Friday, July 3, 2026

Thinking as a Way of Being: Why Philosophy Is Spiritual Practice in Sanatana Dharma

A Study of Jnana-Yoga, the Examined Life, and the Inseparability of Understanding and Liberation

Abstract

In most modern contexts, philosophy and spiritual practice are understood as distinct activities: philosophy is an intellectual discipline concerned with argument and analysis, while spiritual practice is a set of practical techniques for producing specific experiential states or for developing specific qualities of character and consciousness. In the darshana tradition of Sanatana Dharma, this distinction does not exist in the same form. The darshanas are not merely intellectual systems to be studied and evaluated. They are darshanas in the literal sense of the Sanskrit word: ways of seeing, perspectives that, when genuinely inhabited, transform the quality of the consciousness that inhabits them. This article explores the tradition's understanding of why philosophical inquiry is itself a spiritual practice, what it means for thinking to be a path of transformation rather than merely a method of analysis, how the Vedantic tradition in particular understands the relationship between understanding and liberation, and what the cultivation of philosophical wisdom, viveka, actually produces in the person who genuinely develops it.

Keywords: Philosophy, spiritual practice, darshana, jnana-yoga, viveka, transformation, Sanatana Dharma, liberation, understanding, Vedanta, contemplation

Introduction

The word darshana means seeing or vision. It comes from the root drish, to see, the same root that gives us the word for mirror, darpana, and for the one who sees, the drashtu or seer. When the tradition calls its philosophical systems darshanas, it is making a specific claim about what philosophy is: not merely a set of propositions to be accepted or rejected, not merely a method of analysis to be applied to questions, but a way of seeing, a quality of vision that, when it is genuinely developed, changes what one sees and how one sees it.

This understanding of philosophy as transformation rather than merely analysis is the key to understanding why, in the darshana tradition, rigorous philosophical inquiry is considered a spiritual practice rather than an intellectual exercise. A spiritual practice is something that changes the practitioner. It is not merely a performance or a technique. It produces a different quality of consciousness, a different relationship to experience, a different capacity for recognising what is real and what is appearance. And this is precisely what the tradition claims for its darshanas: that the person who has genuinely inhabited a darshana, who has not merely studied it but allowed it to shape their quality of seeing, is a different person from the one who had not done so. The seeing has changed because the seer has changed.

Jnana-Yoga: Knowledge as Liberation

The Bhagavad Gita presents Jnana-Yoga, the path of knowledge, as one of the principal paths to liberation available to the human being. What makes the path of knowledge distinctively a yoga, a discipline, rather than merely an intellectual activity is its insistence that the knowledge in question is not propositional knowledge, the knowledge that something is the case, but transformative knowledge, the direct recognition of reality that changes the quality of the consciousness that has it. This is the distinction the Gita makes between paroksha jnana, indirect knowledge, and aparoksha jnana, direct knowledge.

हि ज्ञानेन सदृशं पवित्रमिह विद्यते। तत्स्वयं योगसंसिद्धः कालेनात्मनि विन्दति॥

Na hi jnanena sadrisham pavitram iha vidyate, Tat svayam yoga-samsiddhah kalenatmani vindati.

(There is nothing as purifying as knowledge. One who is perfected in yoga finds it within themselves in due course.)

Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 4, Verse 38

Pavitramiha vidyate: purifying in this world. Knowledge, in the Gita's understanding, is not merely informative but purifying: it changes the quality of the consciousness that possesses it, removing the obscurations of ignorance and misidentification that generate suffering. The knowledge that purifies is not the knowledge of facts but the direct recognition of the nature of the self and its relationship to reality. And this recognition, the Gita says, is found within oneself, within one's own consciousness, not in any external source. The philosophical inquiry is the path inward: it turns the mind's attention from the external world where it habitually looks for its objects of understanding to the internal ground from which all understanding arises.

Viveka as the Path's Essential Instrument

The specific quality of philosophical understanding that the darshana tradition identifies as spiritually transformative is viveka, discriminative wisdom. Viveka is not the ability to reason correctly about abstract propositions, though this capacity is developed along the way. Viveka is the ability to distinguish, in the specific context of one's own experience, between what is real and what is appearance, between what is permanent and what is transient, between the witness and what is witnessed, between the self and what the self has been misidentifying as itself.

Adi Shankaracharya's Vivekachudamani, the Crest Jewel of Discrimination, is the most sustained account of what this discrimination involves and how it is developed. The text makes clear that viveka is not achieved through intellectual study alone, however rigorous. It requires the full engagement of the person: the intellectual clarity to see the distinction precisely, the emotional courage to hold it when the ego resists it, and the experiential depth of practice that allows the distinction to become not a conclusion of reasoning but a living feature of perception. Philosophy becomes spiritual practice when it is pursued with this quality of full personal engagement, when the philosophical question is not about the world out there but about what one fundamentally is.

विवेकः खलु साधनानां प्रधानम्। शमादयः साधनसंपत्तयः।

Vivekah khalu sadhanam pradhanam. Shamadayah sadhana-sampatayah.

(Discrimination (viveka) is indeed the foremost of the spiritual means. Quietness of mind and the rest are the fourfold equipment.)

Vivekachudamani, Verse 14 (Adi Shankaracharya)

Sadhanam pradhanam: the foremost of spiritual means. This is Shankaracharya's placement of viveka at the absolute pinnacle of the spiritual path's instrumental qualities. Not tapasya, not meditation, not devotion, not service, not even the study of scripture is placed above viveka in his assessment of what the spiritual path most requires. Why? Because without viveka, every other practice is subject to the fundamental confusion that the path is designed to remove: the confusion about what one fundamentally is. The meditator who meditates without viveka may achieve great stillness and still not recognise what is still. The devotee who loves God without viveka may develop great love and still mistake God for what God is not. Viveka is the light that allows all the other practices to be oriented correctly, to be in the service of genuine recognition rather than merely in the service of the ego's spiritual ambitions.

The Examined Life as the Spiritual Life

Socrates' famous declaration that the unexamined life is not worth living finds its most complete parallel in the darshana tradition's understanding of what the philosophical life actually is. The examination Socrates points to is not merely intellectual self-examination, the noting of one's thoughts and feelings as they arise. It is the fundamental examination of what one is, what one values, what one's assumptions about reality actually are and whether they can withstand sustained scrutiny. This is precisely the examination that the darshana tradition's philosophical practice conducts, using its own specific methods and oriented toward its own specific understanding of what the examination will reveal.

The darshana tradition's version of the examined life is the life in which the question who am I is not a rhetorical flourish but a genuine ongoing inquiry, in which the answer that presents itself to ordinary consciousness, I am this body, this person, this set of memories and preferences and fears and hopes, is subjected to the same rigorous analysis that the Nyaya philosopher subjects to any other claim, and in which the result of that analysis, if conducted with genuine honesty and genuine courage, is the recognition that none of these answers is adequate.

When Understanding Becomes Liberation

The tradition's understanding of how philosophical inquiry becomes liberation rather than merely understanding is captured in the concept of direct or immediate knowledge, aparoksha jnana. The philosophical path, as the Vedantic tradition understands it, begins with shravana, hearing the teaching from a qualified source; proceeds through manana, sustained reflection that removes intellectual doubt; and culminates in nididhyasana, the deep absorption in the truth that produces not a conclusion but a recognition.

The recognition, when it genuinely arrives, does not feel like the arrival of new information. It feels like the removal of an obstruction that was preventing one from seeing what was always there. The Advaita tradition's most characteristic image for this is the rope mistaken for a snake: in poor light, what is actually a rope on the path is seen as a snake, and fear arises. When the light improves and the rope is seen for what it is, the fear dissolves not because a new snake-free path has been found but because the thing that was causing the fear was never what it appeared to be. The snake was never there. The liberation produced by genuine philosophical recognition is of this kind: not the achievement of something new but the removal of the misidentification that was generating the suffering. The philosophical inquiry is what improves the light.

Conclusion

Philosophy in the darshana tradition is spiritual practice because it is oriented toward, and genuinely capable of producing, the transformation of consciousness that the tradition calls liberation. This is not philosophy in the academic sense of a discipline concerned with intellectual rigor for its own sake, though intellectual rigor is valued and developed along the way. It is philosophy as the tradition from which the word philosophy itself was derived actually understood it: the love of wisdom, where wisdom is not information or technique but the quality of being that sees clearly, acts rightly, and is at peace with what is.

The person who has genuinely inhabited a darshana, who has allowed its specific way of seeing to shape their quality of perception over years of practice and inquiry, is not merely a better reasoner. They are someone whose relationship to their own experience has been fundamentally changed. The suffering that arose from misidentification, the confusion that arose from wrong understanding, the fear that arose from not knowing what one fundamentally is, these have been reduced or dissolved not through any technique applied to the symptoms but through the understanding that has addressed the cause. This is why the tradition says that knowledge is the highest purifier. Not because knowing is better than feeling or better than devotion or better than action, but because the specific quality of knowing that the darshana tradition cultivates, the direct recognition of what is real, removes the root of suffering at its source. That is what spiritual practice does. That is what the darshanas offer.

ज्ञानेनैव हि संसारः सम्भवो नान्यथा मतः। ज्ञानेनैव मोक्षोऽपि नान्यथेति व्यवस्थितम्॥

Jnanenavia hi samsarah sambhavo nanyatha matah, Jnanenava ca moksho 'pi nanyatheti vyavasthitam.

(Through knowledge alone does samsara arise, not otherwise. And through knowledge alone does liberation come, not otherwise: this is the established conclusion.)

Vivekachudamani, Verse 47 (Adi Shankaracharya)

Jnanenaiva: through knowledge alone. Samsara, the cycle of conditioned existence, arises from wrong knowledge, avidya. Liberation, moksha, arises from right knowledge, vidya. Both the bondage and the liberation are, at their root, a matter of knowing or not knowing what one fundamentally is. This is the darshana tradition's most complete statement of why philosophy is spiritual practice: because what one knows, in the deepest and most direct sense of knowing, is what one is. And when the knowing is complete, the liberation is complete. There is nothing left to achieve, nowhere to go, nothing more to understand. The examination has revealed what was always there. The darshana has done what darshanas are for.

References and Suggested Reading

Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 4 (on jnana-yoga)

Adi Shankaracharya, Vivekachudamani

Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, Chapter 2 (on shravana, manana, nididhyasana)

Swami Vivekananda, Jnana Yoga (1896)

Ramana Maharshi, Who Am I? (Nan Yar)

S. Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, Volume 2 (1927)

Six Blind Men and One Elephant: How the Darshanas Complement Rather Than Compete

A Study of Philosophical Plurality, Anekantavada, and the Tradition of Darshanik Dialogue in Sanatana Dharma
Abstract

The six classical darshanas of Sanatana Dharma, Sankhya, Yoga, Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Mimamsa, and Vedanta, along with the several schools of Vedanta and the heterodox systems of Buddhism and Jainism, present to the modern mind an overwhelming multiplicity of philosophical positions that often appear to directly contradict each other. Sankhya is dualist; Advaita is monist. Nyaya is theist; Sankhya is atheist. Mimamsa insists on the authority of the Vedas as the supreme pramana; Yoga adds Ishvara as a special object of practice; Advaita Vedanta questions whether the God of popular theism is an adequate understanding of the absolute. These differences are real and the tradition never pretended otherwise: the darshana literature is full of vighna-khandana, the refutation of rival views. But the tradition also understood something about its own philosophical plurality that a competitive reading misses: that different darshanas address different aspects of a reality too large for any single perspective to encompass, and that the tradition's philosophical vitality, its ability to remain alive and relevant across more than two thousand years, is partly the product of this plurality rather than despite it.

Keywords: Darshanas, complementarity, plurality, anekantavada, philosophical dialogue, Sanatana Dharma, Nyaya, Sankhya, Vedanta, Yoga, Mimamsa, Vaisheshika

Introduction

There is a story in the Indian tradition, also found in the Jain tradition where it is most elaborately developed, about several blind men who each touch a different part of an elephant and then argue fiercely about what the elephant is. The one who touched the trunk says it is like a snake. The one who touched the leg says it is like a pillar. The one who touched the side says it is like a wall. The one who touched the tail says it is like a rope. Each is right about the part they encountered. None is right about the whole. And the argument between them, conducted with complete conviction on each side, produces more heat than light.

The tradition often uses this image, developed into the Jain doctrine of anekantavada, many-sidedness, to describe the relationship between its own philosophical schools. Each darshana has encountered a genuine aspect of the reality it is investigating. Each has developed a rigorous and sophisticated account of what it has encountered. And the apparent contradictions between them are, in this understanding, not failures of philosophical reasoning but the natural result of different perspectives on a reality that no single perspective can fully encompass. The tradition's response to philosophical plurality is not the demand for one perspective to defeat all the others but the cultivation of the wisdom to understand what each perspective is genuinely seeing and how the different views together constitute a more complete understanding than any single view alone.

Different Questions, Different Answers

The most important thing to understand about the relationship between the darshanas is that they are often answering different questions, not different answers to the same question. Sankhya asks: what is the relationship between consciousness and matter, and what does this tell us about liberation? Yoga asks: what specific practices produce the cessation of the mind's modifications? Nyaya asks: what are the valid means of knowledge, and how do we reason correctly? Vaisheshika asks: what are the ultimate constituents of the physical world? Mimamsa asks: how are the Vedic texts to be correctly interpreted and applied? Vedanta asks: what is the ultimate nature of Brahman, the self, and the world?

These are genuinely different questions, and the fact that different darshanas give different answers is partly because they are addressing different aspects of the enormous complex of questions that philosophical and spiritual life generates. The Nyaya logician who develops the five-membered syllogism and the Advaita Vedantin who develops the neti neti method of negation are not in direct competition. They are addressing different dimensions of the same ultimate project, developing different tools for different aspects of the work.

एकं सद् विप्राः बहुधा वदन्ति।

Ekam sad viprah bahudha vadanti.

(Truth is one; the wise speak of it in many ways.)

Rigveda, 1.164.46

Ekam sat viprah bahudha vadanti: truth is one, the wise speak of it in many ways. This verse from the Rigveda is the tradition's most ancient and most celebrated affirmation of the legitimacy of philosophical plurality. It is not a licence for relativism: the truth is still one. But it is the recognition that the one truth can be approached from many angles, described using many frameworks, and illuminated through many methods, without any of these approaches exhausting what the truth is or contradicting the others in any fundamental way. The darshanas are, on this understanding, the tradition's collection of many-ways of speaking the one truth.

Historical Relationships and Mutual Development

The darshanas did not develop in isolation from each other. They developed through sustained mutual engagement: each school's positions were sharpened and refined through the critiques of the other schools, and many of the most important developments in any darshana's history were direct responses to challenges from rival schools. The Nyaya-Vaisheshika engagement with Buddhist epistemology produced some of the most sophisticated epistemological work in the tradition. The Mimamsa school's development of the theory of the eternal word was a response to Buddhist challenges to Vedic authority. The Advaita tradition's refinement of the maya doctrine was driven by Dvaita and Vishishtadvaita critiques.

This history of productive philosophical dialogue, conducted with intellectual rigour and genuine engagement with the strongest versions of rival positions, is one of the tradition's most impressive features. The darshana tradition developed not through the suppression of diversity but through its cultivation. Each new challenge produced a new sophistication in the responses, and the overall quality of the philosophical tradition improved through the engagement rather than being weakened by the disagreement.

वादे वादे जायते तत्त्वबोधः।

Vade vade jayate tattva-bodhah.

(Through debate, through discussion, understanding of truth is born.)

Traditional saying

Vade vade: through debate, through dialogue. The tradition's understanding is that genuine philosophical understanding is not produced by individual contemplation alone but through the encounter with the best available alternatives, the engagement with the strongest challenges to one's own position. The darshana tradition's culture of rigorous philosophical dialogue, conducted within a framework that valued both intellectual rigour and genuine openness to the strongest available challenges, is part of what has kept the tradition philosophically vital across more than two thousand years.

Complementarity in Practice: Different Tools for Different People

Beyond the philosophical complementarity of the darshanas as different perspectives on a common reality, there is a practical complementarity that the tradition has always recognised: different approaches suit different temperaments, different levels of philosophical development, and different specific spiritual needs. Yoga as a darshana and as a practice speaks most directly to the person who learns through disciplined bodily and mental practice. Bhakti-oriented Vedanta speaks most directly to the person whose primary mode of engagement with the divine is devotional. Nyaya speaks most directly to the intellectually inclined person who needs the rigour of careful logical analysis to feel secure in their understanding.

The tradition does not hold that any of these approaches is universally superior to the others, except in the qualified sense that, for the specific person and the specific spiritual need, the approach that fits is superior. This is the tradition's practical wisdom about the plurality of paths: not relativism, not the claim that all paths are equally good for everyone, but the recognition that different paths are optimally suited to different people, and that the wisdom to identify which path fits which person is itself a form of spiritual insight that the tradition has always valued in its teachers.

Conclusion

The darshanas of Sanatana Dharma are not a philosophical Tower of Babel, multiple confused attempts to say the same thing that never quite succeed in understanding each other. They are the tradition's intellectual inheritance: a rich, varied, sophisticated collection of perspectives on reality that together constitute a more complete philosophical vision than any single perspective could achieve alone. The apparent conflicts between them are real, and the tradition has never pretended otherwise. But the conflicts are productive rather than merely competitive: each challenge to a position produced a refinement of the position, each refutation produced a more sophisticated response, and the quality of the overall philosophical tradition was deepened by the engagement.

The tradition's affirmation, in the Rigveda's most quoted philosophical verse, that truth is one and the wise speak of it in many ways, is not a consolation prize offered to those who cannot agree. It is the deepest possible acknowledgment of the nature of truth itself: too large for any single language, too deep for any single method, too rich for any single perspective to exhaust. The darshanas together are the tradition's best available approximation of what that truth is, and their plurality is the sign of the tradition's philosophical health, not its failure.

References and Suggested Reading

S. Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, Volumes 1 and 2 (1923, 1927)

Karl Potter, Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies (multiple volumes)

Swami Vivekananda, The Complete Works, Volume 2

B.K. Matilal, Perception: An Essay on Classical Indian Theories (1986)

Arindam Chakrabarti and Mark Siderits (eds.), Apoha: Buddhist Nominalism and Human Cognition (2011)

J.N. Mohanty, Classical Indian Philosophy (2000)

The One That Contains the Many: Vishishtadvaita and the Philosophy of Qualified Oneness

A Study of Ramanujacharya's Middle Path Between Non-Duality and Genuine Difference

Abstract

Vishishtadvaita, qualified non-dualism, is the philosophical system developed by Ramanujacharya in the eleventh and twelfth centuries CE as a middle path between the absolute non-dualism of Adi Shankaracharya and the strict dualism of Madhvacharya. The central thesis of Vishishtadvaita is that Brahman is one, but is not without qualities or distinctions: Brahman is Vishnu, who includes within his nature both the individual souls (chit) and the material world (achit) as real but dependent modes of his being. This is qualified non-dualism: the oneness is real, but the one is qualified by the genuine multiplicity that it contains as its body. Ramanujacharya's system accepts the Advaita insistence on ultimate oneness while rejecting its dismissal of the world and the individual soul as mere appearances, and accepts the Dvaita insistence on the reality of the souls and the world while rejecting its position that they are ultimately separate from God. This article explores the Vishishtadvaita framework, its understanding of the body-soul relationship as the model for the God-world relationship, its critique of Advaita's maya theory, and the specific quality of liberation it describes.

Keywords: Vishishtadvaita, Ramanujacharya, qualified non-dualism, Brahman, chit, achit, shariraka, Vishnu, Sri Vaishnavism, Sanatana Dharma, liberation, devotion

Introduction

There is a philosophical challenge at the heart of any theistic system that also affirms the tradition's Upanishadic inheritance: how can both be true simultaneously? The Upanishads repeatedly assert the unity of all reality and the identity of the individual self with the ultimate. The devotional traditions repeatedly affirm the genuine distinction between the devotee and God, the reality of the devotional relationship, the personal nature of the divine. The Advaita tradition resolves this by holding that the devotional relationship is a lower-level truth that the ultimate non-dual recognition transcends. The Dvaita tradition resolves it by holding that the Upanishadic identity statements are not to be read as claims of literal identity but of dependence.

Ramanujacharya's Vishishtadvaita offers a different resolution: one that takes both the Upanishadic unity and the devotional relationship seriously at the same level, without subordinating either to the other. His key philosophical move is the sharira-shariri bhava, the body-soul relationship, as the model for understanding how the world and the individual souls can be genuinely real and genuinely part of God without either being absorbed into God or being separate from God. The world and the souls are God's body, as real as a body is real, as genuinely the body's own as a body is one's own, and yet not God in the same way that a body is not the self that inhabits and animates it.

The Sharira-Shariri Bhava: Body and Soul as Model

Ramanujacharya's most original philosophical contribution is the extension of the body-soul relationship from the ordinary context of human embodiment to the cosmic context of God's relationship to the world. The soul inhabits and animates the body: the body is the soul's body, part of the soul in the sense of being entirely dependent on it and entirely controlled by it, and yet genuinely distinct from the soul, not identical with it. A person is not their body; yet the body is genuinely theirs, a real part of what they are in a qualified but not unlimited sense.

ये भजन्ति तु मां भक्त्या मयि ते तेषु चाप्यहम्।

Ye bhajanti tu mam bhaktya mayi te teshu capy aham.

(Those who worship Me with devotion are in Me, and I am in them.)

Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 9, Verse 29

Mayi te teshu capy aham: they are in Me and I am in them. Ramanujacharya reads this verse through the lens of his sharira-shariri bhava: the devotee who is in God is God's body, and God who is in the devotee is the soul of the devotee. The mutual indwelling is not identity but the specifically intimate, non-separate, non-identical relationship that the body-soul relationship describes. The devotee is entirely within God as a body is entirely within the self that animates it. God is entirely within the devotee as the self is entirely within the body it inhabits. Neither identity nor separateness, but the specific quality of the body-soul relationship: this is Ramanujacharya's most distinctive contribution to the tradition's understanding of the God-devotee relationship.

Applied cosmically, this means that the material world and the individual souls are God's body: entirely real, genuinely part of God, completely dependent on God, and yet genuinely distinct from God in the way that a body is distinct from the self. God is the inner controller of the world and the souls, as the self is the inner controller of the body. The world and the souls exist, move, and have their being in God, but they are not God, just as the body exists, moves, and has its being in the self that animates it, without being the self.

The Critique of Advaita Maya: Where Ramanujacharya Differs

Ramanujacharya's critique of the Advaita theory of maya is among the most philosophically detailed challenges the Advaita tradition faced. He argues, in his Shribhashya commentary on the Brahma Sutras, that the concept of maya as the power that produces the appearance of the world from the undifferentiated Brahman is philosophically incoherent. If maya is real, it contradicts Advaita's claim that Brahman is the only reality. If maya is unreal, it cannot produce anything. If maya is indescribable as either real or unreal, then this is not a philosophical answer but a philosophical evasion.

Ramanujacharya's positive alternative is to hold that the world and the souls are genuine and real, not appearances produced by any power of concealment or projection, but real modes of Brahman's being, related to Brahman as the body is related to the soul. This preserves the unity of reality, because everything is ultimately within Brahman and dependent on Brahman, while refusing to dismiss the world and the individual souls as mere appearances. The world's reality is not compromised in Vishishtadvaita; it is specifically affirmed as the reality of God's body.

सर्वं खल्विदं ब्रह्म तज्जलान् इति शान्त उपासीत।

Sarvam khalv idam brahma, taj-jalan iti shanta upasita.

(All this is indeed Brahman. From it the world is born, into it the world dissolves, and in it the world breathes. Let one worship with calm.)

Chandogya Upanishad, 3.14.1

Sarvam khalv idam Brahma: all this is indeed Brahman. This Upanishadic statement is read by all three great Vedantic schools but read differently by each. The Advaita reading: the apparent multiplicity of this world is Brahman appearing as multiplicity through maya. The Dvaita reading: Brahman, Vishnu, is the inner controller of all this. The Vishishtadvaita reading: all this is Brahman's body; the world is Brahman's own, as genuinely real as a body is real, and genuinely Brahman's as a body is genuinely one's own. Ramanujacharya's reading is the one that most directly honours both the text's affirmation of unity and its affirmation of the world's reality.

Liberation in Vishishtadvaita: Similarity, Not Identity

The Vishishtadvaita understanding of liberation, moksha, is called kaivalya in one sense but more precisely described as brahma-bhava or the state of being in Brahman, the fully realised participation in God's being as his body. The liberated soul retains its individuality: it does not dissolve into God, it does not lose its specific personal nature. But it is freed from the limitations that material embodiment imposes: the liberated soul is God's body in Vaikuntha, the divine realm, participating fully in the divine bliss without the obstacles of ignorance and karma.

What makes this distinctively Vishishtadvaita is the emphasis on the soul's active, knowing, loving participation in God's being. The liberated soul is not absorbed; it participates. It does not cease to be itself; it becomes fully itself by being fully within God. The relationship of devotion is not dissolved by liberation; it is perfected by it. This is the specific quality of the Vishishtadvaita liberation: not the silence of identity but the fullness of the relationship in which the lover and the beloved are genuinely distinct and genuinely one, as a body and the self that inhabits it are genuinely distinct and genuinely one.

Conclusion

Ramanujacharya's Vishishtadvaita represents one of the most philosophically sophisticated attempts in any tradition to hold together what human experience consistently presents as genuinely both: the unity of all existence and the real distinction of persons, the presence of the divine everywhere and the specific intimacy of the devotional relationship, the Upanishadic declaration that all is Brahman and the devotional tradition's insistence that God and the devotee are genuinely distinct in their love for each other.

The body-soul relationship as the model for the God-world relationship is an insight of genuine philosophical originality, one that makes the God-world relationship immediately comprehensible through one of the most immediate and intimate relationships in human experience. The result is a system that is both philosophically rigorous and devotionally alive, one in which the highest philosophical understanding and the deepest devotional practice are not merely compatible but are two expressions of the same living reality: the reality of the one that genuinely contains the many, the reality of God whose body is the world.

References and Suggested Reading

Ramanujacharya, Shribhashya (commentary on the Brahma Sutras)

Ramanujacharya, Vedarthasangraha and Bhagavad Gita Bhashya

Chandogya Upanishad

S. Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, Volume 2 (1927)

A.K. Ramanujan, Hymns for the Drowning (1981)

Karl Potter, Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, Volume 17

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

God Is Not the Self: Dvaita Vedanta and the Philosophy of Genuine Difference

A Study of Madhvacharya's Theism, the Five Real Differences, and the Irreducibility of the Individual Soul

Abstract

Dvaita Vedanta, the philosophy of dualism or genuine difference, was systematised by the thirteenth-century philosopher-saint Madhvacharya and represents the most thoroughgoing theistic alternative within the Vedantic tradition to the non-dualism of Adi Shankaracharya. Where Advaita insists that the individual self and Brahman are ultimately identical and that the apparent difference between them is the product of maya, Dvaita insists that the difference between God, souls, and the world is real, eternal, and irreducible: not a product of ignorance to be dissolved through correct understanding but an ontological fact about the nature of reality. Vishnu, for Madhvacharya, is the only independent reality; all else, including the individual souls and the material world, is genuinely real but genuinely and permanently dependent on Vishnu. This article explores the five real differences of the Dvaita system, its understanding of liberation as eternal proximity to God rather than identity with God, its critique of the Advaita position, and what the Dvaita system's theistic realism offers as a genuine philosophical and devotional alternative.

Keywords: Dvaita Vedanta, Madhvacharya, difference, panchabheda, Vishnu, individual soul, liberation, theism, Sanatana Dharma, dependence, Brahman

Introduction

There is something that the Advaita tradition's claim of identity between the individual self and Brahman does not sit easily with, and Madhvacharya articulates it with philosophical directness: if God and the individual soul are ultimately identical, then the devotional relationship between them is ultimately a relationship with oneself, and devotion to God is ultimately a kind of elaborate self-worship. If what the soul seeks in its aspiration toward God is its own identity as God, then what it finds at the end of the seeking is not God but itself. And this, Madhvacharya argues, is not what the deepest human aspiration toward the divine actually is.

The devotional traditions, the Bhakti movements that represent the living heart of the tradition's religious life for the vast majority of its practitioners, presuppose a real relationship between the devotee and the divine, a relationship of genuine love between genuinely distinct beings. Madhvacharya's philosophical project is the systematic defence of this presupposition: the argument that the difference between God and the soul is not an appearance to be dissolved but a reality to be celebrated, that the devotional relationship is not a stepping stone toward an ultimate identity but the final and highest form of the soul's relationship to God.

The Five Real Differences: Panchabheda

The Dvaita system identifies five fundamental differences, panchabheda, that it holds to be real, eternal, and irreducible. The first is the difference between God and the individual soul (jiva): God is independent, the souls are dependent. The second is the difference between God and the material world (jada): God is conscious and independent, the material world is non-conscious and dependent. The third is the difference between one soul and another: each soul is genuinely individual and not reducible to any other. The fourth is the difference between the soul and the material world: the soul is conscious, the material world is not. The fifth is the difference between one material thing and another: each thing is genuinely distinct from every other thing.

ईश्वरो विष्णुरेवैको जीवाश्चास्य परतन्त्राः। जड़ं चाप्यस्य तन्त्रस्थमिति प्रभेदशास्त्रम्॥

Ishvaro vishnur evaiko jivas casya parantarah, Jadam capy asya tantra-stham iti prabedha-shastram.

(Vishnu alone is the one Lord; the souls are dependent on Him; inert matter also is dependent on Him: this is the teaching of scripture on difference.)

Madhvacharya, Anuvyakhyana (summarised)

Parantarah: dependent on him. This word is the key to the Dvaita system's understanding of the relationship between God and everything else. The souls and the material world are real, genuinely real in a way that maya-theory denies. But they are dependently real: their existence, their nature, and their activity are all dependent on Vishnu in a way that Vishnu is not dependent on anything. Vishnu is svatantra, independent; everything else is paratantra, dependent. This is not the Advaita claim that only Brahman is real. It is the claim that Vishnu is the only independent reality, and that the souls and the world are genuinely real realities that genuinely depend on him.

Madhva's Critique of Advaita

Madhvacharya's critique of the Advaita system is sustained, detailed, and philosophically serious. He argues that the Advaita concept of maya is incoherent: if Brahman is the only reality and maya is the power that produces the appearance of the world, then maya is either real (in which case there are two realities, contradicting Advaita) or unreal (in which case nothing produces the appearance of the world, and the appearance itself is inexplicable) or indescribable as either real or unreal (which is not a third option but an evasion of the question). The Dvaita critique of the Advaita concept of maya was one of the most effective philosophical challenges the non-dual tradition faced and generated considerable philosophical development in response.

Madhvacharya also argues against the Advaita reading of the mahavakyas, the great sayings like Tat tvam asi (That thou art). The Advaita reading interprets these as statements of identity between the individual self and Brahman. Madhvacharya interprets them as statements of the soul's dependence on and devotion to God: the tat (that) refers to Vishnu, the tvam (thou) refers to the individual soul, and the statement expresses not identity but the soul's recognition of its complete dependence on Vishnu. The difference in interpretation reflects the fundamental difference in metaphysical commitment between the two schools.

सर्वस्य वशिनं देवं सर्वस्य प्रभुमीश्वरम्। सर्वस्य शरणं श्रीमद् विष्णुं सर्वान्तरात्मनम्॥

Sarvasya vashinam devam sarvasya prabhum ishvaram, Sarvasya sharanam shrimad vishnum sarvantaratmanam.

(Vishnu, who controls all, who is the lord of all, the refuge of all, the inner self of all: him I worship.)

Madhvacharya, Dvadasha Stotra (summarised)

Sarvantaratmanam: the inner self of all. This is Madhvacharya's understanding of the relationship between Vishnu and the individual souls: he is not merely an external authority but the inner reality on which each soul's existence depends at every moment. The relationship is one of complete dependence, but it is a living, personal dependence, not the cold dependency of an artifact on its maker. It is the relationship of a child to a parent who is simultaneously infinite: the child is genuinely separate, genuinely individual, genuinely itself, and completely dependent on the parent for every moment of its being. This is the Dvaita vision of liberation: not the dissolution of the child into the parent but the child's full recognition of the relationship and its willing, joyful, permanent embrace of that dependence.

Liberation in Dvaita: Eternal Proximity, Not Absorption

The Dvaita understanding of liberation, mukti, is one of the most distinctive features of the system and the one most directly shaped by its theistic commitments. Where Advaita describes liberation as the recognition of one's identity with Brahman, the dissolution of the apparently individual consciousness back into its infinite source, Dvaita describes liberation as ananda, the bliss of eternal proximity to Vishnu in the divine realm of Vaikuntha, in which the individual soul retains its individuality permanently.

The liberated soul in the Dvaita understanding experiences the fullness of the devotional relationship with Vishnu without the obstacles that the material body and the material world create. The love is complete and the proximity is permanent. But the soul remains genuinely the soul, not God, permanently dependent on God, permanently distinct from God, and permanently in the relationship of devotion that is the highest possible form of the soul's existence. This vision of liberation as the perfection of relationship rather than the dissolution of individuality is Dvaita's most distinctive and most devotionally powerful contribution to the tradition's understanding of the spiritual goal.

Conclusion

Dvaita Vedanta is the tradition's most rigorous and most philosophically complete defence of the position that the devotional relationship between the individual soul and God is not a lower stage of understanding to be eventually transcended but the highest possible form of the soul's existence. Madhvacharya's philosophical work demonstrated that this position is not merely a concession to popular religious sentiment but a defensible metaphysical stance that can be argued for with rigour and sophistication against the most technically demanding alternatives.

The Dvaita tradition's insistence on the reality of difference, on the genuine individuality of each soul, on the irreducibility of the devotional relationship, gives voice to something real in the tradition's spiritual life that the non-dual frameworks, however philosophically sophisticated, do not fully accommodate: the experience of love as a relationship between genuinely distinct beings, the experience of the divine not as what one is but as who one loves, and the aspiration toward a liberation that does not end the love but perfects it.

References and Suggested Reading

Madhvacharya, Brahmasutra Bhashya, Anuvyakhyana, and Dvadasha Stotra

S. Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, Volume 2 (1927)

B.N.K. Sharma, History of the Dvaita School of Vedanta (1960)

Swami Vivekananda, Bhakti Yoga (1896)

Devdutt Pattanaik, Vishnu: An Introduction (2006)

Karl Potter, Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, Volume 20

Friday, June 26, 2026

There Is Only One: Advaita Vedanta and the Philosophy of Non-Duality

 A Study of Brahman, Maya, the Witness, and the Adi Shankaracharya Tradition of Kevala Advaita

Abstract

Advaita Vedanta, the philosophy of non-duality, is the school of Vedantic thought most widely known outside India and the one that Adi Shankaracharya systematised into its most rigorous and influential form in the eighth century CE. Its central thesis is stated with a comprehensiveness that has no parallel in Western philosophy: Brahman is the only reality; the world of multiple, distinct, apparently separate things and persons is an appearance in Brahman produced by the power of maya, which is neither real in the absolute sense nor simply unreal; and the liberation that the tradition offers is the direct recognition of one's own identity as Brahman, the recognition that what one fundamentally is was never separate from the ultimate reality. This article explores the Advaita Vedanta system in depth: the nature of Brahman as pure being-consciousness-bliss, the theory of maya and its two functions, the four-fold practice that Shankaracharya prescribes, the method of neti neti, and the specific quality of the liberation the system describes.

Keywords: Advaita Vedanta, Brahman, maya, Adi Shankaracharya, non-duality, Atman, liberation, viveka, vairagya, mumukshutva, neti neti, Sanatana Dharma

Introduction

There is a statement in the tradition of Advaita Vedanta that sounds, the first time one hears it, like either the deepest truth or a category error: you are Brahman. Not you will become Brahman. Not you are a part of Brahman. Not you are on the path to Brahman. You are, right now, already, what Brahman is. The entire elaborate philosophical apparatus of Advaita Vedanta, with its analysis of maya, its discussion of the three states of consciousness, its neti neti method of negation, its careful distinctions between different levels of reality, exists for a single purpose: to remove the obstacles to the recognition of what is already and always the case.

This starting point is as radical as philosophy gets. Most philosophical traditions, including other schools of Vedanta, begin from the obvious fact of plurality and try to understand how things that appear different might be related or ultimately unified. Advaita begins from the unity and tries to understand how the appearance of plurality arises. The method is different, the conclusions are different, and the quality of what is offered as liberation is different. But the starting point, the insistence that the reality is already one and that the project is recognition rather than achievement, is what gives Advaita its distinctive character and its enormous influence.

Brahman: Being, Consciousness, Bliss

The Advaita understanding of Brahman is not the understanding of a personal God who exists as the greatest of all beings. Brahman in Advaita is the only reality: not a thing among things, not a being among beings, but the ground of all being, the substratum in which all apparent plurality appears and of which all apparent multiplicity is a modification. Brahman is described as Satchidananda: Sat, pure being or existence; Chit, pure consciousness or awareness; Ananda, pure bliss or fullness.

These three are not properties that Brahman has. They are what Brahman is. Pure being means that Brahman simply is, without qualification, without limitation, without the possibility of not being. Pure consciousness means that awareness is not a feature of something that is also aware but the very nature of what Brahman is. Pure bliss means that Brahman's nature is fullness, completeness, the absence of any lack that desire and suffering arise to fill. And the three are not three separate things but three ways of pointing at the same undivided reality.

ब्रह्म सत्यं जगन्मिथ्या जीवो ब्रह्मैव नापरः।

Brahma satyam jagan mithya jivo brahmaiva napara.

(Brahman is real; the world is an appearance; the individual self is Brahman alone, not otherwise.)

Vivekachudamani, Verse 20 (Adi Shankaracharya)

Brahma satyam: Brahman is real, in the absolute sense, meaning it does not depend on anything else for its existence and cannot be negated. Jagan mithya: the world is mithya, not simply false or unreal, but not real in the absolute sense either. Mithya is a technical term in Advaita meaning that which appears real but is ultimately dependent on a more fundamental reality for its appearance. The world is not nothing. It appears. But what appears is Brahman, appearing through the power of maya as the world of multiplicity. Jivo brahmaiva napara: the individual self, the jiva, is Brahman alone, not something other. This is the mahavakya, the great saying, that the entire Advaita philosophical apparatus exists to make recognisable as one's own living reality.

Maya: Neither Real Nor Unreal

The concept of maya is the most discussed and most misunderstood element of the Advaita system. Maya is often glossed as illusion, which suggests that the world is simply false, that what we perceive does not exist at all, that the world is like a hallucination or a dream. This is not the Advaita position. The world is not unreal in the sense of being a hallucination. The world appears, and its appearance is not to be dismissed. What is not real in the absolute sense is the world's apparent independence, its apparent status as a multiplicity of genuinely separate things and persons that exist in their own right apart from Brahman.

Maya operates through two functions: avarana-shakti, the power of concealment, which conceals the true nature of Brahman and makes it appear as if Brahman is not the ground of all appearance; and viksepa-shakti, the power of projection, which projects the appearance of the world of multiplicity onto the ground of Brahman. These two together produce the experience of ordinary consciousness: the awareness that there is a world of many things and a self that is one of those things, distinct from the world and from other selves. This experience is neither real nor simply unreal: it is empirically valid, meaning it is how things appear and how they must be treated in ordinary life; but it is not ultimately real, meaning its apparent structure of multiplicity and separateness does not correspond to the nature of reality as Brahman knows itself.

यत्र यत्र मनो याति तत्र तत्र समाधयः। मनसो निग्रहायत्नः प्रत्याहारः उच्यते॥ ब्रह्मैवेदं विश्वमिदं वरिष्ठं ब्रह्मैव जन्मस्थितिसंयमो हि।

Brahmaivedam vishvam idam varishtham brahmaiva janma-sthiti-samyamo hi.

(This entire world is indeed Brahman, the highest. Brahman indeed is its origin, sustenance, and dissolution.)

Mundaka Upanishad, 2.2.11

Brahmaivedam vishvam: this world is Brahman. The Advaita reading of this declaration is precise: the world that appears is Brahman, not a different reality alongside Brahman. The world's origin, sustenance, and dissolution are all Brahman, not events in a reality separate from Brahman. This is the Upanishadic basis for the Advaita position, and Shankaracharya's commentary tradition is devoted to showing that this is the consistent meaning of the Upanishads throughout: not that the world and Brahman are two things that are related, but that the world is Brahman appearing as what it appears to be, and that the recognition of this identity is the liberation the tradition offers.

The Method: Viveka, Vairagya, and Neti Neti

Advaita Vedanta is not merely a philosophical position to be intellectually understood. It is a path of transformation that the tradition describes through a specific set of qualifications, practices, and methods. The four qualifications, viveka, vairagya, the six inner disciplines, and mumukshutva, prepare the mind for the recognition that the philosophical path points toward. The method of neti neti, not this not this, is the specific tool by which this preparation leads to recognition.

Neti neti is systematic negation: the identification of everything that can be negated as the self, until what cannot be negated is what remains. The body is not the self: one observes the body, so one cannot be the body. The mind is not the self: one observes the mind's movements, so one cannot be the mind. Even the sense of being a separate person, the ahamkara, is not the self: it arises and subsides and can be observed. What remains when everything that can be negated has been negated is the pure witnessing awareness, the Purusha in Sankhya language, the Atman in Vedantic language, which is identical with Brahman.

Conclusion

Advaita Vedanta's contribution to the tradition of Sanatana Dharma is the most comprehensive and the most philosophically rigorous expression of the non-dual insight that runs through the Upanishads from their earliest layers. What Shankaracharya achieved is not an imposition of non-duality on a tradition that taught something else. He showed, through patient and brilliant exegesis of the Upanishadic texts, the Brahma Sutras, and the Bhagavad Gita, that non-duality is the consistent and central teaching of all three together, and he built around this insight a philosophical system so rigorous and so complete that it has remained the dominant influence on the tradition's philosophical self-understanding ever since.

The recognition that the tradition offers through Advaita is not the achievement of something new. It is the recognition of what was always already the case, the recognition that the seeker was always already what was being sought. This is the most liberating and the most demanding thing that any philosophical tradition has ever offered: the recognition that what you most fundamentally are was never absent, never bound, never in need of liberation, and that the entire path of practice and enquiry exists not to produce this recognition but to remove the obstacles to a recognition that is already waiting, always, in the silence behind the mind's noise.

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि।

Aham brahmasmi.

(I am Brahman.)

Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, 1.4.10

Three words in Sanskrit. The entire philosophy of Advaita Vedanta is the unpacking of these three words until they are not merely understood but lived. Aham: I. Brahma: Brahman, the ultimate reality. Asmi: am. Not was or will be. Am. Present tense, immediate, not deferred. The recognition the tradition points toward is not a future achievement. It is the recognition of what is already and always the case, available in this moment, waiting for the obstacles that conceal it to be seen through and released.

References and Suggested Reading

Adi Shankaracharya, Vivekachudamani, Brahmasutra Bhashya, Bhagavad Gita Bhashya

Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, Chandogya Upanishad, Mundaka Upanishad

S. Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, Volume 2 (1927)

Swami Vivekananda, Jnana Yoga (1896)

Ramana Maharshi, Who Am I? (Nan Yar)

T.M.P. Mahadevan, Ramana Maharshi and His Philosophy of Existence (1949)