Life

Thus, by a small set of a logically acceptable principles, spirituality transforms mundane everyday life into one of a great purpose. By having the bigger picture always in mind, a human being can develop the tenacity to stick on to a life of values and also face the various situations in life with great poise. This is the message of Vedas. This is the message of Hinduism. All the rest are details to help an individual to bring this broad vision into practical life.

Based on Principles

Spirituality does not depend on any individual for the validity of its claims. It is based on logical principles. Swami Vivekananda says, “Every one of the great religions in the world excepting our own, is built upon such historical characters; but ours rests upon principles. There is no man or woman who can claim to have created the Vedas. They are the embodiment of eternal principles; sages discovered them; and now and then the names of these sages are mentioned — just their names; we do not even know who or what they were. In many cases we do not know who their fathers were, and almost in every case we do not know when and where they were born. But what cared they, these sages, for their names? They were the preachers of principles, and they themselves, so far as they went, tried to become illustrations of the principles they preached.” [CW III-183]

A Theory of Everything

Spirituality gives its own “Theory of Everything”, based not on matter, but on a universal Consciousness. Upon scrutiny, one would find that this theory is no less logical than any of the theories put forth by science. Swami Vivekananda says, “It seems clear that the conclusions of modern materialistic science can be acceptable, harmoniously with their religion, only to the Vedantins or Hindus as they are called. It seems clear that modern materialism can hold its own and at the same time approach spirituality by taking up the conclusions of the Vedanta. It seems to us, and to all who care to know, that the conclusions of modern science are the very conclusions the Vedanta reached ages ago; only, in modern science they are written in the language of matter.” [CW III-185]

Foundation of Morality

In one integrated system, spirituality gives a logical meaning to a moral life, without depending on any dogma or commandments. Swami Vivekananda says, “The rational West is earnestly bent upon seeking out the rationality, the raison d’ être of all its philosophy and its ethics; and you all know well that ethics cannot be derived from the mere sanction of any personage, however great and divine he may have been. Such an explanation of the authority of ethics appeals no more to the highest of the world’s thinkers; they want something more than human sanction for ethical and moral codes to be binding, they want some eternal principle of truth as the sanction of ethics. And where is that eternal sanction to be found except in the only Infinite Reality that exists in you and in me and in all, in the Self, in the Soul? The infinite oneness of the Soul is the eternal sanction of all morality, that you and I are not only brothers — every literature voicing man’s struggle towards freedom has preached that for you — but that you and I are really one. This is the dictate of Indian philosophy. This oneness is the rationale of all ethics and all spirituality.” [CW III-189]

Spirituality and Scientific Temperament

With these broad principles of spirituality, which is in total alignment with scientific temper, the reader can attempt to answer the big questions of life. The reader can also try to throw more questions at the model given by the Vedas to see how rational answers come to them. Thus, the Vedas provide the framework for spirituality, which can cater to the intellectual, emotional, cultural and spiritual quest of modern youth. Spirituality is religion packaged in such a way that it nurtures the scientific temper of the practitioner.

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Satyam Jnaanam Anantam Brahma

Satyam Jnaanam Anantam Brahma (Taittiriya Upanishad 2.1.1)

The Vedas declare that reality (Brahman) is pure Existence (Sat or Satyam), Consciousness (Cit or Jnaanam) and Infinite (Aananda or Anantam). Here is a way to understand this, based on traditional centuries old Indian texts like Drg-Drsya-Viveka and Maandukya Kaarika. The argument is the same as given in those texts. I have only used a more modern language.

1. Satyam

What we see as the world is based on the sense organs and the instruments that extend the sense organs. The human eye can see only a limited range of frequencies. Similarly the ears can hear only a limited range. There are other animals which have a different range of vision and sound. Also, they have much more powerful sense of smell than us. So their world is an entirely different one. For example, when a cat enters a room, it knows who was sitting in the sofa an hour back based on the smell. It also knows if you have gone to the park or not based on the smell of the flowers on you. Sharks can detect the electrical current in the bodies of animals swimming in the water a few meters away. Even with all the modern technology to extend our access to the various physical phenomenon in the world, there is no reason to assume that what we detect in the world is all that actually exists. There can be entirely new kinds of matter and energy that so far we do not have senses or instruments to detect.

What we see and interpret depend on the state of our mind. If we like someone, we see them as beautiful. The chemicals and hormones in our blood affect the way we think and judge. Also, all our past experience affects our interpretation of the people, objects and situations in the world. Thus, though the world seems to appear outside us objectively, what we know of the world is only what our instruments (senses and mind) show us. We have no access to the bare naked reality that exists. This fundamental reality is referred to as Existence.

What is the nature of Existence which is beyond these apparent properties like color, sound, smell, mass, temperature, charge, momentum, etc.? We know that properties like color, sound, texture, etc. are all emergent phenomenon. When we look at things at their minutest constituents known today like quarks and leptons, these properties do not exist. There are a different set of fundamental properties, which give rise to the perceivable properties at various composite grosser levels.

Vedanta extends this concept and says, “As long as properties are experienced, you have not reached the most fundamental level.” So, every property is only an emergent phenomenon. At the ultimate fundamental level, Existence would necessarily be free from any properties. Vedanta gives an example to understand this: pot-ness does not exist in the clay out of which pot is made.

This fundamental entity, of which the whole universe is made of, is called Sat or Satyam. It cannot have any properties (nirguna). Any two objects are distinguished only based on properties. As Sat does not have any properties, is has to be only one (ekam eva adviteeyam). Any change is only change of properties. So Sat has to be changeless (nirvikaara). Changeless with respect to space and time. So Sat is all-pervading (sarvagata) and eternal (nityam). Parts of an entity is based on properties of constituents. So Sat is partless (akhanda). So, Sat is One, Infinite, All-pervading, Eternal, Changeless, Partless, Property-less, Absolute Existence.

2. Jnaanam

Let us analyze the subject-object relationship in perception. When I see a flower, I (subject) am the body, including the eye. The flower is the object. Form and color of the flower are properties. When I want to judge the properties of the eye like myopia or color-blindness, I put one step back. The eye is the object. I, including the mind, is the subject. Extending this further, the real “I” is the ultimate subject, which can never become an object of perception by the senses or conception by the mind. [Drg Drsya Viveka – 1-5] This ultimate subject is called Cit or Jnaanam.

In any subject-object relationship, properties always belong to the object. To judge the property of anything, it has to be given the status of an object. I need to extend myself to the edge of the instrument that is in contact with the object (internal or external) to experience and evaluate the properties of the object. Thus, I, the Cit, being the ultimate subject, cannot have any properties.

Applying the same logic that we applied to Sat, Cit also is One, Infinite, All-pervading, Eternal, Changeless, Partless, Property-less, Absolute Existence. So, Sat and Cit are not different. They are the same entity.

Thus, real I, the Consciousness is the fundamental entity from which the whole universe has emerged. This is conveyed in innumerable statements in the various Upanishads belonging to various Vedas. As a sample, four statements, each one taken from one of the Vedas, are called mahaavaakyaas.

3. Anantam

To understand the relationship between the infinite Sat-Cit and the finite world, less us take an example.

We have the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, … The existence of these finite numbers indicate that we can go on counting for ever. So we have the concept of “infinity” in mathematics. From the point of view of infinity, we cannot distinguish finite numbers like 1, 2, 3, etc. This can be seen from the equations below:

(1) inf – 1 = inf
(2) inf – 2 = inf
From (1) and (2),
inf – 1 = inf – 2

Thus from the point of view of infinity, 1, 2, 3, etc do not exist as discrete numbers. As the number line is homogeneous, any point on it is only imaginary. There is really no difference between one point and another point.

Thus, from the point of view of infinity, finite does not exist. But from the point of view of finite, infinite exists.

Now, we can apply the same logic to the whole of existence. We have seen that Sat-Cit is the Infinite. The world that we see is finite. From the point of view of infinite Sat-Cit, the finite world does not exist. From the point of view of the finite world, the existence of infinite Sat-Cit cannot be denied. So, Sat-Cit has absolute existence and the empirical world has only relative existence.

This relationship between the infinite and finite is called Maaya.

4. Jivanmukti

Thus, the whole universe exists in Me, the pure Consciousness, as a relative appearance. My existence is of a higher order of reality compared to the world. Vedanta gives an example to understand this: When a rope is mistakenly perceived as a snake in dim light, the rope is not affected by the perceived snake.

So, the world and its problems cannot affect me, just like the water in the movie does not wet the screen on which it is projected. The world is just a relative emergent superimposition which exists using me, the Sat-Cit-Ananda – Infinite Conscious Existence, as the support. This understanding frees me from all psychological defects like insecurity, anxiety, sorrow, fear and desire. This freedom is called Jivanmukti.

5. Sankara’s Summary

The three points we have seen here has been summarized as the three famous statements by the great teacher Sankara:

  • Brahma satyam (from 1) – Infinite Consciousness is the fundamental reality.
  • Jagat mityaa (from 3) – The finite universe is a relative appearance.
  • Jeevah brahma eva na aparah (from 2) – The real ‘I’ is not different from Infinite Consciousness.

6. Jeevaatmaa and Paramaatmaa

The whole finite universe of name (conception by mind) and form (perception by senses) exists as an apparent emergent phenomenon in the pure infinite Consciousness. The Consciousness reflected on a particular body-mind complex is called Jeevaatmaa. The Consciousness reflected on the whole universe is called Paramaatmaa or Ishvara. As long as the person considers himself as an individual, Ishvara cannot be denied. When the person understands and identifies himself as the real ‘I’, which is pure Consciousness, he understands that the real Ishvara and the real Substratum of the world are also the same pure Consciousness.

7. References

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