Devadatta
Well-Known Member
Hi again. Here’s to the beneficial effects of a stiff challenge.
- Now, in one of our previous discussions you suggested that the ultimate realization of Sanatana dharma is “union with Mahabrahma” (if this is not quite accurate, please set me straight). In other exchanges, you’ve put great stock in the atman/anatman distinction. I’m not sure on which particular texts or teachers you base your viewpoint, which I would be interested in knowing. But I feel compelled to explain my own understanding.
- First, at issue is the contention that Buddhism aims at a radically higher realization than any other tradition, in this instance Sanatana dharma.
- For the comparison to be at all meaningful the terms must be at least roughly parallel. And “union with Mahabrahma” has never been to my knowledge the definition of the highest realization in Sanatana dharma. If you look at any standard reference, you’ll find a clear distinction between any notion of “Brahma” as a creator god and “Brahman” as the impersonal absolute. In the dictionary I have, Brahman among other things is described as “incorporeal, immaterial, invisible, unborn, uncreated”, etc. Brahma is a creator god whose name doesn’t even appear in the earliest Vedas and who is supplanted early on by Vishnu and Shiva as the preferred gateway names to the absolute. Highest realization doesn’t turn on any of these gateway names or concepts but on realization of that uncreated absolute.
- Again, I don’t know from where you derive this meaning of “Mahabrahma”, but in the fundamental suttas this refers to a creator god way down in the divine pecking order in the form world (14 out of 16, if I remember correctly), and more a figure of fun than anything like the uncreated absolute.
- So fundamentally, the true comparison is between Buddhist realization of “dependent origination” and Sanatana dharma realization of impersonal “Brahman”; or, to put it another way, the verbal formulation “not-self” as against the verbal formulation “Supreme Self”.
- Is there some fundamental difference between these two views of nirvana, based on verbal distinctions like atman/anatman, in terms of the actual experience of that ideally fully realized sage? If there is, it will take a far more evolved person than myself to explain where that real as opposed to conceptual/verbal difference lies.
- That said, the important issue for me is whether the Buddhist tradition, at its most fundamental, really does claim that realization of the uncreated Brahman is a second-rate nirvana. And here I think the answer may be more straightforward than one thinks, given the vast bulk of Buddhist writings.
- You’re no doubt familiar with the Brahmajala. This is traditionally placed as the very first sutta in the written canon, and is recognized as authoritative by all schools. It’s also the first comprehensive expression of fundamental Buddhist views on this question.
- And what do we find among the 62 views listed as wrong? Well, we find Mahabrahma playing the buffoon as usual, with wrong view arising not from “union” but from being born as a Mahabrahma or in his realm, and retaining a defective memory of the experience (as well, it’s said that one can arrive at this wrong view through some unspecified process of reasoning).
.
- Of all the 62 views listed (actually fewer than 62; the 62 total arises from a quaint way of categorizing “views”), the best shot for a sectarian view of nirvana is the very first, “belief in an eternal soul and an eternal world”. Superficially, this view most resembles the identity of Brahman & Atman that we find in the Upanishads.
- But is it the same thing? I think there are good reasons to doubt. First the “world” and “uncreated Brahman” are hardly synonymous. “Eternal world” could well be a materialist conception. Second, what is posited here is fundamentally a belief rising from the faulty memory of past lives, or a simplistic deduction of eternality arising from those memories or their experience. Does this do justice to the subtle formulations of Brahman already present in the Upanishads of the time? Again, I think there are good reasons to doubt that this “wrong view” adequately sums up the Sanatana approach to nirvana, or is even intending to.
- Certainly this question comes down to interpretation, others are possible, and everyone is entitled to their own. But I think in a way, whatever our interpretation we adhere to, we have to make a basic choice.
- I believe we can either take a pluralist or a sectarian view.
- The pluralist view is that the Brahmajala effectively sums up a range of naive metaphysical views common to its time, and which it shows to be based on clinging to concepts and projections rooted in past memories or present experience. The Brahmajala therefore speaks from a very sophisticated standpoint, but does not thereby preclude other standpoints equally sophisticated. The pluralist view is that such equally sophisticated standpoints existed at the time, have certainly existed & developed over the centuries, east & west, and exist to the present day.
- The sectarian view is to cling to any scriptural formulation that appears to justify a belief in the superiority of its particular tradition or lineage.
- So that would be my question to you, Vajra, and to anyone else who cares to answer: how do you choose, as a pluralist or as a sectarian? Are you with Panikkar or are you with the Pope?
- I hope this comes across as intended: direct, challenging, by not unfriendly.
Cheers.
BTW, here are two posts I wouldn't mind you responding to, if you feel moved to do so: http://www.comparative-religion.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3413
http://www.comparative-religion.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3486
- Now, in one of our previous discussions you suggested that the ultimate realization of Sanatana dharma is “union with Mahabrahma” (if this is not quite accurate, please set me straight). In other exchanges, you’ve put great stock in the atman/anatman distinction. I’m not sure on which particular texts or teachers you base your viewpoint, which I would be interested in knowing. But I feel compelled to explain my own understanding.
- First, at issue is the contention that Buddhism aims at a radically higher realization than any other tradition, in this instance Sanatana dharma.
- For the comparison to be at all meaningful the terms must be at least roughly parallel. And “union with Mahabrahma” has never been to my knowledge the definition of the highest realization in Sanatana dharma. If you look at any standard reference, you’ll find a clear distinction between any notion of “Brahma” as a creator god and “Brahman” as the impersonal absolute. In the dictionary I have, Brahman among other things is described as “incorporeal, immaterial, invisible, unborn, uncreated”, etc. Brahma is a creator god whose name doesn’t even appear in the earliest Vedas and who is supplanted early on by Vishnu and Shiva as the preferred gateway names to the absolute. Highest realization doesn’t turn on any of these gateway names or concepts but on realization of that uncreated absolute.
- Again, I don’t know from where you derive this meaning of “Mahabrahma”, but in the fundamental suttas this refers to a creator god way down in the divine pecking order in the form world (14 out of 16, if I remember correctly), and more a figure of fun than anything like the uncreated absolute.
- So fundamentally, the true comparison is between Buddhist realization of “dependent origination” and Sanatana dharma realization of impersonal “Brahman”; or, to put it another way, the verbal formulation “not-self” as against the verbal formulation “Supreme Self”.
- Is there some fundamental difference between these two views of nirvana, based on verbal distinctions like atman/anatman, in terms of the actual experience of that ideally fully realized sage? If there is, it will take a far more evolved person than myself to explain where that real as opposed to conceptual/verbal difference lies.
- That said, the important issue for me is whether the Buddhist tradition, at its most fundamental, really does claim that realization of the uncreated Brahman is a second-rate nirvana. And here I think the answer may be more straightforward than one thinks, given the vast bulk of Buddhist writings.
- You’re no doubt familiar with the Brahmajala. This is traditionally placed as the very first sutta in the written canon, and is recognized as authoritative by all schools. It’s also the first comprehensive expression of fundamental Buddhist views on this question.
- And what do we find among the 62 views listed as wrong? Well, we find Mahabrahma playing the buffoon as usual, with wrong view arising not from “union” but from being born as a Mahabrahma or in his realm, and retaining a defective memory of the experience (as well, it’s said that one can arrive at this wrong view through some unspecified process of reasoning).
.
- Of all the 62 views listed (actually fewer than 62; the 62 total arises from a quaint way of categorizing “views”), the best shot for a sectarian view of nirvana is the very first, “belief in an eternal soul and an eternal world”. Superficially, this view most resembles the identity of Brahman & Atman that we find in the Upanishads.
- But is it the same thing? I think there are good reasons to doubt. First the “world” and “uncreated Brahman” are hardly synonymous. “Eternal world” could well be a materialist conception. Second, what is posited here is fundamentally a belief rising from the faulty memory of past lives, or a simplistic deduction of eternality arising from those memories or their experience. Does this do justice to the subtle formulations of Brahman already present in the Upanishads of the time? Again, I think there are good reasons to doubt that this “wrong view” adequately sums up the Sanatana approach to nirvana, or is even intending to.
- Certainly this question comes down to interpretation, others are possible, and everyone is entitled to their own. But I think in a way, whatever our interpretation we adhere to, we have to make a basic choice.
- I believe we can either take a pluralist or a sectarian view.
- The pluralist view is that the Brahmajala effectively sums up a range of naive metaphysical views common to its time, and which it shows to be based on clinging to concepts and projections rooted in past memories or present experience. The Brahmajala therefore speaks from a very sophisticated standpoint, but does not thereby preclude other standpoints equally sophisticated. The pluralist view is that such equally sophisticated standpoints existed at the time, have certainly existed & developed over the centuries, east & west, and exist to the present day.
- The sectarian view is to cling to any scriptural formulation that appears to justify a belief in the superiority of its particular tradition or lineage.
- So that would be my question to you, Vajra, and to anyone else who cares to answer: how do you choose, as a pluralist or as a sectarian? Are you with Panikkar or are you with the Pope?
- I hope this comes across as intended: direct, challenging, by not unfriendly.
Cheers.
BTW, here are two posts I wouldn't mind you responding to, if you feel moved to do so: http://www.comparative-religion.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3413
http://www.comparative-religion.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3486