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Remember our question is about this movie, the seen, having Order in jagat and self-will in jiva. Within the movie there is ishvara who maintains the order, grants karmaphala etc. There is internal appearance of causality: mickey mouse punched donald duck who fell down. When we seek the knowledge of Brahman while still relating to this movie duality, He will be known as the self-determining Ishvara, whose determinations we deem as order and free-will in the seer-seen duality.
Excellent post, Putran-ji! Just to be clear, however, your last para states:
“What is an appearance will vanish in Knowledge: the snake is gone when rope is known. So in Knowledge of Brahman, the seer-seen duality vanishes in and as Brahman, beyond change no matter the appearance. This appearance is therefore mithya. It is maya. It is anirvachaneeya.”
I believe you are NOT saying that the world disappears on gaining Self-knowledge. It is known that there is no duality, that sarvam khalvidam brahma, but even so the appearance of the world continues. (At least, I hope this is what you are saying!)
There is an ongoing discussion at my site, with over 100 comments, in which others have been trying to argue that the world DOES disappear. Three posts beginning https://www.advaita-vision.org/ignorance-goes-but-maya-remains/, followed by https://www.advaita-vision.org/the-disappearing-world/ and most recently https://www.advaita-vision.org/ignorance-and-the-world/. In the middle post, I referred to the rope snake metaphor:
“To speak of the snake disappearing when knowledge of the rope is gained is incorrect. Since the snake never existed in the first place, it cannot go away. Similarly, the world never existed, so to speak of it going away upon enlightenment is wrong. A non-existent thing neither comes nor goes away. (The world is, of course, mithyA, being neither real nor unreal but having brahman as its substratum.) So, what actually goes away upon obtaining j~nAna is not the perceived dualistic universe but the error (bhrama) that we made in thinking that there was a dualistic world.”
Would you agree with this?
Incidentally, it would be good to post your summary (with clarification of the above point) if that is ok with you.
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: adva...@googlegroups.com <adva...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of putran M
Sent: 05 October 2020 23:24
To: adva...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [advaitin] Maya
Namaskaram Srivathsan-ji,
Here is my understanding or thinking on this.
The question is on duality, causality, order and change. So this is the seen and the questioner is the seer posing the question. So the discussion is within the seer-seen duality or vyavaharika context.
Who sees? The seer. Who is the seer? Two choices: 1. the Self or 2. a superimposition/appearance/projection on the Self
What does the seer see? The seen. What is the seen? Two choices: 1. the Self or 2. a superimposition/appearance/projection on the Self.
If the seer and seen are Self and the Self as the seer sees the Self as the seen, then the connective seeing is or is indicative of Maya. The seeing is by Self (since seer is Self) of Self (since seen is Self), hence the fact of seeing the seer-seen duality postulates an intrinsic maya-shakti in the Self, its power to see/project as seer and seen. By this shakti, the Self projects/appears as ishvara-jiva-jagat. So when we take the vyavaharika standpoint and seek to know Brahman, it is appropriate to know Brahman as Ishvara, not the God in the movie but the God who manifests the movie of ishvara-jiva-jagat. Remember our question is about this movie, the seen, having Order in jagat and self-will in jiva. Within the movie there is ishvara who maintains the order, grants karmaphala etc. There is internal appearance of causality: mickey mouse punched donald duck who fell down. When we seek the knowledge of Brahman while still relating to this movie duality, He will be known as the self-determining Ishvara, whose determinations we deem as order and free-will in the seer-seen duality.
The other answer, that the seer-seen duality is superimposition on Brahman, seeks the standpoint of the Self beyond all separation and duality. There is no place for question (and technically even consideration) of duality, its order and causality. It is only Brahman that in the lower standpoint is identified variously and ultimately as Ishvara. These identifications however are superimposition like snake on rope; there is no bat hit ball and ball went 40 feet, why!?! It is Brahman above, below, behind; the Self of all, the Self in all, the Self is All. All nama-rupa has only Brahman as referent, so where is the question of change and order?
I don't see this as a negation of the seen or that the seer alone is real and seen unreal. That word usage is mixing contexts (although such may be used for particular purposes). It is transcending the seer-seen divide which is the superimposition. Either you are in vyavaharika standpoint, or in paramarthika knowledge. You always saw only the Rope, never the snake. When you think it is snake, you respond like it is. Negation of snake is not negation of what you saw but what you imagined (of Self). Likewise it is wrong to say the Self is the Dreamer and not the dream. What is the dream if not Self? The realization is that Dreamer-dream is all the same Self appearing in the dream-standpoint as if two.
What is an appearance will vanish in Knowledge: the snake is gone when rope is known. So in Knowledge of Brahman, the seer-seen duality vanishes in and as Brahman, beyond change no matter the appearance. This appearance is therefore mithya. It is maya. It is anirvachaneeya.
(I think there are standard debates on the nature of maya vs avidya vs ajnana.)
thollmelukaalkizhu
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Transcendental Truth
Based on the 2nd Chapter of Bhagavat Geeta, By Sadaji
Krishna starts the teaching with the statement, addressing all of us through Arjuna, “You are crying where there is no real reason for you to cry. Those who are Wise do not cry for those who have died or for those who are eventually going to dye, since nobody dies while every body dies. Recognize that you are not the body, but that which enlivens this body. Does anyone cry for changing a dilapidated dress to a new dress?”
Talk Scheduled from 12:00 to 1:00 PM EST Saturday, Oct. 10, 2020
Join the Zoom Meeting
Sunilji,
This interpretation does not make sense either. Does each jIva live in his/her separate world? The multiple universe theory of modern science?
Or does a jIva ‘drop out of vyAvahArika existence’ in the shared world upon gaining enlightenment? This does not accord with reason or perception. We access the teachings of Shankara, for example, presumed to have been written post-enlightenment. Also, there is the problem of all other jIva-s being in the world of the one being enlightened. I.e. ‘disappearing world’ entails eka-jIva-vAda.
Best wishes,
Dennis
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Sorry, Sunilji. We do not seem to be communicating. No one was taking about ‘shunning sense objects’. One accepts the appearance as mithyA – its substrate is still Brahman. (sarvam khalvidam brahma). ‘Concentration on’ is not ‘gaining Self-knowledge’ from shravaNa with a qualified teacher. Sounds more like Yoga. Also talk of prakRRiti sounds more like sAMkhya. You have not responded to my original comment at all.
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आदावन्ते च यन्नास्ति वर्तमानेऽपि तत्तथा ।
वितथैः सदृशाः सन्तोऽवितथा इव लक्षिताः ॥
A thing, which does not exist in the beginning and nor in the end, cannot be really existent in the present,What we see an object is just
illusory, though regarded as real (by the ignorant)
After acquiring the knowledge through Shravana from the Guru and the Shruti-texts, we have to do the Manana and Dhyana and reach
the Samadhi state and never forgetting the illusoriness of the manifested world. We have to begin our spiritual life with the Pratyahara.
That is why Lord Krishna, while telling us who is Sthitaprajana, starts with the one who is adept in PRATYAHARA. Of course, in the
eight-limbed Yogasutra, PRATYAHARA is the fifth limb.
Hope I could clarify well.. I am a student of the Shankara-school of Advaita in an indirect way, as I am from the Ramakrishna subschhol. May
be Sadaji would like to say something on this.
Jai Shri Krishna
Sunil kb
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Sunilji,
The book I am currently writing is about ‘Confusions’ in Advaita Vedanta, how they have arisen and what Shankara says ‘definitively’ on the related topic. I’m afraid that many of these confusions stem from the misguided teaching of Vivekananda, ‘corrupting’ the original teaching with elements of Christianity, Yoga and science and diverting the seeker from gaining Self-knowledge into looking for some sort of ‘experience’. Whilst aShTA~Nga yoga has undoubted value in preparing the mind, its value stops there and samAdhi has no place at all. Whilst I respect your views, and of course they are likely to differ on this topic, I do not wish to continue the discussion since committed views - on both sides! 😉 – are unlikely to change.
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Namaskar:
Whenever there is a discussion between a wise man and an intelligent man, the discussion will always always be more interesting. The intelligent man knows what to say and how to say wisely. The wise man on the other hand knows what not to say and stops the discussion intelligently and avoid confusions. In the present context, the discussion is focused on the spell of Maya which is clear from more than ONE perceived notions on the World of The Brahman. The suble conclusion is ‘Brahman only knows the Brahman’ is the truth. The rest may be attributable to the spell of Maya!!
With warm regards
Ram Chandran
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Namaskar Dear Sunilji:
Before we end the discussions on the subject of Maya, let me try to clarify your most recent post equating Maya with the Prakriti and mentioned that it came from the Upanishads. Your statement that Maya is Prakriti comes from the Svetasvatara Upanishad. The referenced statement was subject to different interpretation by Acharyas Sankara and Ramanuja. According to Ramanujacharya, Ishwara the creator is the magician or Mayavi and Maya represents His power. This interpretation is from the school of VishishtAdvaita philosophy theorized by Ramanujacharya. The explanations and interpretations of Prakriti and Maya as observed by Ramanuja and Sankar may be highlighted by the following.
Here are the viewpoints of VishistAdvaita:
1. Prakriti is real and it is not unreal or indeterminable.
2. The knowledge of Prakriti as the Universe is true
3. Most importantly the world is real and ever existent.
4. The moola Prakriti is in subtle seed form and with this Ishwara creates the world.
5. The world is nothing but the final form of Prakriti, just like the tree originated from the seed.
The viewpoints of Sankara Advaita can be summarized as:
1. Maya is neither real nor unreal
2. Knowledge of Maya as the Universe is illusionary and not real
3. Upanishads also confirms that multiplicity (duality) is unreal
4. Maya is the power of Ishwara but it doesn’t exist in Ishwara even in seed form
5. Creation visualized by the Jivas appears to those who see the world different from the Brahman
6. Most importantly, the World is not Maya and only the magical power of Ishwara makes the Brahman to appear in the form of the World. Same as saying that the Universe is the illusion of the Brahman.
It may be useful to know that Svetasvatara Upanishad’s statement is the context to overcome the dualism of Purusha and Prakriti of the Sankhya philosophy. It says that pradhana or nature is not an independent entity but belongs to the Self of the Divine Sakti. God is the mayavi, the maker of the world, which is maya attributed to Him. These features of the Svetasvatara Upanishad make Ramanuja and other theistic Acharyas to debate to establish the Personal God as the Ultimate Reality. But Adi Sankara uses the very same words to interpret non-dualistic meaning. Sankara further emphasizes that that the goal of this and other major Upanishads is to prove the sole reality of the non-dual Brahman and the un-substantiality of the jiva and the phenomenal universe. In his commentary of this Upanishad, Sankara’s introduction is a grand illustration of his broad canvas of arguments quoting lavishly from the srutis, smritis, puranas and Bhagavad Gita to establish his view.
There are still doubters expressing whether Sankara wrote the commentary which can never be resolved. Leaving these controversies to the scholars, this Upanishad does serve as a guide using a simple and lucid language provides a compelling logic. Dr. Radhakrishna in his book points out that this Upanishad “teaches the unity of the souls and the world in the one Supreme Reality treating it as an attempt to reconcile the different philosophical and religious views which prevailed at the time of its composition”.
With my warm regards,
Ram Chandran
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Sorry, Sundar-ji. These were not serious questions. I was being provocative because I did not accept the answer given by Sunil-ji. I expected readers to realize that.
From: 'Sundar Rajan' via advaitin <adva...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: 15 October 2020 06:20
To: adva...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [advaitin] Maya
Pranams Dennis-ji,
>>
Does each jIva live in his/her separate world? The multiple universe theory of modern science?
>>
In a very recent Q&A session, someone asks Swami Sarvapriyananda a very similar question “Why do we believe there is only one consciousness even though there are innumerable bodies and minds”
You can listen to the answer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=liHSgzovE9Y&feature=youtu.be&t=55m45s
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On Oct 17, 2020, at 12:55 PM, dwa...@advaita.org.uk wrote:
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Namaste Satsanghis:
We have been discussing the topic of Maya for several weeks with great participation and useful insights.
Here are my observations as a fellow member (definitely not as a moderator) with respect to discussions with the focus to understand Maya in the context of Sankara's Advaita Vedanta Philosophy. Everything that we all want to hear has been repeated with various scriptural references. Instead of discussing the subject matter for our spiritual progress, some have used most of their energy to engage in unresolvable arguments. It is a known fact that no agreeable position can ever be established through argumentative intellectual debates in a Cyber Satsangh. Few years back I have posted a message in this forum (as a part of Yahoogroup) to convey my thoughts.
In general, in any intellectual debates, we like to take positions that are usually opposite to each other. While engaging in an argument we tend to think that we are always more "right" than those who take a different position. The persons making the arguments most often have their own framework of thoughts (model) with unique parameters and assumptions that others don't agree or believe. Arguments arise when we are not willing to consider others' position as a potential possibility. Such a position is known as the right/wrong paradigm. The right/wrong paradigm in general can produce three possible outcomes: (1) proven right, (2) proven wrong, or (3) avoiding to be wrong.
While there may be a short term feeling of satisfaction when we think that we have convinced someone else is wrong, arguments rarely will lead us to long term gratification. Everyone in an argument wants to be "right" and tries hard to avoid being "wrong." This may explain why no one is actually listening. It is inevitable that we like to choose one of these two options: We either feel obligated to forfeit our position, or we refuse to give in and will fight harder and harder. The first option leads to resentment because though we gave in, we are not totally convinced of the other position. The winner also feels at a loss because the winner also was not fully "convinced."
The second option leads to "polarization," where two opposing parties find themselves in an egoistic self-fulfilling vicious cycle and take shelter at opposite end of the "pole." The more one party insists on a position, it encourages the other party to fight harder to be right and to resist being proven wrong. After several cycles of this polarization, arguments escalate and can become hurtful. This is when people say and do things they later regret. There is certainly no winner here. In the world of "right/wrong," there will be never any real winners. And if there can be no real winner, then why should we choose to get involved in a losing game?
Problems are best resolved when we agree to discuss together in a creative capacity to find useful insights that can benefit all. Creativity is only possible when we conduct our discussion that avoids escalating patterns of polarization. Arguments can only be effective if and when we force ourselves not to get caught up and trapped in right/wrong paradigm. An agreeable resolution will become feasible when the "right/wrong" paradigm gets transcended. If this doesn't happen within a reasonable time, we should be wise to put off our discussion and observe silence for few days until we cool down. We should take this time to train our mind to agree to listen to each other's points of view and look for a resolution that provides more insights.
How do we get out from the trap of the "right/wrong" paradigm? This is not easy and we need the will-power to invoke our true divine nature and open our mind to listen. We must determine to take a stand that our care for the other members is much more important than the cheap payoff of winning the debate. We must be willing to reach for something more fulfilling than the predictable mediocrity of proving ourselves right. And we need to have the courage to be the one willing to make this change, even in the face of those who desperately want to prove us wrong! When one of us rise above the right/wrong paradigm, the length of the pole will become smaller and ultimately the argument will likely end.
No matter how much someone else wants to "win," if we refuse to enter into the world of right and wrong, we will not get trapped in any argument. But we should recognize the fact that we cannot rise above this paradigm and avoid an argument if we entertain the thought that the person is wrong. If we do, we will likely back in that right/wrong world again. This is tricky and it is a bit of a paradox. No amount of wanting an argument to stop will ever stop, if our inner mind silently engages in judging the other person's intentions. We must take a stand that we will no longer participate in any endeavor that tears down others' beliefs and thoughts. When those who want to fight can't find a willing partner, they will be left only to face themselves. The argument will slowly disintegrate we will no longer be engaging in the losing game of arguing.
Here is a list of argument stoppers that we can employ:
You may be probably right.
What you have said is one way of looking at it.
I am more than happy to take your point into consideration.
I want to take little more time and I do plan to get back to you.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts and I respect what you have said.
Let's postpone and talk about this when both of us are calm.
I am able to see the subtlety of your thoughts.
I have come to the conclusion that arguing just isn't worth it.
Let's respect each other's position and agree to disagree.
Our opinions may differ but we can gain more by listening.
I have come to the conclusion that we don't gain by arguing.
With my warm regards,
Ram Chandran
Note: Please be assured that this message is not aimed at any person in particular. These are suggestive comments to warn me not to engage in endless debates!
Ramji - Apart from injecting some measure of diplomatic guidance into the discussion, this one caught my eyes "Our opinions may differ but we can gain more by listening".
It is said Shankara was a great
debater skillfully using ideas to neutralize other ideas and as the mind falls
silent, the continuum of listening is reactivated.
Listening from silence is free from self intention. Usually we listen selectively through the filter of our own past ideas, prejudices, fancies, expectations i.e. looking for a specific future results, but in silent listening nothing is objectified! One is simply open, multi-directional, in communion with intimations from the Brahmic whole - call it Bhakti or Divine love - and acting in accordance to these promptings.
Dave-ji,
Someone has revived Mandukya and Gaudapada kArikA-s for a Western audience – see http://www.advaita.org.uk/extracts/a_u_m_unreal.html.
(Thanks for prompt for a bit of marketing!) 😉
Best wishes,
Dennis
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Hi Vijay-ji,
This entire chapter is about ‘The World Appearance’. It covers the second chapter of Gaudapada’s kArikA-s, which is essentially expanding on the word prapa~nchopashamaM from the 7th mantra of the Upanishad. Gaudapada uses the word vaitathya as a synonym for mithyA and means that the world is not real ‘in itself’ – its real substrate is Brahman. The way he approaches this is by first showing that dreams are mithyA and then extrapolating that to the waking state. But the seeker has difficulty accepting this and puts forward a number of objections, which Gaudapada then shows to be unfounded. These objections are 1) that the waking world has utility, 2) that the dream world itself is real, being created by God and 3) that the waking world has objective reality, unlike dreams which only have apparent existence for the dreamer. It is this third objection that is being addressed by the extract at the link.
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: 'VIJAY KUMAR' via advaitin <adva...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: 18 October 2020 23:43
To: adva...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [advaitin] Maya
Hari om Dennis Ji
Wonderful Book. I clicked on the link you provided. Thanks. I read it from beginning to end. If I may, one slight correction to he heading
It says. "Third objection to world being unreal", I think it should be "Third Objection to work being Real" Because all the reasoning he is brining is in support of world being REAL.
Objection to "UNREAL" is, that it is "REAL".
Also on extreme top he says " Waking World is Unreal"- Dennis Waite. And he says the reverse at top left
"The World Appearance- Third objection to world being unreal" . One might get turned off, and not to read this article as a vedantin. I first thought it too, but I continued reading. Then I realized, he is with us not against us. He is one of us. Well explained. Wonderful explanation.
My Pranams to you
Vijay Kumar
.
Thanks for your kind comments, Dave!
There are a number of other extracts from the Appendices of the book available on-line.
1) Symbolism of the chin mudrA (the image on the cover of the book) - https://www.advaita-vision.org/chin-mudra/
2) A series of posts on the metaphor of chidAbhAsa - https://www.advaita-vision.org/chidabhasa/
3) Article showing that the concept of manonAsha is not intended to be taken literally - https://www.advaita-vision.org/manonasha-not-the-literal-death-of-the-mind/
There is also a review of the book at https://www.advaita-vision.org/a-u-m-awakening-to-reality-review-of-book/.
Some other, related posts are on eka-jIva-vAda – https://www.advaita-vision.org/the-devils-teaching-part-1/
and the number of ‘states of consciousness’ - https://www.advaita-vision.org/states-of-consciousness-2-3-4-and-1-2/
and the symbolism of OM - https://www.advaita-vision.org/om/
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: 'davesx' via advaitin <adva...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: 18 October 2020 22:31
To: adva...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [advaitin] Maya
This is simply amazing Dennisji..... Right in our own own backyard :-).
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Pranams,How does Advaitha explain the "order", "continuity" and constancy in the apparent world ?A dream (Swapna) isa) random and does not follow any rules of physics / time etc (no "order"),b) one dream does not continue with another ("lack continuity") andc) personal to each individual (Not consistent between two dreamers)Where does Maya get these qualities?a) The world as Jiva's experience follows certain rules always and everywhere ( laws of physics, chemistry and time )b) world as the Jivas in human form know, has been continuing with explainable changes for billions of yearsc) the laws of nature are (more or less) the same for all Jivas.If the jagath is due to Maya, Where does Maya get these qualities from? and Why?PranamsEkam.
Dear Vijay-ji,
I still do not understand what you are saying about the heading, I’m afraid. I did not see anything wrong. This is the heading that occurs in the book. As I said, it is addressing the third reason why people claim that the waking world is real. I.e. the pUrvapakShin’s objection to Gaudapada’s assertion that it is unreal. The overall heading ‘Waking World is Unreal’ is the colloquial statement of the actual truth – that the waking world appearance is mithyA; it is really only name and form of Brahman. I.e. brahma satyam, jaganmithyA, jIvo brahmaiva nAparaH.
Best wished,
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Hari Om
I looked one of the the links that was shared on Eka Jiva vada by Dennis and came across the last paragraph as
"And that is the start of a ‘slippery slope’ because, if you follow the idea further, you really start to get bogged down! We have recognized that the ‘objects’ in the world are only forms of Brahman, to which we assign names, thereby giving an appearance of duality where there is none. But logic dictates that this has to apply to other people as well (and to our own body-mind) – it means that ‘I’ am the only jIva. This, in turn, means that the world (and ‘other people’) will disappear as soon as I get enlightened. This theory has its own name – eka jIva vAda – and is not explicitly referred to until later still, principally in the work siddhAntalesha-saMgraha by Appaya DikShita in the 16th century CE."
"This, in turn, means that the world (and ‘other people’) will
disappear" should have been rephrased as "This, in turn, means
that the world (and ‘other people’) would now be discovered
as one large projection on me" I am Brahman."
Then this would be acceptable understanding of the eka-jiva-vada.
Om and With Prem
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-- Thank You Rammohan.Subramaniam Gmail.
Dear Shri Rammohan,
I don’t disagree with your rewording. This is precisely the point I have been making throughout the very long discussions at Advaita Vision – namely that the world ‘appearance’ continues after enlightenment. It is realized to be simply name and form of Brahman (‘Me’) but, nevertheless, it does NOT literally disappear. And, more particularly, the ‘other jIva-s’ in this appearance continue to function autonomously and the j~nAnI treats them as such, even though knowing that they are not separate entities. And I have pointed out that eka-jIva-vAda is the most egotistical belief imaginable because it is saying that ‘I am the only jIva in this illusory world and, once I am enlightened, all of the rest of you will be proved to be the result of my imagination’.
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: adva...@googlegroups.com <adva...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Rammohan Subramaniam
Sent: 25 November 2020 13:54
To: 'Akhil Garg' via advaitin <adva...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [advaitin] Maya
Hari Om
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Quite! I am carefully differentiating between the eka-jIva-vAda belief prior to realization and the knowledge that ‘I am Brahman’ after realization.
Best wishes,
Dennis
From: 'davesx' via advaitin <adva...@googlegroups.com>
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Dennis - PraNAms
Yes, from my understanding, it is the question of the reference state from which these statements are made.
Krishna states – mayaa tata midam sarvam jagat avyakta muurthinaa| mastaani sarva bhuutani na chaaham tesvavastitaH
From the point of jeevas there appears to be many and from the point of the absolute, there are no jeeva in Me. Look at my glory.
In the deep-sleep, everyone experiences the advaitic state – even though there is no knowledge of that state since instruments for knowledge at the individual level, the mind, is folded.
Hence Eka (jeeva) vaada is from the understanding of the absolute truth.
One can drop the word ‘Jeeva’ in that understanding. Hence Mandukya mantra 7 states that clearly as – prapanchopashamam, advaitam, chaturtam manyante – sa aatmaa – sa vijneyaH.
Hence understanding involves Ekatvam as the absolute truth.
Hari Om!
Sadananda
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Hari Om DAVE JI:
That it's "one large projection on me and I am Brahman" is still an idea...no?
No. One belongs to realm of truth other belongs to realm of illusion , they cannot be connected by 'idea' because the term 'ideas' belong only to the illusory realm. The term 'dissolves' also belongs to the realm of illusion . The only thing that transfers from Brahman to the World is Infinity, Existence,Consciousness which becomes as though limited in the illusion. Thus limitation is the illusion. What is dissolved is the illusory limitation which also belongs to the illusory realm.
Trust this makes sense.
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Hari Om Dave Ji
The correct example would be a long lost prince who was believed
to be a beggar and then realizes his true nature realizes the
"beggar" in him is an illusion even when contra-thoughts arise, he
falsifies them using his awareness of his true nature.
Namaste Shri Dennis ji,
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