Namaste All,
Very interesting discussion so far.
“Silver” said:
I read that one of the main reasons why we can never know the Brahman is because we are the very conscious of the Brahman. Is this generally accepted and can someone elaborate more on it?
If you believe that you are indeed the very consciousness that you seek, then one may say that in fact there is really nothing to be known!
A quote from the
Kena Upanishad (II.1-5) of the
Samaveda:
Teacher: “If you think, ‘I know Brahman rightly’, you have known but little of Brahman’s (true) nature. What you know of His form and what form you know among the Devas (too is but little). Therefore, Brahman is still to be inquired into by you.”
Student: “I think Brahman is known to me. I think not I know Brahman rightly, nor do I think It is unknown. I know (and I do not know also). He among us who knows that knows It (Brahman); not that It is not known nor that It is known.”
“It is known to him to whom It is unknown; he to whom It is known does not know It. It is unknown to those who know, and known to those who know not.”
“When Brahman is known in every state of consciousness, It is known in reality, because one thus attains immortality. Through one’s own Self is attained strength and through knowledge is attained immortality.”
“Here if one has realised, then there is accomplishment. Here if one has not realised, then there is utter ruin. Having realised Brahman in all beings, and having withdrawn from this world, the wise become immortal.”
Also if this is true does that mean the universe's life conscious is in fact the mind of the Brahman (or "God")?
It has been thus described in some philosophies of Sanatana Dharma, particularly those of the Shaivite Hinduism. Shaivism views all existence as ParaShakti, the Divine Potency, the very inseparable Consciousness (Chitkalâ) of ParaShiva (a.k.a. Brahman or Parabrahman).
Also is there another conscious in the universe not linked to life outside of mythological devas? Such as perhaps an "Ishvara" ("God") Overconscious (similar to the transcendental concept of an oversoul) that is the source of all consciousness?
One may choose to think of Ishvara as the focal point of the Universal Consciousness. If Ishvara is the focal point of Universal Consciousness, and all existence is a manifestation of that Consciousness, then really there is no difference between Ishvara and all of existence, including the Devas, correct?
Although conscious maybe tied to the same conscious of our own I assume it is still a greater conscious that created other consciousness. Sort of like taking a big leaf and tearing parts of it out. Although these tore leaves are individual leave segments they are still linked to the big leaf they came from and although separate, they are still one in a way.
This, in fact, is what we in Sanatana Dharma refer to non-dualism (
advaita). Could it be that the leaf was never torn into segments, as we see and imagine it? Could it be that the whole is not made up of parts at all?
“Z” said:
we would not have to question his existence as he would be ever-present to us! Thus the infinite or universal self that is represented by Brahma is not the same. Perhaps we are condensed consciousness and Brahma uncondensed, that is – we are centralised where as Brahma is decentralised and expansive
This, in fact, is what we in Sanatana Dharma refer to non-dualism (
advaita)
. The terms Brahmâ and Brahman both come from, I am told, the root word,
brh, which means to expand or to pervade. For what you term “Brahmâ” here, Hindu philosophers use the term Ishvara or Parameshvara (Supreme Ishvara)
.
he belongs to the emptiness of the void. Hmm beyond consciousness there is the ‘nature’ of the void
In Sanatana Dharma, rather than emptiness, we choose to describe this as fullness known as
Purnam in Sanskrit or
Plenum in Latin.
Be interesting to get some ideas from the eastern perspective!
You have already, IMO, provided an eastern perspective
!
OM Shanti,
A.