Unit 5: Sāṃkhya and Vedānta

Table of Contents

Sāṃkhya School

Sāṃkhya is one of the oldest Āstika schools, founded by the sage Kapila. It is a system of dualistic realism. It is 'realistic' because it believes both mind and matter are real. It is 'dualistic' because it posits two ultimate, independent, and eternal realities:

  1. Puruṣa (Consciousness, the Self)
  2. Prakṛti (Matter, Nature)

The entire universe is an interplay between these two principles. Sāṃkhya is also (in its classical form) atheistic, as it explains the universe without any need for a God.

Prakṛti (Nature/Matter)

Prakṛti is the "primal matter" or "nature." It is the uncaused, unconscious, and active principle. It is the material cause of the entire physical and mental universe (everything except Puruṣa).

Puruṣa (Consciousness/Self)

Puruṣa is the "self" or "pure consciousness." It is the conscious principle.

The Problem of Bondage: If Puruṣa is free and inactive, and Prakṛti is unconscious, how does bondage happen?
Answer: Bondage is due to non-discrimination (Aviveka). The Puruṣa (Consciousness) falsely identifies itself with the activities of Prakṛti (specifically, the mind/ego). It's like a clear crystal (Puruṣa) that appears red when a red flower (Prakṛti's creation) is placed near it. The crystal *is* not red, but it *appears* to be.
Liberation (Kaivalya): Liberation is simply the "discriminative knowledge" (Viveka-jñāna) that "I (Puruṣa) am not this (Prakṛti)." It is the isolation of the Puruṣa from Prakṛti.

Sāṃkhya Theory of Evolution (Pariṇāma)

This explains how the unconscious Prakṛti creates the entire universe. This is an "evolution," not a "creation" (as there is no creator God). The process begins when the presence of Puruṣa disturbs the equilibrium of the Guṇas in Prakṛti.

Sāṃkhya also follows Satkāryavāda: the doctrine that the *effect* (kārya) *pre-exists* (sat) in its material cause (kāraṇa). (e.g., The pot *already exists* in the clay). This is called Pariṇāma-vāda (theory of transformation), as the cause (Prakṛti) *transforms* into the effect (the world).

[Flowchart Placeholder: Sāṃkhya Tattvas (25 Principles)]

1. Puruṣa (Consciousness) & Prakṛti (Matter) (Un-evolved)

↓ (Evolution begins)

2. Mahat or Buddhi (Cosmic Intellect)

3. Ahaṃkāra (Ego)

↓ (Splits into three based on Guṇas)

4. Sāttvika AhaṃkāraManas (Mind) + 5 Jñānendriyas (Sense Organs: eye, ear, nose, tongue, skin) + 5 Karmendriyas (Action Organs: speak, grasp, walk, excrete, procreate)

5. Tāmasika Ahaṃkāra5 Tanmātras (Subtle Elements: sound, touch, form, taste, smell)

6. 5 Mahābhūtas (Gross Elements: ether, air, fire, water, earth)

(Rajasika Ahaṃkāra provides the energy for both evolutions)

Advaita Vedānta (School of Non-Dualism)

Advaita Vedānta, most famously consolidated by Ādi Śaṅkarācārya, is the school of "non-dualism." It is a monistic system, meaning it posits only *one* ultimate reality.

Śaṅkara's entire philosophy can be summarized in one-half verse:

Brahma Satyam, Jagan Mithyā, Jīvo Brahmaiva Nāparah
(Brahman alone is Real, the world is unreal/illusory, and the individual self (Jīva) is non-different from Brahman.)

Concept of Brahman

Brahman is the one, single, undivided, and ultimate reality. It is not "a" god, but the very "ground of all being" from which everything arises.

From the absolute point of view (Pāramārthika), only Nirguṇa Brahman is real. Īśvara, the Jīva (individual soul), and the Jagat (world) are all *appearances* caused by Māyā.

Concept of Māyā

If Brahman is the only reality, where does this vast, differentiated world (Jagat) come from? Śaṅkara explains this through the concept of Māyā.

Māyā is the inexplicable power of Brahman that makes the "one" Brahman appear as the "many" (the world and individuals). It is the principle of illusion or appearance.

Viśiṣṭādvaita Vedānta (School of Qualified Non-Dualism)

Rāmānujācārya was the chief proponent of Viśiṣṭādvaita, or "qualified non-dualism." He agreed with Śaṅkara that Brahman is the only ultimate reality (non-dualism), but he *disagreed* with Śaṅkara's concepts of an attributeless (Nirguṇa) Brahman and an illusory (Mithyā) world.

For Rāmānuja, reality is one, but it is "qualified" (Viśiṣṭa) by real attributes and parts. He championed Bhakti (devotion) as the primary path to liberation.

Rāmānuja's concept of Brahman

Rāmānuja's Brahman *is* Saguṇa Brahman (Brahman with qualities). This is the *only* Brahman; the idea of a Nirguṇa Brahman is a logical contradiction for Rāmānuja (how can a "reality" have no qualities?).

Brahman, for Rāmānuja, is the one, supreme, personal God (identified with Viṣṇu). He is a single, unified reality, but He is not a simple, homogenous substance.

Brahman's "body" consists of two real and eternal parts:

  1. Cit (Conscious): The innumerable, individual souls (Jīvas).
  2. Acit (Unconscious): The material world (Prakṛti/Matter).

This is the "Brahman-Jīva-Jagat" complex. Brahman is the "soul" (Ātman) of this complex, and the souls and the world are His "body" (Śarīra). The body cannot exist without the soul, and the soul controls the body from within. This is a "body-soul" relationship (Śarīra-Śarīri-Bhāva).

Thus, souls and matter are *real*, *eternal*, and *dependent* on Brahman. They are not illusory (like in Advaita) nor independent (like in Sāṃkhya). They are "modes" (Prakāra) of Brahman.

Rāmānuja's Criticism of Śaṅkara’s concept of Māyā

Rāmānuja launched a powerful and systematic critique against Śaṅkara's doctrine of Māyā/Avidyā. He argued that the concept is illogical and not supported by scripture. His main arguments (often called the Saptavidha-Anupapatti or "seven-fold untenability") include:

  1. Locus of Māyā (Āśraya-anupapatti): *Where* does Māyā reside? It cannot be in Brahman (because Brahman is pure knowledge and cannot be "ignorant"). It cannot be in the Jīva (because the Jīva itself is a *product* of Māyā, which is circular reasoning).
  2. Nature of Māyā (Svarūpa-anupapatti): *What* is Māyā? Is it real or unreal? If it's *real*, you have dualism (Brahman and Māyā), which Advaita denies. If it's *unreal*, how can it "project" a real-looking world? If it is "inexplicable," this is just a way of hiding a logical flaw.
  3. Obscuring Nature (Tirodhāna-anupapatti): How can Māyā "conceal" Brahman? Brahman is said to be self-luminous, pure consciousness. Concealing it is like saying "darkness can cover the sun." It's impossible.
  4. Contradiction with Knowledge (Nivartaka-anupapatti): Advaita says Māyā/Avidyā is "removed by knowledge" (Jñāna). But Rāmānuja argues that knowledge only reveals what *is* or *is not*; it cannot *destroy* a positive entity like Māyā is claimed to be.
  5. No Source of Knowledge (Pramāṇa-anupapatti): Which Pramāṇa (source of knowledge) *proves* that Māyā exists? It cannot be *Perception* (we see a real world, not an illusion). It cannot be *Inference* (there is no logical basis). And it cannot be *Scripture* (Rāmānuja argues the Vedas declare the world is a real creation of God, not an illusion).
Key Difference Summary:
Concept Advaita (Śaṅkara) Viśiṣṭādvaita (Rāmānuja)
Brahman Only reality. Ultimately Nirguṇa (attributeless). Only reality. Always Saguṇa (with attributes). A personal God.
World (Jagat) Mithyā (Unreal/Illusory). An *appearance* of Brahman due to Māyā. Satya (Real). The real "body" of Brahman.
Souls (Jīva) Identical to Brahman. Separation is an illusion. Part of Brahman (his body). Real, distinct, and eternal, but dependent.
Māyā A positive, inexplicable principle of illusion that hides Brahman. A logical absurdity. The term "Māyā" in scripture simply means the "real, wonderful creative power" of God, not illusion.
Path to Liberation Jñāna (Knowledge). Realizing "I am Brahman." Bhakti (Devotion) and Prapatti (Surrender) to God.