Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by member_20317 »

johneeG wrote:IMHO, all sections of Hindu society need to come together in these times and stand side by side like a phalanx to defend. Individually, all are vulnerable.

However, the diversity of thought is no impediment in this. One can continue to adhere to one's school.

Ideally, there should be proper philosophical debates among the stalwarts of the schools to iron out the differences and to make the points clear. But the prevailing circumstances are not the right time for these efforts.

Right now, Hindu society faces groups intent on subverting and destroying Hinduism through force and fraud. Such debates, in present circumstances, will only benefit these anti-Hindu forces.
Nope, debate and sharing of ideas realtime is important to maintain and preserve the Indic knowledge genepool. However alongwith a simple debate along ideas we also need to disseminate the practical application of this philosophies, the dharma coming out of aadhyatm. Philosophies do not ask people to fight about with each other. It is the incompetence/unskilledness of the taught, that is to be guarded against. The problems in understanding of dharma have to be tackled at that level.

Pls excuse my poor skills if it comes across as a lecture.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SriKumar »

ManishHji, appka bahut bahut dhanyavaad. I do read Hindi/Devanagari and was formally schooled in it. All my reading, unfortunately, is in English (for pleasure or knowledge) but any Sanskrit prayers/slokas, I read in Devanagari because English script cannot get the pronunciations right. I think it is time I made the switch to reading in Devanagari for getting information.
.......it is hard to expect a single theme. Apart from Praise, there are themes as varied as creation hymns, fertility charms, advice against dice, prayers for knowledge, weapon charms, duties of a king, chastisement of the non-vedic people etc.......A society with some degree of occupational specialization. A society often in conflict with others who did not share their religious beliefs, and sometimes even internal conflict.
This is very interesting, so the RV is not one monolithic work of praise, religious chants and/or philosophy. This is a OT but it is tantalizing to me that the Indus Valley civilization had a different script (yet undeciphered) from Devanagari....one more reason why I think the Vedas pre-date 2500 B.C. Thanks again.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by svenkat »

The essence of religion is in the vedas-the sense of wonder which was a part and parcel of religion,until the New Testament came along,reflection and contemplation,praise and worship of a deity/multiple deities for fertility,rain,food,health,longevity,progeny,protection from enemies,sense of ethics,purpose and meaning of life.

Like many hindus of my and earlier generation,I used to think in terms of dichotomy,Indus valley vs Vedas,Samhita vs Upanishads,Rig Veda(poetry) vs Yajusha(ritual,prose),NW India vs Gangetic valley.

Why cant we think like our ancestors,our sampradayas which see them as a whole catering to people of different competiences (adhikaaras) as our poorva-s thought.In our forum,there are mujahids who are good at multiple activities and there are mango abduls who stick to what they know best.The Veda is one whole,but lesser beings stick to a part and still reap benefits.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

svenkat wrote:Why cant we think like our ancestors,our sampradayas which see them as a whole catering to people of different competiences (adhikaaras) as our poorva-s thought.
...
The Veda is one whole,but lesser beings stick to a part and still reap benefits.
Very well said svenkat ji.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

I think people don't see revenue in keeping up with sampradayas. They have become poor and down trodden by doing so, while the cunning and ruthless criminals live in luxury and wealth. Forget the karma aspects here, there is no positive feedback to following sampradayas.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

ManishH wrote: Carlji, RV has too many contributors to derive such a definite hierarchy. This rik (RV 1.168.1) definitely doesn't place Agni to be the "lowest deva" ...

"pari yadeṣāmeko viśveṣāṃ bhuvad devo devānāṃ mahitvā"

Agni the one God may he be the most important amongst all Gods.
ManishH ji, the question is the hermeneutic of interpretation. Vedanta is not a "quote contest". Any quote can be taken out of context. Its the warp and woof that makes up the context of knowledge that Veda is all about. As I indicated earlier, the adhibhautika, adhidaivika, adhyatmika and the 4th transcendental epistemic scopes form the basic co-ordinates of interpretation.

The RigVeda quote you posted above indicates that Agni is non-different from the Supreme Godhead -- at the transcendental level. That's all it indicates. After all, that is true for all the Godhead's innumerable Names -

यो देवानाम् नामधा एत एव (Rig Veda Samhita 10:82:3)
"He is the Only One who bears the names of all Gods."

Now if we are talking about tAratamya, then the quote has to be comparative, isn't it? Like this one -

अग्निर्वै देवानामवमो विष्णुः परमस्तदन्तरेव सर्वा अन्या देवता । (Aitareya Brahmana 1.1.1)

"Agni is the lowest and Vishnu is the highest among Devas. All other deities occupy positions that are in between." (Aitareya Brahmana 1.1.1)

Or this one from the RigVeda:

अस्य देवस्य मीळ्हुषो वया विष्णोरेषस्य परभ्र्थे हविर्भिः ।
विदे हि रुद्रो रुद्रियं महित्वं यासिष्टं वर्तिरश्विनाविरावत् ॥ (Rig Veda 7:40:5)

"Thus, By offerings with extreme devotion (prabhRithe) to this deva, Vishnu, who is very generous, Rudra obtained the glory that is associated with him (which is to have control of people's ahamkAra)." (Rig Veda 7:40:5)

Moreover, apart from simple comparisons like this, there are other subtle relationship and psychological aspects where the meaning of "higher" and "lower" itself becomes different (for instance, Krishna was the charioteer and therefore the "servant" of Arjuna, but that doesn't mean that Arjuna is above Krishna in rank). So whenever we take a quote, we have to discern its meaning and put it into the puzzle, both by its immediate context as well as by the larger picture.

Only when one has the key of this larger picture can all the Vedas, Brahmanas, Aranyakas, Upanishads, and the Smrtis be pieced together without the need to derogate one or the other in order to explain away "contradictions". When a superior postulate draws everything under its purview, then a coherent song emerges. IMHO, its sad that a lot of spurious "debate" between sects about tAratamya is just blowing smoke with shallow references here and there, with almost no one providing a larger context for the discussion. No wonder Acharya Shankara chose to focus on the adhyAtmika and turiya aspects and sweep the adhidavika dimension under the carpet in order to first bring about some level of harmony! Plus, taking that route is also a valid and different didactic method for practical spirituality, even if some of the juice of Veda is lost.

As per my readings so far, IMHO Madhva does the best job of resolving the devata-tAratamya lens, which provides a new multidimensional view of Vedic tradition. But then, my reading is limited, and I have a lot more to do.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by ManishH »

Carl wrote: The RigVeda quote you posted above indicates that Agni is non-different from the Supreme Godhead -- at the transcendental level. That's all it indicates.
...
Now if we are talking about tAratamya, then the quote has to be comparative, isn't it? Like this one -
Indeed the quote is comparative. "devānāṃ mahitvā" does mean (Agni is) "more important than all other Gods". The entire RV 1-68 sukta is about Agni. And there is no surprise you found another quote from Atri's commentary which contradicts this. I fully expect such contradictions in the scripture.

I agree with you that debates on supremacy of one God or the other are futile (can electron be called superior to proton). The purpose of my quote was to illustrate contradictory beliefs have always existed.

However, I do disagree with the notion that all Gods are forms of the One God. I personally believe Divinity is just like Nature - with distinct elements. Keep smashing beams in the collision tunnel, but you will discover newer, yet distinct elements.
When a superior postulate draws everything under its purview, then a coherent song emerges.
Search for coherence is a tough task you have embarked on, just like the Vedantic acharyas. However, I personally prefer the multiplicity and contradictions of the Veda samhita.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Mohan Rakesh wrote a play centered on the life of Kalidas.
Mohan Rakesh noted in the introduction to a subsequent play, King-swans of the waves, that, whenever he read Kalidas' Meghdoot, he felt that the poet had distilled out his sense of acute guilt and alienation from his own being into that play, and that this realization is what motivated Mohan Rakesh's writing of Ashadh ka ek din.[8]
The authorized English translation, One Day in the Season of Rain, was authored by Aparna Dharwadker and Vinay Dharwadker in 2009
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by ManishH »

SriKumar wrote:This is a OT but it is tantalizing to me that the Indus Valley civilization had a different script (yet undeciphered) from Devanagari....one more reason why I think the Vedas pre-date 2500 B.C. Thanks again.
Vedas didn't really have a script. It was orally transmitted way before evidence for Devanagari appeared. So much so that Speech (Vak) itself is the Goddess of knowledge in RV. Correct speech being so sacrosanct that the barbarian accent was mocked by Yājñavalkya who called out correct speech as a crucial difference between the learned and the barbarians. Even the sanskrit word 'barbara' (engl barbarian, latin barbaros) derives from "a people who blabber".

The obsession with correct pronunciation also led to unparalleled rigour in study of phonetics in ancient India. Indian language alphabets are the first (probably the only ones ?) to have letters classified according to their phonetic class.

PS: Vedic concepts are as old as when man had the leisure to reflect on nature. But IMHO, it's a far fetch to date the recited metrical hymns that we now call the Veda, to before the Harappan civilization.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

ManishH wrote:Indeed the quote is comparative. "devānāṃ mahitvā" does mean (Agni is) "more important than all other Gods". The entire RV 1-68 sukta is about Agni. And there is no surprise you found another quote from Atri's commentary which contradicts this. I fully expect such contradictions in the scripture.
No no hang on, let's go over that again. The point I wanted to make was as follows:
1. All RigVedic Names for gods also recursively refer to the Godhead (which is the fountainhead of all gods and the rest of creation). So at the ultimate, transcendental level all these names refer to Brahman Itself.
2. There is tAratamya within each scope of knowledge (physical, metaphysical, etc). For instance, for a particular mental-physical purpose, one time of day is better than another, one place is better than another, etc.
3. There is tAratamya of ontological levels too, such as between adhibhautika, adhidaivika, adhyatmika and the transcendental scopes.
4. So tAratamya itself is a recursive, fractal property of knowledge. In any particular consideration, the Selection of Relative Importances is an important factor of Right Knowledge.

The quote you supplied above (devo devAnAm mahitvA) is comparative only in the sense of point #3. It is comparative between epistemic scopes, not between particular terminals within a particular scope (adhidaivika). It is pointing out that this Agni deva is ultimately also referring to the Godhead, and in that scope He is transcendental and therefore superior to all devas in the adhidaivika scope - including the "Agni" cognized in that lower epistemic scope. But this quote is not comparative within the adhidaivika scope itself. Is this point clearer?

This 4th transcendental is called the adhivishnu scope by Madhva. As you know, any Vedic yajna, no matter to which god, is always consecrated to "Vishnu". This "Vishnu" is not just a deity on the adhidaivika plane, but is also the transcendental Godhead, who is referenced by the "highest" co-ordinate on the preceding scope, like the pole star in the sky.

I also wanted to make a couple more clarifications on Madhva's Vedanta:

1. The Madhva Vaishnavas do not neglect the worship of other Deities such as Agni, Rudra, etc. They do not derogate other deities. Unlike Shri Vaishnavas (Ramanuja sampradaya) or the other popular Vaishnava sects like Gaudiyas, etc, Madhvas strictly observe the Vedic rites to all gods. Madhva also insisted in his commentaries that each samhita, or Upanishad, etc has to be duly identified not just with its drashTA (seer), but also with the correct devata of that section. The Madhva Vaishnavas worship the tAratamya, not a "Vishnu" deity. This has to be understood. Once this is understood then a lot of sectarian misgivings are cleared and one becomes interested to gain this new, systematic perspective. The "Vishnu" is merely the referential key from which the tAratamya comes into perspective and emanates from the superior scope. Further, a Vaishnava may choose to worship any one of the other gods as his chosen deity. I noticed that your and svenkat ji's ideas about "Vaishnavas" were more about Shri Vaishnava ideas and culture rather than the Madhva Vedanta that I am trying to understand here.

2. Madhva also would agree with you and says that certain "contradictions" or conflicts in Vedic literatures are indeed necessary, and they signify qualitative modes of nature (guNa) and their psychological conficts. These are resolved in the heart of the sAdhaka based on character development. To take one Puranic example: As you know, the 18 Puranas are supposedly divided according to guNa (sattva, rajas, tamas), where the sAttvik are called the Vaishnava Puranas, etc. In the Shaiva Puranas, the "proof" that Shiva is god is based on the popular narrative of Brahma and Vishnu quarreling over who is greater, and they approach Lord Shiva to settle the dispute. He does so by turning into a column of fire. Both try to find the ends of the column of fire that Shiva turned into. Both the disputants cannot, and this awesome wonder proves Shiva's supremacy over the other two disputants. So this conception of detached, awesome greatness is a conception of god in one mode of nature. In the Vishnu Puranas the "proof" of Vishnu's supremacy is in the popular story of sage Bhrigu's search, where he goes to each of Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu and insults each of them. Each react in a different way, and Vishnu is declared winner because of his complete humility and absence of taking any offence whatsoever, as well as his instinctive nature to serve the mortal Bhrigu. This conception of god found in humility and service to mortal humans, and the awesomeness of his never feeling insulted would appeal to a different mode of nature. The "contradiction" between the two Puranic depictions of supremacy is not a contradiction, it is merely a description of respective guNas.

3. Its also worth noting that Madhva considered Adi Shankara's approach and method "eternal" and valid, but because it uses a higher ordinality of semantics, it is easily misunderstood by most people. Therefore, it becomes incomplete and cheats followers of the most mature fruit of Veda. And this is his criticism, that it obfuscates the available intelligence of the Vedas. As other successive Vaishnava Acharyas have said, "We accept Adi Shankara as Acharya, but do not accept those who currently follow him." So the Vaishnava attitude towards Shankara can partly be compared to certain Sufis who cautioned about the utterances of people like Hallaaj by calling it "shatahaat", meaning that what he said was true, but he didn't know how best to say it without loss of intelligence.
Last edited by Agnimitra on 03 Jan 2012 21:35, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

ManishH wrote:PS: Vedic concepts are as old as when man had the leisure to reflect on nature. But IMHO, it's a far fetch to date the recited metrical hymns that we now call the Veda, to before the Harappan civilization.
Interesting.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

As other successive Vaishnava Acharyas have said, "We accept Adi Shankara as Acharya, but do not accept those who currently follow him." So the Vaishnava attitude towards Shankara can partly be compared to certain Sufis who cautioned about the utterances of people like Hallaaj by calling it "shatahaat", meaning that what he said was true, but he didn't know how best to say it without loss of intelligence.
imho, acceptance of followers is definitely in opposite political/religious belief sides of the argument. could you explain what is that you are saying here -- loss of intelligence to whom?
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

SaiK wrote:imho, acceptance of followers is definitely in opposite political/religious belief sides of the argument. could you explain what is that you are saying here -- loss of intelligence to whom?
Loss of intelligence (information entropy) of Veda and fidelity to it. Neo-Advaitists tend to reduce the concepts of devotion and service to a timeserving means-to-an-end (moksha), rather than understanding it as part of the essence as Vaishnava Acharyas have done (rasO vai saH - Taittiriya Up.). The potential "eternality" of actions performed on Earth is a deep concept in Veda and Vaishnavism, whereas most neo-Advaitists can't go beyond "jagan mithyAtva" and "mAyA-vAda". In Madhva's Vedanta, "mAyA" simply has the RigVedic meaning of magic or miracle, pure and simple; i.e., something that produces wonder.

Its not about "followers of an opposing party", its about the individual who misunderstands transcendental utterances (of Shankara quoting certain phrases of the Upanishads), and this misunderstanding reflects on his Present Time reality and causes cognitive dissonance. Consequently with further action, this platform of reality will eventually cave in on itself and produce a "Release" (moksha) of one kind, but according to certain Acharyas that is not the best that can be achieved with Veda.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

Whatever happens on Earth definitely can be experienced or visualized by man. One need to have Maya (miracle) nor Eternal feeling on Earth concepts to realize God feelings (or a sense of universal understanding). Unless, there is a disjoint in thought where they expect maya (meaning some power external to their understanding) to happen, separated from their actions, then back to basics of I can commit low value karma and need not perform anything for society, as the Maya will take over and everything is resolved. That is BS! imho, lower quality of intelligence required to understand one's purpose.

sorry, did I take this thread away to OT? I am looking for lay man answers.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

SaiK wrote:Unless, there is a disjoint in thought where they expect maya (meaning some power external to their understanding) to happen, separated from their actions, then back to basics of I can commit low value karma and need not perform anything for society, as the Maya will take over and everything is resolved. That is BS! imho, lower quality of intelligence required to understand one's purpose.

sorry, did I take this thread away to OT? I am looking for lay man answers.
That is not the definition of mAyA (miracle) that I was referring to. It is not fatalism, as anyone familiar with Madhva's works or attitude in life can see. In fact, Madhva attacked the other form of fatalistic "karma" attitude and general social stasis that he saw in Advaitist society. He energetically promoted scientific investigation into nature ("the world is real"), self-determinism, and even a martial spirit in addition to burning intellectual curiosity. In fact, Madhva also sought to de-mystify people who possessed yoga-siddhis that laymen tend to worship in awe. He said that these yogic siddhis are also simply a science with natural laws, that's all. He condemned using them to fool or awe people.

The sense of "miracle" is one of wonder, as I clearly said. Wonder and appreciation for the minutest aspects of creation is a pre-requisite to knowing that creation more (its material and instrumentl lcauses), as well as to know the efficient cause behind it more. Don't equate this with fatalism. Madhva Vedanta is emphatically about self-determinism and strength. He claimed to be Vayu, related to Hanuman, and that Bhimasena was the best of the Pandavas. Do any of these look fatalistic? :mrgreen:
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by KrishG »

SaiK wrote:Whatever happens on Earth definitely can be experienced or visualized by man. One need to have Maya (miracle) nor Eternal feeling on Earth concepts to realize God feelings (or a sense of universal understanding). Unless, there is a disjoint in thought where they expect maya (meaning some power external to their understanding) to happen, separated from their actions, then back to basics of I can commit low value karma and need not perform anything for society, as the Maya will take over and everything is resolved. That is BS! imho, lower quality of intelligence required to understand one's purpose.

sorry, did I take this thread away to OT? I am looking for lay man answers.
Well, the Adavita idea of Maya was that of something false, something that does not actually exist. The philosophy says that the whole universe is 'Maya' and quotes the Vedas for it. Their idea of the universe is like that of the Matrix (movie), a world which is not actually real, that it is not bound by any laws and equivalence of all live forms(atma) with God(paramatma).

The Madhva or dvaita philosophy opposes the idea of the universe being maya (the advaita interpretation of Maya). The philosophy provides an alternate meaning to 'Maya' as being something special (wonder). Also, it introduces the idea of 'Tharatamya' which states that there is difference between different 'atman' and between 'atma' and 'paramathma'. As Carlji said it's about self-determination, your karma alone will decide what you will be.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

^^ KrishG ji,

Just to add to your post -- Madhva's Tattvavada philosophy also states the meaning of "not-being" in the word mAyA. Therefore it is a kind of "magic". However, the point is that this "not-being" is not meaningless -- it is not void of meaning, purpose and value. That is the difference.

Thus, the important difference between neo-Advaita and Dvaita is a semantic difference, not a lexical difference.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

But going by the god-particle findings at cern, there should be advaitic science aspects as well. now that is real or that can be experienced is not maya is easily understandable. for example, complex math for me is maya. even atma is maya for me. but, for madhva or adi it is realism in the sense, they understand what is atma etc.

I see the scoped semantics now.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

SaiK wrote:But going by the god-particle findings at cern, there should be advaitic science aspects as well.
How exactly do you mean "advaitic" science?
Note that the word "advaita" is also used by Madhva. After all, it is an Upanishadic term.

BTW your comparison with wave-particles physics is quite appropriate as far as the analogy for adhidaivika terminals is concerned. Same analogy can also be found in the macrocosmic universe. Each terminal has a name and a rank and position, and together they form a configuration.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

meaning, brahman being considered as god particle. brahman is every where, so is god particle, on that basis.

/sorry can't dwell more into my thoughts.. doing dvaitam now with work. :wink:
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

SaiK wrote:meaning, brahman being considered as god particle. brahman is every where, so is god particle, on that basis.
Good. Now if that was all advaita said, then advaita would be a subset of Vaishnavism.

The problem is that Advaitism says more than it should about certain subjects, and not enough about other subjects. So Vaishnavas choose to differentiate themselves from Advaitists.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

so, where does it not talk about less - which subjects are you saying? some more details please.

and, can you explain the differences you are talking on the vaishanvic advaitsm being different?
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

ManishH wrote:Speech (Vak) itself is the Goddess of knowledge in RV. Correct speech being so sacrosanct that the barbarian accent was mocked by Yājñavalkya who called out correct speech as a crucial difference between the learned and the barbarians.
...
The obsession with correct pronunciation also led to unparalleled rigour in study of phonetics in ancient India. Indian language alphabets are the first (probably the only ones ?) to have letters classified according to their phonetic class.
Was perfection of speech restricted to pronunciation? I doubt it.

चत्वारि वाक परिमिता पदानि तानि विदुर्ब्राह्मणा ये मनीषिणः ।
गुहा तरीणि निहिता नेङगयन्ति तुरीयं वाचो मनुष्या वदन्ति ॥ [Rig Veda 1.64.45]

"Speech has been measured out in four divisions, the Brahmanas who have understanding know them. Three kept in close concealment cause no motion; of speech, men speak only the fourth division." [Rig Veda 1.64.45]

I guess these would be vaikhari, madhyama, pashyanti, and para, with the last 3 relating to consciousness characteristics. My guess is that Vedic idea of perfection of speech encompassed these, and was not just an obsession with the vaikhari aspect. Of course, the external language (grammar, phonetics, etc) chosen as a vehicle of vaak (speech) should have the requisite level of sophistication, and so perhaps the so-called "barbarian" languages were looked upon with some disdain?
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

SaiK wrote:and, can you explain the differences you are talking on the vaishanvic advaitsm being different?
SaiK ji, Vaishnavism says that Absolute Reality has both properties - aikya (Oneness) as well as advaita (Uniqueness, one without a second). There is a subtle but important difference between these two. The oneness is qualitative, not numerical. Numerical oneness at the transcendental level doesn't make any sense, although its illusion is possible under a form of divine Ignorance. Only matiraikya, sthAnaikya, etc. are real possibilities.

Thus, the Advaitist conception is just one of several special cases within the possibility space of Madhva's Vedanta.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by ManishH »

Carl wrote: 1. All RigVedic Names for gods also recursively refer to the Godhead (which is the fountainhead of all gods and the rest of creation). So at the ultimate, transcendental level all these names refer to Brahman Itself.
Carlji as usual, your post is a trove of knowledge. I don't claim to have understood all of it, but will explore along the pointers you gave.

Special thanks for summarizing the Madhwa practices. I am mostly ignorant of the transcendental levels or even the Upanishadic Godhead.
It is pointing out that this Agni deva is ultimately also referring to the Godhead, and in that scope He is transcendental and therefore superior to all devas in the adhidaivika scope - including the "Agni" cognized in that lower epistemic scope. But this quote is not comparative within the adhidaivika scope itself. Is this point clearer?
I much respect the philosophical depth of your explanation, but I don't see the phrase "Godhead in the form of Agni" anywhere in the sukta. The construct "eṣām ekaḥ" is a standard phrase for "one among them". So "yat eṣām ekaḥ viśveṣām" means "that one amongst all of them". The original by Nodha Gautama doesen't refer to Godhead (brahman/visnu) anywhere.

Even in immediate context, the first line uses bhuraṇyu (the quivering one) which is a standard synonym for Agni in RV. It also uses "upa sthād divaṃ" (ascends the sky) - again fitting the imagery of rising flames of Agni. Even later in the sukta, the standard Agni praise imagery follows - patī rayīṇām (lord of treasures), śuṣkād janiṣṭhāḥ (born from dry wood). Why would a sukta introduce such a profound philosophical concept of Godhead, not expand on it anymore, and drop it right away to go to trite physical imagery ? Esp. contradictory is "born from dry wood" - does the Upanishad ever mention the Godhead being born from any source ?

Probably our difference here is in the approach - you are coming from a philosophical/spiritual angle. And I'm from a naturalist/historical linguistics perspective, so prefer to read an older text (RV) without the lens of a newer one (Upanishad and their commentaries).

PS: I personally am neutral in the inter-vedantic school debate as I have no family ties to either of these schools.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by ManishH »

Carl wrote: Was perfection of speech restricted to pronunciation? I doubt it.
Also important for oral transmission were poetic metre and therefore a plethora of synonyms. Both confounded visitors like Al Beruni who could never figure out the reason for those and called it absurd.
चत्वारि वाक परिमिता पदानि तानि विदुर्ब्राह्मणा ये मनीषिणः ।
गुहा तरीणि निहिता नेङगयन्ति तुरीयं वाचो मनुष्या वदन्ति ॥ [Rig Veda 1.64.45]

I guess these would be vaikhari, madhyama, pashyanti, and para, with the last 3 relating to consciousness characteristics.
This is a much later interpretation found in Mahabharata, Bhartrihari and some commentaries on Patanjali's Mahabhashya. Patanjali in his Mahabhashya and Yaska in the Nirukta have a different, purely grammatical interpretation of the sukta's fourfold division of speech - nama, akhyata, upasarga and nipaata.

I think a lot of schools tended to retro-fit their beliefs on RV. Not a bad thing since it gives new insights.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

ManishH wrote:Patanjali in his Mahabhashya and Yaska in the Nirukta have a different, purely grammatical interpretation of the sukta's fourfold division of speech - nama, akhyata, upasarga and nipaata.
Interesting, I will check that out. Thanks!
ManishH wrote:PS: I personally am neutral in the inter-vedantic school debate as I have no family ties to either of these schools.
Ya me neither, no family ties to any particular school. Just wandering and absorbing stuff. Right now I feel motivated to talk about Madhva's Vedanta because it is grossly under-represented or mis-represented in public discourse, and I think it could do a lot to help correct certain notions and infuse new thought and vigor into modern takes on "Vedanta".

Here's my take on some questions you raised:
ManishH wrote:but I don't see the phrase "Godhead in the form of Agni" anywhere in the sukta. The construct "eṣām ekaḥ" is a standard phrase for "one among them". So "yat eṣām ekaḥ viśveṣām" means "that one amongst all of them". The original by Nodha Gautama doesen't refer to Godhead (brahman/visnu) anywhere.
The Vedic samhita is not a philosophical lecture in itself, but a poetic glorification in sophisticated language of certain phenomena (maybe just events, or maybe gnosis and resultant ability - doesn't matter which). The important assumption (declared in the Vedas) is that this glorification was done by "seers" who had cleared their minds of all distortions. This poetic journey of speech follows a psycho-linguistic noetic path (according to the natural laws of the mind, undistorted by neuroses and psychoses). In so doing, the semantics implicit in each samhita progresses along that philognostic curve. That noetic curve proceeds from evolutes up towards source. If you see this geometrically, we can see that this logical path has a linear component as well as a cyclic component, a bit like models of Time (kAla).

Image

So the mathematical pattern analysis of samhita and then a philosophical commentary would be observed and constructed - but the Veda itself is not this. What would one mean by "mathematical" pattern analysis of samhita? One simple example of this would be poetic metre. Another example would be verse structure - for example several parts of the Veda such as the namakam chamakam, etc are a chiasm. The philosophical structure of even later texts like the Bhagavad Gita are based on chiastic patterns. Another example would be methods of recitation (ghanapATha). As you know, Sanskrit is a non-directional language, which makes orders and patterns all the more significant. So on and so forth.
ManishH wrote:Even in immediate context, the first line uses bhuraṇyu (the quivering one) which is a standard synonym for Agni in RV. It also uses "upa sthād divaṃ" (ascends the sky) - again fitting the imagery of rising flames of Agni. Even later in the sukta, the standard Agni praise imagery follows - patī rayīṇām (lord of treasures), śuṣkād janiṣṭhāḥ (born from dry wood). Why would a sukta introduce such a profound philosophical concept of Godhead, not expand on it anymore, and drop it right away to go to trite physical imagery ?
Again, given what is actually happening and being expressed in the samhita, poetic imagery and other linguistic tools are merely used to reflect an inner experience of Observation. So the words are lower degree pointers to other intermediate indicators, which in turn reflect a higher degree reality. Consider the use of a synecdoche in English - "give me the 'green' (money, or currency notes)". Here, the attribute 'green' is a pointer to a specific external object possessing it. Or take a metaphor such as "his steely gaze". "Steely" produces a reflection of an inner emotive condition. Very relevant here is a semantic rule, much elaborated on by Count Alfred Korzybski in his General theory of Semantics -- do give his book "Science and Sanity" a dekho if you haven't already. The rule is - "The map is not the territory."
1. When parts of a map are described, it does not actually describe the real territory.
2. The material sense perceptions are like a lower-order map of a higher order reality.
3. Moreover, in a holographic model of the universe (or multiverse), the actual territory also contains a map of itself in some part of itself. So the whole is made up of its parts (easy to understand), but each part also contains the whole within it, recursively.
4. Optimal perception and observation of reality requires "objective silence" and cannot be achieved by mere intensional or extensional paradigms of analysis.

Also, what would the mapping possibly look like between a lower order epistemic scope and a higher order epistemic scope? Perhaps it would be like the mathematical transformations of Mobius curves?



This is beautiful, heck, even the mathematics of it is beautiful. But the samhita itself is not a work of mathematics. Or of philosophy or science. But these are contained within it, because they are inherent in the human being's cognition of Truth. As the Persian poet and spiritual master Rumi said, if a seer intoxicated with god stumbles across the desert, his footsteps would create geomancy symbols in the sand!" :)

So the main point here is that it is absurd to expect a locally situated caveat of "the Agni referred to here is about Godhead" in specific verses everytime. Because the samhita is not concerned with philosophical classroom lectures. It is a free flow of the experience of gnosis and adoration in poetic consciousness. The philosophical and other types of analyses necessarily comes after the experience. And that analysis must then be able to use co-ordinate predication to connect spatially or temporally staggered sections of Veda according to epistemic scopes. The simpler and clearer the lens, the more logically superior it is.
ManishH wrote:Probably our difference here is in the approach - you are coming from a philosophical/spiritual angle. And I'm from a naturalist/historical linguistics perspective, so prefer to read an older text (RV) without the lens of a newer one (Upanishad and their commentaries).
I think both perspectives are important, but its unnecessary to create a false dichotomy between them. Or to obsess with a historical-centric perspective. Things like logic, sexuality, etc are inherent experiences in man, IMHO. The Greeks didn't "invent logic" just because they may have written the first texts on it, just as Hindus didn't "invent sex" because they analyzed it. So the analysis of Veda and its philosophical "splicing" may have occurred later historically, but that doesn't mean it is a "superimposition" on the original samhita, FWIW.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by ManishH »

Carl wrote:So the words are lower degree pointers to other intermediate indicators, which in turn reflect a higher degree reality. Consider the use of a synecdoche in English - "give me the 'green' (money, or currency notes)". Here, the attribute 'green' is a pointer to a specific external object possessing it.
I'm fine with this level of indirection in metaphors eg. bhuraṇyavaḥ (the quivering one) indicates Agni. But your interpretation is a few degrees more of indirection and appears to me right now, a larger leap of faith to take.
So the analysis of Veda and its philosophical "splicing" may have occurred later historically, but that doesn't mean it is a "superimposition" on the original samhita, FWIW.
Fair statement.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

ManishH wrote:I'm fine with this level of indirection in metaphors eg. bhuraṇyavaḥ (the quivering one) indicates Agni. But your interpretation is a few degrees more of indirection and appears to me right now, a larger leap of faith to take.
Ya that's very true ManishH ji. Its definitely intuitive.
The other level of commentary I would like to read up on would be a jyotisha lens on Vedas. Any standard material you or others could suggest?
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

http://www.flickr.com/photos/lijesh/3521129858/
I was flipping channels in the morning and hit upon jayatv interview with her. She was amazing, I guess with some thesis on certain historic works on our epics, and she is a sanskrit major, principal of an old chennai dance school.

she was referring to the wrong notion of muslim invasion only affected north india, but it is not true. between 12-13 century (some sultanate times)., I believe all historical records were via temples. during that time of invasion, there is no record of any epic stories or a missing gap in many art culture etc. the invasion times, the temples were shut down.. and hence no records was the deduction.

wonderful analysis.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Varoon Shekhar »

While searching for references to time travel in ancient texts, the Mahabharata was the first one that came up! There is a story in the MB about a king who traveled to the domain of Brahma, and then returned to his own kingdom, finding that it was in another age. No time travel 'machine' mentioned of course, but the concept of time travel was implicit. Pretty impressive, for way back then.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

Carl wrote:
SaiK wrote:and, can you explain the differences you are talking on the vaishanvic advaitsm being different?
SaiK ji, Vaishnavism says that Absolute Reality has both properties - aikya (Oneness) as well as advaita (Uniqueness, one without a second). There is a subtle but important difference between these two. The oneness is qualitative, not numerical. Numerical oneness at the transcendental level doesn't make any sense, although its illusion is possible under a form of divine Ignorance. Only matiraikya, sthAnaikya, etc. are real possibilities.

Thus, the Advaitist conception is just one of several special cases within the possibility space of Madhva's Vedanta.
In my understanding, numerical oneness at the transcendental level can be categorically represented by "infinity"[like ∞]., though it may not be having a quantitative meaning [for mangoes of course], but definitely can be thought of having a value [like zero] to be related with quantifiable entities.

So, whatever you may want to attribute unknown quantities with a qualifying definition, can be acceptable for human brain religious consumption in many forms of -ism definitions.

Hence, all these variables can be scoped with in the unknown infinite qualities - Illusion, Oneness with transcendental force, Absolute Reality, timelessness [meaning beyond measure or that which present in all times], etc.

So, my mango mind, I don't see the subtle nuances defining ∞ + iX != ∞ + iY, where iX, iY are imaginary numbers. Though your equations may be perfectly correct.

Again when we talk about Oneness, there is always a merge thought - JOIN. So, the property itself becomes quantifiable in some sense that can be considered represent-able in the mango minds.

so, I am bliss-ed to seek more info!
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by member_20317 »

Carl ji is there any way can kidnap you and bring you back to India. Else you could help the future generations by simply maintaining a compilation of what you have written thus far. That lesson on geometry and supplying that logic to vedas was simply too smooth.

Carl ji I was working on something which I knew was not supported by the theories that I was made to read in my certifications (better ones may exist, in some secreted manner). These things nontheless do happen all the time. I have received copious help from other sources that have nothing to do with the core subjects to which the problem is expected to belong. Now my aim is not develop a new theory (lack the mental discipline to be able to even attempt it), rather I want to understand/explain the very practice of it (which actually seems comparatively easier to do). All this hyperbole is only to carry further your idea that all that is required may not be actually codified.

Please do keep up the good work.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by ramana »

Varoon Shekhar wrote:While searching for references to time travel in ancient texts, the Mahabharata was the first one that came up! There is a story in the MB about a king who traveled to the domain of Brahma, and then returned to his own kingdom, finding that it was in another age. No time travel 'machine' mentioned of course, but the concept of time travel was implicit. Pretty impressive, for way back then.

Please do quote the story and would like our Physics experts to comment on it.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

Udhilipa is the flying siddhar from 84 mahasiddhas/TN/Buddhism.
--

but definitely not this desi fooling types:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=etSivpBHUmE
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by Agnimitra »

SaiK wrote:Again when we talk about Oneness, there is always a merge thought - JOIN. So, the property itself becomes quantifiable in some sense that can be considered represent-able in the mango minds.
Sure, the command to "join" back to Source is a given. But, as you said, how best can this fundamental dynamic be characterized for our mango minds? Upanishads give many metaphors in different contexts. One example from Prashna Upanishad 4.7:

स यथा सोम्य वयांसि वासोवृक्षं संप्रतिष्ठन्ते एवं ह वै तत्सर्वं पर आत्मनि संप्रतिष्ठन्ते । [Prashna Up. 4.7]

"O friend, just as a bird goes into a tree to roost, so also all this rests in the Supreme Atman."

From an "external" point of view, the bird has merged and disappeared into the tree. But although it becomes part and parcel of the tree, within that system it retains its individuality.

Another example is from Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 2.5.14:

अयमातमा सर्वेषां भूतानां मध्वस्यात्मनः सर्वाणि भूतानि मधु यश्चायमस्मिन्नात्मनि तेजोमयो 'मृतमयः पुरुषो यश्चायमात्मा तेजोमयो 'मृतमयः पुरुषो 'यमेव स यो 'यमात्मेदममृतमिदं ब्रह्मेदँ सर्वम् । [Brihadaranyaka Up. 2.5.14]

"This (cosmic) body is (like) honey to all beings, and all beings are (like) honey to this (cosmic) body. (The same with) the shining immortal being who is in this (cosmic) body, and the shining, immortal being who is this (individual) self. (These four) are but this Self. This (Self-knowledge) is (the means of) immortality; this (underlying unity) is Brahman; this (knowledge of Brahman) is (the means of becoming) all."

So its like honey is made from essences collected by bees from various flowers. In the actual hive, all the nectarean essences are mixed, and from an "external" point of view are indistinguishably merged. Yet, we know from an "internal" point of view that nothing is lost, all the individual essences inhere in the honey. So also, the individuality of souls is not simply "lost", though it transmutes and becomes a "non-different" part and parcel of the Supreme Soul. Moreover, each individual part has a plenary portion of the whole inherent within. The simultaneous existence of this Supreme One along with the individual many is all over all scriptures.

नित्यो नित्यानां चेतनश्चेतनानाम्
एको बहूनां यो विदधाति कामान्
तमात्मसथं ये 'नुपश्यन्ति धीरस्
तेषां शान्तिः शाश्वति नेतरेषाम् । [Katha Up. 2.2.13]

"The One Eternal among many eternals, the One Consciousness among many consciousnesses,
The One among the many who fulfills (the many's) desires,
Only the spiritually intelligent person who is able to see this One situated within the self and without,
He only can actually attain to perfect and eternal peace, not others."
SaiK wrote:In my understanding, numerical oneness at the transcendental level can be categorically represented by "infinity"[like ∞]
...
So, my mango mind, I don't see the subtle nuances defining ∞ + iX != ∞ + iY, where iX, iY are imaginary numbers.
Yes oneness can be represented by infinity. Of course, even there we can have countably infinite or uncountably infinite, bounded infinities and unbounded infinities. Discreteness and infinity can both be present - based on necessity.

The "subtle nuance" in defining that infinity and its possibilities becomes important in one's conception and therefore objective-setting, as well as one's method and orientation of sAdhana. Especially because the infinite whole is supposedly indwelling in us by a plenary portion, according to the claim of the Upanishads. So that can cause confusion about "roles" and "relations" of the "parts". Think of a couple of metaphors:

1. First, in terms of right conception and purpose about origins, it is important for basic attitude and knowing where one is and where one must go. So think of being a molecule inside a plant. You want to arrive at the "source/origin" of the plant. Now by most types of Buddhist/Advaitist thinking, they start with "drg-drishya viveka", etc, which are mostly based on associative logic. By following this logic of pursuing "substratum" and logical antecedents, they would have us renounce each functional ramification of the plant and logically arrive at the root of the plant. Then they may declare this to be the "source" of the plant, and then perhaps exit and merge with the soil around it. But by a more holistic Vaishnava thinking, the origin of the plant is not the root, but the seed. Its not about going up "back" to the root. And where is the seed found? Not by going backwards down to the root, but by going forwards down each evolved ramification of the plant system, until one reaches its most mature fruit - which is the purpose of the plant's creation. Within that fruit is the seed, and within that seed is the information for a whole new plant.

So a holistic Vaishnava philosophy not only leads to the real origin, but determines one's whole attitude towards human life and all its cultural/civilizational ramifications. IMHO, Buddhist/Advaitist thinking has caused problematic memes of renunciation, celibacy, male/female imbalances, brahmana-kshatriya disharmony, etc to become implanted into Indic society. Even with their caveats of "vyavahArika" necessity to have different social arrangements, by psychologically divorcing it from their "paramArthika" claims, they undermine its vigour and joy. That's why I think Madhva's Vedanta is needed to regenerate Indic society in a healthy manner.

2. Secondly, think in terms of method of sAdhana and relative importances of different aspects of sAdhana. Think of a plant - it has leaves, fruits, branches, stem, and roots. What best way to care for and nourish the well-being of the entire plant so that it grows to its full maturity and we can obtain the most mature fruit of its creation? The right method would be to simply water and nourish the root, because this would automatically be redistributed to the rest of the plant. No amount of spit and polish to the leaves or stem is comparable to watering the root. Its not just a question of "also" watering the root along with other stuff (like how Advaitists talk about "also" having some "bhakti" tamasha). The care of the root is central to the process. Correct organization of tattvas is the main task of philosophy, not just discovery of tattvas.

Also see Bhagavad Gita 15:16-20 for example -
"There are two classes of beings, the fallible and the infallible. In the material world every entity is fallible, and in the spiritual world every entity is called infallible. Besides these two, there is the greatest living personality, the Lord Himself, who has entered into these worlds and is maintaining them. Because I am transcendental, beyond both the fallible and the infallible, and because I am the greatest, I am celebrated both in the world and in the Vedas as that Supreme Person. Whoever knows Me as the Supreme Personality of Godhead, without doubting, is to be understood as the knower of everything, and He therefore engages himself in full devotional service, O son of Bharata. This is the most confidential part of the Vedic scriptures, O sinless one, and it is disclosed now by Me. Whoever understands this will become wise, and his endeavors will know perfection."

ravi_g ji, thanks for the encouragement.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by brihaspati »

Creation of artefacts - constructions based on what is being thought of as reality - may be useful in focusing the uninitiated. But the greatest danger in this is that the focusing ultimately may lead to absorbing this construction itself as the real - and not an artefact.

Relying on literal interpretations of what a particularly successful human theoretician delivered in the language and memes of his times, in the past, has created dangerous and false divisions in our philosophy and thought process. Each such theoretician would deliver ideas from within his existing social limitations - and would not be able to convey things that went beyond the existing memes.

We "Hindus" fight over these constructions of individuals and think we are fighting to establish the best, the most comprehensive "hinduism". This is a false fight.

Its better to study and read up all the texts available, in every coming or future period. It is crucial to remember that texts or supposed sermons or bhashyas are all limited by the severe loss in translation that happens when one tries to express what he feels or conceives of in his mind - and then expressing them. Moreover the person would be limited by the pre-existing language, the memetic connections to the words in the target audience. Further if he has been particularly influential, then he must have served particular socio-political needs in his target audience which in itself would give a hard, self-sustaining structure to his ideas.

Texts are partially clouded windows to daylight. The schools of thought that have crystallized around successful gurus - have in themselves become like mini-Abrahamic schools - whose followers propagate a sense of particular closeness to "truth", and their version being the correct one. This creates a kind of factional atmosphere that fractures and fissures a collective that should otherwise have felt one.

Indian philosophy is like mathematics. It has an underlying common language. If the logic of that language is correctly applied, every individual should be able to arrive at the same conclusion individually - without the intervention of a professor. Just like maths, this is one meta-philosophy that does not need a specialized laboratory with learned supervisors.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by SaiK »

Good, we need a Joint JOIN strategy. After-all all these acharyas are interpreting updanishads to mango minds. So, all mango minds could have a joint strategy to get all interpretations into one doctrine that has application for physical existence and meta-physical thoughts.

Carl ji, it would be a great asset if you can make a table like this: for each argument or thought of discussion - subject area where misunderstanding exists, how various doctrines interprets them.

Philsophy/Statement----Dwaita----Advaita--- Various Others -- Joint Strategy
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------- -------- ---------- ----------------- -------------------
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by member_20317 »

Carl wrote: Correct organization of tattvas is the main task of philosophy, not just discovery of tattvas.
Something like understanding that only a hen (or a he hen ;)) can come after the egg and only an egg can come after the hen, instead of wasting time on researching over what came first. Am I right?
Carl wrote: Its not just a question of "also" watering the root along with other stuff (like how Advaitists talk about "also" having some "bhakti" tamasha).
But I was convinced by an Advaitists writings about the need for bhakti. He never said anything to imply that bhakti was useful only for its tamasha value. Advaita it is said did bind the various bhakti traditions. If they did (and i would like a confirmation from you if they did), would it have been possible without their being a genuine understanding of the bhakti traditions.
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Re: Discussion on Indian Epics, Texts, Treatises & Kathas

Post by member_20317 »

SaiK wrote:Good, we need a Joint JOIN strategy. After-all all these acharyas are interpreting updanishads to mango minds. So, all mango minds could have a joint strategy to get all interpretations into one doctrine that has application for physical existence and meta-physical thoughts.

Carl ji, it would be a great asset if you can make a table like this: for each argument or thought of discussion - subject area where misunderstanding exists, how various doctrines interprets them.

Philsophy/Statement----Dwaita----Advaita--- Various Others -- Joint Strategy
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------- -------- ---------- ----------------- -------------------
----------------------- -------- ---------- ----------------- -------------------
Could this be of any help

Image

The image in the above link is actually a part of the FAQ (link provided below)

http://www.ssvt.org/Education/Hinduism%20FAQ.asp
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