Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 advaitin , Shyam <shyam_md wrote: > > > Pranams, > > While I applaud these relentless attempts at finding common ground with VedAntA, I think there is a tendency, ?deliberate?, to repeatedly gloss over some very fundamental and glaring issues, including the following: > Shyamji, I am afraid you will get everything from our members here, but a direct response to your basic questions; this is your third post of the same type with either tangential or non-response. That is the strategy in operation, whether deliberate or not. How can a discussion on your serious points proceed if the other members cannot properly address your detailed posts? [Albeit I don't disagree that the article in question is not that high in quality: I had sent its link (post 45415) earlier as a secondary link to the more thorough " Vedanta vs Shentong " article.] If I discuss on religion matters with some cousins of mine, I have to take care to gloss over (or not at all mention) what they would likely dismiss right away and try to work with the points that look abstract and modern/rational enough to seemingly not require " faith " . I feel likewise here. I appreciate the fact that you don't take this approach. A member had asked in personal email what I meant by " our sampradaya " in my post to Michaelji. I had given the following reply; I think I sent it before my last three posts in this list (and before yours that followed them) - so it is a more or less candid response. It may not be correct as to definition of " sampradaya " but looks relevant to the situation here IMO. QUOTE By sampradaya, I mean the systematic following of Shankara's interpretation of the Sruthi and teachings as represented by the official Mathas. They have a wholesome assessment of all the issues governing our culture, religion and society, in alignment with how they believe Shankara would have seen it and how it should guide to the final Goals of our religion. For instance, in issues of karma kAnda, this becomes clear. It also abides by a framework of guiding rules. Now when I say " our " , I mean it in an informal sense since many people on this list may only care for the essential philosophy of advaita in its final conclusions. Many may not take to " reincarnation " at all or Ishvara. This is one of the reasons for all this conflict, many do not place importance in things that the sampradaya might consider important. Yet the list is supposed to represent Shankara's teachings and at least formally, they don't advocate taking some aspects lightly. However only a few like Shyamji can be said to seriously adhere to the " sampradaya " in a thorough sense. UNQUOTE thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 Namaste Dr. Shaymji. Since my 45687 has been tangentially called tangential, I believe I owe you a clarification which I inadvertently missed before. I restricted myself to the monk's essay as it glaringly misrepresented Advaita. I don't know if he has done justice to Buddhism. But, with my meagre knowledge of the subject, acquired through reading enlightened Members like Peterji, Vaibhavji, Rajkumarji et al, I have every reason to think that he has faltered there also. I didn't respond to the first part of your mail, i.e. the points you have enlisted, simply and frankly because I am not competent. Hence, my response (45687) wasn't tangential. It is just the very little I know. Best regards. Madathil Nair Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 But, with my meagre knowledge of the subject, acquired through reading enlightened Members like Peterji, Vaibhavji, Rajkumarji et al, I have every reason to think that he has faltered there also. praNAms Hare Krishna But still my mind is not in a position to digest the similarities between buddhism & vedanta...If there is absolute similarity between these two schools, why gaudapAda & shankara treated them as their rival school & refuted their siddhAnta in their works (like kArika, sUtra, bruhad & mAndukya bhAshya) ?? Either they might have misunderstood the doctrine of buddha or they might have deliberately misrepresented/misinterpreted the siddhAnta of buddha just because buddha & his lineage have ignored the veda-s & upanishads while presenting their philosophy!!! Vaibhav prabhuji, any clarification on this please?? Hari Hari Hari Bol!!! bhaskar PS : Just for the information, Sri Krishnaswamy Iyer, the author of 'Vedanta or the Science of Reality', compares other schools with vedanta and says buddha's school teaching not goes in line with vedanta. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 Do you have a single peice of evidence that the philosophy of Nagarjuna contradicts the Upanisads? praNAms Sri Vaibhav prabhuji Hare Krishna One more childish question from a 'socalled' vedanti who is biased against buddhism (ofcourse without knowing anything about buddhism :-)) Kindly let me know whether Nagarjuna has anywhere in his kArika used the word 'shunya' to depict the ultimate reality of this world phenomena!! Sofar, in the quoted references of yours from mAdhyamika kArika of Nagarjuna this word 'shunya' is conspicuous by its absence..Kindly let me know what would be explanation he gives for this word " shunya " if at all he used this word in his works. Hari Hari Hari Bol!!! bhaskar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 Putramji - PraNAms For me sampradaaya is absolutely nothing to do with Mathas. They may follow sampradaaya teaching. It is something to with teaching and the subject invovled. It is something to do with systematic and self-consistent teaching of the advaita Vedanta, recognizing the pitfalls that mind can fall into. The one who has studied under a teacher understanding all the misconceptions that one can get into he become a fit teacher to teach to the next. This is true in any science. I have to study a Rutherford model of an atom before I get to Bohr model even though we know the former is not correct. But by understanding the former model and later learn the pitfalls in the model, the mind has the capacity to discriminate properly what is the correct way of thinking. That training the mind to think properly is sampradaaya. The rest I call it as paraphernalia, may be helpful but not necessary. This is true in any scientific discipline and more so for Vedanta since pitfalls are many and more subtle too, as many have misconceptions about what self-realization really involves. Hari Om! Sadananda --- On Fri, 6/12/09, putranm <putranm wrote: By sampradaya, I mean the systematic following of Shankara's interpretation of the Sruthi and teachings as represented by the official Mathas. They have a wholesome assessment of all the issues governing our culture, religion and society, in alignment with how they believe Shankara would have seen it and how it should guide to the final Goals of our religion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 advaitin , kuntimaddi sadananda <kuntimaddisada wrote: > > > Putramji - PraNAms > > For me sampradaaya is absolutely nothing to do with Mathas. They may follow sampradaaya teaching. Sadaji, that is what I meant. There is clarity in many issues and their significance when the acharyas of these mathas like Kanchi Mahaswamigal discusses them, that a generic response often avoids - although one may dismiss such as paraphernelia. Anycase I had actually suggested to the member to consult yourself or Shastriji for the right definition. thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > > advaitin , " vaibhav_narula21 " <vaibhav_narula21@> wrote: > > > > sorry putranji, > > I cannot alter historical facts for you, I would have loved to but I just can't. > > > > REGARDS, > > VAIBHAV. > > Funny, how sure you seem to be --- like some indologists. > > (Sorry to others; am doing this contesting in the midst of guests from last night and for the next 4 days - already looking embarassing how I am hooked onto this. Otherwise perhaps at least in the " empty " part of the contesting, I could have done something better than in the past couple of posts:-)) > This is not a lie or anything. I don't have time to do extensive research right now, and probably am going to get away from the topic soon anyway. Here is another link of some scholar who points to the differences. Please read it; it is very relevant, although I cannot attest to the scholarship directly - looks good. http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/vonglasenapp/wheel002.html QUOTE Vedanta and Buddhism are the highlights of Indian philosophical thought. Since both have grown in the same spiritual soil, they share many basic ideas: both of them assert that the universe shows a periodical succession of arising, existing and vanishing, and that this process is without beginning and end. They believe in the causality which binds the result of an action to its cause (karma), and in rebirth conditioned by that nexus. Both are convinced of the transitory, and therefore sorrowful character, of individual existence in the world; they hope to attain gradually to a redeeming knowledge through renunciation and meditation and they assume the possibility of a blissful and serene state, in which all worldly imperfections have vanished for ever. The original form of these two doctrines shows however strong contrast. The early Vedanta, formulated in most of the older and middle Upanishads, in some passages of the Mahabharata and the Puranas, and still alive today (though greatly changed) as the basis of several Hinduistic systems, teaches an ens realissimum (an entity of highest reality) as the primordial cause of all existence, from which everything has arisen and with which it again merges, either temporarily or for ever. With the monistic metaphysics of the Vedanta contrasts the pluralistic Philosophy of Flux of the early Buddhism of the Pali texts which up to the present time flourishes in Ceylon, Burma and Siam. It teaches that in the whole empirical reality there is nowhere anything that persists; neither material nor mental substances exist independently by themselves; there is no original entity or primordial Being in whatsoever form it may be imagined, from which these substances might have developed. On the contrary, the manifold world of mental and material elements arises solely through the causal co-operation of the transitory factors of existence (dharma) which depend functionally upon each other, that is, the material and mental universe arises through the concurrence of forces that, according to the Buddhists, are not reducible to something else. It is therefore obvious that deliverance from the Samsara, i.e., the sorrow-laden round of existence, cannot consist in the re-absorption into an eternal Absolute which is at the root of all manifoldness, but can only be achieved by a complete extinguishing of all factors which condition the processes constituting life and world. The Buddhist Nirvana is, therefore, not the primordial ground, the eternal essence, which is at the basis of everything and form which the whole world has arisen (the Brahman of the Upanishads) but the reverse of all that we know, something altogether different which must be characterized as a nothing in relation to the world, but which is experienced as highest bliss by those who have attained to it (Anguttara Nikaya, Navaka-nipata 34). Vedantists and Buddhists have been fully aware of the gulf between their doctrines, a gulf that cannot be bridged over. According to Majjhima Nikaya, Sutta 22, a doctrine that proclaims " The same is the world and the self. This I shall be after death; imperishable, permanent, eternal! " (see Brh. UP. 4, 4, 13), was styled by the Buddha a perfectly foolish doctrine. On the other side, the Katha-Upanishad (2, 1, 14) does not see a way to deliverance in the Buddhist theory of dharmas (impersonal processes): He who supposes a profusion of particulars gets lost like rain water on a mountain slope; the truly wise man, however, must realize that his Atman is at one with the Universal Atman, and that the former, if purified from dross, is being absorbed by the latter, " just as clear water poured into clear water becomes one with it, indistinguishably. " Vedanta and Buddhism have lived side by side for such a long time that obviously they must have influenced each other. The strong predilection of the Indian mind for a doctrine of universal unity (monism) has led the representatives of Mahayana to conceive Samsara and Nirvana as two aspects of the same and single true reality; for Nagarjuna the empirical world is a mere appearance, as all dharmas, manifest in it, are perishable and conditioned by other dharmas, without having any independent existence of their own. Only the indefinable " Voidness " (sunyata) to be grasped in meditation, and realized in Nirvana, has true reality. This so-called Middle Doctrine of Nagarjuna remains true to the Buddhist principle that there can be nowhere a substance, in so far as Nagarjuna sees the last unity as a kind of abyss, characterized only negatively, which has no genetic relation to the world. Asanga and Vasubandhu, however, in their doctrine of Consciousness Only, have abandoned the Buddhist principle of denying a positive reality which is at the root all phenomena, and in doing so, they have made a further approach to Vedanta. To that mahayanistic school of Yogacaras, the highest reality is a pure and undifferentiated spiritual element that represents the non- relative substratum of all phenomena. To be sure, they thereby do not assert, as the (older) Vedanta does, that the ens realissimum (the highest essence) is identical with the universe, the relation between the two is rather being defined as " being neither different nor not different. " It is only in the later Buddhist systems of the Far East that the undivided, absolute consciousness is taken to be the basis of the manifold world of phenomena. But in contrast to the older Vedanta, it is never maintained that the world is an unfoldment from the unchangeable, eternal, blissful Absolute; suffering and passions, manifest in the world of plurality, are rather traced back to worldly delusion. On the other hand, the doctrines of later Buddhist philosophy had a far-reaching influence on Vedanta. It is well known that Gaudapada, and other representatives of later Vedanta, taught an illusionistic acosmism, for which true Reality is only " the eternally pure, eternally awakened, eternally redeemed " universal spirit whilst all manifoldness is only delusion; the Brahma has therefore not developed into the world, as asserted by the older Vedanta, but it forms only the world's unchangeable background, comparable to the white screen on which appear the changing images of an unreal shadow play. In my opinion, there was in later times, especially since the Christian era, much mutual influence of Vedanta and Buddhism, but originally the systems are diametrically opposed to each other. The Atman doctrine of the Vedanta and the Dharma theory of Buddhism exclude each other. The Vedanta tries to establish an Atman as the basis of everything, whilst Buddhism maintains that everything in the empirical world is only a stream of passing Dharmas (impersonal and evanescent processes) which therefore has to be characterized as Anatta, i.e., being without a persisting self, without independent existence. Again and again scholars have tried to prove a closer connection between the early Buddhism of the Pali texts, and the Vedanta of the Upanishads; they have even tried to interpret Buddhism as a further development of the Atman doctrine. There are, e.g., two books which show that tendency: The Vedantic Buddhism of the Buddha, by J.G. Jennings (Oxford University Press, 1947), and in German language, The Soul Problem of Early Buddhism, by Herbert Guenther (Konstanz 1949). (continued in that link) UNQUOTE > thollmelukaalkizhu > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > advaitin , " putranm " <putranm@> wrote: > > > > > > advaitin , " putranm " <putranm@> wrote: > > > > a scholar of his stature in India did not study the Upanishads - the foundation of the major living school of thought. Very Very Nice. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Actually for this specific ending of mine, the argument was already made by Vaibhavji that the Jnana Kanda was not emphasized at those times, by the majority of schools. Whether we should believe that Buddha or Nagarjuna was unaware of Upanishadic thought is for us to decide. It is a weak link - in my opinion. > > > > > > thollmelukaalkizhu > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 Antharyami ji: Pardon my interjection between you and ks ji. >>Vedas are certainly region specific and people particular. Subjective spiritual expressions and experiences can never be morphed upon one another since our respective masters will never endorse such attempts nor did they prescribe such a practice by name.<< While i understand the context in which you have written,i wish to voice my opinion here.Bharatham was the only desham in ancient bhu-loka.Therefore only sanathana dharma prevailed all over.Vedas were the only religious scriptures,which were consistently used by other religions,existing in its present form,with various permutations and combinations incorporated into them. Bharatham's geography was entirely different than the map that is existing today.Thereby fulfilling Lord Krishna's,famous gitaupadeshams verse of,re-incarnating yuge yuge whenever adharma tries to reign the world.I sincerely believe,that all,the enlightened masters did avatar from bharatham territory only,but has been obscured by repeated wars,demolitions,structures re-built to put sanathana dharma,on a lower scale by other religionists. Our Vedanta is of extremely high finesse,and in this advaitham is by far the best,in my opinion. Regards Suresh. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 > 2. > The notion of nairatmyavada which at its core decries that all phenomena lack the quality of inherent existence...sarve nissvabhavah...every thing is without selfnature. > In contrast, according to VedAntA there is one Self that is Eternal, the Ultimate Auspicious Absolute Reality. This Self - the jivAtma IS non-different from the paramAtmA. The Self, the Atman, IS the basis for everything, and is eternal. > Attribute IS identical with substance - Sat is Chit is Anantam IS brahman -Such a view is untenable with Nagarjuna's stated views that the Atman is nonexistent - i.e. the Buddha nature is empty of Svabhava (real existence). > > Contrast that with the Upanishads - That great, unborn Self is undecaying, immortal, undying, fearless; It is Brahman. Brahman is indeed fearless. He who knows It as such becomes the fearless Brahman - and with the MandukyA - " ......in which all phenomena come to a cessation, and which is unchanging, auspicious, and non-dual. That is the Self; that is to be known. " ****************************************************************** shyamji, In Advaita Siddhi Madhusudana Saraswati says that to prove the unity of Brahman, it becomes necessary to prove the unreality of the world. Now, what is this unreality? If objects were unreal like the horns of a hare they would never have been percieved. So this cannot be the meaning. Unreality means the relativity of the world, that it lacks inherent existence, its existence is derived. From where? From Brahman, otherwise what would be the meaning of calling Brahman the substratum of the world? Please read Sri Sankara's commentary of Taittirya Upanisad 2.8.5 where he says: The reality of a substance surely cannot be dependent on external agencies........Mutability is not a reality because that depends on other factors..........any peculiarity that arises in an existing substance is a result of external agencies.(Pg 145, Swami Gambhirananda's translation). Nagarjuna is trying to prove the same. He is bent on the criticism of categories for one reason ie to show that these do not exist in their own right. The theory of Sankhyas and Vaisesikas makes these categories eternal in itself and and the objects of the world percieved as their abstractions. You said that according to Nagarjuna the buddha nature is empty of real existence. Wonder of wonders, I have read many books of Nagarjuna but did not find a single quote indicating such a conclusion. In other words, there is actually none. Brahaman is Sat Chit Ananda but this would be unacceptable to Nagarjuna. How do we know that? Because Nagarjuna does not give any positive description of the ultimate reality. But I have pointed out in the earlier post how uncompromising were Sri Sankara on the negative description of Brahman. Refer to his commentary on Taittirya Upanisad 2.1.1, Pg 79 of Swami Gambhirananda's translation. He clearly states that these Sat Chit etc only indicate Brahman and do not denote Him as Brahman is beyond all class etc. Atman is non existent according to Nagarjuna. When does he say that? I myself don't know. To prove that Nagarjuna is not a nihilist I have given many quotes. I have also discussed the Four Kotis or extremes, if anyone has read my preceding posts he would be aware of these topics. Compare your quotation of Mandukya with this quote from Maha Prajna Paramita Sastra: In this knwoledge of true nature of all things, there cannot be obtained any character of its own, any object of its own, in it all determinate modes of knowing become extinct. This somewhat answers you objection in Pt 3. Here is another quote which I have given earlier also: The Ultimate Nature of Subhuti (a disciple) is the same as the Ultimate Nature of Buddha. The Ultimate Nature of the Tathagata is neither going nor coming. The Ultimately true nature of Subhuti is also neither coming nor going. ......... The ultimately true nature of all things is the same as the ultimately true nature of the Tathagata. .............. The ultimate true nature of Tathagata and the ultimate true nature of all things are in truth one reality, not two, not divided. This ultimate reality is unmade, it will never be other than what always is . It is therefore this ultimate reality is not two, not divided. The highest ideal in Buddhism is Buddha and not Boddhisattva. Prajnaparamita or the perfection of wisdom, the advaita equivalent of jnana, for them leads to cessation of suffering and bondage of samsara. 'Realizing the Supreme', is not Atman the supreme itself? Does one realize anything as other in Nirvikalpa Samadhi? Does the ego remains intact in Nirvikalpa Samadhi? This is a totally indescribable expereince for you admit duality to mantain something as superior and another as inferior. This is the harm of concepts. They are all relative and betray the understanding of advaita. Your Pt.4 was: The concept of God or ParamAtma or Ishwara? You dismiss Ishwara as a " theistic conception " . You base this on your own ignorance about theism, bhakti and advaitA. Please explain how then your version of Buddism account for the world of diversity? How is the One appearing as many? *********************************************************** Nagarjuna mentions ignorance as the root cause of samsara. Taking the unreal as real one tries to fulfill his never ending desires forcing him to take birth again and again. ********************************************************** " In Buddhism what is Eternal is Change. " I am sorry but I challenge this statement. From where does it come. The world is truly a changing phenomena, it is knowhere called eternal. You miss the 'fourteen questions' found in the Nikayas where Buddha preferred to remain silent than answer questions pertaining to the ultimate nature of the self, the world. ********************************************************** Nagarjuna in his literature cautions the aspirant that taking the relative as absolute is an error and clinging onto the absolute as something divided from the world as another error. Don't theists make the same error. An absolute being different from the world but yet remaining in a particular location he can still be immanent. How? Even I dont know. For those thinking that Brahman can be positively described please consider, Vivekachudamani. 572: This exists or This does not exist are the two qualities of the intellect. Really they do not exist in the Atman which is beyond them both. This is exactly the Middle Way, commiting neither to existence nor to non existence. And if criticisms of categories is a proof of Nagarjuna nihilism then we may as well call the great Vednating Sri Harsa a nihilst for writing the Khandana Khanda Khadya. TO ALL OTHERS, I WONDER WHY AM I ASKED SAME QUESTIONS AGAIN AND AGAIN WHEN I HAVE ANSWERED THEM MORE THAN ONCE. PLEASE REFER TO THE EARLIER POSTS WHERE THIS TOPIC HAS BEEN ELABORATELY DISCUSSED. IT IS DIFFICULT FOR ME TO KEEP ON REPEATING MYSELF. REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , Shyam <shyam_md wrote: > > > Pranams, > > While I applaud these relentless attempts at finding common ground with VedAntA, I think there is a tendency, ?deliberate?, to repeatedly gloss over some very fundamental and glaring issues, including the following: > > 1. > The notion of Pratitya-samutpada(theory of dependent co-origination) and how it differs from satkaryavada - with its concomitant logical flaws that alone in fact leads these nihilists to conclude that emptiness is also not an Absolute Existence from where other phenomena arise. > > 2. > The notion of nairatmyavada which at its core decries that all phenomena lack the quality of inherent existence...sarve nissvabhavah...every thing is without selfnature. > In contrast, according to VedAntA there is one Self that is Eternal, the Ultimate Auspicious Absolute Reality. This Self - the jivAtma IS non-different from the paramAtmA. The Self, the Atman, IS the basis for everything, and is eternal. > Attribute IS identical with substance - Sat is Chit is Anantam IS brahman -Such a view is untenable with Nagarjuna's stated views that the Atman is nonexistent - i.e. the Buddha nature is empty of Svabhava (real existence). > > Contrast that with the Upanishads - That great, unborn Self is undecaying, immortal, undying, fearless; It is Brahman. Brahman is indeed fearless. He who knows It as such becomes the fearless Brahman - and with the MandukyA - " ......in which all phenomena come to a cessation, and which is unchanging, auspicious, and non-dual. That is the Self; that is to be known. " > > 3. > The concept of MokshA (or NirvAna in your Buddhistic terminolgy) - in VedantA - to know Brahman the Ultimate Reality IS MokshA - is attainment of this so-called BuddhA nature considered liberation in your book? Are you able to explain the concept of a bodhisattva using Vedantic parallels? Is liberation personal? If a jivAtma gains the knowledge of the substratum, Brahman, does Buddhism in your understanding consider him liberated? Is liberation the cessation of samsara? or is it the gain of the Supreme? > > 4. > The concept of God or ParamAtma or Ishwara? You dismiss Ishwara as a " theistic conception " . You base this on your own ignorance about theism, bhakti and advaitA. Please explain how then your version of Buddism account for the world of diversity? How is the One appearing as many? > > In fact Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism are diametrically opposed - in Advaita Vedanta the Truth is Existence and Eternal. In Buddhism what is Eternal is Change. > > Let me also mention here your repetetive contention that BuddhA was only against the ritualistic section of the VedAs it is untenable because the Buddha, as a human has no authority whatsoever to accept or reject portions of the VedAs he considered palatable or not. The VedAs being coeval with Creation are eternal - so what is dharma and what is adharma is based on what the VedAs say - not what based on what we as limited entities - limited both in space and time infer or postulate. For example I get into a hotel and spot a man stabbing another in the throat - i rush to save him and then realize its a movie scene being shot and am promptly escorted out. My view of things in the here and now disables my ability to judge anything in absolute terms.(See Shankara's arguments in BSB 3.1.25) > > Please note that Krishna in the GitA condemns not the ritualism itself but those who think of the rituals as being the sole end in itself. See the BG:Ch3 > " All beings are born out of food,All food is born out of rain, > All rain is born out of sacrifices,And all sacrifices are born out of actions.All actions are born out of Vedas,All Vedas are born out of perennial God,And so the Vedas which are spread every where, Is based always on sacrificial worship. " > > The VedAs are like a benevolent Mother - you take her from her what you want, and if what you want harms you, the very same Mother then nurtures you back and rehabilitates you. It is like a > Son " Ma, I want to play with a knife " > Mother " No dont do that you will cut yourself " > Son " Ma, I really really want to play with a knife " > Mother " OK - here is the knife " > Son " Maaaaa......my finger is bleeding. " > Mother " Its going to be OK dear, let me get you some bandaid " > > Now can another son disown the Mother? The VedAs - coeval with Creation - encompass all of humanity - the tamasic and the sattvic, the asuric and the daivi - everyone gets from the Holy Mother exactly what they want and hence alone exactly what they deserve - in our tradition there is no Evil with a parallel reality outside of Ishwara's order, ignorance being the Only real Evil. > > The VedAs are svatah-pramanyam - they do not need any complementing. > > > I fully admit that my knowledge of Buddhism is limited - and many of my arguments against it may stem from this fact - however this is a forum to discuss *traditional* advaita, *as taught by Adi Shankara* - the views expressed here are a mere re-affirmation of His views - there is neither chauvinsim nor any egoistic claims of exclusivity here - it is what it is. Contextual discussions are hence bound by AND limited to the paradigms of what ShankarachAryA taught, to the best that we can understand and appreciate - at least in my view. > > Finally if after a million exertions you do conclude and convince yourself, that the Atman of the Upanishads is indeed the Shunya of the Buddists, you could not have made a bigger mockery of hundreds and thousands of Buddhist scholars through the ages - indeed of the BuddhA himself - if in formulating and lending shape and substance to a new philosophy (their claim, not ours), they all simply reaffirmed an eternal Truth of the very VedAs they set out to decry. > > Hari OM > Shri Gurubhyoh namah > Shyam > > The following article written by a Buddhist monk is very informative about these points. > > *** > Madhyamaka Buddhism vis-a-vis Hindu Vedanta > A Paradigm Shift > by > Acarya Dharmavajra > (Mr. Sridhar Rana) > > > Many famous Hindu Indian scholars like Radhaкrishnan, Svami Vivekananda and Nepalese scholars like Mr. Chudanath Bhattaraj, Svami Prapannacharya have written that Buddhism is a reaction, a reformation of Hinduism. The Buddha tried to reform some of the malpractice within Hinduism. That is all. He never wanted to create a new religion. In short, according to these scholars, Buddhism is correct Hinduism without any malpractice and evils and what is called Hinduism is the malpractice and distorted form of the vedas. There are three problems with this interpretation of the Buddha's teaching. One is that if these authors really believe that the Buddha came to reform evils, malpractice and wrong interpretation of the vedas then why are they themselves still following these evils and malpractice and not practicing the Buddha's teachings, the reformed form of the Vedas? > > How warped and distorted are the minds of people who with one breath proclaim the Buddha as the great reformer of Hinduism and then turn around and call Buddhism (what Buddha taught) wrong. Some of these scholars have even gone to the extent of claiming that although the Buddha actually only wanted to reform the Vedas, his disciples misunderstood him and created a new religion. How illogical to believe that Buddha's own disciples did not understand him whereas Hindu Svamis and Panditas 2000 years later really do understand the Buddha's message. The second problem with this interpretation is that it implies that Buddha was a Hindu. Simply because Suddhodana was a king and therefore called a Ksatriya is absolutely no proof that he was a Hindu. If the Buddha was really a Hindu why did he not call himself the great Brahmin or Mahabrahman like the great ksatriya Visvamitra? It is strange to call Buddha a proponent of Brahmanism when he called himself the > great sramana or Mahasramana. Although a lot of research remains to be done about Sramanism it can certainly be said that a Sramana is not a Brahmana and that Sramanism itself is as old as Brahmanism. Mahavira, the founder of Jainism, also called himself a Sramana. If Buddha was merely reforming the Vedas, why did not call himself a Neo-Vedic, Neo-Brahman or true Brahman, i.e., Mahabrahmana? Why did he call himself a Mahasramana? > > I would like to ask those scholars and their followers these questions. Nowhere in the Hindu Sastras are Sraman considered as part of the Vedic fold. And the Buddha called himself a Mahasramana. It was the custom of India from ancient times to call kings Ksatriyas be they of the Sramana or Brahmana group. And even if Suddhodana was of the Brahmin school) of which there is absolutely no proof), the Buddha certainly did not seem to have taken after Brahmanism but rather after Sramanism. Sramanism cannot be called Brahmanism by any historical standard. The third problem is that the teachings found in Buddhism do not in any way appear as a reformation of Hinduism. Any one who was studied Buddhism (If I am not talking about prejudiced Hindu oriented scholars) can see that there is a major paradigm shift between Hinduism and Buddhism, in fact, between all other religious systems and Buddhism. A paradigm shift cannot and should not be misconstrued as a reform. > Reforms are changes brought about within the same paradigm. Paradigm shifts are changes in the very foundations. The very basics are completely different. In such cases, it is completely confused thinking to state that one paradigm is a reformation of another paradigm. So Sramanism is a system of religious based on a completely different paradigm than Hinduism and as such it would be gross error to say Buddhism is a reformation of Vedic Hinduism. It is not a reformation, but a shift in paradigm. Even if the Vedic paradigm was the older, they are still different paradigms. But it is even questionable whether the Vedic paradigm is really older than the Sramana paradigm. After all, although Buddhism begins with Shakyamuni, Sramanism is much older, and according to the findings of the Indus valley civilization, was in the Indian sub-continent even before Brahmanism. > > It is the purpose of this paper to show how Brahmanism and Buddhism are built on two totally different paradigms even though they share the same language. It is this sharing of the same language that has fooled most scholars, especially Hindu biased scholars who have therefore failed to be sensitive to the fact that these are two completely different paradigms with very little in common except the same cultural background, and their language, metaphor, analogy, and words. But as we shall see, the same analogies etc. express two different conceptual structures (paradigms). When we compare the Advaita Vedanta, especially as interpreted by Sankara and Madhyamaka, whether be it the Svatantrika form of Bhasya or Prasangika form of Candrakirti, the sharing of the same language, culture and analogies while talking about two different paradigms becomes obvious. Because of the use of the same language structure (be it Pali or Sanskrit) and the same analogies to > express two different paradigms, many Vedantins or scholars of Buddhism with Vedantic backgrounds have been fooled into thinking Buddhist Madhyamaka is a re-interpretation of Hindu Vedanta. Many think Buddhism is the negative way to the same goal (via negativa) and Hindu Vedanta the positive way (via positiva). One uses negation and the other affirmation but the Sunyata of Buddhism is a negative way of talking about the Brahman of the Vadanta. The issue here is not via negative or via positive at all but rather two different paradigms, or two different goals based on two different paradigms, or two diametrically opposed answers to the burning issue of mankind developed out of diametrically opposed paradigms. In fact, the Buddha, after long years of Brahmanic as well as Sramanic meditation, found the concept of Brahma (an ultimately real, unchanging, eternal substratum to this ephemeral transient world) not only inadequate to solve the basic issue of > humanity, i.e., sorrow (duhkha) and questioned the very existence of such an eternal substratum; but also declared that a search for such an imagined (Skt. Parikalpita Atman) Brahman was a form of escapism and therefore not really spiritual but spiritual materialism. > > Since the concept of Brahman, the truly existent (Skt. paramartha sat) is the very foundation of Hinduism (as a matter of fact some form of an eternal ultimate reality whether it is called God or Nature is the basis of all other religious systems); when Buddhism denies such an ultimate reality (Skt. paramartha satta) in any form, it cuts at the very jugular veins of Hinduism. Therefore it cannot be ontologically, epistemologically, and soteriologically said that Buddhism reforms Hinduism, The affirmation of a ground (Skt. asraya) which is really existent (Skt. paramartha sat) and the denial that such an existent (Skt. satta) can be found anywhere, with in or without, immanent or transcendent, are two diametrically opposed paradigms - not simply variation or reformations of each other. The Webster Dictionary defines re-form: to amend or improve by change of form or removal of faults or abuse. The example I have given above of an eternal base without which > Hinduism in its own language would be atheistic (skt. nastika) and the denial (without any implied affirmation) (Skt. prasajya pratisedha) of such an eternally existing unchanging base by Buddhism cannot be said to be a reformation but a deconstruction of the very roots of the Hindu thesis. That is why Buddhist is not a reformation of Hinduism but a paradigm shift from the paradigms on which Hinduism is based. > > Many Hindu scholars believe that without an ultimate eternal reality then there can be no liberation from the changing, transient samsara; therefore even though the Buddha denied the ultimate reality, he could have meant only conceptually really existing reality, no the eternal ultimate reality which is beyond concepts. Otherwise there cannot be liberation. The fault with this kind of thinking is that it is measuring the thesis (which is no thesis) of the Buddha (or interpreting the Buddha) from within the Hindu paradigm. Remaining within the Hindu paradigm, an eternal ultimate reality is a necessity (a necessary dead end as the Buddha saw it) for the soteriological purpose, i. e. for liberation. Since according to the Buddha there is no Brahman - such a concept being merely an acquired fabrication (skt: parikalpana) learned from wrong (skt: mithya) scriptures, hankering after, searching for such a Brahman is necessary a dead end, which leads nowhere, > let alone liberation. The Buddhist paradigm, if understood correctly, does not require an eternal something or other for liberation. In Buddhism liberation is not realizing such a ground but rather a letting go of all grounds, i.e., realizing groundless. In fact holding on to any ground is ignorance, according to Buddhism. So in the Buddhist paradigm, it is not only not necessary to have an eternal ground for liberation, but in fact the belief in such a ground itself is part of the dynamics of ignorance. We move here to another to major difference within the two paradigms. In Hinduism liberation occurs when this illusory samsara is completely relinquished and it vanishes; what remains is the eternal Brahman which is the same as liberation. Since the thesis is that samsara is meraly an illusion, when it vanishes through knowledge is there were no eternal Brahman remaining it would be a disaster. So in the Hindu paradigm (or according to Buddhism all > paradigms based on ignorance) an eternal unchanging, independent, really existing substratum (skt. mahavastu) is a necessity for liberation else one would fall into Nihilism. But since the Buddhist paradigm is totally different, the question posed by Hindu scholars: How can there be liberation if a Brahman does not remain after the illusory samsara vanishes in Jnana? - is a question with no relevance in the Buddhist paradigm and its Enlightenment or Nirvana. > > First of all, to the Buddha and Nagarjuna samsara is not an illusion but like an illusion. There is a quantum leap in the meaning of these two statements. Secondly, because it is only 'like an illusion', i.e., interdependently arisen like all illusions, it does not and cannot vanish, so Nirvana is not when samsara vanishes like mist and the Brahmin arises like a sun out of the mist but rather when seeing that the true nature of samsara is itself Nirvana. So whereas Brahman and samsara are two different entities one real, the other unreal, one existing, the other non-existing, samsara and Nirvana in Buddhism are one and not two. Nirvana is the nature of samsara or in Nagarjuna's words sunyata is the nature of samsara. It is the realization of the nature of samsara as empty which cuts at the very root of ignorance and results in knowledge and results in knowledge not of another thing beyond samsara but of the way samsara itself actually exists (skt > vastusthiti), knowledge of Tathata (as it is ness) the Yathabhuta (as it really) of samsara itself. It is this knowledge that liberates from wrong conceptual experience of samsara to the unconditioned experience of samsara itself. That is what is meant by the indivisibility of samsara and nirvana (Skt. samsara nirvana abhinnata, Tib: Khor de yer me). The mind being samsara in the context of Dzog Chen, Mahamudra and Anuttara tantra. Samsara would be substituted by dualistic mind. Hindu paradigm is world denying, affirming Brahman. The Buddhist paradigm does not deny the world; it only rectifies our wrong vision (skt. mithya drsti) of the world. It does not give a dream beyond or separate transcendence from samsara. Because such a dream is part of the dynamics of ignorance, to present such a dream would be only to perpetuate ignorance. > > To Buddhism, any system or paradigm which propagates such an unproven and unprovable dream as an eternal substance or ultimate reality, be it Hinduism or any other " ism " , is propagating spiritual materialism and not true spirituality. To Hinduism such a Brahman is the summum bonum of its search goal, the peak of the Hindu thesis. The Hindu paradigm would collapse without it. Since Buddhism denies thus, it cannot be said honestly that the Buddha merely meant to reform Hinduism. As I have said, it is a totally different paradigm. Hinduism, Christianity, Islam, Jainism are all variations of the same paradigm. So truly speaking you could speak of them as reformations of each other. But Buddhism has a totally different paradigm from any of these, not merely from Vedic- Hinduism. This leads us naturally to the concept of the truths (skt. satyadvaya). Both Hindu Vedanta and Madhyamaka Buddhism (and for that matter all forms of Buddhism) use this concept to > clarify its paradigm. But again the same words point at two different paradigms. First of all the concept of two truths clearly stated as in Buddhism comes into Hinduism only after Sankaracarya (Seventh/eight century) whereas the Buddha himself used these words. But even though Sankara copied the use of these words from Buddhism and also copied many other conceptual words from Nagarjuna to elucidate his Vedantic paradigm, the paradigm that he tries to clarify with these words different. In many places these conceptual wordings and analogies are forced to produced the meaning that is required for the Vedantic paradigm. In the Vedantic context, the relative truth (Skt. samvritti satya) is that this samsara is an illusion and the ultimate truth (skt. paramartha satya) is that there is an ultimately existing thing (skt. paramartha satta) transcending/ immanent in this world. The relative truth will vanish like a mist and the both transcendent and immanent > Brahman will appear as the only Truth, the world being false. To sum it up, the Vedantic ultimate truth is the existence of an ultimate existence or ultimate reality. Reality here is used as something which exists (skt. satta). > > However, the Buddhist ultimate truth is the absence of any such satta i. e. ultimately existing thing or ultimate reality. That is the significance of Sunyata - absence of any real, independent, unchanging existence (skt. svabhava). And that fact is the ultimate truth of Buddhism, which is diametrically opposite to the ultimate truth of the Hindu Brahman. So Sunyata can never be a negative way of describing the Atman-Brahman of Hinduism as Vinoba Bhave and such scholars would have us believe. The meaning of Sunyata found in Sutra, Tantra Dzogchen, or Mahamudra is the same as the Prasangic emptiness of Chandrakirti, i. e. unfindability of any true existence or simply unfindability. Some writers of Dzogchen and Mahamudra or Tantra think that the emptiness of Nagarjuna is different from the emptiness found in these systems. But I would like to ask them whether their emptiness is findable or unfindable; whether or not the significance of emptiness in these > systems is also not the fact of unfindability- no seeing as it could also be expressed. Also some Shentong scholars seem to imply that the Shentong system is talking about a different emptiness. They say Buddha nature is not empty of qualities therefore, Buddha nature is not merely empty, it also has qualities. First of all the whole statement is irrelevant. Qualities are not the question and Buddha nature being empty of quality or not is not the issue. The Buddha nature is empty of Svabhava (real existence). Because it is empty of real existence, it has qualities. As Arya Nagarjuna has said in his Mula Madhyamaka Karika: " All things are possible (including qualities) because they are empty " Therefore the whole Shentong/ Rangtong issue is superfluous. However, in Shentong, Buddha nature is also empty and emptiness means unfindable. In short, the unfindability of any true existence is the ultimate (skt. paramartha) in Buddhism, and is diametrically > opposed to the concept of a truly existing thing called Brahman, the ultimate truth in Hinduism. > > Now let's examine relative truth (skt. samvritti satya). In Hinduism, the relative truth is the fact that this world is an illusion (skt. maya). It has no existence. In Buddhism, samsara is interdependently arising. It has relative existence (skt. samvritti satta) according to Tsong Khapa or it appears conventionally according to Gorampa Senge and Mipham. It is like an illusion (Skt. mayavat). Like all illusions, it appears interdependently based on various causes and conditions (Skt. hetu pratyaya). It may be like an illusion but it is the only thing we have, there is nothing behind it or beyond it which can be called an ultimate thing or reality. The ultimate reality or truth or fact in the Buddhist sense is the mode of existence of this illusion like samsara i. e. (Skt. nihsvabhava) empty of real existence. So here too we find two different parameters to two different paradigms. Now let us investigate some of the words used by both paradigms. One word > that has created great confusion is non- dualism. First of all Hindu Vedanta is advaita and Madhyamaka Advaya. Although they are sometimes use interchangeably by both systems, their meanings are as used in the two paradigms differ. In Hindu Vedanta, non dualism (advaita) means one without a second Skt: dvitiyam nasti, Chandogya Upnishad). What is the meaning of this? That there is only Brahman which really exists, nothing else really exists. In other words- the world does not exists at al- it is only am illusion. The true English word for this is Monism according to Webster Dictionary. The view that there is only one kind of ultimate substance. Since, as we have been seen already there is no kind of ultimate substance in Madhyamaka Buddhism the meaning advaya (non-dualism) cannot be like in Hinduism. The Madhyamaka scriptures very clearly defines advaya as " dvaya anta mukta " free from the two extremes. The extremes are the of eternalism into which the > Hindu vedantic Brahman falls and Nihilism into which many materialistic system like Charvak fall. But it goes deeper. Non dual knowledge (skt. advaya jnana) is the state of mind which is soteriologically free from grasping at the two extremes of knowing in terms of " is " and " is not " and ontologically free from being " existing " or " non existing " Advaita jnana is however the knowledge of the one and only truly existing substance or reality called Brahman in Hinduism. It could also be called by any other name. Even if the Brahman is defined as beyond " is and " is not " as in the Yogavasistha, it is only a round about way of saying that there is an ultimate reality, Brahman, which is beyond concepts of existing and non existing and therefore it still falls within eternalism. There is also the use of : " free from the existence and non existence " in Buddhism and beyond existence and non existence in Hinduism. " Beyond " implies a third something which is neither; > but " free " does not necessarily implies a third something which is neither. Some Shentongpas define the Tathagatagarbha exactly like the Brahman of the Vedanta without realizing it and even claim as a higher mediator's view which is not accessible to lower class logicians etc. > > Perhaps it is most apt now to talk about two other words used commonly by both paradigms: Nisprapanca (Tib: thro-me) and avikalpa (Tib: Tog- me). Nisprapanca means non fabricated and avikalpa means non- conceptual. In the context of Hinduism, it is the Brahman (the ultimate reality, the ultimate real, the ultimate existing) which is beyond concepts and non- fabricated. It also means a non-fabricated and non-conceptual knowledge of that Brahman. When I am using ultimate reality as a synonym for the Brahman. I am using reality to mean something that exists as per the Webster's Dictionary. I am aware that reality also connotes " fact " , i.e., truth and with such a meaning could be used in Buddhism to mean ultimate fact/truth. But as one of its connotations is existing, it is hazardous to use the word ultimate reality in any Buddhist context and it is always safer to use the word ultimate truth instead. Some English translations of Dzogchen, Mahamudra etc. > have used the word ultimate reality for Rigpa, co- emergent wisdom (skt. sahaja jnana) Tathagata garbha, rather indiscriminately without the authors even realizing that the use of such lax wording brings them not only dangerously close to Vedantins of one only dangerously close to Vedantins of one form or the other, but also they are actually using Buddhist texts to validate the vedantic thesis. If some of them object that their ultimate reality is empty while the Hindu ultimate reality is not; the Hindu can ask, " then how it is an ultimate reality in the sense of ultimate existing " ? To avoid this confusion, it is safer and semantically closer to the Buddhist paradigm to use only " ultimate truth " . > > Now coming back to Nisprapanca and Avikalpa, as for Buddhism, the first verse of Nagarjuna's MulaMadhyamakakarika makes it clear that it is the " pratityasamutpada " the interdependent origination which is nisprapanca and beyond concepts and it is the wisdom that realizes this that is nisprapanca and avikalpa. No Hindu Vedanta would agree that the Brahman is interdependent origination or interdependently originated. The same can be said of words like acintya (inconceivable), anupamya (inexpressible) or apratistha (non- established) etc. for which we need not write separately. This naturally leads us to three crucial words and concepts used in the two paradigms.: Emptiness, (skt. Sunyata), Interdependent Origination (Skt. pratitya-samutpada) and Brahma (the infinite, eternal, unchanging, Truly existing, Non conceptual, unfabricated reality). Many Hindu writers from the 5th/6th century onwards until today have tried to show that the Brahman and Sunyata, > mean the same thing. The Yogavasistha (7/8th century) has even very explicitly stated that the Brahman and Sunya are the same reality. (Chapter 3/5/5-6) Modern authors like Dr. Radhakrishnan, Svami Vivekananda and Vinova Bhave have also tried to show that they mean the same reality. Je Tsong Khapa says in his " Pratityasamutpada stuti Subhasita Hridaya " whatever is dependent on conditions is empty of real existence. This statement makes it clear that dependent origination and Sunyata are two labels for the same condition - two sides of the same coin. Now I would like to ask these Hindu authors " Is Brahman (which according to them is the same as Sunya), dependently originated or origination? Even here in the two words there is a difference. The Brahman can never be a dependent origination because it is a really existing thing. It can only be a dependently originated thing I am sure no Hindu would like to say this of the unchanging eternal independent > Brahman. On the other hand, the significance of Sunyata is " dependant origination " or nisvabhava (non real existence). The Tathagatarbha, Mahamudra, Rigpa (Vidya) etc cannot also, empty but not nisvabhava. Such as definition of Sunya (as not nisvabhava) would not only contradict the entire Buddhist paradigms but also would force such so- called Buddhist writers to fall into the " all-embracing " arms of the Vedantin Brahman. If Rigpa, Mahamudra etc. is described without the correct emptiness, then such words as Mahamudra, Dzogchen, Rigpa, Tathagatagarbha are only new names given to the ancient concept of Brahman as found in the Upanishads (some of which are 600 years than the Buddha. Such misconcepts of ultimate realities come not from Buddhist but actually from Hindu Brahman in the garb of Buddhist scholar monks. Some Buddhist writers give lame excuse about meditative experience & theory being different. I would like to reiterate that such a meditative > experience is not Buddhist but Hindu because it fits perfectly with Hindu theory of reality. If meditative experiences are going to be different from the theory on which they are based, that would be tantamount to saying that the base has no relation to the path and fruit, or that path is one and the actual experience of the fruit (meditative experience is another). At least the Hindu base- path-fruit is more consistent. They do not being with non real existence and end up with some kind of subtle existence. The Buddhist meditation experience must coincide with its base (basic paradigm). Yes, there is a shift from conceptual to non-conceptual during meditation but that does not necessitate a shift from non-real existence to real existence. If reality is conceptually non real existent it does not become real existent non conceptually. The true Buddhist meditative experience or " non real existence " not " real existence " . Some may say that non real > existence is only a concept. But the same can be said of real existence. Since Brahman is real existence by itself, independent etc. it cannot be a synonym for Sunyata. Some Shentong Buddhist writers who have not studied Hindu philosophy well enough try to give invalid excuses by implying that the Atma-Brahman of Hinduism is imagined , fabricated, whereas the shentong Tathagatagarbhas is non conceptual (eg. Jamgon Kongtro Lordo Thaye- Gaining certainly about the view 5.2.4.2.). If one has read the Vedanta Shastra one finds that the Atma (self) of the Hindu is also free from mental elaboration like the Tathagatagarbha. So the crux of the different lies in emptiness not in non-elaboration, non conceptual, luminous etc. The Atma of the Vedanta is also not accessible to inferior logicians and not negated by logic because it is uncreated, unconditioned, self existing, self-luminous and beyond concept. So just stating that the Hindu Atman is fabricated and > our Tathagatagarbha is not, does not really solve anything. The Atma is what remains after everything else that is not it, has been negated. Last of all the Atman is not the Ego (Ahamkara, Tib. ngak dzin) which is what the Shentong logic negates. > Another word that has confounded many Hindu Svamis is the unborn (skt. ajata or anutpada), unproduced. In the context of the Hindu Vedanta it means that there is this ultimate reality called the Brahman which is unborn, i.e., never produced by any thing or at any time, which means it always was. A thing or super thing even a non thing that always existed and was never ever produced at any period in time which is separate from this born, illusory samsara. In the Buddhist context, it is the true nature of samsara itself which although relatively appears to be " born " ultimately is never born. Advayavajra in his Tatvaratnavali says " The world is unborn says the Buddha " . As Buddha Ekaputra Tantra (Tib. Sangye Tse tsig tantra) says, the base of Dzogchen is the samsara itself stirred from its depth. Since the Samsara stirred from its depth is interdependently originated, i. e. not really originated i. e. unborn and since the samsara is only relatively > an interdependently originated thing but ultimately neither a thing nor a non-thing (bhava or abhava) that truly exists, the use of the word unborn for Brahman (which is definitely not samsara) and for samsara itself in Buddhism are diametrically opposed. The true meaning of unborn (anutpada) is not dependently originated (pratitya-samutpanna) which is as already mentioned the meaning of a nisvabhava (non real existence) or Sunyata. None of these can be a synonym for Brahman or anything that ahs kind of ultimate real existence, even if it is called Tathagatagarbha. There is no acceptance of an ultimate existence in any Buddhist Sutra. It is interesting that an exact word for paramartha satta in Tibetan Buddhism is very rarely used. It shows how non-Buddhist the whole concept is. One has to differentiate between satta (existence) and satya (truth) although they are so close and come from the same root in Sanskrit. Even in the Ratnagotra there is one > single sentence (Skt. Yad yatra tat tena sunyam iti samanupasyati yat punartravasistam bhavati tad sad ihasthiti yathabhutam prajanati): " whatever is not found know that to be empty by that itself, if something remains knows that to exist as it is). " This statement is straight out of the Vaibhasika sutras of the Theravada (Sunnatavagga) and Sautrantik Abhidharma Samuccaya. It seems to imply an affirming negative. First of all this statement contradicts the rest of the Ratnagotravibhaga if it is taken as the ultimate meaning in the Sutra (as Shentongpas have done). Secondly since it is a statement of the Vaibhasika school (stating than an ultimate unit of consciousness and matter remains), it cannot be superior to the Rangtong Madhyamaka. Thirdly its interpretation as what remains is the ultimately existing Tathagatagarbha contradicts not only the interpretation that found in other Buddhist sutras as " itar etar Sunyata " (emptiness of what is different > from it) but also the shentong interpretation of Tathagatagarbha contradicts all the other definition of the Tathagatagarbha found in the Ratnagotravibhaga itself. > > This brings us to the word nitya, i.e., eternal or permanent. The Hindu use of the word Nitya for its ultimate existing reality, viz. Brahman is Kutastha Nitya i. e. something remaining or existing unchangingly eternal, i. e. something statically eternally. Whatever the word Nitya is used for the ultimate truth in Buddhism, the Great Pandita Santa rakshita has made it very clear in his Tatvasamgraha that the Buddhist Nitya is parinami nitya i. e. changing, transforming, eternal in another words dynamically eternal. The Buddhist Nitya is more accurately translated in English as eternal continuum rather than just eternal. I would like to remind some western translators of Nyingma and Kagyu texts that it is either the view of Santarakshita's Svatantrika Madhyamaka or the prasangika view that is given during the " Tri " instruction of Yeshe Lama as the correct view of Dzogchen. Now finally I would like to show how the same analogies are used in the Vedantic > Hinduism and Buddhist Madhyamaka to illustrate different thesis. The most famous analogy in both Vedanta and Madhyamka is that of the snake seen in the rope. In Vedanta you have the famous Sankaric verse rajjau sarpa bhramanaropa tadvat Brahmani jagataropa, i.e., as a snake is imputed/superimposed upon a piece of rope so is the samsara imposed upon the Brahman. Only the rope or the Brahman is real the snake-samsara is unreal and does not exist at all. They are only illusions. If one studies teh analogy one realizes that it is not such an accurate analogy. The rope is not eternal like Brahman. Furthermore the rope is not asamskrita (unconditioned like Brahman so it is not really good example or the proof of a truly existing independent Brahman. It is a forced analogy. And rightly so, because it is a Buddhist analogy squeezed to give Vedantic meaning. > > As for Buddhism the rope stands for pratityasamutpada for which it is a good example being itself interdependently arisen from pieces of jute etc. and the snake imputed upon it stands for real existence which is imposed on the interdependently existing rope appearance. Here it is the rope that is the true mode of existence of the samsara (unlike the snake representing samsara in Vedanta) and the snake is our ignorance imputing samsara as really existing instead of experience it as interdependently arisen. This interdependence or emptiness is parinami nitya i. e. an eternal continuum and this applicable to all phenomena. Of course, this interdependence is the conventional truth whereas nisvabhavata, which is synonymous to emptiness, is the ultimate truth in Madhyamaka. Although interdependence is itself conditioned, in reality it is unborn and empty, its true nature is unconditioned. But this is not an unconditioned reality like Brahman but an > unconditioned truth i. e. the fact that all things are in reality empty, unborn, uncreated. Likewise the Mirror reflection analogy is used to show that just like images which have no existence at all appear and disappear on the permanent surface of the mirror so too samsara which is an illusory reflection on the mirror of Brahman appears on the surface of the Brahman and disappears there. In Buddhism this metaphor is used to show that samsara is interdependently arisen like the reflection on the mirror. The mirror is only one of the causes and conditions and no more real that the other causes and conditions for the appearance of the reflection of Samsara. Here too the mirror is a very poor metaphor for the Brahman, being itself interdependently arisen like the reflection on it. Actually such analogies are good examples for pratityasamutpada and not for some eternal Brahman. The mirror Brahman metaphor is only forced. The same can be said of the moon on > the pond analogy and rainbow in the sky analogy. > > In conclusion, I would like to sum it up by stating that Buddhism (especially Mahayana/Vajrayana) is not a reformulation of Hinduism or a negative way of expressing what Hinduism as formulated. Hinduism and Buddhism share a common culture and therefore tend to use the same or similar words. They do share certain concepts like Karma and re-incarnation, although their interpretations differ. Hindu concepts of karma and therefore reincarnation tend to be rather linear whereas the Buddhist concept is linked with pratitya-samutpada. The Theravada concept of pratitya-samutpada is also rather linear but the Mahayana/Vajrayana concept is more non-linear multidimentional and multileveled interdependent inter-latched. But all similarities to Hinduism end there. The Sunyata of the Buddha, Nagarjuna, Candrakirti is by no accounts a negative way of describing the Brahman of the Upanisad-Sankara-Vidyaranya groups. > > I would like to dedicate this article for the long lives of Ven. H. E. Urgyen Tulku, H. E. Chobgye Tri Chen, H. H. Sakya Trizin and Ven. Karma Thinley Rinpoche and to the 17th century siddha Vajracharya Surat Vajra of Nepal, Tache Baha. May his lineage be re- instated again > *** --- On Thu, 6/11/09, vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: > > > vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 > Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism > advaitin > Thursday, June 11, 2009, 11:53 AM > But yea atleast he said the Vedas are authorotative. So what if one realizes Brahman but tries to expalin it with his own method which turns out to be complementing the Vedas, we want only people to say 'the Upanisads are great' follow it or not, we do not care. After all that satisfies our egos, makes us feel inflated with pride. Sri Ramana Maharishi, Swami Vivekananda, Sri Ramakrishna Paramhansa all believed that Buddha did not contradict the Upanisads but their words are not Sruti, why believe them? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 12, 2009 Report Share Posted June 12, 2009 I just forgot answering a few more questions of shyamji which I am giving here: 1. The concept of Isvara in Buddhism. First of all the advaitins do not have any concept of creation. Isvara manifests the universe with maya as its auxiliary and then rules and governs it. The limiting adjuct of the jiva is internal organ and Isvara is maya. You would be surprised to know that this concept also exists in Buddhism. This is the tathagata garbha, also known as the transformation body of the Buddha. In the Lankavatara Sutra Lord Buddha says: I come into the hearing range of the ignorant in this Sahaloka world in hundreds of thousands of three people, and they call me under these names, yet they fail to recognize that they are all my own appellations. There are some who call me the Self Existing One, the leader, the remover of obstacles, the guiding one, Buddha, Rishi, Bull King Brahma, Visnu, Isvara, the Originator, Kapila, the Destroyer, the Imperishable, Soma, Fire, Rama, Vyasa, Suka, Indra, The Strong One, or Varuna; there are others who know Me as immortality, Suchness, Truth, Reality, Eternity, Dharmadhatu,, formless,..........., the all knowing one. While I am thus knwon in hundreds of thousands of titles not only of this world, but also other worlds, my names are not exhausted..........Those who know me will recognize me everywhere, but the ignorant who cannot rise above dualism will now know me. .............. They are thus unable to comprehend that One Tathagata may be known in many different names and titles. (Pg 192 and 193, translation by D.T. Suzuki) Here are the comments of the famous Buddhist scholar D.T. Suzuki: If the Buddha is compassionate enough to see the suffering beings, there is no other way to satisfy his heart's desire than that of dividing himself into so many different forms and approaching sufferers. The masses may think that they have what they want excusively in the form revealed to their minds. In fact the Tathagata never divides himself. For further information read D.T. Suzuki's Studies In The Lankavatara Sutra. 2. It was said that many buddhists do not agree with this equivalence of Advaita and Buddhism. How do we know that? Through one article of a buddhist. Is that a majority? Please consider that leading Buddhists like The Dalai Lama and Sogyal Rinpoche are not against such a notion rather they positively support it. 3. QUOTE: Let me also mention here your repetetive contention that BuddhA was only against the ritualistic section of the VedAs it is untenable because the Buddha, as a human has no authority whatsoever to accept or reject portions of the VedAs he considered palatable or not. The VedAs being coeval with Creation are eternal - so what is dharma and what is adharma is based on what the VedAs say - not what based on what we as limited entities - limited both in space and time infer or postulate. For example I get into a hotel and spot a man stabbing another in the throat - i rush to save him and then realize its a movie scene being shot and am promptly escorted out. My view of things in the here and now disables my ability to judge anything in absolute terms.(See Shankara's arguments in BSB 3.1.25) > > Please note that Krishna in the GitA condemns not the ritualism itself but those who think of the rituals as being the sole end in itself. See the BG:Ch3 > " All beings are born out of food,All food is born out of rain, > All rain is born out of sacrifices,And all sacrifices are born out of actions.All actions are born out of Vedas,All Vedas are born out of perennial God,And so the Vedas which are spread every where, Is based always on sacrificial worship. " UNQUOTE: Shyamji, this just tells me how carefully you have been reading my posts. This is what I said: Sri Krishna spoke against the attitude of people who believe that by performance of sacrifices they can get immortality. Buddha too challenged this position. He challenged the supremacy of brahmanas in social hierachy and emphasized unity. Many today know how the Vedas were misintrepreted by the smriti and shastra writers who turn them as and when they like to suit heir interests. Wasn't the birth determined jati system invented by the shastras of ours. One of the contributers of the Rig Veda is Manu Sravani who was a grocer, Visvamitra was a kshatriya, Gargi was a woman. How did such close minded ness of latter times then infect our country. Buddha wanted the spirit of religion and not its outer covering. Didn't Nachiketa oppose his father when he was performing a dry sacrifice for his own benefit? The saints do not come in this world to teach the masses what the scriptures say. This can be done by street smart scholars also. You and I can do it. They come to lead us to the path of realization of the truths embodied in the scriptures. They come not to feed our intellects but to feed our hearts. These saints are above the obligations of the scriptures. They follow them only to set an example. Budhha did whatever he could to teach the masses the way to truth. He felt the the ritualistic mindset was an impediment and thus rejected it. Even then he said that he was preaching Arya Dharma. REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , Shyam <shyam_md wrote: > > > Pranams, > > While I applaud these relentless attempts at finding common ground with VedAntA, I think there is a tendency, ?deliberate?, to repeatedly gloss over some very fundamental and glaring issues, including the following: > > 1. > The notion of Pratitya-samutpada(theory of dependent co-origination) and how it differs from satkaryavada - with its concomitant logical flaws that alone in fact leads these nihilists to conclude that emptiness is also not an Absolute Existence from where other phenomena arise. > > 2. > The notion of nairatmyavada which at its core decries that all phenomena lack the quality of inherent existence...sarve nissvabhavah...every thing is without selfnature. > In contrast, according to VedAntA there is one Self that is Eternal, the Ultimate Auspicious Absolute Reality. This Self - the jivAtma IS non-different from the paramAtmA. The Self, the Atman, IS the basis for everything, and is eternal. > Attribute IS identical with substance - Sat is Chit is Anantam IS brahman -Such a view is untenable with Nagarjuna's stated views that the Atman is nonexistent - i.e. the Buddha nature is empty of Svabhava (real existence). > > Contrast that with the Upanishads - That great, unborn Self is undecaying, immortal, undying, fearless; It is Brahman. Brahman is indeed fearless. He who knows It as such becomes the fearless Brahman - and with the MandukyA - " ......in which all phenomena come to a cessation, and which is unchanging, auspicious, and non-dual. That is the Self; that is to be known. " > > 3. > The concept of MokshA (or NirvAna in your Buddhistic terminolgy) - in VedantA - to know Brahman the Ultimate Reality IS MokshA - is attainment of this so-called BuddhA nature considered liberation in your book? Are you able to explain the concept of a bodhisattva using Vedantic parallels? Is liberation personal? If a jivAtma gains the knowledge of the substratum, Brahman, does Buddhism in your understanding consider him liberated? Is liberation the cessation of samsara? or is it the gain of the Supreme? > > 4. > The concept of God or ParamAtma or Ishwara? You dismiss Ishwara as a " theistic conception " . You base this on your own ignorance about theism, bhakti and advaitA. Please explain how then your version of Buddism account for the world of diversity? How is the One appearing as many? > > In fact Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism are diametrically opposed - in Advaita Vedanta the Truth is Existence and Eternal. In Buddhism what is Eternal is Change. > > Let me also mention here your repetetive contention that BuddhA was only against the ritualistic section of the VedAs it is untenable because the Buddha, as a human has no authority whatsoever to accept or reject portions of the VedAs he considered palatable or not. The VedAs being coeval with Creation are eternal - so what is dharma and what is adharma is based on what the VedAs say - not what based on what we as limited entities - limited both in space and time infer or postulate. For example I get into a hotel and spot a man stabbing another in the throat - i rush to save him and then realize its a movie scene being shot and am promptly escorted out. My view of things in the here and now disables my ability to judge anything in absolute terms.(See Shankara's arguments in BSB 3.1.25) > > Please note that Krishna in the GitA condemns not the ritualism itself but those who think of the rituals as being the sole end in itself. See the BG:Ch3 > " All beings are born out of food,All food is born out of rain, > All rain is born out of sacrifices,And all sacrifices are born out of actions.All actions are born out of Vedas,All Vedas are born out of perennial God,And so the Vedas which are spread every where, Is based always on sacrificial worship. " > > The VedAs are like a benevolent Mother - you take her from her what you want, and if what you want harms you, the very same Mother then nurtures you back and rehabilitates you. It is like a > Son " Ma, I want to play with a knife " > Mother " No dont do that you will cut yourself " > Son " Ma, I really really want to play with a knife " > Mother " OK - here is the knife " > Son " Maaaaa......my finger is bleeding. " > Mother " Its going to be OK dear, let me get you some bandaid " > > Now can another son disown the Mother? The VedAs - coeval with Creation - encompass all of humanity - the tamasic and the sattvic, the asuric and the daivi - everyone gets from the Holy Mother exactly what they want and hence alone exactly what they deserve - in our tradition there is no Evil with a parallel reality outside of Ishwara's order, ignorance being the Only real Evil. > > The VedAs are svatah-pramanyam - they do not need any complementing. > > > I fully admit that my knowledge of Buddhism is limited - and many of my arguments against it may stem from this fact - however this is a forum to discuss *traditional* advaita, *as taught by Adi Shankara* - the views expressed here are a mere re-affirmation of His views - there is neither chauvinsim nor any egoistic claims of exclusivity here - it is what it is. Contextual discussions are hence bound by AND limited to the paradigms of what ShankarachAryA taught, to the best that we can understand and appreciate - at least in my view. > > Finally if after a million exertions you do conclude and convince yourself, that the Atman of the Upanishads is indeed the Shunya of the Buddists, you could not have made a bigger mockery of hundreds and thousands of Buddhist scholars through the ages - indeed of the BuddhA himself - if in formulating and lending shape and substance to a new philosophy (their claim, not ours), they all simply reaffirmed an eternal Truth of the very VedAs they set out to decry. > > Hari OM > Shri Gurubhyoh namah > Shyam > > The following article written by a Buddhist monk is very informative about these points. > > *** > Madhyamaka Buddhism vis-a-vis Hindu Vedanta > A Paradigm Shift > by > Acarya Dharmavajra > (Mr. Sridhar Rana) > > > Many famous Hindu Indian scholars like Radhaкrishnan, Svami Vivekananda and Nepalese scholars like Mr. Chudanath Bhattaraj, Svami Prapannacharya have written that Buddhism is a reaction, a reformation of Hinduism. The Buddha tried to reform some of the malpractice within Hinduism. That is all. He never wanted to create a new religion. In short, according to these scholars, Buddhism is correct Hinduism without any malpractice and evils and what is called Hinduism is the malpractice and distorted form of the vedas. There are three problems with this interpretation of the Buddha's teaching. One is that if these authors really believe that the Buddha came to reform evils, malpractice and wrong interpretation of the vedas then why are they themselves still following these evils and malpractice and not practicing the Buddha's teachings, the reformed form of the Vedas? > > How warped and distorted are the minds of people who with one breath proclaim the Buddha as the great reformer of Hinduism and then turn around and call Buddhism (what Buddha taught) wrong. Some of these scholars have even gone to the extent of claiming that although the Buddha actually only wanted to reform the Vedas, his disciples misunderstood him and created a new religion. How illogical to believe that Buddha's own disciples did not understand him whereas Hindu Svamis and Panditas 2000 years later really do understand the Buddha's message. The second problem with this interpretation is that it implies that Buddha was a Hindu. Simply because Suddhodana was a king and therefore called a Ksatriya is absolutely no proof that he was a Hindu. If the Buddha was really a Hindu why did he not call himself the great Brahmin or Mahabrahman like the great ksatriya Visvamitra? It is strange to call Buddha a proponent of Brahmanism when he called himself the > great sramana or Mahasramana. Although a lot of research remains to be done about Sramanism it can certainly be said that a Sramana is not a Brahmana and that Sramanism itself is as old as Brahmanism. Mahavira, the founder of Jainism, also called himself a Sramana. If Buddha was merely reforming the Vedas, why did not call himself a Neo-Vedic, Neo-Brahman or true Brahman, i.e., Mahabrahmana? Why did he call himself a Mahasramana? > > I would like to ask those scholars and their followers these questions. Nowhere in the Hindu Sastras are Sraman considered as part of the Vedic fold. And the Buddha called himself a Mahasramana. It was the custom of India from ancient times to call kings Ksatriyas be they of the Sramana or Brahmana group. And even if Suddhodana was of the Brahmin school) of which there is absolutely no proof), the Buddha certainly did not seem to have taken after Brahmanism but rather after Sramanism. Sramanism cannot be called Brahmanism by any historical standard. The third problem is that the teachings found in Buddhism do not in any way appear as a reformation of Hinduism. Any one who was studied Buddhism (If I am not talking about prejudiced Hindu oriented scholars) can see that there is a major paradigm shift between Hinduism and Buddhism, in fact, between all other religious systems and Buddhism. A paradigm shift cannot and should not be misconstrued as a reform. > Reforms are changes brought about within the same paradigm. Paradigm shifts are changes in the very foundations. The very basics are completely different. In such cases, it is completely confused thinking to state that one paradigm is a reformation of another paradigm. So Sramanism is a system of religious based on a completely different paradigm than Hinduism and as such it would be gross error to say Buddhism is a reformation of Vedic Hinduism. It is not a reformation, but a shift in paradigm. Even if the Vedic paradigm was the older, they are still different paradigms. But it is even questionable whether the Vedic paradigm is really older than the Sramana paradigm. After all, although Buddhism begins with Shakyamuni, Sramanism is much older, and according to the findings of the Indus valley civilization, was in the Indian sub-continent even before Brahmanism. > > It is the purpose of this paper to show how Brahmanism and Buddhism are built on two totally different paradigms even though they share the same language. It is this sharing of the same language that has fooled most scholars, especially Hindu biased scholars who have therefore failed to be sensitive to the fact that these are two completely different paradigms with very little in common except the same cultural background, and their language, metaphor, analogy, and words. But as we shall see, the same analogies etc. express two different conceptual structures (paradigms). When we compare the Advaita Vedanta, especially as interpreted by Sankara and Madhyamaka, whether be it the Svatantrika form of Bhasya or Prasangika form of Candrakirti, the sharing of the same language, culture and analogies while talking about two different paradigms becomes obvious. Because of the use of the same language structure (be it Pali or Sanskrit) and the same analogies to > express two different paradigms, many Vedantins or scholars of Buddhism with Vedantic backgrounds have been fooled into thinking Buddhist Madhyamaka is a re-interpretation of Hindu Vedanta. Many think Buddhism is the negative way to the same goal (via negativa) and Hindu Vedanta the positive way (via positiva). One uses negation and the other affirmation but the Sunyata of Buddhism is a negative way of talking about the Brahman of the Vadanta. The issue here is not via negative or via positive at all but rather two different paradigms, or two different goals based on two different paradigms, or two diametrically opposed answers to the burning issue of mankind developed out of diametrically opposed paradigms. In fact, the Buddha, after long years of Brahmanic as well as Sramanic meditation, found the concept of Brahma (an ultimately real, unchanging, eternal substratum to this ephemeral transient world) not only inadequate to solve the basic issue of > humanity, i.e., sorrow (duhkha) and questioned the very existence of such an eternal substratum; but also declared that a search for such an imagined (Skt. Parikalpita Atman) Brahman was a form of escapism and therefore not really spiritual but spiritual materialism. > > Since the concept of Brahman, the truly existent (Skt. paramartha sat) is the very foundation of Hinduism (as a matter of fact some form of an eternal ultimate reality whether it is called God or Nature is the basis of all other religious systems); when Buddhism denies such an ultimate reality (Skt. paramartha satta) in any form, it cuts at the very jugular veins of Hinduism. Therefore it cannot be ontologically, epistemologically, and soteriologically said that Buddhism reforms Hinduism, The affirmation of a ground (Skt. asraya) which is really existent (Skt. paramartha sat) and the denial that such an existent (Skt. satta) can be found anywhere, with in or without, immanent or transcendent, are two diametrically opposed paradigms - not simply variation or reformations of each other. The Webster Dictionary defines re-form: to amend or improve by change of form or removal of faults or abuse. The example I have given above of an eternal base without which > Hinduism in its own language would be atheistic (skt. nastika) and the denial (without any implied affirmation) (Skt. prasajya pratisedha) of such an eternally existing unchanging base by Buddhism cannot be said to be a reformation but a deconstruction of the very roots of the Hindu thesis. That is why Buddhist is not a reformation of Hinduism but a paradigm shift from the paradigms on which Hinduism is based. > > Many Hindu scholars believe that without an ultimate eternal reality then there can be no liberation from the changing, transient samsara; therefore even though the Buddha denied the ultimate reality, he could have meant only conceptually really existing reality, no the eternal ultimate reality which is beyond concepts. Otherwise there cannot be liberation. The fault with this kind of thinking is that it is measuring the thesis (which is no thesis) of the Buddha (or interpreting the Buddha) from within the Hindu paradigm. Remaining within the Hindu paradigm, an eternal ultimate reality is a necessity (a necessary dead end as the Buddha saw it) for the soteriological purpose, i. e. for liberation. Since according to the Buddha there is no Brahman - such a concept being merely an acquired fabrication (skt: parikalpana) learned from wrong (skt: mithya) scriptures, hankering after, searching for such a Brahman is necessary a dead end, which leads nowhere, > let alone liberation. The Buddhist paradigm, if understood correctly, does not require an eternal something or other for liberation. In Buddhism liberation is not realizing such a ground but rather a letting go of all grounds, i.e., realizing groundless. In fact holding on to any ground is ignorance, according to Buddhism. So in the Buddhist paradigm, it is not only not necessary to have an eternal ground for liberation, but in fact the belief in such a ground itself is part of the dynamics of ignorance. We move here to another to major difference within the two paradigms. In Hinduism liberation occurs when this illusory samsara is completely relinquished and it vanishes; what remains is the eternal Brahman which is the same as liberation. Since the thesis is that samsara is meraly an illusion, when it vanishes through knowledge is there were no eternal Brahman remaining it would be a disaster. So in the Hindu paradigm (or according to Buddhism all > paradigms based on ignorance) an eternal unchanging, independent, really existing substratum (skt. mahavastu) is a necessity for liberation else one would fall into Nihilism. But since the Buddhist paradigm is totally different, the question posed by Hindu scholars: How can there be liberation if a Brahman does not remain after the illusory samsara vanishes in Jnana? - is a question with no relevance in the Buddhist paradigm and its Enlightenment or Nirvana. > > First of all, to the Buddha and Nagarjuna samsara is not an illusion but like an illusion. There is a quantum leap in the meaning of these two statements. Secondly, because it is only 'like an illusion', i.e., interdependently arisen like all illusions, it does not and cannot vanish, so Nirvana is not when samsara vanishes like mist and the Brahmin arises like a sun out of the mist but rather when seeing that the true nature of samsara is itself Nirvana. So whereas Brahman and samsara are two different entities one real, the other unreal, one existing, the other non-existing, samsara and Nirvana in Buddhism are one and not two. Nirvana is the nature of samsara or in Nagarjuna's words sunyata is the nature of samsara. It is the realization of the nature of samsara as empty which cuts at the very root of ignorance and results in knowledge and results in knowledge not of another thing beyond samsara but of the way samsara itself actually exists (skt > vastusthiti), knowledge of Tathata (as it is ness) the Yathabhuta (as it really) of samsara itself. It is this knowledge that liberates from wrong conceptual experience of samsara to the unconditioned experience of samsara itself. That is what is meant by the indivisibility of samsara and nirvana (Skt. samsara nirvana abhinnata, Tib: Khor de yer me). The mind being samsara in the context of Dzog Chen, Mahamudra and Anuttara tantra. Samsara would be substituted by dualistic mind. Hindu paradigm is world denying, affirming Brahman. The Buddhist paradigm does not deny the world; it only rectifies our wrong vision (skt. mithya drsti) of the world. It does not give a dream beyond or separate transcendence from samsara. Because such a dream is part of the dynamics of ignorance, to present such a dream would be only to perpetuate ignorance. > > To Buddhism, any system or paradigm which propagates such an unproven and unprovable dream as an eternal substance or ultimate reality, be it Hinduism or any other " ism " , is propagating spiritual materialism and not true spirituality. To Hinduism such a Brahman is the summum bonum of its search goal, the peak of the Hindu thesis. The Hindu paradigm would collapse without it. Since Buddhism denies thus, it cannot be said honestly that the Buddha merely meant to reform Hinduism. As I have said, it is a totally different paradigm. Hinduism, Christianity, Islam, Jainism are all variations of the same paradigm. So truly speaking you could speak of them as reformations of each other. But Buddhism has a totally different paradigm from any of these, not merely from Vedic- Hinduism. This leads us naturally to the concept of the truths (skt. satyadvaya). Both Hindu Vedanta and Madhyamaka Buddhism (and for that matter all forms of Buddhism) use this concept to > clarify its paradigm. But again the same words point at two different paradigms. First of all the concept of two truths clearly stated as in Buddhism comes into Hinduism only after Sankaracarya (Seventh/eight century) whereas the Buddha himself used these words. But even though Sankara copied the use of these words from Buddhism and also copied many other conceptual words from Nagarjuna to elucidate his Vedantic paradigm, the paradigm that he tries to clarify with these words different. In many places these conceptual wordings and analogies are forced to produced the meaning that is required for the Vedantic paradigm. In the Vedantic context, the relative truth (Skt. samvritti satya) is that this samsara is an illusion and the ultimate truth (skt. paramartha satya) is that there is an ultimately existing thing (skt. paramartha satta) transcending/ immanent in this world. The relative truth will vanish like a mist and the both transcendent and immanent > Brahman will appear as the only Truth, the world being false. To sum it up, the Vedantic ultimate truth is the existence of an ultimate existence or ultimate reality. Reality here is used as something which exists (skt. satta). > > However, the Buddhist ultimate truth is the absence of any such satta i. e. ultimately existing thing or ultimate reality. That is the significance of Sunyata - absence of any real, independent, unchanging existence (skt. svabhava). And that fact is the ultimate truth of Buddhism, which is diametrically opposite to the ultimate truth of the Hindu Brahman. So Sunyata can never be a negative way of describing the Atman-Brahman of Hinduism as Vinoba Bhave and such scholars would have us believe. The meaning of Sunyata found in Sutra, Tantra Dzogchen, or Mahamudra is the same as the Prasangic emptiness of Chandrakirti, i. e. unfindability of any true existence or simply unfindability. Some writers of Dzogchen and Mahamudra or Tantra think that the emptiness of Nagarjuna is different from the emptiness found in these systems. But I would like to ask them whether their emptiness is findable or unfindable; whether or not the significance of emptiness in these > systems is also not the fact of unfindability- no seeing as it could also be expressed. Also some Shentong scholars seem to imply that the Shentong system is talking about a different emptiness. They say Buddha nature is not empty of qualities therefore, Buddha nature is not merely empty, it also has qualities. First of all the whole statement is irrelevant. Qualities are not the question and Buddha nature being empty of quality or not is not the issue. The Buddha nature is empty of Svabhava (real existence). Because it is empty of real existence, it has qualities. As Arya Nagarjuna has said in his Mula Madhyamaka Karika: " All things are possible (including qualities) because they are empty " Therefore the whole Shentong/ Rangtong issue is superfluous. However, in Shentong, Buddha nature is also empty and emptiness means unfindable. In short, the unfindability of any true existence is the ultimate (skt. paramartha) in Buddhism, and is diametrically > opposed to the concept of a truly existing thing called Brahman, the ultimate truth in Hinduism. > > Now let's examine relative truth (skt. samvritti satya). In Hinduism, the relative truth is the fact that this world is an illusion (skt. maya). It has no existence. In Buddhism, samsara is interdependently arising. It has relative existence (skt. samvritti satta) according to Tsong Khapa or it appears conventionally according to Gorampa Senge and Mipham. It is like an illusion (Skt. mayavat). Like all illusions, it appears interdependently based on various causes and conditions (Skt. hetu pratyaya). It may be like an illusion but it is the only thing we have, there is nothing behind it or beyond it which can be called an ultimate thing or reality. The ultimate reality or truth or fact in the Buddhist sense is the mode of existence of this illusion like samsara i. e. (Skt. nihsvabhava) empty of real existence. So here too we find two different parameters to two different paradigms. Now let us investigate some of the words used by both paradigms. One word > that has created great confusion is non- dualism. First of all Hindu Vedanta is advaita and Madhyamaka Advaya. Although they are sometimes use interchangeably by both systems, their meanings are as used in the two paradigms differ. In Hindu Vedanta, non dualism (advaita) means one without a second Skt: dvitiyam nasti, Chandogya Upnishad). What is the meaning of this? That there is only Brahman which really exists, nothing else really exists. In other words- the world does not exists at al- it is only am illusion. The true English word for this is Monism according to Webster Dictionary. The view that there is only one kind of ultimate substance. Since, as we have been seen already there is no kind of ultimate substance in Madhyamaka Buddhism the meaning advaya (non-dualism) cannot be like in Hinduism. The Madhyamaka scriptures very clearly defines advaya as " dvaya anta mukta " free from the two extremes. The extremes are the of eternalism into which the > Hindu vedantic Brahman falls and Nihilism into which many materialistic system like Charvak fall. But it goes deeper. Non dual knowledge (skt. advaya jnana) is the state of mind which is soteriologically free from grasping at the two extremes of knowing in terms of " is " and " is not " and ontologically free from being " existing " or " non existing " Advaita jnana is however the knowledge of the one and only truly existing substance or reality called Brahman in Hinduism. It could also be called by any other name. Even if the Brahman is defined as beyond " is and " is not " as in the Yogavasistha, it is only a round about way of saying that there is an ultimate reality, Brahman, which is beyond concepts of existing and non existing and therefore it still falls within eternalism. There is also the use of : " free from the existence and non existence " in Buddhism and beyond existence and non existence in Hinduism. " Beyond " implies a third something which is neither; > but " free " does not necessarily implies a third something which is neither. Some Shentongpas define the Tathagatagarbha exactly like the Brahman of the Vedanta without realizing it and even claim as a higher mediator's view which is not accessible to lower class logicians etc. > > Perhaps it is most apt now to talk about two other words used commonly by both paradigms: Nisprapanca (Tib: thro-me) and avikalpa (Tib: Tog- me). Nisprapanca means non fabricated and avikalpa means non- conceptual. In the context of Hinduism, it is the Brahman (the ultimate reality, the ultimate real, the ultimate existing) which is beyond concepts and non- fabricated. It also means a non-fabricated and non-conceptual knowledge of that Brahman. When I am using ultimate reality as a synonym for the Brahman. I am using reality to mean something that exists as per the Webster's Dictionary. I am aware that reality also connotes " fact " , i.e., truth and with such a meaning could be used in Buddhism to mean ultimate fact/truth. But as one of its connotations is existing, it is hazardous to use the word ultimate reality in any Buddhist context and it is always safer to use the word ultimate truth instead. Some English translations of Dzogchen, Mahamudra etc. > have used the word ultimate reality for Rigpa, co- emergent wisdom (skt. sahaja jnana) Tathagata garbha, rather indiscriminately without the authors even realizing that the use of such lax wording brings them not only dangerously close to Vedantins of one only dangerously close to Vedantins of one form or the other, but also they are actually using Buddhist texts to validate the vedantic thesis. If some of them object that their ultimate reality is empty while the Hindu ultimate reality is not; the Hindu can ask, " then how it is an ultimate reality in the sense of ultimate existing " ? To avoid this confusion, it is safer and semantically closer to the Buddhist paradigm to use only " ultimate truth " . > > Now coming back to Nisprapanca and Avikalpa, as for Buddhism, the first verse of Nagarjuna's MulaMadhyamakakarika makes it clear that it is the " pratityasamutpada " the interdependent origination which is nisprapanca and beyond concepts and it is the wisdom that realizes this that is nisprapanca and avikalpa. No Hindu Vedanta would agree that the Brahman is interdependent origination or interdependently originated. The same can be said of words like acintya (inconceivable), anupamya (inexpressible) or apratistha (non- established) etc. for which we need not write separately. This naturally leads us to three crucial words and concepts used in the two paradigms.: Emptiness, (skt. Sunyata), Interdependent Origination (Skt. pratitya-samutpada) and Brahma (the infinite, eternal, unchanging, Truly existing, Non conceptual, unfabricated reality). Many Hindu writers from the 5th/6th century onwards until today have tried to show that the Brahman and Sunyata, > mean the same thing. The Yogavasistha (7/8th century) has even very explicitly stated that the Brahman and Sunya are the same reality. (Chapter 3/5/5-6) Modern authors like Dr. Radhakrishnan, Svami Vivekananda and Vinova Bhave have also tried to show that they mean the same reality. Je Tsong Khapa says in his " Pratityasamutpada stuti Subhasita Hridaya " whatever is dependent on conditions is empty of real existence. This statement makes it clear that dependent origination and Sunyata are two labels for the same condition - two sides of the same coin. Now I would like to ask these Hindu authors " Is Brahman (which according to them is the same as Sunya), dependently originated or origination? Even here in the two words there is a difference. The Brahman can never be a dependent origination because it is a really existing thing. It can only be a dependently originated thing I am sure no Hindu would like to say this of the unchanging eternal independent > Brahman. On the other hand, the significance of Sunyata is " dependant origination " or nisvabhava (non real existence). The Tathagatarbha, Mahamudra, Rigpa (Vidya) etc cannot also, empty but not nisvabhava. Such as definition of Sunya (as not nisvabhava) would not only contradict the entire Buddhist paradigms but also would force such so- called Buddhist writers to fall into the " all-embracing " arms of the Vedantin Brahman. If Rigpa, Mahamudra etc. is described without the correct emptiness, then such words as Mahamudra, Dzogchen, Rigpa, Tathagatagarbha are only new names given to the ancient concept of Brahman as found in the Upanishads (some of which are 600 years than the Buddha. Such misconcepts of ultimate realities come not from Buddhist but actually from Hindu Brahman in the garb of Buddhist scholar monks. Some Buddhist writers give lame excuse about meditative experience & theory being different. I would like to reiterate that such a meditative > experience is not Buddhist but Hindu because it fits perfectly with Hindu theory of reality. If meditative experiences are going to be different from the theory on which they are based, that would be tantamount to saying that the base has no relation to the path and fruit, or that path is one and the actual experience of the fruit (meditative experience is another). At least the Hindu base- path-fruit is more consistent. They do not being with non real existence and end up with some kind of subtle existence. The Buddhist meditation experience must coincide with its base (basic paradigm). Yes, there is a shift from conceptual to non-conceptual during meditation but that does not necessitate a shift from non-real existence to real existence. If reality is conceptually non real existent it does not become real existent non conceptually. The true Buddhist meditative experience or " non real existence " not " real existence " . Some may say that non real > existence is only a concept. But the same can be said of real existence. Since Brahman is real existence by itself, independent etc. it cannot be a synonym for Sunyata. Some Shentong Buddhist writers who have not studied Hindu philosophy well enough try to give invalid excuses by implying that the Atma-Brahman of Hinduism is imagined , fabricated, whereas the shentong Tathagatagarbhas is non conceptual (eg. Jamgon Kongtro Lordo Thaye- Gaining certainly about the view 5.2.4.2.). If one has read the Vedanta Shastra one finds that the Atma (self) of the Hindu is also free from mental elaboration like the Tathagatagarbha. So the crux of the different lies in emptiness not in non-elaboration, non conceptual, luminous etc. The Atma of the Vedanta is also not accessible to inferior logicians and not negated by logic because it is uncreated, unconditioned, self existing, self-luminous and beyond concept. So just stating that the Hindu Atman is fabricated and > our Tathagatagarbha is not, does not really solve anything. The Atma is what remains after everything else that is not it, has been negated. Last of all the Atman is not the Ego (Ahamkara, Tib. ngak dzin) which is what the Shentong logic negates. > Another word that has confounded many Hindu Svamis is the unborn (skt. ajata or anutpada), unproduced. In the context of the Hindu Vedanta it means that there is this ultimate reality called the Brahman which is unborn, i.e., never produced by any thing or at any time, which means it always was. A thing or super thing even a non thing that always existed and was never ever produced at any period in time which is separate from this born, illusory samsara. In the Buddhist context, it is the true nature of samsara itself which although relatively appears to be " born " ultimately is never born. Advayavajra in his Tatvaratnavali says " The world is unborn says the Buddha " . As Buddha Ekaputra Tantra (Tib. Sangye Tse tsig tantra) says, the base of Dzogchen is the samsara itself stirred from its depth. Since the Samsara stirred from its depth is interdependently originated, i. e. not really originated i. e. unborn and since the samsara is only relatively > an interdependently originated thing but ultimately neither a thing nor a non-thing (bhava or abhava) that truly exists, the use of the word unborn for Brahman (which is definitely not samsara) and for samsara itself in Buddhism are diametrically opposed. The true meaning of unborn (anutpada) is not dependently originated (pratitya-samutpanna) which is as already mentioned the meaning of a nisvabhava (non real existence) or Sunyata. None of these can be a synonym for Brahman or anything that ahs kind of ultimate real existence, even if it is called Tathagatagarbha. There is no acceptance of an ultimate existence in any Buddhist Sutra. It is interesting that an exact word for paramartha satta in Tibetan Buddhism is very rarely used. It shows how non-Buddhist the whole concept is. One has to differentiate between satta (existence) and satya (truth) although they are so close and come from the same root in Sanskrit. Even in the Ratnagotra there is one > single sentence (Skt. Yad yatra tat tena sunyam iti samanupasyati yat punartravasistam bhavati tad sad ihasthiti yathabhutam prajanati): " whatever is not found know that to be empty by that itself, if something remains knows that to exist as it is). " This statement is straight out of the Vaibhasika sutras of the Theravada (Sunnatavagga) and Sautrantik Abhidharma Samuccaya. It seems to imply an affirming negative. First of all this statement contradicts the rest of the Ratnagotravibhaga if it is taken as the ultimate meaning in the Sutra (as Shentongpas have done). Secondly since it is a statement of the Vaibhasika school (stating than an ultimate unit of consciousness and matter remains), it cannot be superior to the Rangtong Madhyamaka. Thirdly its interpretation as what remains is the ultimately existing Tathagatagarbha contradicts not only the interpretation that found in other Buddhist sutras as " itar etar Sunyata " (emptiness of what is different > from it) but also the shentong interpretation of Tathagatagarbha contradicts all the other definition of the Tathagatagarbha found in the Ratnagotravibhaga itself. > > This brings us to the word nitya, i.e., eternal or permanent. The Hindu use of the word Nitya for its ultimate existing reality, viz. Brahman is Kutastha Nitya i. e. something remaining or existing unchangingly eternal, i. e. something statically eternally. Whatever the word Nitya is used for the ultimate truth in Buddhism, the Great Pandita Santa rakshita has made it very clear in his Tatvasamgraha that the Buddhist Nitya is parinami nitya i. e. changing, transforming, eternal in another words dynamically eternal. The Buddhist Nitya is more accurately translated in English as eternal continuum rather than just eternal. I would like to remind some western translators of Nyingma and Kagyu texts that it is either the view of Santarakshita's Svatantrika Madhyamaka or the prasangika view that is given during the " Tri " instruction of Yeshe Lama as the correct view of Dzogchen. Now finally I would like to show how the same analogies are used in the Vedantic > Hinduism and Buddhist Madhyamaka to illustrate different thesis. The most famous analogy in both Vedanta and Madhyamka is that of the snake seen in the rope. In Vedanta you have the famous Sankaric verse rajjau sarpa bhramanaropa tadvat Brahmani jagataropa, i.e., as a snake is imputed/superimposed upon a piece of rope so is the samsara imposed upon the Brahman. Only the rope or the Brahman is real the snake-samsara is unreal and does not exist at all. They are only illusions. If one studies teh analogy one realizes that it is not such an accurate analogy. The rope is not eternal like Brahman. Furthermore the rope is not asamskrita (unconditioned like Brahman so it is not really good example or the proof of a truly existing independent Brahman. It is a forced analogy. And rightly so, because it is a Buddhist analogy squeezed to give Vedantic meaning. > > As for Buddhism the rope stands for pratityasamutpada for which it is a good example being itself interdependently arisen from pieces of jute etc. and the snake imputed upon it stands for real existence which is imposed on the interdependently existing rope appearance. Here it is the rope that is the true mode of existence of the samsara (unlike the snake representing samsara in Vedanta) and the snake is our ignorance imputing samsara as really existing instead of experience it as interdependently arisen. This interdependence or emptiness is parinami nitya i. e. an eternal continuum and this applicable to all phenomena. Of course, this interdependence is the conventional truth whereas nisvabhavata, which is synonymous to emptiness, is the ultimate truth in Madhyamaka. Although interdependence is itself conditioned, in reality it is unborn and empty, its true nature is unconditioned. But this is not an unconditioned reality like Brahman but an > unconditioned truth i. e. the fact that all things are in reality empty, unborn, uncreated. Likewise the Mirror reflection analogy is used to show that just like images which have no existence at all appear and disappear on the permanent surface of the mirror so too samsara which is an illusory reflection on the mirror of Brahman appears on the surface of the Brahman and disappears there. In Buddhism this metaphor is used to show that samsara is interdependently arisen like the reflection on the mirror. The mirror is only one of the causes and conditions and no more real that the other causes and conditions for the appearance of the reflection of Samsara. Here too the mirror is a very poor metaphor for the Brahman, being itself interdependently arisen like the reflection on it. Actually such analogies are good examples for pratityasamutpada and not for some eternal Brahman. The mirror Brahman metaphor is only forced. The same can be said of the moon on > the pond analogy and rainbow in the sky analogy. > > In conclusion, I would like to sum it up by stating that Buddhism (especially Mahayana/Vajrayana) is not a reformulation of Hinduism or a negative way of expressing what Hinduism as formulated. Hinduism and Buddhism share a common culture and therefore tend to use the same or similar words. They do share certain concepts like Karma and re-incarnation, although their interpretations differ. Hindu concepts of karma and therefore reincarnation tend to be rather linear whereas the Buddhist concept is linked with pratitya-samutpada. The Theravada concept of pratitya-samutpada is also rather linear but the Mahayana/Vajrayana concept is more non-linear multidimentional and multileveled interdependent inter-latched. But all similarities to Hinduism end there. The Sunyata of the Buddha, Nagarjuna, Candrakirti is by no accounts a negative way of describing the Brahman of the Upanisad-Sankara-Vidyaranya groups. > > I would like to dedicate this article for the long lives of Ven. H. E. Urgyen Tulku, H. E. Chobgye Tri Chen, H. H. Sakya Trizin and Ven. Karma Thinley Rinpoche and to the 17th century siddha Vajracharya Surat Vajra of Nepal, Tache Baha. May his lineage be re- instated again > *** --- On Thu, 6/11/09, vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: > > > vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 > Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism > advaitin > Thursday, June 11, 2009, 11:53 AM > But yea atleast he said the Vedas are authorotative. So what if one realizes Brahman but tries to expalin it with his own method which turns out to be complementing the Vedas, we want only people to say 'the Upanisads are great' follow it or not, we do not care. After all that satisfies our egos, makes us feel inflated with pride. Sri Ramana Maharishi, Swami Vivekananda, Sri Ramakrishna Paramhansa all believed that Buddha did not contradict the Upanisads but their words are not Sruti, why believe them? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 Pranams Vaibhav-ji Thank you for your responses. Your conclusions and assertions are as flawed as they are fantastic. Before I respond to them methodically, may I request you to respond to the very first and most important of the numerous points that I raised. [Perhaps in the true spirit of Buddhism my very first question appeared as nothingness to you as did your answer to me - :-).] *** " The notion of Pratitya-samutpada( theory of dependent co-origination) - and how it differs from satkaryavada - with its concomitant logical flaws that alone in fact leads these nihilists to conclude that emptiness is also not an Absolute Existence from where other phenomena arise. " *** The Upanishads declare Brahman as Satyam - Existence which is Anantam - Eternal. This - the manifest Creation is also Brahman and as such is Existence alone. Poornamadah Poornamidam Poornaat Poornamudachyate Poornasya Poornamaadaya Poornamevaavashishyate Can you please explain/reconcile the doctrine of pratitya-samutpada with regards to this Vedantic Truth. Hari OM Shyam vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism advaitin Friday, June 12, 2009, 3:05 PM I just forgot answering a few more questions of shyamji which I am giving here: 1. The concept of Isvara in Buddhism. 2. It was said that many buddhists do not agree with this equivalence of Advaita and Buddhism. How do we know that? Through one article of a buddhist. Is that a majority? Please consider that leading Buddhists like The Dalai Lama and Sogyal Rinpoche are not against such a notion rather they positively support it. Recent Activity 10 New Members 1 New Photos 1 New FilesVisit Your Group Give Back for Good Get inspired by a good cause. Y! Toolbar Get it Free! easy 1-click access to your groups. Start a group in 3 easy steps. Connect with others. .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 advaitin , " vaibhav_narula21 " <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: > > I reiterate my point that Buddha did not feel he was going against > the Upanisads which is the reason he calls his teachings as Arya > Dharma. Vaibhavji, A couple of questions/points at the starting point. 1. did the Buddha actually specify what is said in the Upanishads? As to the absolute Reality or Brahman. 2. To what metaphysical questions was Buddha silent? If he was silent to these questions, why is this heavy suggestion about his intentions as being non-different/non-contradictory from the Upanishads - when the Upanishads had given specific answers? (Oh he called it Arya Dharma - funny). Why is this not manipulation of evidence to direct unanswered questions to a preferred answer? Can not that the Buddha's silence refer to the 'indeterminable' nature of the questions (and the futility in " convincing " oneself of a position), rather than to the inexpressible nature of its 'Answer'? Is there any convincing reason to think Buddha meant the latter, independently or in combination with the former? If not, then this trying to establish Buddha's real intentions is futile. 2. Why should anyone feel compelled to think Nagarjuna is the right interpreter of Buddha, when we freely reject latter-day Buddhist interpreters of Nagarjuna and Buddha - who see them as contradicting the Up./Brahman, or at least as not affirming it? What is there (other than his own predelictions) to compel an Astika, who takes the Veda as pramana, that the Mahayana is better representative of Buddha than the Hinayana? When neither of these schools can prove themselves to the other, then " Buddha intended this " reduces to a particular " interpretation " - i.e. the all-knowing nature of assertions as to what Buddha meant are 'empty' except for the gullible. thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 shyamji, I just feel like laughing how easily you termed my arguements as flawed. Well you are just making me repeat myself yet again. Consider: Sri Sankara's commentary of Taittirya Upanisad 2.8.5 where he says: The reality of a substance surely cannot be dependent on external agencies........Mutability is not a reality because that depends on other factors..........any peculiarity that arises in an existing substance is a result of external agencies.(Pg 145, Swami Gambhirananda's translation). Also: But I have pointed out in the earlier post how uncompromising were Sri Sankara on the negative description of Brahman. Refer to his commentary on Taittirya Upanisad 2.1.1, Pg 79 of Swami Gambhirananda's translation. He clearly states that these Sat Chit etc only indicate Brahman and do not denote Him as Brahman is beyond all class etc. Again: Vivekachudamani. 572: This exists or This does not exist are the two qualities of the intellect. Really they do not exist in the Atman which is beyond them both. REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , Shyam <shyam_md wrote: > > Pranams Vaibhav-ji > > Thank you for your responses. Your conclusions and assertions are as flawed as they are fantastic. Before I respond to them methodically, may I request you to respond to the very first and most important of the numerous points that I raised. [Perhaps in the true spirit of Buddhism my very first question appeared as nothingness to you as did your answer to me - :-).] > > *** > " The notion of Pratitya-samutpada( theory of dependent co-origination) - and how it differs from satkaryavada - with its concomitant logical flaws that alone in fact leads these nihilists to conclude that emptiness is also not an Absolute Existence from where other phenomena arise. " > *** > The Upanishads declare Brahman as Satyam - Existence which is Anantam - Eternal. > This - the manifest Creation is also Brahman and as such is Existence alone. > > Poornamadah Poornamidam Poornaat Poornamudachyate > Poornasya Poornamaadaya Poornamevaavashishyate > > Can you please explain/reconcile the doctrine of pratitya-samutpada with regards to this Vedantic Truth. > > Hari OM > Shyam > > vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 > Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism > advaitin > Friday, June 12, 2009, 3:05 PM > > I just forgot answering a few more questions of shyamji which I am giving here: > > 1. The concept of Isvara in Buddhism. > > 2. It was said that many buddhists do not agree with this equivalence of Advaita and Buddhism. How do we know that? Through one article of a buddhist. Is that a majority? Please consider that leading Buddhists like The Dalai Lama and Sogyal Rinpoche are not against such a notion rather they positively support it. > > > > Recent Activity > > > 10 > New Members > > 1 > New Photos > > 1 > New FilesVisit Your Group > > > > Give Back > for Good > Get inspired > by a good cause. > > Y! Toolbar > Get it Free! > easy 1-click access > to your groups. > > > Start a group > in 3 easy steps. > Connect with others. > . > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 putranji, this is not a comedy show so please don't make me laugh first of all. Second how beautifully you pose that you understand Buddha better than Nagarjuna and that Nagarjuna's intrepretation is flawed without giving a single proof to that effect while demanding ample proofs from me. Very nice,very very nice indeed. Who's intrepreation is better? Hinayana or Mahayana. I would have answered the question if this was a Buddhist blog but unfortunately it is not. I would also remind you that when I began posting my messages I said that when we talk about the similarity of Hinduism and Buddhism we generally mean the similarity of Advaita Vedanta and Madhyamikas. You brand Nagarjuna a nihilst, without any proof, then you say his intrepreatation of Buddha is wrong, without any proof, Buddha contradicts the Upanisads, but here also no proofs. Your powers of making assumptions and imaginations is just brillaint. But they just lack one thing ie facts. We may well use this ability to get children to sleep, it will be just more effective, really, try it! REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > > advaitin , " vaibhav_narula21 " <vaibhav_narula21@> wrote: > > > > I reiterate my point that Buddha did not feel he was going against > the Upanisads which is the reason he calls his teachings as Arya > > Dharma. > > Vaibhavji, > > A couple of questions/points at the starting point. > > 1. did the Buddha actually specify what is said in the Upanishads? As to the absolute Reality or Brahman. > > 2. To what metaphysical questions was Buddha silent? If he was silent to these questions, why is this heavy suggestion about his intentions as being non-different/non-contradictory from the Upanishads - when the Upanishads had given specific answers? (Oh he called it Arya Dharma - funny). Why is this not manipulation of evidence to direct unanswered questions to a preferred answer? Can not that the Buddha's silence refer to the 'indeterminable' nature of the questions (and the futility in " convincing " oneself of a position), rather than to the inexpressible nature of its 'Answer'? Is there any convincing reason to think Buddha meant the latter, independently or in combination with the former? If not, then this trying to establish Buddha's real intentions is futile. > > 2. Why should anyone feel compelled to think Nagarjuna is the right interpreter of Buddha, when we freely reject latter-day Buddhist interpreters of Nagarjuna and Buddha - who see them as contradicting the Up./Brahman, or at least as not affirming it? What is there (other than his own predelictions) to compel an Astika, who takes the Veda as pramana, that the Mahayana is better representative of Buddha than the Hinayana? When neither of these schools can prove themselves to the other, then " Buddha intended this " reduces to a particular " interpretation " - i.e. the all-knowing nature of assertions as to what Buddha meant are 'empty' except for the gullible. > > thollmelukaalkizhu > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 advaitin , " vaibhav_narula21 " <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: > > putranji, > this is not a comedy show so please don't make me laugh first of all. Second how beautifully you pose that you understand Buddha better than Nagarjuna and that Nagarjuna's intrepretation is flawed without giving a single proof to that effect while demanding ample proofs from me. Very nice,very very nice indeed. Who's intrepreation is better? Hinayana or Mahayana. I would have answered the question if this was a Buddhist blog but unfortunately it is not. I would also remind you that when I began posting my messages I said that when we talk about the similarity of Hinduism and Buddhism we generally mean the similarity of Advaita Vedanta and Madhyamikas. You brand Nagarjuna a nihilst, without any proof, then you say his intrepreatation of Buddha is wrong, without any proof, Buddha contradicts the Upanisads, but here also no proofs. > Your powers of making assumptions and imaginations is just brillaint. But they just lack one thing ie facts. We may well use this ability to get children to sleep, it will be just more effective, really, try it! > > REGARDS, > VAIBHAV. > Too bad Vaibhavji - I think you are trying to get out; fine. You lost a bit of power with this nonsense post. The questions I posed are too basic to be dismissed in this vague manner. Anyone with a rational/scientific mind can tell that. It at once reveals the flaws in your attempts in spite of all your so-called evidence. thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 vaibhav ji : Extra-ordinary understanding sir.Was totally enlightened by this piece. >>The saints do not come in this world to teach the masses what the scriptures say. This can be done by street smart scholars also. You and I can do it. They come to lead us to the path of realization of the truths embodied in the scriptures. They come not to feed our intellects but to feed our hearts. These saints are above the obligations of the scriptures. They follow them only to set an example. Budhha did whatever he could to teach the masses the way to truth. He felt the the ritualistic mindset was an impediment and thus rejected it. Even then he said that he was preaching Arya Dharma.<< suresh. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 putranm ji: budhha preached.his shisyas made it mahayana and hinayana,which is contrary to budhhas teachings itself.obviously his shisyas never understood buddhas teachings=emptyness,in lighter vein. suresh. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 putranji, the objections I raised against your questions also are not vague which would be clear to a scientific, rational and unbiased mind. As for the power you talked about, what matters to me is my conviction and I don't care what others would think about me. It is impossible to please everyone in the world. But anyways, I think this topic is very elaborately discussed for a long time now, so it would be wise to stop here. REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > > advaitin , " vaibhav_narula21 " <vaibhav_narula21@> wrote: > > > > putranji, > > this is not a comedy show so please don't make me laugh first of all. Second how beautifully you pose that you understand Buddha better than Nagarjuna and that Nagarjuna's intrepretation is flawed without giving a single proof to that effect while demanding ample proofs from me. Very nice,very very nice indeed. Who's intrepreation is better? Hinayana or Mahayana. I would have answered the question if this was a Buddhist blog but unfortunately it is not. I would also remind you that when I began posting my messages I said that when we talk about the similarity of Hinduism and Buddhism we generally mean the similarity of Advaita Vedanta and Madhyamikas. You brand Nagarjuna a nihilst, without any proof, then you say his intrepreatation of Buddha is wrong, without any proof, Buddha contradicts the Upanisads, but here also no proofs. > > Your powers of making assumptions and imaginations is just brillaint. But they just lack one thing ie facts. We may well use this ability to get children to sleep, it will be just more effective, really, try it! > > > > REGARDS, > > VAIBHAV. > > > > > Too bad Vaibhavji - I think you are trying to get out; fine. You lost a bit of power with this nonsense post. The questions I posed are too basic to be dismissed in this vague manner. Anyone with a rational/scientific mind can tell that. It at once reveals the flaws in your attempts in spite of all your so-called evidence. > > thollmelukaalkizhu > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > > > Too bad Vaibhavji - I think you are trying to get out; fine. You lost a bit of power with this nonsense post. The questions I posed are too basic to be dismissed in this vague manner. Anyone with a rational/scientific mind can tell that. It at once reveals the flaws in your attempts in spite of all your so-called evidence. > My recent post 45706 is to get out of this " Buddha intended this " when we are working with interpretations of others – as he was silent to many important metaphysical questions, and we are guessing about silence (!) – the Upanishads are never silent to metaphysical questions, so interpretations of them are in an entirely different category. If I am one of these people (M. or H.), I may want to assert such things. Not being so, I don't want to get pulled into such a stance – objectively and rationally speaking IMO, the Person of Buddha cannot be saved for the Advaitin on the grounds of metaphysics. However this weak attempt at saving Buddha (in very strong terms) often accompanies as a corollary for those who want to find equivalence between Madhyamika and Buddhism. I have been consistent on this point before itself, regarding personality and interpretations – I have also said that in spite my own wishes to idolizing Buddha, I will not do that in a formal setting, or when representing sampradaya – it becomes nonsensical or `empty'. When I mentioned Mahayana and Hinayana, I was not talking about which is better in my opinion – but on the question of guessing which is " better representative of Buddha " – the intention being conveyed in the adjoining lines. Vaibhavji's response was vague as it left this, and was banging my statements on other points and my non-answering of them. Stating " my conviction " is not scientific here. (Anyway readers can please see if Vaibhavji's response 45708 addresses my questions.) Once this above point is conceded, the air becomes freer. As for Nagarjuna, yes, good points were made that he is not a nihilist – BTW this is the first time I am using the word directly. I was more contesting the idea that he or Buddha were not aware of Upanishadic thought – for which a good counter argument was presented. As I am not convinced of this and based on the little I do know, I find it very plausible that Nagarjuna was not suggesting Brahman – again I am working with interpretations of same " evidences " . I have also seen other interpretation in a google book by P.T. Raju: http://books.google.com/books?id=dXCOemCvh5sC & dq=idealistic+though+in+India+raju\ & printsec=frontcover & source=bl & ots=iwrgvYExmf & sig=JmhZRBUf2hxMnP9L8NWR_jjTwhQ & hl\ =en & ei=8cszStjCDqamM_W0nJsK & sa=X & oi=book_result & ct=result & resnum=1#PPA251,M1 See pg 251 onwards on the significance of Sunya. Worth reading (should mention; I think the author is a Radhakrishnan fan and at some level may side with the equivalence theory.) He mentions, " … Nagarjuna should be interpreted as holding either that the world is sunya or unreal and that there is beyond and behind this unreality or sunya the indescribable Real or the Tathagata; or that the nature of the Real or the Tatagata is sunyata or indeterminateness, that the truth of determinateness is indeterminateness, and therefore determinateness as such is unreal. I feel that the latter seems to be the meaning of Nagarjuna. But the problem may be left open to the scholars of China and Japan, who are better equipped, to decide. " Keep this in mind, when he mentions later of the equivalence of the Madhayamika methodology with " Neti, Neti " . Note the difference in the two ways of interpreting Nagarjuna here; this scholar in spite of his concession to scholars from China and Japan is preferring the latter, or so he says here - i.e. both have a validity in the objective mind. thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: When I mentioned Mahayana and Hinayana, I was not talking about which is better in my opinion – but on the question of guessing which is " better representative of Buddha " – the intention being conveyed in the adjoining lines. Vaibhavji's response was vague as it left this, the " this " at the end is not focussing on the H vs M question in itself but the whole point mentioned in this post and the one before. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > of same " evidences " . I have also seen other interpretation in a google book by P.T. Raju: > > http://books.google.com/books?id=dXCOemCvh5sC & dq=idealistic+though+in+India+raju\ & printsec=frontcover & source=bl & ots=iwrgvYExmf & sig=JmhZRBUf2hxMnP9L8NWR_jjTwhQ & hl\ =en & ei=8cszStjCDqamM_W0nJsK & sa=X & oi=book_result & ct=result & resnum=1#PPA251,M1 > > See pg 251 onwards on the significance of Sunya. Worth reading (should mention; I think the author is a Radhakrishnan fan and at some level may side with the equivalence theory.) He mentions, " … Nagarjuna should be interpreted as holding either that the world is sunya or unreal and that there is beyond and behind this unreality or sunya the indescribable Real or the Tathagata; or that the nature of the Real or the Tatagata is sunyata or indeterminateness, that the truth of determinateness is indeterminateness, and therefore determinateness as such is unreal. I feel that the latter seems to be the meaning of Nagarjuna. But the problem may be left open to the scholars of China and Japan, who are better equipped, to decide. " Keep this in mind, when he mentions later of the equivalence of the Madhayamika methodology with " Neti, Neti " . Hmm:-) Although I am a bit confused by the author's direction, here is another quote from a little before in the section that shows a bit why I sent that latter interpretation - the word Tathagata though when used as a noun suggests an Entity/Reality also appears to have an alternate meaning as " Reality of the state of things " - I understood this usage in the second interpretation of Nagarjuna that the author said he preferred (but may be mistaken as to Raju's intentions): " There is a double significance in the word sunya. It means the unreality of the determinateness as well as the reality of indeterminateness... To be determinate menas to be relative, to be pratityasamutpanna (to have a dependent origination). Even bhava or existence is relative according to Nagarjuna ... But the sunya is not merely the same as relativity. To be relative means to be unreal; but the Sunya is not merely the same as untruth or unreality. It is the same as the paramaarthsatyam or the highest truth of Nagarjuna. So **** the essence of Nagarjuna's teaching seems to be that determinations, which are all relative, are unreal, and hence the truth of all determinations is indeterminateness. And as indeterminateness is emptied of all determinations, it is pure void or Sunya.**** As existence is a determination according to the Buddhists, sunya is neither existence nor non-existence. ***This Sunya as indeterminateness is Tathataa, the same as the Tathaagata or the Dharmakaaya of the school.*** As we have seen, Nagarjuna goes even further in his dialectic, and says that even the idea of the Sunya is not adequate to express the truth which is inexpressible. As the Tathagata is the truth, he should be called neither sunya nor asunya, nor both, nor neither. He is beyond every determination and name. " thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 Vaibhavji - pranAms.  It is easy to spot a wolf in sheeps clothing because he will remain silent on matters that will expose the truth.  For three posts now, I have asked you to reconcile Pratitya-samutpada with Vedanta Advaita. I felt perhaps your skirting the issue all along may be deliberate and this latest response from you confirms it in no uncertain terms. On my last post I even tried to help you by providing you with a conceptual framework of the Upanishadic Shanti mantra Poornamadah on which to base your rationalization of reconcilation.  Your reponse of repeating the same sections of T.Up bhashya and the Vivekachudani - which are irrelevant to this - reminds me of the famed parakeets of Mandana Mishra who would keep chirping swata pramanam parata pramanam over and over again. It is fruitless for me to continue to engage in this kind of a discussion and hence from my side this will be the last post in this thread.  My unsolicited and sincere advise to you would be to stick to a sincere and serious study of Buddhism instead of wasting your efforts in traditional Advaita VedAnta forums like these concocting similarities in things that are diametrically opposed.  In closing I would like to point out these words from the very Lankavatara Sutra you quoted:  Then Mahamati said to the Blessed One: In the (Buddhist) Scriptures mention is made of the Tathagatagarbha and it is taught that that which is born of it is by nature bright and pure, originally unspotted......We are taught that this Buddha-nature immanent in everyone is eternal, unchanging, auspicious. Is not thisTathagatagarbha the same as the Atman that is taught by the philosophers? The Divine Atman as taught by them is also claimed to be eternal, inscrutable, unchanging,(satyam) imperishable (anantam). Is there, OR IS THERE NOT A difference? The Blessed One replied: No, Mahamati, my Tathagatagarbha is NOT the same as the Divine Atman as taught by the philosophers. What i teach is Tathagatagarbha in the sense of Dharmakaya, Ultimate Oneness, Nirvana, emptiness, ......The doctrine of the Tathagatagarbha is disclosed in order to awaken philosphers from their clinging to the notion of a Divine Atman as a transcendental personality, so that their minds that have become attached to the imaginary notion of a Atman as being something self-existing, may be quickly awakened to a state of perfect enlightement. All such notions as....personal soul, Supreme Spirit, ....are all figments of the imagination and manifestations of mind. No, Mahamati, the Tathagatagarbha is not the same as the philosopher’s Atman. "  Please note the specific reference is not to the " conventional soul " which you would readily dismiss as referring to the Ego or " i " , but to the Supreme Atman which is Satyam Jnanam Anantam.  Here is Nagarjuna in seventy verses on shunyata (perhaps the title is illustrative of his philosophy?  Consciousness occurs in dependence on the internal and external sense-fields. Therefore consciousness is empty...  And ShantidevA: For instance - when we cut through the fibers of the trunk of a plantain tree we find nothing , in the same way, when we analyze " who am I "  we will find no " I " no existent Self. (In fact I could quote entire chapter on Wisdom in his work on Bodhicaryavatara which is full of the very same arguments that Shankara and other Vedantins throw at the these nihilists and their " able " refutation! " ) Something not within the body, and yet nowhere else, that does not merge with it nor stand apart - something such as this does not exist, not even slightly.  The fact is that the principles of Buddhism as propounded by the Buddha and expounded on by Nagarjuna were extremely well-known to GaudapadAcharya and his successors.  Whether or not Gaudapadacharya was influenced or incorporated lexicon that he adopted from Nagarjuna may be disputable or debatable, but it is inconceivable that He and subsequently ShankarachArya were not intimately familar with their philosophy.  And with that this is what they thought of the prevalent Buddhist theories of their time:  " .....they may as well see footmarks in space itself " - GaudapAdAcharya " Nihilists (Madhayamikas) who while perceiving the nonexistence of everything, assert thereby the VOIDness of their own philosophy, they are even more adventerous who try to hold the sky in their fists. - ShankarAcharya " Budhists ended up in a blind alley without recognising the Sruthi. " SureshwarachAryA  I have also previously quoted Shankara's views on the Buddha himself - asserting his incoherence in speech and malicious intent. I could go on...  I am sure their views may have been more lenient had they been given to understand the essential " non-difference " Certainly as they stand its far from an endorsement of similarity!  How then do we reconcile these stark positions, with their intrinsic rigid territorial integrity, with some recent " reformist " Buddhist movement to assert that the Buddha taught all along that his nothingness is really the Atman of the Upanishads.  In my view the answer is self-evident - after centuries of defending a position that is inherently indefensible, those that deserted the safe harbors of the Shruti find themselves in a sinking ship and are now raising the sails of one-ness with Vedanta. In so re-inventing their own scriptures to try to render them toe the line of VedantA - what they are ingeniously cutting down on is really the glory of their own lineage of masters such as Nagarjuna and ShantidevA among hundreds of others, who strove hard to uphold a doomed, empty and inherently confused philosophy. What is more these " reformists "  now assert to being the only ones " true " to the spirit of the BuddhA, and going by what Vaibhav-ji says count amongst their ranks no less a figurehead than the Dalai-Lama himself - sweet irony indeed!  I am sorry my friends - you do not get to win by giving a checkmate to your own King.  Hari OM Shyam  --- On Sat, 6/13/09, vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism advaitin Saturday, June 13, 2009, 3:54 AM shyamji, I just feel like laughing how easily you termed my arguements as flawed. Well you are just making me repeat myself yet again. Consider: Sri Sankara's commentary of Taittirya Upanisad 2.8.5 where he says: The reality of a substance surely cannot be dependent on external agencies.... .....Mutability is not a reality because that depends on other factors..... ......any peculiarity that arises in an existing substance is a result of external agencies.(Pg 145, Swami Gambhirananda' s translation) . Also: But I have pointed out in the earlier post how uncompromising were Sri Sankara on the negative description of Brahman. Refer to his commentary on Taittirya Upanisad 2.1.1, Pg 79 of Swami Gambhirananda' s translation. He clearly states that these Sat Chit etc only indicate Brahman and do not denote Him as Brahman is beyond all class etc. Again: Vivekachudamani. 572: This exists or This does not exist are the two qualities of the intellect. Really they do not exist in the Atman which is beyond them both. REGARDS, VAIBHAV. advaitin@ s.com, Shyam <shyam_md@.. .> wrote: > > Pranams Vaibhav-ji >  > Thank you for your responses. Your conclusions and assertions are as flawed as they are fantastic. Before I respond to them methodically, may I request you to respond to the very first and most important of the numerous points that I raised. [Perhaps in the true spirit of Buddhism my very first question appeared as nothingness to you as did your answer to me - :-).] >  > *** > " The notion of Pratitya-samutpada( theory of dependent co-origination) - and how it differs from satkaryavada - with its concomitant logical flaws that alone in fact leads these nihilists to conclude that emptiness is also not an Absolute Existence from where other phenomena arise. " > *** > The Upanishads declare Brahman as Satyam - Existence which is Anantam - Eternal. > This - the manifest Creation is also Brahman and as such is Existence alone.  >  > Poornamadah Poornamidam Poornaat Poornamudachyate > Poornasya Poornamaadaya Poornamevaavashishy ate >  > Can you please explain/reconcile the doctrine of pratitya-samutpada with regards to this Vedantic Truth. >  > Hari OM > Shyam > > vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21@ ...> > Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism > advaitin@ s.com > Friday, June 12, 2009, 3:05 PM > > I just forgot answering a few more questions of shyamji which I am giving here: > > 1. The concept of Isvara in Buddhism. > > 2. It was said that many buddhists do not agree with this equivalence of Advaita and Buddhism. How do we know that? Through one article of a buddhist. Is that a majority? Please consider that leading Buddhists like The Dalai Lama and Sogyal Rinpoche are not against such a notion rather they positively support it. > > > > Recent Activity > > >  10 > New Members > >  1 > New Photos > >  1 > New FilesVisit Your Group > > > > Give Back > for Good > Get inspired > by a good cause. > > Y! Toolbar > Get it Free! > easy 1-click access > to your groups. > > > Start a group > in 3 easy steps. > Connect with others. > . > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2009 Report Share Posted June 13, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > ... But the sunya is not merely the same as relativity. To be relative means to be unreal; but the Sunya is not merely the same as untruth or unreality. It is the same as the paramaarthsatyam or the highest truth of Nagarjuna. So **** the essence of Nagarjuna's teaching seems to be that determinations, which are all relative, are unreal, and hence the truth of all determinations is indeterminateness. And as indeterminateness is emptied of all determinations, it is pure void or Sunya.**** As existence is a determination according to the Buddhists, sunya is neither existence nor non-existence. ***This Sunya as indeterminateness is Tathataa, the same as the Tathaagata or the Dharmakaaya of the school.*** As we have seen, Nagarjuna goes even further in his dialectic, and says that even the idea of the Sunya is not adequate to express the truth which is inexpressible. As the Tathagata is the truth, he should be called neither sunya nor asunya, nor both, nor neither. He is beyond every determination and name. " > > Now the two interpretations of Nagarjuna, etc. were mentioned in earlier discussions as " Rangtong " and " Shentong " - the latter being heavily contested by the former (I had sent a good link on this, which includes the questions of history of the latter). I would like to point out also that contrary to Vaibhavji's claim, both the Buddhists Neil Glazer (from a couple of years back) and Hamsa.soham recently clearly mentioned (Neil being quite specific on the issue) that the present Dalai Lama is of Rangtong (some Gelup... sect) and ultimately not in line with Advaita, except in a generic public-relations sense. thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2009 Report Share Posted June 14, 2009 You can both win, if you hug each other. :-). Lots of love Harsha advaitin [advaitin ] On Behalf Of Shyam Saturday, June 13, 2009 2:37 PM advaitin Re: Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism I am sorry my friends - you do not get to win by giving a checkmate to your own King. Hari OM Shyam --- On Sat, 6/13/09, vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 wrote: vaibhav_narula21 <vaibhav_narula21 Re: advaita vedanta and buddhism advaitin Saturday, June 13, 2009, 3:54 AM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2009 Report Share Posted June 14, 2009 advaitin , " putranm " <putranm wrote: > > > I received this interesting backstage advice from a member: " Pl read and reread your own posts. It reflects your muddled and confused thinking " . I did my most recent posts and the comment looks true once I started talking on Nagarjuna - especially with the half-attempt at reconciling and the later connecting back to the Rangtong-Shentong thing. With regard to validity of Buddhist interpretations of Nagarjuna, take it in the sense that Hindus have many interpretations of Up. I still stand by the questions I had raised regarding the Buddha's intentions, etc. There is one point of Shyamji that still stands out: that there are serious issues that cannot be pushed under the rug by simply hinting a paramaarthika or ajativada viewpoint. He alone has stood true to this whereas most others have only concerned ourselves on the question of " ultimate reality " - is it affirmed or not in Madhyamika? Naturally the question arises: what do we mean by ultimate reality? 1. IF in the Upanishads, the only thing said about " Brahman " is " Not this, Not this " - it is not existence or non-existence, etc - shall we conclude that the Mahavakyas " Aham Brahmasmi " , " Pragnyanam Brahma " etc follow from this? Why is the latter considered essential for invoking *right* knowledge? Of course, we can simply assert " Neti, Neti " is the only " mahavakya " we need - and all is proved! 2. In fact, rightly so, using a term Brahman practically synonymously with negation-of-duality gives no real reason to conclude Brahman denotes the ultimate Reality behind that duality. In fact, at face value, we have to stop and conclude our ultimate reality/truth is the negation-of-duality (or indeterminateness) - nothing more can be said. Really! 3. Of course, as Vedantins, we say more: we conclude that this negation-of-duality affirms an ultimate Reality that is the substratum, essence, what-Is behind that apparent duality. You may complain as to the usage of such descriptions - but unfortunately, if I am not clear that " Brahma Satyam " , I cannot simply claim that " Jagan Mithya " will imply it necessarily. It may, it may not - what about " Jagat sunya " ? So " Brahma Satyam, Jagan Mithya, jivo brahmaiva naparaha " - each part is important, and together it is Advaita-Vedanta. Whether " Brahman is Neti,Neti " + " Jagat is sunya " is the same as the advaita triple is quite a big question - we have to create bridges and modifications to achieve this. But by no means, can we demand our triple is the same that this sum-pair intended. 4. As a followup to the above, is the immanence of Brahman in jagat achieved necessarily through the sum-pair? The Upanishads (and our advaita triple) are clear on such metaphysical issues. Well, can we excuse a system that fails to develop the metaphysics properly and simply claim that its founders meant the same, or close enough? Are these points to be taken lightly or arbitrarily by a mumukshu? thollmelukaalkizhu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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