Saturday, March 28, 2026

Why the Bhagavad Gita Begins on a Battlefield

 Because this teaching was never meant for people who had nothing to lose

Abstract: If you were going to compose the greatest philosophical and spiritual text in the history of human civilisation, where would you set it? A quiet hermitage, perhaps. A forest clearing where birds sing and the river moves gently and there is nothing to distract the mind from the deepest questions. A temple, maybe, surrounded by incense and the sound of bells. Anywhere, really, except a battlefield, where two armies are drawn up against each other and the ground is about to become soaked in the blood of brothers.

And yet the battlefield is precisely where Krishna chooses to deliver his teaching to Arjuna. The Bhagavad Gita, which contains eighteen chapters and seven hundred verses of the most concentrated philosophical wisdom India has ever produced, opens not with calm but with crisis. Not with peace but with paralysis. Not with a student calmly asking questions but with a man who has dropped his bow, sunk into the floor of his chariot, and announced that he cannot fight.  [Bhagavad Gita 1.28 to 1.47: Arjuna's collapse described in full]

This article asks the question that every serious reader of the Gita should eventually ask: why here? Why this moment? Why a battlefield, of all places? The answer, it turns out, is not incidental to the teaching. The battlefield is the teaching. Arjuna's crisis is not the obstacle to the philosophy. It is the philosophy's starting point, the exact condition that makes genuine wisdom not just interesting but absolutely necessary.

Keywords: Bhagavad Gita, Kurukshetra, Arjuna, Krishna, Battlefield, Dharma, Crisis, Vishada Yoga, Karma Yoga, Philosophy in Action, Sanatan Dharma, Mahabharata, Spiritual Teaching, Existential Crisis, Duty

Introduction: The Classroom Nobody Would Have Chosen

Kurukshetra is a real place. It sits in the modern Indian state of Haryana, and if you visit it today you will find temples and pilgrimage sites and a tank of water called the Brahma Sarovar where pilgrims come to bathe. The landscape is flat and open, the kind of land that armies have used for battles since human beings first organised themselves into armies. There is nothing visually dramatic about it. No mountains, no river gorges, no natural theatre that would suggest a stage for one of history's most consequential conversations.  [The Mahabharata locates Kurukshetra in the territory north of Delhi; historically significant as a site of several major battles in Indian history]

And yet this is where Vyasa, the composer of the Mahabharata within which the Gita sits, chose to set the dialogue that would become, for hundreds of millions of people across thousands of years, the most personally significant text in existence. People have read the Gita in prison cells and on their deathbeds, at the moment of bereavement and at the moment of professional ruin. People have carried it into surgery and into war. Its teaching has been invoked by Gandhi to justify non-violent resistance and by soldiers to justify going into battle. It has been the subject of more commentaries than almost any other text in world literature, and it continues to produce new ones every year.  [Gandhi described the Gita as his mother; he turned to it daily and wrote his own commentary, Anasakti Yoga, published in 1929]

The question of why it begins where it begins, in the middle of a war, with a warrior who has lost his nerve, is not an academic curiosity. It goes to the heart of what the Gita is for, what kind of teaching it is, and why it has spoken so directly to so many people whose own crises look nothing like a military confrontation.

The First Chapter Is Called the Yoga of Arjuna's Grief

The title that tradition gives to the first chapter of the Gita is Arjuna Vishada Yoga, which translates roughly as the yoga of Arjuna's despondency or the yoga of Arjuna's grief. This title is extraordinary when you sit with it. Yoga means a path to union with the divine, a discipline of spiritual practice. How can grief be a yoga? How can collapse be a beginning?  [The chapter title Arjuna Vishada Yoga appears in the traditional division of the Gita's chapters; Vishada means deep sorrow, grief, or despair]

The answer is that in the Gita's understanding, genuine crisis, the kind that strips away all the usual distractions and comfortable certainties and forces a person to ask who they really are and what they are really doing, is not an interruption of the spiritual life. It is its most natural starting point. The person who has never been truly shaken, who has never had the floor fall out from under their assumptions about themselves and the world, may have access to a great deal of philosophical information. What they may not have is the desperate, personal, urgent need for wisdom that transforms information into genuine understanding.

Arjuna is that person. He is a great warrior, arguably the greatest archer of his age. He has fought in wars before. He has faced danger with courage. He is not a coward and the Gita is careful to make this clear. His collapse on the battlefield of Kurukshetra is not fear in the ordinary sense. It is something deeper, more philosophically interesting, and ultimately more universal than simple physical fear. It is the collapse of a particular way of understanding the world, the moment when all the frameworks he has lived by suddenly reveal themselves as insufficient for the situation he is in.  [Bhagavad Gita 2.3: Krishna explicitly says 'do not yield to unmanliness, O Arjuna, this does not become you'; he is not addressing a coward but a brave man who has broken down for different reasons]

What Arjuna Actually Sees

Standing in his chariot between the two armies, Arjuna looks at the people he is about to fight and sees, with terrible clarity, that they are not strangers. They are family. The opposing army is full of men who taught him to use a bow, who were present at his birth, who shared meals with him, who are his cousins, his uncles, his teachers. Bhishma, who is in the opposing army, is the grandfather figure who raised him. Drona, who stands on the other side, is the man who taught him everything he knows about warfare.  [Bhagavad Gita 1.26 to 1.27: Arjuna sees fathers-in-law, grandfathers, teachers, uncles, brothers, sons, grandsons, and companions]

He sees this and he asks, with complete sincerity: what good is victory if the price is the death of everyone I love? What is a kingdom worth if it is built on the bones of my family? What kind of happiness could I possibly find in wealth and power and pleasure that comes at this cost? He is not being selfish. He is being, at that moment, more genuinely human than at any previous point in the epic. He is asking real questions about real stakes and arriving at the terrifying conclusion that he does not know the answer.  [Bhagavad Gita 1.32 to 1.35: Arjuna lists what he would gain and declares he does not desire kingdoms or pleasures or even life itself at this price]

And then he does something that the tradition marks as the precise moment when wisdom becomes possible. He stops trying to solve the problem with the tools that created it. He puts down his bow. He sits down in the chariot. He tells Krishna he will not fight. And in that moment of apparent failure, of apparent surrender, the real conversation begins.  [Bhagavad Gita 2.9: sanjaya uvaca, evam uktva hrishikesham, gudakeshaha paranthapa, na yotsya iti govindam uktva tushneem babhuva ha, Arjuna having spoken, fell silent]

The Battlefield as the Perfect Classroom

Real Questions Require Real Stakes

Here is something worth thinking about. Most philosophical texts are written in conditions of relative comfort. The philosopher has time. They have a study, or at least a quiet place. The question they are addressing is important but it is not, at this particular moment, literally a matter of life and death. They can afford to be wrong. They can revise their position tomorrow. There is time.

Arjuna has no time. In a matter of minutes or hours the conches will sound and the battle will begin and every decision will be irreversible. In this situation, abstract philosophy is useless. Fine distinctions between competing schools of thought are useless. What Arjuna needs is not information but transformation, not something to add to his stock of knowledge but something that changes the very level from which he is looking at his situation.  [This urgency is noted by Shankaracharya in the introduction to his Gita Bhashya, where he identifies the entire teaching as arising from Arjuna's specific crisis of identity and purpose]

The battlefield creates exactly the conditions in which genuine wisdom is not merely interesting but absolutely necessary. It is the condition that every human being who has ever faced an irreversible choice, a loss that cannot be undone, a situation in which every available option comes at a terrible cost, recognises from the inside. The details are different. The scale is different. But the experience of standing between two impossible choices while the clock runs down is as common as human life itself.

This is why the Gita has spoken so directly to so many people in so many different kinds of crisis. Not because they were on a literal battlefield, but because they were on their own version of one. The person who has to choose between loyalty to family and loyalty to their own deepest values is on Kurukshetra. The person who has to act decisively in a situation where every choice causes harm to someone they love is on Kurukshetra. The person who has collapsed under the weight of competing obligations and no longer knows what the right thing to do even looks like is, in the most important sense, exactly where Arjuna is sitting when Krishna begins to speak.

Dharma Cannot Be Taught in the Absence of Real Conflict

The Gita's central subject is Dharma, which is one of the most untranslatable words in Sanskrit. Duty, righteousness, moral order, the right way of living, the law of one's own being: all of these are parts of what Dharma means without any of them capturing the whole. And here is the thing about Dharma: it is easy to talk about it in comfortable circumstances. It is easy to know what the right thing to do is when the right thing costs you nothing.  [The concept of Svadharma, one's own duty or the law of one's own nature, is introduced in Bhagavad Gita 2.31 to 2.33 and becomes one of the organizing concepts of the entire text]

Arjuna's situation is constructed, by Vyasa with great deliberateness, to be the hardest possible case. He faces a conflict between his Svadharma as a warrior, his duty to fight for justice in a just war, and his deeply human love for the people he would have to harm in fulfilling that duty. There is no easy answer. There is no option that does not cost something. This is the condition under which the question of Dharma becomes genuinely urgent and genuinely deep, and this is the condition that the battlefield provides.  [Bhagavad Gita 3.35: it is better to perform one's own Dharma imperfectly than to perform another's Dharma perfectly; the impossibility of an easy resolution is built into the text's structure]

If Krishna had delivered his teaching in a garden, to a student with no pressing obligations and nothing at stake, the teaching would have been philosophy in the academic sense. Interesting, possibly inspiring, but ultimately optional. The possibility of saying, yes, very deep, I will think about this, and then going home for dinner, would always be open. On the battlefield, that option does not exist. Every word Krishna speaks has to be the kind of word that can change a person who is holding a bow and whose hands are shaking.  [Bhagavad Gita 1.30: Arjuna's physical symptoms of collapse, shivering limbs, dry mouth, hair standing on end, the body's truthful response to genuine existential crisis]

Krishna's Presence in the Chariot Is Itself the Teaching

There is one more dimension of the battlefield setting that deserves careful attention, and it is easy to miss. The Gita does not begin with Arjuna alone in his crisis. It begins with Krishna already in the chariot, already beside him, already holding the reins. Before a single philosophical word is spoken, the divine is already present at the site of the human being's deepest difficulty.  [Bhagavad Gita 1.21 to 1.24: Arjuna had asked Krishna to drive the chariot between the two armies; Krishna, as charioteer, chose to place it directly before Bhishma and Drona]

This is not a small point. The Gita's opening image is not of a student seeking out a teacher in a moment of calm enquiry. It is of a human being in complete breakdown, and the divine sitting quietly beside him. Not intervening immediately. Not producing a solution. Just being there, holding the reins, waiting for the right moment to speak. There is something profoundly reassuring about this image for anyone who has ever been in the middle of their own battlefield: the presence that can help you is already there. It has been there the whole time. It was driving the chariot before you even knew you needed to ask it for help.  [This interpretation is developed in several modern commentaries, including Swami Chinmayananda's Holy Geeta commentary, Vol 1, which notes that Krishna's positioning of the chariot was itself an act of grace rather than cruelty]

Conclusion: The Gita Is Not for People Who Have It Together

If you have ever wondered whether the Bhagavad Gita is relevant to your life because your problems seem too ordinary, too mundane, too far removed from battles and chariots and cosmic stakes, the answer to that question is embedded in the very setting of the text itself. The Gita is addressed to a person who has fallen apart. It is delivered in the middle of a crisis, not after it has safely passed. It speaks to someone who does not know what to do, who is overwhelmed by competing obligations, who has stopped pretending that everything is fine and is finally ready to ask a real question.

That person is not unusual. That person is every thoughtful human being at some point in their life. The battlefield of Kurukshetra is not a historical curiosity. It is a precise and deliberate image of the inner terrain that every person who takes their life seriously will eventually have to cross, the ground between who they thought they were and who they actually are, between the comfortable certainties they were raised with and the deeper understanding those certainties were never quite adequate to provide.  [Sri Aurobindo, Essays on the Gita, Volume 1, argues that Kurukshetra is both historically real and symbolically inexhaustible; the external battle is always also an image of the inner battle every person must fight]

The Gita begins on a battlefield because wisdom is not a luxury for people who are doing well. It is medicine for people who are suffering. And the most important suffering is not physical. It is the suffering of a person who no longer knows what they believe, why they are here, what they owe to others, and what they owe to themselves. That is Arjuna's suffering. And for that suffering, and only for that suffering, does the teaching of the Gita exist.  [Bhagavad Gita 2.7: Arjuna says, my being is afflicted with the weakness of pity, I am confused about Dharma, I ask you, tell me for certain what is good for me, I am your student, teach me who has come to you for refuge]

Karpanya doshopahata svabhavah

Prcchami tvam dharmasammudha cetah

Yac chreyah syan nishcitam bruhi tan me

Shishyas te ham shadhi mam tvam prapannam

My nature is overcome by weakness and pity, my mind confused about Dharma.  [Bhagavad Gita 2.7]

I ask you to tell me clearly what is good for me. I am your student. Teach me, I take refuge in you.

Dharma in Crisis: Arjuna's Dilemma Revisited

 The Bhagavad Gita's most human moment and what it still has to say to us

Abstract: Every thoughtful person, at some point in their life, finds themselves in a version of Arjuna's situation: standing at a moment where every available path forward causes harm to someone they care about, where what they are duty-bound to do and what their heart is pleading for them not to do are in direct and irreconcilable conflict. No amount of intelligence resolves it cleanly. No rulebook covers it exactly. You simply have to decide, knowing that whatever you decide, you will carry the cost of it.

The Bhagavad Gita is a text that was written for precisely this kind of moment. Its first chapter and a half is, among other things, the most honest account of ethical paralysis in all of world literature. Arjuna's dilemma is not a failure of character. It is what happens when a genuinely good person thinks carefully about the full consequences of what they are about to do. And the resolution that Krishna offers over the following sixteen chapters is not the resolution most people expect. It does not make the conflict go away. It changes the level from which Arjuna is looking at it. This article is about that dilemma, why it is real, why it still matters, and what Krishna's answer actually is.

Keywords: Arjuna's Dilemma, Dharma, Svadharma, Bhagavad Gita, Kurukshetra, Moral Conflict, Karma Yoga, Krishna, Nishkama Karma, Duty versus Compassion, Ethical Crisis, Mahabharata, Sanatan Dharma, Action and Inaction

Introduction: The Problem Has Not Aged

Arjuna's problem is almost three thousand years old and it does not feel like it. Strip away the chariots and the conches and the armies arrayed across a dusty plain, and what you have is something entirely contemporary: a person of genuine conscience standing at a point where two legitimate obligations are pulling in opposite opposite directions, where there is no option available that does not come at a moral cost, where the very clarity of their moral vision is what is making the decision so impossibly hard.  [The Bhagavad Gita's crisis is set at the opening of the Kurukshetra war, which forms the climax of the Mahabharata; the entire epic can be read as a sustained meditation on the nature of Dharma under conditions of extreme moral pressure]

This is worth saying at the outset because Arjuna's dilemma is sometimes treated as a solved problem, something that Krishna answers neatly in Chapter Two and that Arjuna accepts, and then the Gita moves on to other things. But the dilemma is not solved in any simple sense. It is deepened, examined from every angle, and eventually dissolved at a level that most of us spend our entire lives unable to reach. The more honestly you read the Gita, the more you realise that Arjuna's confusion at the beginning of the text is not the exception. For most of us, it is the rule. And Krishna's response is not a comfortable resolution. It is a demand.

What Arjuna's Dilemma Actually Is

Two Duties, Both Real

Arjuna is a Kshatriya, a warrior. His Dharma, his duty according to the role he was born into and has trained for his entire life, is to fight in a just war when one is required of him. The war at Kurukshetra is, by the internal moral logic of the Mahabharata, a just war. The Pandavas have been cheated, exiled, and humiliated. Every diplomatic option has been exhausted. Krishna himself went to Hastinapur as a peace envoy and was refused. The war is happening because injustice has been given every opportunity to correct itself and has refused.  [Bhagavad Gita 2.31 to 2.33: Krishna explicitly invokes Arjuna's Kshatriya Dharma, saying there is nothing more fortunate for a warrior than a righteous war; to refuse it is to abandon both Dharma and honour]

And yet. The people Arjuna would have to kill are not abstract enemies. They are Bhishma, who is for all practical purposes his grandfather, who taught him what it meant to live with honour. They are Drona, his teacher, the man who made him the finest archer of his generation. They are cousins he grew up with, uncles he respects, old men and young men whose specific faces he can see from where he is standing. He knows these people. He loves some of them. And he is being asked to kill them.  [Bhagavad Gita 1.26 to 1.28: Arjuna sees grandfathers, teachers, uncles, brothers, sons, grandsons, and friends on both sides, and is overcome with compassion]

His Dharma as a warrior says: fight. His love for these people says: do not. Both are real. Neither is trivial. This is what makes the dilemma genuine rather than merely theatrical.

The Argument Arjuna Makes

What is often not appreciated about Arjuna's position is how good his arguments are. When he refuses to fight, he does not do so simply out of emotion. He makes a case, and it is not a bad one. He says that killing one's own family members cannot be justified by the prospect of a kingdom, however righteous that kingdom might be. He says that the destruction of a family destroys its Dharmic traditions, and without those traditions society itself unravels. He looks at the future consequences of what he is being asked to do and finds them deeply troubling.  [Bhagavad Gita 1.38 to 1.44: Arjuna's detailed argument about the destruction of family Dharma and its social consequences; this is one of the most thoughtful passages on the long-term costs of violence in any text]

He even makes an argument that has a genuinely modern ring to it. He says that even if the people on the other side do not see the moral wrong of what they are doing, he can see it, and therefore the sin of the outcome will stick to him rather than to them. In other words: ignorance is a kind of excuse, but knowledge is not. He knows too much to pretend that this is simple.  [Bhagavad Gita 1.38 to 1.39: the argument about knowledge and moral responsibility]

Shankaracharya, in his commentary on the Gita, describes Arjuna at this point as someone afflicted by two opposing tendencies: the grief of attachment on one side, and a confused understanding of Dharma on the other. Crucially, he does not dismiss either one. He acknowledges that both are real.  [Shankaracharya, Gita Bhashya, introduction to Chapter 2: the tension between shoka and moha, grief and delusion, as the two roots of Arjuna's paralysis]

Why Krishna Does Not Simply Tell Arjuna to Fight

The Answer That Does Not Come

If you read the Gita expecting Krishna to simply say: look, the war is just, your Dharma as a warrior requires you to fight, so stop crying and pick up your bow, you are going to be surprised. He does say something like that, fairly early, but it takes up about two verses and it is clearly not the main event. The main event is the teaching that follows, which covers the nature of the self, the nature of action, the nature of the cosmos, the nature of devotion, and the nature of knowledge. That is not the answer to a simple question about whether to fight in a specific war. That is the answer to a much deeper question.  [The argument from Kshatriya Dharma occupies Bhagavad Gita 2.31 to 2.38; what follows is the teaching on the self, which begins at 2.11 and continues for the rest of the text]

The reason Krishna goes so deep is that Arjuna's dilemma, properly understood, is not really about this specific war. It is about the general problem of action under conditions of moral uncertainty, about how to act with integrity when you cannot foresee all the consequences of your action and when every available choice causes someone to suffer. That problem does not have a specific rule-based answer. It has a different kind of answer. And that is what the Gita provides.

Svadharma: The Key That Arjuna Is Missing

One of the things Krishna does very early in his teaching is introduce a distinction that Arjuna has collapsed: the distinction between Svadharma and Paradharma. Svadharma means the Dharma of one's own nature, the duties and actions that flow from who one genuinely is, one's particular role and calling and capacity. Paradharma means the Dharma of another, doing what is right for someone else's nature rather than one's own.  [Bhagavad Gita 3.35: shreyan svadharmo vigunah paradharmat svanushthitat, it is better to perform one's own Dharma imperfectly than to perform another's Dharma perfectly]

Arjuna, in his grief, has started evaluating his own Dharma by the standards of a completely different value system. He is measuring the obligations of a warrior by the emotional logic of a grieving family member, and finding that the two do not fit. Krishna is not saying that the grief is wrong. He is saying that the grief, however genuine, does not override the obligations of the role Arjuna has accepted. A surgeon who is emotionally attached to a patient does not stop being a surgeon. The love is real and the professional obligation is real and both have to be held at once. Failing to act because of emotional attachment is not compassion. It is a kind of abandonment.  [Sri Aurobindo, Essays on the Gita, Chapter 3: the distinction between Arjuna's compassion, which is genuine, and his failure of nerve, which is rooted in ego-attachment rather than true ahimsa]

Nishkama Karma: Acting Without Being Owned by the Outcome

The most important teaching Krishna offers in response to Arjuna's dilemma is not about this specific battle at all. It is about the nature of action itself. He says: you have a right to action, but never to the fruits of action. Do not let the fruits of action be your motive, but do not slip into inaction either.  [Bhagavad Gita 2.47: karmanye vadhikaraste ma phaleshu kadachana, one of the most quoted verses in all of Sanskrit literature]

This sounds, on first reading, like it might be cold. Do your duty and don't worry about the consequences. But that reading misses the point entirely. Krishna is not telling Arjuna to stop caring about consequences. He is telling him something more subtle: that performing an action while being inwardly consumed by anxiety about whether the outcome will be what you want is a different thing from performing the same action with full attention and full integrity while releasing the outcome. The first kind of action is driven by ego. The second is driven by Dharma. And only the second kind is genuinely free.  [Bhagavad Gita 2.50: yogah karmasu kaushalam, yoga is skill in action; Shankaracharya interprets this as evenness of mind in success and failure]

For Arjuna, this means something very specific. He is paralysed not only because the situation is terrible but because he is trying to guarantee in advance that he will not feel guilty afterward. He wants an outcome he can live with. And Krishna is saying: there is no such guarantee. What there is instead is the capacity to act from your deepest and most honest self, to do what your nature and your role require you to do, with full attention and without self-deception, and to release the rest. That is all anyone can ever do. And it is enough.

The Dilemma Is Not Resolved. It Is Transformed

By the end of the Gita, Arjuna picks up his bow. He fights. But the Arjuna who fights at the end of the text is not the same person who collapsed at the beginning. He has not resolved the dilemma in the sense of making it stop hurting. The people he is about to fight are still people he loves. The consequences are still devastating. The Mahabharata's account of the aftermath of the war is one of the most desolate things in all of literature: a world in which almost everyone has died, in which the survivors have to live with what they did and did not do, in which victory feels indistinguishable from loss.  [The aftermath of the Kurukshetra war is described in the Stri Parva and Shanti Parva of the Mahabharata; even Krishna weeps at the destruction]

What has changed is not the situation. What has changed is Arjuna's relationship to the situation. He is no longer acting from the desperate need to protect himself from guilt. He is acting from a place of genuine understanding: understanding of who he is, what his role requires, what the nature of action and consequence actually is, and what it means to offer one's actions as something other than a transaction with the universe in which he expects a specific return.  [Bhagavad Gita 18.73: Arjuna's final words, nashto mohah smritir labdha, my delusion is destroyed, I have regained my memory; the word memory here suggests a recovery of his own deepest nature rather than the acquisition of something new]

This is what makes the Gita so relevant to ordinary human crises. It does not promise that doing the right thing will feel right, or that the pain of a moral conflict will dissolve once you have made your decision. It promises something different and more honest: that it is possible to act with full integrity in an impossible situation, that the quality of your action matters even when its outcomes are beyond your control, and that the person who acts from genuine understanding rather than from fear or ego carries something through the hardest moments that the person acting from desperation does not.

Arjuna's dilemma is not a solved problem in the Gita. It is a transformed one. He does not get an easy answer. He gets the only real answer available: become someone capable of holding the full weight of the situation without being crushed by it, act from your deepest self rather than your most frightened self, and let the rest go.  [Bhagavad Gita 18.66: sarva dharman parityajya mam ekam sharanam vraja, abandon all other Dharmas and take refuge in me alone; Shankaracharya interprets this as the ultimate surrender of ego-driven action to the infinite self]

Nasto mohah smritir labdha

Tvat prasadan mayachyuta

Sthito asmi gata sandehah

Karishye vachanam tava

My delusion is destroyed and I have regained my memory through your grace, O Krishna.  [Bhagavad Gita 18.73]

I stand firm, my doubts are gone. I will do as you say.

 

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Why the Upanishads Are Called Vedanta

 How the final chapter of the Vedas became the beginning of the greatest philosophical tradition India ever produced

Abstract: Every great tradition has a word that carries its entire identity within it. For the philosophical tradition that has shaped Indian civilisation more deeply and more durably than any other, that word is Vedanta. It is a word used casually by millions of people who have some vague sense that it refers to Indian philosophy or to a particular school of Hindu thought. But very few of those millions could explain precisely what the word means, why it is the right word for what it describes, and what it reveals about the relationship between the vast body of Vedic scripture and the particular texts, the Upanishads, that are given the name.

This article unpacks the word Vedanta from the inside out. It explains what the Vedas are and how they are structured, what position the Upanishads occupy within that structure, what the two meanings of anta as end reveal about the Upanishads' relationship to everything that preceded them, and why the philosophical tradition that grew from the Upanishads was given this name rather than any other. The argument is that the name Vedanta is not a bureaucratic label assigned by later scholars. It is a precise and philosophically loaded description of exactly what the Upanishads are and what they do, and understanding the name is one of the best possible introductions to understanding the texts themselves.

Keywords

Vedanta, Upanishads, Vedas, Vedic Literature, Shruti, Aranyakas, Brahmasutras, Adi Shankaracharya, Ramanuja, Madhva, Advaita, Vishishtadvaita, Dvaita, Prasthanatrayi, Jnana Kanda, Karma Kanda, End of the Vedas, Philosophical Summit, Sanatan Dharma, Indian Philosophy

Introduction: What Is in a Name?

In Sanskrit, names are rarely arbitrary. The tradition of Sanskrit naming reaches back to the Vedas themselves, and it is governed by the principle that a name should capture the essential nature of the thing it names. Not just a label to distinguish one thing from another, but a description that, if you understand it fully, gives you genuine insight into what you are naming. This principle applies with particular force to the great philosophical terms of the Vedic tradition, and nowhere more precisely than in the word Vedanta.

Vedanta is a compound of two Sanskrit words: Veda and anta. Veda, from the root vid meaning to know, refers to the vast body of sacred knowledge that forms the foundational scripture of the Hindu tradition, the oldest continuously transmitted body of religious and philosophical literature in the world. Anta has two distinct but related meanings: it means end in the sense of conclusion or termination, and it also means end in the sense of goal, purpose, or highest point. Both meanings are active in the word Vedanta, and understanding how they are both active simultaneously is the key to understanding why the Upanishads deserve this name.

The Upanishads are called Vedanta, the tradition tells us, because they form the conclusion of the Vedic literary corpus, appearing at the end of the Vedic texts chronologically and structurally. But they are also called Vedanta because they represent the final goal and highest purpose of Vedic knowledge, the philosophical destination toward which everything that preceded them was moving, the answer to the question that the entire Vedic enterprise was ultimately asking. End of the Vedas, and summit of the Vedas, simultaneously. This article explains both meanings and shows why they are inseparable.

Part One: The Structure of the Vedas and Where the Upanishads Sit

The Vedic Corpus: A Library That Grew Over Centuries

To understand why the Upanishads are at the end of the Vedas, you first need to understand what the Vedas are and how they are arranged. The word Veda in common usage sometimes refers to all of Hindu scripture, but in its precise technical sense it refers to four specific collections: the Rigveda, the Samaveda, the Yajurveda, and the Atharvaveda. These four Vedas are together the foundational scripture of the entire Hindu tradition, collectively called Shruti, which means that which was heard, a word that points to the belief that this knowledge was not composed by human beings but received by ancient seers, the rishis, in states of deep meditative perception.

Each of the four Vedas is itself a layered structure rather than a single text. Each Veda consists of several distinct layers of literary material composed at different periods and serving different purposes. The first and oldest layer is the Samhita, which means collection, the hymns, chants, and incantations that are the heart of each Veda. The Samhitas of the Rigveda contain the oldest sacred poetry of the tradition, some of it of astonishing philosophical depth and beauty, composed perhaps as far back as 1500 BCE or earlier. The Samhitas are primarily the material for ritual performance, the words that are chanted at sacrifices and ceremonies.

The second layer is the Brahmanas, prose texts that explain the Samhita material, provide detailed instructions for the performance of rituals, and offer interpretations of the symbolic meaning of various ritual acts. The Brahmanas are the textbooks of the ritual tradition, technical and in places very dense, less interesting to the philosophical reader but essential for understanding how the ritual system worked and what it was trying to achieve. If the Samhitas are the script of the Vedic ritual drama, the Brahmanas are the director's handbook.

The third layer is the Aranyakas, which means forest texts, texts composed for and by those who had withdrawn from active household life into the forest for deeper contemplation. The Aranyakas sit between the practical ritual world of the Brahmanas and the purely philosophical world of the Upanishads. They continue to discuss ritual but increasingly in a symbolic and philosophical rather than a practical sense, treating the ritual as a map of inner experience rather than primarily as an external performance. The Aranyakas are the hinge between the ritual dimension of the Vedas and the philosophical dimension.

And the fourth and final layer, appearing at the conclusion of this entire literary sequence, is the Upanishads. They are sometimes called the Vedanta within the Vedas, the portion of Vedic literature in which the philosophical enquiry that has been gathering force through all the preceding layers finally comes to its full and explicit expression. This positioning at the end of the Vedic sequence is the first and most literal sense in which Upanishads are Vedanta: they are where the Vedas end.

From Ritual to Philosophy: The Journey the Vedas Make

To appreciate what the Upanishads bring that the earlier layers do not, it helps to understand the journey that the Vedic tradition makes from the Samhitas through the Aranyakas. That journey is, broadly speaking, a movement from the outer to the inner, from the ritual performance of sacrifice to the inner understanding of what the sacrifice truly is and what it is trying to achieve.

The Samhitas and Brahmanas are primarily concerned with what the tradition calls the Karma Kanda, the section of action and ritual. The world of the Karma Kanda is a world in which the right performance of the right rituals at the right times with the right materials and the right intentions produces specific results: health, prosperity, progeny, victory in battle, favourable weather, a good afterlife. The relationship with the divine is understood primarily as a transactional one: the human being offers something of value to the divine through the medium of the fire, and the divine responds with blessings and benefits.

This is not a primitive or foolish understanding. It reflects a genuine insight into the reciprocal nature of the relationship between human beings and the cosmos, and it contains within it, in symbolic form, philosophical truths of real depth. But it is not yet the full answer to the deepest questions. The Karma Kanda tells you what to do and what the benefits will be. It does not tell you who is doing the doing, what the self is that performs the actions and reaps the results, and what ultimate liberation means as opposed to temporary benefit.

The Upanishads take up exactly these questions. They represent the Jnana Kanda, the section of knowledge, in which the focus shifts from ritual performance to philosophical understanding, from the outer act of sacrifice to the inner question of what the self is that is performing the sacrifice. And in making this shift, they do not reject the Karma Kanda. They complete it. They show where the ritual tradition was always pointing, what its deepest symbolic logic was always gesturing toward, and what genuine understanding of that symbolic logic leads to.

Part Two: Anta as Goal, the Upanishads as the Summit

The Purpose That the Ritual Was Always Pointing Toward

The second meaning of anta, goal or purpose or highest point, is in some ways the more philosophically important of the two. It is the meaning that the tradition has emphasised most consistently when explaining why the Upanishads deserve their name. And it is the meaning that reveals the most about the internal logic of the Vedic tradition as a whole.

The great Vedic ritualists were not simply concerned with practical benefits. Behind the elaborate machinery of the Vedic sacrifice, behind the precise measurements and the carefully memorised chants and the precisely timed offerings, there was a philosophical vision: the vision of a universe held together by the principle of right relationship, in which human beings participate in the cosmic order by giving back to the powers that sustain them. This is the vision of Yajna as cosmic law, discussed in earlier articles. And within that vision, there was always an implicit question: if the sacrifice sustains the cosmic order, what is the nature of the one who performs it? If the ritual connects the human to the divine, what is the nature of that connection at the deepest level?

The Upanishads are the texts in which these implicit questions become explicit, and in which the tradition's most profound thinkers work through their answers with full philosophical rigour. They are the goal of the Vedic enterprise in the sense that they are where the enterprise arrives when it follows its own internal logic to its natural conclusion. A tradition that began by asking how to relate to the divine ends by asking what the divine is, and then by asking what the self is, and then by discovering that the answer to both questions is the same answer. Brahman and Atman are one. The divine that the sacrifice was always addressing and the self that was performing the sacrifice are, at the deepest level, identical. This discovery is the goal toward which the entire Vedic tradition was, from its beginning, unknowingly moving.

The Three Foundational Texts of Vedanta: The Prasthanatrayi

The tradition of Vedanta as a philosophical school is built on what is called the Prasthanatrayi, the three foundational texts, each representing one of the three main ways in which the Vedantic wisdom can be approached and systematised. Understanding these three texts and how they relate to each other gives the clearest possible picture of what Vedanta as a philosophical tradition actually is and why the Upanishads are its heart.

The first and most important of the three is the Upanishads themselves, the Shruti Prasthana or the revelatory foundation. The Upanishads are primary because they are Shruti, directly received knowledge, the most authoritative form of knowledge in the Vedic hierarchy. They are the source from which everything else flows. Every philosophical school that calls itself Vedanta, regardless of what specific positions it holds on questions of metaphysics and theology, must root its arguments in the Upanishads. The Upanishads are the data, and any philosophical system that cannot accommodate the Upanishadic data is, by definition, not a Vedantic system.

The second text is the Bhagavad Gita, the Smriti Prasthana or the remembered foundation. The Gita is technically not Shruti but Smriti, a text of remembered tradition rather than direct revelation. But its authority in the Vedantic tradition is so great, and its condensation of Upanishadic teaching into practical, applicable philosophical guidance is so effective, that it has been accepted as the second pillar of the tradition. Every major Vedantic philosopher from Shankaracharya to Ramanuja to Madhva wrote a commentary on the Gita, using it as the occasion to systematise and defend their particular interpretation of the Upanishadic teaching.

The third text is the Brahmasutras of Badarayana, the Nyaya Prasthana or the logical foundation. The Brahmasutras are a systematic philosophical work composed specifically to organise and defend the teaching of the Upanishads against philosophical objections. They consist of 555 short aphorisms, each typically just a few words long, which together map out the logical structure of Vedantic philosophy. The Brahmasutras are where Vedanta becomes philosophy in the formal sense, where the insights of the Upanishads are subjected to the rigour of systematic argument. Again, every major Vedantic philosopher wrote a commentary on the Brahmasutras, and those commentaries are the main texts of the different Vedantic schools.

The Three Great Interpreters and What They Debated

If the Upanishads are the source of Vedanta, the three great commentarial philosophers who shaped the tradition into its major living forms are Adi Shankaracharya, Ramanuja, and Madhva. Each of them wrote commentaries on all three texts of the Prasthanatrayi. Each of them claimed to be giving the correct interpretation of what the Upanishads actually mean. And each of them arrived at significantly different conclusions, producing three distinct philosophical schools within the single tradition of Vedanta.

Shankaracharya, who lived in the eighth century CE, taught the school called Advaita, which means non-dual. His reading of the Upanishads concluded that Brahman is the only ultimate reality, that the individual self and Brahman are identical in their deepest nature, and that the apparent multiplicity of the world is the product of Maya, the cosmic creative power that makes the one appear as many. For Shankaracharya, liberation means the direct recognition that you are Brahman, that the sense of being a separate individual self was always a misperception, and that what remains when that misperception dissolves is the infinite, unchanging, blissful awareness that was your true nature all along.

Ramanuja, who lived in the eleventh and twelfth centuries CE, taught the school called Vishishtadvaita, which means qualified non-duality. He agreed with Shankaracharya that Brahman is the ultimate reality but disagreed with his interpretation of what that means. For Ramanuja, the individual souls and the material world are real, not illusory, but they are real as the body of Brahman rather than as independent entities. The relationship between individual souls, the world, and Brahman is like the relationship between the body and the self that inhabits it: genuinely distinct, genuinely itself, and yet not ultimately separable from the one that sustains and pervades it. Liberation, for Ramanuja, means devotion and love directed toward the personal God, Ishvara, understood as the supreme self of all.

Madhva, who lived in the thirteenth century CE, taught the school called Dvaita, which means dual. His reading of the Upanishads insisted that Brahman and the individual souls are genuinely and permanently distinct, that the relationship between the devotee and God is a real relationship between two real beings, and that liberation means the eternal blessed presence of the individual soul in the proximity of Brahman, not its merger with Brahman. Madhva's tradition has a particular emphasis on devotion and on the absolute supremacy of Vishnu as the personal form of Brahman.

These three schools have debated with each other with great intellectual vigour for nearly a thousand years. The debates are among the most sophisticated philosophical discussions in the history of human thought, touching the deepest questions in metaphysics, epistemology, and the philosophy of religion. But the remarkable fact, and the fact that gives Vedanta its coherence as a tradition, is that all three schools agree on the primacy of the Upanishads as their source. They disagree about what the Upanishads mean, but they do not disagree that the Upanishads are where the answer is to be found. The Upanishads are Vedanta not only in the sense that they are the end of the Vedas, but in the sense that they are the inescapable reference point for every serious philosophical enquiry within the tradition.

Part Three: What Makes the Upanishads Genuinely Different

The Shift from What to Do to Who Is Doing It

The deepest reason why the Upanishads deserve the name Vedanta, summit of the Vedas, is the specific and radical shift in the nature of the question they ask. The Samhitas ask: what words shall we offer to the divine? The Brahmanas ask: how shall we perform the ritual correctly? The Aranyakas ask: what does the ritual mean at a deeper symbolic level? And the Upanishads ask: who is the one who is performing the ritual? What is the nature of the self that is praying, offering, seeking? What is the relationship between that self and the divine it is seeking?

This shift is not a rejection of the earlier questions. All those earlier questions are genuine and their answers are genuinely valuable. But the Upanishads recognise that the earlier questions cannot be fully and finally answered until the question of the self is answered. You cannot know how to relate to Brahman until you know what you are. You cannot understand the purpose of the ritual until you understand the nature of the one for whose benefit the ritual is performed. You cannot arrive at liberation by performing actions, however perfectly, until you understand what the self is that liberation is meant to free.

The Mundaka Upanishad states this with extraordinary precision in its opening. A student named Shaunaka comes to the sage Angiras and asks: Revered sir, by knowing what does all of this become known? This question, by knowing what does everything become known, is the question that defines Vedanta. It is the question that recognises there must be some single, central, foundational knowledge from which all other knowledge flows and by the light of which all other knowledge becomes fully intelligible. And the Mundaka's answer is the Vedantic answer: know Brahman, which is the self, and you will know everything, because everything is Brahman.

Vedanta as Living Tradition, Not Historical Relic

One of the most remarkable things about Vedanta is that it is not simply a historical phenomenon, a chapter in the academic history of Indian philosophy, something that was vital in ancient and medieval India but has since been superseded or made irrelevant by the advance of modern knowledge. Vedanta is a living tradition. Its texts are still studied. Its practices are still followed. Its questions are still, for millions of people in India and around the world, the most urgent and most personally significant questions available.

This living quality is partly a consequence of the nature of the questions Vedanta asks. What is the self? What is the ultimate nature of reality? What is the relationship between the individual and the infinite? These questions do not become irrelevant with the advance of technology or the growth of scientific knowledge. They are perennial questions, questions that every human being who thinks seriously about their own existence eventually arrives at, and questions to which modern science and modern philosophy, for all their extraordinary achievements, have not yet provided fully satisfying answers.

Swami Vivekananda, who introduced Vedanta to the Western world in his historic appearance at the Parliament of World's Religions in Chicago in 1893, made exactly this argument. He said that Vedanta is the most rational, the most universal, and the most scientifically compatible of all religious and philosophical traditions, precisely because it does not rest on historical claims about specific events that may or may not have occurred, or on the authority of a particular person whose biography must be accepted on faith, but on the direct investigation of the nature of consciousness itself. The Upanishads, he said, are an invitation to enquiry, not a demand for belief. And that invitation is as open and as urgent today as it was when Yajnavalkya first sat with Maitreyi in the early morning silence and began to speak.

Conclusion: The End That Opens Everything

The word Vedanta, end of the Vedas, is one of those rare names that the more you understand it the more precisely right it seems. The Upanishads are the end of the Vedas in the literal sense: they appear at the conclusion of the Vedic literary corpus, after the hymns and the rituals and the forest meditations have done their work and the tradition is ready, finally, to ask the question that the whole enterprise has been preparing for. What is the self? What is Brahman? Are these two one thing or two?

They are the end of the Vedas in the philosophical sense: they are where the Vedic enquiry reaches the foundation it was always looking for, the bedrock of self-knowledge from which all other knowledge draws its meaning and its legitimacy. Every ritual in the Karma Kanda was, at some level, a question about the relationship between the human and the divine. The Upanishads are the tradition's fullest, most direct, most philosophically rigorous attempt to answer that question.

And they are the end of the Vedas in the sense that opens into everything else. Because the philosophical tradition of Vedanta that the Upanishads generated, the centuries of brilliant commentary and debate and practice and realisation that flowed from these ancient forest conversations, is one of the most extraordinary intellectual and spiritual achievements in the history of humanity. Shankaracharya, Ramanuja, Madhva, Vivekananda, Ramana Maharshi, Nisargadatta Maharaj, and countless others, all of them were doing nothing more and nothing less than trying to understand and transmit and apply what the ancient sages first articulated in the Upanishads. The end of the Vedas is, it turns out, the beginning of an enquiry that is still alive, still producing insight, still changing lives, and still as far from being completed as the question it is pursuing: the question of what we are.

Vedanta vignanam sunishchitartham

Sannyasayogad yatayah shuddhasattvah

Te brahmaloke tu parante sarve

Parimuchyanti amritah parimuktah

Those who have thoroughly understood the meaning of Vedanta

through the yoga of renunciation, their nature purified,

they are all liberated at the end in the world of Brahman.

(Mundaka Upanishad 3.2.6)

 

Why Silence Is Central in the Mandukya Upanishad

 Twelve verses. One sound. One silence. The whole of Vedanta

Abstract: The Mandukya Upanishad is the shortest of all the principal Upanishads. It contains just twelve verses. In the world of ancient Indian philosophical texts, where some Upanishads run to hundreds of pages and the great epics fill entire libraries, twelve verses is almost nothing. And yet the tradition has consistently held that the Mandukya alone is sufficient for liberation. Shankaracharya called it the most important of all the Upanishads. Gaudapada, whose commentary on the Mandukya is the foundational text of Advaita Vedanta, built an entire philosophical system out of its twelve sentences. The question worth asking is simple: how can something so short contain so much?

The answer lies in what the Mandukya Upanishad is actually doing. It is not making arguments to be followed step by step. It is not providing information to be memorised and recited. It is leading the reader, through a precise and careful movement of attention, to the edge of all possible description and then pointing, with its final verses, into a silence that is not the absence of meaning but the fullness of it. Silence, in the Mandukya Upanishad, is not where the teaching ends. It is where the teaching arrives. This article traces that journey from the first word of the text to the silence that its final verses open into, and explains why that silence is the most important thing the Mandukya has to say.

Keywords: Mandukya Upanishad, Om, Turiya, Four States of Consciousness, Silence, Gaudapada, Advaita Vedanta, Waking State, Dream State, Deep Sleep, Fourth State, Awareness, Consciousness, Brahman, Atman, Non-duality, Shankaracharya, Sanatan Dharma

Introduction: The Upanishad That Ends Where Words Cannot Go

Most sacred texts are long. The Bible, the Quran, the Mahabharata, the Pali Canon of Buddhist scripture, all of them fill volumes. Length, in religious literature, is often a sign of comprehensiveness, of the desire to say everything that can be said about the truth so that no one is left without guidance. The Mandukya Upanishad takes exactly the opposite approach. It is as if its authors recognised that the truth they were pointing toward could not be reached by accumulating more and more words, and that at some point the most honest and the most useful thing a text could do was to lead the reader, as efficiently as possible, to the place where words stop working and something else takes over.

That place is what the Mandukya calls Turiya, the fourth. Not the fourth state of consciousness, exactly, though it is sometimes described that way. More precisely, Turiya is the ground in which all three ordinary states of consciousness, waking, dreaming, and deep sleep, arise and dissolve. It is the awareness that is present through all three states without being limited to or defined by any of them. And it is, the Mandukya insists, what you are at the most fundamental level of your existence. The journey to Turiya is the journey to silence, because Turiya, by its very nature, cannot be described in words. It can only be recognised in the stillness that opens when all description has been exhausted.

This article follows the Mandukya Upanishad through its twelve verses, explaining each movement of the text in plain language, and showing how every step of the argument is also a step toward the silence that the text considers the deepest possible truth about the nature of the self and of reality.

Part One: Om Is All This

The First Verse and the Claim That Contains Everything

The Mandukya Upanishad opens with a declaration so enormous that it is easy to read past it without fully registering what is being said. The first verse says simply: Om. This syllable is all this. All that was, all that is, all that will be, all of this is indeed Om. And even what transcends the three divisions of time, that too is only Om.

Every word of this opening matters. Om is not being introduced as a useful symbol, a traditional invocation, or a culturally significant sound. It is being identified with all of reality. Not compared to all of reality, not described as a representation of all of reality, but equated with it. The syllable Om and the totality of existence are, the Mandukya says, one and the same thing. This is the most radical possible starting point for a philosophical text, and the Mandukya does not apologise for it or soften it. It simply states it, and then spends the next eleven verses explaining what it means.

Why does the text begin with Om rather than with a description of Brahman or the Atman? Because Om is a sound that has a unique property among all possible sounds: it contains, within its three constituent elements and its concluding silence, a complete map of consciousness. The tradition identifies the sound Om as being made up of three letters in Sanskrit: A, U, and M. These three letters correspond to the three ordinary states of human consciousness. And the silence that follows the sound of M, the silence into which the resonance of Om dissolves, corresponds to the fourth, Turiya. The Mandukya is telling you, in its very first verse, that the whole of what it is about to teach is already contained in the single syllable that every Vedic recitation begins with. If you can truly hear Om, you have already heard everything.

The Three Letters and the Three States

The second verse of the Mandukya introduces the concept of the four quarters of consciousness, the four Padas, which will be the main subject of everything that follows. The text says that the Atman is fourfold, that it has four aspects or quarters, each corresponding to a different dimension of conscious experience. Three of these four dimensions are the states of consciousness that every human being moves through every single day of their life. The fourth is the ground of all three.

The first state is Vaishvanara, the waking state. When you are reading these words, you are in the waking state. Your senses are open and engaged with the physical world. You are aware of the room around you, the weight of the book or device in your hands, the sounds of the environment. The waking state is the state of outward-turned consciousness, consciousness oriented toward the external world of objects and experiences. In the Mandukya's framework, this state corresponds to the letter A in Om, the first letter, the most open sound in the human voice, the sound produced with the mouth wide open and the breath flowing freely outward.

The second state is Taijasa, the dreaming state. Every night, when your body rests and your senses withdraw from the outer world, another world appears: the dream world. In that world you see, hear, feel, and experience things with complete vividness, and while the dream is happening it is entirely convincing. You experience genuine emotion in dreams. You make decisions, feel fear, feel joy. The dreaming state is the state of inward-turned consciousness, consciousness creating its own world from the materials stored in memory and imagination. It corresponds to the letter U in Om, the middle sound, produced with the lips beginning to close and the sound turning inward from its most open position.

The third state is Prajna, the state of deep dreamless sleep. This is the state you enter every night after dreaming has ceased and before waking begins. In deep sleep there is no experience of a world, inner or outer. There is no specific thought, no emotion, no narrative. And yet it is not nothing: people emerge from deep sleep feeling rested, refreshed, having received something, even though they cannot say what they experienced. The Mandukya describes this state as a mass of pure awareness with bliss as its face, the closest that ordinary consciousness comes to its own deepest nature without quite recognising itself. It corresponds to the letter M in Om, the sound produced with the lips completely closed, the most inward and the most unified of the three sounds, just before the sound ends.

Part Two: The Sound Ends and the Fourth Begins

Turiya: Not a State but the Ground of All States

And then the sound of Om ends. The M closes into silence. And it is in that silence, the Mandukya says, that the fourth, Turiya, is to be found. But found is perhaps the wrong word, because Turiya is not something hidden that you discover after looking for a while. It is something always already present that you simply have not noticed, because all your attention has been directed toward the three states that arise within it.

The Mandukya's seventh verse, which introduces Turiya, is one of the most carefully worded passages in the entire Upanishadic literature, and it is worth sitting with every phrase. The text says that the fourth is not that which is conscious of the inner world, and not that which is conscious of the outer world, and not that which is conscious of both worlds, and not a mass of consciousness, and not conscious, and not unconscious. It is unseen. It cannot be grasped. It has no distinguishing features. It cannot be thought about. It cannot be pointed to. It is the essence of the certainty of the self. It is the cessation of all phenomena. It is peace. It is bliss. It is non-dual. This is the Atman. This is what must be known.

Read that passage slowly and you will notice something remarkable happening. The Mandukya begins by saying what Turiya is not. It is not conscious of the inner world, meaning it is not the dreaming state. It is not conscious of the outer world, meaning it is not the waking state. It is not conscious of both worlds simultaneously. It is not a mass of consciousness, meaning it is not the deep sleep state. It is not conscious in the ordinary sense, meaning it is not any identifiable experience. And it is not unconscious, meaning it is not simply the absence of awareness. Every possible description has been excluded.

What remains after all those exclusions? The text gives the answer in a series of the most economical and the most beautiful phrases in Sanskrit philosophy. Peace. Bliss. Non-dual. The Atman. What remains after every possible description has been removed is not nothing. It is the awareness itself, which was never any particular state and never any particular experience, but which was the silent, steady, utterly present ground within which all states and all experiences arose. Turiya is not a fourth thing added to the other three. It is what all three arise in. It is the silence that was always already present underneath the sound of all three.

Why Silence Cannot Be Described and Must Be Experienced

Here is the central challenge that the Mandukya Upanishad honestly acknowledges: you cannot describe silence with words. The moment you say something about it, you have broken it. The moment you point to it, it has already become an object of attention, and an object of attention is not the awareness that is doing the attending. Every attempt to capture Turiya in a concept produces a concept, which is precisely not Turiya. Turiya is what is aware of concepts, not another concept to be aware of.

This is not a failure of the Mandukya. It is the most honest philosophical observation possible. And it is the reason why the Mandukya is structured the way it is: twelve verses that systematically eliminate every possible description, not to leave you with nothing but to leave you with the one thing that is left when everything describable has been eliminated. You cannot think your way to Turiya. You can only stop thinking enough to notice that something has been present through all the thinking, something that was not produced by the thinking and is not disturbed when the thinking stops.

The Chandogya Upanishad, in a different context, makes a similar point when it says that Brahman is where the mind goes and does not return, having no words. The Brihadaranyaka says Neti, neti, not this, not this, until the negation itself reveals what cannot be negated. The Mandukya does the same thing through the structure of Om: three sounds that are knowable, describable, experienced, followed by a silence that is none of those things. The three sounds prepare you for the silence. The silence is the point.

Part Three: Gaudapada and the Deeper Silence

The Karikas: When Philosophy Points Beyond Itself

The Mandukya Upanishad does not stand alone in the tradition. It is accompanied by the Mandukya Karikas of Gaudapada, the teacher who was Shankaracharya's teacher's teacher, the founder of the Advaita Vedanta lineage as a formal philosophical school. Gaudapada's Karikas are a commentary on the Mandukya that expand its twelve verses into several hundred, developing the philosophical implications of the Upanishad's teaching on the four states and the nature of Turiya into one of the most rigorous and complete systems of non-dual philosophy ever constructed.

Gaudapada's central contribution is the doctrine of Ajativada, which means the doctrine of non-origination. He argues, building directly on the Mandukya's teaching about Turiya, that nothing has ever actually been created. The entire apparent world of multiplicity and change, of birth and death, of one thing becoming another, is, from the perspective of Turiya, an appearance within the one, unchanging, non-dual awareness. Nothing comes into being. Nothing ceases to be. There is only the one awareness, appearing to itself as a world of many things through the mysterious power of its own creative capacity.

This teaching sounds extreme. But Gaudapada's argument for it is philosophically precise and practically important for understanding why silence is central to the Mandukya. He asks: what is the waking world like? It appears real, solid, external, permanent while you are in it. Now consider the dream world. It also appears real, solid, external, permanent while you are in it. But the moment you wake up, you recognise instantly that the dream world was not external, not independent, not truly other than the mind that was dreaming it. The whole vivid world of the dream, with its people and its places and its dramas and its dangers, was produced by and within your own awareness.

Gaudapada asks: what makes you confident that the waking world is different in its fundamental nature? From within the waking state, of course, it seems entirely different. It seems solid and real and independent in a way the dream world was not. But that is exactly what the dream also seemed like from within it. The waking state has no independent criterion by which to judge itself superior in reality to the dream, because the very instrument of judgment, the waking mind, is itself part of what is being judged. The only truly independent vantage point is Turiya, the awareness that is equally present in and through waking, dreaming, and deep sleep, and which is not produced by any of the three.

From Turiya's vantage point, both the waking world and the dream world arise in the same way: within awareness, from awareness, as appearances of awareness. Neither is more ultimately real than the other. Both are modifications of the one non-dual consciousness. And the recognition of this is not a depressing discovery. It is, the Mandukya and Gaudapada together insist, the most liberating recognition possible, because it means that the small, frightened, separated self that seems to be trapped in a solid and threatening world is itself only an appearance within the one awareness, and that the one awareness, which is what you truly are, is never trapped, never threatened, never limited by any of the forms it appears as. It is always free. Always full. Always silent in the deepest sense, because it is never disturbed by any of the noise that arises within it.

The Silence Between Thoughts Is the Same Silence as Turiya

Here is the most practically useful implication of the Mandukya's teaching on silence, and the one most directly accessible to an ordinary person who is not a professional philosopher: the silence that the Mandukya is pointing to is not somewhere else. It is not a special state that requires years of practice to enter. It is present right now, in this very moment, as the background of your experience.

You are reading these words. Between each word, there is a tiny gap. Between each sentence, a slightly longer one. Between each thought that arises in your mind as you read, there is a moment of silence, a brief interval in which the previous thought has dissolved and the next has not yet arisen. In that interval, what is there? Not nothing. There is awareness. There is presence. There is the quiet sense of being here, being conscious, being alive to this moment. That quiet presence in the gap between thoughts is the same silence that the Mandukya calls Turiya. It is not a special experience reserved for advanced meditators. It is the ordinary background of every moment of conscious experience, usually overlooked because the attention is so fully absorbed in the foreground of thoughts and sensations and stories.

The practice that the Mandukya Upanishad implicitly recommends, the practice that the tradition of Advaita Vedanta has developed in many forms from Gaudapada through Shankaracharya through Ramana Maharshi to teachers of the present day, is precisely the practice of noticing this background. Not manufacturing it, not achieving it through effort, not working yourself into a special state. Simply noticing what is already here. Turning the attention from the foreground of experience to the background within which the foreground arises. Letting the sound of the Om in your mind dissolve into the silence that follows. And recognising, in that silence, something that has always been present, something that the tradition dares to say is what you most fundamentally are.

Conclusion: The Upanishad That Teaches by Stopping

There is a paradox at the heart of the Mandukya Upanishad that every reader eventually has to sit with: it is a text whose entire purpose is to lead you beyond texts. It is a teaching whose conclusion is that the teaching cannot take you all the way. Words can describe the three states of waking, dreaming, and deep sleep, because those states are objects of description, experiences that can be talked about. But Turiya, the ground of all three, the silence that underlies all sound including the sound of Om, cannot be described. It can only be recognised directly, in the stillness of attention turned back on itself.

This is why the Mandukya is so short. A longer text would simply be more words, and the problem that the Mandukya is addressing is not a shortage of words. It is a surplus of attention directed outward. Twelve verses are enough to map the territory, to show you the three states and point to the fourth, to give the mind enough of a framework that it can, at least for a moment, stop its habitual outward movement and rest in the silence that was there all along. That is what the twelve verses are for. They are a hand pointing at the moon. The moon itself is the silence.

The Mandukya Upanishad begins with Om. Om is all this. All that was, all that is, all that will be is Om. And even what transcends the three divisions of time is only Om. If you chant Om slowly, you can hear it: the A rising from the belly, the U moving forward through the chest, the M closing at the lips, and then the sound ends. And what is left? Silence. The same silence that was there before you began. The silence that the sound arose from and returns to. The silence that was never not there. The Mandukya Upanishad calls that silence the Atman. It calls it Brahman. It calls it the fourth. It says it is what you are. And then, having said that much, it says no more. Because saying more would only take you further from the silence it is trying to introduce you to. The loudest teaching is a silence. And the silence is enough.

Om ity etad aksharam idam sarvam

Tasyopavyakhyanam

Bhutam bhavad bhavisyad iti sarvam omkaara eva

Yac canyat trikalaatitam tad apy omkaara eva

Om. This syllable is all this.

All that was, all that is, all that will be is indeed Om.

And what transcends the three divisions of time, that too is Om.

(Mandukya Upanishad 1.1)