[Advaita-l] avidya is Agantuka
Venkatraghavan S
agnimile at gmail.com
Wed Jan 13 09:55:06 CST 2016
Sri Sreenivasa,
Seeking आत्म अनुभव, to experience the Atma, is an exercise in futility, for
the Atma cannot be an object of experience, nor an object of the senses.
That knowledge of Atma is to be had from Shastra under the guidance of a
guru, and until the knowledge is attained, the आवरण, which is a lack of
knowledge of the आत्मा is said to be present.
अविद्या, which is of the nature of आवरण and विक्षेप, is not an object of
experience either. One cannot see or experience अविद्या, but can experience
it's effects, which is this दृश्य प्रपंच.
Regards,
Venkatraghavan
On 13 Jan 2016 15:40, "sreenivasa murthy" <narayana145 at yahoo.co.in> wrote:
> Dear Sri Venkataraghvan,
>
> You write : "That was what I was trying to say in shorthand - but the
> important thing
> was to establish that आवरण was very much present in the waking state."
> You want to establish that AvaraNa was very much present in the waking
> state.What is that *AvaraNa*?How do you know that there is *AvaraNa* in
> your waking state? Who has seen it? Or is it a concept which has been told
> in an ancient text ? Has one accepted that concept blindly without
> verification in his own *anuBava*? These doubts crossed my mind while I
> was going through the above passage of yours.
>
> With warm and respectful regards,
> Sreenivasa Murthy
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* Venkatraghavan S via Advaita-l <
> advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
> *To:* H S Chandramouli <hschandramouli at gmail.com>
> *Cc:* A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta <
> advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
> *Sent:* Wednesday, 13 January 2016 7:21 PM
> *Subject:* Re: [Advaita-l] avidya is Agantuka
>
> Namaste Sri Chandramouli ji,
>
> I'm somewhat confused. I thought you were saying earlier that the
> manifestation of कारण शरीर is limited to सुषुप्ति. However, the latest
> emails indicate that you agree that कारण शरीर is manifest in all three
> अवस्थाs. I agree with this btw, but it appears a change to your earlier
> position (of course, I simply may not have understood what you were saying
> earlier).
>
> Coming back to the topic at hand, we are in agreement that the
> manifestation of अविद्या occurs in all three states. The manifestation is
> of the nature of association with a body शरीर अभिमानं (this you may not
> agree with, see next paragraph). It is this manifestation that is आगन्तुकं.
> If this is the interpretation of Sri Anandagiri AchArya and Sri
> ShankarAchArya, I am in agreement.
>
> If शरीर अभिमानं is taken to be the meaning of अभिव्यक्तं, that implies the
> inclusion of both आवरण रूप अविद्या and विक्षेप रूप अविद्या as the objects
> of the adjective आगन्तुकी. However, here it may be argued the context of
> the बृहदारण्यक मंत्र is सुषुप्ति, and hence only आवरण is being described as
> आगन्तुकं - as विक्षेप isn't present then. I'm ok with that too, but would
> still contend that it is possible to explain विक्षेप as आगन्तुक in the
> manner described above, if the context isn't सुषुप्ति.
>
> The purpose of the example about the awareness of "I" in the waking/dream
> states was merely to establish the presence of आवरणं in those states.
>
> The example is a diversion from the main topic, but since you had some
> objections to the example, I thought I will clarify.
>
> The attribution of "I" the sAkshi Atma to "I" associated with the sharIra
> (which is the object of the awareness) is indeed विक्षेप, but it requires
> that साक्षी/आत्म अज्ञानं be present for that विक्षेप to happen.
>
> The mind should not have known that what is denoted by the term "I" is the
> sAkshi the Atma (आवरणं), and falsely believes "I" to be the 2 sharIras.
>
> The awareness of "I" is विक्षेप, I wasn't implying that the "I" that the
> mind is aware of is Atma.
>
> That was what I was trying to say in shorthand - but the important thing
> was to establish that आवरण was very much present in the waking state. It
> appears from your latest email that you agree with that.
>
> Regards,
> Venkatraghavan
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