आत्मानमेव आत्मतया अविजानतां
तेनैव जातं निखिलं प्रपञ्चितम् ।
ज्ञानेन भूयोऽपि च तत्प्रलीयते
रज्ज्वां अहेर्भोगभवाभवौ यथा ।। 10.14.25
A person who mistakes a rope for a snake becomes fearful, but he then
gives up his fear upon realizing that the so-called snake does not exist.
Similarly, for those who fail to recognize You, Brahman, as the Supreme Soul of all
souls, the expansive illusory material existence arises, but knowledge
(realization) of You (Your True Nature) at once causes it (the variegated
world of plurality) to subside.
In the above verse we see the expression of relative reality, the world, and the Absolute Reality, Brahman. This is exactly the teaching of the Upanishad through the pithy statement: satyasya satyam. The rope is the Satyam and the snake is the satyam, in the analogy of the Bhagavatam. There itself, the relatively real, the world, is contrasted with the Absolutely Real, Brahman. The state of ignorance is signified by the world and the state of realization is conveyed by the term Brahman. One can recall the verse 2.69:
या निशा सर्वभूतानां तस्यां जागर्ति संयमी ।
यस्यां जाग्रति भूतानि सा निशा पश्यतो मुनेः ॥ ६९ ॥
2.69 The self-restrained man keeps awake during that which is night for all creatures. That during which creatures keep awake, it is night to the seeing sage.
Here the waking and sleep are symbolic of real and unreal: For the Jnani, the waking means the Absolute Truth. For the ajnanis waking is to the relative world.
The relatively real has no reality of its own and hence is only dependently real, paratantra satyam. On the other hand, Brahman, the Absolute Reality, does not need to acquire reality from any other source. The world needs reality from Brahman. All this is implied by the Upanishadic statement: satyasya satyam.
Why does the Upanishad call the vyavaharika, the world, 'satyam'? The Upanishad is alluding to, doing anuvāda of, the uninformed person holding the world to be real, untaught. This has to be corrected. Hence the Upanishad as though holds the world to be satyam and goes on to teach, in the manner of 'from the known to the unknown', and the adhyāropa-apavāda nyāya, the truth that Brahman is indeed the absolute Satyam.
There are many such verses in the Bhagavatam that carry the Upanishadic purport.
Om Tat Sat
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Namaste Subbuji,
Sir, with all respect, your linked paper is a fine piece of scholarship, no doubt, but does it reflect Bhasyakara's true intention in his teaching? Not when weighed against the citations and remarks of SSSS in my link but that is my own humble opinion.
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Bhasya that attributes mithya to misperceived reality.
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Satya and Anṛta
Satya is one, anṛta is another. Satya is the truth. Anṛta is untruth. Satya is permanent, unchanging, that which does not perish. Anṛta is that which is perishable, transient. Satya is Brahman, the supreme Self, imperishable, eternal, immortal, fearless. Anṛta is everything other than Brahman, all the names and forms. Therefore, Brahman alone is satya, the rest is anṛta. In this manner, satya and anṛta are opposed.
(Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad Bhāṣya 2-1-20)
The difference between satya and anṛta; the meaning of satya in different places; how the meaning of satya has been used in this context — (Śaṅkara Bhāṣya p. 59).
(Here) the word satya means the Vedic sentences (śruti-vākyas).
(There) the word satya means Brahman, Paramātman.
How can there be two different meanings for the same word satya? The difference is as follows: where the subject matter (viṣaya) is Brahman, there satya means Brahman; but where the subject matter is Vedic sentences (śruti-vākya), there satya means Vedic sentences.
Therefore here satya means śruti-vākya. Accordingly, in the first place (ṛg-veda) the word satya is taken as referring to the Vedic words. Later on, the word satya is to be understood as Brahman.
So the satya of one context (i.e., śruti) is different from the satya of another context (i.e., Brahman).
What is meant by satya and anṛta in this passage? Explain separately.
Why is satya used in two different senses? Clarify with reasoning.
How is the connection between satya and Brahman explained here?
Explain with examples the way the same word (satya) conveys different meanings in different contexts.
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namaste subbji,that was supposed to be a translation of the Kannada passage you sent.
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Tameva bhantamanubhati sarvam
tasya bhaasa sarvidam vibhaati
Explains the same idea beautifully.
On Wednesday, September 24, 2025, V Subrahmanian via Advaita-l <
> souls, the *expansive illusory material existence arises,* but knowledge
> Upanishad *as though* holds the world to be satyam and goes on to teach, in
> the manner of 'from the known to the unknown', and the adhyāropa-apavāda
> nyāya, the truth that Brahman is indeed the absolute Satyam.
>
> There are many such verses in the Bhagavatam that carry the Upanishadic
> purport.
>
> Om Tat Sat
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· In the same way, one who was ignorant of the Self and who is awakened from this ignorance by the Vedic text (sruti) sees nothing other than his own Self. The Teacher (guru), the texts and he himself as deluded individual soul have all disappeared. (Nais Siddhi 4.37)
· 'There is no plurality here' (Brhad. 4.4.19)
· 'He goes from death to death who sees the appearance of plurality here' (Brhad 4.4.19)
· 'When, however, this soul makes in this one the smallest interval (difference), then, for him, there is fear' (Taitt. 2.7),
Namaste Subbuji,I appreciate your patience. I have read through your link and the Tait bhasya 2.6.1 but find it extremely weak evidence to accept three states of existence.
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Namaste Subbuji,
Please help me understand, the Tait bhasya is referring to how Brahman created the world, as it were, 'entered into' it as well, and now answers, what Brahman does after it enters ."It became the formed and the formless" which nonetheless "still continue to be inseparable from the Self in time and space." Then, from this premise follows the notions of vyavarhara vishaya and paramartha satta, Then peripheral to the main discussion comes this notion of water as the vishaya of vyavarhara and mirage water as anrta. And you are saying It is by virtue of this last sentence ALONE in the whole bhasya, that you wish to establish pratibhasika satta as a distinct state from vyavaharika. Please, do I have that right? Are there other references you can easily share? Regards, 🙏🙏🙏,
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Namaste Subbuji,
Sir, somehow, somewhere, I thought you implied through the Tait reference support for introducing pratibhasika satta as distinct from vyavaharika. Otherwise, I agree with what you are saying - there is a necessity to accept the existential status of vyavahara - how else to explain our conversation. That is clear. The issue between us and perhaps off topic, is defining what is meant by existential status. Is it other than or different from the illusory nature of pratibhasika satta. You say, yes because of the difference Sankara is drawing between waking water and dream water, I am saying, weak defense, anything better? Just to be clear.
Regardless, I found your citations interesting://(In BS) 3.2.4, Shankara says: Nor should it be concluded that the world of waking made of ether, etc. elements is not absolutely real. We have eminently established in BSB 2.1.14 that the entire world (including the dream and sleep) is illusory: māyāmātra. Prior to the realization of Brahman, the waking world remains in an orderly fashion. The world of dream, though, is negated everyday upon waking. //--This IS a fair defense of pratibhasika satta but I read it as two different drsti-s rather than states.
--What does Shankara mean where he says the waking world should be taken as 'absolutely real'? This might make sense if avidya is simply non-recognition.
Then in BSB 2.1.14, //: The distinction between the Enjoyer and the experienced inert world was stated as a matter of vyāvahārika//--mustn't that be taken as refuting any kind of avidya-lesa? Even sAkshi/sAkshya distinction is avidya and subject to change and all the other limits of duality.
--off topic and needn't require a replyLastly, your comment on Gita bhasya 13.2 saying, //There are two requirements mandatory for liberation: 1. the knowledge that one is distinct from the inert prakriti and 2. that this prakriti is non-existent. //--'prakriti is non-existent' as a requirement? please discuss though also off topic
🙏🙏🙏Yes sir, I recognize that on occasion Bhasyakara will acknowledge vyavarharika as provisionally real FOR THE IGNORANT MIND. And indeed, who could deny the fears, hopes and desires that motivate us. But this is the common empirical view whereas sastra employs its own view intended to rid us of this misconception and instill the teaching that portrays the paramarthika view. The issue between us, between post-Sankara Advaita and the strict reliance on Bhasya alone is--On Sat, Sep 27, 2025 at 6:52 AM V Subrahmanian <v.subra...@gmail.com> wrote:--On Sat, Sep 27, 2025 at 4:57 AM Michael Chandra Cohen <michaelc...@gmail.com> wrote:Namaste Subbuji,
Please help me understand, the Tait bhasya is referring to how Brahman created the world, as it were, 'entered into' it as well, and now answers, what Brahman does after it enters ."It became the formed and the formless" which nonetheless "still continue to be inseparable from the Self in time and space." Then, from this premise follows the notions of vyavarhara vishaya and paramartha satta, Then peripheral to the main discussion comes this notion of water as the vishaya of vyavarhara and mirage water as anrta. And you are saying It is by virtue of this last sentence ALONE in the whole bhasya, that you wish to establish pratibhasika satta as a distinct state from vyavaharika. Please, do I have that right? Are there other references you can easily share? Regards, 🙏🙏🙏,Namaste Michael ji,Please do not conclude that the statement of different levels of reality is a peripheral matter. In truth, this idea is crucial to the Shankara Advaita. It is the seminal point of Advaita. Its pervasion throughout the prasthana traya bhashya is something to be seen, realized, to be appreciated. I shall mention a few out of the countless instances where this concept is repeatedly highlighted by Shankara.In the Brahma sutras is a section to determine the state of dream. There in 3.2.4, Shankara says: Nor should it be concluded that the world of waking made of ether, etc. elements is not absolutely real. We have eminently established in BSB 2.1.14 that the entire world (including the dream and sleep) is illusory: māyāmātra. Prior to the realization of Brahman, the waking world remains in an orderly fashion. The world of dream, though, is negated everyday upon waking.At the beginning of the very long bhashya for BSB 2.1.14, Shankara recalls what was said in the earlier portion: The distinction between the Enjoyer and the experienced inert world was stated as a matter of vyāvahārika. But this distinction does not exist in the pāramārthika since the cause and effect are non-different from each other. Thus Shankara holds the world of experience to be unreal from the absolute standpoint.In the commentary to the last verse of the 13th chapter of the Bh.Gita, Shankara says, following the Gita teaching there: There are two requirements mandatory for liberation: 1. the knowledge that one is distinct from the inert prakriti and 2. that this prakriti is non-existent.In fact this verse is a mirror-verse of the 2.16 where too this teaching is contained, though in different words: That which is existent, Brahman, the Paramartha Satyam, will never go out of existence. And that which is not there, will never gain existence. This corresponds to the Self and the not-self of the 13th ch.last verse.In the Mundaka Bhashya Shankara says: the entire creation is a figment of imagination of the mind.One can give examples endlessly from the Bhashya, the Vartika and Gaudapada for the idea of two types/levels of reality.There are innumerable such instances where Shankara has pointed to the two types of reality. It's this feature of Shankaran Advaita that sets it apart from the other schools of Dvaita, etc.warm regardssubbu
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Namaste Subbuji,
//Yes, Shankara does, on the basis of the Tai.Up. passage, accepts three states of Reality. The distinction between vyavaharika and pratibhasika is also specifically stated by him with that analogy. It is certainly a case of 'existential status'. This is because the three 'existences' differ from each other on the basis of their 'status'. I had clarified earlier that the prātibhasika satya is called so because the imagined snake is 'existing' for that person under the sway of that error. Till the correction happens, for him, the snake exists. Hence it is called so: apparent existence. That is its status. The vyavaharika is also held to be existent to the one under the sway of the avidya pertaining to his true svarupa, Brahman. Hence it is named so. Till Brahma jnana dispels that avidya, the existence of this is having that status. And Paramarthika Satya is for Brahman which is signified by the term Satyam in the Tai.Up. 'satyam jnanam anantam' and the Brihadaranyaka 'Satyam' as opposed to the other 'satyasya' which is actually vyavaharika. ////Yes, Shankara does, on the basis of the Tai.Up. passage, accepts three states of Reality.//You will have to show me exactly how this passage can be interpreted as 3 states of reality. I repeat my earlier understanding:"It became the formed and the formless" which nonetheless "still continue to be inseparable from the Self in time and space." Then, from this premise follows the notions of vyavarhara vishaya and paramartha satta, Then peripheral to the main discussion comes this notion of water as the vishaya of vyavarhara and mirage water as anrta.
//The distinction between vyavaharika and pratibhasika is also specifically stated by him with that analogy. //yes, I can see how that might follow Post-Sankara/PS bias but it is that sentence that I call weak evidence
//the prātibhasika satya is called so because the imagined snake is 'existing' for that person under the sway of that error. Till the correction happens, for him, the snake exists. //personhood/seer and the snake/seen belong to the same order of reality. Personhood is just as imagined as the illusory snake. But you are saying the person holding the illusion is different enough from the illusion to seek and gain moksa. I believe that concurs with Madhusudhana's jiva as one of the 6 anadi-s.
Bhasya's teaching however, as pointed out by SSSSji, is that jiva/jagat, bondage/liberation must be understood as sastra's superimposition. Jivatvam is an error of understanding - there ever was a jiva who was bound. All in line with Karika 2.32
//Nor should it be concluded that the world of waking made of ether, etc. elements is not absolutely real.//double negatives confuse meaning
Taittirīya Upaniṣad 2.6 (on “satyam ca anṛtam ca satyam abhavat”) — Śaṅkara spells out the two levels in so many words:
सत्यं च व्यवहारविषयम्, अधिकारात्, न परमार्थसत्यम्; एकमेव हि परमार्थसत्यं ब्रह्म । इह पुनः व्यवहारविषयमापेक्षिकं मृगतृष्णिकाद्यनृतापेक्षया उदकादि सत्यमित्युछ्यते । अनृतं च तद्विपरीतम् । (Adbhutam's Blog)
(“‘Satyam’ here is of the realm of vyavahāra, by context, not the paramārtha-satya; the one paramārtha-satya is Brahman. And in this world the vyavahāra-domain ‘truth’ is āpekṣika (comparative): water etc. are called ‘true’ only relative to illusions like mirage-water; anṛta is the opposite.”)
Chāndogya Upaniṣad 6.1.4 (vācārambhaṇa) — Śruti’s “mṛttikety eva satyam” underwrites Śaṅkara’s paramārtha/ vyavahāra reading: the substratum alone is satyam; all “forms” are merely names in vyavahāra. (See text+commentary presentation.) (Shlokam)
Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad bhāṣya (III.5.1 context) — Śaṅkara contrasts paramārtha and vyavahāra explicitly; the tradition often cites his line (at III.5.1) that worldly vyavahāra proceeds as conditioned by paramārtha—showing the two-level vocabulary in the bhāṣya itself. (Wisdom Library)
What you don’t find in Śaṅkara’s bhāṣyas is the formal noun “prātibhāsika-sattā.” Illusory cases (rope-snake, nacre-silver, mirage water) are treated as mithyā / anṛta / bhrānti / adhyāsa within vyavahāra, not as a separately named “level of sattā.” For the classic rope-snake/nacre-silver usage in Śaṅkara’s Bṛhadāraṇyaka-bhāṣya, see standard editions and translations that quote these examples in the bhāṣya exegesis. (Wisdom Library)
If you want, I can pull page-exact Sanskrit from a specific edition (e.g., Anandagiri-ṭīkā ed. for BṛU, or a particular TU-bhāṣya printing) to match your citation style.
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Namaste Subbuji,
First, Is Gita 13.2 the only best reference in PTB for anadi jiva?
//So, the Upanishad says: Brahman became the entire universe and gave the break up from several angles. This includes the three types of Reality. //"I asked Chatgpt 5, " post sankara advaita make a distinction between vyavahara satta and pratibhasika satta that isn't found in bhasya sankara. Both of course accept paramartika satta. Find citations from bhasya"I found it interesting that Chat's answer referred specifically to our Tait terms with a distinctly different understanding than you have offered. I have not confirmed other citations.You’re right that the later “three-tier” labels—prātibhāsika–vyāvahārika–pāramārthika sattā—are not Śaṅkara’s own terminology. In the bhāṣyas, Śaṅkara explicitly contrasts paramārtha-satya with a vyavahāra/āpekṣika (contextual, comparative) “satya,” while illusory items are called anṛta / mithyā / bhrānti-jñāna / adhyāsa, not “prātibhāsika-sattā.” Here are clean places to cite from Śaṅkara’s bhāṣya:
Taittirīya Upaniṣad 2.6 (on “satyam ca anṛtam ca satyam abhavat”) — Śaṅkara spells out the two levels in so many words:
सत्यं च व्यवहारविषयम्, अधिकारात्, न परमार्थसत्यम्; एकमेव हि परमार्थसत्यं ब्रह्म । इह पुनः व्यवहारविषयमापेक्षिकं मृगतृष्णिकाद्यनृतापेक्षया उदकादि सत्यमित्युछ्यते । अनृतं च तद्विपरीतम् । (Adbhutam's Blog)
(“‘Satyam’ here is of the realm of vyavahāra, by context, not the paramārtha-satya; the one paramārtha-satya is Brahman. And in this world the vyavahāra-domain ‘truth’ is āpekṣika (comparative): water etc. are called ‘true’ only relative to illusions like mirage-water; anṛta is the opposite.”)
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Namaste Subbuji,
//There is this Brahma sutra itself 2.1.35 which says the samsāra is anādi. There is the BGB 15. 3 in this regard. Samsāra, bondage, can't be without the jiva. Hence jiva is anādi. //Why single out jiva and the "other" 5 anadi when samsara and avidya themselves are anadi?
//In that blog of mine, I have cited the Vanamālā commentary to the Tai.Up.Bhashya of Shankara where he says: the word 'anRtam' of the Upanishad denotes prātibhāsika object.//Rather an obscure reference - show where three states of reality are stated explicitly.
It appears to me these discussions are endless the way we are engaging, word by word, example by example. Rather, I believe a systematic view of the entirety of PTB is necessary to determine what Sankara intends to teach. SSSS has certainly done that to ascertain clear difference with Post-Sankara Advaita. Hacker has done that with regard to Brahma Sutra bhasya by determining and analyzing every use of key terms. Others have followed Hacker's same technique with Brh, Tait, Chandogy Upanishads and Upadesha Sahasri. All have confirmed SSSS's findings. These unbiased and exhaustive studies are powerful arguments for corrections to traditional understanding of PTB. Yet, I know of no systematic attack denying these studies. 🙏🙏🙏
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Namaste Subbuji,
//The pratibhasika is within the vyavaharika. //Timalsina, Seeing and Appearance, commenting on Madhusudhana contrast of two orders of reality rather than distinguishing empirical and illusory found in other authors but NOT IN BHASYA. Three orders gives empirical a status of reality not explicitly found in Bhasya or Gaudapada.
"Most remarkably, he places the statement of Śaṅkara between the statements of Sureśvara and Sarvajñātman, both of whom do not make a distinction between the empirical and the illusory. Thus, for Madhusūdana, the ‘superimposition’ (adhyāsa) of Śaṅkara corresponds to Sarvajñātman’s example of mirage. The point which aligns him with DS is his definition of reality. All in all, Madhusūdana gives nine definitions of empirical reality, demonstrating various positions that he defends. Some of these definitions cover both the empirical and illusory states within the domain of vyavahārika. This last point of Madhusūdana tallies with Ābhāsa and DSE, since in the doctrines of Padmapāda and Vācaspati, the empirical truth cannot be equated with an illusory truth, both bearing different degrees of reality.”
//Hacker, etc. are not the final authority for the tradition. It is the traditional Acharyas who have based everything that they have said on Shankara are alone the authority.//Is the personality of traditional acharyas or their reasoning and knowledge of sastra that contains authority?
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