Vedanta Sutra by Baladeva Vidyabhusana.doc

(2712 KB) Pobierz
SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM--THE NATURAL COMMENTARY ON VEDANTA (ARTHO 'YAM

 

    SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM--THE NATURAL COMMENTARY ON VEDANTA (ARTHO 'YAM

                            BRAHMA-SUTRANAM)

 

     A STUDY GUIDE BASED UPON THE GOVINDA-BHASYA OF SRILA BALADEVA

                              VIDYABHUSANA

 

 

                              INTRODUCTION

 

     The word Veda means 'knowledge.'  In the modern world, the term

'science' is used to identify the kind of authoritative knowledge upon

which human progress is based.  To the ancient people of Bharatavarsa,

the word Veda had an even more profound import than the word science has

for people today.  That is because in those days scientific inquiry was

not restricted to the world perceived by the physicial senses.  And the

definition of human progress was not restricted to massive technological

exploitation of material nature.  In Vedic times, the primary focus of

science was the eternal, not the temporary; human progress meant the

advancement of spiritual awareness yielding the soul's release from the

entrapment of material nature, which is temporary and full of ignorance

and suffering.

 

     Vedic knowledge is called apauruseya, meaning that it is not

knowledge of human invention.  Vedic knowledge appeared at the dawn of

the cosmos within the heart of Brahma, the lotus-born demigod of

creation from whom all the species of life within the universe descend.

Brahma imparted this knowledge in the form of sabda (spiritual sound) to

his immediate sons, who are great sages of higher planetary systems like

the Satyaloka, Janaloka and Tapaloka.  These sages transmitted the Vedic

sabda to disciples all over the universe, including wise men of earth in

ancient times.  Five thousand years ago the great Vedic authority Srila

Krsna Dvaipayana Vyasa compiled the sabda into Sanskrit scripture

(sastra) which collectively is known today as 'the Vedas.'

 

     In the India of old, the study of the Vedas was the special

prerogative of the brahmanas (the priestly and intellectual class).

There were four degrees of education in Vedic knowledge that

corresponded to the four asramas of brahminical culture (the brahmacari

or student asrama, the grhastha or householder asrama, the vanaprastha

or retired asrama and the sannyasa or renounced asrama).  The first

degree of learning was the memorization of the Vedic Samhita, which

consists of thousands of mantras (verses) divided into four sections--

Rg, Sama, Yajur and Atharva--that are chanted by priests in

glorification of the Supreme Being during sacrificial rituals.  The

second degree was the mastery of the Brahmana portion of the Vedas,

which teaches rituals for fulfillment of duties to family, society,

demigods, sages, other living entities and the Supreme Lord.  The third

degree was the mastery of the Aranyaka portion, which prepares the

retired householder for complete renunciation.  The fourth degree was

the mastery of the Upanisads, which present the philosophy of the

Absolute Truth to persons seeking liberation from birth and death.

 

     The texts studied in the four stages of formal Vedic education are

collectively called sruti-sastra, 'scripture that is to be heard' by the

brahmanas.  But sruti-sastra is not all there is to the Vedic

literature.  Chandogya Upanisad 7.1.2 declares that the Puranas and

Itihasas comprise the fifth division of Vedic study.  The Puranas and

Itihasas teach the same knowledge as the four Vedas, illustrating it

with extensive historical narrations.  The fifth Veda is known as

smrti-sastra ('scripture that must be remembered'); Srila Vyasadeva

compiled it into eighteen Puranas and the Mahabharata.  Smrti-sastra

study was permitted to non-brahmanas.  At Naimasaranya, therefore, Suta

Gosvami, a non-brahmana by birth, was requested by the great assembly of

brahmanas to recite the Srimad-Bhagavata Maha-purana that his father

Romaharsana had learned directly from Vyasa.

 

     Before Vyasadeva's compilation, the Vedas had long been taught in

the brahmana-asramas by six schools of Vedic philosophy.  Each of these

schools had come to be associated with a famous sage who was the author

of a sutra (code) expressing the essence of his darsana (standpoint on

the ultimate meaning or purpose of the Veda).  To dispel the confusion

that had arisen among brahmanas because of the incongruities of these

standpoints, Vyasa wrote Vedanta-sutra as a final judgement on the

arguments of the six schools as well as those of other philosophies.

Vedanta-sutra forms the third great body of Vedic literature after the

sruti-sastra and smrti-sastra.  It is known as the nyaya-sastra,

'scripture of philosophical disputation.'

 

     The sad-darsana (six standpoints) are Nyaya (logic), Vaisesika

(atomic theory), Samkhya (analysis of matter and spirit), Yoga (the

discipline of self-realization), Karma-mimamsa (science of fruitive

work) and Vedanta (science of God realization).

 

     The sad-darsana are termed astika (from asti, or 'it is so'),

because they all acknowledge the Veda to be authoritative.  The nastika

philosophies of the Carvakas, Buddhists and Jains (nasti, 'it is not

so'), reject the Vedas.  Beginning with Nyaya, each of the sad-darsanas

in their own turn presents a more developed and comprehensive

explanation of the conclusion of Vedic knowledge.  Nyaya sets up the

rules of philosophical debate and identifies the basic subjects under

discussion: the physical world, the soul, God and liberation. Vaisesika

engages the method of Nyaya or logic in a deeper analysis of the

predicament of material existence by showing that the visible material

forms to which we are all so attached ultimately break down into

invisible atoms.  Samkhya develops this analytical process further to

help the soul become aloof to matter.  Through Yoga, the soul awakens

its innate spiritual vision to see itself beyond the body. Karma-mimamsa

directs the soul to accept the duties prescribed in the Vedic

scriptures.  Vedanta focuses on the supreme goal taught in the

Upanisads.

 

     Originally, the six darsanas were specialized fields within

a harmonious, comprehensive study of the Veda.  The purest and most

ancient versions of these darsanas are found in Srimad-Bhagavatam,

propounded by great mahajanas like Brahma, Narada, Siva, the four

Kumaras, Devahuti-putra Kapiladeva and Sukadeva Gosvami.  But later and

far lesser scholars of the darsanas advanced opposing, contentious

points of view.  Thus Vedic philosopy came to be misrepresented for

selfish ends.  For instance, Karma-mimamsa (which by 500 BC had become

the foremost philosophy of the brahmana class) was misused by

bloodthirsty priests to justify their mass slaughter of animals in Vedic

sacrifices.  But the unexpected rise of a novel non- Vedic religion

challenged the power of Karma-mimamsa.  This new religion was Buddhism.

When King Asoka instituted the Buddha's doctrine as the state religion

of his empire, many brahmanas abandoned Vedic scholarship altogether to

learn and teach nastika concepts of ahimsa (nonviolence) and sunyata

(voidism).  This seriously eroded the influence of the astika schools.

 

     In the seventh century after Christ, Buddhism in its turn was

eclipsed by the rise of the teachings of the Vedantist Sankara, who

revived the Vedic culture all over India. But Sankara's special

formulation of Vedanta was itself influenced by Buddhism and is not

truly representative of the original Vedanta-darsana taught by Vyasa.

 

     After Sankara, Vedanta was refined by the schools of great teachers

(acaryas) like Ramanuja, Madhva and Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Having shed

the baggage of Sankara's crypto-Buddhism, Vedanta philosophers soared to

heights of dialectical sophistication that has been much appreciated by

many Western intellectuals.  Vedantic dialectics are represented today

in the bhasyas (commentaries) of the acaryas and the tikas

(subcommentaries) of their disciples.  All possible philosophical

positions, including some bearing remarkable resemblance to the ideas of

European philosophers, are therein proposed, analyzed and refuted.

 

     Vedanta study is jnana-yoga, the yoga of theoretical knowledge. But

from jnana one must come to vijnana, practical realization of the

ultimate truth.  The theoretical dialectics (sastratha) of Vedanta twist

and turn from thesis (purvapaksa) to antithesis (uttarapaksa) to

synthesis (siddhanta) like the gnarled branches of a tree.  But the ways

of philosophical disputation do not themselves add up to the Absolute

Truth.  The Absolute Truth, being transcendental, is only indirectly

framed in the branches of jnana, like the rising full moon may be framed

by the branches of a tree.  A friend who wishes us to see the moon may

first draw our attention to that tree.  This may be compared to the

indirect or theoretical stage of knowledge.  Actually seeing the moon is

vijnana.

 

     There is a straightforward path to vijnana.  It is explained by the

Supreme Personality of Godhead to Brahma in Srimad-Bhagavatam 2.9.31:

 

                          sri-bhagavan uvaca

                        jnanam parama-guhyam me

                         yad vijnana-samanvitam

                        sarahasyam tad-angam ca

                          grhana gaditam maya

 

                              TRANSLATION

 

     The Personality of Godhead said: Knowledge about Me as described in

the scriptures is very confidential, and it has to be realized in

conjunction with devotional service. The necessary paraphernalia for

that process is being explained by Me. You may take it up carefully.

 

     This verse, which establishes that vijnana is attainable by one who

coordinates scriptural study with pure devotional service, is the

prelude to the Catuhsloki Bhagavatam, the four original verses of the

Srimad-Bhagavatam spoken before creation by the Lord to His servant

Brahma. (Bhag. 2.9.33-36)  Five thousand years ago, the Catuhsloki

Bhagavatam was expanded into 18,000 verses by Srila Vyasadeva as his own

commentary on Vedanta-sutra.  The Srimad-Bhagavatam, then, is meant for

persons who are willing to go beyond mere thinking about the Absolute

Truth to the realized stage of practical engagement--body, mind, soul

and words--in the ninefold angas (divisions) of devotional service to

Krsna.  As Sri Prahlada Maharaja states, kriyeta bhagavaty addha tan

manye 'dhitam uttamam: 'One who has dedicated his life to the service of

Krsna through these nine methods should be understood to be the most

learned person, for he has acquired complete knowledge.' (Bhag. 7.5.24)

 

     The study guide that follows is designed to help the student of

Srimad-Bhagavatam to 1) discern the original Bhagavata versions of the

six darsanas, 2) learn the Srimad-Bhagavatam's answers to challenges

fired from many different philosophical stances, and 3) appreciate the

solid Vedic philosophical foundation of Krsna-bhakti.  In this guide,

verses of the Srimad-Bhagavatam are presented as commentaries on

philosophical controversies raised in the Vedanta-sutra.  The outline of

Vedanta controversies provided by this guide is drawn from the

Govinda-bhasya of Srila Baladeva Vidyabhusana.  The Govinda-bhasya

quotes a number Bhagavatam verses deemed to be the elucidations of

specific sutras.  All verses mentioned therein are incorporated into

this study guide.  And wherever the Govinda-bhasya provides no

Bhagavatam verses to match the Vedanta, other Vaisnava studies of the

Srimad-Bhagavatam were consulted.  They are: Sri Bhagavata-arka Marici

Mala by Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura, Sri Bhakti Ratnavali by Visnu Puri,

Vedanta-darsana by Haridasa Sastri and--first and foremost--the

computerized BBT Folio of the books of His Divine Grace A. C.

Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.

 

    Readers should note that this study guide examines the Srimad-

Bhagavatam from a very specific angle of vision--Vedanta philosophy-- so

as to heighten our appreciation and understanding of certain verses that

may have escaped our careful consideration due to their seeming

technical or esoteric nature.  Thus this study guide is really aimed at

augmenting an already developed appreciation for Bhagavata philosophy.

It is not conceived of as a general introduction to the Srimad

Bhagavatam.  Nor is it meant to be an exhaustive study of the

Vedanta-sutra either.  Many of the finer details of Vedanta philosophy

that are dealt with in Govinda-bhasya can find no place in such a work

as this, which utilizes Vedanta only as a background reference for

a deeper understanding of the Srimad-Bhagavatam.

 

SRILA PRABHUPADA ON THE SRIMAD-BHAGAVATAM AS THE NATURAL COMMENTARY ON

VEDANTA-SUTRA

 

From Teachings of Lord Kapila, Chapter 4: 'Srimad-Bhagavatam is

a commentary on Vedanta-sutra. Vedanta-sutra explains that the Supreme is

the source of everything, and the nature of that source is explained in

Srimad-Bhagavatam (1.1.1): janmady asya yato 'nvayad itaratas carthesv

abhijnah svarat. That source is abhijna, cognizant.  Matter is not

cognizant; therefore the theory of modern science that life comes from

matter is incorrect. The identity from whom everything emanates is

abhijna, cognizant, which means He can understand.  The Bhagavatam

(1.1.1) also states, tene brahma hrda ya adi-kavaye: Krsna instructed

Lord Brahma in Vedic knowledge. Unless the ultimate source is a living

entity, how can He impart knowledge? Srimad-Bhagavatam was compiled by

Vyasadeva, who also compiled the Vedanta-sutra.  Generally the Mayavadis

emphasize the commentary made on the Vedanta-sutra by Sankaracarya, the

Sariraka-bhasya, but that is not the original commentary on

Vedanta-sutra. The original commentary is given by the author himself,

Vyasadeva, in the form of Srimad-Bhagavatam. To understand the actual

meaning of the Vedanta-sutra, we must refer to the commentary made by

the author himself. As stated by Sri Krsna Himself in Bhagavad-gita

(13.5):

 

                         rsibhir bahudha gitam

                      chandobhir vividhaih prthak

                       brahma-sutra-padais caiva

                        hetumadbhir viniscitaih

 

"The knowledge of the field of activities and of the knower of

activities is described by various sages in various Vedic writings--

especially in the Vedanta-sutra--and is presented with all reasoning as

to cause and effect."

 

Transcendental knowledge is therefore very logical.  According to the

Vedic system, the acarya must understand Vedanta-sutra (also called

Brahma-sutra) before he can be accepted as an acarya.  Both the

Mayavada-sampradaya and the Vaisnava-sampradaya have explained the

Vedanta-sutra. Without understanding Vedanta-sutra, one cannot

understand Brahman.'

 

From Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi-lila, Chapter 7, Text 72, purport:

'Knowledge of the unlimited is actual brahmajnana, or knowledge of the

Supreme. Those who are addicted to fruitive activities and speculative

knowledge cannot understand the value of the holy name of the Lord,

Krsna, who is always completely pure, eternally liberated and full of

spiritual bliss.  One who has taken shelter of the holy name of the

Lord, which is identical with the Lord, does not have to study Vedanta

philosophy, for he has already completed all such study.

 

One who is unfit to chant the holy name of Krsna but thinks that the

holy name is different from Krsna and thus takes shelter of Vedanta

study in order to understand Him must be considered a number one fool,

as confirmed by Caitanya Mahaprabhu by His personal behavior, and

philosophical speculators who want to make Vedanta philosophy an

academic career are also considered to be within the material energy.

A person who always chants the holy name of the Lord, however, is already

beyond the ocean of nescience, and thus even a person born in a low

family who engages in chanting the holy name of the Lord is considered

to be beyond the study of Vedanta philosophy.  In this connection the

Srimad-Bhavatam states:

 

                     aho bata svapaco' to gariyan

                  yaj-jihvagre vartate nama tubhyam

                 tepus tapas te juhuvuh sasnur arya

                   brahman ucur nama grnanti ye te

 

"If a person born in a family of dog-eaters takes to the chanting of the

holy name of Krsna, it is to be understood that in his previous life he

must have executed all kinds of austerities and penances and performed

all the Vedic yajnas." (SB. 3.33.7) Another quotation states:

 

             rg-vedo 'tha yajur-vedah sma-vedo 'py atharvanah

              adhitas tena yenoktam harir ity aksara-dvayam

 

"A person who chants the two syllables Ha-ri has already studied the

four Vedas--Sama, Rk, Yajuh and Atharva."

 

Taking advantage of these verses, there are some sahajiyas who, taking

everything very cheaply, consider themselves elevated Vaisnavas but do

not care even to touch the Vednta-sutras or Vedanta philosophy.  A real

Vaisnava should, however, study Vedanta philosophy, but if after

studying Vedanta one does not adopt the chanting of the holy name of the

Lord, he is no better than a Mayavadi.  Therefore, one should not be

a Mayavadi, yet one should not be unaware of the subject matter of Vedanta

philosophy.  Indeed, Caitanya Mahaprabhu exhibited His knowledge of

Vedanta in His discourses with Prakasananda Sarasvati. Thus it is to be

understood that a Vaisnava should be completely conversant with Vedanta

philosophy, yet he should not think that studying Vedanta is all in all

and therefore be unattached to the chanting of the holy name. A devotee

must know the importance of simultaneously understanding Vedanta

philosophy and chanting the holy names. If by studying Vedanta one

becomes an impersonalist, he has not been able to understand Vedanta.

This is confirmed in Bhagavad-gita (Bg. 15.15).  Vedanta means "the end

of knowledge." The ultimate end of knowledge is knowledge of Krsna, who

is identical with His holy name.  Cheap Vaisnavas (sahajiyas) do not

care to study the Vedanta philosophy as commented upon by the four

acaryas.  In the Gaudiya- sampradaya there is a Vedanta commentary

called the Govinda-bhasya, but the sahajiyas consider such commentaries

to be untouchable philosophical speculation, and they consider the

acaryas to be mixed devotees. Thus they clear their way to hell.'

 

From Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi-lila, Chapter 7, Text 102, Purport: 'The

Mayavadi sannyasis, appreciating Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu, inquired from

Him why He did not discuss Vedanta philosophy.  Actually, however, the

entire system of Vaisnava activities is based on Vedanta philosophy.

Vaisnavas do not neglect Vedanta, but they do not care to understand

Vedanta on the basis of the Sariraka-bhasya commentary. Therefore, to

clarify the situation, Lord Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, with the permission

of the Mayavadi sannyasis, wanted to speak regarding Vedanta philosophy.

The Vaisnavas are by far the greatest philosophers in the world, and the

greatest among them was Srila Jiva Gosvami Prabhu, whose philosophy was

again presented less than four hundred years later by Srila

Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura Maharaja. Therefore one must know very

well that Vaisnava philosophers are not sentimentalists or cheap

...

Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin