There has been an awful lot of discussion over the past year on various aspects relating to ‘ignorance’. If there were any non-advanced seekers attempting to follow these, it is almost certain that they would have given up on most of the posts. (I have to confess that so did I on many of them.)
For all of these readers (if any), here is an attempt to summarize the key aspects in simple terms – with strictly no Devanagari script and only a few Sanskrit terms (with links to those that have already been defined).
Avidyā: Unmasking the Primal Ignorance in Advaita Vedānta
In our pursuit of spiritual truth, we often find ourselves gripped by a subtle but persistent sense of dissatisfaction. Traditional Advaita Vedānta suggests that this entire predicament—known as saṃsāra—is rooted in a single, fundamental error: Self-ignorance, or avidyā. Grasping the nuances of this term is essential for any seeker, as it serves as the cornerstone for Advaitic metaphysics and epistemology.
The Meaning and Etymology of Not-Knowing
The word avidyā is a simple compound: the prefix ‘a’ (negation) added to ‘vidyā’ (knowledge). Literally, it translates as “not knowing” or “unwisdom”. However, in Advaita, it is not merely a lack of general information, such as being ignorant of a foreign language; it refers specifically to ignorance of our true nature as the non-dual reality, Brahman.
According to Ādi Śaṅkara, avidyā is characterized by three distinct features in the mind: non-perception of the truth (agrahaṇa), doubtful perception (saṃśaya), and wrong perception (viparīta). We are not only unaware that we are limitless Consciousness, but we also actively believe we are something else—a limited, suffering body-mind.
The Mechanics of Illusion: Avidyā and Superimposition
If avidyā is the underlying condition, adhyāsa [https://www.advaita-vision.org/adhyasa/] (superimposition) is its experiential result. Śaṅkara defines this as the “mixing up of the real and the unreal,” or the apprehension of one thing as something else.
The classic metaphor used to explain this is the rope and the snake. In dim light, a traveler sees a coiled rope and, failing to recognize it clearly, superimposes the image of a snake upon it. The fear and the urge to flee are real to the traveler, yet the snake has no objective reality. In this scenario, avidyā is the “darkness” or lack of clear sight, while the superimposition is the resulting “mistake” of seeing a snake.
The Two Powers of Ignorance
Post-Śaṅkara authors developed the theory that avidyā possesses two distinct “powers” (śakti) that maintain the world-illusion:
While Śaṅkara himself did not explicitly categorize ignorance into these two powers, he acknowledged that we suffer from both a failure to see the truth and the active misapprehension of it.
The Mūlāvidyā Controversy (Root Ignorance)
One of the most extensive areas of confusion investigated in the Confusions series is the concept of mūlāvidyā, often termed “root” or “causal” ignorance. The Vivaraṇa school and many later commentators argue that ignorance must be a positively existing entity (bhāvarūpa) because a mere “nothing” could not have the power to conceal or project. They speak of mūlāvidyā as a beginningless, material cause of the world that exists even during deep sleep.
However, modern traditionalists such as Swami Satchidanandendra Saraswati (SSSS) argue that Śaṅkara never taught the existence of a “root ignorance” entity. SSSS maintained that ignorance is strictly epistemological—it is nothing more than a wrong notion in the mind of the individual (jīva), which is corrected as soon as Self-knowledge arises. In this view, calling ignorance a “positive entity” is merely an adhyāropa-apavāda [https://www.advaita-vision.org/adhyaropa-apavada-2/] device that must eventually be rescinded. If ignorance were a real, positive entity, it would imply a duality (Brahman plus ignorance) and would be impossible to destroy, thereby making liberation unattainable.
The Locus of Ignorance: Who is Ignorant?
One of the thorniest questions in Advaita is: Where does ignorance reside? If reality is non-dual, then there is only Brahman. How can Brahman be ignorant?
Śaṅkara often bypassed this academic knot by telling questioners that ignorance belongs to the one who perceives it. Once you realize your identity as Brahman, the question itself becomes irrelevant because the ignorance is seen never to have truly existed.
The Status of the World and Enlightenment
A major misconception is the belief that the physical world literally disappears for a realized person (jñānī). Traditional Advaita clarifies that what “disappears” on enlightenment is not the world itself, but the delusion that the world is an independent, separate reality.
Perception is a function of the mind and senses, which continue to operate until the prārabdha karma (the karma that initiated the current birth) is exhausted. Just as a person can know that a mirage is not real water while still seeing the image of water, a jñānī still perceives duality but knows it to be anirvacanīya [https://www.advaita-vision.org/anirvacaniya/]—a dependent appearance that is none other than Brahman.
Obstacles to Peace: Pratibandha-s and Manonāśa
A seeker may have “intellectual” Self-knowledge but still suffer from habitual emotional disturbances. These are attributed to pratibandha-s, or mental obstacles (such as deeply ingrained habits of identification) that require nididhyāsana (meditation/reflection) to fully consolidate the knowledge into a transformed life outlook.
Furthermore, the term manonāśa, often mistranslated as the “death of the mind,” actually refers to the resolution of the ego’s identification with the mind. A jñānī would not be able to move, eat, or teach without a mind. The mind remains as a useful instrument, but the dominion of attachments and aversions has been forever destroyed.
The Remedy: Knowledge Alone
If the problem is avidyā (ignorance), the only possible solution is jñāna (knowledge). Advaita is firm that action (karma) can never destroy ignorance because action is not opposed to it; you can perform a thousand rituals and still be ignorant of your true nature.
Just as light is the direct antidote to darkness, Self-knowledge is the direct antidote to avidyā. This knowledge is not the acquisition of a new “experience” or “state,” but the removal of a false idea. It is a mental event—an akhaṇḍākāra vṛtti—where the seeker finally recognizes the truth: “I am Brahman”.
Conclusion: Guidance for the Confused Seeker
The modern landscape of non-dual spiritual teaching, especially the style popularized as Neo-Advaita, often fails the seeker by denying the validity of the phenomenal world (vyavahāra). By claiming there is “no seeker and no path,” these movements risk inducing nihilism or confusion.
Traditional Advaita, by contrast, acknowledges the seeker’s experience and provides a proven methodology passed down through a teaching lineage (sampradāya). The complexity of the teaching serves a vital purpose: it is a necessary tool to dismantle the deeply ingrained illusion of duality. For the confused seeker, the path through the jungle is navigated by finding a teacher who is both enlightened (brahmaniṣṭha) and learned in the scriptures (śrotriya), capable of unfolding the truth that you are already the limitless, perfect Brahman.
Dennis
One of the most extensive areas of confusion investigated in the Confusions series is the concept of mūlāvidyā, often termed “root” or “causal” ignorance. The Vivaraṇa school and many later commentators argue that ignorance must be a positively existing entity (bhāvarūpa) because a mere “nothing” could not have the power to conceal or project. They speak of mūlāvidyā as a beginningless, material cause of the world that exists even during deep sleep.
However, modern traditionalists such as Swami Satchidanandendra Saraswati (SSSS) argue that Śaṅkara never taught the existence of a “root ignorance” entity. SSSS maintained that ignorance is strictly epistemological—it is nothing more than a wrong notion in the mind of the individual (jīva), which is corrected as soon as Self-knowledge arises.
In this view, calling ignorance a “positive entity” is merely an adhyāropa-apavāda [https://www.advaita-vision.org/adhyaropa-apavada-2/] device that must eventually be rescinded. If ignorance were a real, positive entity, it would imply a duality (Brahman plus ignorance) and would be impossible to destroy, thereby making liberation unattainable.
The Locus of Ignorance: Who is Ignorant?
One of the thorniest questions in Advaita is: Where does ignorance reside? If reality is non-dual, then there is only Brahman. How can Brahman be ignorant?
- The Jīva as Locus: Some argue that ignorance must reside in the individual self (jīva), as it is the jīva who experiences suffering and seeks liberation. However, this leads to a logical loop: the jīva is a product of ignorance, so how can it be the locus for its own cause?.
- Brahman as Locus: Others, including Śaṅkara in certain contexts, state that Brahman is the locus. Since there is nothing else in reality, ignorance must rest on Brahman, just as the illusory snake rests on the rope.
Śaṅkara often bypassed this academic knot by telling questioners that ignorance belongs to the one who perceives it. Once you realize your identity as Brahman, the question itself becomes irrelevant because the ignorance is seen never to have truly existed.
The Status of the World and Enlightenment
A major misconception is the belief that the physical world literally disappears for a realized person (jñānī). Traditional Advaita clarifies that what “disappears” on enlightenment is not the world itself, but the delusion that the world is an independent, separate reality.
Perception is a function of the mind and senses, which continue to operate until the prārabdha karma (the karma that initiated the current birth) is exhausted. Just as a person can know that a mirage is not real water while still seeing the image of water, a jñānī still perceives duality but knows it to be anirvacanīya [https://www.advaita-vision.org/anirvacaniya/]—a dependent appearance that is none other than Brahman.
Obstacles to Peace: Pratibandha-s and Manonāśa
A seeker may have “intellectual” Self-knowledge but still suffer from habitual emotional disturbances. These are attributed to pratibandha-s, or mental obstacles (such as deeply ingrained habits of identification) that require nididhyāsana (meditation/reflection) to fully consolidate the knowledge into a transformed life outlook.
Furthermore, the term manonāśa, often mistranslated as the “death of the mind,” actually refers to the resolution of the ego’s identification with the mind. A jñānī would not be able to move, eat, or teach without a mind. The mind remains as a useful instrument, but the dominion of attachments and aversions has been forever destroyed.
The Remedy: Knowledge Alone
If the problem is avidyā (ignorance), the only possible solution is jñāna (knowledge). Advaita is firm that action (karma) can never destroy ignorance because action is not opposed to it; you can perform a thousand rituals and still be ignorant of your true nature.
Just as light is the direct antidote to darkness, Self-knowledge is the direct antidote to avidyā. This knowledge is not the acquisition of a new “experience” or “state,” but the removal of a false idea. It is a mental event—an akhaṇḍākāra vṛtti—where the seeker finally recognizes the truth: “I am Brahman”.
Conclusion: Guidance for the Confused Seeker
The modern landscape of non-dual spiritual teaching, especially the style popularized as Neo-Advaita, often fails the seeker by denying the validity of the phenomenal world (vyavahāra). By claiming there is “no seeker and no path,” these movements risk inducing nihilism or confusion.
Traditional Advaita, by contrast, acknowledges the seeker’s experience and provides a proven methodology passed down through a teaching lineage (sampradāya). The complexity of the teaching serves a vital purpose: it is a necessary tool to dismantle the deeply ingrained illusion of duality. For the confused seeker, the path through the jungle is navigated by finding a teacher who is both enlightened (brahmaniṣṭha) and learned in the scriptures (śrotriya), capable of unfolding the truth that you are already the limitless, perfect Brahman.
Dear Sudhanshu-ji,
I knew in advance that you would respond in this vein because of your vast knowledge, of and affinity with, post-Śaṅkara philosophers.
First of all, if you recall my opening post announcing a series on ‘Terms and Definitions’, you will remember that I made it clear these were intended for beginner to intermediate students who were unable to follow the esoteric discussions of senior members of the group. I recently published an entire book on the confusions caused by the topic of ‘Ignorance’. There was no way that I was ever going to address all of these issues in a simple ‘definition’ post. This was an attempt simply to put the notion of ‘avidyā’ into the context of advaita.
Secondly, I have also made it clear on previous occasions that my own view is that most post-Śaṅkara authors, while they may claim that they are attempting to clarify complex issues and aiming to tell us what Śaṅkara was actually trying to teach, do precisely the opposite. They muddy issues with their nit-picking, logical analysis and, rather like most modern academic authors, make what should be a straightforward, reasonable subject into a totally unreadable and confusing mess.
Here is what I said in the introduction to ‘Confusions – Ignorance and Its Removal’:
“The premise with which I am operating is that Śaṅkara’s interpretation of the teaching methodology of Advaita is the most reasonable one and the one least likely to trip up the seeker as he/she endeavors to get from ‘ignorance’ to ‘knowledge’. Once there, the ‘ladder’ is discarded. The problem with most of the post-Śaṅkara authors is that they thought they could improve on Śaṅkara’s ladder and they have added extra rungs with twists and diversions almost guaranteed to divert the climber or even in some cases, make them fall off altogether!...
“As you will see below, many, mainly post-Śaṅkara writers have argued over the centuries without clearly reaching any conclusions about the precise nature of ignorance! Yet most of these are what may be termed ‘academic’. Not understanding the finer details will not provide an obstacle to enlightenment. The aim of this book is to highlight the areas of confusion and hopefully clarify them sufficiently to enable the reader to understand what is important and what can be safely ignored! I try to reveal Śaṅkara’s view of the matter and to show where other authors diverged from this. I openly admit at the outset that I will not be completely clarifying the topic (I suggest that this is impossible!), but I believe sufficient is explained to enable any seeker to follow Śaṅkara’s teaching on this subject — the other positions may be safely ignored.”
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: adva...@googlegroups.com <adva...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Sudhanshu Shekhar
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2026 9:18 AM
To: adva...@googlegroups.com; A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta <adva...@lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
Subject: Re: [advaitin] T&D – Avidyā
Namaste Dennis ji.
Lots of issues in your write-up.
------------------------------------
Regards,
Sudhanshu Shekhar.
--
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/CAH9%3D%2BBC0g1MJL_YAtYG0RcmxeCm_wjPxozpOQ4uKEsJ2C0F4Wg%40mail.gmail.com.
Secondly, I have also made it clear on previous occasions that my own view is that most post-Śaṅkara authors, while they may claim that they are attempting to clarify complex issues and aiming to tell us what Śaṅkara was actually trying to teach, do precisely the opposite. They muddy issues with their nit-picking, logical analysis and, rather like most modern academic authors, make what should be a straightforward, reasonable subject into a totally unreadable and confusing mess.
Hi Sudhanshu-ji,
I understand what you are saying and respect your view. I suppose my attitude is that what is important is to know not to stand under the tree when the apples are falling…
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: adva...@googlegroups.com <adva...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Sudhanshu Shekhar
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2026 6:14 PM
To: Advaitin <adva...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [advaitin] T&D – Avidyā
Namaste Dennis ji.
--
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/CAH9%3D%2BBBKkyZ2KeO44P_zk4w%3DZZnHN120tNE62YWX4SLvMUM1PA%40mail.gmail.com.
However, this move is purely stipulative and depends entirely on a prior
reification of avidyā.
The need for a “third ontological category” arises
only if avidyā is first treated as a positive explanatory entity requiring
metaphysical classification.
Once that assumption is questioned—as in
Śaṅkara’s strictly epistemic treatment of ignorance as mere
non-apprehension or error—the dilemma itself dissolves.
Ignorance is not a
candidate for ontological taxonomy at all, and thus need not be located
within or outside the bhāva/abhāva schema.
Accordingly, the appeal to “paraspara-viraha-vyāpya” does not solve an
independent problem; it merely accommodates a problem generated by the
prior hypostatization of avidyā.
Prātibhāsika is not taught as some separate quasi-epistemological, class of provisional entity. It is simply misperception (adhyāsa). What appears is only the substratum, wrongly cognized. -a cognitive error.
Indeed, the entire triad—seer, seen, and seeing—belongs to avidyā alone without distinction. By positing a distinct prātibhāsika level, the theory covertly treats illusion as something positively produced,
as though error required a subtle material manifestation. This mistakes misapprehension for creation. Illusion is not produced; it is only falsely attributed.
The result is a violation of the law of excluded middle: what is neither sat nor asat is granted a quasi-status. But for strict Advaita there is no third category. The real alone is unsublatable; everything else is simply unreal.
What has happened in this departure from PTB is this elaborate construction explaining and inadvertently reifying creation. The distinction between DSV adn SDV are only further constructions - mula and tula ajnana - vivarana and vishepa shakti - bhava-abhava vilakshana - on and on - all constructions not found in PTB. Sankara wasn't interested in building explanation only dismissing the superimposition
//Epistemic and error require a mind upfront. So, is the opponent saying that ignorance pre-requires mind?
If so, then entire VedAnta stands refuted because mind being nAma-rUpa, is a product of ignorance.//
--
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/CAH9%3D%2BBC1Qfg5vG86wgGbiio-cAJi2JuZs%2BKqq6%2BRGqg_tiZA5w%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAAz9PvG_6dwS7KzJyHTeRCOAPynSvE0A8GTbrgSPZ2_QwffFAw%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAM7AOLdmuMGrFLLKSYFV07ryhS9uiLTD4rFjbGb%3DQaSznMqAUw%40mail.gmail.com.
praNAms Sri Venkataraghavan prabhuji
Hare Krishna
mithyA fits into the former, not the latter. That which is sublatable.
Hari Hari Hari Bol!!!
bhaskar
--
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/AM7PR06MB66255000697DFAFB505B91318491A%40AM7PR06MB6625.eurprd06.prod.outlook.com.
praNAms Sri Venkatraghavan prabhuji
Hare Krishna
I was bit hurried as I was in tight official schedule 😊 My question is very simple, is the mithyA vastu deserved to be called as anirvachaneeya ( IOW an exception to law of excluded middle). For the anirvachaneeyatvaM shankara gives the example of foam / water, can this be compared with Kalpita jneya vastu due to adhyAsa?? Further to explain this : anirvachaneeyatva occurs only when both the kAraNa and the kArya are simultaneously perceived (like mrudghata) either by direct perception or through the shAstra. On the other hand mithyA is related to the wrong perception of an object. During the bhrAnti samaya we have a deterministic knowledge that it is satya (though it is bhrAnti jnAna) and after realizing the existing thing we realize that it was just our mithyA jnAna. At what stage do we think that there was / is / will be an anirvachaneeya vastu existing ?? that too when it is proven that it was just mere Kalpita jneya vastu due to adhyAsa. Neither dviteeya Chandra nor sarpa exist to explain it as a sadasadanirvachaneeya mithyA vastu just coz. sarpa and dviteeya Chandra mithyA jnAna is sublated.
--
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/AM7PR06MB6625A57311B3D7164545CFD38491A%40AM7PR06MB6625.eurprd06.prod.outlook.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAL34aEmRnW_TM%3DESrofvU1cmj6ms_6ZhLRfkE_gCCM41XMLHag%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAAz9PvGsQM2PyE1wc%2BOWwzCsN9J7LY7qrS1k1rre6DJniRE_3w%40mail.gmail.com.
It is fairly common for other sampradayas to invoke LEM while critiquing Advaita, but I find it surprising when Advaitins themselves treat it as a concern.
praNAms
Hare Krishna
I am curious to know as to how they explain their own theory of MAyA (and not avidyA) being anirvachanIya?
Isn't LEM violated by them the way they seek to explain.
SSSS ji brings in concepts of Dvaita VedAnta into his version of Advaita. Concepts such as the following are from Dvaita:
Ø You can enjoy your own hallucinations (ofcourse with the clapping crowd around you) about Sri SSS’s interpretation on each and everything. Frankly I don’t have time to ‘educate’ you, I know how you miserably failed to understand the context of NS3.1 and Sri SSS’s clarification in mUlAvidyA nirAsa about Ashraya and Vishaya of avidya😊 If time permits I will handle it in a separate post.
- For us and as per bhAshyakAra the avidyA is nothing apart from agrahaNa, anyathAgrahaNa and saMshaya. We don’t say there is a mother for all these types of avidyA and that is anirvachaneeya.
- So there is no problem or headache for us to come out with the concocted theory like sadasadvilakshaNa, bhAvaabhAva vilakshaNa anirvachaneeya avidyA. For us it is nirvachaneeya.
- And also for us avidyA is NOT mAya
- and mAya has been explained as tatva – anyatvAbhyAM anirvachaneeya ( sutra bhashya). This expression anirvachaneeya has been explained by bhAshyakAra by giving the example of foan, waves, bubbles which are not quite the same as water but yet not different from water. (you can refer US & bruhad bhAshya for this).
- And in the divine alignment of Ishwara and his shakti/mAya (which is ofcourse not palatable Vedanta siddhAnta to dry logicians) mAyA is A-vyakta, that is defying any unambiguous description whether it belongs to Brahman (tatva) or is different from It (anyatva). It is the nAma-rUpa which cannot be described unambiguously whether they are brahman/Ishwara or different from It, the unmanifest but to be manifested later. I am not saying this bhAshyakAra himself saying this in IkshatyadhikaraNa in sUtra.
Isn't LEM violated by them the way they seek to explain.
SSSS ji brings in concepts of Dvaita VedAnta into his version of Advaita. Concepts such as the following are from Dvaita:
Ø You can enjoy your own hallucinations (ofcourse with the clapping crowd around you) about Sri SSS’s interpretation on each and everything.
Frankly I don’t have time to ‘educate’ you, I know how you miserably failed to understand the context of NS3.1 and Sri SSS’s clarification in mUlAvidyA nirAsa about Ashraya and Vishaya of avidya😊 If time permits I will handle it in a separate post.
Hare Krishna Bhaskar prabhu ji.
- For us and as per bhAshyakAra the avidyA is nothing apart from agrahaNa, anyathAgrahaNa and saMshaya. We don’t say there is a mother for all these types of avidyA and that is anirvachaneeya.
You say that, true. But bhAshya says that!! False. See what BhAshya says - तामसे च आवरणात्मके तिमिरादिदोषे सति अग्रहणादेः अविद्यात्रयस्य उपलब्धेः. When there is AvaraNa (tAmas/timira-dOsha etc), there is perception of avidyA-traya. If you don't have this AvaraNa, there is no perception of avidyA-traya.
Sir, you cannot negate this bhAshya-vAkya. And if you do, then you cannot claim allegiance to bhAshya. What is said is very clear -- there is an AvaraNa different from avidyA-traya. Only when this AvaraNa is present, there is avidyA-traya.This AvaraNa is what is mUlAvidyA. Those who hold that avidyA is nothing other than avidyA-traya, need to explain what is this AvaraNa, the presence whereof is stated by bhAshya to be the cause of avidyA-traya.
- So there is no problem or headache for us to come out with the concocted theory like sadasadvilakshaNa, bhAvaabhAva vilakshaNa anirvachaneeya avidyA. For us it is nirvachaneeya.
Sir, sat-asat-vilakshaNa is not concocted. It is the very mantra of NAsadIya SUkta, which says -- na sat aaseet, na asat aaseet.. tama aaseet.
- And also for us avidyA is NOT mAya
And then SSSS ji would equate Maya and avidyA without any issues in MANDUkya Rahasya Vivriti 3.10 -- आत्मन: माया अविद्या.
- and mAya has been explained as tatva – anyatvAbhyAM anirvachaneeya ( sutra bhashya). This expression anirvachaneeya has been explained by bhAshyakAra by giving the example of foan, waves, bubbles which are not quite the same as water but yet not different from water. (you can refer US & bruhad bhAshya for this).
True. The question was however regarding LEM.
- And in the divine alignment of Ishwara and his shakti/mAya (which is ofcourse not palatable Vedanta siddhAnta to dry logicians) mAyA is A-vyakta, that is defying any unambiguous description whether it belongs to Brahman (tatva) or is different from It (anyatva). It is the nAma-rUpa which cannot be described unambiguously whether they are brahman/Ishwara or different from It, the unmanifest but to be manifested later. I am not saying this bhAshyakAra himself saying this in IkshatyadhikaraNa in sUtra.
Isn't LEM violated by them the way they seek to explain.
I was interested in response to LEM violation by SSSS ji. I am aware of what BhAshya is saying.
SSSS ji brings in concepts of Dvaita VedAnta into his version of Advaita. Concepts such as the following are from Dvaita:
Ø You can enjoy your own hallucinations (ofcourse with the clapping crowd around you) about Sri SSS’s interpretation on each and everything.
It is an open knowledge Bhaskar ji. NyAyAmrita holds ajnAna as jnAna-abhAva. That is rejected in Advaita Siddhi with lots of arguments.Frankly I don’t have time to ‘educate’ you, I know how you miserably failed to understand the context of NS3.1 and Sri SSS’s clarification in mUlAvidyA nirAsa about Ashraya and Vishaya of avidya😊 If time permits I will handle it in a separate post.
I read what is written in black and white. In NS, SSSS ji nowhere mentions chidAbhAsa as the Ashraya and vishaya of avidyA. Of course, NS does not say that either. In MUlAvidyA-nirAsah, SSSS ji writes chidAbhasa as the Ashraya and vishaya of ajnAna. What am I to understand?Actually, it is hilarious BhAskar ji. Mirror is the Ashraya of AbhAsa. AbhAsa cannot be the Ashraya of mirror. Of course, SureshwarachArya clearly says in VArtika that ajnAna is the Ashraya of chidAbhAsa. So, SSSS ji saying the opposite that chidAbhAsa is Ashraya/vishaya of ajnAna is actually diametrically opposite to Sureshwaracharya. But how does it matter!! Or does it?For reference: VArtika 4.3.416 - चिदाभासाश्रयाज्ञानात्कार्यसंगतिहेतुतः | स्वाभासान्तः परोऽप्यात्मा ध्यायतीवेति वीक्ष्यते || ४१६ ||And if you hold that ajnAna cannot be the mirror because it is abhAva (as per you), then you need to check VArtika 4.3.355 which says :आत्माज्ञानमतः प्रत्यक्चैतन्याभासवत्सदा | आत्मनः कारणत्वादेः प्रयोदजकमिहेष्यते || ३५५ ||ajnAna of AtmA is always coupled with the AbhAsa of inner-consciousness. And this ignorance alone is accepted as the reason of kAraNa-tva of Atman.Regards.Sudhanshu Shekhar.
--
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/CAH9%3D%2BBDhsmFpjURzZSRiw1TqXpZggCjw72M_yPxnjoKk83nfLw%40mail.gmail.com.
The defect leading to misapprehension, etc., exists in the eye, the instrument of cognition, and not in the cognizer. When the eye is cured by right treatment, the cognizer's vision ceases to be defective. Similarly non-apprehension, etc., are due to the defects of instruments of perception and not of the field-knower who perceives.
praNAms
Hare Krishna
This has been quoted umpteen times to clarify why we should not say that the ignorance pertains to the self and why should we understand that the ignorance pertains to the mind / antaHkaraNa!! A dead man’s antaHkaraNa cannot see, so it is shAreeri who sees the dviteeya Chandra due to defect of this karaNa. There is no discussion of how karaNa has come into picture before avidyA!! In taittireeya bhAshya also it has been explained. This bhAshya clearly says the defect of avidyA pertains to the instrument that shAreeri using and not to the ‘user’ of the instrument. By this shankara clarifies and confirms that the knower who is the kshetrajna whose nature is pure consciousness, for him there is no dealing such as vidyAvidya. He is absolute consciousness. From the vyAvahArika drushti the ignorance pertains to the mind alone and that should be as it is without any fabricated additional avidyA in the form of brahmAshrita mUlAvidyA. evamanAdiH anantaH naisagikaH adhyAsaH ‘mithyApratyayarUpaH, kartrutva bhOktrutva pravartakaH sarvalOka pratyakshaH. This argument presented by bhAshyakAra based on the common experience of life and shows that the knower has to ignorance. NS 3.1 which argues Chaitanya is the Ashraya for the avidyA should be understood with this backdrop not to erroneously conclude nirvishesha, nitya Shuddha buddha mukta kUtastha parabrahman is the Ashraya for the anishta called avidyA. And this is what Sri SSS emphasized while clarifying in his mulAvidyAnirAsa. Noway we should understand this bhAshya vAkya like avidyA is a solid thing like cataract that literally covers the eye sight of seer and due to ‘pre-existing’ of this cataract in the form of mUlAvidyA and it is going to give birth to all other three types of avidya i.e. abhAva, saMshaya and vipareeta grahaNa…
Thus Shankara holds that Avarana to be the basic problem which expresses as the three stated effects.
praNAms
Hare Krishna
The nature of avidyA categorically explained by bhAshyakAra, so at the first place it is not anirvachaneeya, if it is anirvachaneeya you (mulAvidyAvAdins) cannot announce/explain that there is brahmAshrita avidyA, it has AvaraNa, vikshepa shakti, capable enough to cover the brahmA capable to project non-brahman, exists in sushupti without the support of upAdhi etc. By holding it is anirvachaneeya you are making it more explicit and clearly describable concept😊 BTW, brahmAshrita avidyA is an alien theory to shankara’s prasthAna traya bhAshya, nowhere bhAshyakAra eulogizes the avidyA and says it has super powers like AvaraNa and vikshepa. The word avaraNatmakatvAt in geeta does not warrant to introduce the special force called mUlAvidyA, shankara explains this tAmasO hi pratyaya pertaining to the intellect /antaHkaraNa alone, by any stretch of our grand imagination we cannot paste this AvaraNa to brahman or the self (kshetrajna/vijnAnAtma). Atleast those who are giving the quotes with regard to avidyA from geeta bhAshya should know the background of giving the example of cataract which hinders the eyesight and not the seer.
Thus Shankara holds that Avarana to be the basic problem which expresses as the three stated effects.
praNAms
Hare Krishna
The nature of avidyA categorically explained by bhAshyakAra, so at the first place it is not anirvachaneeya, if it is anirvachaneeya you (mulAvidyAvAdins) cannot announce/explain that there is brahmAshrita avidyA, it has AvaraNa, vikshepa shakti, capable enough to cover the brahmA capable to project non-brahman, exists in sushupti without the support of upAdhi etc. By holding it is anirvachaneeya you are making it more explicit and clearly describable concept😊
BTW, brahmAshrita avidyA is an alien theory to shankara’s prasthAna traya bhAshya, nowhere bhAshyakAra eulogizes the avidyA and says it has super powers like AvaraNa and vikshepa. The word avaraNatmakatvAt in geeta does not warrant to introduce the special force called mUlAvidyA, shankara explains this tAmasO hi pratyaya pertaining to the intellect /antaHkaraNa alone, by any stretch of our grand imagination we cannot paste this AvaraNa to brahman or the self (kshetrajna/vijnAnAtma). Atleast those who are giving the quotes with regard to avidyA from geeta bhAshya should know the background of giving the example of cataract which hinders the eyesight and not the seer.
Hari Hari Hari Bol!!!
bhaskar
--
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/AM7PR06MB6625F93245D21902171CE074849EA%40AM7PR06MB6625.eurprd06.prod.outlook.com.
Dear Subbu-ji,
I am not actually following the thread (which for some reason still has as its ‘subject’ my initial post, even though the thread no longer has anything to do with it!) But your statement below does raise several questions.
I am not actually asking or expecting you to answer these questions; just pointing out that one can indulge in endless arguments about this stuff! It is why I wrote the book on the subject to try to look at all of the aspects to see clearly what matters and what doesn’t. Advaita according to Śaṅkara really isn’t as difficult and complicated as some post-Śaṅkara authors would have you believe!
Best wishes,
Dennis
There has been an awful lot of discussion over the past year on various aspects relating to ‘ignorance’. If there were any non-advanced seekers attempting to follow these, it is almost certain that they would have given up on most of the posts. (I have to confess that so did I on many of them.)
For all of these readers (if any), here is an attempt to summarize the key aspects in simple terms – with strictly no Devanagari script and only a few Sanskrit terms (with links to those that have already been defined).
Avidyā: Unmasking the Primal Ignorance in Advaita Vedānta
In our pursuit of spiritual truth, we often find ourselves gripped by a subtle but persistent sense of dissatisfaction. Traditional Advaita Vedānta suggests that this entire predicament—known as saṃsāra—is rooted in a single, fundamental error: Self-ignorance, or avidyā. Grasping the nuances of this term is essential for any seeker, as it serves as the cornerstone for Advaitic metaphysics and epistemology.
The Meaning and Etymology of Not-Knowing
The word avidyā is a simple compound: the prefix ‘a’ (negation) added to ‘vidyā’ (knowledge). Literally, it translates as “not knowing” or “unwisdom”. However, in Advaita, it is not merely a lack of general information, such as being ignorant of a foreign language; it refers specifically to ignorance of our true nature as the non-dual reality, Brahman.
According to Ādi Śaṅkara, avidyā is characterized by three distinct features in the mind: non-perception of the truth (agrahaṇa), doubtful perception (saṃśaya), and wrong perception (viparīta). We are not only unaware that we are limitless Consciousness, but we also actively believe we are something else—a limited, suffering body-mind.
The Mechanics of Illusion: Avidyā and Superimposition
If avidyā is the underlying condition, adhyāsa [https://www.advaita-vision.org/adhyasa/] (superimposition) is its experiential result. Śaṅkara defines this as the “mixing up of the real and the unreal,” or the apprehension of one thing as something else.
The classic metaphor used to explain this is the rope and the snake. In dim light, a traveler sees a coiled rope and, failing to recognize it clearly, superimposes the image of a snake upon it. The fear and the urge to flee are real to the traveler, yet the snake has no objective reality. In this scenario, avidyā is the “darkness” or lack of clear sight, while the superimposition is the resulting “mistake” of seeing a snake.
The Two Powers of Ignorance
Post-Śaṅkara authors developed the theory that avidyā possesses two distinct “powers” (śakti) that maintain the world-illusion:
- Āvaraṇa (The Veiling Power): This acts like a cloud covering the sun. It conceals the true nature of Brahman, making it appear as though the Self is non-existent or unknown.
- Vikṣepa (The Projecting Power): This power projects the appearance of a dualistic universe, replete with objects and separate individuals, onto the veiled reality of Brahman.
While Śaṅkara himself did not explicitly categorize ignorance into these two powers, he acknowledged that we suffer from both a failure to see the truth and the active misapprehension of it.
The Mūlāvidyā Controversy (Root Ignorance)
One of the most extensive areas of confusion investigated in the Confusions series is the concept of mūlāvidyā, often termed “root” or “causal” ignorance. The Vivaraṇa school and many later commentators argue that ignorance must be a positively existing entity (bhāvarūpa) because a mere “nothing” could not have the power to conceal or project. They speak of mūlāvidyā as a beginningless, material cause of the world that exists even during deep sleep.
However, modern traditionalists such as Swami Satchidanandendra Saraswati (SSSS) argue that Śaṅkara never taught the existence of a “root ignorance” entity. SSSS maintained that ignorance is strictly epistemological—it is nothing more than a wrong notion in the mind of the individual (jīva), which is corrected as soon as Self-knowledge arises. In this view, calling ignorance a “positive entity” is merely an adhyāropa-apavāda [https://www.advaita-vision.org/adhyaropa-apavada-2/] device that must eventually be rescinded. If ignorance were a real, positive entity, it would imply a duality (Brahman plus ignorance) and would be impossible to destroy, thereby making liberation unattainable.
The Locus of Ignorance: Who is Ignorant?
One of the thorniest questions in Advaita is: Where does ignorance reside? If reality is non-dual, then there is only Brahman. How can Brahman be ignorant?
- The Jīva as Locus: Some argue that ignorance must reside in the individual self (jīva), as it is the jīva who experiences suffering and seeks liberation. However, this leads to a logical loop: the jīva is a product of ignorance, so how can it be the locus for its own cause?.
- Brahman as Locus: Others, including Śaṅkara in certain contexts, state that Brahman is the locus. Since there is nothing else in reality, ignorance must rest on Brahman, just as the illusory snake rests on the rope.
Śaṅkara often bypassed this academic knot by telling questioners that ignorance belongs to the one who perceives it. Once you realize your identity as Brahman, the question itself becomes irrelevant because the ignorance is seen never to have truly existed.
The Status of the World and Enlightenment
A major misconception is the belief that the physical world literally disappears for a realized person (jñānī). Traditional Advaita clarifies that what “disappears” on enlightenment is not the world itself, but the delusion that the world is an independent, separate reality.
Perception is a function of the mind and senses, which continue to operate until the prārabdha karma (the karma that initiated the current birth) is exhausted. Just as a person can know that a mirage is not real water while still seeing the image of water, a jñānī still perceives duality but knows it to be anirvacanīya [https://www.advaita-vision.org/anirvacaniya/]—a dependent appearance that is none other than Brahman.
Obstacles to Peace: Pratibandha-s and Manonāśa
A seeker may have “intellectual” Self-knowledge but still suffer from habitual emotional disturbances. These are attributed to pratibandha-s, or mental obstacles (such as deeply ingrained habits of identification) that require nididhyāsana (meditation/reflection) to fully consolidate the knowledge into a transformed life outlook.
Furthermore, the term manonāśa, often mistranslated as the “death of the mind,” actually refers to the resolution of the ego’s identification with the mind. A jñānī would not be able to move, eat, or teach without a mind. The mind remains as a useful instrument, but the dominion of attachments and aversions has been forever destroyed.
The Remedy: Knowledge Alone
If the problem is avidyā (ignorance), the only possible solution is jñāna (knowledge). Advaita is firm that action (karma) can never destroy ignorance because action is not opposed to it; you can perform a thousand rituals and still be ignorant of your true nature.
Just as light is the direct antidote to darkness, Self-knowledge is the direct antidote to avidyā. This knowledge is not the acquisition of a new “experience” or “state,” but the removal of a false idea. It is a mental event—an akhaṇḍākāra vṛtti—where the seeker finally recognizes the truth: “I am Brahman”.
Conclusion: Guidance for the Confused Seeker
The modern landscape of non-dual spiritual teaching, especially the style popularized as Neo-Advaita, often fails the seeker by denying the validity of the phenomenal world (vyavahāra). By claiming there is “no seeker and no path,” these movements risk inducing nihilism or confusion.
Traditional Advaita, by contrast, acknowledges the seeker’s experience and provides a proven methodology passed down through a teaching lineage (sampradāya). The complexity of the teaching serves a vital purpose: it is a necessary tool to dismantle the deeply ingrained illusion of duality. For the confused seeker, the path through the jungle is navigated by finding a teacher who is both enlightened (brahmaniṣṭha) and learned in the scriptures (śrotriya), capable of unfolding the truth that you are already the limitless, perfect Brahman.
Dennis
--
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/003901dc8d5f%243c31d2e0%24b49578a0%24%40advaita.org.uk.
Dear Subbu-ji,
I am not actually following the thread (which for some reason still has as its ‘subject’ my initial post, even though the thread no longer has anything to do with it!) But your statement below does raise several questions.
- If ‘avidyA obstructed Brahman’s knowledge of itself’, would not that mean that there were at least 2 things in reality, and therefore contradict Advaita?
- I thought that Brahman could not ‘do’ or ‘know’ anything, being beyond time and space, so you would not expect it to know itself, would you?
- If intending this statement to refer to vyavahAra, rather than paramArtha, isn’t Brahman (Ishvara) sarvaj~na? Knowing everything, how can it not know itself?
- If the Ashraya and viShaya of avidyA is Brahman, does that not make avidyA mithyA? And, in reality, mean that Brahman is obstructing its own knowledge? Which takes us back to 1.
I am not actually asking or expecting you to answer these questions; just pointing out that one can indulge in endless arguments about this stuff! It is why I wrote the book on the subject to try to look at all of the aspects to see clearly what matters and what doesn’t. Advaita according to Śaṅkara really isn’t as difficult and complicated as some post-Śaṅkara authors would have you believe!
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: adva...@googlegroups.com <adva...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of V Subrahmanian
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2026 10:32 AM
To: adva...@googlegroups.com
Cc: A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta <adva...@lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
Subject: Re: [Advaita-l] [advaitin] T&D – Avidyā
The logic is clear: Avidya obstructed Brahman's knowledge of Itself. So, the aashraya and vishaya of avidya is Brahman alone.
regards
subbu
--
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/004b01dc9132%24ca610320%245f230960%24%40advaita.org.uk.
- If ‘avidyA obstructed Brahman’s knowledge of itself’, would not that mean that there were at least 2 things in reality, and therefore contradict Advaita?
As you propose below, since Avidya is mithya, there is no contradiction of Advaita.
- I thought that Brahman could not ‘do’ or ‘know’ anything, being beyond time and space, so you would not expect it to know itself, would you?
In that Br.Up.1.4.10 and Bhashya, that Brahman, only thru becoming a jiva, realizes itself.
- If intending this statement to refer to vyavahAra, rather than paramArtha, isn’t Brahman (Ishvara) sarvaj~na? Knowing everything, how can it not know itself?
- If the Ashraya and viShaya of avidyA is Brahman, does that not make avidyA mithyA? And, in reality, mean that Brahman is obstructing its own knowledge? Which takes us back to 1.
I am not actually asking or expecting you to answer these questions; just pointing out that one can indulge in endless arguments about this stuff!
It is why I wrote the book on the subject to try to look at all of the aspects to see clearly what matters and what doesn’t. Advaita according to Śaṅkara really isn’t as difficult and complicated as some post-Śaṅkara authors would have you believe!
--I agree Dennis ji, that the header of your original post is now hijacked 🙂warm regardssubbu--
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: adva...@googlegroups.com <adva...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of V Subrahmanian
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2026 10:32 AM
To: adva...@googlegroups.com
Cc: A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta <adva...@lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
Subject: Re: [Advaita-l] [advaitin] T&D – Avidyā
The logic is clear: Avidya obstructed Brahman's knowledge of Itself. So, the aashraya and vishaya of avidya is Brahman alone.
regards
subbu
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/004b01dc9132%24ca610320%245f230960%24%40advaita.org.uk.
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/CAKk0Te1_%3DyeUmYUMr2HcojRuCDGODHir4iwgXLKyS4Jdfqactg%40mail.gmail.com.
........ his claim that post Shankara authors make it complex appears without merit.
praNAms Sri Venkatraghavan prabhuji
Hare Krishna
Yes it is vyavahAra but clearly the shruti does not refer to a sarvajna Ishvara because such an eventuality would be untenable for Ishvara.
It cannot refer to NirguNa Brahman because as Dennis ji says, It is not capable of knowing anything.
It cannot refer to the world, which is inert and cannot know anything.
So who else can the shruti be referring to as Brahman which came to know itself?,
Hari Hari Hari Bol!!!
bhaskar
|
BHASKAR YR |
From: adva...@googlegroups.com <adva...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Venkatraghavan S
Sent: Friday, January 30, 2026 10:35 AM
To: Advaitin <adva...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [Advaita-l] [advaitin] T&D – Avidyā
|
Warning |
|
This email comes from outside of Hitachi Energy. Make sure you
verify the sender before clicking any links or downloading/opening attachments.
|
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/advaitin/CAL34aE%3DnePaM7URNv9%3DSy-tT%3D8-yU2G26n9w36abX8TnTKMW1Q%40mail.gmail.com.
- And in chAndOgya bhAshyakAra clarifies when the Atman is mentioned without any prefixes or suffixes it is addressed to kshetrajna / pratyagAtma / vijnAnAtma only and it is not strictly about kUtastha parishuddha Chaitanya.
praNAms Sri Dennis Waite prabhuji
Hare Krishna
Ø Yes as per mUlAvidyAvAdins, there exists a jada vastu (like chair, table etc. hence they say even darkness is also a solid thing like chair it is not just prakAsha abhAva!!) which has the power of concealing (avaraNa) the brahman itself and projecting the something else (vikshepa). And this jada shakti is existing in brahman itself well before any jeeva-jagat notion…it is the prime ignorance (brahmAshrita bhAva rUpa avidyA having Ashraya in brahman itself) which have the off-springs like jnAna abhAva, vipareeta grahaNa and saMshaya as well at jeeva level and it is the upAdAna kAraNa for the adhyAsa as well. So obviously it contradicts the ekatvaM of brahman which shruti asserts without any ambiguous terms. Sri SSS somewhere observes that if we advocate and accept the existence of avidyA like this then vishishtAdvaitin’s (rAmAjuna’s) 7 great untenable cannot be convincingly refuted by Advaita. He also observes since this MV is conspicuous by its absence in PTB better to be eliminated from shankara siddhAnta.
Ø If we see the jeeva svarUpa in sushupti we will get the answer to this..why jeeva does not know himself that he is brahman in sushupti?? bhAshyakAra clarifies it is because of ekatvaM (non-duality).
MUlAvidyAnirAsah, page 153 (section 125), clearly says that chidAbhAsa, wrongly understood as AtmA due to avidyA, is the Ashraya and vishaya of avidyA. (विद्यत एव च अविद्यागृहीतो मायात्मा चिदाभासो ज्ञानाज्ञानोभयाश्रयः....तस्मात् अविद्यया आत्मत्वेन गृहीत: आत्माभासो अध्यासाश्रायो विषयः च)
praNAms
Hare Krishna
Have you not seen there itself Sri SSS clarification with regard to this!!?? And why we should not ask the kAraNa for the maNah in this context??
And also, this AbhAsa is in which medium?
praNAms
Hare krishna
chidAbhAsa refers to the antarAtma ( the knower of kshetra) its svarUpa is paramAtma and this chidAbhAsa needs to be understood as the individual soul (vaiyuktika jeeva), representing or reflection of the innermost, witnessing consciousness (sAkshi Chaitanya) and it exists within the BMI hence he is shAreera (shAreera eti sharere bhavaH etyarthaH), but Ishwara/paramAtma not only in shareera he is like AkAshavat sarvagatashcha nityaH…but jeevastu shareere ‘eva’ bhavati clarifies bhagavatpAda. It is the "I" that observes the body, mind, and the absence or presence of the world, it is that I due to mithyA jnAna (adhyAsa) about itself takes himself as kartru, bhOktru etc., it is that I that is striving to know / realize its sva-svarUpa, it is that I that does the shravaNAdi sAdhana to have the ‘darshana’ of paramAtma 😊 In siddhAnta, in avidyA vyavahAra where pramAtru-prameya-pramANa hold sway, this is the consciousness (Chetana / Atma) that shines within the satyasya satya paramAtma.
I am really surprised to receive these type of trifle queries from the scholar like you 😊
I am really surprised to receive these type of trifle queries from the scholar like you 😊
praNAms
Hare Krishna
No question is a trifle Prabhuji. It is a significant question as to what is the medium in which there is AbhAsa.
Ø What is the definition of chidAbhAsa as per you, please explain then I will try to explain its medium.
I did not get clear answers.
Ø When one is enjoying just asking questions they would never get clear answers 😊
Two questions:
Hari Hari Hari Bol!!
bhaskar
--
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.
So who else can the shruti be referring to as Brahman which came to know itself?,
- If we see the bhAshya vAkya carefully it is not explicitly saying it is parabrahman who is having avidyA here, if that is the case bhAshyakAra says paramAtman would become sadviteeya..So who is having the vidyA [sic] here??
What is the definition of chidAbhAsa as per you, please explain then I will try to explain its medium.
- I would like to hear from you the complete definitions for the terms like : chidAbhAsa, pratyagAtma, paramAtma like their similarities, differences and contextual usage of these terms in PTB etc. Afterwards, we will take and discuss Sri SSS’s take and my take on this 😊