Namaskaram Krishna ji,
This is in reference to your original email related to the Kena Upanishad study.
Shri Subbu ji had hit the nail on the head. A clear understanding of Adhyasa Bhashya is indispensable prior to a study of prasthana traya SankaraBhashya.
Taking this as an opportunity for my self-reflection, here is a rather long, but a step-by-step premier on the rejection of jnana-karma-samucchaya in Advaita Siddhanta. This is my current understanding, fundamentally based on Adhyasa Bhashya & Chatusutri, but also on further elaboration by later acharyas. Those interested may kindly peruse through. Corrections, feedback & comments are most welcome.
Responses to your specific questions are included thereafter.
1. Definition of the terms per Advaita siddhanta:2. To begin with, let’s set the right definitions of the terms. Here is my current understanding:
3. Jnana - here refers to brahma-atma-ekatva-jnana - a specific antahkarana vritti, called brahmakara vritti, that alone overcomes avidya / ajnana / adhyasa. No other jnana or antahkarana vritti is capable of overcoming this avidya.
4. Karma - here refers to activities performed by the body or the mind, with the sense of agency (limited ‘I’-ness as the knower / doer / enjoyer), prompted by a definitive antahkarana vritti.
5. Samucchaya - refers to the relationship between jnana and karma, such as dependence, correlation, coexistence, togetherness.
6.
7. Setting the context of discussion:8. Jnana-karma-samucchaya vada implies the co-dependence of jnana and karma together as the direct cause of moksha. Without either, attainment of moksha is not possible.
9. The alternatives to jnana-karma-samucchaya is jnana or karma alone as the direct cause, with the other being an indirect cause or not related at all.
10. In the case of an indirect cause, it can be a direct hard dependency, meaning one is a direct cause of the other which in turn is a direct cause of moksha, or only a helpful but optional accessory.
11.
12. Advaita siddhanta:13. Per Advaita siddhanta, the attainment of moksha is through jnana alone. Jnana alone is the direct cause of moksha.
14. Karma, independently or associated with jnana, is not a direct cause of moksha.
15. Karma is not a direct cause of jnana either. There is no direct hard dependency on karma by jnana.
16. Karma is a helpful but non-mandatory accessory to the genesis of jnana.
17. After the genesis of jnana, which results in moksha, there is no more possibility of performing any karma.
18.
19. Jnana and karma are said to be of opposite characteristics:20. Jnana, as referred to brahmakara vritti, is a akhandakara vritti with no distinctions or a definitive pattern within.
21. Karma, prompted by a non-brahmakara vritti, is usually always a khandakara vritti with a limited definitive pattern.
22. Jnana overcomes adhyasa (avidya).
23. Karma presumes the context of adhyasa (avidya). This is reviewed in detail later.
24. Jnana overcomes the sense of being the jiva.
25. Karma presumes the sense of being the jiva.
26. Jnana removes ahamkara (sense of agency as the limited ‘I’-ness), which is an aspect of adhyasa between the antahkarana and Chaitanya.
27. Karma depends on the ahamkara (sense of agency as the limited ‘I’-ness) for its functioning.
28. Jnana obliterates the distinction in the triputi (pramata-prameya-pramana).
29. Karma depends on the distinction in the triputi.
30. Jnana is vastu tantra - it purely depends on the vastu - Brahman / Atman / Chaitanya in this case.
31. Karma is purusha tantra - it depends on the jiva’s performance / non-performance / alternate performance of the action.
32.
33. Nature of avidya, jnana and moksha:34. A critical aspect in the right understanding of Advaita position is dependent on the fundamental understanding of what is meant by avidya.
35. Other vedanta sampradhayams may consider avidya as the contracted state of jiva’s jnana due to Karma etc. This changes the very definition & nature of jnana, corresponding sadhana and resulting moksha.
36. But per Advaita, avidya is of the nature of adhyasa - a misunderstanding or superimposition
37. It is the fundamental adhyasa between the antahkarana and the Chaitanya, which is due to the lack of clear understanding of the true nature of Chaitanya.
38. Jnana is the means of overcoming this misunderstanding by the correct understanding of the true nature of Chaitanya.
39. Moksha is the result of jnana - the state where there is no more adhyasa
40.
41. Karma’s dependence on avidya:42. Adhyasa in functioning antahkarana gives rise to the false sense of limited individuality called ahamkara.
43. Antahkarana with its extroverted nature focuses on anatma as its vishaya, with the sense of distinctions
44. The distinction between the triputi pramata-pramana-prameya gives rise to a distinct prama.
45. The ahamkara results in the pramata possessing the sense of agency with respect to the prama.
46. Pramata with the sense of agency is the performer of karma - the karta.
47. Performance of karma as either sakama karma or nishkama karma depends on the desire / association with the results of the karma, but both these karmas presume the performer of the karma as the karta.
48. Thus it is seen that performance of karma presupposed the sense of distinction as the karta, which stems from fundamental ahamkara or adhyasa or avidya.
49.
50. Jnana overcomes avidya - direct cause of moksha:51. Avidya, or particularly adhyasa, is the lack of knowledge of the true nature of Brahman / Atman / Chaitanya (brahmakara vritti).
52. In other words, brahmakara vritti is jnana, and all other vrittis are ajnana / avidya
53. The nature of brahmakara vritti is akhandakara (unitary unrelational impartite vritti) or nirvikalpa (no vikalpa / fluctuations / distinct vrittis) state.
54. This results in the knowledge, which is also a antahkarana vritti, of brahma-tattva or brahma-svarupa.
55. The knowledge of brahma-svarupa - as the infinite immutable consciousness - removes from the jiva the sense of limited individuality (ahamkara) as also adhyasa with the mutable functioning antahkarana
56. In other words, having gained the knowledge that “‘I’ am the infinite immutable consciousness”, there is no more the false sense of “‘I” am the limited individuality”.
57. Consequently, there is no more association between the real ‘I’ and the functioning antahkarana
58. Consequently, there is no more sense of agency with the functioning antahkarana.
59.
60. Why karma cannot coexist with jnana - sama-samucchaya rejected:61. Karma in its entirety presumes the kartrutva bhava as the jiva, as seen above.
62. In the absence of kartrutva bhava, there is no more performance of karma
63. Jnana completely overcomes this kartrutva bhava
64. Consequently, with the dawn of jnana, there is the impossibility of performance of karma
65. In other words, a jnani is actually no longer an adhikari for karma
66.
67. Karma as an indirect cause of jnana - krama-samucchaya accepted68. The performance of nishkama karma results in the purification of the antahkarana (chitta shuddhi) by reducing the attachment with the external objects.
69. This in-turn reduces the extrovertedness and agitations of the antahkarana; consequently preparing the antahkarana to gain the nitya-anitya vastu viveka
70. This is much needed by most of the seekers (mandha and madhyama adhikari) due to the prior predilections.
71. However, the performance of nishkama karma is not the only means of gaining chitta shuddhi and viveka; rendering karma as non-mandatory.
72. An uttama adhikari already possesses chitta shuddhi, due to purva janma samskaras or other factors, that enables blossoming of viveka a straightforward process.
73. Hence it is said that karma is only an optional, although supremely helpful, accessory for jnana.
74.
75. Direct cause of jnana - sadhana chatushtaya76. Jnana is brahmakara vritti - a antahkarana vritti which has the illuminating Chaitanya as its vishaya
77. This is an internalized / introverted state of the antahkarana; in comparison to the natural extroverted state wherein the vishaya is an entity external to the antahkarana
78. This brahmakara vritti, in a prepared antahkarana, is the result of direct shravana (with/without manana & nidhidhyasana) of the Vedanta mahavakyas as taught by the guru.
79. This brahmakara vritti is formed only when the antahkarana earnestly enquires to find the nature of the self ‘I’. This is called mumukshatvam.
80. In order to do so, the antahkarana must be free from external attachments, desires and agitations of any kind.
81. This is possible only on understanding the distinction between nitya and anitya vastu. This is called viveka.
82. This is the fundamental knowledge of transitoryness of the external objects in comparison with the eternal Atman / self as expounded in Vedanta
83. Proper viveka will automatically result in an innate disinterestedness with the transitory external objects, and an innate longing to seek the eternal Atman / self. This is called vairagya.
84. Viveka and vairagya, when coupled with the 6-fold body-sense-mind control qualities (sama, dama, uparati, titiksha, shraddha, samadhana) will directly lead to mumukshatvam.
85. Thus the process sequence is triggered with the origination of viveka, which results in vairagya. A person endowed with vairagya naturally develops the 6-fold qualities that leads to the earnest mumukshatvam.
86. Such a seeker alone is the adhikari for brahma-jijnasa and gains Brahma-tattva-jnana on shravana/manana/nidhidhyasana of tattva-darshi guru’s upadesha.
87.
88. Role of Ishvara’s / Bhagavan’s grace:89. The origination of viveka in a seeker is only possible as a result of Ishvara’s / Bhagavan’s grace.
90. For such a seeker, the tattva-darshi guru is a direct manifestation of Ishvara’s / Bhagavan’s grace.
91. The ultimate reveal of the true nature of the Brahman / Atman / Self is outside the control of the seeker’s efforts. Consequently this revelation is also purely through Ishvara’s / Bhagavan’s grace.
92. Quoting the Mundaka Upanishad 3.2.3, "yamevaiṣa vṛṇute tena labhyastasyaiṣa ātmā vivṛṇute tanūṃ svām".
93.
94. Jnani - a jivanmukta - is seen to perform karma:95. As long as the physical/subtle/causal bodies continue to exist in vyavahara, the bodies will continue to function.
96. The physical & subtle bodies depend on the causal body in the form of Prarabdha Karma.
97. To others it will appear as if the jnani is preforming karma just as the others
98. But there is a stark difference in the attitude between a jnani and an ajnani
99. For a jnani, due to the absence of ahamkara, there is no more any self-identification with the activities.
100. Consequently, there is no more any sense of agency and thus neither the perception as the performer of the karma nor the bondage of the results of the karma.
101. For a jnani there is no such thing as giving up of karma; as the concept of karma itself is no longer applicable to the jnani.
102. Whereas for an ajnani, the ahamkara (or specifically adhyasa) will bind the person with the performance of the karma and its results.
Now to your specific questions:
<<
“(Why) the vedadhyayana and other karmas are unnecessary for moksha”
“Why Shankaracharya is denying jnana-karma samucchaya or anga-angi bhava between jnana and karma”
“why Shankaracharya is against karma being an anga for jnana”
>>
These have been explained above. Essentially, the presumption for karma (presence of kartrutva bhava) is overridden by the presumption for jnana (absence of kartrutva bhava). They cannot coexist because of contradictory nature.
<< Why Jnani should give up karma >>
Giving up of karma is not an injunction for a jnani. It is not an action or a conscious activity either. It is the natural state of a jnani. In the absence of a kartrutva bhava, there is no performance of any karma. However, this doesn’t prevent the jnani’s BMI from continuing to function in the world; and there is no conflict with jnana either.
One of the most profound teachings of this concept by Swami Sankaracharya is in the Adhyasa Bhashya and Chatusutri. An excellent place to start our study.
Karma is prescribed for a jiva - an ajnani with the sense of limited individuality and agency. This is because, performance of activities is unavoidable for any person with a functioning gross/subtle/causal body. The self-identification with the performance of activities is called karma. This itself is adhyasa / avidya. Naturally, an ajnani is bound by adhyasa and hence by karma. Consequently, prior to brahma-jijnasa, it is warranted to prescribe the path of effective karma, and an elucidation of the true nature of karma to an ajnani. Depending on the spiritual maturity level of the ajnani student, sakama karma / nishkama karma / karma sanyasa are recommended. There is no such injunction possible for a jnani. Only a jnani’s state - as complete freedom & withdrawal from all karma - can be stated.
There is no karma-ignorer. A jnani is not a karma ignorer (or one who avoids / denies / shuns karma). This is a misunderstanding of Advaita siddhanta. Light cannot be said as the ignorer of darkness. Performance of karma is an impossibility for a jnani, although a jnani is seen to be performing activities. The transition is purely from the state of self-identified agency (karma doer) to self-realization (no-doer). How to transcend from doership to no-doership is moksha and moksha sadhana.
There is no pursual or giving up of karma. It is only a question of believing oneself to be an agent or giving up (transcending) the sense of agency. Until the dawn of jnana, a person is incapable of giving up karma. At best they can develop the intellectual understanding of the nature of karma and give up karma phala & sakama karma. Teachings about transcending karma are intended to state the goal of the sadhana, just as teachings about transcending avidya to an ajnani.
Prescriptions of various karmas such as sakama karma, nishkama karma, saguna upasana are intended for the appropriate audience depending on their spiritual maturity for chitta shuddhi and chitta ekagratha.