Guest guest Posted June 26, 2008 Report Share Posted June 26, 2008 http://www.indology.net/article71.html Sankhya Shastra & Maharishi Vyasa (Epistemology of Existence) By Surin Usgaonkar* Abstract: The following essay re-looks at the writings of Maharishi Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa, the writer of the Mahabharata and composer of the Bhagavad Gita that the followers of the religion of Hindus today hold as their sacred Dharma-Grantha. The essay here wishes to introduce readers to the uniqueness of Gita as well as its consummate philosophical enquiry into the evolution, nature and ultimate destruction of the visible universe and subsequent enquiry into the true nature of the God. The essay contains the two aspects; the first, which deals with the epistemology and the Sankhya Shastra regarding the existence and nature of the Supreme Self. And second the help and assistance that the Bhagavad Gita offers to the common man in handling the abstract concept of God. For intellectuals, Mahabharata and Bhagavad Gita are the most intelligible sources of Adhikrit (official) Sankhya Philosophy besides the treatise of Isvarakrishna in furtherance of their knowledge and for a common man in every walk of life it is a prescriptive book which offers a tutorial on good and successful living. Main Text One of the most difficult concepts to understand and handle in ancient Hindu scriptures is " Sankhya " . However, without understanding the science of Sankhya it is not possible to have deeper insight into Hindutva or Hindu Dharmashastra. Sankhya is probably the epistemological core of the " Vedic " thinking of cosmos and life. It is the " Sankhya " which gives Hindutva its philosophical richness and a profound flavour. The exact translation or meaning of the term " Sankhya " from the original Sanskrit is extremely difficult and my friends within the University campuses shall have their own interpretations none of which are easy to contest. Meaning of the word, prima facie, appears to mean a science that has something to do with numbers or method of counting. There are scholars who believe that since this science involves listing and counting of number of properties of the universe the term may have come into existence. However the definition, which appeals to me the most, is the one, which defines Sankhya as analysis and a serious inquiry of the " ultimate truth " or an individual who has attained this knowledge of such an ultimate truth. In Gita the word, at least from the context, appears to have been used in a manner to mean " Philosophy " . Whatever is the pure linguistic meaning of the word there seem to be an unanimous agreement among the scholars of ancient times that " Sankhya " is one of the most important school of philosophical school. This theory has been granted the status of one of the " Darshana " among the six important " Darshanas " of the Dharmashastra of Hindus. Darshana in Sanskrit is literally translates as " philosophy " in English. One of the great scholars of Sankhya in the ancient times is Rishi Panchshikh and treatise written by him; called " Shashthitantra " which forms the part of the Adhikrut Sankhya Shastra and is said to have contained sixty different subjects and sixty thousand " gathas " . Unfortunately the treatise is not available. One of the relatively easily available treatises on the subject titled as " Sankhya-Karika " is written by Ishvarakrishna; this could have been written few centuries BC (believed that it could not have been after 200 AD). However a Chinese translation of this treatise was done around 546 AD [ii]. Chanakya the author of the famous " Arthashastra " was well versed in Sankhya. Arthashastra was written around 300 BC coinciding with the period of Chandragupta Maurya's rule over the subcontinent. The importance that the ancient scholars like Vyasa accorded to this science is evident from the verses Shanti-Parva of the Mahabharata: The verses (Sec 290, 102, 103, 104) read as: dvividhaanIha bhUtaani pR^ithvipate . jaDagamaagasamaGNani jaDagama.n tu vishiSyate ..102.. Dyaane mahadyamaddhimahatsu raajan vedeSu saa.nkheSu tathaiva yoge . Yaccaapi dR^iSTa.n vividha puraaNa.n saa.nkhyaagata tannikhila narendra ..103.. YaccetihaaseSu mahatsu dR^iSTa.n yaccaarthashaastre nUpashiSTajuSTe . GNYaanaM ca loke yadihaasti ki.nchitsaakhyaagata.n tacca mahanmahaatman ..104.. (Translation: " There are two kinds of creatures on Earth, O lord of Earth, viz., mobile and immobile. Of these that are mobile are superior, That high knowledge, O king, which exists in persons conversant with Brahma, and that which occurs in the Vedas, and that which is found in other scriptures, and that in Yoga, and that which may be seen in the diverse Puranas, are all, O monarch, to be found in Sankhya philosophy. Whatever knowledge is seen to exist in high histories whatever knowledge occurs, O king, in the sciences appertaining to the acquisition of wealth as approved by the wise, whatever other knowledge exists in this world,--all these,--flow, O high-souled monarch, from the high knowledge that occurs among the Sankhya.) [iii] Mahrishi Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa (known as " Dwaipayana " in ancient Sanskrit treatises and in the modern ages is well known as Vyasa the creator of the famous epic " Mahabharata " ) attaches immense importance to this Shastra. Besides " Shanti-Parva " he mentions it and many of its principles in various places in Mahabharata and prominently in " Bhagvad Gita " The riddle of existence The riddle of existence appears in the very first shloka of Isvarakrishna's Treatise Sankhya-Karika: duHkha trayaabhighaataaj jiGYaasaa tad- apaghaatake hetau dR^iSTe sa apaarthaa cen naikaantya antato.abhaavaat..1.. (From the shock of triple misery comes the desire to the means of prevention; nor is the enquiry superfluous because of visible remedies, for these cannot secure a certain and permanent solution. Translation by Raghavan Iyer[iv]) Eshwarkrishna in next 74 shlokas of his treatise put down the basic principles of the Sankhya theory, which was originally proposed by the sage Panchashikha Since the original treatise of " Panchashikh " is lost in the time, for us the most important ancient work on the Sankhya Shastra, apart from the Eswarkrishna's work which is fairly recent, comes from Bhagvad Gita which appears as a part of Bhishma Parva of Vyasa's Mahabharata and is written in a classic Sanskrit style as a dialogue between Arjuna and Lord Krishna (assumed to be almighty the Narayana himself). Gita's Chapter II is wholly devoted to this Shastra however the whole of Gita seems to be full with the wisdom of Sankhya. Importantly, Vyasa appears to be the first writer who writes with a clear intent of solving the riddle of existence rather that further mystifying the same. What are the Sankhya principles? 1. There are two types of " tattvas " (could be loosely translated as principles), which exist in the universe. One is called the " Prakriti " (or Pradhana) and the other is called the " Purusha " . 2. These properties always existed in the Universe (Even when the physical universe did not exist) and they shall continue to exist even after destruction of this physical universe. 3. When these two properties come together in a particular combination, among billions of possible permutations, ultimately five basic properties (Earth, wind, sky, fire and water) get created. [Note: Earth does not mean the earth as a planet but earthly properties, similarly wind does not mean the wind that blows on the earth, sky means the ever pervading space and fire means the energy (of creation and destruction) and water means the organic properties]. These are also called (In Gita) as " Pancha-mahabhuta " [v] 4. After creation of these basic properties the ever evolving and changing animate and inanimate world gets created 5. Paradox: It is believed by some that the " Prakriti " and " Purusha " came together in a required combination (or always will come together) by a pure coincidence or by a sheer accident. Where is the need for the God here? There are others who believe that there is an all-pervading power, which brought them together in a particular combination. A power that is higher in form higher than the universe and retains its control and influence over the entire universe. This power is the cause of all that seem to happen as if by an accident. This power was perhaps termed as " The God " or " the Brahma " meaning the ultimate truth. The paradox gave rise to two types of philosophical schools. One that accepts the existence of god and the other that does not find it necessary to accept the existence of God and is known as " Nireshvaravadi " .[vi] 6. Both these schools of thought accept the principle of the theory which states that there is no true " aetiology " meaning nothing is caused to happen. The cause (or reason) is embedded in the happening (or the resultant action). 7. The day any part of " Purusha " (which is present in all living creatures and probably in the inanimate objects also " ) gains knowledge of how it got into this labyrinth leading to this combination he discovers the way out of the labyrinth and becomes free. This state is known as " Moksha " . Moksha is the ultimate ambition and objective of all living creatures especially the Humans. All that one does in the small intervening period in which he/her is alive and manifest (small period compared to cosmic time) is to achieve this objective. It is described as " Param puruSartha " . Epistemology in Gita - Vyasa and Sankhya The subject, in itself, is too vast and would actually mean holding serious inquiry into the nature and existence of the universe, which cannot be the objective of the current essay. All sciences, even an exact science like modern mathematics has within its body of knowledge a principle of an " Axiom " or a " Postulate " . Even Euclidean geometry states that " two points determine a unique straight line " this is accepted as a postulate and is not proved separately. It is self-proved or " swayamsidha " . In fact if the postulate[vii] is not accepted and if one thinks of re- developing the whole science of an Euclidean geometry without this postulate one may recreate a same body of knowledge in a different " formal language " .[viii] " Vyasa " accepts the existence of the God like no other scholar before him did. Most of the development of Sankhya Shastra in the post Mahabharata period (I agree with Dr P V Vartak that the period was three years from 5561 BC)[ix] has a definite impact of Vyasa's discourses on Sankhya (Gita). He can be credited as one of the most influential thinkers of the bygone era whose contribution to all aspects of tradition of civilization on the banks of Indus (Sindhu river) is simply brilliant. In the spread of Adwait school of thought and consequently the popularity of this school of thought over the " Nirishwarvadis " (not accepting existence of god) the influence of Bhagwad Gita is extraordinary. It is important to know that the present Hindu Philosophy stems from " Vedanta " and the words Vedanta and Advaita are used interchangeably as synonyms in many ancient treatises. Bhagavad Gita forms the " Smrti Prasthana " one amongst the three acknowledged pillars of the Vedanta philosophy. (The other two being Upanishads which are called Shruti Prasthana and Badarayana's Nyaya Prasthana). Having accepted and established arguments in favour of existence of God, Vyasa accepted the whole Sankhya Shastra as an important theory and accepted all its principles. To quote glaring examples Principle 1 above: in Bhagvad Gita Ch. II Verse 12 na tvevaaha.n jaatu naasa.n na tva name janaadhipaaH . na caiva na bhaviSyaamaH sarve vayamataH param .. 2 .. (There was never a time when I was not, nor these lords of men were not and there shall never be a time in future when all this shall cease to exist) Similarly on of the most important principle viz. the principle enumerated as Principle 6 above is found expressly in the following verse of the Gita Ch. II verse 16 naasato vidyate bhaavo naabhaava vidyate sataH . ubhayorapi dR^iSTo.antastattvadarshibhi .. 16.. (Of existent there is no ceasing to be and of non- existence there is no coming to be…)[x] However, Maharishi Vyasa stuns us with his sheer brilliance at many places in the Bhagavad Gita some of the insights offered by the Gita are the first ever in any tradition of the mankind. While the author of Gita makes you believe in the God he springs equal number of surprises at you regarding the nature and existence of God albeit subtly To cite a few outstanding examples; taking about Vedic knowledge Vyasa says: [bhagvad-Gita Ch II Verse 46] yaavaanartha udapaane sarvataH samplutodake . taavaan sarveSu vedeSu brahmaNasya vijaanataH .. 46.. Brilliant English translation of these words is by Sarvapalli Radhakrishnan: " As is the use of a pond in a place flooded with water same is the use of Vedas for a Brahmin who understands. " Vyasa suggests the end of knowledge at the same time he hints here that the knowledge that can be obtained by Five senses, mind and intelligence is incapable of conceiving the concept of the ultimate universal truth. He wants to emphasise that after obtaining the whole knowledge that which is in the Vedas one must first transcend that knowledge (post acquiring it) and then seek the ultimate truth. If the enquiry is adulterated by the knowledge obtained through the senses mind and intellect the enquiry in the ultimate truth shall be futile. This is true; what is unimaginable cannot be imagined by the mind. Vyasa strengthens this argument in Chapter IX when Lord Krishna is assumed to have shown Arjuna the universal form of himself (the Narayana) here he distinguished between " divya chaksu " and " mansa chaksu " (the former being the divine eye sight and the latter being eye of the flesh or the human eye). Lord Krishna is assumed to have temporarily bestowed upon Arjuna the power of divine eyesight to enable him to see (or grasp) the Narayana in the universal form. Whatever is the lyrical and poetic description the fact that the author seems to emphasise here that what we imagine as a God is not what he is and the way he (it) looks at you and the way you look at him is so different that a two-way communication between the manifest and an un-manifest is impossible. The author also presents the arguments in the Chapter IX verse 5 on the nature of the god na cha matsthaani bhUtaani pashya me yogamaishvaram . bhUtabhR^inna ch bhUtastho mamaatmaa bhUtabhaavanaH .. Ch 9 , 5.. Here he uses the term yogamaishvaram = yogam + aishvaram meaning divine mystery[xi] it appears that the author does want to suggest that the entity, the creator is remote, distinct and possesses no qualities which are generated and visible by the behaviour of the matter and yet it is directly responsible in making the matter behave in a fashion that it does and further states that the creator is least affected by the behaviour of the matter. In the very next shloka (No 6) he gives illustration of the " aakaasha " meaning the space and in the succeeding shloka (No 7) he hurriedly speaks about Cycles viz., kalpaksaya kalpadau meaning " time. " In short, the author of the Bhagavad Gita seems to refer to the space-time (again I wish to insist that I am not trying to draw any parallels between Einstein's vision and the one that exists in treatise. It is hard to conclude that whether it is space-time or " Space & Time together " ) which grants the matter the pattern of behaviour which is easier to enquire into rather than the concept of space-time. That brings us to what Isvarakrishna speaks about in the first shloka of Sankhya- Karika - the " visible remedies " and their non-endurance. Sociological Concepts - Moksha and Vyasa (Helping the common man) Bhagavad Gita leaves the intellectuals, philosophers and scientist in a lurch. It gives them a food for thought and refuses to help them further saying that this is as far as one can go in explaining; the rest is for you alone to understand through your thought. Purer that thought is clearer shall be your vision. However, for the common man who wants to go through the journey of life comfortably Vyasa offers a great help. A kind of help that a common man cannot get from Vedas, Upanishads or other treatises of knowledge. This is where he proposes the most revolutionary concept. It is the concept of " Bhakti-Marga " . Most of the Vedic knowledge is for the people who are of high learning and great intellectual skills. The literature Vedic or otherwise prior to Mahabharata (and some after it) thinks very little of the common man. According to the Sankhya Shastra, for example, Moksha can only be attained by understanding the nature of Brahma and truly understanding the principles of creation of the universe and position of human in the entire system. This is impossible for a common man. Does he have hope? According to Sankhya, No chance. According to Vyasa by practice of the Bhakti Marga it is possible that even a common man or even a bad man who decides to reform himself is eligible for Moksha. According to Gita (at various places) it is been propounded that anyone who without the desire of the fruit surrenders to the wishes of the Almighty God and worships him with pure intent is sure to attain the " Param Purushartha " which is Moksha. In the light of these discourses Vyasa's claim to be the first Sociologist on the planet may not be exaggerated. It was him who and consummately conceptualised the " Human Society " (or Manava Samaj). He gave unprecedented importance to development and enhancement of human society in his writings. During the Mahabharata war when the Lord Krishna realizes that Arjuna is not willing to kill Bhishma he (Krishna) breaks his vow and takes a weapon in his hand. " Whether history records me as the one who broke his promise (or Vow) or is far less important than the welfare of the human society at large " that was Krishna's contention. This concept at the end of Dvapara Yuga (about 7000 years ago) was a statement of great vision and any analysis of Hindu Dharma's tenacity in wake of the confusion and conflicts of the Middle Ages can be traced to these and other principles of Bhakti Marg. It is the advocacy of this principle that made Devaki-nandan (son of Devaki) Bhagavan Krishna. " Bhaga " is a very rare adjective in Vedic Sanskrit language and can only be applied to something truly extraordinary [xii]; the concept of Bhakti lent hope to the common man to attain the Moksha and developed a code of conduct, which resulted into an enrichment of civilization sans doubt. Religion of Hindus and its rich philosophy mentions several gods each of them having great " Iconographic " and " Symbolic " significance. This symbolism again is meant for those who are adept in the abstract thinking. Knowing that this may result into confusion and conflict among masses in future Vyasa composed verse 23 in Ch IX of Gita. ye.apyanyadevataabhaktaa yajante shradhdayanvitaaH. te.api maameva kau.nteya yajantyavidhipUrvakam .. 23.. Meaning O son of Kunti, the worshipers of all Gods (or god in any form) when they worship them with faith ultimately worship me. This composition is actually inspired by the Rigveda 01.164. 46 that reads as under[xiii] iMdra'm mitra.n varu'Naam aagnim aa'hur adho' divyu sa suparNo gurutmaa'n . eka.n sad vipraa' bahudaa vendanty agni yaman matarishvaa'naam aahu ..R^i 164 46 .. [Translation: " They call him Indra, Mitra, Varuna, Agni. He is heavenly nobly winged Garutman. To what is one, sages give many titles they call it Agni, Yama, Matarishvan etc. " [xiv]] Conclusion Mahabharata and Gita are very important works which have deeply influenced the tradition of Aryan civilization on the banks of Indus and Saraswati rivers and which rapidly spread to the banks of Yamuna and Ganga (Ganges) which was later (about 300-400 BC) named as " Hindu " (Hindu is not a Sanskrit word. It is probably Iranian in its origin was used by the emperor Darayas in 300 BC). To call " The Gita " as a Holy Religious Book (Grantha) of Hindus on the lines on which that word is used for " the Bible " or " the Koran " will not be appropriate. Hindu Dharmashastra is unique in a way that any thinking about its traditions can only be spoken about as " History of Dharmashastra " . It is a tradition of living, which is ever evolving according to the basic character of Nature and draws its strength, relevance and tenacity from this. If you look at the vast western literature of ancient or present time it can be roughly divided as didactic, esoteric or playing to the " gallery " . The Gita and the writings of Vyasa in Mahabharata are unique. It is rich and overflowing with philosophy, it handles profound subjects like the nature evolution and ultimate destruction of the visible Universe, but it appeals to every individual and touches his/her heart. It does not matter whether you are an illustrious scholar of philosophy or an ordinary menial worker. It is neither esoteric nor does it play to the gallery, it is written with a deep, sincere and genuine concern for every human walking on this planet. That makes Mahabharata the greatest epic and Gita great enough to become eligible for a Sanskrit adjective " Bhaga " . We all, whose heart and life it touches, call it " Bhagavad Gita " . What is outstanding in Vyasa's writings is that any man in his everyday life and without special skills or efforts can easily follow the Bhagvad Gita, unlike many other brilliant Sanskrit treatises. Whether you are in pursuit of wealth, knowledge or wielding or seeking power it teaches you how to conduct yourself in society so that neither you nor the society will denigrate. Dr. Henry Kissinger, the secretary of state of the USA in 1971, while commenting on the Indo-Pak war, had said " Hinduism is not a religion of exaltation but of endurance, it has inspired men not through prophetic visions of messianic fulfilment but by bearing witness to fragility of human existence and offers not only salvation but a solace from an inevitable destiny… " [xv] Notes: * Researched and written by Surin Usgaonkar Contact usgaonkar ** MM stands for Mahamahopadhyaya (highest degree in Sanskrit during British times) and NL stands for Nobel Laureate. *** All Sanskrit Shlokas are written as per Itrans 5.2 notation and are automatically machine convertible in Devnagari (sanskrit98 Font) by using Itranslator 2003 available as a freeware on http://www.omkarananda-ashram.org/Sanskrit/Itranslt.html " History of Dharmashastra " by Bharatratna MM Dr PV Kane (Original is in Five volumes). [ii] Date according to MM Dr PV Kane (in History of Dharmashastra) above. [iii] " Translation of Mahabharata " by Dr Kisari Mohan Ganguli, 1883- 1896 AD. Book 12 Section CCCII. [iv] Raghvan Iyer, Hermes, September 1987 ed. [v] Sanskrit verbal translation is Panch = Five; Maha = Great; and Bhuta = that which is created. [Ref: Sanskrit dictionary by M V Apte - 1893] [vi] Do not confuse this with the word " atheist " which is a Western terminology meaning non-believers of Christ. [vii] The Sanskrit word for Postulate is " Arthapatti " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.