Isvara-Jiva-Jagat Identity: The Four Orders of Reality

Isvara-Jiva-Jagat Identity (Aikyam): The Four ‘Orders of Reality’

Awareness

Before the projection of maya is referred to as ‘pure’ consciousness/awareness or paramatman, amongst many other names, including Isvara.

‘Pure’ serves to define awareness as having no qualities, but is not actually a good word because it implies that awareness could be ‘impure’, which it cannot. However what is important to understand s that it is used to distinguish ‘pure’ awareness from awareness plus maya. The word ‘before’ is also not correct because there is no before or after in awareness. Ram explains this beautifully in the e-satsang below mine where he unfolds two creation theories. Time and space do not apply to awareness as they are objects known to it. As Edwin our editor beautifully puts it: Definitions are the stuff of duality, but they bring the clarity that helps us transcend it.

Maya

Maya is a power (shakti) that exists in awareness, or it would not be unlimited. It only ‘covers’ a small ‘portion’ of awareness. We have to use the words ‘covers’ and ‘portion’ in order to teach, but they are not strictly speaking correct because they have spatial and temporal implications while awareness is beyond space and time and has no parts. Maya is the principle that gives rise to duality. It is also called ignorance.

Isvara

Once maya is operating, awareness ‘assumes’ the role of creator and apparently identifies with maya. Awareness in association with maya (ignorance) is then referred to as Isvara or ‘God,’ the creator, preserver and destroyer of the objects in the dharma field. As such it is also known as the macrosmic mind, the causal body or the deep sleep state. Isvara or Maya is a ‘limiting adjunct’ for awareness in that it causes awareness to appear as the limited world. Again this implies a sequence of ‘events’ which is not correct, because it infers time; we describe it so because we need to understand the distinction between the real and the apparently real, sattya and mithya. (Read James’ e-satsangs below; he explains this beautifully).

Jiva

Awareness, under the spell of maya, identified with the subtle body, is called jiva. The subtle body is an uphadi or limiting adjunct for awareness. The jiva is the microcosmic mind or individual. The subtle body is made up of the mind, intellect and ego. Sometimes the jiva is defined as awareness plus the five sheaths: the physical sheath (ananmayakosa), the vital air sheath (pranamayakosa), the emotional sheath (manomayakosa), the intellect sheath (vignamayakosa) and the bliss sheath (anandamayakosa). There is only one jiva because there is only one awareness appearing as many apparent jivas or individuals.

Jagat

Awareness appears as the creation (jagat) when ignorance (maya) is operating. It is an effect and is called the apparent (mithya) reality. It includes all the gross and subtle objects in existence, the objective empirical world and the subjective psychological world.

Gunas

The creation comes into existence with the emergence of the 3 gunassattvatamas and rajasSattva is intelligence and knowledge; tamas, a heavy dense energy is matter the substance of the creation; rajas is the dynamic active energy also known that transforms objects. Psychologically it is known as the mode of action and desire. The gunas make up everything in creation, from thoughts to gross objects. In effect, the gunas are another word for Isvara.

Isvara plus jiva and jagat make up the dharma field. Their common identity is non-dual reality, awareness, out of which these four ‘orders’ arise. Although they share a common identity as awareness, they are not the same as pure awareness. However, all the orders and the objects within them depend on awareness, but awareness is always free of them. A good analogy is H2O. Water is pure H2O. So are the ocean (Isvara) and the wave (jiva/jagat). But while the wave and the ocean are dependent on the H2O, the H2O is free of both the wave and the ocean. Pure awareness is free of Isvarajiva and jagat, but Isvara-jiva- jagat has a dependent existence on awareness.

Self Knowledge, Self-Realisation, Self-Actualisation and Moksa

Moksa is discriminating awareness from the objects in it. Understanding the Isvara-jiva- jagat identity (aikyam) is of paramount importance because the gunas are Isvara, meaning the environment, which includes the jiva. It is important to not only to discriminate the self from the objects, but to actualise what it means to be self realised in the apparent reality. This is because self-realisation is not moksa. Hear that again.

What is Self-realisation? 

Self-realisation is an experiential term and means that one has understood that one’s true nature is awareness. However, self-realisation is an experience. It is therefore not real in the light of Vedanta’s definition of what constitutes reality as that which is always present and never changes. Meaning you can ‘lose’ your self- realisation, if the knowledge “I am awareness” is not firm.

What is Self-actualisation?

To be self actualized means (1) that one has fully discriminated the self from the objects appearing in it (the dharma field, one’s conditioning) and (2) that that knowledge has (a) rendered the vasanas non-binding and (b) destroyed one’s sense of doership

Moksa is discriminating the self from the not-self. Through discrimination, the jiva, the individual under the spell of self ignorance, understands that it is actually the self, limitless awareness and not the person it thinks it is. Moksa is for the jiva because the self is already free. This knowledge allows the jiva to live free in this apparent reality. This means that the jiva is not bound by his or her conditioning.

The Gunas or the Ropes

The word guna means rope, aptly named because the 3 gunas are bound to each other and they bind the person to objects. As the components that make up the dharma field, the gunas govern the creation of everything. This of course, includes the vasanas that motivate the individual and the individual’s relative nature (svadharma) that gives rise to ‘their’ conditioning. This conditioning is then reinforced by their environment and life experiences, which is also made up of the gunas. So managing the gunas is nothing less than understanding how to relate to the totality of your environment, your gross and subtle bodies. The gunas are not a problem unless you identify with them or if you are unaware of them. The gunas are always present and operating on the jiva and the dharma field because the causal body is there whether the jiva is present or not, enlightened or not. The gunas condition the jiva or subtle body at all times other than in deep sleep, nirvikalpa samadhi and of course, once the self is actualised as one’s true nature.

The Three Forces in Creation

Sattva, rajas and tamas correspond to the three forces in creation: Rajas, vikshepa shakti, which is the projecting energy; tamas, avarana shakti, the concealing energy and sattva, the revealing energy. When maya operates, sattva (pure knowledge-intelligence) is the first guna to emerge. It is known as pure maya and becomes the nature of the mind. Tamas and rajas appear next. Rajas and tamas are the main cause of ignorance; they extrovert the mind, turning it towards objects. When a person is sattvic the mind is turned inwards toward awareness, its nature. This happens when rajas and tamas have been largely eliminated. Sattva feels very good. With karma yoga and the practice of self knowledge it can become the person’s predominant guna. Purifying the mind is to aim for a sattvic mind.

Liberation or self-knowledge means that you have assimilated the knowledge that you are whole and complete and that the ‘person’ that you used to think you were is no more than a notion in you, awareness. When ignorance (avidya) of yourself as awareness has been removed by self-knowledge, maya (macrocosmic ignorance and its effects still obtain and the gunas continue to condition the subtle body (the ‘person’)…but they are rendered non- binding as the doer has been negated by self knowledge. They have nothing to do with you, awareness, because you know that you are not the Subtle Body, the person/doer. You are trigunatita; beyond the gunas.

Macrocosmic Vasanas

The gunas are called macrocosmic vasanas i.e. they belong to Isvara or the total, the creation, not to the person. As an apparent person or jiva, (the self under the spell of ignorance) they are in the driver’s seat, so to speak. The person thinks he/she is a doer so they drive him/her relentlessly until he/she gains the direct knowledge of his/her true nature as awareness. There are basically four stages to the guna teaching, which can be applied to people at different levels of their spiritual development.

The Four Stages of the Guna Teaching

Stage 1

The guna teaching is very effective for doers (karmi‘s); these are people in the world, not going for moksha. As a karmi, one uses the knowledge to accomplish things in the world and get what one wants. One can gain knowledge of the gunas without realising the self and use this knowledge very productively to live a better life. It is possible to ‘un-couple’ the guna teaching from Vedanta and apply it “on its own”, so to speak. This would be very useful for people in the human resources field, as well as a more enlightened approach to psychological counseling and related therapies.

Stage 2

This is for the application of karma yoga. As a karma yogi, how does one really understand what giving up the results of your actions are, unless you understand what makes up the dharma field? Also, the karma yogi uses the guna teaching to purify the mind as well as identify their conditioning. This is the most powerful way to negate the doer.

Stage 3

Once the mind is purified, one uses self knowledge to discriminate the self from the not-self. This means that your conditioning does not belong to you. At this stage, unless one really understands the gunas, many highly qualified inquirers get stuck with the most subtle teaching of all, the relationship between pure awareness and Isvara, jiva and jagat. Remember, it does not work to superimpose satya (pure awareness) on mithya (Isvara, jiva and jagat). If superimposition happens, even though the self is known, it will remain indirect knowledge i.e. the self will still appear as an object. And one will still think one has to “get” it. Or one will still wait to have that final experience that will prove he or she is awareness! Direct knowledge and self actualisation is the difficult part. Therefore, full understanding of the Isvara-jiva-jagat identity (aikyam) and the guna teaching is of paramount importance.

Stage 4

In the fourth and final stage self knowledge has fully removed the ignorance of your true nature and you know without a doubt that you are beyond the gunas. This means that knowledge and ignorance are both ‘gone’; they are simply objects known to you. Only, you, the self remains. This is moksha.

Typical Symptoms of Rajas, Tamas and Sattva

Start observing them. Each of your thoughts and feelings are guna driven. See which ones are sattvic, which are tamasic and which are rajasic. Understand the implications of identifying with each kind of energy and the thoughts they cause. Start observing all objects (the world around you or your environment) from this perspective. It will be obvious that no-one is doing anything; it is all a play of the gunas. You will be amazed how clear it all becomes once the gunas are identified: it is like having 20/20 vision.

When rajas is operating, the person will be projecting, arrogant, passionate, angry, frantic, over-stimulated/active/driven, extroverted, jittery, can’t sit still, afraid, dissatisfied, insatiable, possessive, jealous, controlling, can’t sleep, bored, wired and tired… (to name a few) Rajas triggers fear based thoughts and actions; the person will project their stuff onto ‘others’ or the ‘world’ and he/she will go “unconscious” (tamas). One tends to speak too quickly, do things too quickly, drop things, bump into things, break them, have accidents and injure oneself. In the extreme he/she will be totally extroverted, driven by passion and desire to gain whatever object he/she is fixated on, certain that the joy is in the object. The mind is turned completely outwards.

When tamas is operating, the person will be in denial, blaming, holding onto the past or using it as a reason to justify action or inaction, or as an avoidance strategy to deny his or her fears, making excuses for why he/she can’t be honest or make decisions, rationalising, dithering, living in potentia, can’t wake up or get out of bed in the morning, exhausted, complaining, dull, lazy, depressed feeling a victim, feeling the wrongs of the world on his shoulders, unloved or that the ‘world’ is unloving or a bad place, cruel, uncaring, self absorbed etc. Here the mind is clouded, dull.

When sattva is operating, the person is peaceful, calm, clear thinking, balanced, compassionately honest, loving, secure, taking appropriate action, owning all projections, cleaning up his/her karma, dispassionate (especially about his/her own thoughts and feelings), unconcerned, untouched by the opinion of others or the results of his/her actions, enjoying objects for what they are i.e. fully aware of all their inherent defects, satisfied, whole and complete… etc.

How Do the Gunas Function?

The gunas are programmed ways of thinking and acting. They are totally predictable. All the gunas build on themselves, so rajas will create more rajas, as will tamas create more tamas and sattva more sattva.

The gunas all work together and at any given time, one of them will predominate. Rajas and tamas are inseparable. I call them the ‘terrible twins’. James calls them ‘incestuous bedfellows’. For instance, when rajas is operating, the mind will be projecting outwards and tamas will be right there to deny it. They are just the programmes that run the individual (and everything else). They are a problem if you do not have the knowledge of how the apparent reality functions, or if you identify with them. For instance, if you find yourself saying “I am rajasic or I am tamasic today”, you are identified with them. The person may be rajasic/tamasic today but you, awareness, are not.

Remember, you are the knower of the person; therefore you are the knower of the gunas. Again, whenever you find yourself saying “I” press pause and ask yourself, “who is talking here… which perspective am I identified with, the reflected self (the person) or me, awareness?” If you can consistently do this, it will change your life forever.

All three gunas have an upside as well as a downside, as does everything in this apparent reality. Without rajas, you would never get out of bed in the morning or accomplish anything. Rajas is the active, creative ‘force’. It is the mode of passion and desire. Not all desire or passion is bad however; you need a passion for self inquiry and a strong desire for moksa. It is one of the qualifications. Tamas is the very substance of matter, a heavy and steady energy. Without it you not be capable of endurance. You would not have the staying power to complete anything and would more or less float off the planet. You would not be ‘earthed’…and you would never be able to sleep.

With too much sattva you can get stuck in a golden cage of experiential bliss, thinking happiness is the Holy Grail and that you are quite special. Sattva is not the be all and end all, even though sat, awareness (of which sattva is the most subtle manifestation) is actually the true nature of the mind. Sattva however, is a state of mind that is experienced by the doer, the Subtle Body. It is purely experiential and therefore does not last. It certainly will not free the person from dependence on objects or end the subtle existential suffering that comes with it. It is the last object to be released before moksa. Yet it is a valuable energy for inquiry and should be cultivated as it is the guna springboard for self-knowledge. ‘After’ moksa, sattva or peace of mind no longer needs to be the goal, although one will still make choices in alignment with it. However once all the objects have been negated along with the doer, it will be there naturally and if it should not be, that is fine too because you know that as awareness you are beyond sattva.

Is it Self-Inquiry or a Spiritual Lifestyle?

Many spiritual seekers are looking for a way to cope with their unresolved psychological issues or as a balm to salve their emotional wounds. Often, they have the vanity to think they are pure and holy because they have had some kind of transcendental spiritual experiences or because they have walked away from a samsaric life when their ‘renunciation’ is actually escapism. They build a ‘spiritual’ identity that makes them feel less small and afraid. This is one of the negative effects of sattva. Being “spiritual” becomes a lifestyle.

How to Manage the Gunas

Other than gaining the knowledge of what the gunas are and how they operate, which is half the battle , you can do a great deal to manage them through self knowledge. This means that you know that there are appropriate actions to maintain peace of mind for the jiva. If you are feeling brain dead, depressed or lazy, you can do something physical like take a walk or exercise. If you are bouncing off the walls with extroversion, stress, fear or anxiety, driven by desire or action….slow down. Skip the coffee, cut down on sugar. Find some time alone where you can sit quietly and breathe in light. Once you have calmed down, meditate, sit in silence or light a candle, do a puja, chant or pray.

Many enlightened people do not bother managing the gunas and simply accept whatever transpires in the dharma field, knowing it has nothing to do with them. This practice is fine if the underlying motivation is not a refusal to face binding vasanas; or a way to camouflage the doer. If the mind is agitated or dull because of your life choices or lifestyle, freedom will not be that free unless you acknowledge the cause of the agitation in the light of self- knowledge. This is a common trap for spiritual seekers and one the ego likes. Often it is not lack of self-knowledge that is the problem. It is just that the ‘self-realised’ person is avoiding doing what it takes to change their behaviour…meaning staring down their vasanas, and getting their actions and lifestyle to conform with dharma.

Practical Lifestyle Management

Take a look at your lifestyle and change what you can. Diet is very important for guna management. Learn which foods cause which guna. Examine what you do for a living, how you recreate, spend money and exercise. Stop hoarding unwanted ‘stuff’ (psychological and otherwise). Examine your relationships with people. Don’t keep company with people who bring you down. Or, if you can’t avoid them, see how the gunas run them. See where they want things to be different and the pain it causes. People can’t help being true to their predominant guna when they are unaware that there is choice.

The practice of seeing how the gunas operate in yourself and ‘others’, will put you in a whole new world of perception. Of course there really are no ‘others’ as there is only one self with three guna– manufactured bodies. By that I mean that they work the same way in everyone. The gunas run the show for everyone who is identified with the body/mind and the story of personhood.

If the predominant guna is tamas, clean out your cupboards; give away everything you don’t really need, stop staying up or getting up late, stop eating tamasic foods, get some exercise. Educate yourself about proper nutrition. Guna management is just common sense. Avoid depressants such as alcohol, sleeping pills and drugs. Be constantly on the alert for denial of any kind.

If the dominant guna is rajas, be on constant alert for mindless activity, aggression, arrogance, projection, desire and extroversion. Rajas and tamas are the real problem makers. Check your diet. Too much sugar, coffee and other stimulants exacerbate rajas and induce it. So do many over-the-counter as well as prescription medications. More than half the planet seems to be on some kind of tranquiliser and it is not hard to see why. James says that rajas is the disease of the 21st century.

If you observe too much sattva, stop pretending that you are ‘special’ because you have ‘out of this world’ epiphanies, spiritual knowledge and lots of bliss. Or stop pretending that you are very holy because you meditate, chant for hours or have an enlightened guru, (or worse, that you think you are an enlightened guru). Or you think you have the moral high-ground because you are a vegan/vegetarian and live on sprouts.

Get real, keep it humble and keep up the practice of self-knowledge. The point here is that everyone has a predominant guna which will not only create their most entrenched tendencies, (i.e. vasanas) but it will also be what has conditioned them to have a particular kind of nature. There is no right or wrong here, no better or worse. We do not make ourselves the way we are; Isvara…the gunas…do. The ‘work’ involved in self-inquiry is identifying the gunas through self-knowledge and allowing the knowledge to help ‘you’ manage the gunas by dis-identifying from them and standing as awareness.

You can Choose the Guna

Once you find yourself acting a particular guna out, just observe what is going on. As a person you have relative free will to choose what action to take to achieve a desired result and thus success in the world is possible. One can make ‘the best of one’s life’ as a jiva. However, those choices themselves are determined by your conditioning, i.e. Isvara or the gunas. Don’t judge or beat yourself up, be dispassionate about whatever is going on… it’s a movie after all. Trace back the train of events, thoughts and feelings to their source and identify what triggered them.

The practice of knowledge, the ‘work”, is keeping an eye on the person and his/her likes and dislikes. Make a note of the guna and adjust it in light of the kind of mind you are trying to create. Make peace of mind your aim at all costs. Each time you do this, it will get easier to manage the gunas and it will be easier to recognize them quicker when they appear as your likes and dislikes. Consider the likes and dislikes appearing in your mind as red flags, ways to identify the vasanas that keep a particular program running.

It is like playing a computer game: although it appears as if you are making the moves, all the moves that are possible are already programmed into the game. If you keep up the practice of knowledge, before long, you will have de-activated the like or dislike that keeps the program running. It will no longer condition the subtle body, although it may still appear. You will no longer be a robot acting out unconscious motives by reacting to your environment. If the vasana is still there but you do not have to act on it, it is considered non- binding. As stated above: understanding the guna teaching means that you understand the nature of your environment, (meaning Isvara) which includes you as a jiva. It is also important to remember that it is impossible and unnecessary to de-activate all vasanas. Not all vasanas are bad; you need a vasana for self inquiry and other to motivate yourself. As long as a vasana is not causing excessive agitation in the mind, it is dharmic. Knowing the nature of the gunas and vasanas renders the doer non-binding.

Quote from Edwin on the Gunas

As it is with all the teachings of Vedanta, knowledge is power. Sadly, many people try to control the gunas without understanding them. This can lead to a painful exercise in what is called “will power.” When we do things we recognize as harmful, but don’t understand the mechanism at work, we make resolutions, manhandling our psyche, so to speak. Sometimes these resolutions are kept; often they are broken. And we suffer accordingly.

As the gunas are Maya, they are illusory. They draw us into the world of objects – including thoughts and feelings – and lead us to identify with these objects. The whole point of identifying the gunas, (which are also objects) and managing them is to understand the gunas, not to be afraid of what is bad or become attached to what is good in the gunas.

A Fearless Moral Inventory

Conduct a fearless inventory of your likes and dislikes and see which guna values they represent. Be totally honest, without shame, blame or fear as you investigate what you are invested in. Be really alert, like a sharp bird with an acute monocular vision; witness the person you think you are and what goes on in his/her mind and life. Triguna vibhava yoga (managing the gunas) is a great way to purify your mind and prepare it for enlightenment. All the vasanas and samskaras (a conglomeration of vasanas) are nothing but the results of the gunas and their conditioning. They become binding obstacles (pratibandikas) when they are not understood and controlled.

Prarabdha Karma, the Effects of Ignorance and Karma Yoga

If the effects of ignorance are playing out (prarabdha karma) and you cannot change it, accept it. Don’t resist. Do what you can to ameliorate them with equanimity and through dharmic lifestyle choices. Know that it is not you and it will pass; this is what Isvara is bringing your way as the jiva and you must flow with it. Resistance keeps you tied to the person and is a guarantee of more suffering. The gunas are constantly changing and impersonal, like everything else in the apparent reality; what use is control? Karma yoga is the only solution as there is no way to fast forward this process.

It is common that people who have realised the self, still struggle with stubborn samskaras and with fears that seem to have no origin. The effects of ignorance take as long as they take to subside; it is not up to the jiva or to awareness. Fear is an acronym for False Evidence Appearing Real, and is the very nature of rajas. It is part of the fabric of the macrocosmic mind and the jiva being an extension of it has unnamed and gripping fears that emerge from the depths like monsters from the deep. Rajas and tamas are impersonal and together these two form the main problematic components of ignorance. They are not real. They belong to the causal body, not to you. It only seems like they belong to the jiva because there is always a corresponding story that comes with them. The gunas belong to Isvara and have nothing to do with awareness or with the person. The person has a story and has suffered; there is no escape if you are a jiva. As long as one is identified with the person, rajas stalks you every step of the way and the pitfalls of tamas are waiting to engulf you.

Following Dharma

The knowledge of how the gunas function alleviates existential pain and guilt and gives you X-ray vision into yourself and everyone else. It shows that no-one is doing anything…or ever has. You can stop blaming yourself or anyone else for anything you did or anything that happened ‘to you’. Those who think that they are doers have no choice but to follow their natures. When you know you are not the doer, you can choose to drop “your” story’. This is not to say you do not take appropriate action when required or that you would do harm to any part of the creation. You would naturally make choices that give peace of mind, (sattva) and causes no injury, not because you feel guilt or duty bound, but because you are doing what is right. This is what following dharma means.

Om and prem, Sundari


Which Came First: Isvara or Maya?

James: This is a tricky one because the word Isvara refers to both Pure Awareness without Maya and Pure Awareness in conjunction with Maya.

Ken: First, there is only pure awareness. Within pure awareness is a potential called ignorance, MayaMaya manifests. Because of Maya, a small portion of pure awareness projects itself. The totality of this projection is called IshvaraIshvara is not a ‘person’ but the total aggregate of creation which appears as a result of the projection. Ishvara is the structure or system or mechanism or ‘machine’ of the whole of creation with its inherent principles and laws that hold govern and run creation. It is because of Maya, ignorance that Ishvara appears. That is, Maya precedes Ishvara, the creator. The sequence therefore is: awareness — > Maya — > Ishvara. Hence Maya wields Ishvara.

James: In the first place we cannot really speak of a ‘sequence’ because time has not happened at this level. Time is the interval between events. But the Causal Body (Maya, Isvara) is the first event. We need two more events to come up with time. The third event gives us a way to evaluate the time/distance between the first two events. In fact creation is simultaneous. It all comes out at once and there is no time involved. That is why we can negate it. It is not an actual temporal creation. It is a projection. On the Causal ‘level’ there are several things to consider: consciousness, ignorance, the three gunas and the five elements. You can make different arguments for various sequences but the fact remains that all of these factors are required and they exist in potentia before time.

Your definition of Isvara is reasonable. Panchadasi presents both views of the relationship between Isvara and Maya. Remember it does not have to be one way or the other because Vedanta is a means of knowledge and the way it is presented can be tailored to the doubt that is presented by the student. But your view presents a certain logical problem. Please consider the following:

Consciousness…Isvara…is conscious. Therefore it can wield Maya. Wielding implies a doer, a conscious agent. So in association with Maya Isvara becomes the Creator (Jagat Karanam) and the dispenser of the results of actions (Karma Phala Datta). But it is not a doer like jiva is a doer. It ‘does’ by its association with Maya. Its presence causes things to happen. It is like fire. It does not burn in the sense that it does not reach out and grab you and burn you. You get close to it and you get burned. So you can say it burns…but it doesn’t burn.

Maya is not conscious. It is neither consciousness nor not consciousness. It is something altogether different. Maya is ignorance, the apparent non-apprehension (Avaranna or veiling) of Isvara of itself brought about by Macrocosmic TamasIsvara ignorant of its nature is called Jiva. Maya has another power called projection (Vikeshepa). When it is operating, Isvara saliva under the spell of its own Tamas, takes the objects reflected the Subtle Body to be real and because it feels incomplete owing to the veiling power of Maya, it chases objects and suffers. If Maya is just ignorance and not conscious, how can it ‘wield’ Isvara?

The limitation of this model is the fact that Maya is made of three gunas, not two. So how do you account for sattva, the revealing aspect of Maya? It accounts for knowledge, in our case self knowledge. It appears in Maya as Vedanta and reveals awareness by removing ignorance about it.

Your view is OK. It is: both Isvara and Jiva are projections brought on by Maya. This is true because everything is awareness and it is unborn i.e. it never did manifest the world. Or to use the popular teaching, ‘nothing ever happened.’ So, in fact there is no Jiva or Isvara. But if thesis true there is no ‘sequence’ either.

Summary: Vedanta presents creation both as evolution and as superimposition. They are both useful to remove ignorance. So you are right and you are not right. 🙂

Love, James


It is said in Vedanta that Ishvara wields Maya. Isn’t it the other way around?

Question: You said that awareness shines on the sattva of the causal body first, then on rajas and tamas. Also, that the problem of evil does not belong to awareness but is due to ignorance (rajas and tamas). I’m paraphrasing and maybe I didn’t fully get your drift as this went by quickly and was not elaborated upon. But isn’t the Causal Body made of the three gunas, as it is itself the direct result of ignorance (i.e. Maya)? So, why would awareness shine on sattva…first?

James: It doesn’t really. You have to remember that the purpose of the teachings are to remove ignorance of the self, not to give a description of an object, the Causal Body, for example. Yes, the Causal Body is the three gunas but it is more, not that there is anything more than the gunas when you are discriminating awareness from experience.

But this teaching is not for discriminating awareness from experience. Although the creation appears all at once because it is just ignorance, for teaching purposes we speak as if there was a sequence because the inquirer understands things in terms of the apparent reality where time is operating so we need to have Isvara appear as pure sattva before rajas and tamas emerge to avoid the problem of blaming Isvara for collective evil. Of course, if any blaming or explaining is necessary, which it isn’t…‘evil’ is just ignorance of the nature of reality…Isvara as the three gunas is to blame. But the very idea of creation is ignorance in so far as reality is actually only non-dual pure consciousness. The teaching that Isvara is pure sattva is meant to point out that the creation is pure knowledge, uncontaminated with rajas and tamasRajas and tamas too are just knowledge in the hands of Isvara, but when they show up in the Subtle Body they apparently delude awareness and it thinks it is a jiva and it subsequently suffers projection and denial. The idea is a set-up to convince the jiva that it needs to manage rajas and tamas for moksa since sattva, the substance of the Subtle Body… where ignorance is located jiva-wise… is required for moksa. It should not blame Isvara and do nothing. You would be surprised how many so called ‘spiritual’ people won’t do sadhana because they believe that the effects of ignorance… their conditioning…which stands in the way of the assimilation of knowledge cannot be changed. Usually these people think that just knowing the Self changes their conditioning automatically, confers some kind of special ‘state’ that solves all problems.

From the relative perspective, jiva and Isvara share more than just their identity as pure awareness, sat. Their upadhis intersect or overlap in such a way that certain jivas, those withal high degree of sattva i.e. relatively less rajas and tamas also ‘wield’ rajas and tamas to varying degrees with reference to the bit of Isvara, i.e., the life stream…read environment…they inhabit. They are ‘little’ Isvara’s (avatars), meaning they have a greater impact on their environment than ordinary jivas, who do not have rajas and tamas under their control. Of course they do not manage macrocosmic ignorance, just their personal ignorance.

Question: As well, isn’t so-called evil inherent and therefore inevitable in Maya? I mention this because it sort of came off that evil in the world could be otherwise. Like, if everyone knew they were awareness, evil wouldn’t exist. We both know that is not going to happen. Could you clarify when you find the time?

James: Yes and no. It depends on what you mean by evil. It is ignorance of Isvara, i.e. dharma. If you understand that you are awareness in more than a purely intellectual way, your jiva will appreciate Isvara and align itself with the dharma field (Isvara) in such a way that unnecessary conflict will disappear. Unnecessary conflict is conflict born out of gratuitous likes and dislikes. It does not serve the evolutionary needs of the total. Of course conflict will not be eliminated because creation does not work without rajas.

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