Three Acaryas and Narayana Guru – The Ongoing Revaluation of Vedanta

Three Acaryas and Narayana Guru – The Ongoing Revaluation of Vedanta

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Book Specification

Item Code: NAC650
Author: Swami Muni Narayana Prasad
Publisher: D. K. Printworld Pvt. Ltd.
ISBN: 8124605955
Pages: 457
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 8.8 Inch X 5.8 Inch
Weight 780 gm

Book Description

From the Jacket

Sankara, Ramanuja and Madhva are considered the three acaryas of South India who commented on the three basic texts of Vedanta, that is, the Upanisads, the Brahmasutras and the Bhagavad-Gita, and there from originated the three major schools within the Vedanta fold — Advaita, Visistadvaita and Dvaita respectively. This volume is concerned with the philosophy of the famous saint-teacher Narayana Guru and his perspectives on the philosophies of the three acaryas.

The book uses the philosophy of Narayana Guru as the guide to study and compare the philosophies of the acaryas. It begins with the life sketches of the three acaryas and discusses their philosophies, especially the various specific viewpoints they maintained and the points on which they disagreed. It explores the ideas of the acaryas on avidya and maya, atomicity of the self, consciousness and the self, tat tvam asi, karma and reincarnation and the ultimate liberation. It also scrutinizes their use of terms like that of atha which literally means “now then”. It examines the perception of Narayana Guru vis-à-vis the particular philosophical positions in a unified manner. It also contains the full text, transliteration and translation of the original Vedanta-Sutras of Narayana Guru.

The volume will interest students and scholars who are engaged in advanced studies on the philosophy of Vedanta, and persons keen on acquainting themselves with the philosophy of Narayana Guru.

Swami Muni Narayana Prasad is the Guru and Head of Narayana Gurukula, a guru- disciple foundation open to all, irrespective of caste, creed, gender, religion or nation, aimed at promoting the Science of the Absolute (Brahma-vidya) as restated by Narayana Guru. A disciple of Nataraja Guru and Guru Nitya Chaitanya Yati, he has travelled widely teaching Indian philosophy. He has authored around eighty-five books in the Malayalam language. His English books are:

commentaries on the Isa, Kena, Katha, Prasna, Mundaka, Mandukya Taittiriya, Aitareya and Chandogya Upaniads, Vedanta Sutras and Darsanamala of Narayana Guru, Three Acaryas and Narayana Guru, Karma and Reincarnation, Basic Lessons on India’s Wisdom, The Philosophy of Narayana Guru, Life’s Pilgrimage Through the GIN, Collected Works of Narayana Guru, Narayaasmrtih, and Philosophy Simplified for Youth.

Preface

I MUST confess that Narayana Guru’s philosophy has always been the thrill of my life, because it never excluded any possible view of Reality from its overall vision. In the philosophy of the Guru, all visions are given due respect, because all have their place in the Absolute. When I decided to dedicate myself to deeply studying the philosophy of the Guru, the first book I carefully read was The Word of the Guru by Nataraja Guru. In this valuable book there is a chapter titled “The Guru-trio of South India.”

The three gurus or acaryas of south India discussed there are Sankara, Ramanuja and Madhva. By virtue of commenting on the three basic texts of Vedanta, these great masters themselves originated three major schools within the Vedanta-fold. The basic texts they commented on are the Upanisads, the Brahma Sutras or Vedanta Sutras, and the Bhagavad-Gita; and the three schools they initiated are respectively known as Advaita, Viaistadvaita and Dvaita. During his lifetime, there were followers of all three of these great schools who acknowledged the wisdom of Narayana Guru, though they all differed in their philosophical visions. They even came forward to formally honour the Guru upon several occasions. The Guru reciprocated by fully admitting the greatness of the three acharyas. A moving presentation of the spirit of these events is given in the above-mentioned chapter in The Word of the Guru. Mentioning the three acaryas thus, Nataraja Guru does not dive into their respective philosophies there. Yet it was when reading this chapter that an intense yearning welled up from within me to study and compare the philosophies of the three acaryas, with Narayana Guru’s philosophy as a torch for guidance.

Embarking upon my studies in Vedanta, I later learned that writing down one’s thoughts sharpens the ability to think critically. As such, I developed a lifelong habit of writing, which centred on the teachings of the Upanisads, as well as the life and teachings of Narayana Guru. It was within that current of study and writing that I eventually came around to making a detailed study of the three acaryas, the idea of which I had cherished since reading The Word of the Guru years before. The opportunity came one day when Guru Nitya Chaitanya Yati unexpectedly assigned me to a serious task. He requested that I write an elaborate commentary on the Vedanta-Sutras of Narayana Guru. This work is actually the first sutra-text on Vedanta philosophy that has been written since the ancient Badarayana penned his own Brahma-Sutras. It was for this reason that Guru Nitya also wanted me to write a lengthy “Introduction” to the commentary, clarifying the historical background preceding Narayana Guru’s sutra composition, rather than commenting on the Badarayana’s Brahma-Sutras itself. The historical background researched was also to include a comparative study of the three major schools of Vedanta developed during medieval times. I was immediately provided the required source books for the task. Looking at all these before me, the feeling arose in me that just as a patient should love the medicine prescribed by the doctor, so I should love the work set before me! I took this heavy yet exhilarating assignment to the Fiji Islands, where I lived in near seclusion for three years. The assignment itself took me the full three years to complete.

The book I originally planned was to have two parts: one part was to be a long introductory, including a historical background and the other part was to be an actual commentary on the Gum’s Vedanta-Sutras. Yet as the work progressed, the book kept getting larger and larger. After growing far beyond what I had originally intended, I decided to publish the work as two separate books. Circumstances so conspired that I published the second part of the book first in both Malayalam and English. The book now in your hands is the first part of the original product. It has come about 15 years after the second part was published, and only so after much waiting and editing. Mr Ian Jaco, a friend and student of mine, had taken much pain to read through the text of the book and edit it thoroughly. Leaving it unacknowledged, I feel, would be unfair.

The general outline of the current book is this: after the initial section titled “Preliminaries,” there are given the life-sketches of all three acharyas, as well as Narayana Guru. The following three chapters then discuss the philosophies of the three acaryas respectively. Further chapters discuss the various specific philosophical points of view that the acaryas maintained, and generally disagreed upon. Each of those chapters is completed with a discussion of how Narayana Guru perceived those particular philosophical stands unitively. The book is finally completed with an Appendix containing the full text, transliteration and translation of the original Vedanta-Sutras of Narayana Guru.

This book is likely to be helpful for those of an unbiased mind wishing to dive into more advanced studies in the philosophy of Vedanta. Those interested in a deeper study of the philosophy of Narayana Gun may also find this book useful.

During my life I have had the good fortune to sit attentively at the feet of both Nataraja Guru and Gum Nitya Chaitanya Yati during the various classes they conducted. The particular channelisation of thought I imbibed from these classes has continued to constantly inspire me from within, even to this day, and was definitely the ongoing inspiration that produced every line of this book. Now I in turn present this to the serious students of Vedanta, as I prostrate myself before the revered feet of Narayana Guru and my own two direct gurus. The same prostration I offer before the three acaryas to whom I offer my mind as an altar flower.

Contents

Preface v
Part 1: The Lives and Teachings of the Three Acaryas and Narayana Guru
1. Preliminaries 3
The Brahma-Sutras and its Commentaries 9
The Sutra Style 10
After Badarayana 13
Sankara and His Followers 14
Ramanuja and His Followers 16
Madhva and His Followers 19
2. The Lives of the Three Acaryas and Narayana Guru 21
The Life of Sankara (ce 788-820) 21
The Life of Ramanuja (ce 1017-1137) 28
The Life of Madhva (ce 1238-1317) 40
A Few Historical Notes 42
The Life of Narayana Guru (ce 1854-1928) 45
3. The Philosophy of Sankara 55
A Summary of Sankara’s Philosophy 56
4. The Philosophy of Ramanuja 69
Souls or Cit 70
Ramanuja’s Three Kinds of Souls 78
Bound Souls 78
Liberated Souls 79
Eternal Souls 80
How do souls become bound? 80
Inert Matter or Acit 81
Misra-Sattva: Acit with Mixed Gunas 81
Cosmogony and Cosmology 83
Suddha-sattva: Acit of the Pure Guna 87
Sattva-Sunya: Acit with No Gunas 87
How Time is Measured 88
God or Isvara 91
Infiniteness 93
Knowledge in Essence 93
The Attributes of God 93
God as the Source of the World 96
Creation, Sustenance and Re-absorption 98
The Supernatural Forms of God 102
Para 104
Vyuha 104
Vibhava 106
Antaryamin 109
Arca 109
Conclusion 111
5. The Philosophy of Madhva 113
Reality 114
The Cosmic System 117
Creation 122
Souls 124
Bondage 127
Innate Difference 128
Brahman 131
Spiritual Practices 133
Devotion (Bhakti) 135
Liberation (Mukti) 136
Comparativeness of Innate Bliss 140
Part 2: Ideas of the Three Acaryas Unitively Revisualised
Avidya and Maya 145
Avidya according to Sankara 146
Different Levels of Unreality 148
Maya and Brahman as Causes 152
Neither Existent nor Non-Existent 154
The Theory of Five Sheaths 158
Looking into the Taittiriya Upanisad 160
Looking into the Sarvasara Upanisad 167
Looking into the Gaudapada Karika 168
Looking into the Vivekacudamani 169
Conditioning and Deconditioning of Consciousness 170
Looking into the Pancadasi 172
Difference in the Epistemological C ontext 174
Ramanuja’s Seven Objections 176
Avidya in the Ramanuja School 181
Similarities 183
Avidya in the Madhva School 187
The Enigma Acceptable to All 189
Avidya and Maya for Narayana Guru 192
7. The Word Atha 199
8. The Atomicity of the Self 207
9. Brahman: The Lower and the Higher 211
Sankara 211
Ramanuja 215
Madhva 217
Narayana Guru 221
Ineffability 223
A Way Out 225
The Dialectical Way of Narayana Guru 228
10. Consciousness and the Self 232
Ramanuja 233
Madhva 235
Narayana Guru 236
11. Tat Tvam Asi 245
12. Karma and Reincarnation 255
Karma and Reincarnation According to the Acaryas In the Sankara System 255
In the Ramanuja System 257
In the Madhva System 259
In the Narayana Guru 259
Vedic References 260
Artabhaga’s Doubt and the Mystery of Karma 265
What is Karma and Who Does It? 272
Karma and Brahman 280
What is Birth and Death? 282
Death, a Part of the Life Cycle 282
The Two Paths 288
A Third Path 297
The Paths of Jnanis and Ajnanis 298
In the Katha Upanisad 300
In the Bhagavad-Gita 304
The Case of Yoga-Bhrasta 309
As Part of the Perishable 310
One Isvara Alone Continues 311
In the Brahma-Sutras 313
Birth Determined by Karma 320
Good and Evil Actions 325
A Summary Review of Karma and Reincarnation 332
13. Final Release 335
Liberation According to Sankara 336
Liberation According to Ramanuja 348
Liberation According to Madhva 354
Madhva’s Concept of Released Souls 356
Svarupananda-Taratamya According to Madhva 362
Liberation in Narayana Guru’s Philosophy 366
Conclusion 375
Appendix 378
Glossary 382
Bibliography 436
Index 440

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