Dear Ram,
You said that The Gita or maybe
Vedanta do not contain concepts but is/are a means of knowledge. Can you elaborate on this? I also wondered does Vedanta have an actual
meaning?
Ram:
The two questions are connected.
Vedanta is a compound word, veda
and anta. Veda means knowledge and anta
means end. So Vedanta is the knowledge
that ends one’s search for (self) knowledge.
Once the Self is known as it is everything else is as good as known
since the Self is (the essence of) everything and without the Self, awareness,
nothing can be known. In other words
when you realize that you are whole and complete you no longer a need to know
or gain anything, since whatever you might know or gain would not affect your
fundamental sense of self. A person who
thinks of his or herself as a limited being always believes that he or she will
be changed in some way by the knowledge he or she gains. But ‘relative’ knowledge always pertains to
things...the material world or the psyche…and does not reveal the nature of the
Self. Yes, you could gain relative
knowledge, information, to solve problems in the world, but this knowledge
would not change your basic state of mind.
So in an esoteric sense Vedanta means Self knowledge.
Exoterically Vedanta refers to the
Upanishads (and the Brahma Sutras…commentaries on the Upanishad by a great
sage…and the Bhagavad Gita both of which draw their ideas from the Upanishads)
because the Upanishads which are appended to the karmic portion of the Vedas
are treatises on the Self. The karmic
portion of the Vedas presents rituals that enable one to gain things in this
world and the next. This knowledge is
useful for living a relatively happy life…getting what you want and avoiding
what you don’t…but it is not useful for Self knowledge, the knowledge that you
are not a wanting being, that you are free of want. Those who see themselves as limited and
incomplete are bedeviled by innumerable wants.
I didn’t mean to say that Vedanta did not have
concepts. I meant to say that Vedanta uses
concepts in a very unusual way…to remove Self ignorance. Vedanta is a group of prakriyas,
teachings, about the nature of the world, the mind and the Self that is called
a pramanam, a means of knowledge. Just as eyes are necessary to know forms and
ears are necessary to know sounds and an intellect is necessary to know ideas,
one needs a means to know the Self. But
since the Self is beyond all known means of knowledge, that is, it cannot be
objectified like sense objects, emotions and thoughts, another means is
necessary. And that means is Vedanta.
Vedanta does not claim to give
enlightenment because it says that there is only one Self and that Self is chaitanya, awareness. So the Self is already enlightened. Vedanta does not promise to give you something
you don’t already have….like Yoga or Hinayana
Buddhism, which says that if you follow a certain path you will ‘attain’ a
state of limitless bliss, nirvikalpa samadhi or nirvana. Vedanta says that the Self already is
limitless bliss. It is samadhi, equal
seeing. It is nirvana, desireless.
So why don’t I know myself in this
way. Why don’t I feel, experience
it? Because I have certain ideas, an
unquestioned conditioned way of thinking about my self and the world that keep
me from seeing the truth of my being…that I am limitless awareness, that the
‘I’ is free of desire. To phase it
another way ‘I am already enlightened.’
Therefore, Vedanta sets out to remove my ignorance…which is standing in
the way of appreciating myself as non-dual being, actionless awareness.
It is not conceptual, like a
philosophy or a school of thought, because, if it works properly, you are not
left with a bunch of ideas about who you are or about the nature of the
world. The knowledge of what things
actually are removes the misunderstandings about what they are, and then it too
disappears from the mind, leaving only you, pure awareness…which, of course,
was there all along. Vedanta works
rather like an alkaline substance that neutralizes an acid. In the process the alkaline ceases to be
alkaline and the acid ceases to be acid.
In this way it removes both ignorance and knowledge. This is not to say that you end up like a
spaced-out zombie unable to function in the world because you have forgotten
what it is. This does not mean that you
could not conceptually formulate an approximation who you are, the nature of
the mind and material reality, but that you understand that who you are in no
way depends on any concepts…like I am a man/woman, rich/poor, white/black, gay/straight,
the daughter/son of my father/mother, etc. or any of the plethora of other
limited identities that human beings are capable of concocting.
So how does this work? Can I just study the Upanishads, the Brahma
Sutras, the Bhagavad Gita or any of the dozens of other Vedantic texts and
remove my ignorance of who I am?
Probably not, unless I was very highly evolved, meaning that I had had
at least several important ephiphanies and had
developed a subtle inquiring mind. This
is so because someone striving to know who he or she is is
admittedly ignorant and does not know that scripture is meant to be used to
remove doubts about the nature of reality, not to convert one to a religion and
/or encourage belief in a deity. The
ideas of Vedanta are not meant to be believed in…they are to be
understood…because belief is ignorance.
Yes, one’s positive beliefs may make life more liveable…but
they do not remove the sense that one is limited, that the self is, for
example, a ‘sinner,’ to use a particularly obnoxious (Christian) small self
identity.
Self ignorance varies from
individual to individual. As you know
from your own experience a person can be completely ignorant of an aspect of
his or her self that a therapist or even a man on the street, for example, can
spot immediately. So the prakriyas, the teachings, require a teacher. And not someone who has merely read the texts
and does not know in a concrete way that he or she is the Self…what in India
are called pundits. Even if you
understand the teachings intellectually, you may take them out of context and
not understand how to apply them to your own ignorance. So a teacher contexualizes
them and shows you how to apply them. Since ignorance is working all the time, in the presence of a
teacher or not, one needs to ‘practice knowledge’ until the last vestiges of
(self) ignorance are removed.
If you study a philosophy or a
school of thought the ‘you’ remains and a bunch of ideas, which may or may not
form your identity, is added to you.
But Vedanta helps you strip off the notion that you are a limited being,
a separate or individual self by revealing your limitless nature. The meaning of the word Upanishad contains
the idea of destruction of ignorance (shad) by revealing what ‘sits nearest’ (upani) to you, i.e. the Self.
Only very few are qualified for
Vedanta because most people do not think that the way they think of themselves
is a problem…they are locked into various ego identities and are concerned with
gaining experiences from which they may pick up a bit of happiness…or avoid a
bit of misery. But after a while it
becomes clear that experience cannot remove my sense of limitation and
inadequacy; my desires and fears, which are just signs of my incompleteness,
continue to plague me. So I need to seek
another solution; I need to think about myself and life in another way. Then Vedanta can help because it provides a
wider view, the view from the Self, one that includes
and transcends the individual.
So where do Vedanta’s teachings come
from? They are the distilled experience
of tens of thousands of people who realized the Self, whose limited identities
were supplanted by the one universal identity.
For many thousands of years these people contributed to this body of
knowledge and refined it so that it is now free of belief and opinion. And in the process of communicating it a
method of transmission involving logic and common sense evolved which was
handed down with the knowledge itself.
So someone on whom Vedanta has been wielded can as well wield it on
someone else. A philosophy or a school
of thought can modify over time as new ideas come in and old ones are no longer
deemed relevant. But this does not happen
to Vedanta and it will not happen because the fundamental identity problem of
human beings never changes and the teachings of Vedanta solve the problem as
they always have…so there is no need for it to change. While it has retained its original purity in
some lineages in India, unfortunately Yoga doctrine, the notion that enlightenment
is an experience to be gained through certain practices, has co-opted Vedantic
language in the last one hundred years in both India and the West, and a
confusing and unhelpful hybrid, which is
neither Yoga or Vedanta has developed.
I understand that what I am saying
is not common knowledge, as Vedanta has been presented for a long time as if it
were a school of thought or a philosophy.
This is due to the fact that the teachings are downright interesting and
brilliant on the intellectual level and can have a big impact on one’s
life…merely as ideas. I had no knowledge
of it at all but was led to it like a moth to the flame by the burning desire I
had to be free. And one day I found
myself at the feet of a great Vedanta master and had the teachings wielded on
me with great skill…and they set me free.
I trust you’re well. My best to Cathy. See you soon.
Love,
Ram