A Study of Nada, Shabda-Brahman, and the Agamic Understanding of Sacred Sound
Abstract: The concept of mantra in the Agamic and
Tantric traditions is among the most philosophically rich and most frequently
misunderstood elements of the entire practice system. A mantra is not, in this
tradition's understanding, a prayer addressed to a deity or a magical formula
that compels supernatural results. It is a specific configuration of sound that
embodies a specific aspect of cosmic consciousness: the vibration of the
mantric sound, when it is produced with correct pronunciation, correct
intention, and genuine devotional engagement, resonates with the cosmic
vibration that it encodes and produces specific effects in the consciousness of
the practitioner. This article explores the Agamic and Tantric understanding of
the nature of sound, the theory of Nada-Brahman and the cosmic significance of
primordial vibration, the three levels of shabda (speech) and how they relate
to the levels of consciousness, the specific theory of bija (seed) mantras, and
what the tradition means when it says that the universe itself is a vibration
of consciousness.
Keywords: Mantra, Nada-Brahman, shabda, bija mantra,
sound consciousness, Kashmir Shaivism, Agamas, Om, Spanda, sacred sound,
Sanatana Dharma, vibration
Introduction
Sound occupies a more fundamental place in the Agamic
and Tantric understanding of reality than in almost any other philosophical
tradition. In most traditions, sound is a secondary phenomenon: the world
exists, and sound is one of the many properties of objects in that world. In
the Agamic tradition, this relationship is inverted. Sound, specifically nada,
the primordial vibration of consciousness, is the primary phenomenon from which
all of manifest existence unfolds. The world is sound, in the deepest possible
sense: it is the expression of the divine consciousness's own
self-communication, which takes the form of vibration and unfolds through
successive levels of subtlety into the specific forms of the manifest world.
This is not a poetic or metaphorical claim. It is a
philosophical position that the Agamic tradition has worked out with
considerable precision through its analysis of the four levels of speech, the
nature of mantra, and the mechanism by which sound produces effects in
consciousness. The tradition's understanding of how mantra works is grounded in
this philosophical account of the primordial nature of sound, and the specific
practices it prescribes for mantra japa, the repetition of mantras, are the
practical application of this philosophical understanding.
Nada-Brahman: The Universe as Primordial
Vibration
The concept of Nada-Brahman, Brahman as primordial
sound, is one of the oldest and most central in the tradition. It appears in
the Upanishads, which describe Om as the sound that represents Brahman, and it
is developed with much greater philosophical detail in the Agamic and Tantric
traditions. The tradition's understanding is that the absolute consciousness,
in its dynamic aspect as Shakti, expresses itself through vibration, spanda,
and this primordial vibration is nada. The manifest universe, in all its
specificity and multiplicity, is the differentiation of this primordial
vibration into increasingly specific and increasingly dense forms of vibration,
from the subtlest cosmic sounds to the gross vibrations of the physical world.
ओमित्येकाक्षरं ब्रह्म
व्याहरन्मामनुस्मरन्। यः
प्रयाति त्यजन्देहं
स याति
परमां गतिम्॥
Om ity ekaksharam brahma vyaharan
mam anusmaran, Yah prayati tyajan deham sa yati paramam gatim.
(One who departs from the body
while uttering the single syllable Om, and while remembering Me, attains the
supreme goal.)
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 8, Verse 13
Ekaksharam Brahma: the single syllable that is
Brahman. Om is the most fundamental mantra in the tradition precisely because
it is the closest possible approximation in human sound to the primordial nada
from which all manifestation arises. The tradition's analysis of Om divides it
into its three constituent sounds, A, U, and M, each of which corresponds to a
specific state of consciousness: waking, dream, and deep sleep respectively.
The silence that follows the sounding of Om corresponds to the fourth state,
turiya, the witnessing consciousness that pervades and transcends the other
three. The complete Om, sound and silence together, is therefore a sonic
representation of the complete range of consciousness.
The Four Levels of Speech: Vaikhari
to Para
The Agamic tradition's most distinctive contribution
to the understanding of mantra is the theory of the four levels of speech (vak
or shabda), which traces the production of sound from its most primordial
source in pure consciousness to its most manifest form as the gross physical
sound that the ordinary ear hears. This theory is developed most fully in the
Kashmir Shaivism tradition.
Vaikhari is the most manifest level: the gross physical
sound that is produced by the vocal apparatus and heard by the physical ear.
This is the level of ordinary speech and also of the mantra as it is
conventionally recited. Madhyama is the subtler level of mental speech: the
sounds that exist as formulated thought before being expressed in gross
physical sound. Pashyanti is the level at which sound exists as
undifferentiated potential, before it takes on the specific form of particular
words or mantras. And Para is the most fundamental level: pure vibration of
consciousness itself, before it has differentiated into any specific form of
speech or sound. Para vak is not a sound in any ordinary sense. It is the
dynamic aspect of consciousness itself, the primordial vibration that is
indistinguishable from consciousness's own nature.
चत्वारि वाक्
परिमिता पदानि
तानि विदुर्ब्राह्मणा
ये मनीषिणः।
गुहा त्रीणि
निहिता नेङ्गयन्ति
तुरीयं वाचो
मनुष्या वदन्ति॥
Catvari vak parimita padani tani
vidur brahmanah ye manishinah, Guha trini nihita nengayanti turiyam vacho manushya
vadanti.
(Speech has four measured steps;
those who are wise and learned know them. Three are hidden in the cave and do
not move; the fourth is what human beings speak.)
Rigveda, 1.164.45
Three are hidden in the cave: Para, Pashyanti, and
Madhyama are the three levels of speech that are not accessible to ordinary
consciousness. What human beings speak is Vaikhari, the gross physical sound.
But when the Agamic practitioner recites a mantra, the tradition understands
that the gross physical sound of the mantra is the outermost expression of the
mantra's full reality: the mantra exists at all four levels simultaneously, and
the practitioner who recites it with genuine understanding and genuine
attunement is not merely producing a physical sound but resonating with the
mantra's presence at all four levels, including the Para level where the mantra
is a direct expression of the divine consciousness it encodes.
Bija Mantras: Seed Sounds of Cosmic
Reality
Bija mantras, seed mantras, are the most fundamental
units of the Tantric mantra system: single-syllable sounds that are understood
to be the compressed sonic representation of specific aspects of divine energy
or specific deities. The bija AIm represents Saraswati's energy of knowledge
and creative expression. Hrim represents Maya's energy of the divine power of
manifestation. Klim represents the attractive power of Vishnu or Krishna. Shrim
represents Lakshmi's abundance. Dum represents Durga's protective power. These
are not arbitrary syllables. The tradition understands them as the specific
sonic frequencies that resonate with the specific aspects of cosmic
consciousness they represent, and their repetition in meditation is understood
to produce specific effects in the practitioner's consciousness by activating
those resonances.
The theory of bija mantras is the most specifically
Tantric element of the mantra tradition, and it reflects the Tantric
philosophical framework most directly: if the universe is a differentiation of
primordial vibration, and if specific aspects of cosmic reality correspond to
specific frequencies of that vibration, then the specific syllables that embody
those frequencies are not merely symbols of cosmic reality but actual sonic
instantiations of it. The bija mantra for Saraswati is not a label for
Saraswati's energy. It is a concentrated expression of that energy in sound
form. This is what the tradition means when it calls a bija mantra the deity
itself in sound: not a metaphor but a philosophical claim about the nature of
sound and its relationship to the cosmic reality it encodes.
Conclusion
The Agamic and Tantric understanding of mantra as
sound consciousness is one of the most philosophically developed accounts of
the relationship between sound, consciousness, and cosmic reality in any
intellectual tradition. It is not magic in the pejorative sense: not the
manipulation of supernatural forces through incantation. It is a sophisticated
applied philosophy of sound, grounded in a specific understanding of the cosmic
significance of primordial vibration and the relationship between the levels of
speech and the levels of consciousness.
The practitioner who recites a mantra with genuine
understanding of this framework is not performing a superstitious ritual. They
are engaging in a disciplined practice that, in the tradition's understanding,
uses the sonic embodiment of cosmic consciousness as the instrument of their
own consciousness's alignment with and recognition of what it fundamentally is.
The mantra is the universe singing back to the practitioner what the
practitioner actually is. And the recognition of this, gradually deepened
through sustained practice, is itself a form of the liberation the tradition
offers.
नादं बिन्दुं कलां
सर्वं मन्त्रमूलं
श्रितो ध्वनिः।
यो जानाति
स योगीन्द्रो
न चान्यः
शिवमर्हति॥
Nadam bindum kalam sarvam
mantra-mulam shrito dhvanih, Yo janati sa yogindro na canyo shivam arhati.
(Sound, resting in nada, bindu, and
kala, is the root of all mantras. One who knows this is the king of yogis; no
other is worthy of Shiva.)
Shiva Purana, Vayaviya Samhita,
1.16.15
Mantra-mulam shrito dhvanih: sound, which rests at the
root of mantra. The universe is fundamentally sonic: it is nada at its most
primordial, differentiated through bindu (the point of concentration) and kala
(the aspect or phase of divine energy) into the specific sounds that constitute
the mantric tradition's treasury of divine names and seed syllables. The
practitioner who understands this, who genuinely comprehends what sound is and
what the mantra's relationship to consciousness is, is described as the king of
yogis: the one whose understanding is complete and whose practice is therefore
fully aligned with what the practice is actually doing.
References and Suggested Reading
Vijnana Bhairava Tantra (on mantra as consciousness)
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 8
Kshemaraja, Pratyabhijnahridayam
Abhinavagupta, Tantraloka (on the four levels of
speech)
Alain Danielou, The Myths and Gods of India (1991)
Swami Lakshman Joo, Kashmir Shaivism: The Secret
Supreme (1988)