Showing posts with label Shankara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shankara. Show all posts

2024/03/12

Shankara & Advaita Vedanta [Let's Talk Religion]


Shankara & Advaita Vedanta

Let's Talk Religion
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346,865 views  Premiered Feb 14, 2021  #Shankara​ #Advaita #Vedanta​
The much requested video about Shankara is finally here.


Sources/Suggeested Reading:
Deutsch, Eliot (1973). “Advaita Vedanta: A Philosophical Reconstruction”. University of Hawai’i Press.

Deutsch, Eliot & Rohit Dalvi (2005). “Essential Vedanta: A New Source Book of Advaita Vedanta”. World Wisdoms Books.

Suthren Hirst, J.G. (2005). “Samkara’s Advaita Vedanta: a way of teaching”. Routledge.

“The Mandukya Upanishad with Gaudapada’s Karika and Sankara’s Commentary”. Translated by Swami Nikhilananda. 1987. Advaita Ashrama.

“Brahma Sutra Bhasya of Sankaracarya”. Translated by Swami Gambhirananda.1972. Advaita Ashrama.
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Transcript


0:00
in the vast category of what we call hinduism there is a huge diversity when it comes
0:06
to everything from practices to beliefs but in any case among this incredible diversity of
0:12
different schools of thought ideas and ritual tendencies there is perhaps no
0:17
school of thought or philosophy more famous or admired really in the western world
0:23
than what is known as advaita vedanta advaita which means literally not two is a non-dualistic
0:31
interpretation of the vedas and especially the upanishads and has become one of the most important
0:36
and influential philosophical and religious intellectual currents in the history of indian
0:42
thought we talked about advaita briefly in my previous video about
0:48
vedanta but in this video i want to dive deeper while a dwight de vedanta is a diverse
0:54
school in itself that can't really be boiled down to a single central figure per se and there
1:00
are arguments that it dates back further in history still advaita vedanta is
1:05
primarily associated with a certain figure by the name of shankara also sometimes
1:11
endearingly called adi shankara or shankaracharya who is also often considered to be its founder
1:19
so let's spend a few minutes talking about this massively important figure his understanding of advaita through his
1:26
interpretation of the upanishads and through him also the larger
1:32
school of advaitha vedanta generally
1:41
[Music]
1:54
shankara is an almost legendary figure at this point he is often considered the founder of
2:00
the school of advaitha vedanta however some will argue that the non-dual or advaita interpretation of the upanishads
2:07
existed since before his time which we can see for example in the writings of gaudapada
2:12
who were supposedly the teacher of shankara's own teacher this argument is convincing enough but i
2:18
still think that it isn't entirely inaccurate to call him the founder of advaitha vedanta on the basis that his
2:25
writings and teaching has become so successful that he functions as the instigating figure of advaitha as we
2:32
know it today with all of that said however trying to reconstruct a comprehensive biography of shankara is
2:40
almost impossible we have very little to go by when it comes to contemporary
2:45
archaeological or trustworthy evidence for his life we do have traditional accounts of his
2:51
life written centuries after he died which are often used in this context but
2:56
all of these accounts are so called hagiographical what this means that is hagiography is
3:03
that they are stories told from the point of view of revering the person in question
3:08
how geographies are the kind of life stories we find told about great saints or prophets of history
3:15
often characterized by miraculous and incredible stories to showcase the great power or stature of an individual
3:21
rather than being an accurate retelling of historical events aside from the hydrographical sources we
3:28
can also use the authentic writings of shankara himself as well as records by his students
3:34
to try and get an idea of who he was as a historical person all of these sources are problematic in
3:41
different ways but it's basically all we have to go by so when i do tell biographical information in this
3:48
video you should always keep this in mind and thus also take it with a grain of salt we have basically nothing to go by when
3:55
it comes to the life of shankara so his biography is basically entirely up for debate even such a basic
4:01
thing as dating is contested some have suggested that shankara lived between
4:06
788 to 820 a.d others think that he lived centuries before
4:13
many scholars today will argue and i think we can be safe in assuming that shankara probably lived sometime
4:19
around the year 700 a.d he was from a brahmana
4:24
family that is the highest priestly caste in the varna system of social structure in
4:29
india the famous caste system many accounts state that he was from the kerala region
4:36
in south west india and that at a very young age he would leave his home and family to
4:42
become a sanyasin a wandering ascetic as a brahmana he would have studied the
4:49
veda scriptures and was later taught vedanta in particular under a teacher by
4:54
the name of govinda it is this teacher that in turn is said to have been taught by the famous
5:00
proto-advaitan gowdapada nonetheless shankara clearly became somewhat of a master or teacher
5:06
himself as he started to wander all around india gathering students and disciples of his own as he
5:13
debated with philosophers from various schools of thought around the subcontinent apparently defeating all of them with
5:20
his very impressive rhetorical skills we can't hear any of these debates today of course but a lot of that skillful
5:26
rhetoric can certainly be found in the writings that are attributed to shankara he seems to have written quite a lot and
5:33
judging from the texts that have survived he was a master of sanskrit argumentation and style
5:39
there is some disagreement on which of the writings attributed to shankara should be considered authentic
5:45
but generally scholars tend to agree that we can be safe in assuming
5:50
that at least the great commentaries that he wrote are should be attributed to shankara
5:56
himself this includes a great commentary also known as abashia on the brahma sutras as well as a
6:03
commentary on the bhagavad-gita and several of the most important upanishads
6:09
there are also many other texts attributed to shankara including prose works as well as for
6:14
example hymns to different gods but they are more controversial when it comes to
6:19
authenticity but still based on those writings that are considered authentic by most
6:26
scholars that i mentioned we can use them to still reconstruct a pretty good idea about the personality and ideas of this
6:33
great hindu sage more than this is hard to say when it comes to the life of shankara a life that was very
6:40
eventful but short because indeed another one of the most recurring themes in the different
6:45
biographical material is that shankara died at a very young age at the age of 32 and certainly he seems
6:54
to have accomplished quite a lot in that short amount of time shankara can be a very hard person to
7:00
pin down we should remember that what we call hinduism today hadn't really developed into the form
7:07
that we know it as today back in shankara's lifetime and so it can be very hard to place
7:13
within a specific pocket in that sense some have speculated that shankara was a
7:19
shaivite that is shaivism is the tradition of hinduism where shiva is worshipped as the primary
7:26
deity but other aspects of his writings suggest a familiarity and and
7:32
a great understanding of the vaisnava tradition as well that is the tradition of worshiping vishnu as the
7:38
primary deity but again none of these traditions were fully developed at this time it was still pretty young and so in my
7:45
opinion it's pretty anachronistic to try and place shankara within one of these specific categories
7:50
also i think we shouldn't get too bogged down in details like that now it's a very modern obsession i'll be
7:57
i think a very worthwhile one to be so focused on the historical
8:02
person in question rather than focusing on what arguably is more important which is of course what
8:08
he taught what he came to represent and symbolize for later developments both in
8:13
advaithas particularly but also in hinduism more generally the context in which he lived and worked
8:20
is of course very important for getting a comprehensive view of where his ideas figure into the wider picture and
8:28
in that sense the question of shaivism versus vaishnavism is actually pretty significant not so
8:34
much in the sense of what tradition shankara himself belonged to if any but rather to point out that devotional
8:41
worship known as bhakti was becoming a significant movement at the time of shankara's life bhakti
8:48
is the devotional worship of a deity through rituals like puja aspects which we very strongly
8:55
associate with hinduism today bhakti this particular form of religious
9:00
practice and belief would eventually eclipse the earlier vedic rituals almost entirely but
9:07
during shankara's life this was still a pretty new movement only one among a multitude of schools of
9:12
thought philosophies and traditions that make up the historical and intellectual context
9:18
of shankara's environment in fact the intellectual environment in which shankara writes and
9:24
teaches is a very diverse one filled with various schools and thinkers competing
9:30
as well as influencing each other sometimes we talk about what is known as the six orthodox schools of
9:37
hindu philosophy and while this simplified things to a degree the movements included on that list were
9:44
very significant during shankara's time all of them debating which of the various means of gaining knowledge known
9:51
as pramana was the most legitimate the schools of nyaya and vaishesika placed an emphasis on
9:58
reason and logic arguing that brahman and truth could be reached by
10:04
reason alone others like the purva memsa school considered scripture
10:09
that is the vedas to be the primary or only way of reaching true knowledge and emphasize the importance
10:15
of the vedic rituals aside from these so-called orthodox schools of philosophy usually
10:22
only those schools that are connected to the vedas as scriptures and what we call hinduism today there are
10:28
also other significant movements like buddhism and jainism that were flourishing at the time too
10:34
the former of which had a particularly strong standing in society and probably influenced shankara a lot
10:41
shankara as we have seen spent much of his life traveling around the indian subcontinent
10:46
meeting with various representatives of these various schools of thought he would meet with
10:51
buddhists with jains with the representatives of the nyaya and vaishyazuka schools and so on
10:57
and he would debate them and argue with them over who had the right means to true knowledge
11:05
even in the writings of shankara this form of argumentation is present as well this was the main form
11:11
of writing prose or treatises at the time and shankara also uses this technique of trying to
11:19
first present the opinions of his opponents so he will say this is what the buddhist
11:24
says this is the objection of the nyaya scholars this is the and so on and so on and at the final
11:31
section he will present the vedantin which is his own position and which he of course considers to be
11:37
the right one in terms of doctrinal alignment or philosophical alignment shankara took influence and pointers from many of
11:45
these different philosophical schools but from one perspective we could say that shankara was particularly close to
11:52
the school known as purva mimsa especially in the sense that he emphasized
11:57
that scripture was the only valid means of knowledge when it comes to knowing
12:02
the brahman but what was this truth that was to be reached in other words what is the philosophy of
12:10
shankara the school of thought that is associated with shankara and which is sometimes
12:15
considered to have been founded by him is referred to as advaita vedanta
12:21
or non-dual vedanta advaita literally translates to not two and the
12:27
reason why will become pretty clear soon advaita vedanta is characterized by
12:32
the idea that the absolute reality known as brahman is the only thing that truly exists
12:40
in the words of eliot dutch quote brahman the one is a state of being it is not a
12:47
he a personal being nor is it an it's an impersonal object brahman
12:53
is that state which is when all subject object distinctions are obliterated
12:59
brahman is ultimately a name for the experience of the timeless plenitude of
13:04
being brahman is a concept that is recurring in the vedic scriptures especially in the upanishads but
13:12
descriptions or references to it often presents very different and sometimes even contradictory statements
13:18
which has lent itself to many different interpretations but to shankara and advaita vedanta all
13:25
is the brahmana there is nothing which is not the brahmana the one brahman is the very
13:31
reality of the world that we experience an unfathomable oneness in which multiplicity
13:37
is ultimately an illusion this is often expressed by shankara and many others through the vedic quote tatvam asi
13:45
you are that or thou art that this phrase has also been interpreted in
13:50
various ways but to shankara and his followers it is read quite literally you meaning the person or self with
13:57
which you identify are that meaning the brahman literally you are the brahmana everything is the
14:05
brahmana quote brahman is real the world is illusory the self is not different from brahman
14:13
shankara's stance seems to be pretty straightforward it is a very staunch monism but let's unpack the nuances and
14:21
complexities of what all of this actually means shankara begins his brahma sutra basia
14:27
that is his commentary on the brahma sutras with an assumption that is the starting
14:32
point for understanding him and advaita vedanta generally that is
14:37
that the self that we identify with and the way that we look on the world the
14:43
way we conceive of the world around us is ultimately based on a false assumption or a misunderstanding
14:49
when we say the word i like in i am hungry or i am sad we are confusing the mind and
14:56
the body with the actual self it is my body that is hungry
15:02
not the eye to which i am referring similarly it is the mind that is
15:07
sad or feels emotions not the actual self that which we are actually referring to
15:13
when we use the word i the actual self stands beyond these
15:18
things it experiences them but as things other than itself or as beings thinks outside
15:24
of itself all of us think that we are these various things i am a human being i am the son of so-and-so
15:31
i am swedish but all of this is ultimately based on a misunderstanding it's all
15:36
false and similarly when we look on the world around us we also conceal a bunch of different things
15:43
separate objects like it's a tree outside that's a rock this is a chair but again
15:50
this is all false the true self which we are actually referring to when we use the word i
15:56
is none of these things it's not the body it's not the mind it's none of these
16:01
conceptual things these individual components that we apply to it the actual
16:09
true self which is known as the atman is according to shankara in fact
16:14
completely identical to the brahman the absolute reality
16:19
similarly again if we look at the world around us the tree is not a tree the rock is in
16:26
fact not a rock and this chair is not a chair it's all just brahman so our
16:31
view of ourselves and the world around us is fundamentally skewed this is the reason we are doomed to be
16:36
reincarnated and are trapped in the wheel of samsara this basic human condition or the reason
16:43
for it is called avidia meaning ignorance however ignorance doesn't really capture
16:49
what shankara is trying to say with the word it isn't really a passive lack of
16:54
knowledge that is at play but an active misunderstanding another word used by shankara which
17:01
perhaps functions a little better to explain it is aviyasa meaning superimposition
17:07
we are superimposing things onto the one brahman actively misidentifying ourselves and
17:14
the world as something else or as something independent when it is all just brahman ultimately quote owing to an absence of
17:22
discrimination there continues a natural human behavior in the form of i am this or
17:28
this is mine this is avidya it is a superimposition of the
17:34
attributes of one thing on another the ascertainment of the nature of the real entity by separating the
17:40
superimposed things from it is vidya knowledge or illumination one allegory that shankara loves to use
17:47
to explain this idea is the famous example of the snake and the rope
17:52
suppose you're walking along some road and suddenly you see a snake lying before you naturally you get scared and concerned
17:59
over the danger that it may pose but you then carefully look a little closer and you realize that what you
18:06
thought was a snake was in fact only a rope you had identified the rope as being a snake
18:12
which also caused you distress this is how avidya and alvasa work
18:18
we think that what we see is the snake but it is really only the rope in this case it is really only the
18:25
brahman and this is an important detail to keep in mind often when we talk about advaita
18:30
or shankara we place a huge emphasis on this word maya which is then translated as
18:36
illusion and that the world is seen as this grand illusion but this can very easily be misunderstood
18:43
shankara doesn't actually use the word maya as much as we often like to think and when he does use the word it is
18:50
basically used interchangeably with the word avidya and while it is
18:55
somewhat legitimate to translate it as illusion it doesn't really mean illusion in the
19:00
regular sense of how we understand that word shankara was actually a realist he
19:06
didn't deny that the world was ontologically real or claim that it was some phantom or a simulation to use a modern
19:14
example what is illusory about the world is the superimposed concepts that we apply to
19:20
it when we conceive of it as being something other than the brahman just like in the snake and rope example
19:28
when one realizes that the snake was in fact a rope the rope doesn't just disappear into
19:33
nothingness we are just giving a new perspective on the actual reality of the rope it
19:38
wasn't a snake that was the illusion but it's still something it's still a rope quote there could be no non-existence of
19:45
external entities because external entities are actually perceived an external entity is invariably
19:52
perceived in every cognition such as a pillar wall a pot a piece of cloth it can never
19:59
be that what is actually perceived is non-existent and again returning to the snake and
20:05
rope example quote when it is determined that it is nothing but the rope alone
20:10
then all illusions regarding the rope disappear and the non-dual knowledge that there
20:15
exists nothing else but the rope becomes firmly established shankara isn't presenting a existential
20:23
nihilism something that he actually accuses the buddhists of doing perhaps inaccurately so but what he is saying is
20:30
that the illusion is when we can see of anything in our experience as being anything other
20:35
than the brahman and since brahman is very much real in an ultimate sense this means
20:41
that the world we experience is also real as long as it is understood as being simply the brahman and nothing
20:48
else in other words it is the constructs that we create about the world that is the illusion but the brahman is
20:55
the reality of the world and since the brahman is real in that sense and and so far as it is the brahman the
21:01
world is absolutely real the goal of life to shankara like for so many hindus
21:06
is to reach liberation or moksha from the cycle of rebirths and according to him this can only be
21:13
achieved by reversing the misidentification of things and to realize knowledge of brahman
21:20
here he differs from many other schools of thought within hinduism at the time especially the purvamsa school by
21:27
denying the central role of rituals and practices for reaching liberation now he doesn't
21:34
necessarily deny the usefulness of rituals but he is claiming that their rewards are only
21:40
temporary instead liberation is only reached through knowledge known as jnana to know
21:48
the brahmana is to be liberated but knowing the brahmana is not like knowing any object in the
21:54
world in this sense the brahman can't be known in fact
21:59
knowledge of brahman is not knowledge of brahman as an object for brahman is different from the
22:05
known and above the unknown rather it is being brahman knowing brahman not as an
22:11
object but as being identical with one's true self that is self-reflexive consciousness
22:17
beyond subject object duality this is liberation our true state from which all
22:23
superimpositions have finally been removed if knowledge has a function it is to
22:29
remove these superimpositions not to produce some new result it is from the notion of this basic human
22:36
condition of ignorance misunderstanding and superimposition and with the goal of being liberated
22:43
through knowledge of oneself as being the same as the brahman that shankara
22:49
and advaita then presents its further ideas and positions quotes
22:54
and the realization of brahman is the highest human objective for it completely eradicates all such
23:00
evils as ignorance etc that constitute the seed of transmigration
23:06
therefore brahman should be deliberated on but how is this salvific knowledge
23:11
reached according to shankara well the answer here is pretty simple it is reached through scripture to
23:17
shankara the only pramana or source of knowledge when it comes to the brahman is scripture
23:23
namely the vedas in contrast to many other schools of thought he denies the legitimacy of things like
23:30
sense perception or even reason as ways of reaching true knowledge now that isn't to say that he denies
23:36
these things completely sense perception and reason are useful tools for understanding the conventional
23:43
world of multiplicity but when it comes to reaching knowledge of the brahman scripture is the only way to do it and
23:50
correct interpretation of scripture at that quote the realization of brahman results
23:56
from the firm conviction arising from the deliberation of the vedic texts and their meanings
24:01
but not from other means of knowledge like inference etc in order for scripture to be interpreted
24:07
correctly according to shankara he also here of course places a huge emphasis on the importance of having a
24:14
vedantan teacher to relay these this knowledge to the student and here he also allows
24:21
for a certain reason in terms of religious matters in other words through correct interpretation of the
24:27
vedic scriptures by an accomplished non-dualist teacher the seeker can realize knowledge of
24:34
one's true self as being none other than the one brahman and thus reached liberation through this
24:40
state of non-dual consciousness this very heavy scripturalism of shankara is one thing that might be
24:46
pretty surprising to a lot of people today another area in which this comes to the surface is in shankara's requirements
24:53
for who is even allowed to enter into the study of advaita or the brahman while there is some disagreement among
24:59
scholars on this in many of his writings including the treatise a thousand teachings
25:04
shankara seems to think that only individuals belonging to the highest brahman caste are eligible as pupils
25:11
shankar of course lived in a context where the caste system was a fact of life and this played a role in how he conceived
25:18
of his teachings and who it was aimed at at the very least shankara requires the people to have
25:24
studied the vedas deeply which immediately disqualifies the lowest shudra caste as well as for example
25:31
women in a general sense again there are different interpretations of this and shankara's writings
25:36
do sometimes allow for various readings but it seems clear that he took it for granted that a
25:42
student of advaitha was a male of the brahmana caste the important subject of shankara's firm
25:49
grounding in his religious and intellectual environment carries over to other aspects of his teachings as well
25:56
as i mentioned in the beginning the bhakti movement of devotional worship to a personal deity
26:02
was becoming very popular in shankara's day and indeed one of the main sources of
26:08
vedanta and a text on which shankana has commented is the bhagavad-gita
26:13
a bhakti text centered on the god krishna which again also is an avatar of vishnu and
26:19
shankara's relationship with devotion or bhakti and religious worship generally is a very complex question on
26:26
which a lot has been written and speculated later critics of shankara such as
26:31
ramanuja and mavacharya viewed shankara's advaita vedanta as essentially denying the importance or
26:38
legitimacy of ritual worship by of course claiming the absolute identity between the individual self and
26:45
the brahman but the situation also appears to be a lot more complicated than that
26:50
indeed shankara frequently employs devotional and theistic language in his writings
26:56
talking about ishvara or the lord often translated also as god as for example being the creator of
27:03
the universe and worthy of praise and worship much interpretation has gone into understanding how this fits with his
27:10
general ideas of non-duality many will say that shankara's talk about the lord is only a kind of preliminary
27:16
language bound to the world of superimposition which only conceal or obscure his true
27:22
doctrines of advaita or non-duality in this interpretation ishvara or the lord who is often
27:29
identified as visnu becomes a kind of second god who is bound to the world of illusions
27:35
but that is ultimately as unreal as anything else in the conventional world but in many of shankara's writings this
27:41
position doesn't really seem to hold he appears to use terms like
27:46
brahman ishvara supreme self etc interchangeably revealing a more complex
27:53
picture of the role of the lord and its relationship to brahman and to the world of misidentification
27:59
sometimes when talking about the doctrines of advaita vedanta and shankara there is talk about two
28:06
forms of or you can say two ways of talking about brahman on the one hand there is nirguna brahman
28:12
that is brahman without attributes this is the absolute form of brahman that is beyond all conceptions
28:19
and on the other hand there is saguna brahman brahman with attributes often also identified with
28:25
ishvara or the lord or god the relationship between these two can be obscure and there is
28:32
disagreement on this question as well the important question here becomes that the scholar eric lott puts it
28:38
quote are they two distinct brahmanas or merely two aspects of one brahman of course no one
28:44
would argue that shankara conceives of two actual brahmanas as that would completely contradict the very basics of
28:51
his system the question rather is is saguna brahman or the lord
28:56
a different epistemological concept bound by the world of multiplicity and disappearing along with it
29:03
or are they in fact referring directly to the same thing without distinction as mentioned a lot of the writings of
29:10
shankara seems to suggest or imply that the lord is in fact completely identical to
29:16
the brahman but shankara also sometimes seems to be defending the practice of worshipping or of
29:23
devotion to the lord or to god against its critics or its enemies which seems
29:29
to go against the idea that shankara only viewed worship as preliminary or as unimportant
29:35
which a lot of his critics later would accuse him of in the tradition of advaita vedanta especially today
29:41
the idea of ishvara or god or visnu or any of the gods is often implemented as simply being a
29:48
certain expression of the brahman as being the same as brahman but representing different relationships
29:54
that we can have with this ineffable source while this has been a standard position among
30:00
adwaitans that doesn't necessarily mean that it is the position that shankara himself proposes
30:06
but i think the wisest thing for me to do here is to leave this discussion to people who are a lot
30:12
more qualified to talk about it there is disagreement among scholars on how the idea of the
30:17
lord should be understood or read in the teachings of shankara and i'm not going to attempt to to solve
30:24
that problem here there are a lot more smart people people who are smarter than me who can answer
30:29
this question a lot better but a good takeaway here is that all of this talk about the lord
30:35
either as cause or as an object of worship containing different attributes all of this is often provisional for
30:43
there to be a lord there must be something to be ruled over and since the world as such is only the
30:49
result of misidentification this means that when there is no world there is no lord as such either at the
30:57
end of the day all of this talk only functions within a discussion about the world of name and
31:02
form the world of superimposition and illusion shankara's main points and the
31:08
whole purpose of advaitha is the affirmation of the non-dual nature of reality
31:14
that there is only the brahman and all else is false attribution so whatever is said about god or worship
31:21
or rituals as valuable as they may be at the end of the day it is all relative
31:27
and only bound to the conventional world the goal after all is to go beyond this
31:33
and realize one's own total identity with the brahmana that everything is
31:38
in a sense a single oneness this point is what is always affirmed by shankara just in many
31:45
different ways another example that he likes to use to explain this kind of situation
31:52
is another famous parable of the clay pot the clay pot example is taken from
31:58
the upanishads where we find the quote by knowing a lump of clay all things
32:04
made of clay are known what does this mean well think of various things made of
32:10
clay including a pot maybe a sculpture or just a simple lump of clay we may think
32:17
that all of these things exist the pot the sculpture and so on but when we look closer they are all
32:23
simply made of one thing that is clay so when we are looking at the pot
32:29
what we are actually looking at is clay when we are looking at the sculpture
32:35
what we are looking at ultimately is clay it is only our minds
32:40
that conceptualize this clay into various things i see clay in one shape and i
32:46
call it a pot i see it in another and it is a sculptured statue but these are only mental constructions
32:53
that are all just referring to one single thing that is again clay
32:59
so this is what the brahman is like again in philosophical language what truncate
33:05
is saying here is that the effect pre-exists in the cause something
33:10
cannot come from nothing thus the brahman as cause is really what the world as effect
33:17
consists of this philosophical position of the effect pre-existing in its cause
33:23
which shankara held in opposition to other schools at the time is known as satkarigavada quote
33:30
our ordinary experience tells us that milk clay and gold are taken by people in
33:36
order to produce out of them curds jars and ornaments respectively
33:42
no one who wants curds will expect to have it out of clay nor will anyone expect to have jars out
33:49
of milk this means that the effect exists in the cause prior to its production for had the
33:55
effect been really non-existent before its production there is no reason why curds could not
34:00
be produced out of milk alone or jars out of clay besides all the
34:06
effects being equally non-existent anything might come out of anything else but if we
34:11
understand the brahmanan world relationship only through this allegory of the clay
34:16
pot we may get the false impression that the brahmana actually changes
34:21
since the clay when it is formed into these different things it does change it takes different shapes
34:27
but the brahman does not function like this the brahman is completely unchanging and static this is why we
34:34
need that other example that i mentioned also the snake and rope example remember
34:40
the snake was only misidentified as being a snake it was only really the rope the rope
34:46
didn't ever change into the snake it was only the result of a misidentification of the reality
34:54
of the rope which was due to avidia or ignorance after all from one perspective the
34:59
conventional world is absolutely not brahman the world consists of
35:05
various attributes concepts and things and multiplicity and none of this
35:11
applies to the brahman which is one without attributes and completely unchanging
35:17
this is what shankara is talking about when he uses another one of his favorite phrases
35:22
which is neti neti or not this not this as expressed in the upanishads
35:29
for example quote there is no other or better description of brahman than this that it is not this not this that is
35:37
whatever we may think see or talk about it is always based on distinction
35:42
definition and multiplicity in other words the world of superimposition and brahman
35:48
can be none of this but from an absolute perspective it is of course all the brahman yet only
35:54
if understood that brahman is the true reality of whatever is conceived not that the
35:59
particular features of our mental constructs ever correspond to the nature of brahman as such when we
36:06
think of the conventional world we always see a bunch of things or concepts
36:11
which means multiplicity inevitably but as we have seen anything that we conceive is really only a mental
36:18
construct a superimposition based on ignorance avidia
36:24
the same is true for ourselves when i think of myself i think of a bunch of different things
36:30
as i said in the beginning of this discussion i may consider myself to be a human being or as having a
36:35
body or experiencing various thoughts or feelings but to advise the vedanta the further we
36:42
investigate who this actual self this i really is we start to penetrate into the
36:49
inevitable conclusion that just like all things in the world i am really nothing
36:54
i am just a silence that simultaneously is all things this is the atman
37:01
the true self atman which i've already mentioned before is one of the most central concepts in
37:09
all of vedanta including for shankara of course
37:14
when talking about the individual cell for the soul the term jiva or jivatman is often used
37:22
but even this concept based as it is on individuality and therefore difference is ultimately not true in the ultimate
37:30
sense quote the individual soul is not directly the highest atma
37:36
because it is seen to be different on account of the upadhis nor is it different from the atma
37:42
because it is the atma who has entered the jivatman in all the bodies
37:47
we may call the jiva as a mere reflection of the atman our true selves our
37:54
true reality is realized when we break beyond the subject object duality
37:59
and into the pure consciousness that is the atman the self the real self quote
38:06
the self is not absolutely beyond apprehension because it is apprehended as the content
38:11
of the concept i and because the self opposed to the non-self
38:17
is well known in the world as an immediately or self-revealing entity the atman or self is not a thing
38:25
it's not an object that can be experienced or grasped in any way the atman is pure
38:32
subjectivity it's pure awareness and consciousness it's not something that we
38:38
are aware of it is the very act of being aware and not just individually either it is a
38:45
kind of universal self the atman is not just my consciousness or your consciousness
38:51
but consciousness itself which we all share in the ultimate oneness of existence
38:58
to the adwaitan thinkers this is the most self-evident reality that is immediately proven by its own
39:04
qualities quote the knowledge of the atman is self-revealed and
39:10
is not dependent upon perception and other means of knowledge in other words it is clear to all of us
39:16
that we are aware right now since you are currently listening to me speak and
39:21
in an argument that very much reminds us of what descartes would famously say a couple of centuries later
39:27
the sage vidyaranya stated quote no one can doubt the fact of his own existence
39:33
where want to do so who could the doubter be this is the atman our true self which is
39:40
the pure state of consciousness and awareness it is one timeless spaceless and most
39:46
importantly to advise the vedanta in particular it is not different from the brahman
39:52
indeed this is after all the main point of advaitha vedanta the atman is identical to the brahman to
40:00
the absolute reality the actual true self is identical to absolute reality
40:07
thus we have come full circle we started from the standpoint of avidia maya and aviyasa ignorance and illusion
40:15
based on superimposition and misidentification and we have returned back from that to
40:20
the essential conclusions of the entire system the absolute oneness of all reality and
40:26
its essential identity with brahman shankara's position on reality and his interpretations of the
40:32
vedas stands pretty clear it's right there in the name advaita
40:38
not to to shankara there is no multiplicity there is only one there is only oneness
40:45
quote when duality is perceived to be illusory and atman alone is known as the sole
40:51
reality then it is clearly established that all our experiences ordinary or religious verily pertain to
40:59
the domain of ignorance then one perceives that there is no dissolution i.e destruction
41:06
that which is non-dual advaitha can never be said to be born or destroyed that it should be non-dual
41:14
and at the same time subject to birth and death is a contradiction in terms at my very core at your core at
41:22
the core of everything is nothing but the one absolute reality there is no difference between any of us
41:31
this is non-duality in its most clear and strict form shankara is of course a very
41:37
profound thinker and his teachings have had a vast impact on the intellectual climate
41:43
of india and really on the rest of the world in a direct sense it is said that he
41:48
opens several mafas or monasteries and religious centers where his lineage has survived to this day
41:55
he also taught students directly who carried his legacy forward but even aside from this his ideas have
42:01
spread across the world and has indeed become one of the most significant and influential schools of
42:07
thought in all of what we call hinduism there would appear many critics of shankara in later
42:13
periods even within the school of vedanta itself for example the thinker ramanuja
42:19
was very critical of some of shankara's monistic ideas and instead favored a kind of compromise in his own
42:25
system which is known as vishishtadvaita or qualified non-dualism
42:30
something that we will dedicate a future video to and while western scholars of the last few centuries
42:36
have often over emphasized the importance of shankara and advaita vedanta in hinduism
42:42
largely for example was adapted to a much larger degree by the
42:49
vaishnavites historically there's still no denying that advaita and shankara
42:55
stands as one of the pillars of this vast tradition of vedanta but also of hinduism in a much
43:02
more general sense shankara is a very popular figure today both in his native india but also in the
43:09
western world and around the world globally as i've mentioned his
43:14
the way that he's presented today is often removed from a lot of his historical religious and intellectual
43:21
environment and context but still the core ideas that he presents of non-duality
43:27
is one that is very popular and influential to many modern religious movements as well
43:34
again very impressive for someone who supposedly only lived for 32 years i'll see you next time
43:43
as always this video is brought to you by our patrons the new ones include barry nobles and
43:49
faris al rosabi thank you both so much and of course a special shout out to all of my patrons
43:56
in the saint category adam shraeby faris badawi hanan fikri just the truth
44:03
muhammad mudasir richie able sandy jabber stuart cleland sayeth
44:09
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44:16
so much if anyone else is interested in becoming a patron and supporting my
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44:48
description you



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Life, Teachings and Legacy: The Adi Shankara Story (full documentary)





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Life, Teachings and Legacy: The Adi Shankara Story (full documentary)

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32,831 views  Jan 9, 2021  #advaita #hinduism #adishankara
A portrait of Adi Shankaracharya, a revered philosopher and theologian, who aimed to provide a coherent, single reading of Hindu scriptures. 


This is a documentary with audio taken from the BBC Radio 4 series, 'Incarnations: India in 50 Lives, Shankaracharya: A God Without Qualities'. Narrated and written by Professor Sunil Khilnani. I make no money off this documentary, this is for educational purposes only. 
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Life, Teachings and Legacy: The Adi Shankara Story (full documentary)

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32,831 views  Jan 9, 2021  #advaita #hinduism #adishankara
A portrait of Adi Shankaracharya, a revered philosopher and theologian, who aimed to provide a coherent, single reading of Hindu scriptures. 


This is a documentary with audio taken from the BBC Radio 4 series, 'Incarnations: India in 50 Lives, Shankaracharya: A God Without Qualities'. Narrated and written by Professor Sunil Khilnani. I make no money off this documentary, this is for educational purposes only. 


#adishankara #hinduism #advaita
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1 songs

Bhaja Govindam
M. S. Subhalakshmi
Bhaja Govindam And Vishnu Sahasranamam
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Transcript
Follow along using the transcript.


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@shaunbird8051
@shaunbird8051
5 months ago
Thank you very much for the excellent analysis. It really gives us many insights into the life of this Great Saint.


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@shashinaththakur
@shashinaththakur
2 years ago
Too much good work thanks from India 🔺🙏

5


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2 replies
@kalkiji6723
@kalkiji6723
1 year ago
He debated! He transformed the consciousness of entire land and people with his word. You cannot change the world by force for you will be always met with resistance. People can  be crippled by fear but love can transformed within their hearts and minds.

8

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@rajendranpk4883
@rajendranpk4883
2 years ago
Thank your 🙏🙏

3


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@bhuvaneswariganesh7161
@bhuvaneswariganesh7161
2 years ago
Jaya Jaya Shankara Hara Hara Shankara. 
🌿🌷🌿🙏🙏🌿🌷🌿

3


Reply

@samadhi5281
@samadhi5281
2 years ago
Thank you ❤

2


Reply

@batman9833
@batman9833
2 years ago
Shameful how Wendy Doniger a controversial Indologist who is both a non practitioner and known for her affiliation with the church is used as an expert on something she repeatedly tries to interpret. Also interesting how she attributes items to British whose rule was nothing more than a drop in the 11,000 year cultural ocean of India. If you want to learn about Christianity — read the bible. Same goes for Vedanta and Shankara - read his teachings, practice meditation and other aspects like vegetarianism. You will find what you are looking for.

16


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@atmanand5802
@atmanand5802
2 years ago
💖eternally🌏grateful🙏
🌠Aham🌅Brahmasmi🌴
🌌Tat🌕Tvam🌈Asi🌀

2


Reply

@mukularya9849
@mukularya9849
2 years ago
Came as a avatar form before 2500 years ago,

3


Reply

@PurpleSoma
@PurpleSoma
1 year ago (edited)
14:44 could I please know his name? He appeared in my dreams

4


Reply


1 reply
@Trending_statuz
@Trending_statuz
3 years ago
🙏🙏🙏

1


Reply

@anjalianangamanjari
@anjalianangamanjari
2 years ago
Bhaja Govinda, Bhaja Govinda, Bhaja Govinda🙏🌈

1


Reply

@herozero6123
@herozero6123
2 years ago
with due respect, professor was wrong about few things.

7


Reply

@Mosquito805
@Mosquito805
3 years ago
Wow that was a very well made documentary, did You yourself made it or took from  somewhere else?, is it a part of a longer series?

2

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@parvathamupendracharya6728
@parvathamupendracharya6728
2 years ago
The name "Jagadguru" teacher of the world, the teacher of the world is a distinction to which the people of Vishvakarma Caste alone are entitled (Wilson Dictionary). When the world-famous Shankaracharya of Travancore, the founder of the Avaita School of Philosophy ... halted at Masulipatam he styled himself "Jagadguru". The Devakammalars of South India, who were very jealous of their title were incensed at an apparent impostor trying to assume what was their own exclusive propert, questioned his right to the distinction, when the philosopher sang the following lines:

"Acharya Sankaro nama 
"Twashta putro nasanyasa, 
"Viprakula gurordiksha, 
"Visvakarmantu Brahmana"

"My name is Shankaracharya, I am a descendant of Twashtar, I have come here to teach the Vipras the right of wearing the sacred thread, I am a Brahmana of the Vishvakarma Caste." (Shankaracharya Vijaya)

This is irrefutable proof that the people of the Vishvakarma Caste are Brahmans.



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1 reply
@achutha_ks
@achutha_ks
2 years ago
You are trying to provide black and white answers.. The professor from University of Chicago has definitely not dug deeper into the philosophical concepts of not just Shankaracharya, but also Ramanujacharya or Madhwacharya. The problem with your documentary is that it appears to have deeper analysis on the surface, but not really. I would suggest just interview vedantic teachers of different traditions, and you will start to understand nuances. Basically, the Indian thought is you can explore truth about existence through belief systems or unrelenting questioning. These are ends of the spectrum by the way.. And there are many paths in-between. Western tradition of pursuit of truth is very narrow, filled with dogmas and only belief systems. Hence for someone raised in that tradition, it is hard to grapple with nuances. Hope you pursue truth!

9


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1 reply
@sripradevikash9964
@sripradevikash9964
1 year ago
Good work sir...but it's not hinduism..which the invaders named it so .it's sanatanam...a Dharma which teaches how to find out the god in u...and a science to live a life of Dharma... 🙏🙏

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@TarunKumar-uo5gn
@TarunKumar-uo5gn
10 months ago
Yet Adi Shankaracharya himself could not overcome the maya of caste system and all Shankaracharya's appointed are brahmins.

1


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@2066cj
@2066cj
1 month ago
Hindu Ashoka converted to Buddhism and made India, China, Sri Lanka Buddhist countries... Adi Shankara, won India back to Brahmanical Hinduism and brought back casteism.. Adi Shankara or his followers didnt go to Sri lanka because of some religious belief that sea is God or something like that & shall not be crossed...So, Srilanka is still a Buddisht country



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@sunfield009
@sunfield009
11 months ago
MANUVADI BRAHMINICAL EGOS



Reply

@nishansitoula4922
@nishansitoula4922
1 year ago
buddha dismantle the foundation of Vedas .  Hindu resort to voilence for is revival eg Mihirakula is said to have razed 1600 viharas, stupas and monasteries, and “put to death 900 Kotis, or lay adherents of Buddhism”.  Madhava Acharya, in his “Sankara-digvijayam” of the fourteenth century A.D., records that Suddhanvan “issued orders to put to death all the Buddhists from Ramesvaram to the Himalayas”.sankar lead the camping



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2 replies
Transcript


0:03
it's dawn
0:04
in this south indian temple town a brief
0:07
still moment of cool
0:10
walking in the half light sleepy i'm
0:12
startled by something coiled on the
0:14
veranda
0:16
a snake and from the looks of it sleepy
0:19
too
0:21
best wait for it to move off on its own
0:28
as the light rises i look again and i
0:30
laugh
0:31
what snake it's merely a coiled rope
0:34
left behind by a man
0:35
who's been fixing the tiled roof
0:40
this little bit of self-deception
0:42
mistaking a rope for a snake
0:44
isn't just an occasional practical
0:46
occurrence in indian life
0:48
it's among the most well-known okay
0:50
hackneyed
0:52
popular examples in indian philosophical
0:54
thought
0:55
its purpose is to show that while the
0:57
sensory empirical world is real
1:00
our minds are tricksters what we see is
1:03
sometimes not what we think it to be
1:06
conversely the reality we sense
1:09
superimposing a snake
1:10
on a road exists only so far as we
1:13
believe it
1:18
[Music]
1:20
hindu philosophy is pervaded by
1:22
mistakings
1:23
by metaphors of concealment and
1:25
obscuration
1:27
they serve as examples of maya a reality
1:30
that's substantially there
1:32
but whose true nature eludes us because
1:34
of the limitations of our consciousness
1:37
if we can push aside this slippery and
1:39
illusory reality though
1:41
we can find something pure and constant
1:44
the world of universal spirit
1:46
brahman this belief in maya which hides
1:50
brahman
1:51
is at the core of what many today see as
1:53
the philosophy of hinduism
1:56
and we owe that definition of hinduism
1:58
to a philosopher and religious teacher
2:00
who lived in the 8th century adi
2:06
shankaracharya
2:09
[Music]
2:12
all this universe being other than the
2:14
self is unreal
2:17
for the self alone is all inclusive
2:20
and is self self-established and
2:22
self-dependent
2:26
shankaracharya established his first
2:28
hindu monastery or mutt
2:29
at sringari now a pilgrimage town in
2:32
karnataka
2:33
south west india
2:37
to get to sringara you have to take
2:39
narrow hill roads that wind up
2:41
through the hills of northern karnataka
2:44
pass miles and miles of coffee
2:45
plantation
2:47
tall palms and splays of bamboo
2:51
it's a little hilltown the mutton temple
2:54
separated by a river
2:55
set amidst meadows
2:59
shankaracharya or shankara as he was
3:01
also known
3:02
transformed existing hindu beliefs and
3:04
practices
3:05
and in many ways it's he who made the
3:07
faith what it is today
3:09
the third largest religion in the world
3:12
while there's some dispute about dates
3:14
it's generally reckoned that shankara
3:16
was born in the 8th century
3:18
in the malabar region of southern india
3:20
today's kerala state
3:23
in europe this was the era of
3:24
charlemagne pursuing a bloody expansion
3:27
of christendom in his campaigns against
3:29
the saxons
3:30
saracens moors and slavs and gaining for
3:33
himself rome's christian imperium
3:36
shankara's campaign to assert and extend
3:38
hindu beliefs was vastly different
3:41
it was an intellectual struggle
3:43
prosecuted through debates he held
3:45
across the length and breadth of india
3:48
[Music]
3:51
[Applause]
3:57
as we've now come to expect with the
3:58
ancient indians there's much uncertainty
4:00
and dispute about our man's early life
4:03
according to some religious biographies
4:05
written in verse several hundred years
4:07
later
4:08
shankara's long childless parents had
4:10
prayed to shiva
4:12
the hindu deity at a nearby temple
4:15
shiva appearing to them in a dream
4:17
presented a choice
4:19
they could have a son who was a
4:20
brilliant philosopher all-knowing and
4:22
virtuous
4:23
but short-lived or one who would live
4:25
long but without any special virtue
4:28
or greatness they opted for the smart
4:30
kid
4:31
whom they named shankara another name
4:33
for shiva
4:35
as promised he turned out to be a child
4:37
prodigy
4:38
mastering the four vedas the oldest
4:40
hindu scriptures
4:41
by the age of eight and adding his own
4:43
written commentaries by the age of 16
4:47
but his brilliance quickly proved a
4:48
double-edged thing for his mother
4:50
his father had died when he was very
4:52
young and shankara's a good son
4:54
was expected to provide for his mother
4:57
instead
4:58
at the age of five some say while others
5:00
say eight
5:01
he declared his desire to become a
5:03
sannyasi an ascetic
5:05
wandering monk shankaracharya
5:08
shankaracharya's precocious
5:10
choice of sannyas was a scandal he was
5:13
skipping over the usual stages of a
5:15
hindu man's life
5:16
student householder hermit and then
5:20
only finally religious wanderer but he
5:23
prevailed on
5:24
his widowed mother the poor woman seems
5:26
to have been faced with quite a few hard
5:27
choices in life
5:28
and so off he went establishing temples
5:31
and mutts across the length of india
5:34
at the four cardinal geographic points
5:36
of the subcontinent badrinath in the
5:38
north
5:39
puri in the east dwarka in the west and
5:42
here at sringari in the south
5:45
and they continue to exist their head
5:47
priests often in rivalry with one
5:50
another
5:52
his teachings gained many devoted
5:54
followers and have many still
5:56
today like they're all around me coming
5:59
here
5:59
to pilgrimage at the shingari mutt
6:03
and temple the earliest ideas about what
6:07
later came to be known as hinduism
6:09
are found in the vedas and they were
6:11
developed by the upanishads
6:13
dating from 2500 years ago
6:16
these sanskrit writings known as the
6:18
vedant or the end of the vedas
6:21
began to answer some of the eternal
6:23
questions that had been posed in the
6:24
vedas
6:25
where do we come from why are we here
6:29
and where do we go in the upanishads we
6:32
find ideas of reincarnation
6:35
and of how individual action in this
6:37
life can shape our chances in the next
6:39
one
6:40
shankaracharya immersed himself in these
6:42
texts
6:43
drawing them together into an
6:45
intellectual system
6:47
janadan ghaneri is professor of
6:48
philosophy at new york university
6:51
shankara's ambition was to provide
6:55
a unified single reading
6:58
of the great plurality and diversity of
7:02
the hindu scriptures
7:03
so he wrote commentaries on almost all
7:07
of the key
7:08
hindu scriptures that formed the canon
7:12
and attempted to provide them with a
7:15
single
7:16
interpretation which for him was a form
7:20
of
7:20
monism that is to say he thought there
7:23
was just one
7:24
real entity the name of which is brahman
7:28
the fundamental grounding principle
7:31
of the universe and that everything else
7:33
all the apparent
7:34
distinctions and differences in the
7:36
world
7:37
including differences between different
7:40
individual
7:41
selves
7:44
[Music]
7:47
was crucially different from monotheism
7:49
unlike the jealous paternal god of the
7:51
abrahamic faiths
7:53
and unlike to the superhuman personal
7:55
gods of the vedic pantheon
7:57
shankar as brahman was without positive
7:59
attributes
8:00
a god or all-pervading substance without
8:03
qualities
8:07
you cross over a bridge and climb a hill
8:09
to get to the shingeri mat
8:11
the monastery established by
8:12
shankaracharya
8:14
its modern incarnation is somewhat
8:15
different from when it was founded in
8:17
the 8th century
8:18
and so it would seem are some of the
8:20
practices of the present day monks
8:22
who are maybe a little forgetful of
8:24
shankaracharya's original
8:26
views
8:39
believed that there was something more
8:41
valuable in the vedas the ancient
8:43
scriptures
8:44
than mere ritual injunctions for
8:46
instance the recitation of mantras
8:48
word sounds whose repetition was
8:50
supposed to up once karmic investment
8:52
fund
8:53
and so to improve chances of escape from
8:56
the cycle of birth and death
8:58
for shankaracharya that was a
8:59
misunderstanding of the individual's
9:01
spirit's path to liberation
9:04
to him the vedas and especially the
9:07
later upanishads
9:08
contained knowledge jinan which revealed
9:12
the essential unity of man in the cosmos
9:15
survey the hinduism had to be newly
9:17
formulated
9:18
its obsession with rituals must be
9:20
replaced by asceticism
9:22
celibacy and intellectual rigor instead
9:25
of mantras he prescribed therefore
9:27
meditative reflection through which each
9:30
individual could come to recognize the
9:32
identity between his or her own essence
9:35
and brahman universal spirit
9:38
once we grasped that oneness with the
9:40
eternal
9:41
we attain moksha moksha
9:45
released from the cycle of birth and
9:47
death
9:48
shankaracharya's doctrine came to be
9:50
known as advaita vedant
9:52
which crystallized existing beliefs into
9:54
a new religious philosophy
9:56
his efforts to capture the oneness of
9:58
the universe
10:00
produced beautiful and sometimes
10:01
enigmatic sentences
10:04
i am neither earth nor water nor fire
10:07
nor air nor sense organ nor the
10:11
aggregate of all these
10:13
for all these are transient i am neither
10:15
above
10:16
nor below neither inside nor outside
10:19
neither middle nor a cross neither the
10:22
east nor west
10:24
for i am indivisible one by nature
10:28
and all pervaded like space
10:33
[Music]
10:42
was also a masterful popularizer of his
10:45
difficult
10:46
teachings composing devotional songs and
10:48
hymns
10:49
that are widely sung even today this is
10:52
bhaja govindam
10:53
in praise of krishna by the celebrated
10:55
carnatic vocalist
10:56
ms subba lakshmi
11:00
[Music]
11:12
[Music]
11:14
the version of hinduism shankara
11:15
propagated gained popularity
11:18
but there are aspects of it not all
11:20
hindus would share or even recognize
11:23
wendy donega professor of the history of
11:25
religions at the university of chicago
11:28
shankar is there everybody knows about
11:30
him some people
11:31
use him as their own guide
11:34
to their own thinking about the meaning
11:36
of life and those people say that's what
11:38
hinduism really is
11:40
but it's really not true it's what some
11:42
of hinduism is
11:44
the trouble is that one branch of
11:46
hinduism which includes the shankara
11:48
tradition
11:50
the philosophical tradition was very
11:53
attractive to the british when they came
11:55
to india and they began the british raj
11:58
they liked that it was a philosophical
12:00
tradition they could come to terms with
12:02
that
12:02
the rest of hinduism which is to say
12:04
most of hinduism
12:06
with the gods with many arms and
12:09
goddesses that drink warm blood
12:11
the british didn't really like that part
12:13
of hinduism so
12:14
the hindus who worked with the british
12:16
which is to say quite a lot of people
12:18
they became ashamed of that part of
12:20
their own religion
12:24
it was hindu revivalists and
12:26
nationalists who at the end of the 19th
12:28
and in the 20th century
12:29
embraced shankar as monism as hinduism's
12:32
muscular response
12:33
to the monotheistic religions of
12:35
christianity and islam
12:38
so proselytizers like vivekananda whom
12:40
we'll hear about later in this series
12:42
invoked shankara's ideas and argued for
12:45
the creation of schools to promote
12:46
advaita vedant
12:48
and to foster national self-pride
12:51
present day shankaracharyas may be the
12:53
nearest thing hinduism has
12:55
to a pope or papacy but hinduism itself
12:58
remains as it was when shankara lived
13:01
multiple in form
13:02
bubbling with internal arguments and
13:04
accepting of different forms of belief
13:07
there's no single defining text or
13:09
interpreter
13:10
what there are are mesmerizing questions
13:13
puzzles
13:14
day break doubts about the nature of our
13:16
perceptions the limits of ourself
13:19
the relationship between that self and
13:21
the unceasing flow
13:22
of time
13:35
[Music]
13:49
[Music]
14:00
foreign
14:02
[Music]
14:09
[Music]
14:14
is
14:27
[Music]
14:36
[Music]
14:42
foreign
14:44
[Music]



2024/03/11

Adi Shankara - Wikipedia cf Buddhism

Adi Shankara - Wikipedia


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the vedic philosopher Adi Shankara. For the title used in Advaita traditions, see Shankaracharya.
"Adi Shankaracharya" redirects here. For the 1983 Indian film, see Adi Shankaracharya (film).

Adi Shankara

Painting of Adi Shankara, exponent of Advaita Vedanta with his disciples by Raja Ravi Varma



Adi Shankara, also called Adi Shankaracharya (Sanskrit: आदि शङ्कर, आदि शङ्कराचार्य, romanized: Ādi Śaṅkara, Ādi Śaṅkarācārya, lit. 'First Shankaracharya',[note 2] pronounced [aːdɪ ɕɐŋkɐraːt͡ɕaːrjɐ]),[note 3] was an Indian Vedic scholar and teacher (acharya).[1] His works present a harmonizing reading of the sastras, with liberating knowledge of the self at its core, synthesizing the Advaita Vedanta teachings of his time.[2][web 1]

Due to his later fame, over 300 texts are attributed to him, including commentaries (Bhāṣya), introductory topical expositions (Prakaraṇa grantha) and poetry (Stotra).[3][4] However, most of these are likely to be written by admirers or pretenders or scholars with an eponymous name.[5][6] Works known to be written by Shankara himself are the Brahmasutrabhasya,[3] his commentaries on ten principal Upanishads,[3][5] his commentary on the Bhagavad Gita,[7] and the Upadeśasāhasrī.[8][9] The authenticity of Shankara being the author of Vivekacūḍāmaṇi has been questioned and mostly rejected by scholarship.[10][11]

The central concern of Shankara's writings is the liberating knowledge of the true identity of jivatman (individual self) as Ātman-Brahman,[9][12] taking the Upanishads as an independent means of knowledge, beyond the ritually-oriented Mīmāṃsā-exegesis of the Vedas.[13][14][note 4][note 5] 
Shankara's Advaita shows influences from Mahayana Buddhism, despite Shankara's critiques;[15][16] and Hindu Vaishnava opponents have even accused Shankara of being a "crypto-Buddhist,"[17][18][19][note 6] a qualification which is rejected by the Advaita Vedanta tradition, highlighting their respective views on Atman, Anatta and Brahman.[20][note 7]

Shankara has an unparallelled status in the tradition of Advaita Vedanta,[13][21] but his influence on Hindu intellectual thought has been questioned.[22][23][24] Until the 10th century Shankara was overshadowed by his older contemporary Maṇḍana Miśra,[23][25] and there is no mention of him in concurring Hindu, Buddhist or Jain sources until the 11th century.[26] 
The popular image Shankara started to take shape in the 14th century, centuries after his death, when Sringeri matha started to receive patronage from the kings of the Vijayanagara Empire[25][27][28][29] and shifted their allegiance from Advaitic Agamic Shaivism to Brahmanical Advaita orthodoxy.[30] 
Hagiographies dating from the 14th-17th centuries deified him as a ruler-renunciate, travelling on a digvijaya (conquest of the four quarters)[31][32] across the Indian subcontinent to propagate his philosophy, defeating his opponents in theological debates.[33][34] These hagiographies portray him as founding four mathas ("monasteries"), and Adi Shankara also came to be regarded as the organiser of the Dashanami monastic order, and the unifier of the Shanmata tradition of worship. The title of Shankaracharya, used by heads of certain monasteries in India, is derived from his name.

DatingThe birthplace of Adi Shankara at Kalady

Reliable information on Shankara's actual life is scanty.[35] His existing biographies are not historical accurate documents, but politically motivated hagiographies which were all written several centuries after his time and abound in legends and improbable events.[36] Several different dates have been proposed for Shankara.[37] While the Advaita-tradition assigns him to the 5th century BCE, the scholarly-accepted dating places Shankara to be a scholar from the first half of the 8th century CE.[13][38]

Matha datings509–477 BCE: this dating is based on records of the heads of the Shankara's cardinal institutions Maṭhas. The exact dates of birth of Adi Shankaracharya believed by four monasteries are Dvārakā at 491 BCE,[note 8] Jyotirmath at 485 BCE, Jagannatha Puri at 484 BCE and Sringeri at 483 BCE.[41] while according to the Kanchi Peetham Adi Shankara was born in Kali 2593 (509 BCE).[42][note 9]

The records of the Sringeri Matha state that Shankara was born in the 14th year of the reign of "Vikramaditya", but it is unclear to which king this name refers.[45] Though some researchers identify the name with Chandragupta II (4th century CE), modern scholarship accepts the Vikramaditya as being from the Chalukya dynasty of Badami, most likely Vikramaditya II (733–746 CE).[45]
Scholarly datings788–820 CE: This was proposed by late 19th and early twentieth century scholars, following K.P. Tiele,[note 10] and was customarily accepted by scholars such as Max Müller, Macdonnel, Pathok, Deussen and Radhakrishna.[46][47] Though the 788–820 CE dates are widespread in 20th-century publications, recent scholarship has questioned the 788–820 CE dates.[36][note 11]
c. 700 – c. 750 CE: Late 20th-century and early 21st-century scholarship tends to place Shankara's life in the first half of the 8th century.[36][49][note 12] This estimate is based on the probable earliest and latest limits for his lifetime. His works contains traces of debates with Buddhist and Mimamsa authors from th 5th-7th century, setting the earliest limit at c. 650 CE. The latest limit is established by Vacaspatimisra's commentary on Sankara's work, dated first half of the 9th century, thus setting the latest limit for Sankara at c. 800 CE.[50]
Other datings44–12 BCE: the commentator Anandagiri believed he was born at Chidambaram in 44 BCE and died in 12 BCE.[51]
6th century CE: Telang placed him in this century. Sir R.G. Bhandarkar believed he was born in 680 CE.[51]
805–897 CE: Venkiteswara not only places Shankara later than most, but also had the opinion that it would not have been possible for him to have achieved all the works apportioned to him, and has him live ninety-two years.[51]

Works
Further information: Adi Shankara bibliography

Adi Shankara is highly esteemed in contemporary Advaita Vedanta, and over 300 texts are attributed to his name, including commentaries (Bhāṣya), original philosophical expositions (Prakaraṇa grantha) and poetry (Stotra).[3][4] However, most of these are not authentic works of Shankara, and are likely to be written by his admirers, or scholars whose name was also Shankaracharya.[5][6] Piantelli has published a complete list of works attributed to Adi Sankara, along with issues of authenticity for most.[52]

Authentic works

Shankara is most known for his systematic reviews and commentaries (Bhasyas) on ancient Indian texts. Shankara's masterpiece of commentary is the Brahmasutrabhasya (literally, commentary on Brahma Sutra), a fundamental text of the Vedanta school of Hinduism.[3]

Most of his commentaries on the ten Mukhya (principal) Upanishads are considered authentic by scholars,[3][5] and these are: Bhasya on the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, the Chandogya Upanishad, the Aitareya Upanishad, the Taittiriya Upanishad, the Kena Upanishad,[note 13] the Isha Upanishad, the Katha Upanishad, the Mundaka Upanishad, and the Prashna Upanishad.[54][55] The authenticity of the commentary on the Mandukya Upanishad and Gaudapadas Madukya-karika has been questioned.[54][55]

Other authentic works of Shankara include commentaries on the Bhagavad Gita (part of his Prasthana Trayi Bhasya).[7] His Vivarana (tertiary notes) on the commentary by Vedavyasa on Yogasutras as well as those on Apastamba Dharma-sũtras (Adhyatama-patala-bhasya) are accepted by scholars as authentic works of Shankara.[54][8] Among the Stotra (poetic works), the Dakshinamurti Stotra, the Bhajagovinda Stotra, the Shivanandalahari, the Carpata-panjarika, the Visnu-satpadi, the Harimide, the Dasha-shloki, and the Krishna-staka are likely to be authentic.[54][56]

Shankara also authored Upadesasahasri, his most important original philosophical work.[8][9][9] Of other original Prakaranas (प्रकरण, monographs, treatise), seventy-six works are attributed to Shankara. Modern era Indian scholars such as Belvalkar as well as Upadhyaya accept five and thirty-nine works respectively as authentic.[57]

Shankara's stotras considered authentic include those dedicated to Krishna (Vaishnavism) and one to Shiva (Shaivism) – often considered two different sects within Hinduism. Scholars suggest that these stotra are not sectarian, but essentially Advaitic and reach for a unified universal view of Vedanta.[56]

Shankara's commentary on the Brahma Sutras is the oldest surviving. However, in that commentary, he mentions older commentaries like those of Dravida, Bhartrprapancha and others which are either lost or yet to be found.[58]
Works of doubtful authenticity or not authentic

Commentaries on Nrisimha-Purvatatapaniya and Shveshvatara Upanishads are attributed to Shankara, but their authenticity is highly doubtful.[5][55][59] Similarly, commentaries on several early and later Upanishads attributed to Shankara are rejected by scholars[60] to be his works, and are likely works of later scholars; these include: Kaushitaki Upanishad, Maitri Upanishad, Kaivalya Upanishad, Paramahamsa Upanishad, Sakatayana Upanishad, Mandala Brahmana Upanishad, Maha Narayana Upanishad, Gopalatapaniya Upanishad. However, in Brahmasutra-Bhasya, Shankara cites some of these Upanishads as he develops his arguments, but the historical notes left by his companions and disciples, along with major differences in style and the content of the commentaries on later Upanishad have led scholars to conclude that the commentaries on later Upanishads were not Shankara's work.[55]

The authenticity of Shankara being the author of Vivekacūḍāmaṇi[61] has been questioned,[10][11] though it is "so closely interwoven into the spiritual heritage of Shankara that any analysis of his perspective which fails to consider [this work] would be incomplete."[11][note 14] According to Grimes, "modern scholars tend to reject its authenticity as a work by Shankara," while "traditionalists tend to accept it."[62] Nevertheless, does Grimes argue that "there is still a likelihood that Śaṅkara is the author of the Vivekacūḍāmaṇi," [62] noting that "it differs in certain respects from his other works in that it addresses itself to a different audience and has a different emphasis and purpose."[63]

The Aparokshanubhuti and Atma bodha are also attributed to Shankara, as his original philosophical treatises, but this is doubtful. Paul Hacker has also expressed some reservations that the compendium Sarva-darsana-siddhanta Sangraha was completely authored by Shankara, because of difference in style and thematic inconsistencies in parts.[60] Similarly, Gayatri-bhasya is doubtful to be Shankara's work.[55] Other commentaries that are highly unlikely to be Shankara's work include those on Uttaragita, Siva-gita, Brahma-gita, Lalita-shasranama, Suta-samhita and Sandhya-bhasya. The commentary on the Tantric work Lalita-trisati-bhasya attributed to Shankara is also unauthentic.[55]

Shankara is widely credited with commentaries on other scriptural works, such as the Vishnu sahasranāma and the Sānatsujātiya,[64] but both these are considered apocryphal by scholars who have expressed doubts.[55] Hastamalakiya-bhasya is also widely believed in India to be Shankara's work and it is included in Samata-edition of Shankara's works, but some scholars consider it to be the work of Shankara's student.[55]


Philosophy and practice



Atma Shatakam (The song of the Self):

I am Consciousness, I am Bliss, I am Shiva, I am Shiva.[note 15]

Without hate, without infatuation, without craving, without greed;
Neither arrogance, nor conceit, never jealous I am;
Neither dharma, nor artha, neither kama, nor moksha am I;
I am Consciousness, I am Bliss, I am Shiva, I am Shiva.

Without sins, without merits, without elation, without sorrow;
Neither mantra, nor rituals, neither pilgrimage, nor Vedas;
Neither the experiencer, nor experienced, nor the experience am I,
I am Consciousness, I am Bliss, I am Shiva, I am Shiva.

Without fear, without death, without discrimination, without caste;
Neither father, nor mother, never born I am;
Neither kith, nor kin, neither teacher, nor student am I;
I am Consciousness, I am Bliss, I am Shiva, I am Shiva.

Without form, without figure, without resemblance am I;
Vitality of all senses, in everything I am;
Neither attached, nor released am I;
I am Consciousness, I am Bliss, I am Shiva, I am Shiva.

—Adi Shankara, Nirvana Shatakam, Hymns 3–6[66]

According to Nakamura, Shankara was not an original thinker, but systematised the works of preceding philosophers.[67] The central theme of Shankara's writings is the liberating knowledge of the identity of the Self (Ātman) and Brahman.[9][12] Moksha is attained in this life by recognizing the identity of Atman and Brahman,[9] as mediated by the Mahavakyas, especially Tat Tvam Asi, "That you are."

Systematizer of Advaita

According to Nakamura, comparison of the known teachings of the early Vedantins and Shankara's thought shows that most of the characteristics of Shankara's thought "were advocated by someone before Śankara".[68] Shankara "was the person who synthesized the Advaita-vāda which had previously existed before him".[68] According to Nakamura, after the growing influence of Buddhism on Vedānta, culminating in the works of Gauḍapāda, Adi Shankara gave a Vedantic character to the Buddhistic elements in these works,[69] synthesising and rejuvenating the doctrine of Advaita.[70]

According to Koller, using ideas in ancient Indian texts, Shankara systematized the foundation for Advaita Vedānta in the 8th century, reforming Badarayana's Vedānta tradition.[9] According to Mayeda, Shankara represents a turning point in the development of Vedānta,[69] yet he also notices that it is only since Deussens's praise that Shankara "has usually been regarded as the greatest philosopher of India."[71] Mayeda further notes that Shankara was primarily concerned with moksha, "and not with the establishment of a complete system of philosophy or theology,"[71] following Potter, who qualifies Shankara as a "speculative philosopher."[72] Lipner notes that Shankara's "main literary approach was commentarial and hence perforce disjointed rather than procedurally systematic [...] though a systematic philosophy can be derived from Samkara's thought."[73]

Shankara has been described as influenced by Shaivism and Shaktism, but his works and philosophy suggest greater overlap with Vaishnavism, influence of Yoga school of Hinduism, but most distinctly express his Advaitin convictions with a monistic view of spirituality,[9][38][74] and his commentaries mark a turn from realism to idealism.[75][76]

Moksha - liberating knowledge of Brahman


The central theme of Shankara's writings is the liberating knowledge of the true identity of jivatman (individual self) as Ātman)-Brahman.[9][12][note 16] One of Shankara's main concerns was establishing the Upanishads as an independent means of knowledge beyond the ritually-oriented Mīmāṃsā exegesis of the vedas.[14][13][note 4][note 5]

According to Shankara, the one unchanging entity (Brahman) alone is real, while changing entities do not have absolute existence. Shankara's primary objective was to explain how moksha is attained in this life by recognizing the true identity of jivatman as Atman-Brahman,[9] as mediated by the Mahāvākyas, especially Tat Tvam Asi, "That you are." Correct knowledge of jivatman and Atman-Brahman is the attainment of Brahman, immortality,[77] and leads to moksha (liberation) from suffering[note 17] and samsara, the cycle of rebirth[78] This is stated by Shankara as follows:


I am other than name, form and action.
My nature is ever free!
I am Self, the supreme unconditioned Brahman.
I am pure Awareness, always non-dual.
— Adi Shankara, Upadesasahasri 11.7, [78]

Pramanas - means of knowledge


Shankara recognized the means of knowledge,[79][note 18] but his thematic focus was upon metaphysics and soteriology, and he took for granted the pramanas,[82] that is epistemology or "means to gain knowledge, reasoning methods that empower one to gain reliable knowledge".[citation needed] According to Sengaku Mayeda, "in no place in his works [...] does he give any systematic account of them,"[82] taking Atman-Brahman to be self-evident (svapramanaka) and self-established (svatahsiddha), and "an investigation of the means of knowledge is of no use for the attainment of final release."[82] Mayeda notes that Shankara's arguments are "strikingly realistic and not idealistic," arguing that jnana is based on existing things (vastutantra), and "not upon Vedic injunction (codanatantra) nor upon man (purusatantra).[82]

According to Michael Comans (aka Vasudevacharya), Shankara considered perception and inference as a primary most reliable epistemic means, and where these means to knowledge help one gain "what is beneficial and to avoid what is harmful", there is no need for or wisdom in referring to the scriptures.[83] In certain matters related to metaphysics and ethics, says Shankara, the testimony and wisdom in scriptures such as the Vedas and the Upanishads become important.[84]

Merrell-Wolff states that Shankara accepts Vedas and Upanishads as a source of knowledge as he develops his philosophical theses, yet he never rests his case on the ancient texts, rather proves each thesis, point by point using the pramanas (means of knowledge) of reason and experience.[85][86] Hacker and Phillips note that his insight into rules of reasoning and hierarchical emphasis on epistemic steps is "doubtlessly the suggestion" of Shankara in Brahma-sutra-bhasya, an insight that flowers in the works of his companion and disciple Padmapada.[87]
Logic versus revelation

Stcherbatsky in 1927 criticized Shankara for demanding the use of logic from Madhyamika Buddhists, while himself resorting to revelation as a source of knowledge.[15][note 19] Sircar in 1933 offered a different perspective and stated, "Sankara recognizes the value of the law of contrariety and self-alienation from the standpoint of idealistic logic; and it has consequently been possible for him to integrate appearance with reality."[88]

Recent scholarship states that Shankara's arguments on revelation are about apta vacana (Sanskrit: आप्तवचन, sayings of the wise, relying on word, testimony of past or present reliable experts).[89][90] It is part of his and Advaita Vedanta's epistemological foundation.[89] The Advaita Vedanta tradition considers such testimony epistemically valid, asserting that a human being needs to know numerous facts, and with the limited time and energy available, he can learn only a fraction of those facts and truths directly.[91] Shankara considered the teachings in the Vedas and Upanishads as apta vacana and a valid source of knowledge.[89] He suggests the importance of teacher-disciple relationship on combining logic and revelation to attain moksha in his text Upadeshasahasri.[92] Anantanand Rambachan and others state that Shankara did not rely exclusively on Vedic statements, but also used a range of logical methods and reasoning methodology and other pramanas.[93][94]

Anubhava


Anantanand Rambachan summarizes the widely held view on the role of anubhava in Shankara's epistemology as follows, before critiquing it:


According to these [widely represented contemporary] studies, Shankara only accorded a provisional validity to the knowledge gained by inquiry into the words of the Śruti (Vedas) and did not see the latter as the unique source (pramana) of Brahmajnana. The affirmations of the Śruti, it is argued, need to be verified and confirmed by the knowledge gained through direct experience (anubhava) and the authority of the Śruti, therefore, is only secondary.[7]
Yoga and contemplative exercises

Shankara considered the purity and steadiness of mind achieved in Yoga as an aid to gaining moksha knowledge, but such yogic state of mind cannot in itself give rise to such knowledge.[95] To Shankara, that knowledge of Brahman springs only from inquiry into the teachings of the Upanishads.[96] The method of yoga, encouraged in Shankara's teachings notes Comans, includes withdrawal of mind from sense objects as in Patanjali's system, but it is not complete thought suppression, instead it is a "meditative exercise of withdrawal from the particular and identification with the universal, leading to contemplation of oneself as the most universal, namely, Consciousness".[97] Describing Shankara's style of yogic practice, Comans writes:


the type of yoga which Sankara presents here is a method of merging, as it were, the particular (visesa) into the general (samanya). For example, diverse sounds are merged in the sense of hearing, which has greater generality insofar as the sense of hearing is the locus of all sounds. The sense of hearing is merged into the mind, whose nature consists of thinking about things, and the mind is in turn merged into the intellect, which Sankara then says is made into 'mere cognition' (vijnanamatra); that is, all particular cognitions resolve into their universal, which is cognition as such, thought without any particular object. And that in turn is merged into its universal, mere Consciousness (prajnafnaghana), upon which everything previously referred to ultimately depends.[97]

Shankara rejected those yoga system variations that suggest complete thought suppression leads to liberation, as well the view that the Shrutis teach liberation as something apart from the knowledge of the oneness of the Self. Knowledge alone and insights relating to true nature of things, taught Shankara, is what liberates. He placed great emphasis on the study of the Upanisads, emphasizing them as necessary and sufficient means to gain Self-liberating knowledge. Sankara also emphasized the need for and the role of Guru (Acharya, teacher) for such knowledge.[97]

Samanvayat Tatparya Linga


Shankara cautioned against cherrypicking a phrase or verse out of context from Vedic literature, and remarks in the opening chapter of his Brahmasutra-Bhasya that the Anvaya (theme or purport) of any treatise can only be correctly understood if one attends to the Samanvayat Tatparya Linga, that is six characteristics of the text under consideration: (1) the common in Upakrama (introductory statement) and Upasamhara (conclusions); (2) Abhyasa (message repeated); (3) Apurvata (unique proposition or novelty); (4) Phala (fruit or result derived); (5) Arthavada (explained meaning, praised point) and (6) Yukti (verifiable reasoning).[98][99] While this methodology has roots in the theoretical works of Nyaya school of Hinduism, Shankara consolidated and applied it with his unique exegetical method called Anvaya-Vyatireka, which states that for proper understanding one must "accept only meanings that are compatible with all characteristics" and "exclude meanings that are incompatible with any".[100][101]
The Mahāvākyas - the identity of Ātman and Brahman

Moksha, liberation from suffering and rebirth and attaining immortality, is attained by disidentification from the body-mind complex and gaining self-knowledge as being in essence Atman, and attaining knowledge of the identity of Ātman and Brahman.[78][77] According to Shankara, the individual Ātman and Brahman seem different at the empirical level of reality, but this difference is only an illusion, and at the highest level of reality they are really identical.[102] The real self is Sat, "the Existent," that is, Ātman-Brahman.[103][104][note 20] Whereas the difference between Ātman and non-Ātman is deemed self-evident, knowledge of the identity of Ātman and Brahman is revealed by the shruti, especially the Upanishadic statement tat tvam asi.

Mahāvākyas


According to Shankara, a large number of Upanishadic statements reveal the identity of Ātman and Brahman. In the Advaita Vedānta tradition, four of those statements, the Mahāvākyas, which are taken literal, in contrast to other statements, have a special importance in revealing this identity.[105][106] They are:तत्त्वमसि, tat tvam asi, Chandogya VI.8.7. Traditionally rendered as "That Thou Art" (that you are),[107][108][109] with tat in Ch.U.6.8.7 referring to sat, "the Existent"[110][111][112]); correctly translated as "That's how [thus] you are,"[107][109][113] with tat in Ch.U.6.12.3, it' original location from where it was copied to other verses,[107] referring to "the very nature of all existence as permeated by [the finest essence]"[114][115]
अहं ब्रह्मास्मि, aham brahmāsmi, Brhadāranyaka I.4.10, "I am Brahman," or "I am Divine."[116]
प्रज्ञानं ब्रह्म, prajñānam brahma, Aitareya V.3, "Prajñānam[note 21] is Brahman."[note 22]
अयमात्मा ब्रह्म, ayamātmā brahma, Mandukya II, "This Atman is Brahman."
That you are

The longest chapter of Shankara's Upadesasahasri, chapter 18, "That Art Thou," is devoted to considerations on the insight "I am ever-free, the existent" (sat), and the identity expressed in Chandogya Upanishad 6.8.7 in the mahavakya (great sentence) "tat tvam asi", "that thou art."[119][120] In this statement, according to Shankara, tat refers to Sat,[120] "the Existent"[110][111][121][122] Existence, Being,[123] or Brahman,[124] the Real, the "Root of the world,"[120][note 23] the true essence or root or origin of everything that exists.[111][121][123] "Tvam" refers to one's real I, pratyagatman or inner Self,[125] the "direct Witness within everything,"[126] "free from caste, family, and purifying ceremonies,"[127] the essence, Atman, which the individual at the core is.[128][129] As Shankara states in the Upadesasahasri:


Up.I.174: "Through such sentences as "Thou art That" one knows one's own Atman, the Witness of all the internal organs." Up.I.18.190: "Through such sentences as "[Thou art] the Existent" [...] right knowledge concerning the inner Atman will become clearer." Up.I.18.193-194: "In the sentence "Thou art That" [...] [t]he word "That" means inner Atman."[130]

The statement "tat tvam asi" sheds the false notion that Atman is different from Brahman.[131] According toNakamura, the non-duality of atman and Brahman "is a famous characteristic of Sankara's thought, but it was already taught by Sundarapandya"[132] (c. 600 CE or earlier).[12] Shankara cites Sundarapandya in his comments to Brahma Sutra verse I.1.4:


When the metaphorical or false atman is non-existent, [the ideas of my] child, [my] body are sublated. Therefore, when it is realized that 'I am the existent Brahman, atman', how can anyduty exist?[133]

From this, and a large number of other accordances, Nakamura concludes that Shankar was not an original thinker, but "a synthesizer of existing Advaita and the rejuvenator, as well as a defender, of ancient learning."[134]
Meditation on the Mahāvākya

In the Upadesasahasri Shankara, Shankara is ambivalent on the need for meditation on the Upanishadic mahavyaka. He states that "right knowledge arises at the moment of hearing,"[135] and rejects prasamcaksa or prasamkhyana meditation, that is, meditation on the meaning of the sentences, and in Up.II.3 recommends parisamkhyana,[136] separating Atman from everything that is not Atman, that is, the sense-objects and sense-organs, and the pleasant and unpleasant things and merit and demerit connected with them.[137] Yet, Shankara then concludes with declaring that only Atman exists, stating that "all the sentences of the Upanishads concerning non-duality of Atman should be fully contemplated, should be contemplated."[138] As Mayeda states, "how they [prasamcaksa or prasamkhyana versus parisamkhyana] differ from each other in not known."[139]

Prasamkhyana was advocated by Mandana Misra,[140] the older contemporary of Shankara who was the most influential Advaitin until the 10th century.[141][25][note 24] "According to Mandana, the mahavakyas are incapable, by themselves, of bringing about brahmajnana. The Vedanta-vakyas convey an indirect knowledge which is made direct only by deep meditation (prasamkhyana). The latter is a continuous contemplation of the purport of the mahavakyas.[142] Vācaspati Miśra, a student of Mandana Misra, agreed with Mandana Misra, and their stance is defended by the Bhamati-school, founded by Vācaspati Miśra.[143] In contrast, the Vivarana school founded by Prakasatman (c. 1200–1300)[144] follows Shankara closely, arguing that the mahavakyas are the direct cause of gaining knowledge.[145]
Renouncement of ritualism

Shankara, in his text Upadesasahasri, discourages ritual worship such as oblations to Deva (God), because that assumes the Self within is different from the Brahman.[note 4][note 5] The "doctrine of difference" is wrong, asserts Shankara, because, "he who knows the Brahman is one and he is another, does not know Brahman".[147][148] The false notion that Atman is different from Brahman[131] is connected with the novice's conviction that (Upadeshasahasri II.1.25)


...I am one [and] He is another; I am ignorant, experience pleasure and pain, am bound and a transmigrator [whereas] he is essentially different from me, the god not subject to transmigration. By worshipping Him with oblation, offerings, homage and the like through the [performance of] the actions prescribed for [my] class and stage of life, I wish to get out of the ocean of transmigratory existence. How am I he?[149]

Recognizing oneself as "the Existent-Brahman," which is mediated by scriptural teachings, is contrasted with the notion of "I act," which is mediated by relying on sense-perception and the like.[150] According to Shankara, the statement "Thou art That" "remove[s] the delusion of a hearer,"[151] "so through sentences as "Thou art That" one knows one's own Atman, the witness of all internal organs,"[152] and not from any actions.[153][note 25] With this realization, the performance of rituals is prohibited, "since [the use of] rituals and their requisites is contradictory to the realization of the identity [of Atman] with the highest Atman."[155]

However, Shankara also asserts that Self-knowledge is realized when one's mind is purified by an ethical life that observes Yamas such as Ahimsa (non-injury, non-violence to others in body, mind and thoughts) and Niyamas. Rituals and rites such as yajna (a fire ritual), asserts Shankara, can help draw and prepare the mind for the journey to Self-knowledge.[156] He emphasizes the need for ethics such as Akrodha and Yamas during Brahmacharya, stating the lack of ethics as causes that prevent students from attaining knowledge.[156][157]

Īśvara

Shankara, while rejecting empirical reality due to his position of nonduality, still attributes value to the universe as it identifies with Īśvara. He sometimes blurs the distinction between Īśvara and Brahman, using various terms for both. However, he generally separates Īśvara, associated with the universe and its attributes, from the absolute nondual brahman. Drawing from the Upanishads, Shankara sees Īśvara as the universe's material and intelligent cause, emanating it through the power of maya, thereby making the universe sentient and self-aware. In relation to the Mandukya Upanishad, Shankara compares the universe's unmanifest state to Īśvara in a deep dreamless cosmic state.[158]

Influences of Mahayana Buddhism

See also: Buddhist influences on Advaita Vedanta

Shankara's Vedanta shows similarities with Mahayana Buddhism; opponents have even accused Shankara of being a "crypto-Buddhist,"[18][17][19][note 6] a qualification which is rejected by the Advaita Vedanta tradition, given the differences between these two schools. According to Shankara, a major difference between Advaita and Mahayana Buddhism are their views on Atman and Brahman.[20] According to both Loy and Jayatilleke, more differences can be discerned.[159][160]

Similarities and influences

Despite Shankara's criticism of certain schools of Mahayana Buddhism, Shankara's philosophy shows strong similarities with the Mahayana Buddhist philosophy which he attacks.[15] 

According to S.N. Dasgupta,

Shankara and his followers borrowed much of their dialectic form of criticism from the Buddhists. His Brahman was very much like the sunya of Nagarjuna [...] The debts of Shankara to the self-luminosity of the Vijnanavada Buddhism can hardly be overestimated. 
There seems to be much truth in the accusations against Shankara by Vijnana Bhiksu and others that he was a hidden Buddhist himself. 
I am led to think that Shankara's philosophy is largely a compound of Vijnanavada and Sunyavada Buddhism with the Upanisad notion of the permanence of self superadded.[16]

According to Mudgal, Shankara's Advaita and the Buddhist Madhyamaka view of ultimate reality are compatible because they are both transcendental, indescribable, non-dual and only arrived at through a via negativa (neti neti).

Mudgal concludes therefore that


... the difference between Sunyavada (Mahayana) philosophy of Buddhism and Advaita philosophy of Hinduism may be a matter of emphasis, not of kind.[161]

Some Hindu scholars criticized Advaita for its Maya and non-theistic doctrinal similarities with Buddhism.[162][163] Ramanuja, the founder of Vishishtadvaita Vedānta, accused Adi Shankara of being a Prachanna Bauddha, that is, a "crypto-Buddhist",[17][18] and someone who was undermining theistic Bhakti devotionalism.[163] The non-Advaita scholar Bhaskara of the Bhedabheda Vedānta tradition, similarly around 800 CE, accused Shankara's Advaita as "this despicable broken down Mayavada that has been chanted by the Mahayana Buddhists", and a school that is undermining the ritual duties set in Vedic orthodoxy.[163]

Differences

The qualification of "crypto-Buddhist" is rejected by the Advaita Vedanta tradition, highlighting their respective views on Atman, Anatta and Brahman.[20][note 7]

There are differences in the conceptual means of "liberation." 

Nirvana, a term more often used in Buddhism, is the liberating 'blowing out' of craving, aided by the realization and acceptance that there is no Self (anatman) as the center of perception, craving, and delusion. 

Moksha, a term more common in Hinduism, is the similar liberating release from craving and ignorance, yet aided by the realization and acceptance that 
one's inner Self is not a personal 'ego-self', but a Universal Self.[159][164]

====

Historical and cultural impact
See also: History of HinduismAdi Sankara Keerthi Sthampa Mandapam, Kalady, Kochi

Historical context

Further information: History of India and History of Hinduism

Shankara lived in the time of the great "Late classical Hinduism",[165] which lasted from 650 till 1100 CE.[165] This era was one of political instability that followed the Gupta dynasty and King Harsha of the 7th century CE.[166] power became decentralised in India. Several larger kingdoms emerged, with "countless vasal states".[167][note 26] The kingdoms were ruled via a feudal system. Smaller kingdoms were dependent on the protection of the larger kingdoms. "The great king was remote, was exalted and deified",[167] as reflected in the Tantric Mandala, which could also depict the king as the centre of the mandala.[168]

The disintegration of central power also lead to regionalisation of religiosity, and religious rivalry.[169][note 27] Local cults and languages were enhanced, and the influence of "Brahmanic ritualistic Hinduism"[169] was diminished.[169] Rural and devotional movements arose, along with Shaivism, Vaisnavism, Bhakti and Tantra,[169] though "sectarian groupings were only at the beginning of their development".[169] Religious movements had to compete for recognition by the local lords,[169] and Buddhism, Jainism, Islam and various traditions within Hinduism were competing for members.[170][171][172] Buddhism in particular had emerged as a powerful influence in India's spiritual traditions in the first 700 years of the 1st millennium CE,[166][173] but lost its position after the 8th century, and began to disappear in India.[169] This was reflected in the change of puja-ceremonies at the courts in the 8th century, where Hindu gods replaced the Buddha as the "supreme, imperial deity".[note 28]


Influence on Hinduism
Traditional view


Shankara has an unparallelled status in the tradition of Advaita Vedanta. Hagiographies from the 14th-17th century portray him as a victor who travelled all over India to help restore the study of the Vedas[174] According to Frank Whaling, "Hindus of the Advaita persuasion (and others too) have seen in Sankara the one who restored the Hindu dharma against the attacks of the Buddhists (and Jains) and in the process helped to drive Buddhism out of India."[175] His teachings and tradition are central to Smartism and have influenced Sant Mat lineages.[176] Tradition portrays him as the one who reconciled the various sects (Vaishnavism, Shaivism, and Saktism) with the introduction of the Pañcāyatana form of worship, the simultaneous worship of five deities – Ganesha, Surya, Vishnu, Shiva and Devi, arguing that all deities were but different forms of the one Brahman, the invisible Supreme Being,[177] implying that Advaita Vedanta stood above all other traditions.[178]

According to Koller, Shankara, and his contemporaries, made a significant contribution in understanding Buddhism and the ancient Vedic traditions, then transforming the extant ideas, particularly reforming the Vedanta tradition of Hinduism, making it India's most important "spiritual tradition" for more than a thousand years.[179][note 29] Benedict Ashley credits Adi Shankara for unifying two seemingly disparate philosophical doctrines in Hinduism, namely Atman and Brahman.[180]

Critical assessment

Scholars have questioned Shankara's early influence in India.[27] The Buddhist scholar Richard E. King states,


Although it is common to find Western scholars and Hindus arguing that Sankaracarya was the most influential and important figure in the history of Hindu intellectual thought, this does not seem to be justified by the historical evidence.[23]

Prominence of Maṇḍana Miśra (until 10th century)


According to Clark, "Sankara was relatively unknown during his life-time, and probably for several centuries after, as there is no mention of him in Buddhist or jain sources for centuries; nor is he mentioned by other important philosophers of the ninth and tenth centuries."[26] According to King and Roodurmun, until the 10th century Shankara was overshadowed by his older contemporary Mandana-Misra, the latter considered to be the major representative of Advaita.[23][25] Maṇḍana Miśra, an older contemporary of Shankara,[22] was a Mimamsa scholar and a follower of Kumarila, but also wrote a seminal text on Advaita that has survived into the modern era, the Brahma-siddhi.[181][182] The "theory of error" set forth in the Brahma-siddhi became the normative Advaita Vedanta theory of error,[183] and for a couple of centuries he was the most influential Vedantin.[141][25][note 24] His student Vachaspati Miśra, who is believed to have been an incarnation of Shankara to popularize the Advaita view,[184] wrote the Bhamati, a commentary on Shankara's Brahma Sutra Bhashya, and the Brahmatattva-samiksa, a commentary on Mandana Mishra's Brahma-siddhi. His thought was mainly inspired by Mandana Miśra, and harmonises Shankara's thought with that of Mandana Miśra.[185][web 3] The Bhamati school takes an ontological approach. It sees the Jiva as the source of avidya.[web 3] It sees yogic practice and contemplation as the main factor in the acquirement of liberation, while the study of the Vedas and reflection are additional factors.[186][187] The later Advaita Vedanta tradition incorporated Maṇḍana Miśra into the Shankara-fold, by identifying him with Sureśvara (9th century),[188] believing that Maṇḍana Miśra became a disciple of Shankara after a public debate which Shankara won.[181][189]

According to Satchidanandendra Sarasvati, "almost all the later Advaitins were influenced by Mandana Misra and Bhaskara."[190] He argues that most of post-Shankara Advaita Vedanta actually deviates from Shankara, and that only his student Suresvara, who's had little influence, represents Shankara correctly.[191] In this view, Shankara's influential student Padmapada misunderstood Shankara, while his views were manitained by the Suresvara school.[191][note 30]

Vaishnavite Vedanta (10th-14th century)


Hajime Nakamura states that prior to Shankara, views similar to his already existed, but did not occupy a dominant position within the Vedanta.[192] Until the 11th century, Vedanta itself was a peripheral school of thought;[193] Vedanta became a major influence when it was utilized by various sects of Hinduism to ground their doctrines.[194] The early Vedanta scholars were from the upper classes of society, well-educated in traditional culture. They formed a social elite, "sharply distinguished from the general practitioners and theologians of Hinduism."[195] Their teachings were "transmitted among a small number of selected intellectuals".[195] Works of the early Vedanta schools do not contain references to Vishnu or Shiva.[196] It was only after Shankara that "the theologians of the various sects of Hinduism utilized Vedanta philosophy to a greater or lesser degree to form the basis of their doctrines,"[197] whereby "its theoretical influence upon the whole of Indian society became final and definitive."[195] Examples are Ramanuja (11th c.), who aligned bhakti, "the major force in the religions of Hinduism," with philosophical thought, meanwhile rejecting Shankara's views,[web 4] and the Nath-tradition.[198]

Vijayanagara Empire and Vidyaranya (14th century)

In medieval times, Advaita Vedanta position as most influential Hindu darsana started to take shape, as Advaitins in the Vijayanagara Empire competed for patronage from the royal court, and tried to convert others to their sect.[199] It is only during this period that the historical fame and cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedanta was established.[27][29][200] Many of Shankara's biographies were created and published in and after the 14th century, such as Vidyaranya's widely cited Śankara-vijaya. Vidyaranya, also known as Madhava, who was the 12th Jagadguru of the Śringeri Śarada Pītham from 1380 to 1386[201] and a minister in the Vijayanagara Empire,[202] inspired the re-creation of the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire of South India. This may have been in response to the devastation caused by the Islamic Delhi Sultanate,[27][29][200][202] but his efforts were also targeted at Sri Vaishnava groups, especially Visishtadvaita, which was dominant in territories conquered by the Vijayanagara Empire.[203] Furthermore, sects competed for patronage from the royal court, and tried to convert others to their own sectarian system.[199] Vidyaranya and his brothers, note Paul Hacker and other scholars,[27][29] wrote extensive Advaitic commentaries on the Vedas and Dharma to make "the authoritative literature of the Aryan religion" more accessible.[204] Vidyaranya was an influential Advaitin, and he created legends to turn Shankara, whose elevated philosophy had no appeal to gain widespread popularity, into a "divine folk-hero who spread his teaching through his digvijaya ("universal conquest") all over India like a victorious conqueror."[204][205] In his doxography Sarvadarśanasaṅgraha ("Summary of all views") Vidyaranya presented Shankara's teachings as the summit of all darsanas, presenting the other darsanas as partial truths which converged in Shankara's teachings, which was regarded to be the most inclusive system.[206][204] The Vaishanava traditions of Dvaita and Visishtadvaita were not classified as Vedanta, and placed just above Buddhism and Jainism, reflecting the threat they posed for Vidyaranya's Advaita allegiance.[207] Bhedabheda wasn't mentioned at all, "literally written out of the history of Indian philosophy."[208] Such was the influence of the Sarvadarśanasaṅgraha, that early Indologists also regarded Advaita Vedanta as the most accurate interpretation of the Upanishads.[207] And Vidyaranya founded a matha, proclaiming that it was established by Shankara himself.[204][205] Vidyaranya enjoyed royal support,[202] and his sponsorship and methodical efforts helped establish Shankara as a rallying symbol of values, spread historical and cultural influence of Shankara's Vedānta philosophies, and establish monasteries (mathas) to expand the cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedānta.[27]


Neo-Vedanta (19-20th century)

Shankara's position was further established in the 19th and 20th-century, when neo-Vedantins and western Orientalists elevated Advaita Vedanta "as the connecting theological thread that united Hinduism into a single religious tradition."[209] Shankara became "an iconic representation of Hindu religion and culture," despite the fact that most Hindus do not adhere to Advaita Vedanta.[210]
Digvijaya - "The conquests of Shankara"

Sources
Main article: Digvijaya

There are at least fourteen different known hagiographies of Adi Shankara's life.[38] These, as well as other hagiographical works on Shankara, were written many centuries to a thousand years after Shankara's death,[211] in Sanskrit and non-Sanskrit languages, and the hagiographies are filled with legends and fiction, often mutually contradictory.[38][note 31]

Many of these are called the Śankara Vijaya ('The conquests (digvijaya) of Shankara'), while some are called Guruvijaya, Sankarabhyudaya and Shankaracaryacarita. Of these, the Brhat-Sankara-Vijaya by Citsukha is the oldest hagiography but only available in excerpts, while Sankaradigvijaya by Mādhava (17th c.) and Sankaravijaya by Anandagiri are the most cited.[38][35] Other significant hagiographies are the Cidvilāsīya Śaṅkara Vijayaṃ (of Cidvilāsa, c. between the 15th and 17th centuries), and the Keraļīya Śaṅkara Vijayaṃ (of the Kerala region, extant from c. the 17th century).[212][213]}

Scholars note that one of the most cited Shankara hagiographies, Anandagiri's, includes stories and legends about historically different people, but all bearing the same name of Sri Shankaracarya or also referred to as Shankara but likely meaning more ancient scholars with names such as Vidya-sankara, Sankara-misra and Sankara-nanda.[35] Some hagiographies are probably written by those who sought to create a historical basis for their rituals or theories.[35][211]
LifeMurti of Shankara at his Samadhi Mandir, behind Kedarnath Temple, in Kedarnath, IndiaMurti of Shankara at the SAT Temple in Santa Cruz, California

According to the oldest hagiographies, Shankara was born in the southern Indian state of Kerala, in a village named Kaladi[214][38] sometimes spelled as Kalati or Karati.[215][note 32] He was born to Nambudiri Brahmin parents.[216][217] His parents were an aged, childless, couple who led a devout life of service to the poor. They named their child Shankara, meaning "giver of prosperity".[218] His father died while Shankara was very young.[38] Shankara's upanayanam, the initiation into student-life, had to be delayed due to the death of his father, and was then performed by his mother.[219]

Shankara's hagiography describe him as someone who was attracted to the life of Sannyasa (hermit) from early childhood. His mother disapproved. A story, found in all hagiographies, describe Shankara at age eight going to a river with his mother, Sivataraka, to bathe, and where he is caught by a crocodile.[220] Shankara called out to his mother to give him permission to become a Sannyasin or else the crocodile will kill him. The mother agrees, Shankara is freed and leaves his home for education. He reaches a Saivite sanctuary along a river in a north-central state of India, and becomes the disciple of a teacher named Govinda Bhagavatpada.[220][221] The stories in various hagiographies diverge in details about the first meeting between Shankara and his Guru, where they met, as well as what happened later.[220] Several texts suggest Shankara schooling with Govindapada happened along the river Narmada in Omkareshwar, a few place it along river Ganges in Kashi (Varanasi) as well as Badari (Badrinath in the Himalayas).[221]

The hagiographies vary in their description of where he went, who he met and debated and many other details of his life. Most mention Shankara studying the Vedas, Upanishads and Brahmasutra with Govindapada, and Shankara authoring several key works in his youth, while he was studying with his teacher.[222] It is with his teacher Govinda, that Shankara studied Gaudapadiya Karika, as Govinda was himself taught by Gaudapada.[38] Most also mention a meeting with scholars of the Mimamsa school of Hinduism namely Kumarila and Prabhakara, as well as Mandana and various Buddhists, in Shastrartha (an Indian tradition of public philosophical debates attended by large number of people, sometimes with royalty).[221] Thereafter, the hagiographies about Shankara vary significantly. Different and widely inconsistent accounts of his life include diverse journeys, pilgrimages, public debates, installation of yantras and lingas, as well as the founding of monastic centers in north, east, west and south India.[35][221]

Digvijaya and disciples

While the details and chronology vary, most hagiographies present Shankara as traveling widely within India, Gujarat to Bengal, and participating in public philosophical debates with different orthodox schools of Hindu philosophy, as well as heterodox traditions such as Buddhists, Jains, Arhatas, Saugatas, and Charvakas.[223][224][page needed][225][page needed] The hagiographies credit him with starting several Matha (monasteries), but this is uncertain.[223] Ten monastic orders in different parts of India are generally attributed to Shankara's travel-inspired Sannyasin schools, each with Advaita notions, of which four have continued in his tradition: Bharati (Sringeri), Sarasvati (Kanchi), Tirtha and Asramin (Dvaraka).[226] Other monasteries that record Shankara's visit include Giri, Puri, Vana, Aranya, Parvata and Sagara – all names traceable to Ashrama system in Hinduism and Vedic literature.[226]

Shankara had a number of disciple scholars during his travels, including Padmapadacharya (also called Sanandana, associated with the text Atma-bodha), Sureśvaracharya, Totakacharya, Hastamalakacharya, Chitsukha, Prthividhara, Chidvilasayati, Bodhendra, Brahmendra, Sadananda and others, who authored their own literature on Shankara and Advaita Vedanta.[223][227]

Death

According to hagiographies, supported by four maths, Adi Shankara died at Kedarnath in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand, a Hindu pilgrimage site in the Himalayas.[228][3] Texts say that he was last seen by his disciples behind the Kedarnath temple, walking in the Himalayas until he was not traced. Some texts locate his death in alternate locations such as Kanchipuram (Tamil Nadu) and somewhere in the state of Kerala.[221].According to the hagiographies related to the monastery of Kanchi, Adi Sankara died at Kanchi.[229]

A 108-foot statue of Adi Shankara was unveiled near Omkareshwar Temple in Madhya Pradesh to commemorate his life and work on 21 September 2023.[230] Another 12-foot statue at Kedarnath was unveiled by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 5 November 2019, is made of chlorite schist and weighs 35 tonnes.[231][232]

Mathas and Smarta tradition
See also: Dashanami SampradayaVidyashankara temple at Sringeri Sharada Peetham, Shringeri

Shankara is regarded as the founder of the Daśanāmi Sampradāya of Hindu monasticism, and the Panchayatana puja and Ṣaṇmata of the Smarta tradition.
Dashanami Sampradaya and mathas

Advaita Vedanta is, at least in the west, primarily known as a philosophical system. But it is also a tradition of renunciation. Philosophy and renunciation are closely related:[web 5]


Most of the notable authors in the advaita tradition were members of the sannyasa tradition, and both sides of the tradition share the same values, attitudes and metaphysics.[web 5]

Shankara was a Vaishnavite who came to be presented as an incarnation of Shiva in the 14th century,[233][web 5] to facilitate the adoption of his teachings by previously Saiva-oriented mathas in the Vijayanagara Empire. From the 14th century onwards hagiographies were composed, in which he is portrayed as establishing the Daśanāmi Sampradaya,[234] organizing a section of the Ekadandi monks under an umbrella grouping of ten names.[web 5] Several other Hindu monastic and Ekadandi traditions remained outside the organisation of the Dasanāmis.[235][236]

According to tradition, Adi Sankara organised the Hindu monks of these ten sects or names under four Maṭhas (Sanskrit: मठ) (monasteries), with the headquarters at Dvārakā in the West, Jagannatha Puri in the East, Sringeri in the South and Badrikashrama in the North.[web 5] Each matha was headed by one of his four main disciples, who each continues the Vedanta Sampradaya.

According to Paul Hacker, the system may have been initiated by Vidyaranya (14th c.), who may have founded a matha, proclaiming that it was established by Shankara himself, as part of his campaign to propagate Shankara's Advaita Vedanta.[204][205] Vidyaranya enjoyed royal support,[202] and his sponsorship and methodical efforts helped establish Shankara as a rallying symbol of values, spread historical and cultural influence of Shankara's Vedānta philosophies, and establish monasteries (mathas) to expand the cultural influence of Shankara and Advaita Vedānta.[27]


Smarta Tradition
Main article: Smarta Tradition

Traditionally, Shankara is regarded as the greatest teacher[237][238] and reformer of the Smartism sampradaya, which is one of four major sampradaya of Hinduism.[239][238] According to Alf Hiltebeitel, Shankara established the nondualist interpretation of the Upanishads as the touchstone of a revived smarta tradition:


Practically, Shankara fostered a rapprochement between Advaita and smarta orthodoxy, which by his time had not only continued to defend the varnasramadharma theory as defining the path of karman, but had developed the practice of pancayatanapuja ("five-shrine worship") as a solution to varied and conflicting devotional practices. Thus one could worship any one of five deities (Vishnu, Siva, Durga, Surya, Ganesa) as one's istadevata ("deity of choice").[240]

Panchayatana puja (IAST Pañcāyatana pūjā) is a system of puja (worship) in the Smarta tradition.[241] It consists of the worship of five deities set in a quincunx pattern,[242] the five deities being Shiva, Vishnu, Devi, Surya, and an Ishta Devata such as Kartikeya, or Ganesha or any personal god of devotee's preference.[243][244] Sometimes the Ishta Devata is the sixth deity in the mandala.[241] while in the Shanmata system,[245] Skanda, also known as Kartikeya and Murugan, is added. Panchayatana puja is a practice that became popular in medieval India,[241] and has been attributed to Adi Shankara.[246] However, archaeological evidence suggests that this practice long predates the birth of Adi Shankara.[note 33]
FilmsShankaracharya (1927), Indian silent film about Shankara by Kali Prasad Ghosh.[248]
Jagadguru Shrimad Shankaracharya (1928), Indian silent film by Parshwanath Yeshwant Altekar.[248]
Jagadguru Shankaracharya (1955), Indian Hindi film by Sheikh Fattelal.[248]
In 1977 Jagadguru Aadisankaran, a Malayalam film directed by P. Bhaskaran was released in which Murali Mohan plays the role of Adult Aadi Sankaran and Master Raghu plays childhood.
In 1983 a film directed by G.V. Iyer named Adi Shankaracharya was premiered, the first film ever made entirely in Sanskrit language in which all of Adi Shankaracharya's works were compiled.[249] The movie received the Indian National Film Awards for Best Film, Best Screenplay, Best Cinematography and Best Audiography.[250][251]
On 15 August 2013, Jagadguru Adi Shankara was released in an Indian Telugu-language biographical film written and directed by J. K. Bharavi and was later dubbed in Kannada with the same title, by Upendra giving narration for the Kannada dubbed version
See alsoHinduism portal
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Self-consciousness (Vedanta)
Govardhan Peetham (East), Puri, Odisha
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Jyotirmath Peetham (North), Jyotirmath, Badrikashram, Uttarakhand
Shri Sringeri Sharada Peetham (South), Sringeri, Karnataka
Shri Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham, Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu
Dakshinamurti Stotra


Notes

  1. ^ Jump up to:a b Modern scholarship places Shankara in the earlier part of the 8th century CE (c. 700–750).(Koller 2013, p. 99, Comans 2000, p. 163, Mayeda 2015) Earlier generations of scholars proposed 788–820 CE.(Comans 2000, p. 163, Mayeda 2015} The cardinal Advaita matha's assign his dates as early as 509–477 BCE.
  2. ^ Adi means "first", to distinguish him from other Shankaras.
  3. ^ He is also known as Shankara Bhagavatpada (Śaṅkara Bhagavatpāda), Shankara Bhagavatpadacharya (Śaṅkara Bhagavatpādācārya) or Shankaracharya, sometimes spelled Sankaracharya.
  4. ^ Jump up to:a b c Shankara, himself, had renounced all religious ritual acts.[146]
  5. For an example of Shankara's reasoning "why rites and ritual actions should be given up", see Karl Potter on p. 220;
  6. Elsewhere, Shankara's Bhasya on various Upanishads repeat "give up rituals and rites", see for example Shankara's Bhasya on Brihadaranyaka Upanishad pp. 348–350, 754–757
  7. ^ Jump up to:a b c Compare Mookerji 2011 on Svādhyāya (Vedic learning). Mookerji (2011, pp. 29–31) notes that the Rigveda, and Sayana's commentary, contain passages criticizing as fruitless mere recitation of the Ŗik (words) without understanding their inner meaning or essence, the knowledge of dharma and Parabrahman. Mookerji (2011, pp. 29, 34) concludes that in the Rigvedic education of the mantras "the contemplation and comprehension of their meaning was considered as more important and vital to education than their mere mechanical repetition and correct pronunciation." Mookerji (2011, p. 35) refers to Sayana as stating that "the mastery of texts, akshara-praptī, is followed by artha-bodha, perception of their meaning." (Artha may also mean "goal, purpose or essence," depending on the context. See: Sanskrit English Dictionary University of Kloen, Germany (2009); Karl Potter (1998), Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, Volume 4, ISBN 81-208-0310-8, Motilal Banarsidass, pp 610 (note 17).) According to Mookerji (2011, p. 36), "the realization of Truth" and the knowledge of paramatman as revealed to the rishis is the real aim of Vedic learning, and not the mere recitation of texts.
  8. ^ Jump up to:a b King (1995, p. 183): "It is well-known that Sankara was criticized by later (rival) Vedantins as a crypto-Buddhist (pracchana bauddha).
  9. ^ Jump up to:a b Atman versus anatman:(Isaeva 1993, pp. 60, 145–154)
  10. KN Jayatilleke (2010), Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge, ISBN 978-81-208-0619-1, p. 246–249, from note 385 onwards
  11. Steven Collins (1994), Religion and Practical Reason (Editors: Frank Reynolds, David Tracy), State Univ of New York Press, ISBN 978-0-7914-2217-5, p. 64: "Central to Buddhist soteriology is the doctrine of not-self (Pali: anattā, Sanskrit: anātman, the opposed doctrine of Ātman is central to Brahmanical thought). Put very briefly, this is the [Buddhist] doctrine that human beings have no soul, no self, no unchanging essence."
  12. Edward Roer (Translator), Shankara's Introduction at Google Books
  13. Katie Javanaud (2013), Is The Buddhist 'No-Self' Doctrine Compatible With Pursuing Nirvana?, Philosophy Now
  14. John C. Plott et al. (2000), Global History of Philosophy: The Axial Age, Volume 1, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-0158-5, p. 63: "The Buddhist schools reject any Ātman concept. As we have already observed, this is the basic and ineradicable distinction between Hinduism and Buddhism".
  15. ^ Arun Kumar Upadhyay: "The copper-plate of King Sudhanwa, said to have been issued to Sankara and now in the possession of Government on behalf of Dwärká Mutt, bears the date as Yudhisthira Saka 2663, Åsvin Sukla 15. This gives us 476 B.C. as the relevant year of his death. The copper-plate seems to have been issued to Sankara right towards the end of his career. King Sudhanwa is referred to not only by Jinavijaya but also by biographers like Madhava and Sadánanda."[39] Citsukha's Brhat-Sankara Vijaya also gives us the year of 2663 of Yudhi. Saka i.e., 476 B.C. as the year of Sankara's passing away.[40]
  16. ^ The successive heads of the Kanchi and all other major Hindu Advaita tradition monasteries have been called Shankaracharya leading to some confusion, discrepancies and scholarly disputes. The chronology stated in Kanchi Matha texts recognizes five major Shankaras: Adi, Kripa, Ujjvala, Muka and Abhinava. According to the Kanchi Matha tradition, it is "Abhinava Shankara" that western scholarship recognizes as the Advaita scholar Shankara, while the monastery continues to recognize its 509 BCE chronology.[42][43] Also, as per astronomical details given in books Shankara Satpatha, Shankara Vijaya, Brihat Shakara Vijaya and Prachina Shankara Vijaya, it is believed that Shankaracharya was born in 509 BCE.[citation needed] According to Kanhi Peetham, having established his divine mission, the incomparable Sankara attained his BrahmTbhava (identity with Brahman) at Kanchi, in the precincts of Sri Kamakshi, in his 32nd year, in 2625 Kali, in the cyclic year Raktakshi, corresponding to 476 B.C.[44]
  17. ^ Tiele based this dating on Yajnesvara Sastri's treatise Aryavidya-sudhakar ("The Moon of Noble Knowledge"), who in turn cited Bhatta Nilakantha's work Sankara-mandara-saurabha ("The fragrance of Sankara's paradise tree").[46]
  18. ^ The date 788–820 is also among those considered acceptable by Swami Tapasyananda, though he raises a number of questions.[48]
  19. ^ Koller 2013, p. 99: "the best recent scholarship argues that he was born in 700 and died in 750 CE."
  20. ^ Kena Upanishad has two commentaries that are attributed to Shankara – Kenopnishad Vakyabhasya and Kenopnishad Padabhasya; scholars contest whether both are authentic, several suggesting that the Vakyabhasya is unlikely to be authentic.[53]
  21. ^ See also IndiaDivine.org, Authorship of Vivekachudamani and arshabodha.org, Sri Sankara's Vivekachudamani, pp. 3–4, The Question of Authorship of Vivekachudamani
  22. ^ Swami Vivekananda translates Shivoham, Shivoham as "I am he, I am he".[65]
  23. ^ Brahman is not to be confused with the personalised godhead Brahma.
  24. ^ The suffering created by the workings of the mind entangled with physical reality
  25. ^ Mayeda refers to statements from Shankara regarding epistemology (pramana-janya) in section 1.18.133 of Upadesasahasri, and section 1.1.4 of Brahmasutra-bhasya.[80][81] NB: some manuscripts list Upadesasahasri verse 1.18.133 as 2.18.133, while Mayeda lists it as 1.18.133, because of interchanged chapter numbering. See Upadesa Sahasri: A Thousand Teachings, S Jagadananda (Translator, 1949), ISBN 978-81-7120-059-7, Verse 2.8.133, p. 258; Karl H Potter (2014), The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, Volume 3, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-61486-1, p. 249
  26. ^ Shcherbatsky 1927, pp. 44–45: "Shankara accuses them of disregarding all logic and refuses to enter in a controversy with them. The position of Shankara is interesting because, at heart, he is in full agreement with the Madhyamikas, at least in the main lines, since both maintain the reality of the One-without-a-second, and the mirage of the manifold. But Shankara, as an ardent hater of Buddhism, would never confess that. He therefore treats the Madhyamika with great contempt [...] on the charge that the Madhyamika denies the possibility of cognizing the Absolute by logical methods (pramana). Vachaspati Mishra in the Bhamati rightly interprets this point as referring to the opinion of the Madhyamikas that logic is incapable to solve the question about what existence or non-existence really are. This opinion Shankara himself, as is well known, shares. He does not accept the authority of logic as a means of cognizing the Absolute, but he deems it a privilege of the Vedantin to fare without logic, since he has Revelation to fall back upon. From all his opponents, he requires strict logical methods."
  27. ^ Highest self:Shankara, Upadesasahasri I.18.3: "I am ever-free, the existent" (Sat). I.18.6: "The two [contradictory] notions "I am the Existent-Brahman" and "I act," have Atman as their witness. It is considered more reasonable to give up only [that one] of the two [notions] which arises from ignorance. I.18.7: "The notion, "I am the Existent," arises from right means of knowledge [while] the other notion has its origin in fallacious means of knowledge."[252]
  28. Sivananda 1993, p. 219: "Brahman (the Absolute) is alone real; this world is unreal; and the Jiva or individual soul is non-different from Brahman."
  29. Deutsch 1973, p. 54: "[the] essential status [of the individual human person] is that of unqualified reality, of identity with the Absolute [...] the self (jiva) is only misperceived: the self is really Brahman."
  30. Koller 2013, pp. 100–101: "Atman, which is identical to Brahman, is ultimately the only reality and [...] the appearance of plurality is entirely the work of ignorance [...] the self is ultimately of the nature of Atman/Brahman [...] Brahman alone is ultimately real."
  31. Bowker 2000: "There is only Brahman, which is necessarily undifferentiated. It follows that there cannot even be a difference, or duality, between the human subject, or self, and Brahman, for Brahman must be that very self (since Brahman is the reality underlying all appearance). The goal of human life and wisdom must, therefore, be the realization that the self (ātman) is Brahman."
  32. Menon 2012: "The experiencing self (jīva) and the transcendental self of the Universe (ātman) are in reality identical (both are Brahman), though the individual self seems different as space within a container seems different from space as such. These cardinal doctrines are represented in the anonymous verse "brahma satyam jagan mithya; jīvo brahmaiva na aparah" (Brahman is alone True, and this world of plurality is an error; the individual self is not different from Brahman)."Hacker (1995, p. 88) notes that Shankara uses two groups of words to denote 'atman': "One group - principally jiva, vijnanatman, and sarira - expresses the illusory aspect of the soul [...] But in addition there are the two expressions atman and pratyagatman. These also designate the individual soul, but in its real aspect." Mayeda (1992, pp. 11, 14) uses the word pratyagatman; Sivananda (1993, p. 219), Deutsch (1973, p. 54), and Menon (2012) use the term jiva when referring to the identity of atman and Brahman.
  33. ^ "Consciousness",[117][web 2] "intelligence",[118][116] "wisdom"
  34. ^ "the Absolute",[117][web 2] "infinite",[web 2] "the Highest truth"[web 2]
  35. ^ While the Vedanta tradition equates sat ("the Existent") with Brahman, the Chandogya Upanishad itself does not refer to Brahman.[111][109] Deutsch & Dalvi (2004, p. 8): "Although the text does not use the term brahman, the Vedanta tradition is that the Existent (sat) referred to is no other than Brahman."
  36. ^ Jump up to:a b King 2002, p. 128: "Although it is common to find Western scholars and Hindus arguing that Sankaracarya was the most influential and important figure in the history of Hindu intellectual thought, this does not seem to be justified by the historical evidence."
  37. ^ Up.I.18.219: "The renunciation of all actions becomes the means for discriminating the meaning of the word "Thou" since there is an [Upanisadic] teaching, "Having become calm, self-controlled [..., one sees Atman there in oneself]" (Bhr. Up. IV, 4, 23)."[154]
  38. ^ Michaels (2004, p. 41):In the east the Pala Empire (770–1125 CE),
  39. in the west and north the Gurjara-Pratihara (7th–10th century),
  40. in the southwest the Rashtrakuta Dynasty (752–973),
  41. in the Dekkhan the Chalukya dynasty (7th–8th century),
  42. and in the south the Pallava dynasty (7th–9th century) and the Chola dynasty (9th century).
  43. ^ McRae (2003): This resembles the development of Chinese Chán during the An Lu-shan rebellion and the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period (907–960/979), during which power became decentralised end new Chán-schools emerged.
  44. ^ Inden (1998, p. 67): "Before the eighth century, the Buddha was accorded the position of universal deity and ceremonies by which a king attained to imperial status were elaborate donative ceremonies entailing gifts to Buddhist monks and the installation of a symbolic Buddha in a stupa ... This pattern changed in the eighth century. The Buddha was replaced as the supreme, imperial deity by one of the Hindu gods (except under the Palas of eastern India, the Buddha's homeland) ... Previously the Buddha had been accorded imperial-style worship (puja). Now as one of the Hindu gods replaced the Buddha at the imperial centre and pinnacle of the cosmo-political system, the image or symbol of the Hindu god comes to be housed in a monumental temple and given increasingly elaborate imperial-style puja worship."
  45. ^ This includes also the dualistic Vaishna bhakti traditions, which have also commented on the Upanishads and the Brahma Sutras, but take a different stance.
  46. ^ Potter (2006, pp. 6–7): "...these modern interpreters are implying that most Advaitins after Samkara's time are confused and basically mistaken, and that 99% of the extant classical interpretive literature on Samkara's philosophy is off the mark. This is clearly a remarkably radical conclusion. Yet, there is good reason to think that it may well be true.
  47. ^ The hagiographies of Shankara mirror the pattern of synthesizing facts, fiction and legends as with other ancient and medieval era Indian scholars. Some hagiographic poems depict Shankara as a reincarnation of deity Shiva, much like other Indian scholars are revered as reincarnation of other deities; for example, Mandana-misra is depicted as an embodiment of deity Brahma, Citsukha of deity Varuna, Anandagiri of Agni, among others. See Isaeva (1993, pp. 69–72).
  48. ^ This may be the present day Kalady in central Kerala. The house he was born in is still maintained as Melpazhur Mana.
  49. ^ Many Panchayatana mandalas and temples have been uncovered that are from the Gupta Empire period, and one Panchayatana set from the village of Nand (about 24 kilometers from Ajmer) has been dated to belong to the Kushan Empire era (pre-300 CE).[247] The Kushan period set includes Shiva, Vishnu, Surya, Brahma and one deity whose identity is unclear.[247] According to James Harle, major Hindu temples from 1st millennium CE embed the pancayatana architecture very commonly, from Odisha to Karnataka to Kashmir; and the temples containing fusion deities such as Harihara (half Shiva, half Vishnu) are set in Panchayatana worship style.[242]


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  • Tapasyananda (2015). Sankara Digvijaya – The traditional life of Sri Sankaracharya. Sri Ramakrishna Math. ISBN 978-81-7823-342-0.
  • Tola, Fernando (1989). "On the Date of Maṇḍana Miśra and Śaṅkara and Their Doctrinal Relation". Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute. 70 (1/4): 37–46. ISSN 0378-1143. JSTOR 41693459.
  • Whaling, Frank (1979). "Shankara and Buddhism". Journal of Indian Philosophy. 7 (1): 1–42. doi:10.1007/BF02561251. JSTOR 23440361. S2CID 170613052.
  • White, David Gordon, ed. (2000). Introduction. In: Tantra in practice. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.




Further reading

Fort, Andrew O. (1998). Jivanmukti in Transformation: Embodied Liberation in Advaita and Neo-Vedanta. SUNY Press.
Fuller, C.J. (2004). The Camphor Flame: Popular Hinduism and Society in India. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-12048-5.
Ingalls, Daniel H.H. (1954). "Śaṁkara's Arguments against the Buddhists". Philosophy East and West. 3 (4): 291–306. doi:10.2307/1397287. JSTOR 1397287. Archived from the original on 28 June 2011.
Succession of Shankaracharyas (a chronology) Archived 1 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine (from Gaudapada onwards)
Reigle, David (2001). "The Original Sankaracarya" (PDF). Fohat. 5 (3): 57–60, 70–71.
Frank Whaling (1979), Śankara and Buddhism, Journal of Indian Philosophy, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 1–42
Navone, J.J. (1956). "Sankara and the Vedic Tradition". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 17 (2): 248–255. doi:10.2307/2104222. JSTOR 2104222.
Rukmani, T.S. (2003). "Dr. Richard de Smet and Sankara's Advaita". Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies. 16. doi:10.7825/2164-6279.1295.
A Questioning Approach: Learning from Sankara's Pedagogic Techniques Archived 30 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Jacqueline Hirst, Contemporary Education Dialogue, Vol. 2, No. 2, pp. 137–169


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A Note on the date of Sankara (Adi Sankaracharya) Archived 26 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine by S. Srikanta Sastri
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Preceded by
Bhagawan Govinda Bhagavat Pada Jagadguru of Sringeri Sharada Peetham
?–820 (videha-mukti) Succeeded by
Sureshwaracharya



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