saguNa and nirguNa are the same
Anand Hudli
anandhudli at HOTMAIL.COM
Tue Nov 23 14:26:04 CST 1999
On Mon, 22 Nov 1999 17:43:33 -0500, Ramakrishnan Balasubramanian
<ramakris at EROLS.COM> wrote:
Thanks for a well thought out post.
>
>[...]
>I'll first give an outline of my understanding, as a series of
>"claims". I'll justify my claims separately. This approach
>will help in two ways: the first is that it summarizes my
>understanding. The second is that is any of my claims is
>wrong, it can be easily pointed out.
>
>claim 1: jIvanmukti is attained by GYAna alone. It need not
>and should not be combined with karma.
>
True.
>claim 2: saguNopAsana or meditation on Gods leads to
>kramamukti. saguNopAsana has to necessarily be combined with
>karma. Only when saguNopAsana combined with karma leads to
>kramamukti. saguNopAsana without karma leads to undesirable
>results.
I have difficulty in agreeing with this. MadhusUdana SarasvatI,
for example, was a sannyAsin and yet he practiced bhakti/upAsana.
Many sannyAsins do many kinds of upAsana such as praNava(OMkAra)
upAsana. If there is a restriction that upAsana must be done
in combination with karma, these would not have been able to
do such upAsana. upAsana is defined as "samAnapratyayapravAhakaraNam.h"
as per Shankara or also as dhyAna -
tailadhArAvat.h santato .avichchhinnapratyayo dhyAnam.h,
dhyAna (meditation) is the continuous and unbroken thought, like the
flow of oil - (Shankara's gItA bhAshhya 13.24). So if upAsana/dhyAna/
bhakti towards saguNa Brahman is practised as fixing the mind entirely
on the object - saguNa Brahman, I do not understand why karma should
be brought in and insisted upon. But I do agree partially, taking a
cue from MadhusUdana's gItA bhAshhya. upAsana/bhakti can be of three
types:
1) karma-mishra - mixed with karma
2) shuddha - unmixed with karma (or GYAna)
3) GYAna-mishra - mixed with GYAna
Shankara himself makes this comment, recognizing different types of
upAsana :
kAnichit.h brahmaNa upAsanAni karmasamR^iddhyarthAni kAnichit.h
abhyudayArthAni, kAnichitkramamuktyarthAni teshhAM guNavisheshho-
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
pAdhibhedena bhedaH | (sUtra bhAshhya 1.1.12)
Some upAsanas of Brahman are meant for increasing the fruit of
actions, some for bringing about prosperity, some for bringing
about Krama-mukti. The differences among them are due to the differences
in attributes (assigned to Brahman) and the limiting adjuncts (assigned
to Brahman in the upAsanas).
upAsana may be mixed with karma (initially). Such meditations are
prescribed in the Vedas and may be combined with Vedic karmas. This is
clear. But it is not right to say that all upAsana's are to be
combined with karma.
Besides, it is impossible to mix GYAna-mishra upAsana with karma
for the simple reason that GYAna and karma are like light and darkness!
These two cannot be mixed even in the slightest way. If one could mix
GYAna-mishra upAsana with karma, one could have a situation where one is
practising karma in conjunction with GYAna- an impossibility. In other
words, karma-upAsana samuchchaya is possible, upAsana-GYAna samuchchaya
is possible, but not karma-GYAna samuchchaya, not karma-upAsana-GYAna
samuchchaya. The only comment I can make at this stage about the
shuddha type of upAsana is that it should ultimately lead to the
GYAna-mishra type.
And Shankara does endorse upAsana-GYAna samuchchaya in his gItA
bhAshhya, for example in commenting on (the famous verse) 9.22:
ananyAshchintayanto mAM ye janAH paryupAsate |
teshhAM nityAbhiyuktAnAM yogaxemaM vahAmyaham.h |
Note how Shankara comments on the first line of the verse:
ananyAH apR^ithagbhUtAH paraM devaM nArAyaNaM Atmatvena gatAH
santaH chintayantaH mAM ye janAH sannyAsinaH paryupAsate ...
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
They are non-different (from Me) who consider the Supreme God
nArAyaNa as the Self. They, the sannyAsins, who meditate on Me
and worship Me in all ways... Therefore, it is clear that sannyAsins may
also be engaged in upAsana, upAsana that is not combined with karma in
any way. And it is this type of upAsana that confers krama-mukti.
Shankara also states the common ground or similarity between
advaitaGYAna and upAsana in his introduction to the chhAndogya
upanishhad bhAshhya:
yathA advaitaGYAnaM manovR^ittimAtraM tathA anyAnyupAsanAni mano-
vR^ittirUpANi ityasti hi sAmAnyam.h |
Just as advaitaGYAna is only a modification of the mind (destruction
of the superimposition "adhyAsa" deeply rooted in the mind), so also
the other upAsanas are modifications of the mind. Herein lies the
similarity (between advaita-GYAna and upAsana).
>
>claim 3: saguNopAsana by itself does not lead to mukti, it is
>absolutely dependent on the realization of unconditioned
>brahman. Just before the end of the yuga, the souls in
>brahma-loka attain knowledge of the unconditioned brahman or
>GYAna.
>
[...]
>Justification for claim 2:
>--------------------------
>
>
>[...]
>
>b. but, suguNopAsana has to be combined with karma:
>---------------------------------------------------
>
> [...]
>Please read the bhAshhyas to verses 8-11 carefully. karma is
>an *integral* part of saguNa-upAsana.
>
Please see my remarks above. The IshAvAsya verses would have
to be interpreted so that the upAsana/vidyAs mentioned here
are of the lower type, ie. the karma-mishra upAsanas, not
the GYAna-mishra upAsanas for obvious reasons.
>c. saguNopAsnana without karma is undesirable:
>----------------------------------------------
>
>Refer bhAshhya to verse 9 of the Isha Up.
Sure, it may refer to the lower upAsanas.
>--------------------------------------------------------------
>
>Since saguNopAsana is absolutely co-dependent on karma and
>finally dependent on "the unqualified brahman", we cannot say
>saguNopAsana and GYAna are the "same". All we can say is that
>they finally lead to same result, but with clear understanding
>of the difference. One involves upAsana and the other involves
>GYAna. The two are **vastly different**.
>
>If we say saguNa and nirguNa are the same just because the
>"final results" are the same, we must also admit karma and
>GYAna to be the same. Note that we can say karma finally leads
>to mukti and indeed S himself points this out in the bhAshhya
>to 4.1.18. Here sha.nkara clearly says that we can say karma
>leads to mukti, *if it is understood* that karma is followed
>later by shravaNa etc.
There is a vital difference between karma and upAsana. Nowhere
does Shankara or any advaitin say that krama-mukti can be achieved
by karma. True, karma-yoga makes one eligible for GYAna at
which stage one *must* resort to the shravaNa-manana-nididhyAsana
discipline. In other words, mukti is NOT automatic after
karma. But there is no such obligatory discipline to be
followed in the krama-mukti process of upAsana. When one
attains the Brahmaloka through upAsana, there is no requirement
that one must undergo shravaNa, manana, and nididhyAsana in
that state. MadhusUdana, in fact, explicitly says that the great
truths of the upanishhads automatically become revealed with no
effort in the Brahmaloka. And this is not the case in karma.
>
>worshiper and worshiped "the same"? Only when the limiting
>adjuncts of *both* are removed. But, that is the same as GYAna
>and vastly different from upAsana. In fact there is no scope
>for upAsana to be combined with GYAna. The two vastly
>different. I hope this clears up things a bit.
See my remarks above regarding GYAna-mishra upAsana.
>
>
>What is the meaning of this story? Lord Siva says Siva or
>Vishhnu who are brahman limited by adjuncts are not the
>ultimate truth. When the limiting adjuncts are removed, that
>is the "unqualified" brahman. All this means is that the same
>brahman appears *as if* possessed by attributes and only in
>this sense can be said to be the qualified brahman also. This,
>however, seems to be **completely different** from what the
>prabodasudhAkara is saying. In any case, we cannot say that
>the effect of saguNopAsana are GYAna are the "same" for the
>reasons I gave above.
>
Again, the effects are the same only if "mukti" is viewed
as the end-result. If one is interested in jIvanmukti, of course,
GYAna is an absolute must. My point and also the point of the
prabodhasudhAkara seems to be that upAsana/bhakti can be combined
with GYAna and upAsana is also a moxa-sAdhana. Even if upAsana
is not used as moxa-sAdhana by the aspirant, it can be used as a
preparation for GYAna.
I will end with a quote from Shankara's commentary on the Katha
upanishhad (2.15) where he talks about the praNava (OMkAra) upAsana:
OM shabdavAchyaM OM shabdapratIkaM cha brahma | aparaparabrahmaNoH
hi pratIkaM etadaxaram.h | etaddhi eva axaraM GYAtva (brahmetyupAsya)
yo yadichchhati paraM aparaM vA tasya tat.h bhavati |
Brahman is represented by the OMkAra sound and symbol. This letter
(AUM) is the symbol of (both) the lower and Higher Brahman. Knowing
this letter (AUM), doing upAsana of AUM, one attains whatever one
desires, the Higher or lower (Brahman).
Compare this with gItA 8.13:
oMityekAxaraM brahma vyAharan.h mAmanusmaran.h |
yaH prayAti tyajan.h dehaM sa yAti paramAM gatim.h ||
Anand
--
bhava shankara deshikame sharaNam
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