|
EARLY TRANSLATIONS OF SOME VEDANTIC TEXTS
The Karikas of Gaudapada
THE Karikas of Gaudapada are a body of authoritative verse maxims and reasonings setting forth in a brief and closely-argued manual the position of the extreme Monistic School of Vedanta philosophy. The monumental aphorisms of the Vedanta Sutra are meant rather for the master than the learner. Gaudapadaʼs clear, brief and businesslike verses are of a wider utility; they presuppose only an elementary knowledge of philosophic terminology and the general trend of Monistic and Dualistic discussion — this preliminary knowledge granted, they provide the student with an admirably lucid pregnant nucleus of reasoning which enables him at once to follow the Monistic train of thought and to keep in memory its most notable positions. It has also had the advantage, due no doubt to its pre-eminent merit and the long possession of authority and general use, of a full and powerful commentary by the great Master himself and a further exposition by the Masterʼs disciple, the clear-minded and often suggestive Anandagiri. To modern students there can be no better introduction to Vedanta philosophy — after some brooding over the sense of the Upanishads — than a study of Gaudapadaʼs Karikas and Shankaraʼs commentary with Deussenʼs System of the Vedanta in one hand and any brief and popular exposition of the six Darshanas in the other. It is only after the Monistic School has been thoroughly understood that the Modified-Monistic and Dualistic-Monistic with their intermediary shades can be profitably studied. When the Vedantic theory has been mastered, the Sankhya, Yoga, Nyaya and Vaisheshika can in its light be easily mastered in succession with Vijnanabhikshuʼs work and the great synthesis of the Bhagvadgita to crown the whole structure. The philosophical basis will then be properly laid and the Upanishads can be studied with new interest, verifying or modifying as one goes oneʼs original interpretation of the Sacred Books. This will bring to a close the theoretical side of the Jnanakanda; its practical and Page – 427 more valuable side can only be mastered in the path of Yoga and under the guidance of a Sadguru.
Gaudapada begins his work by a short exposition in clear philosophical terms of the poetical and rhythmic phraseology of the Upanishads. He first defines precisely the essential character of the Triune nature of the Self as manifested in the macrocosm and the microcosm, the Waker, the Dreamer and the Sleeper, who all meet and disappear in the Absolute.
Shankara: The position taken is that, as the entity which cognizes enters into three conditions one after another and not simultaneously, and is moreover in all three connected by the memory which persists in feeling “This is Iˮ “This is Iˮ “This is Iˮ, it is obvious that it is something beyond and above the three conditions and therefore one, absolute and without attachment to its conditions. And this is supported by the illustrations like that of the large fish given in the Scripture.
Page – 428 Shankara: 1. The object of this verse is to show that these three, Vishwa, Taijasa and Prajna, are experienced even in the waking state. The right eye is the door the means, through which especially Vishwa, the seer of gross objects, becomes subject to experience. The Sruti saith, “Verily and of a truth Indha is he, even his Being as he standeth here in the right eye.ˮ Vaishwanara is Page – 429 Indha because his essential principle is light and is at once the macrocosmic Self within the Sun and the seer in the eye.
“Know me, O son of Bharat, for the Knower of the body in all bodies. I stand undivided in all creatures and only seem to be divided.ˮ
Page – 430 really differenced and manifest and the senses become one with Prana, so how do you predicate of it absence of manifestation and differentia by saying it becomes One? But there is no real fault in the reasoning; since in the undifferenced the particularising conditions of space and time are absent and the same is the case with Prana in the state of Sleep. Although indeed the Prana is in a sense differenced because the idea of separate existence as Prana remains, yet the more special sense of separate existence as circumscribed by the body is brought to a stop in Prana and Prana is therefore undifferenced and unmanifest in the Sleep in relation at least to the possessors of this circumscribed egoism. And just as the Prana of those who have the circumscribed bodily egoism becomes undifferenced when it is absorbed at the end of the world, so it is with him who has the sense of existence as Prana only in the condition of sleep which is in reality precisely the same as that of the temporary disappearance of phenomena at the end of a world; both states alike are void of differentia and manifestation and both alike are pregnant with seeds of future birth. The Self governing either state is one and the same, it is Self in an undifferenced and unmanifest condition. It follows that the governing Self in each case and the experiences of the circumscribed bodily egoism are one and the same; therefore the descriptions previously given of Prajna become One or become densified and self-concentrated consciousness etc. are quite applicable; and the arguments already advanced support the same conclusion.
Page – 431 it is only when this idea is not eliminated from the idea of Brahma that he can be called Brahma Existent. For if [it] were the absolute seedless Brahma of which the Scripture had meant to speak, it would have used such expressions as “He is not this, not that nor anything which we can call himˮ; “From whom words return baffledˮ; “He is other than the known and different from the Unknownˮ. The Smriti also says, “He (the Absolute) is called neither Existent nor non-Existent.ˮ Besides if the Existent be seedless, then there would be no ground for supposing that those who have coalesced with and become absorbed into the Existent or the state of Sleep or the destruction of a world can again awake out of either of these conditions. Or, if they can, then we should immediately have the contingency of liberated souls again coming into phenomenal existence; for on this hypothesis, the condition of souls liberated into the absolute and those absorbed into the existent would be alike, neither having seed or cause of future phenomenal existence. And if to remove this objection you say that it is the seed of ignorance which has to be burnt away in the fire of knowledge that is absent in the case of liberated souls and Some other seed of things in the other case, you are in danger of proving that Knowledge (of the Eternal) is without use or unnecessary as a means of salvation.
Page – 432
Shankara: The meaning of these two verses has been explained.
Shankara: That which is enjoyed under the name of gross objects, subtle objects and pure pleasure in the three conditions, waking, dream and sleep is one and the same thing although it has taken a threefold aspect. And that which enjoys under the names of Vishwa, Taijasa and Prajna has been declared to be one because they are connected by the sense of oneness expressed in the continual feeling “This is I, This is Iˮ and because the nature of cognition is one and without difference throughout. Whoever knows both these to be one though split up into multiplicity by the Page – 433 sense of being enjoyer or enjoyed does not receive any stain from enjoyment, because the subject of enjoyment is the One universal and the enjoyer too is not different from the enjoyed. For note that whoever be the enjoyer or whatever his object of enjoyment, he does not increase with it or diminish with it, just as in the case of fire when it has burnt up its object in the shape of wood or other fuel; it remains no less or greater than it was before.
Shankara: All existences (divided as Vishwa, Taijasa and Prajna) are already in being, that is, they existed before and it is only by their own species and nature and illusion of name and form created by Ignorance that they take birth or in other words put forth into phenomenal existences. As indeed the writer says later on, “A son from a barren woman is not born either in reality or by illusion.ˮ For if birth of the in-existent — that is something coming out of nothing — were possible, then there would be no means of grasping this world of usage and experience and the Eternal itself would become an unreality. Moreover we have Page – 434 seen that the snake in the rope and other appearances born of the seed of illusion created by Ignorance do really exist as the self of the rope — or other substratum in the case. For the snake in the rope, the mirage and other hallucinations of the sort are never experienced by anybody unless there is some substratum. Just as before the coming into being of the snake it existed already in the rope as the ropeʼs self, so before the coming to birth of all phenomenal existences, they already existed as the self of the seed of things called Prana. And the Scripture also saith, “This universe is the Eternalˮ, “In the beginning all this was the Spiritˮ. The Prana gives birth to the All as separate rays of consciousness; — just as the rays of the Sun, so are these consciousness-rays of the Purusha who is Chit or conscious existence and they are clearly distinguished in different bodies of gods, animals, etc. under three different lights as Vishwa, Taijasa and Prajna, in the same way as reflections of the sun are clearly seen in different pieces of water; they are thrown from the Purusha and though they differ according to the separate existences which are their field of action and enjoyment, yet they are all alike like sparks from a fire being all Jiva or conditioned Self. Thus the Prajna or causal Self gives phenomenal birth to all other existences as the spider to his web. Compare the Scripture, “As a fire sendeth forth sparks.ˮ
Page – 435 Shankara: Those who concern themselves with creation think that creation is the pervading Power, the extension, so to speak, of God; but it is implied, those who concern themselves with final and transcendental truth do not care about speculations on creation. For when men see a conjurer throw a rope into the air and ascend it armed and accoutred and then after he has climbed out of sight fall hewn to pieces in battle and rise again whole, they do not care about inquiring into the illusion he has created with all its properties and origins. Just so this evolution of the Sleep, Dream and Waking conditions is just like the self-lengthening of the jugglerʼs rope and the Prajna, Taijasa and Vishwa self abiding in the three conditions is like the conjurer climbing up the rope, but the real conjurer is other than the rope or its climber. Just as he stands on the ground invisible and hidden in illusion, so is it with the real and transcendental fact called the Fourth. Therefore it is for Him that the Aryan-minded care, those who follow after salvation and they do not care for speculations about creation which are of no importance to them. Accordingly the writer implies that all these theories are only imaginations of those who concern themselves with the origin of creation and then goes on to say that by others creation is imagined as like to an illusion or again as like to a dream.
Shankara: Creation is the Will of the Lord because the divine ideas must be true facts — pots etc. are ideas only and nothing more than ideas. Some say that creation is the result of Time. Page – 436
Shankara: Others think creation was made for enjoyment or for play. These two theories are criticised by the line “This is the very nature of the Lord.ˮ Or, it may be, that the theory of Divine Nature is resorted to in order to criticise all other theories by the argument He has all He can desire and why should He crave for anything? For no cause can be alleged for the appearance of the snake etc. in the rope and other substrata except the very nature of Ignorance.
Shankara: The Self, Fourth or transcendental is the master of the cessation of all ills, which belong to the conditions of Prajna, Taijasa and Vishwa. The expression Strong Lord is an explanation of the word Master; it is implied that His strength and lordship are in relation to the cessation of ills, because the Page – 437 cessation of ills results from the knowledge of Him. Undecaying, because He does not pass away, swerve or depart, i.e., from his essential nature. How is this? Because he is the One without a second owing to the vanity¹ of all phenomenal existences. He is also called God, the Shining One because of effulgence, the Fourth and He who pervades, exists everywhere.
Shankara: The common and particular characteristics of Vishwa and the two others are now determined in order that the real self of the Fourth may become clear. Effect, that which is made or done, is existence as result. Cause, that which makes or does, is existence as seed. By inapprehension and misapprehension of the Truth the aforesaid Vishwa and Taijsa are, it is agreed, bound or imprisoned by existence as result and seed. But Prajna is bound by existence as seed only. For the seed state which lies in unawakening to the Truth alone (and not in misreading of Him), is the reason of the state of Prajna. Therefore both of these, existence as cause and existence as effect, inapprehension and misapprehension of the Truth are held not to apply to the Fourth, i.e., do not exist and cannot happen in Him.
¹ falseness Page – 438 truth nor falsehood; the fourth seeth all things for ever. Shankara: But how then is Prajna bound by Cause, while in the Fourth the two kinds of bondage conditioned by inapprehension and misapprehension of the Truth is said to be impossible. Because Prajna does not cognise at all this duality of an outside universe even from Ignorance and conditioned as distinct from Self, so that like Vishwa and Taijasa he also is bound by inapprehension of the Truth, by that darkness which becomes the seed of misapprehension; and because the Fourth blindeth all things for ever. That is to say, since, nothing really exists except the Fourth, He is necessarily in seeing of all that is, Omniscient and all-cognisant at all times and for ever; in him therefore the seed state of which the conditioning feature is inapprehension of the Truth, cannot possibly exist. Absence of the misapprehension which arises out of inapprehension naturally follows. The Sun is for ever illuminative by its nature and non-illumination or misillumination as contrary to its nature cannot happen to it; and the same train of reasoning applies to the Omniscience of the [seer]. The Scripture also says, “For of the Sight of the Seer there is no annihilation.ˮ Or indeed, since it is that in the Waking and Dream State dwelling in all creatures is the light or reflection in them to which all objects present themselves as visible, cognisable objects, it is in this way too the seer of all things for ever. The Scripture says, “There is nought else than This that seeth.ˮ
NOTE : Words underlined in the manuscript are printed here in italics. Page – 439 |