A Study of Purusha, Prakriti, and the Sankhya Account of How the Universe Unfolds
Abstract: Sankhya is among the oldest and most
systematically developed of the six classical darshanas of Sanatana Dharma. It
offers a dualistic account of reality built on two eternal and categorically
distinct principles: Purusha, pure consciousness, and Prakriti, the material or
dynamic principle from which all of manifest existence evolves. Neither
principle is reducible to the other, and the relationship between them, the proximity
of consciousness to matter that triggers the cosmic evolution, is the key to
Sankhya's account of how the universe comes to be and why liberation from its
cycles is both necessary and possible. This article explores the Sankhya
framework in depth: its understanding of Purusha and Prakriti, the twenty-five
tattvas or principles of cosmic evolution, the role of the three gunas in the
differentiation of the world, and what the Sankhya system understands
liberation to consist of. It also examines the Sankhya system's relationship to
Yoga, with which it is historically paired, and its enduring influence on
virtually every subsequent philosophical and medical tradition in Sanatana
Dharma.
Keywords: Sankhya, Purusha, Prakriti, gunas, tattvas,
cosmic evolution, liberation, darshana, Kapila, Ishvarakrishna, Sanatana
Dharma, dualism
Introduction
There is a quality of intellectual courage in the
Sankhya system that deserves recognition before anything else about it is
examined. In a tradition that predominantly tends toward the affirmation of a
single ultimate reality, whether Brahman in the Vedantic sense or the divine in
its theistic expressions, Sankhya stands apart by insisting that reality is
irreducibly dual: there is consciousness and there is matter, and neither is a
form of the other, neither reduces to the other, and neither can exist without
the other in the manifest world. This position is not confusion or
incompleteness. It is a carefully reasoned philosophical stance that the
tradition maintained with rigour and defended with sophistication against the
competing claims of both monism and theism.
The Sankhya system is attributed to the sage Kapila,
who is described in the Bhagavata Purana as an avatar of Vishnu, and its
classical textual expression is the Sankhya Karika of Ishvarakrishna, composed
probably in the fourth or fifth century CE. But the ideas the Karika
systematises are considerably older, appearing in the Upanishads, the
Mahabharata, and the Gita, which explicitly uses Sankhya categories to describe
the nature of prakriti and purusha. The framework is foundational for the
entire tradition's understanding of the relationship between consciousness and
matter.
The Two Eternal Principles: Purusha
and Prakriti
Purusha in Sankhya is pure consciousness: unchanging,
uninvolved, inactive, a witness. It has no qualities in the Sankhya sense
because qualities are features of matter, not of consciousness. It does not
act. It does not create. It simply is: the eternal witness, the light of
awareness that illuminates everything without itself being illuminated by
anything else. There are, in the Sankhya system's classical formulation, many
Purushas, one for each individual consciousness, though this plurality is
itself the product of the identification of consciousness with matter rather
than an original feature of consciousness itself.
Prakriti is the dynamic material principle: active,
creative, constantly changing, the source of all differentiation in the
manifest world. In its unmanifest state, Prakriti is the perfect equilibrium of
the three gunas, sattva, rajas, and tamas, held in dynamic balance. When this
equilibrium is disturbed, through the proximity of Purusha, the cosmic
evolution begins. Prakriti produces the twenty-three principles that together
constitute the manifest world, from the subtlest to the grossest, from pure
intelligence to the five elements.
मूलप्रकृतिरविकृतिर्महदाद्याः प्रकृतिविकृतयः
सप्त। षोडशकस्तु
विकारो न
प्रकृतिर्न विकृतिः
पुरुषः॥
Mula-prakriti avikritir mahad-adyah
prakriti-vikritayah sapta, Shodashakas tu vikaro na prakritir na vikritih
purushah.
(The root prakriti is neither a
modification nor a product; the seven beginning with Mahat are both products
and producers; the sixteen are only products; Purusha is neither a product nor
a producer.)
Sankhya Karika, Verse 3
(Ishvarakrishna)
This single verse encapsulates the entire hierarchical
structure of Sankhya's cosmic evolution. Mula-prakriti, the root material
principle, is the unmodified source from which everything else evolves. Mahat,
the cosmic intelligence or buddhi, is the first product of prakriti's evolution
and is itself a source of further products. The sixteen include the eleven
sense organs and the five subtle elements. And Purusha stands entirely outside
this hierarchy of production, neither produced by anything nor producing
anything. The clarity of this categorisation is the hallmark of the Sankhya
approach: it maps the entire cosmos with taxonomic precision.
The Twenty-Five Tattvas: The Map of
Manifestation
The Sankhya account of cosmic evolution proceeds
through twenty-five tattvas or principles. From Prakriti evolves Mahat, the
cosmic intelligence or buddhi. From Mahat evolves Ahamkara, the ego-principle
or the sense of individual identity. From Ahamkara evolve, in two directions:
the eleven Indriyas, the organs of perception and action along with the mind,
and the Tanmatras, the five subtle elements of sound, touch, form, taste, and
smell. From the Tanmatras evolve the five Mahabhutas, the five gross elements of
space, air, fire, water, and earth. Together with Purusha, these twenty-five
account for everything in the manifest universe.
What is philosophically significant about this
sequence is that it is an account of increasing grossness: from the most
subtle, Mahat, through the increasingly concrete, to the most tangible, the
five gross elements. The world we inhabit and experience with the senses is the
furthest point of prakriti's self-differentiation. And the path back, which
Sankhya describes as the path of liberation, is a reversal of this sequence:
the discriminative intelligence working backwards through the tattvas until it
recognises that Purusha is not any of these evolved products but the eternal
witness in whose light they all appear.
पुरुषस्य दर्शनार्थं
कैवल्यार्थं तथा
प्रधानस्य। पङ्गोरिव
पक्षाहीनस्तद् योगोऽन्यत्र
न भवति॥
Purushasya darshanartham
kaivalyartham tatha pradhanasya, Pangor iva paksha-hinas tad yogo 'nyatra na
bhavati.
(For the sake of showing itself to
Purusha and for the sake of liberation, Prakriti acts like a lame person with
wings. This conjunction (of Purusha and Prakriti) serves no other purpose.)
Sankhya Karika, Verse 21
(Ishvarakrishna)
The image is precise and memorable: Prakriti is like a
lame person with wings, Purusha like a blind person with working legs. Neither
can accomplish their respective purposes alone. Prakriti has the power of
action but no consciousness to direct it. Purusha has consciousness but no
capacity for action. Their proximity, the lame and the blind travelling
together, enables both the cosmic evolution that Prakriti produces and the
eventual liberation that Purusha achieves through discrimination. The
relationship is functional rather than ontological: they do not merge, and they
are not the same kind of thing, but their conjunction is what makes both the
world and the liberation from the world possible.
Liberation in Sankhya: Viveka and
Kaivalya
Liberation in the Sankhya framework is called
kaivalya, aloneness or isolation, and it consists in the complete discriminative
recognition that Purusha is not and never has been any of the products of
Prakriti's evolution. The suffering that characterises conditioned existence
arises from the misidentification of Purusha with the products of Prakriti: the
ego, the intellect, the mind, the body. When this misidentification is
dissolved through sustained discriminative awareness, viveka-khyati, the
Purusha recognises itself as the eternal witness that it always was, and the
cosmic evolution ceases to bind it.
This is not described as a merging with the absolute
or a dissolution of individual consciousness into universal consciousness. In
the Sankhya framework, such a merger would be a category error: consciousness
and matter cannot merge because they are categorically different. Liberation is
instead the Purusha's recognition of its own nature, the seer seeing that it
has always been the seer and nothing it saw was itself. The manifest world
continues; Prakriti continues to evolve. But the liberated Purusha is no longer
subject to that evolution because it no longer mistakes itself for any of its
products.
Conclusion
Sankhya's enduring significance in the tradition is
its provision of the most systematic and rigorous account of the relationship
between consciousness and matter available in the entire philosophical
tradition. Every subsequent school has had to position itself relative to
Sankhya's fundamental categories: the Vedanta rejects the ultimate dualism but
retains the Sankhya account of the manifest world; Yoga accepts the Sankhya
metaphysics and adds the path of disciplined practice; Ayurveda uses the
Sankhya account of the gunas and the five elements as its fundamental framework
for understanding the human body.
What Sankhya offers that no other darshana offers in quite
the same form is the precision of its discrimination between the seer and the
seen. This discrimination, viveka, is the foundational insight that every
tradition in the darshana system, in different ways and with different
metaphysical frameworks, is ultimately trying to produce. Sankhya's
contribution is to make the nature of that discrimination absolutely clear: the
seer is not any version of the seen, however subtle. The consciousness that
witnesses is not the mind that thinks, not the ego that claims ownership, not
the body that feels, not even the cosmic intelligence that encompasses all of
these. It stands apart, unchanging, as the light in which everything else
appears.
यथा प्रकाशयत्येकः कृत्स्नं
लोकमिमं रविः।
क्षेत्रं क्षेत्री
तथा कृत्स्नं
प्रकाशयति भारत॥
Yatha prakashayaty ekah kritsnam
lokam imam ravih, Kshetram kshetri tatha kritsnam prakashayati bharata.
(Just as the one sun illuminates
this entire world, the knower of the field illuminates the entire field, O
Bharata.)
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 13, Verse 33
The sun does not become the things it illuminates. It
shines and they are visible. This is Sankhya's most essential contribution: the
recognition that consciousness is the light in which everything else appears,
and that the light's nature is not changed by what it illuminates. This
recognition, when it becomes genuinely lived rather than merely understood, is
liberation. Sankhya is the system that most directly makes this recognition the
explicit and central object of philosophical inquiry.
References and Suggested Reading
Sankhya Karika of Ishvarakrishna (with commentary by
Gaudapada)
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 13 (Kshetra-Kshetrajna Vibhaga
Yoga)
Bhagavata Purana, Canto 3 (Kapila's teaching to
Devahuti)
S. Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, Volume 2 (1927)
Gerald Larson, Classical Samkhya (1969)
P.V. Kane, History of Dharmashastra, Volume 5