Showing posts with label illusion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illusion. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 May 2022

A HANDBOOK OF HINDU RELIGION-3

 CHAPTER III-JIVA

The study of the Jiva. or the Atman holds a central place in Hinduism. Hinduism insists on the sacredness of life and the solidarity of all Jlvas. The atman is to be reflected on and realised before God or Paramatman is reflected on and realised. The atman is different from the body made of prakrti and its 23 elements. It isdifferent from the gross body consisting of the five elements, namely, earth, water, fire, air and ether, known as the pancabhutas. It is not the five pranas and is more than life. It is not the five sense organs, namely the eye, the ear, the nose,the tongue and the organ of touch. The atman is to be distinguished from the subtle body or suksmasarira, consisting of manas, buddhi, citta and ahankara or the mind, reason and egoity.Hinduism regards the mind and reason as part of the body and the atman as different from the suksmasarira and the stlmlasarira or mind-body.The bodies come and go but the atman never changes and it is eternal or nitaa. It is beyond birth and death and beyond ail mental changes,like the waking state, dream and deep sleep. It is a changeless entity by itself.

The Jiva is thus different from its quality of jnana or consciousness. The jnana or quality undergoes changes and not the substance or atman. In the jagrat or waking state, the Jiva is conscious of the external world, and its five sense organs are active. It sees things with the eyes, hears sounds with the ears, has the sensations of smell, taste and touch through the nose,the tongue and the skin. Therefore sensations are in the Jiva and the objects which cause them are in the external world. In the dream state or svapna, the Jlva does not perceive things but is only mentally active and enjoys pleasure and pain.
In deep sleep or subtle, the Jiva is at perfect rest and its consciousness does not work. Though it is not active, it is not' non-existent; it is in a latent state.The atman is by nature self-effulgent, active,joyful and eternal. It is a mode or amsa of God and though it exists as an eternal entity, it is not separate from Him. It is not born and it does not die. It is beyond the past, the present and the future and is thus beyond time and it is beyond space. The atman is essentially self conscious and it has the quality of jnana by which it thinks, feels and wills. It is' a knowing subject and is not jada or inert. It has moral
freedom and it is not passive. It is joyful and is not miserable or sick-minded. In this way it abides in its own spiritual nature and is different from prakrti and God. Atman has its own dignity, intrinsic worth and autonomy. It is not a thing or physical substance like a stone or piece of wood which is acit or jada. It is not subject to prakrti and its gunas and is free from the instincts, like lust, anger, hatred, jealousy and it has self-mastery. Thus it is a spiritual personality which is free and eternal. It is a knower, a free
agent and is joyful. The atman that subjects itself to the evils of samsra or the bondage of karma is called baddha-jiva. It somehow, owing to avidya or ancient ignorance which cannot be explained, mistakes itself for the body made of prakrti and suffers from the series of births and deaths. It is like the prince who exiles himself from his father’s throne and joins the wild hunters in the forest, marries a hunter girl, begets children by her and thus gets immersed in savage life. The atman somehow deserts its divine home, enters into the body made of acit, wallows in sense life and is caught up in the wheel of
births and deaths. Why or how it lapses from the divine heritage and suffers from avidya, kama and karm,a, is a mystery. But the jiva alone is responsible for the evils and ills of worldliness and not any outside agency. Avidya makes it JIVA identify itself with prakrti jts gunas; Kama' makes it seek the pleasures ,the senses and suffer from the pains of animal life and karma subjects it to the endless series of births and deaths. But the Jiva does not suffer from original sin or unmerited suffering. Though the
origin of avidga, or samsara cannot be understood, it can be destroyed by jnavia, and the atman can go back to God and return no mere to samsara. But as long as its true nature is concealed by avidya, it is bound by karma and is subject to the rounds of births and deaths.

Karma

The law of karma occupies an important place in Hindu Ethics, and it alone solves the problem of the inequalities of life and unmerited suffering. Why does the wicked man prosper in life and the good man suffer from all kinds of misery, physical, mental and social? and why does the new-born child suffer for the sins of its parents and from untold evils and why should there be evil and misery at all if there is a good God? These problems are as old as humanity itself. But of all the solutions offered, the theory of karma is the least objectionable. Evil and suffering no doubt exist hut each man is responsible for the ills of life he undergoes and not God or the Devil. The theory of karma is the law of causation applied to moral life and each man reaps what he sows. The effect of karma or action done by thought, word and deed (or matins,vak and kaija) is never lost; it is conserved in the mind-body or sarira. The present karma is the effect of the past, and is the cause of the future.In this way all karmas are connected as cause and effect and they form a series without any beginning. The law of causation operates uniformly
without any exception and it is the moral law of retribution. I: a man does good deeds or punyakanna he is rewarded and he enjoys the effect of his deeds, like health, longevity of life, prosperity,power and glory; but if he does bad deeds he is punished and he suffers for his bad acts and they lead to disease, poverty and misery. Good and evil thus lead to pleasure and pain and there is a mathematical ratio between virtue and pleasure and vice and suffering. In this way every man is accountable for his good and bad deeds.

Transmigration

The laws of rebirth and transmigration of Jivas follow as the consequence of karma. No child is born out of nothing; it is not born with an empty mind. It does not evolve from the parents and follow the laws of heredity. Every child is born with certain predispositions or vasanas, which are retained in the subtle body, as the effect, no deed is lost. When a person dies, the gross body alone is dissolved but the subtle body of the Jiva remains, retaining- all the effects of its karma. The Jiva then enters into a new
body suited to its past karma and is born again ,Thus every birth is the result of past karma and is the cause of a new body and birth. Just as a man throws away worn out garments and puts on new garments, the Jiva throws away worn out bodies and puts on new bodies. Just as there is continuity in a man's life from infancy to old age and personal identity, so there is continuity of the same Jiva in the series of births and rebirths and personal identity. There is identity in spite of numerous births and this is due to the eternity of the Jiva.
The adventures of the Jiva in the world of samsara are not confined to this earth alone. It migrates from body to body according to its karma in the cosmic spheres known as the three lokas ranging from Brahmaloka or Satyaloka  above to the Patalaloka below. In the celestial worlds above, starting with Svarga, the quality of sattva is dominant and the Jiva enjoys pleasure. In the nether regions, starting with Atala, the quality of tamas is dominant and Patala is the lowest region of darkness and' the Jiva suffers from pain. But the middle region called Karma Bhumi is influenced by rajas. It is the moral
world of man and it is here that he does good deeds and bad deeds and their effect is reaped in the worlds above and below. There are other Brahmandas(universes) like this and they are countless like
the stars and they are ruled by Isvara according to the karma of the Jivas. The worlds have no spatial meaning but they have hierarchical moral values. Good men ascend to higher regions according to their karma and enjoy celestial pleasures and when the effect is exhausted, they come down again and are born in different bodies, sub-human and human. Likewise wicked Jivas suffer from pain and when it is exhausted, they have a new chance and are born again in this moral world.

Freedom

The scientific view of karma in terms of cause and effect is open to the objection that it leads to fatalism and pessimism and that it does not provide any hope of bettering the future. Since every man reaps what he sows, he has to submit meekly to what happens without any moral freedom. He has to endure what cannot be cured and is a slave of circumstances. But the scientific view is only one aspect of karma as the more important side is the assertion of the moral freedom or freedom of the will. It says that every man can control his inclinations like anger,fear, lust, hatred and jealousy and that he can
control his future. The scientific theory applies only to prarabdha-karma and not to sancita karma. The former refers to the karma that has already happened, like the birth of a person and which cannot be changed. But the latter refers to the future which is in our hands. Every man is the master or architect of his destiny and not even a God can alter it. If a man has a conflict of desires, like the choice of a career, he has the moral freedom to decide for himself which career he can choose. He can control his passions, like anger or hatred and attain moral victory. But if he chooses tbe way of the animal,then he once again is chained to the wheel of samsara. But he too will one day begin to realise the futility and pain of choosing the animal way of life and turn towards the higher path of freedom through self-control. In either case freedom is inherent in every soul to choose the higher or the lower. A soul has freedom to
choose but not the power to get the results of what it chooses as it likes. The results depend on
the laws of the worlds and causation (karma).

Monday, 29 June 2020

Maya (Illusion)

Is time an illusion (Maya)?
      
In Hinduism time is considered a facet of creation. It exists only so long as we are bound to the things of this world through our senses. Time may be a mental concept created by the movement of our senses, the celestial objects and our perceptions. It is a part of the illusion during which we live and which we deem real. In God's consciousness, there are no divisions of time. There is only this moment, one continuous, indivisible and indistinguishable state of existence.
Time is additionally considered a facet of Prakriti or Nature. It is one among the 36 tattvas or principles of creation . Prakriti subjects the boundless individual souls of pure consciousness to the restrictions of your time (Kala), space (Nyathi), knowledge (vidya), passion (raga) and power (Kala) and binds them to the cycle of births and rebirths. When beings transcend these five limitations through the grace of The divine soul, they regain their pure consciousness (chit) and become free.
 To understand this we have to go through the story of Narada “The Deva rishi”.
The Story of Narada
  He is one of the many Manash (born out of mind) Putra (son) of Lord Brahma. He was not interested in the material world so he refused to marry. He preferred in the realm of Vishnu, where time and space does not exist, where Maya casts no spells. He encouraged Brahma’s other sons to stay celibate like him. He did not understand the purpose of the creation of the universe and see no point of engaging with Prakriti.
Some other son's of the Brahma also agreed with Narada, and they refuse to marry. This happened several times until an enraged Brahma cursed Narada, ‘you will stay trapped within the material world until you appreciate the worth of Maya.’
Narada visited Vishnu and asked him the meaning of Maya. Vishnu said, ‘i will explain after you quench my thirst. Go fetch me some water.’Narada went to a river to fetch water. But as he was collecting the water, he saw a beautiful girl. He was so drawn to her that he followed her to her village and asked her father for her hand in marriage. The father agreed and the two got married. Before long, Narada was a father then grandfather than a great grandparent. Narada felt content. Suddenly one day, it rained. And the rains refused to stop. The river swelled and broke its
banks. Water rushed into Narada’s house, and to his horror, caught in a frenzy his wife, his children, his grandchildren and his great-grandchildren. He screamed and shouted for help as the water dragged him under. Suddenly he was pulled up and found himself in Vaikuntha (Vishnu’s abode) before Vishnu.
‘Narada,’ said Vishnu, ‘where is my water? I am still thirsty.’ Narada did not understand. Where was his family, his wife’s village, the river?
Where do this pain and suffering come from, Narada?’ asked Vishnu with a smile. ‘I thought you had full knowledge of Maya before you began to fetch water on behalf of me .’
Narada bowed his head in realization. He knew Maya but had never experienced Maya. Brahma was encouraging his sons to marry in order that they experience Maya. Knowledge of Maya is not the experience of Maya. Unless one experiences Maya, one won't be ready to empathize with those that are trapped in it.
Said Vishnu, ‘you knew all about measuring scales and subjective realities, Yet you forgot all about them as soon as you experienced the fabric world – home, family, children, and village. Your understanding of Maya and Brahmanda could have helped you in the turmoil of pleasure and pain, but it did not. Such is the spell of Maya. Now that you have experienced Maya, I want you to go and meet people and realize them that the only way out of Maya is seeking answers out of material reality. I want you to teach them into following the spiritual path.
The Parbrahma or Supreme soul is true, the material world is an illusion. The world exists for those who recognize the existence and does not exist for those who ignore its existence. For example- As long as the dreamer is going through the experience of Dream, the dream is a reality for him. All of his experience will be real. If he is hungry, eating relieves him of hunger, and if he is thirsty, he will drink water and thereby quenches his thirst. This experience in the dream will be as real as when we do it physically. This experience or state of mind will be the same when we do the activity with our physical body ( real-world) or without it in a dream ( illusion). So which is real , our physical world or dream world? In some sense  both, maybe real or illusion, Or one may be real and other illusion by his/her opinion. For us when we are in our material body, the dream is an Illusion and the material world is real but when we leave our body and left only with the soul, we realize that the material world is an illusion and that world is real. As Soul has no physical limitation like our body, it can see the real truth. The spiritually elevated person who knows the real truth i.e. these supreme being (Spiritually elevated person) considered the material world as Maya or illusion when he is present in physical body also. That person knows the purpose of body and material world, they do their duty ( Karma) but not attached to it. Like I know the purpose of the pen is to write no matter how much expensive or beautiful it is. I used to write with this pen, I am not attached to his beautifulness or expensiveness. I am not preserving it. All material world is under the spell of Maya even Lord Brahma is not excluded. Even Narada forgets all his wisdom and knowledge when under the spell of Maya, so how can we human being know the real truth when under the spell of Maya?
  All material world exists in the dream of Vishnu when he awakes, this material world vanishes, like a dream. For us the material world (time) is real but for Vishnu, it is illusion or dream. But for Brahma and us, the material world is real, so is time.

Featured post

Maya (Illusion)

Is time an illusion (Maya)?        In Hinduism time is considered a facet of creation. It exists only so long as we are bound to the...