(Translation of the Bhāṣyārtha)
By satya (truth) is meant vyavahāra-satya—empirical or transactional truth; because the present context pertains to empirical dealings. This is not pāramārthika-satya (absolute truth); for the absolute truth, Brahman, is one alone. Here, in contrast to the unreal entities of empirical experience such as the mirage-“water,” those things like actual water—which are relatively true (āpekṣika)—are spoken of as satya. That which is opposed to this is anṛta (untruth).
(Question): Then what is that which truly is?
(Answer): Sat—the absolute truth.
(Question): And what indeed is that (absolute truth)?
Although inert objects such as stones are also effects of the conscious Brahman, consciousness does not manifest distinctly in them. (Sūtra Bhāṣya 2.1.6)
Comparative truth: water quenches thirst, whereas the water of a mirage does not. Therefore, water is relative truth, while mirage-water is unreal.
Thank you for collecting these references and especially for highlighting Śaṅkara’s gloss on “satyam cānṛtam ca satyam abhavat” in Taittirīya 2.6.1. The distinction you draw between paramārthika and vyāvahārika is certainly helpful pedagogically.
That said, one caution may be worth adding.
The presentation risks suggesting that the three-level scheme (paramārthika–vyāvahārika–prātibhāsika) is explicitly taught by the Śruti itself. Textually, however, this taxonomy does not appear in the Upaniṣads as a formal doctrine, nor does Śaṅkara introduce it as an ontological stratification of reality.
In the Taittirīya bhāṣya, for example, Śaṅkara does not posit “levels of being.” Rather, he restricts the scope of the word satya contextually:
व्यवहारविषयमापेक्षिकं सत्यम् … एकमेव हि परमार्थसत्यं ब्रह्म
Here vyāvahārika satya simply means “empirically valid for transactional purposes,” like water contrasted with a mirage; it does not denote a second grade of reality. Ontologically speaking, he is explicit: Brahman alone is real; everything else has only dependent or borrowed status (mithyā).
So in Śaṅkara the terms function epistemically and pedagogically, not as a three-tier metaphysics. The later “three orders of reality” framework is a convenient explanatory schema developed by the tradition, but it should not be read back into the Śruti or into Śaṅkara as if he were proposing a graded ontology.
Framed this way, the passage reinforces his consistent method: not constructing intermediate realities, but progressively sublating all empirical standpoints into non-dual Brahman.
🙏🙏🙏
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "advaitin" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to advaitin+u...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAKk0Te2sb2gMnGcQybGPst61PpzGR8i0L0yU90dM7rgNwAwo9w%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAAz9PvG4XF_V52-UxaP2gKvqPvCfiHX9W%3D5jVe7%3DhV-JaJNQZA%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAKk0Te0D5giSwksoba0AR30dzzY7-steyD10hhp6RxmG1OSXBQ%40mail.gmail.com.
namaste subbuji, It's not Chatgpt that is adding anything, but rather that the traditional presentation of the three levels of reality is a later schema.not found in PTB systematically.Your one Tait reference is not sufficient to establish the three-level ontology as a systematic doctrine in the Upanishads or Shankara's Bhashya.. That's confirmed by SSS, Hacker, Alston,and a host of other objective observers not just CHATGPT
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAAz9PvH_PkZbMK2zUtPXdSMnhCfevLBQg9%2B--FKnhFZaF-_7rA%40mail.gmail.com.