Request for Review: 21 Foundational Axioms of Advaita Siddhānta

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Vikram Jagannathan

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Mar 7, 2026, 11:06:48 PMMar 7
to A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta, Advaitin
Namaskaram,

Through His grace, and as part of my ongoing Vedānta mananam, I have been pursuing a svādhyāya focused on a thorough analysis of Viśiṣṭādvaita’s criticisms of Advaita, alongside identifying Advaita's robust defense against these dialectical objections. As a prelude to this study, I have attempted to formulate a concise set of 21 axiomatic statements that, in my understanding, systematically capture the conceptual foundations of Advaita-siddhānta.

The set is divided into two distinct levels:
  • Level 1 - 3 Root Axioms: These are the most basic and irreducible foundational propositions, constituting the fundamental basis of Advaita Siddhanta.
  • Level 2 - 18 Explanatory Axioms: These are intended as derivative or explanatory formulations that systematically unpack and extend the implications of those foundational propositions across core themes such as the ontology of Brahman, the mechanics of avidyā, epistemology, and mokṣa.

The purpose of this formulation is not merely summarization, but conceptual testing: namely, to determine whether these 21 statements together yield a framework that is internally coherent, doctrinally faithful, and sufficiently precise to withstand major lines of criticism. My working hypothesis is that many criticisms directed at Advaita arise from ambiguity, incompleteness, or misunderstanding at the axiomatic level. Accordingly, this effort seeks to identify whether a sufficiently clear and rigorous foundational set can serve as a stable basis for subsequent defense and analysis.

I would be deeply grateful if the members of this group would kindly review these axioms and comment especially on the following points:
  • Their conceptual accuracy from the standpoint of Advaita-siddhānta
  • The extent to which the 18 explanatory axioms are valid derivations or expansions of the first 3
  • Whether any formulation is overstated, incomplete, imprecise, redundant, or potentially misleading
  • The grammatical correctness and appropriateness of the Sanskrit phrasing (samāsa, sandhi, syntax etc.)

I submit these formulations in a spirit of study and correction. Any comments, objections, refinements, or corrections from the learned members here would be sincerely valuable and gratefully received.

Many thanks in advance for your time and guidance.

Level 1: The Root Axioms

L1-1
ॐइत्येतत्प्रत्यगात्मा ब्रह्म; अभेदः।
oṃ ity etat pratyagātmā brahma; abhedaḥ.
Oṃ, this inner Self is Brahman; non-difference.

L1-2
अनाद्यध्यासोऽविद्यैव; अधिष्ठानज्ञानेन बाध्या।
anādy adhyāso'vidyaiva; adhiṣṭhāna-jñānena bādhyā.
Beginningless superimposition is avidyā itself; it is sublated by knowledge of the substratum.

L1-3
त्रिपुटीप्रत्ययात्मकव्यवहारो मिथ्या; बाध्यत्वात्।
tripuṭī-pratyayātmaka-vyavahāro mithyā; bādhyatvāt.
Transactional existence, being of the nature of triadic cognition, is mithyā; because of sublatability.

Level 2: Explanatory Axioms

Group 1: Ontology of Brahman

L2-1
परमार्थोऽभेदब्रह्म; व्यवहारस्त्रिपुटीप्रसिद्धः; तेन विरोधपरिहारः।
paramārtho'bheda-brahma; vyavahāras-tripuṭī-prasiddhaḥ; tena virodha-parihāraḥ.
The ultimate is non-different Brahman; transaction is established through the triad; thereby contradiction is resolved.

L2-2
अभेदवस्तु निर्विकारम्।
abheda-vastu nirvikāram.
The non-difference-entity is changeless.

L2-3
ब्रह्म स्वतःसिद्धं स्वयम्प्रकाशम्।
brahma svataḥ-siddhaṃ svayaṃprakāśam.
Brahman is self-established and self-luminous.

L2-4
कार्यं कारणादनन्यत्; नामरूपमात्रत्वात्।
kāryaṃ kāraṇād ananyat; nāma-rūpa-mātratvāt.
The effect is non-other than the cause; as it is merely name and form.

L2-5
व्यवहारे ब्रह्म विवर्तकारणम्; माया परिणामिनी।
vyavahāre brahma vivarta-kāraṇam; māyā pariṇāminī.
In Transactional existence, Brahman is the transfiguration-cause; māyā is what undergoes transformation.

L2-6
जीवजगदीश्वरसत्ता ब्रह्माश्रया परतन्त्रा।
jīva-jagad-īśvara-sattā brahmāśrayā paratantrā.
The existential reality of jīva, world, and Īśvara is dependent, resting on Brahman.

Group 2: Mechanics of Avidyā

L2-7
अविद्या भावरूपाप्यनिर्वचनीया; न द्रव्यम्; आश्रयवादो व्यवहारमात्रः।
avidyā bhāva-rūpa-apy anirvacanīyā; na dravyam; āśraya-vādo vyavahāra-mātraḥ.
Avidyā, though of positive appearance, is indescribable; it is not a substance; discussion about its locus is merely transactional.

L2-8
ज्ञातृकर्तृभोक्तृभावादिभेदप्रतीतिः सर्वाविद्याकृता।
jñātṛ-kartṛ-bhoktṛ-bhāvādi-bheda-pratītiḥ sarvāvidyā-kṛtā.
All appearance of difference, inclusive of the states of being a knower, doer, and enjoyer, etc., is caused by avidyā.

L2-9
अविद्यावरणविक्षेपशक्तिद्वयात्मिका; सुषुप्तावावरणप्राधान्यं, जाग्रत्स्वप्नयोर्विक्षेपात्मकोऽध्यासः।
avidyā-āvaraṇa-vikṣepa-śakti-dvayātmikā; suṣuptau āvaraṇa-prādhānyaṃ, jāgrat-svapnayor-vikṣepātmako'dhyāsaḥ.
Avidyā consists of the dual powers of concealment and projection; in deep sleep concealment is predominant, while in waking and dream superimposition is of the nature of projection.

L2-10
जीवोऽविद्योपाधिविशिष्टब्रह्म; ईश्वरो मायोपाधिविशिष्टब्रह्म; साक्षिचैतन्यमेकं सर्वत्र।
jīvo'vidyopādhi-viśiṣṭa-brahma; īśvaro māyopādhi-viśiṣṭa-brahma; sākṣi-caitanyam ekaṃ sarvatra.
The jīva is Brahman qualified by the adjunct of avidyā; Īśvara is Brahman qualified by the adjunct of māyā; witness-consciousness is one everywhere.

L2-11
मोक्षो बाधमात्रः; नोत्पत्तिः।
mokṣo bādha-mātraḥ; notpattiḥ.
Liberation is mere sublation; not a production.

L2-12
कर्मोपासनेऽन्तःकरणशुद्ध्यर्थम्; ज्ञानमेव बाधहेतुः।
karmopāsane'ntaḥkaraṇa-śuddhyartham; jñānam eva bādha-hetuḥ.
Action and upāsanā are for the purification of the inner-instrument; knowledge alone is the cause of sublation.

Group 3: Epistemology and Liberation

L2-13
जीवन्मुक्तेः प्रारब्धप्रतीतिस्तिष्ठति; व्यवहारसत्यताबुद्धिर्न तिष्ठति।
jīvanmukteḥ prārabdha-pratītis tiṣṭhati; vyavahāra-satyatā-buddhir na tiṣṭhati.
For the liberated while living, the appearance of prārabdha remains; belief in the reality of transactional existence does not remain.

L2-14
अनिर्वचनीयत्वं न च त्रिकालाबाधितत्वं न च त्रिकालाभावत्वम्।
anirvacanīyatvaṃ na ca trikālābādhitatvaṃ na ca trikālābhāvatvam.
Indescribability is neither non-sublatability in all three times nor non-existence in all three times.

L2-15
त्रिपुटीप्रमाणानि व्यवहारे प्रमाणानि; ब्रह्माप्रमेयम्।
tripuṭī-pramāṇāni vyavahāre pramāṇāni; brahmāprameyam.
Triadic means of knowledge are means in transactional existence; Brahman is not an object of knowledge.

L2-16
उपदेशक्रमे आरोपः; सिद्धान्तेऽपवादः।
upadeśa-krame āropaḥ; siddhānte'pavādaḥ.
In the teaching-sequence there is superimposition; in the conclusion there is rescission.

L2-17
श्रुतिवाक्यमभेदज्ञानजनकं त्रिपुटीबाधे पर्यवस्यति।
śruti-vākyam abheda-jñāna-janakaṃ tripuṭī-bādhe paryavasyati.
The sentence of śruti produces knowledge of non-difference and culminates in the sublation of the triad.

L2-18
महावाक्येषूपाधित्यागेनैक्यबोधः।
mahāvākyeṣu upādhi-tyāgena aikya-bodhaḥ.
In the mahāvākyas, the knowledge of unity arises through the abandonment of adjuncts.

prostrations,
Vikram

Sudhanshu Shekhar

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Mar 8, 2026, 12:18:36 AMMar 8
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Hare Krishna Vikram prabhu ji.

A very well-formulated presentation. I enjoyed reading it. Such efforts are very welcome and bring a new enthusiasm in the reader. Keep it up!

I will share my views on each of the assertions.

L1-1
ॐइत्येतत्प्रत्यगात्मा ब्रह्म; अभेदः।

Fine. 

L1-2
अनाद्यध्यासोऽविद्यैव; अधिष्ठानज्ञानेन बाध्या।

adhyAsa is effect while avidyA is cause. So, when we say adhyAsa is avidyA-eva, we should keep in mind that they are not synonyms. Rather, being effect, it can be indicated by name of cause. For e.g. a jeweller in his stock register refers all gold-ornaments as gold, all silver-ornaments as silver and mentions their cost in one go. Being effect of gold, there is no prejudice caused by referring the ornaments as gold. Similarly, being a product of avidyA, the adhyAsa is referred by the word "avidyA". I am sure by the word एव in avidyaa-eva, you mean the same. If not, then please clarify.

L1-3
त्रिपुटीप्रत्ययात्मकव्यवहारो मिथ्या; बाध्यत्वात्।

Fine. Here question arises as to how do we know that this tripuTi-vyavhAra is bAdhya. Being hetu, it's presence in paksha should not be something which can be disputed. Hence, we can explain, for better conception, that this bAdhyatva is seen by one and all in deep-sleep. Hence, no one should question the bAdhyatva of paksha.

L2-1
परमार्थोऽभेदब्रह्म; व्यवहारस्त्रिपुटीप्रसिद्धः; तेन विरोधपरिहारः।

Fine. 

L2-2
अभेदवस्तु निर्विकारम्।

Fine. 

L2-3
ब्रह्म स्वतःसिद्धं स्वयम्प्रकाशम्।

I feel this is not a derivation. This should also be kept in axiom category. Because, if swayam-siddha, swayam-prakAsha is kept in derived category, then it is against the assertion itself. 

L2-4
कार्यं कारणादनन्यत्; नामरूपमात्रत्वात्।

Not very convincing. What is the vyApti -- यत्र यत्र नामरूपमात्रत्वम्, तत्र तत्र कारणात्-अनन्यत्वम्? Isn't it? What is the drishTAnta? In the drishTAnta, how are we proving kAraNaAt-ananyatvam? Through nAma-rUpa-mAtratvam?

The kAraNaAt-ananyatvam comes about from the very definition of kArya.

So, I would rather say it like this --

कार्यं कारणात् न भिन्नम्; कार्यत्वात्, घटवत्।

L2-5
व्यवहारे ब्रह्म विवर्तकारणम्; माया परिणामिनी।

Fine. 

L2-6
जीवजगदीश्वरसत्ता ब्रह्माश्रया परतन्त्रा।

Fine. 

L2-7
अविद्या भावरूपाप्यनिर्वचनीया; न द्रव्यम्; आश्रयवादो व्यवहारमात्रः।

Fine.

L2-8
ज्ञातृकर्तृभोक्तृभावादिभेदप्रतीतिः सर्वाविद्याकृता।

Fine. 

L2-9
अविद्यावरणविक्षेपशक्तिद्वयात्मिका; सुषुप्तावावरणप्राधान्यं, जाग्रत्स्वप्नयोर्विक्षेपात्मकोऽध्यासः।

In jAgrat and swapna also, there is AvaraNa. May be a "च" or "अपि" can be added for clarification.

L2-10
जीवोऽविद्योपाधिविशिष्टब्रह्म; ईश्वरो मायोपाधिविशिष्टब्रह्म; साक्षिचैतन्यमेकं सर्वत्र।

Fine.

L2-11
मोक्षो बाधमात्रः; नोत्पत्तिः।

Fine. 

L2-12
कर्मोपासनेऽन्तःकरणशुद्ध्यर्थम्; ज्ञानमेव बाधहेतुः।

Fine. 

L2-13
जीवन्मुक्तेः प्रारब्धप्रतीतिस्तिष्ठति; व्यवहारसत्यताबुद्धिर्न तिष्ठति।

Fine in SDV. Inadmissible in DSV.

L2-14
अनिर्वचनीयत्वं न च त्रिकालाबाधितत्वं न च त्रिकालाभावत्वम्।

This is not correct as per my understanding. TrikAla-abhAva is common to tuchchha and anirvachanIya. So, to say अनिर्वचनीयत्वं न त्रिकालाभावत्वम् - is not correct.

Correct formulation would be -- अनिर्वचनीयत्वं न त्रिकालाबाधितत्वं न च क्वचिदपि उपाधौ सत्त्वेन प्रतीत्यनर्हत्वम्।

L2-15
त्रिपुटीप्रमाणानि व्यवहारे प्रमाणानि; ब्रह्माप्रमेयम्।

Fine.

L2-16
उपदेशक्रमे आरोपः; सिद्धान्तेऽपवादः।

Fine.

L2-17
श्रुतिवाक्यमभेदज्ञानजनकं त्रिपुटीबाधे पर्यवस्यति।

Fine. 

L2-18
महावाक्येषूपाधित्यागेनैक्यबोधः।

This is fine in mukhya-sAmAnAdhikaraNya. In bAdha-sAmAnAdhikaraNya, there is swarUpa-negation and not merely upAdhi-negation. 

So, take for e.g. Tat tvam asi. In mukhya-sAmAnAdhikaraNya, as you said, the aikya is arrived at by rejecting the upAdhi from tat and tvam. But in bAdha-sAmAnAdhikaraNya, tvam is negated in its totality and not merely upAdhi. 

Regards.
Sudhanshu Shekhar.

Vikram Jagannathan

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Mar 9, 2026, 3:40:46 PMMar 9
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Namaskaram Sudhanshu ji,

Many thanks for the thorough review and guidance. I have incorporated the feedback. Updated statements below.

---

L1-2: Yes, precisely. The use of 'eva' indicates that the effect, 'adhyasa,' is referred to by the word 'avidya,' which is its cause. The intended point is that the operation of avidya is understood primarily in the form of adhyasa. This stands in contrast to several other Vedanta schools, where avidya is more closely identified with Karma (residual impressions, not action). That distinction alone significantly changes the nature of sadhana. Adhyasa-avidya is removed through right knowledge alone (jnana eva), whereas Karma-avidya is exhausted through action guided by right knowledge, that is, through some form of jnana-karma-samucchaya.

L1-3
त्रिपुटीप्रत्ययात्मकव्यवहारो मिथ्या; अखण्डाकारज्ञानेन बाध्यः
tripuṭī-pratyayātmaka-vyavahāro mithyā; akhaṇḍākāra-jñānena bādhyaḥ.
Transactional existence, being of the nature of triadic cognition, is mithyā; it is sublated by impartite cognition.

---

L1 statements are among the most important, yet also among the most overlooked, misunderstood, and misinterpreted aspects of Advaita Siddhanta. L1-1 clarifies that Atman-Brahman is abheda, free from distinction in the sajatiya, vijatiya, and svagata senses. Most other schools retain some form of bheda. L1-2 clarifies the nature and operation of avidya, and thereby also clarifies the nature of moksha-sadhana, as explained above. L1-3 establishes that the scope of triputi-vyavahara is mithya and badhya; by contrast, most other schools treat vyavahara as a form of paramarthika satya, and therefore misinterpret suddha-chaitanya through the lens of triputi-anubhava. These three terms - abheda, adhyasa, and mithya - firmly establish Advaita Siddhanta.

---

L2-3: Agreed, that is an axiomatic statement rather than a derivation / explanation. I included it in L2 not because it is perhaps a derivative, but because it is generally accepted within Vedanta schools, and typically contrasts only with other darshanas. Updated to explain Brahman as Consciousness.
ब्रह्म चैतन्यम्; स्वतःसिद्धं स्वयम्प्रकाशम्।
brahma caitanyam; svataḥ-siddhaṃ svayaṃprakāśam.
Brahman is consciousness; self-established and self-luminous.

L2-4: Incorporated feedback, and retained 'ananyat' in alignment with BS-2.1.14
कार्यं कारणादनन्यत्; नामरूपविकारमात्रम्।
kāryaṃ kāraṇād ananyat; nāma-rūpa-vikāra-mātram.
The effect is non-other than the cause; it is merely a change in name and form.

L2-9
अविद्यावरणविक्षेपशक्तिद्वयात्मिका; सुषुप्तावावरणप्राधान्यं, जाग्रत्स्वप्नयोरावरणविक्षेपात्मकोऽध्यासः।
avidyā-āvaraṇa-vikṣepa-śakti-dvayātmikā; suṣuptau āvaraṇa-prādhānyaṃ, jāgrat-svapnayor-āvaraṇa-vikṣepātmako'dhyāsaḥ.
Avidyā consists of the dual powers of concealment and projection; in deep sleep concealment is predominant, while in waking and dream superimposition is of the nature of concealment and projection.

L2-13: Agreed, that is inadmissible in DSV. The intended scope of this statement is within SDV which attracts the most criticism from other schools.

L2-14: Yes, this is a mistake and I overlooked this subtle but pertinent nuance. Thank you for catching this. We know well that it is sad-asad-vilakshanam; I wanted to make it an explicit neither... nor... statement referencing time, with an implicit definition of sat and asat. Update the statement.
अनिर्वचनीयत्वं न च त्रिकालाबाधितत्वं न चाप्रतीयमानत्रिकालाभावत्वम्
anirvacanīyatvaṃ na ca trikālābādhitatvaṃ na ca-apratīyamāna-trikālābhāvatvam
Indescribability is neither non-sublatability in all three times nor non-manifest non-existence in all three times.

L2-18: Yes, the intent is to explain Advaita Siddhanta through upadhi-negation, contrasting with most other Vedanta schools that retain upadhi-bheda in the maha-vakya interpretation. I will also need to read and understand more about svarupa-negation in badha-samanadhikaranyam.

---

retaining the rest as-is.

With full gratitude, prostrations
Vikram


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Sudhanshu Shekhar

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Mar 9, 2026, 10:06:32 PMMar 9
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Namaste Vikram ji.

I am in agreement with the write-up.

Regards.
Sudhanshu Shekhar.

Vikram Jagannathan

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Mar 9, 2026, 11:34:38 PMMar 9
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Dhanyosmi, Sudhanshu ji!

I am re-listing the updated formulations for other esteemed members' review & opinion.

Level 1
Foundation of Advaita Siddhānta


L1-1
ॐइत्येतत्प्रत्यगात्मा ब्रह्म; अभेदः।
oṃ ity-etat-pratyagātmā brahma; abhedaḥ.

Oṃ, this inner Self is Brahman; non-difference.

L1-2
अनाद्यध्यासोऽविद्यैव; अधिष्ठानज्ञानेन बाध्या।
anādy-adhyāso’vidyaiva; adhiṣṭhāna-jñānena bādhyā.

Beginningless superimposition is avidyā itself; it is sublated by knowledge of the substratum.

L1-3
त्रिपुटीप्रत्ययात्मकव्यवहारो मिथ्या; अखण्डाकारज्ञानेन बाध्यः।
tripuṭī-pratyayātmaka-vyavahāro mithyā; akhaṇḍākāra-jñānena bādhyaḥ.
Transactional existence, being of the nature of triadic cognition, is mithyā; it is sublated by impartite cognition.

Level 2
Exposition of Advaita Siddhānta


L2-1
परमार्थोऽभेदब्रह्म; व्यवहारस्त्रिपुटीप्रसिद्धः; तेन विरोधपरिहारः।
paramārtho'bheda-brahma; vyavahāras-tripuṭī-prasiddhaḥ; tena virodha-parihāraḥ.
The ultimate is non-different Brahman; transaction is established through the triad; thereby contradiction is resolved.

L2-2
अभेदवस्तु निर्विकारम्।
abheda-vastu nirvikāram.
The non-difference-entity is changeless.

L2-3
ब्रह्म चैतन्यम्; स्वतःसिद्धं स्वयम्प्रकाशम्।
brahma caitanyam; svataḥ-siddhaṃ svayaṃ-prakāśam.

Brahman is consciousness; self-established and self-luminous.

L2-4
कार्यं कारणादनन्यत्; नामरूपविकारमात्रम्।
kāryaṃ kāraṇād-ananyat; nāma-rūpa-vikāra-mātram.
The effect is non-other than the cause; it is merely a modification in name-form.


L2-5
व्यवहारे ब्रह्म विवर्तकारणम्; माया परिणामिनी।
vyavahāre brahma vivarta-kāraṇam; māyā pariṇāminī.
In Transactional existence, Brahman is the transfiguration-cause; māyā is what undergoes transformation.

L2-6
जीवजगदीश्वरसत्ता ब्रह्माश्रया परतन्त्रा।
jīva-jagad-īśvara-sattā brahmāśrayā paratantrā.
The existential reality of jīva, world, and Īśvara is dependent, resting on Brahman.

L2-7
अविद्या भावरूपाप्यनिर्वचनीया; न द्रव्यम्; आश्रयवादो व्यवहारमात्रः।
avidyā bhāva-rūpa-apy anirvacanīyā; na dravyam; āśraya-vādo vyavahāra-mātraḥ.
Avidyā, though of positive appearance, is indescribable; it is not a substance; discussion about its locus is merely transactional.

L2-8
ज्ञातृकर्तृभोक्तृभावादिभेदप्रतीतिः सर्वाविद्याकृता।
jñātṛ-kartṛ-bhoktṛ-bhāvādi-bheda-pratītiḥ sarvā-avidyā-kṛtā.

All appearance of difference, inclusive of the states of being a knower, doer, and enjoyer, etc., is caused by avidyā.

L2-9
अविद्यावरणविक्षेपशक्तिद्वयात्मिका; सुषुप्तावावरणप्राधान्यं, जाग्रत्स्वप्नयोरावरणविक्षेपात्मकोऽध्यासः।
avidyā-āvaraṇa-vikṣepa-śakti-dvayātmikā; suṣuptau-āvaraṇa-prādhānyaṃ, jāgrat-svapnayor-āvaraṇa-vikṣepātmako'dhyāsaḥ.

Avidyā consists of the dual powers of concealment and projection; in deep sleep concealment is predominant, while in waking and dream superimposition is of the nature of concealment and projection.

L2-10
जीवोऽविद्योपाधिविशिष्टब्रह्म; ईश्वरो मायोपाधिविशिष्टब्रह्म; साक्षिचैतन्यमेकं सर्वत्र।
jīvo'vidyopādhi-viśiṣṭa-brahma; īśvaro māyopādhi-viśiṣṭa-brahma; sākṣi-caitanyam ekaṃ sarvatra.
The jīva is Brahman qualified by the adjunct of avidyā; Īśvara is Brahman qualified by the adjunct of māyā; witness-consciousness is one everywhere.

L2-11
मोक्षो बाधमात्रः; नोत्पत्तिः।
mokṣo bādha-mātraḥ; notpattiḥ.
Liberation is mere sublation; not a production.

L2-12
कर्मोपासनेऽन्तःकरणशुद्ध्यर्थम्; ज्ञानमेव बाधहेतुः।
karmopāsane'ntaḥkaraṇa-śuddhyartham; jñānam-eva bādha-hetuḥ.

Action and upāsanā are for the purification of the inner-instrument; knowledge alone is the cause of sublation.

L2-13
जीवन्मुक्तेः प्रारब्धप्रतीतिस्तिष्ठति; व्यवहारसत्यताबुद्धिर्न तिष्ठति।
jīvanmukteḥ prārabdha-pratītis-tiṣṭhati; vyavahāra-satyatā-buddhir-na tiṣṭhati.

For the liberated while living, the appearance of prārabdha remains; belief in the reality of transactional existence does not remain.

L2-14

अनिर्वचनीयत्वं न च त्रिकालाबाधितत्वं न चाप्रतीयमानत्रिकालाभावत्वम्।
anirvacanīyatvaṃ na ca trikāla-abādhitatvaṃ na ca-apratīyamāna-trikāla-abhāvatvam.

Indescribability is neither non-sublatability in all three times nor non-manifest non-existence in all three times.

L2-15
त्रिपुटीप्रमाणानि व्यवहारे प्रमाणानि; ब्रह्माप्रमेयम्।
tripuṭī-pramāṇāni vyavahāre pramāṇāni; brahmāprameyam.
Triadic means of knowledge are means in transactional existence; Brahman is not an object of knowledge.

L2-16
उपदेशक्रमे आरोपः; सिद्धान्तेऽपवादः।
upadeśa-krame āropaḥ; siddhānte'pavādaḥ.
In the teaching-sequence there is superimposition; in the conclusion there is rescission.

L2-17
श्रुतिवाक्यमभेदज्ञानजनकं त्रिपुटीबाधे पर्यवस्यति।
śruti-vākyam-abheda-jñāna-janakaṃ tripuṭī-bādhe paryavasyati.

The sentence of śruti produces knowledge of non-difference and culminates in the sublation of the triad.

L2-18
महावाक्येषूपाधित्यागेनैक्यबोधः।
mahāvākyeṣu-upādhi-tyāgena-aikya-bodhaḥ.

In the mahāvākyas, the knowledge of unity arises through the abandonment of adjuncts.

prostrations,
Vikram

Vikram Jagannathan

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Mar 9, 2026, 11:36:02 PMMar 9
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Dhanyosmi, Sudhanshu ji!

I am re-listing the updated formulations for other esteemed members' review & opinion.

Level 1
Foundation of Advaita Siddhānta

L1-1
ॐइत्येतत्प्रत्यगात्मा ब्रह्म; अभेदः।
oṃ ity-etat-pratyagātmā brahma; abhedaḥ.

Oṃ, this inner Self is Brahman; non-difference.

L1-2
अनाद्यध्यासोऽविद्यैव; अधिष्ठानज्ञानेन बाध्या।
anādy-adhyāso’vidyaiva; adhiṣṭhāna-jñānena bādhyā.

Beginningless superimposition is avidyā itself; it is sublated by knowledge of the substratum.

L1-3
त्रिपुटीप्रत्ययात्मकव्यवहारो मिथ्या; अखण्डाकारज्ञानेन बाध्यः।
tripuṭī-pratyayātmaka-vyavahāro mithyā; akhaṇḍākāra-jñānena bādhyaḥ.
Transactional existence, being of the nature of triadic cognition, is mithyā; it is sublated by impartite cognition.

Level 2
Exposition of Advaita Siddhānta

L2-1
परमार्थोऽभेदब्रह्म; व्यवहारस्त्रिपुटीप्रसिद्धः; तेन विरोधपरिहारः।
paramārtho'bheda-brahma; vyavahāras-tripuṭī-prasiddhaḥ; tena virodha-parihāraḥ.
The ultimate is non-different Brahman; transaction is established through the triad; thereby contradiction is resolved.

L2-2
अभेदवस्तु निर्विकारम्।
abheda-vastu nirvikāram.
The non-difference-entity is changeless.

L2-3
ब्रह्म चैतन्यम्; स्वतःसिद्धं स्वयम्प्रकाशम्।
brahma caitanyam; svataḥ-siddhaṃ svayaṃ-prakāśam.

Brahman is consciousness; self-established and self-luminous.

L2-4
कार्यं कारणादनन्यत्; नामरूपविकारमात्रम्।
kāryaṃ kāraṇād-ananyat; nāma-rūpa-vikāra-mātram.
The effect is non-other than the cause; it is merely a modification in name-form.


L2-5
व्यवहारे ब्रह्म विवर्तकारणम्; माया परिणामिनी।
vyavahāre brahma vivarta-kāraṇam; māyā pariṇāminī.
In Transactional existence, Brahman is the transfiguration-cause; māyā is what undergoes transformation.

L2-6
जीवजगदीश्वरसत्ता ब्रह्माश्रया परतन्त्रा।
jīva-jagad-īśvara-sattā brahmāśrayā paratantrā.
The existential reality of jīva, world, and Īśvara is dependent, resting on Brahman.

L2-7
अविद्या भावरूपाप्यनिर्वचनीया; न द्रव्यम्; आश्रयवादो व्यवहारमात्रः।
avidyā bhāva-rūpa-apy anirvacanīyā; na dravyam; āśraya-vādo vyavahāra-mātraḥ.
Avidyā, though of positive appearance, is indescribable; it is not a substance; discussion about its locus is merely transactional.

L2-8
ज्ञातृकर्तृभोक्तृभावादिभेदप्रतीतिः सर्वाविद्याकृता।
jñātṛ-kartṛ-bhoktṛ-bhāvādi-bheda-pratītiḥ sarvā-avidyā-kṛtā.

All appearance of difference, inclusive of the states of being a knower, doer, and enjoyer, etc., is caused by avidyā.

L2-9
अविद्यावरणविक्षेपशक्तिद्वयात्मिका; सुषुप्तावावरणप्राधान्यं, जाग्रत्स्वप्नयोरावरणविक्षेपात्मकोऽध्यासः।
avidyā-āvaraṇa-vikṣepa-śakti-dvayātmikā; suṣuptau-āvaraṇa-prādhānyaṃ, jāgrat-svapnayor-āvaraṇa-vikṣepātmako'dhyāsaḥ.

Avidyā consists of the dual powers of concealment and projection; in deep sleep concealment is predominant, while in waking and dream superimposition is of the nature of concealment and projection.

L2-10
जीवोऽविद्योपाधिविशिष्टब्रह्म; ईश्वरो मायोपाधिविशिष्टब्रह्म; साक्षिचैतन्यमेकं सर्वत्र।
jīvo'vidyopādhi-viśiṣṭa-brahma; īśvaro māyopādhi-viśiṣṭa-brahma; sākṣi-caitanyam ekaṃ sarvatra.
The jīva is Brahman qualified by the adjunct of avidyā; Īśvara is Brahman qualified by the adjunct of māyā; witness-consciousness is one everywhere.

L2-11
मोक्षो बाधमात्रः; नोत्पत्तिः।
mokṣo bādha-mātraḥ; notpattiḥ.
Liberation is mere sublation; not a production.

L2-12
कर्मोपासनेऽन्तःकरणशुद्ध्यर्थम्; ज्ञानमेव बाधहेतुः।
karmopāsane'ntaḥkaraṇa-śuddhyartham; jñānam-eva bādha-hetuḥ.

Action and upāsanā are for the purification of the inner-instrument; knowledge alone is the cause of sublation.

L2-13
जीवन्मुक्तेः प्रारब्धप्रतीतिस्तिष्ठति; व्यवहारसत्यताबुद्धिर्न तिष्ठति।
jīvanmukteḥ prārabdha-pratītis-tiṣṭhati; vyavahāra-satyatā-buddhir-na tiṣṭhati.

For the liberated while living, the appearance of prārabdha remains; belief in the reality of transactional existence does not remain.

L2-14

अनिर्वचनीयत्वं न च त्रिकालाबाधितत्वं न चाप्रतीयमानत्रिकालाभावत्वम्।
anirvacanīyatvaṃ na ca trikāla-abādhitatvaṃ na ca-apratīyamāna-trikāla-abhāvatvam.

Indescribability is neither non-sublatability in all three times nor non-manifest non-existence in all three times.

L2-15
त्रिपुटीप्रमाणानि व्यवहारे प्रमाणानि; ब्रह्माप्रमेयम्।
tripuṭī-pramāṇāni vyavahāre pramāṇāni; brahmāprameyam.
Triadic means of knowledge are means in transactional existence; Brahman is not an object of knowledge.

L2-16
उपदेशक्रमे आरोपः; सिद्धान्तेऽपवादः।
upadeśa-krame āropaḥ; siddhānte'pavādaḥ.
In the teaching-sequence there is superimposition; in the conclusion there is rescission.

L2-17
श्रुतिवाक्यमभेदज्ञानजनकं त्रिपुटीबाधे पर्यवस्यति।
śruti-vākyam-abheda-jñāna-janakaṃ tripuṭī-bādhe paryavasyati.

The sentence of śruti produces knowledge of non-difference and culminates in the sublation of the triad.

L2-18
महावाक्येषूपाधित्यागेनैक्यबोधः।
mahāvākyeṣu-upādhi-tyāgena-aikya-bodhaḥ.

In the mahāvākyas, the knowledge of unity arises through the abandonment of adjuncts.

prostrations,
Vikram

H S Chandramouli

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Mar 10, 2026, 6:45:14 AMMar 10
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Namaste Vikram Ji and Sudhanshu Ji,

Reg  //  L1-2


अनाद्यध्यासोऽविद्यैव; अधिष्ठानज्ञानेन बाध्या

adhyAsa is effect while avidyA is cause. So, when we say adhyAsa is avidyA-eva, we should keep in mind that they are not synonyms. Rather, being effect, it can be indicated by name of cause. For e.g. a jeweller in his stock register refers all gold-ornaments as gold, all silver-ornaments as silver and mentions their cost in one go. Being effect of gold, there is no prejudice caused by referring the ornaments as gold. Similarly, being a product of avidyA, the adhyAsa is referred by the word "avidyA". I am sure by the word एव in avidyaa-eva, you mean the same. If not, then please clarify //,

Which one is anAdi ; adhyAsa or avidyA ? cause or effect ? Or can both be anAdi?. 

In gold-ornaments illustration, both gold and ornament are sAdi ( have a beginning ).

Regards

Sudhanshu Shekhar

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Mar 10, 2026, 7:51:15 AMMar 10
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Namaste Chandramouli ji.

Which one is anAdi ; adhyAsa or avidyA ? cause or effect ? Or can both be anAdi?. 

In gold-ornaments illustration, both gold and ornament are sAdi ( have a beginning ).


There are two types of adhyAsa. One, anAdi-adhyAsa and second sAdi-adhyAsa.

adhyAsa of ajnAna in AtmA is referred as ajnAna-adhyAsa. This is anAdi.

Other adhyAsAs are sAdi-adhyAsa. They are also referred to as कादाचित्क-अध्यास. aham-adhyAsa is first such sAdi-adhyAsa.

Reference from VivaraNa:

निष्कलङ्कचैतन्यैकताने निरंशानन्दैकरसे अज्ञानादिसाक्षिणि अनादिसिद्धेऽपि अज्ञानाध्यासे, कादाचित्कमध्यासमाश्रित्य आह--अहमिति तावत् प्रथमोऽध्यासः इति।।

Regards.
Sudhanshu Shekhar.

H S Chandramouli

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Mar 10, 2026, 8:38:01 AMMar 10
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Namaste Sudhanshu Ji,

Should not the vivaraNa quote by you be understood as first sdyAsa in terms of understanding, and not in terms of time. In words should not the Atma-anAtma adhyAsa, termed naisargika in the adhyAsa bhAshya be understood as anAdi, and not sAdi as stated by you.

Regards

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H S Chandramouli

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Mar 10, 2026, 8:39:31 AMMar 10
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A correction.

Please read ** sdyAsa ** as **adhyAsa **.

Regret typo.

Regards

Sudhanshu Shekhar

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Mar 10, 2026, 9:11:21 AMMar 10
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What is the meaning of कादाचित्क Chandramouli ji? It refers to kArya-adhyAsa.

Also, please check VivaraNa:

अध्यास-प्रवाह-जन्मना उपादान-कारण-रूपेण नैसर्गिकत्वम् (अनादित्वम्)

कार्य-व्यक्ति-रूपेण नैमित्तिकत्वम् (सादित्वम्)

Please also check Prabodha-Parishodhini commentary on Panchapadika which clearly uses the term anAditva and sAditva.




So, it is clear that description of sAdi-adhyAsa and anAdi-adhyAsa is being made in terms of time. Also, kArya-vyakti is sAdi, having a beginning in terms of time.


Regards.
Sudhanshu Shekhar.

H S Chandramouli

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Mar 10, 2026, 10:36:10 AMMar 10
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Namaste Sudhanshu Ji,

Certainly I am not denying sAdi adhyAsa and anAdi adhyAsa. But all adhyAsa should not be classified as effect, and hence *follows* cause, in terms of time. There is anAdyadhyAsa which is not an *effect* meaning that it *follows* a cause in terms of time.

Aham-adhyAsa basically is jIva. And jIva is anAdi.

This is how I have framed my understanding of BhAshya. As for the references you have cited, I certainly believe they should be understood in the particular context in which they are made. I am unable to offer any comments at this stage as my knowledge of Sanskrit is limited, and I may not be able to understand those portions in a reasonable time. If and when I am in a position to do so, I will refer back.

Regards

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Sudhanshu Shekhar

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Mar 10, 2026, 12:06:46 PMMar 10
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Namaste Chandramouli ji.

Certainly I am not denying sAdi adhyAsa and anAdi adhyAsa. But all adhyAsa should not be classified as effect, and hence *follows* cause, in terms of time. There is anAdyadhyAsa which is not an *effect* meaning that it *follows* a cause in terms of time.

There are two types of adhyAsa. One, kAraNa-adhyAsa and second kArya-adhyAsa. When I say that adhyAsa is kArya, I meant kArya-adhyAsa only. 

The adhyAsa of ajnAna in AtmA is kAraNa-adhyAsa. It is anAdi and is hence not an effect. Hope it is clear.

Aham-adhyAsa basically is jIva. And jIva is anAdi.


This is wrong. aham-adhyAsa is not anAdi. It is absent in sushupti and is the first kArya-adhyAsa in waking and dream. It is sAdi.

Further, I am not sure how you equated jIva with aham-adhyAsa. JIva is pratibimba of chaitanya in avidyA. 

This is how I have framed my understanding of BhAshya. As for the references you have cited, I certainly believe they should be understood in the particular context in which they are made. I am unable to offer any comments at this stage as my knowledge of Sanskrit is limited, and I may not be able to understand those portions in a reasonable time. If and when I am in a position to do so, I will refer back.

Ok.

Regards.
Sudhanshu Shekhar.

H S Chandramouli

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Mar 11, 2026, 11:37:17 AMMar 11
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Namaste Sudhanshu Ji,

The following response may not be in exact sequential order.

Reg  // This is wrong. aham-adhyAsa is not anAdi. It is absent in sushupti and is the first kArya-adhyAsa in waking and dream. It is sAdi //,

Following is from VivaraNa Prameya Samgraha

//  तर्ह्यहङ्कारः किमुपादानः ? किंनिमित्तः ? किंस्वरूपः ? किम्प्रमाणकः ? किंकार्यः ? किमिति सुषुप्तौ नास्तीति चेत्, उच्यते – अहङ्कारस्याऽनाद्यनिर्वचनीयाऽविद्या उपादानम्, अविद्यायाः परमेश्वराधिष्ठितत्वं निमित्तम्, ज्ञानशक्तिक्रियाशक्तिद्वयं स्वरूपम्, कूटस्थचैतन्यं प्रमाणम्, कर्तृत्वभोक्तृत्वादिकं कार्यम्  //

//  tarhyaha~NkAraH kimupAdAnaH ? kiMnimittaH ? kiMsvarUpaH ? kimpramANakaH ? kiMkAryaH ? kimiti suShuptau nAstIti chet, uchyate – aha~NkArasyA.anAdyanirvachanIyA.avidyA upAdAnam, avidyAyAH parameshvarAdhiShThitatvaM nimittam, j~nAnashaktikriyAshaktidvayaM svarUpam, kUTasthachaitanyaM pramANam, kartRRitvabhoktRRitvAdikaM cha kAryam |//

Highlighting is mine. This may be read in conjunction with the following citation from SiddhAnta Bindu , Shloka 1. This further clarifies what the previous quotes above convey.

//  तस्मात्पूर्वपूर्वाध्यासमूल एवायमुत्तरोत्तरोहङ्काराध्यासः बीजांकुरवदनादिःअविद्याध्यासच एक एवानादिः //  tasmAtpUrvapUrvAdhyAsamUla evAyamuttarottaroha~NkArAdhyAsaH bIjAMkuravadanAdiH | avidyAdhyAsacha eka evAnAdiH  //.

The same meaning is conveyed by the citation from Prabodha-Parishodhini commentary on Panchapadika given by you.

These confirm my understanding. They also address some other points made by you. For the benefit of readers not familiar with Sanskrit, I request you to give the exact translations for the portion cited by me. While I can give the summary meaning to the extant I understand, I may not be able to give exact translation.

I am not sure what Vikram Ji wanted to convey by L1-2  // अनाद्यध्यासोऽविद्यैव; अधिष्ठानज्ञानेन बाध्या //. The quote from Siddhanta Bindu I have cited above ** अविद्याध्यासच एक एवानादिः ** (avidyAdhyAsacha eka evAnAdiH ) is practically the same.

Regards

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Sudhanshu Shekhar

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Mar 12, 2026, 7:01:25 AMMar 12
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Namaste Chandramouli ji.

//These confirm my understanding. They also address some other points made by you. For the benefit of readers not familiar with Sanskrit, I request you to give the exact translations for the portion cited by me. While I can give the summary meaning to the extant I understand, I may not be able to give exact translation.//

I will summarise your points. Please confirm whether they have been correctly reproduced:
  1. sAdi-adhyAsa and anAdi-adhyAsa division is accepted.
  2. All adhyAsa are not effect.
  3. There is "an" anAdi-adhyAsa, which is not effect.
  4. aham-adhyAsa is jIva.
  5. jIva is anAdi.
  6. aham-adhyAsa is spoken by VivaraNa as "first" in terms of understanding, and not in terms of time.
  7. Atma-anAtma adhyAsa, termed naisargika in the adhyAsa bhAshya be understood as anAdi, and not sAdi.
Translations of cited portions:
 

//  तर्ह्यहङ्कारः किमुपादानः ? किंनिमित्तः ? किंस्वरूपः ? किम्प्रमाणकः ? किंकार्यः ? किमिति सुषुप्तौ नास्तीति चेत्, उच्यते – अहङ्कारस्याऽनाद्यनिर्वचनीयाऽविद्या उपादानम्, अविद्यायाः परमेश्वराधिष्ठितत्वं निमित्तम्, ज्ञानशक्तिक्रियाशक्तिद्वयं स्वरूपम्, कूटस्थचैतन्यं प्रमाणम्, कर्तृत्वभोक्तृत्वादिकं कार्यम्  //


Then, what is the material cause of ahamkAra? What is the nimitta-kAraNa of ahamkAra? What is the swarUpa of ahamkAra? What is the pramANa for ahamkAra? What are the effects of ahamkAra? Whether it exists in deep sleep or not?

In response to these, it is said -

1. Beginningless anirvachanIya-avidyA is the material cause of ahamkAra. 
2. The nimitta-kAraNa of ahamkAra is the locus-hood of avidyA in Parameshwara.
3. The swarUpa of ahamkAra is the conglomerate of kriyA-shakti and jnAna-shakti.
4. The pramANa for ahamkAra is immutable chaitanya.
5. The effects of ahamkAra are kartritva, bhOktritva etc.   

Highlighting is mine. This may be read in conjunction with the following citation from SiddhAnta Bindu , Shloka 1. This further clarifies what the previous quotes above convey.

//  तस्मात्पूर्वपूर्वाध्यासमूल एवायमुत्तरोत्तरोहङ्काराध्यासः बीजांकुरवदनादिःअविद्याध्यासच एक एवानादिः //  tasmAtpUrvapUrvAdhyAsamUla evAyamuttarottaroha~NkArAdhyAsaH bIjAMkuravadanAdiH | avidyAdhyAsacha eka evAnAdiH  //.

The same meaning is conveyed by the citation from Prabodha-Parishodhini commentary on Panchapadika given by you.

Therefore, subsequent ahamkAra-adhyAsa is rooted in prior-adhyAsa and is beginningless like that in the case of seed and seedling. And only avidyA-adhyAsa alone is beginningless. 

Please state your concurrence to my summarization of your view and the translations. I will offer my comments subsequent thereto.

Regards.
Sudhanshu Shekhar.

 

H S Chandramouli

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Mar 13, 2026, 6:49:12 AMMar 13
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Namaste Sudhanshu Ji,

Thanks for the translation.

As also for summarizing my understanding of the issues. By and large it is a fair presentation of my understanding. A few corrections would be in order.

Reg  // aham-adhyAsa is spoken by VivaraNa as "first" in terms of understanding, and not in terms of time //,

I have not studied vivaraNa per se as a text. But I have come across such statements as above in different texts in bits and parts during my study of the Bhashya. And I have understood them as stated above. I just looked through some just now for a recap and came across the following in PanchapAdika, VarNaka 1. I believe this represents my understanding. ( Emphasis mine ).

//   कस्य धर्मिणः कथं कुत्र अध्यासः ? धर्ममात्रस्य वा क्व अध्यासः ? इति भाष्यकारः स्वयमेव वक्ष्यति  

अहमिदं ममेदम् इति  अध्यासस्य स्वरूपं दर्शयति अहमिति तावत् प्रथमोऽध्यासः  ननु अहमिति निरंशं चैतन्यमात्रं प्रतिभासते, अंशान्तरम् अध्यस्तं वा यथा अध्यस्तांशान्तर्भावः, तथा दर्शयिष्यामः ननु इदमिति अहङ्कर्तुः भोगसाधनं कार्यकरणसङ्घातः अवभासते, ममेदमिति अहङ्कर्त्रा स्वत्वेन तस्य सम्बन्धः तत्र किञ्चित् अध्यस्तमिव दृश्यते उच्यते ; यदैव अहङ्कर्ता अध्यासात्मकः, तदैव तदुपकरणस्यापि तदात्मकत्वसिद्धिः  हि स्वप्नावाप्तराज्याभिषेकस्य माहेन्द्रजालनिर्मितस्य वा राज्ञः राज्योपकरणं परमार्थसत् भवति, एवम् अहङ्कर्तृत्वप्रमुखः क्रियाकारकफलात्मको लोकव्यवहारः अध्यस्तः नित्यशुद्धबुद्धमुक्तस्वभावे आत्मनि  //

//  kasya dharmiNaH kathaM kutra cha adhyAsaH ? dharmamAtrasya vA kva adhyAsaH ? iti bhAShyakAraH svayameva vakShyati | ‘ahamidaM mamedam iti’  adhyAsasya svarUpaM darshayati | ahamiti tAvat prathamo.adhyAsaH | nanu ahamiti niraMshaM chaitanyamAtraM pratibhAsate, na aMshAntaram adhyastaM vA | yathA adhyastAMshAntarbhAvaH, tathA darshayiShyAmaH | nanu idamiti aha~NkartuH bhogasAdhanaM kAryakaraNasa~NghAtaH avabhAsate, mamedamiti cha aha~NkartrA svatvena tasya sambandhaH | tatra na ki~nchit adhyastamiva dRRishyate | uchyate ; yadaiva aha~NkartA adhyAsAtmakaH, tadaiva tadupakaraNasyApi tadAtmakatvasiddhiH | na hi svapnAvAptarAjyAbhiShekasya mAhendrajAlanirmitasya vA rAj~naH rAjyopakaraNaM paramArthasat bhavati, evam aha~NkartRRitvapramukhaH kriyAkArakaphalAtmako lokavyavahAraH adhyastaH nityashuddhabuddhamuktasvabhAve Atmani | //

Translation ( D. Venkataramiah )  //  Of which dharmin, how and where is the adhyasa? Again, where is the superimposition of attributes perceived? These (questions) the Bhāṣyakāra himself answers. He points to the form that superimposition takes in "This am I" and "This is mine". The ego notion so far is the first adhyasa.  ( Note 1 ).

 Is it not that the integral (partless) cit alone manifests itself in the aham-ego' and that there is no additional part (seen in the ego-notion) either superimposed or not superimposed ? ( Note 2 ).

We will show; (when explicating the ego") how the superimposed part (viz., the insentient) is involved therein.

Well, in the notion- this' (referring to one's body), the body--the aggregate of cause and effect which is the means of the enjoyment (of the agent denoted by the ego-aham kartā ') is manifest to view (ie., is seen as the object of perception); and in this is mine', (the body) is related to the agent as his property (ie., as a thing distinct from him). There (in consequence) nothing appears to be superimposed.

Here is the answer: When the notion of ego as agent is (admitted to be) a case of superimposition, then alone is it evident that its auxiliary also is an erroneous notion; (when the notion of self-jiva as manifested in the 'I' is error-ridden, the body which is intended for its service is likewise an erroneous notion, i.e., of like nature, when spoken of as this is mine'). Of one who has been crowned king in a dream, or of a king who is a creation of mighty magic,33 the paraphernalia of royalty cannot have any real existence. It is thus that all worldly activities beginning with the ego-agency (I am doer, etc.), and embracing action, means and results (phala) are superimposed on atman which is by nature eternal, pure, enlightened and free.

Note 1 ;; The aham-ego is a complex of cit and acit-sentience and insentience. Why the author regards the ego-superimposition अहङ्काराध्यास (aha~NkArAdhyAsa ) as the initiative adhyāsa, is because it is the starting point of all the käryädhyāsas, the effect-series. Though the superimposition of nescience on consciousness which is pure, integral, bliss entire, and witness of ajñāna (i.c., it reveals ignorance) is beginningless, the aha~NkArAdhyAsa is spoken of as the beginning in the effect-series---kAryA dhyAsa.

Note 2 ;; In all cases of superimposition, two apprehensions are involved; but in the ego-concept, the opponent says, there is only one and hence superimposition is absent. The answer is that even in this con cept two notions are present, the one real, the other transferred, similar to 'this' and the 'silver' in 'This is silver' //.

Reg  //  There is "an" anAdi-adhyAsa, which is not effect //,

Could be reworded as  // There are adhyAsAs  which are not effects //. May even be deleted as really not germane to the issue at hand.

Reg  //  The nimitta-kAraNa of ahamkAra is the locus-hood of avidyA in Parameshwara //.

Could be rephrased as follows  ( Prof SuryanarayaNa Shastry ) // The control of avidyA by Parameswara is the nimitta kAraNa //. Not very particular about  the change though.

SiddhAnta Bindu translation

Reg  //  And only avidyA-adhyAsa alone is beginningless //

Could be reworded as under

//  And the adhyAsa of avidyA alone is beginningless by itself //.

The adhyAsa of ahamkAra  etc are beginningless like the seed and sprout each of which is the cause of the other, but that of avidyA on the Self alone is beginningless in the sense that it is without cause.

Regards

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H S Chandramouli

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Mar 13, 2026, 7:06:44 AMMar 13
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Namaste Sudhanshu Ji, Vikram Ji,

I have clarified my understanding to the best of my ability. The views may be considered and disposed off as per your understanding. I am really not keen to enter into a debate on my understandings.

I am happy that at least I could link the discussion to one of the axioms cited by Vikram Ji, namely L1-2. Very similar to my quote from SiddhAnta Bindu.To that extant I would not have hijacked the thread on an entirely different route. With this, I am exiting so that the thread could take the initially intended route.

Regards

putran M

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May 1, 2026, 8:45:39 AMMay 1
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Namaskaram Vikram-ji,

I heard your talk last night (EDT). Well structured and excellently presented. You said 'nothing original" but definitely not everyone composes Sanskrit sutras to cover most-all of essential advaita. We can say "nothing original" because it is only His knowledge being revealed to us by Him. Your sutras with your explanations has potential to be a great resource because through your erudite bhashya, you have shown how one gets a panaromic view of advaita and of its several intricate and essential concepts. 

I had a couple of questions. 

How can we situate in or derive from this axiomatic framework:

1. the thrust of the dream analogy as used by advaitins.

2. Gaudapada's karika 2.12: "The self-luminous Atman [Lord] imagines Itself through Itself by the power of Its own Maya, and It alone cognises all objects. This is the definite conclusion of Vedanta." [1, 2]

thollmelukaalkizhu

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Vikram Jagannathan

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May 1, 2026, 7:28:17 PMMay 1
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Namaskaram Putran ji,

Thank you for the very kind words. Definitely His grace in and through. 🙏

My thoughts on your 2 questions. Please let me know if further refinement is required.

<< 1. the thrust of the dream analogy as used by advaitins.>>

I believe you are referring to the dream analogy as follows:
"Just as a dream world appears real while dreaming, but is known to be unreal upon waking, the waking world appears real while one is under avidyā, but is known as mithyā when Brahman is realized."

When it comes to the dream analogy, the usage is somewhat viewpoint-sensitive. From the SDV perspective, dream and waking are distinct within vyavahāra: waking has vyāvahārika-sattā, while dream has prātibhāsika-sattā. From the DSV perspective, however, dream and waking are not ontologically different in mechanism or status.

The following is the nuanced derivation from the SDV perspective. From the DSV perspective, the presentation's structure applies more directly.

From L1-2: anādy-adhyāso’vidyaiva; adhiṣṭhāna-jñānena bādhyā:
Dream illustrates adhyāsa. A whole dream-world appears through the individual antaḥkaraṇa, illumined by consciousness, and is later sublated from the waking standpoint. The dream subject, dream objects, dream cognition are experienced while the dream lasts, but they do not survive waking cognition as independently real. Thus dream demonstrates how a projected field can be experientially compelling and yet be bādhya, sublatable.

From L1-3: tripuṭī-pratyayātmaka-vyavahāro mithyā; akhaṇḍākāra-jñānena bādhyaḥ:
Dream is tripuṭī-pratyayātmaka-vyavahāra. It contains a dream-knower, dream-known, and dream-means of knowledge. It has its own subject-object structure, its own internal transactions, and its own felt reality while it lasts. Yet, because this whole dream-tripuṭī is sublated upon waking, it is mithyā. In the SDV reading, this does not make dream and waking identical at the vyavahara level; rather, it shows that even a functioning tripuṭī need not be ultimately real.

From L2-9: jñātṛ-kartṛ-bhoktṛ-bhāvādi-bheda-pratītiḥ sarvā-avidyā-kṛtā:
The dream “I” as dream-knower, dream-doer, and dream-enjoyer is avidyā-kṛta. The dreamer says, “I know,” “I act,” “I enjoy,” “I suffer,” but that dream-jīva is not the true Self. It is an ignorance-conditioned empirical identity appearing within the dream field. In SDV, this dream identity is localized within the individual’s dream projection; in DSV, the same principle extends more radically to the waking “I” as well.

From L2-10: avidyā-āvaraṇa-vikṣepa-śakti-dvayātmikā; suṣuptau-āvaraṇa-prādhānyaṃ, jāgrat-svapnayor-āvaraṇa-vikṣepātmako’dhyāsaḥ:
Waking and dream are explicitly treated together as states in which āvaraṇa and vikṣepa operate as adhyāsa. Āvaraṇa conceals the true nature of the Self. In dream, vikṣepa projects an inward dream-world whereas in waking, vikṣepa projects the outward empirical field. SDV preserves a distinction between these two orders; DSV emphasizes that the same structure of projection applies to both.


<< 2. Gaudapada's karika 2.12: "The self-luminous Atman [Lord] imagines Itself through Itself by the power of Its own Maya, and It alone cognises all objects. This is the definite conclusion of Vedanta." [12] >>

This derivative is more straightforward - Ma.Up.Ka-2.12 - “self-luminous Ātman” here may be understood as Brahman appearing as Īśvara through māyā-upādhi, not as a second entity apart from Brahman. The verse says that the entire manifold is imagined through māyā and illumined by the same self-luminous consciousness. Thus, from the empirical explanatory standpoint, this is Īśvara: Brahman associated with māyā as the governing and projecting principle. But from the final standpoint, Īśvara too is only an upādhi-conditioned designation; the underlying reality is the same sākṣi-caitanyam, the non-dual Ātman-Brahman.

prostrations,
Vikram



putran M

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May 2, 2026, 1:20:53 PMMay 2
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Namaskaram Vikram-ji,

Thanks for the further explanations. I think the dream analogy has been thoroughly addressed but I am not sure if I can tell how 2.12 is derived from your axioms in the systematic way you have shown for the dream analogy.

Brahman is known as the manifold universe of selves and objects in the vyavaharika standpoint based in anadi-ajnana, but when we have shastra upadesa, we come to know Brahman as (the singular unitary Self) Ishvara who imagines/knows Himself in manifold ways through His power of Maya. imu Gaudapada in 2.12 asserts this Ishvara is (vyavaharika) satya according to Vedanta. Even such an Ishvara "designation" is (vis-a-vis paramarthika) ultimately mithya - but that is not the thrust of this verse which asserts the final vyavaharika knowledge of Brahman.

I want to know if I can reach this emphasis and framing of vyavaharika satya given by 2.12 through your axioms. In particular, I don't want to correspond Ishvara to a sum of more-or-less distinct parts (like Self + illumining-Consciousness + projecting-Maya + world-appearance, or Consciousness + (Maya <- world)). Rather I want to derive as vyavaharika satya the Ishvara who is the adhishtanam and Cause/knower/imaginer for the world appearance/imagination. It is more like Ishvara = Consciousness=Self <- Maya <- World. The world-existence is resolved in Maya is resolved in Atma and so long as world is affirmed in any sense, the ultimate reality knowable in the standpoint is Ishvara (in the unitary sense).

thollmelukaalkizhu

Ishvara is upadhi-conditioned designation, yes, but He is vyavaharika satya constituting the valid knowledge of Brahman in the vyavaharika standpoint. There is the knowledge of Brahman (in ignorance) with parts, attributes, selves, ishvara-jiva-jagat, where the manifold is held to be real, and there is the knowledge of Brahman as Ishvara (the unitary singular Self) where the manifold is realized as His imagination of Himself through His power of imagination (maya). For us (i.e. the ignorant), the former is the natural viewpoint that denotes reality; but for Gaudapada, the latter is the definite conclusion of Vedanta.



In this perspective, Ishvara is unitary singular Reality imagining the manifold and not merely a sum of parts (illumining consciousness + an imagining/projecting maya). All causality derives from Him and all existence is rooted in Him.



The particular emphasis of this karika that I am seeing is: It does not allow us to separate Maya from the Atman and talk of Maya as the imagining entity and the atman as-if having a passive role as the illumining Consciousness. Rather, if there is a positing of "objects" (known), then it is the imagination of the Atman (knower), by the Atman, through Its power to imagine (know) Itself in various ways. 

I think it is important to discern the differences in connotation. Gaudapada's verse emphasizes both agency and knowership in the Atman, and classifies the self-cognition of objects as His imagination of Himself (the only Self there is) through His intrinsic shakti of imagination. It is not that Maya imagines and the Atman acts inertly as the illumining Consciousness. In the standpoint where there is a positing of objects (known), there the Atman is the knower who has the power or capacity to know Himself thus.


it is tied back to Consciousness as its conditioned-imagination but more so, the framework is such that Consciousness is necessarily identified as the Knower/Imaginer of the known-imagined. And if the manifold is imagined through maya, then also the Atman 



Since Gaudapada has gone out of his way to emphasize this verse as the definite conclusion of Vedanta, it is worth focusing on its contents and seeing through it, so to speak. Later we can point out the equivalence with other pedagogical approaches.

This particular karika asserts the atman or Ishvara here as the agent of the imagination. He is the knower of the known and the known is nothing but His self-imagination through His shakti/power of imagination. That is the total unified and unitary picture of the Self being presented here. That is to say, in any vyavaharika standpoint where object-identification (cognition) is posited, the Self-Consciousness-Atman is realized as the Cognizer who imagines Himself in/as these objects. One cannot separate that Self as a Consciousness illumining a manifold that is imagined as if separately in/through maya. You posit known, then you posit the Self as the knower/imaginer.  



putran M

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May 2, 2026, 1:21:49 PMMay 2
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Sorry, wrote a lot before the final version but forgot to delete. Just take the first 3 paras before my sign-off.

Vikram Jagannathan

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May 5, 2026, 11:08:47 PM (14 days ago) May 5
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Namaskaram Putran ji,

Apologies for the late reply. Your written-thoughts presented more insights on your thought process. Thank you!

Here is the response for #2.

<< 2. Gaudapada's karika 2.12: "The self-luminous Atman [Lord] imagines Itself through Itself by the power of Its own Maya, and It alone cognises all objects. This is the definite conclusion of Vedanta." [12] >>

Swami Gauḍapādācārya’s Ma.Up.Kā. 2.12 should be understood in the context of the preceding question in Ma.Up.Kā. 2.11: who is the creator of the perceived objects, and who is their cognizer? Since the question concerns perceived objects and cognition, the discussion is already within mithyā-vyavahāra, the empirical field structured by duality and tripuṭī. Ma.Up.Kā. 2.12 answers that the same self-luminous Self, when spoken of through māyā-upādhi, is the creator of the manifold, and the same consciousness alone illumines all cognition. Thus, from the explanatory standpoint, this is Īśvara with māyā-upādhi; from the final standpoint, there is only non-dual svayaṃ-prakāśa Ātman-Brahman.

From L2-3: brahma caitanyam; svataḥ-siddhaṃ svayaṃ-prakāśaṃ pūrṇam:
Brahman alone is svayaṃ-prakāśa-caitanyam, self-luminous consciousness. There is no second consciousness-principle apart from Brahman. Therefore, when Swami Gauḍapādācārya speaks of the Self as the luminous one, the meaning is that the Self alone is the light because of which all objects, distinctions, and cognitions are known. The perceived manifold does not have its own independent light; it is illumined by the self-luminous Self alone.

From L1-3: tripuṭī-pratyayātmaka-vyavahāro mithyā and L2-12: tripuṭī-pramāṇāni vyavahāre pramāṇāni; brahmāprameyam:
The question of creation and cognition belongs to the field of tripuṭī: knower, known, and means of knowledge. Objects, cognition, and the cognizer all arise within vyavahāra. Therefore, Ma.Up.Kā. 2.12 is not describing Brahman as an object among objects, nor as an empirical knower in the ordinary sense. Rather, within the mithyā tripuṭī-field, the same consciousness appears as the basis of cognition and illumines all perceived differences.

From L2-5: vyavahāre brahma vivarta-kāraṇam; māyā pariṇāminī:
In vyavahāra, Brahman is spoken of as vivarta-kāraṇa, the apparent cause, while māyā is the principle through which transformation, differentiation, and manifestation are accounted for. Therefore, when Swami Gauḍapādācārya says that the Self imagines or projects through Its own māyā, this should not be taken as real transformation in Brahman. It means that the manifold is kalpita, imagined or projected, through māyā. Brahman remains changeless; the appearance of creation belongs to māyā-vyavahāra.

From L2-11: jīvo’vidyopādhi-viśiṣṭa-brahma; īśvaro māyopādhi-viśiṣṭa-brahma; sākṣi-caitanyam ekaṃ sarvatra:
Once māyā is brought in as the creative principle, Brahman with māyā-upādhi is called Īśvara. Therefore, from the empirical explanatory standpoint, Swami Gauḍapādācārya’s Ma.Up.Kā. 2.12 speaks of Īśvara, not as a second entity apart from Brahman, but as Brahman viewed through māyā-upādhi. At the same time, the consciousness in the jīva and the consciousness spoken of in Īśvara are not different. Sākṣi-caitanyam ekaṃ sarvatra: witness-consciousness is one everywhere.

From L2-9: jñātṛ-kartṛ-bhoktṛ-bhāvādi-bheda-pratītiḥ sarvāvidyā-kṛtā:
The distinction of cognizer and cognized is itself avidyā-kṛta, born of ignorance. The Self does not truly become a limited cognizer. Rather, through avidyā and upādhi, the one consciousness appears as the empirical knower. Therefore, when Swami Gauḍapādācārya says that the Self alone cognizes all objects, the meaning is not that Brahman becomes a finite subject. It means that all cognition of difference is illumined by the one consciousness alone, even though the empirical distinction of knower and known belongs to avidyā.

So Ma.Up.Kā. 2.12 can be situated in the framework this way: the realm of perceived objects and cognition belongs to mithyā-vyavahāra. Within that realm, Brahman associated with māyā-upādhi is called Īśvara and is spoken of as the source of the manifold. The same self-luminous consciousness, appearing through avidyā-upādhi as jīva, is spoken of as the cognizer. But the underlying sākṣi-caitanyam is one and the same. Thus Swami Gauḍapādācārya’s conclusion is fully aligned with the axiomatic structure: the non-dual Self alone appears through māyā, illumines all distinctions, and yet remains untouched as abheda-Brahman.

Hope this clarifies further.

prostrations,
Vikram


putran M

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May 7, 2026, 7:09:57 PM (12 days ago) May 7
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Namaskaram Vikram-ji,

Thanks for going through and explicating this part thoroughly as well. It does show how your axioms will allow for the karika verse. The scope of the sutras should be explored further by such questions and topics and showing how they lead to known answers only.

I did intent to add some comments/thoughts but will possibly do so separately later; don't want to rush it now.

thollmelukaalkizhu

On Tue, May 5, 2026 at 11:08 PM Vikram Jagannathan <vikky...@gmail.com> wrote:
Namaskaram Putran ji,

Vikram Jagannathan

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May 8, 2026, 9:22:53 AM (11 days ago) May 8
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Yes Putran ji, this was a very good reflection exercise. Thank you for initiating this. Always welcome more such deep-dives. 🙏

prostrations,
Vikram

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putran M

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May 12, 2026, 3:32:17 AM (8 days ago) May 12
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Namaskaram Vikram-ji,

I was asking with regard to a certain perspective on knowledge of Ishvara that is shown by the karika, whose emphasis has validity in mithya-vyavahara but not all presentations of advaita (I feel) may highlight it in the same manner. I want to just point it out more specifically so that the key issue is not missed; you can clarify your understanding as possible through your axioms. Thanks.

Let's look at this comment from your previous mail.

"Once māyā is brought in as the creative principle, Brahman with māyā-upādhi is called Īśvara."

The phrase "brought in".

We have the vyavaharika plane of cognition and the knowledge illumined by/in Consciousness that corresponds to this cognition.

This knowledge involves the positing of duality, change, the self-recognition of "I" the knower and cognition of the known, of other objects and identities. 

Now the affirmation of a shakti, as an adjunct to the knower and known, enabling them to know, desire, manifest - 

is this maya-shakti only an adhyaropa that explains the knowledge pertaining to a cognition, or should it be understood as an adjunct reality affirmed inferentially or otherwise and completing the knowledge?

Adyaropa would be a weak-assertion that serves an explanatory temporary purpose. It is not a true or essential part of the knowledge of the cognition but an extension that is optional and not necessarily unique. 

Let's look at an example. We see smoke. That is the cognition. Anumana says there is or was fire there that caused the smoke. The knowledge of smoke is completed by the knowledge of fire, even though the cognition directly affirmed only the smoke. We situated the smoke cognition within a larger knowledge-world of past cognitions and other pramanas, and in that world the fire was the real cause of the smoke. It is not an adhyaropa by us. 

An adhyaropa would be a weak-projection of existence of something that is not actually present in the cognition nor ascertainable as part of its knowledge. Whereas the fire in this example has a strong-affirmation of existence. It is satya in the plane of cognition wherein the smoke has affirmation. (If however the "smoke" was appearing in a movie, then (in that higher standpoint/knowledge) both smoke and fire are mithya (adhyasa/adhyaropa); and the 'real'-cognition that is (through adhyaropa) corresponded to "smoke" has 'real'-cause as the screen or projector (strongly affirmed)).

So the questions in our discussion: when we posit a Maya (causal creative shakti) or an Ishvara (knowledge of Self with Maya as upadhi), in the plane of cognition where duality or change is being posited, is this a strong affirmation or an adhyaropa? Is Maya strongly affirmed but Ishvara an adhyaropa, or are they equivalent?

Are there advaitins or advaita-schools that prescribe to both viewpoints, and if so, does your axiomatic framework allow for both; and if not in your opinion, then how does your framework ultimately negate one viewpoint and affirm only the other?

thollmelukaalkizhu


putran M

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May 12, 2026, 7:52:26 AM (7 days ago) May 12
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Namaskaram,

 (If however the "smoke" was appearing in a movie, then (in that higher standpoint/knowledge) both smoke and fire are mithya (adhyasa/adhyaropa); and the 'real'-cognition that is (through adhyaropa) corresponded to "smoke" has 'real'-cause as the screen or projector (strongly affirmed)).

Small correction, imo.

I should not have used the word "mithya" above; just adhyasa/adhyaropa would have been appropriate. Since the sublation of earlier smoke belief has been fully completed and there is no question in our mind that the movie-appearance is real smoke, there is no conflict between two valid pramanas in our higher standpoint (where we know the movie is only a movie, etc.) That is, the movie-smoke is not strongly-affirmed as smoke in our present standpoint itself; we know its belief to be an adhyaropa category.

The term mithya would be appropriate in a standpoint where an entity or fact is strongly-affirmed in a certain way by a valid pramana of that standpoint, and yet that fact is contradicted by another pramana of a higher standpoint teaching a higher knowledge.

thollmelukaalkizhu
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