asterix

*Am working on figuring out the best way to render Devanagari. For now, transliteration...sorry. Namaste.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Synecdoche






Synecdoche

The Chandogya Upanishad is principally concerned with the question of what is the “true self” or Soul, the Atman of the individual and how it relates to the larger question of the Universe at hand.

It is a catechism of parts for the whole, though the whole, in Truth, is never divided, but only perceived as being divided by our discretion, though born out of ignorance of how things are all truly entangled, leaving us confused about the coherent nature of existence.

This is unsettling when one thinks of the concept of Theodicy, or the explanation of Evil in the world, and how can there be bad things in a world created by a perfect, omnipotent, omniscient power. For if All is One, then it begs the question of whether Evil then is part of Good, and vice versa.

Having lived now for 43 years, I am inclined to believe that this is true. When one reaches this age, you have lived long enough to see a lot of shit in the world, as well as a lot of beauty. How can we reconcile the extremes that we see and experience on a daily basis? While in India, I was confronted by this seeming dichotomy every day of the piles of shit next to blankets of flowers. Back in Belgium, it is more subtle, but there all the same.

Hearing of the death of a former student and friend, one who sought desperately for Beauty in the world, claiming that he saw it all around, yet at the same time felt desperately alone and discouraged, feeling the absence of the beloved for his Love for the world. His life ended running blindly amongst the traffic of Austin’s I-35, being struck down by a truck in a most indignant death. He was loved by many and mourned by many. In his memorial guestbook, words such as Beauty, Love, Peace, and Life were reiterated over and over. All of those words overshadowed for the time being by Death.

And yet, to sound very trite, what is Life without Death, and the contrary of Death without Life? Such reflections are often made in the armchairs of philosophers, but when it is reality, and it takes on a visceral nature when you are one of the Living, contemplating the Dead, words take on new meaning.

Within the Chandogya, there is a metaphor of the life essence of person as a tree, that all throughout, there is life, but when dead, Death permeates all, except for the Soul, which lives on. Though this sounds like a duality, it is the root of Advaita, that is that the Soul, or Atman, is not related to Life nor Death, but is beyond, beyond Good and Evil, beyond the Time and Space that we experience in our corporeal selves. To this extent, there is no “Heaven above us, nor Hell below…” Imagine.

I don’t have answers, but have been running through many questions of late, and I recently returned to the Chandogya for some such reflection and these verses jumped out at me today.

So, here they are:

Asya somya mahato vrkshasya yo mule-bhyãhanyãjjivinsraveddhyo
Mathye-bhyãhanyãjjivansraveddhya-pre-bhyãhanyãjjivansravetsa
Esha jivenãtmãnãnuprabhutah pepiyamãno modamãnastishtati

Asya yadekãm shãkhãm jivo jahãtyatha sã shushyati
Dvitiyãm jahãtyatha sã shushyati
Tritiyãm jahãtyatha sã shushyati
Sarvam jahãti sarvah shushyati

O, Fair One, if anyone strikes the root of this great tree, it seeps while living. If one strikes the trunk, it seeps while living. If one should strike its crown, it will seep its juices while alive. This one, thus, while drinking the sap, abides by being permeated by the Soul.

If the individual removes one of these branches, that branch will wither. If one removes a second one, it too withers, and a third. When the whole is discarded, then the whole withers as well.


Friday, June 15, 2012

Upa-Ni-Shad

"Come closer, sit down with me, and let us discuss the philosophy of Life"

Well, in essence, that could be a "poetic" translation of the word Upanishad, which more or less does mean, "come, sit, near" and was a term that designated a teaching method that ultimately the Buddha, Krishnamurti and many other educators would come to embrace. Invite the student to your physical comfort zone and space and learning will emerge.

Well, otherwise proclaimed teachers such as the Buddha, Krishnamurti and many others quickly realized that this type of Upa-ni-shad leads to idolatry and worse, disciples.

The Buddha, upon his dying words, decreed that more or less there should not be followers and each man (and woman, as at the time, it was not gender-based, to a degree) should be responsible for his or her own Path, the Eight-Fold Path.

But, isn't it easier to have teachers? Isn't it easier to have someone tell us what to do? Isn't it easier to blame someone when that teaching goes wrong??

Yes, it is easier.

And, there is no metaphysical proof one way or the other that mandates that education of any level leads to something better or worse, and yet both sides of the equation, teachers and students, each have a stake and at times are at complete odds with each other.

So, what gives?

Education and means of education have been a topic of concern for thousands of years, this much is evinced by the mere form of the Upanishads in the genealogy of Indian philosophical thought. However, what it really marks is a turning away from the dogmatic views of the Brahmanic caste of priests towards a "New Hope (Star Wars IV...)" of what the knowledge of the universe actually means.

Siddhartha Guatama was born into the Kshatriya caste, or the Warrior Caste, and not the Brahmin, or Priestly Caste, contrary to many pre-conceived ideas. He was destined to be a warrior-king, but an old mendicant proclaimed him to be a great teacher, much to his father's disgust and disgrace. A teacher he shall not be, but a king.

Well, things did not go as planned by the father and Siddhartha left the royal fold to later become one of the world's greatest teachers, as was the words of the prophet at his birth.

But, what made him a great teacher?

Much in the tradition of the Chandogya Upanishad, the teachings of the Buddha are so incredibly "simple" that they on the surface seem to be mere tautologies.

However, the beauty of a tautology, or self-evident "truth" is that it takes one decades if not lifetimes to either see the simplicity and to accept it or to forever remain blinded to the fact that on a daily basis, if we do, for a moment, sit down, come closer, and listen, we just, just perhaps, might learn something from others on a secular and worldly level.

Or, we can walk with our heads in the clouds all day and be none pence the richer.


Friday, March 16, 2012

I Am Death, Destroyer of All


There has been much discussion about Robert Oppenheimer, the maven of the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, New Mexico, which was the genesis of the first Atomic Bomb, that later was dropped on the civilian targets of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, Japan to end a World War, that by all intents and purposes had already ended. But, we had built a bomb to end all bombs, and we needed to let the world know it. For that, it served its purpose and put the fear of the Bomb into everyone’s hearts and minds across the world. It was the shock that sent waves around the world.

One of the points of mindless dispute over Oppenheimer was his usage and actual knowledge of the Gita, perhaps in order to detract from his actual message, for when one really considers what he said, it is hard to wish away or merely brush off as intellectual posturing.

When the Trinity Site explosion had been successful and it was clear that the US had indeed succeeded in winning the arms race towards nuclear weaponry, there was great jubilation amongst the scientists, because, they had cheated the praises of Lucretius and Democritus and Epicurus who had called the a-tom (from Gk. <<not to cut>>) as that which could not be split. We split the un-splittable. There was jubilation, for about 24 hours, until the reality set in. We had thought the un-thinkable. We were going to use this awesome power to disintegrate hundreds of thousands of civilians.

When it was all said and done, and the War was over, Oppenheimer fell into a series of difficult times, which are quite eloquently described in Kai Bird and Marthin J. Sherwin’s Pulitzer-Prize winning, American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer.

One of the famous urban legends about Oppenheimer is that he quoted the Bhagavad Gita regarding his role in the development of the Atomic Bomb. Condensed, it is often quoted as “Now I am Death, Destroyer of All.” Pundits like to wag their tongues on whether he said it or not, or did he know Sanskrit and all of that other jazz, which means nothing. According to Kai and Sherwin, Sanskrit was not just a passing fancy, nor the mere flippancy of a New York dandy that Oppenheimer was.

The point is that the quote has been associated with the Modern World, and perhaps rightly so.

It appears in the Gita in Book Eleven, after Krishna, the human-avatar of Vishnu and personal charioteer of our hero, Arjuna, finally acquiesces to Arjuna’s pleas to see the Godhead in all his glory. Arjuna, as is painfully clear in the Gita, does not exactly “get it” and it takes Krishna several books to warn him that he better be careful for  what he asks for, because he just might really get it.

So, Krishna reveals his true Self, as the Cosmos as Everything. But, Everything includes the not-so-nice, as well as the shits and giggles and bunnies and butterflies. When Krishna reveals his godlike form, it is Awe-some. It is Death and destruction and a level of terror that Arjuna cannot even conceive of because it is all Death at all Times at Once. It is all of Creation at all Times at Once.

It is Time, all at once.

Time is Death. Time is also Life. We cannot live exclusively with one or the other, as both are Omni-present, Omni-potent.

Eventually, Krishna returns to his human form, and Arjuna, having had the epiphany to end all epiphanies, realizes the ephemeral nature of the moment, yet at the same time, it eternity. He realizes that in the face of such power and Awe, he can only do what he can do. He must live out his life, according to his Dharma, or personal Duty, in accordance with the Dharma of the Universe. He is a part of the greater whole, both of which are always living and always dying.

The key to understanding his Mortality is the very thing that links him inextricably with the Immortality of Time.



At 11:32 of the Gita, Krishna says,

Kãlo’ smi lokakshayakrtpravrddho
lokansamãhartumiha pravrttah

rte’pi tvã na bhavishanti sarve
ye’ vasthitãh pratyanikeshu yodhã

Now, I am Time, the world destroyer;
Here, I have come to annihilate the worlds.

Even without you, these warriors will all perish, all
Who are now legion in battle, shall die.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Be-ing or Non-Be-ing, is that the Question?

Recently I finished a translation of the Aparokshãnubhuti, attributed to Sri Shankaracharya, under the title of Immanent Awareness. Here is the introduction for those of you interested in reading more about it. I will be putting out a more comprehensive examination of the text within the year, but the current edition is available now on Blurb as you can see on the left side of this page.

Namaste,

Robert





Introduction: Indra’s Net as a state of Be-ing and non-Be-ing

The relatively short text of the Aparokshãnubhuti, here translated as Immanent Awareness, attributed to Sri Shankaracharya, is remarkable for that which it is not as much as for that which it is. Perhaps taking the advice of the text itself from verse 138, it is beneficial for us to assert what it is from the negation method as well as from the positive method.

The question concerning authenticity of authorship is then an appropriate point of departure for our investigation. Whether Sri Shankaracharya composed this text is a question that will most likely never be answered, and for all intents and purposes, it is not a very interesting question, rendering either a positive or negative response neutral, like the noun Brahman itself. As such, I have no intention of either spilling any more ink or splitting any more hairs about the question than has already been done in previous studies on Shankara and/or Advaita Vedanta, or Indian Philosophy in general. However, I will maintain that it is important to realize that it could be a text by Sri Shankaracharya, and that remains a valuable point worth pausing upon for a moment.

Shankara is believed to have composed several hundred texts in his brief, yet brilliant lifetime, dying at the early age of 32, sometime in the 8th Century BCE. Yet, as with many of the eminent Sanskrit authors and texts, the likelihood of ever correctly attributing a specific text to a specific author approaches zero rather swiftly. Again, that Shankara could have written the Aparokshãnubhuti, however, does not raise many eyebrows, and it is usually ascribed to at least his Advaita Vedanta school of thought, if not to the poet-sage himself. Shankara’s more well-known works include the Advaita Vedanta pièce de resistance of the Vivekashudamani as well as his commentaries on the Bhagavad Gita, the Manduka Upanishad and the Brahmasutras, which are all considered to be the bulwark of his achievements.

The important thing being for our purposes here, however, is that the Aparokshãnubhuti does fall under the rubric of an Advaita Vedanta text and not necessarily commentary on any one particular textual tradition as in the case of his aforementioned texts, excluding the Vivekashudamani that is. Advaita Vedanta itself, which literally means “Non-Dualism of the End of the Vedas” is considered to be a reaction to the various competitions of Vedic Scriptures, most notably Buddhism, Yoga, sectarian Hinduism, and Jainism, which each and all threatened to overturn the supremacy of the Brahmin caste as the truly learned and traditionally revered. As such Advaita could easily be seen as being much like the New Testament to the Old Testament in which Jesus does not come to replace the old laws, but rather to complete them. By saying “the End of the Vedas,” one is to take it as such, a completion of the Vedic tradition, rather than its negation or replacement.

However, given the very nature of Advaita itself, meaning that it is Non-Dualism, it runs the risk of not only negating the division between what came before Vedanta, but also, per definition, must take into account what comes after the Vedas, and consequently, must account for all of the competition as being part of the Advaita. For, in order to fully become Advaita, there can be no competition, the dualism must be extinguished on every level. And, this is where the Aparokshãnubhuti shines.

The sheer economy of the text itself, merely a gross number of verses, is staggering in the scope of what it accomplishes. Within the text, entire philosophical systems and major religious tenets are encapsulated, and in some cases refuted, in a mere handful of verses, such as in verses 90-99 where the entire concept of Prãrabdha, the concept of regenerative Karma and culmination of the actions of past lives and the consequences thereof, is negated wholesale, written off as a veritable myth for the Ignorant, and even the scriptures themselves are put into question. So much for being slavishly Vedic, a critique that Shankara has had levied against him more than once by those who oppose his presumed associations with the ultra-Orthodox. In essence, Shankara’s message of Advaita both thwarts and proves the concept of Orthodoxy, becoming a most troublesome enigma and paradox for many. In order to refute Advaita, moreover, you must accept it fully.

Yet, this self-negation is a necessary product of Advaita and in turn is the solution to its own riddle as a perceived dilemma. It must negate itself in order to reach its goal, that being the union of Brahman with the Universal Ãtman, which in turn is the all-pervading Soul of Everything. No mean feat to be carried out in a mere 144 verses, yet, it happens within this text. The name ascribed to the text, namely Aparokshãnubhuti, literally means an “immediate or unmediated realization/awareness,” meaning that there is no mediation between Brahma and the Individual Ego, for how could there be if the goal of Advaita is to show that they are one and the same? The rub, however, is whether the One is the Same, and what relationship it has with the Many.

In philosophy, specifically what is loosely termed Western Philosophy, the concept of the One versus the Many has occupied the minds of many thinkers and has caused irreparable rifts amongst various fields of thought and inquiry, most notably with the infamous sparring of Plato and Aristotle, the classic case of the student taking a 180 degree turn from the Master resulting in the Platonic championing of the One as a grand Synthesis of the particulars into the Ideal, and the Aristotelian favoring of the Many by means of taxonomy and classification by Analysis. This perceived duality between the concepts of Synthesis and Analysis is highlighted in the Platonic dialogue known as the Parmenides by the discussion of the phrase hen to Pan, or what is usually translated as “All is One.” However, as I will show below, what the predicate actually is for Advaita will prove to be quite important in its distinction from this translation and its consequences in philosophy.

As a result of taking sides for the One or the Many, for millennia, western philosophers have quarreled over the teleological conundrum of, when it is all said and done, is the Universe One, or is it a composite of Many? Herein lies that rub, yet one that Advaita does not balk at. The answer for Advaita, however, is “simply”: both, and neither, because it’s the same answer. Let us consider a few other attempts to answer this question, however, before going further.

An illustration of the paradox of the One and the Many can also be seen in what is known as Zeno’s Paradox, regarding Time and Space. The situation is whether all is in flux, or if nothing changes. When an arrow is shot from a bow, at any given time, it should be half the way from some other point, and this division, theoretically, can go on ad infinitum, resulting in the arrow never reaching its target as it is always, half the way there, from some point. And, at each point, even at Infinity, as a result of Gödel’s Theorem, there can always be one more division, or Infinity plus one. Or, on the other hand, if Time is a continuum, then the arrow is both in the bow, and at the target, and every point in between, at ALL TIMES! In the former, we are dealing with Aristotelian Analysis and infinite regression between Cause and Effect, never reaching the source, nor the Prime Mover. In the latter, we are looking at the Platonic Ideal that the arrow is a mere shadow of the perfect, Ideal Arrow, that exists at all times, and is in a perpetual state of perfection, unmediated by Time or Space. Advaita, by default, has to say that both are correct, yet also that both are incorrect. In other words, we are at the stage of MU, a well-known concept within Zen, and which Advaita comes closest to encapsulating, specifically in the Aparokshãnubhuti.

MU, as Douglas Hofstadter celebrated in his monumental book, Gödel, Escher and Bach, is the concept of a state that is beyond either 1 or 0 in the binary system, or in other words, is neither Yes nor No, but both, and neither. Many Zen Koans, or thought experiments, (most famously with the question of “What is the sound of one handing clapping?”) are based upon this state of Mind, or Be-ing, in which there is No State of Mind, nor Be-ing. It is non-Duality par excellence because it is a non-entity state. It exists outside of both Time and Space. It transcends the transcendent.

Yet, we must not just turn to Zen or other Oriental thought for this concept, for within the Occidental tradition, there is Immanuel Kant. In Kant’s three critiques, when read together as a whole, we see this same concept being played out. Within his first Critique, that of Pure Reason, he establishes the two a priori concepts of Space and Time as the Transcendental Dialectic. Space and Time are Transcendental to the human experience, which is the subject of his second Critique of Practical Reason. In the first Critique, Time and Space, being a priori, are beyond our comprehension when taken together. They are the two aspects of the Law of Nature, or the realm of God, and human understanding cannot, because of its limitations bound by Time and Space, ever reach full awareness of the Time-Space Continuum that would later be the lynchpin for the emergence of Quantum Mechanics and the New Physics of the new millennium.

Kant’s philosophical concept of incomprehensibility was synthesized by the Physicist Werner Heisenberg and his “Principle of Uncertainty,” in that we cannot measure both the vectors of location and movement of an object at the same Time within Space. It is impossible with our limited, human a posteriori faculties of Reason, being Practical, not Transcendent. There are two realms of Law, the Natural Law of a priori Time and Space that transcends our capacities of understanding, and there is Human Law, which is fabricated upon experience and can only ever be an approximation to Nature.  Morality, as a consequence of being part of Human Law is merely a good approximation based upon a common consensus of what we ought to do. But, even Kant, in the end, will not say it is what we have to do. We can only guess, and make an approximation. There are limits of Reason. Only God, according to Kant has the capacity to know all Space and all Time. In Physics, this God would become GUT, or the Grand Unifying Theory, a search for the “Mind of God” as Stephen Hawking would phrase it.

What happens in between for Kant, however, is the subject of the third installment, that being the Critique of Judgment. In this Critique, the mediation between the realm of Nature and the world of Human Understanding is simply “play,” or Spiel. Herein lies our capacity to make judgments based upon experience and to witness the Beautiful and the Sublime of the Universe as a sense of perception. However, neither is based upon reason, but rather they are the result of an “Immanent Awareness,” which is likewise the focus of the Aparokshãnubhuti. The unmitigated experience and witness of Brahman as Be-ing is this immanent awareness, or unmediated consciousness. It is transcendent, and once someone has this awareness, the Universe can never be viewed in the same way as before having this awareness. The Laws have changed, forever, or rather, our perception of them has as a result of this awareness.

Hegel was the logical step following Kant in the development of this train of thought, and brings us one step closer to what we find within Shankara’s text, though predating Hegel’s Phenomenology of the Spirit by at least a millennium. For Hegel, Bewußtsein, or consciousness/awareness was the goal of philosophy. Yet, this Bewußtsein, or consciousness did not stop at Selbstbewußtsein, or unmediated self-awareness, but something much more bizarre, yet very akin to Advaita. In the individual dialectic of Self-Consciousness, with each step of realization, a “new” Individual living for-Itself was manifest. Furhtermore, with each consequent sublimation of an awareness of the Self, the Individual became more and more Self-Conscious, like the accretions of nautilus shell building upon its own complexity in simple stages, only revealing the trajectory of the spiral in its completion, or Perfection. But, the ultimate goal was not merely for each Individual to reach Self-Consciousness, but rather for the entire Universe to do so.

Furthermore, the way that the Universe performed this amazing feat, for Hegel, was to suddenly become Self-Conscious of Itself being Self-Conscious of Itself, much like an infinity of mirror images reflecting upon themselves. In Indian thought this is similar to the concept of Indra’s Net, which is described as a net, infinite in all directions, containing a brilliant jewel at each intersection, of which each jewel reflects all other jewels in all Space for all Time. For Hegel, this reflexive self-awareness of the Universe was done when all individuals realized that they were Universal. In other words, in the words of Advaita, it was when the Individual Atman realized that they were No-Thing but rather were the Universal Atman, meaning they were all Brahman, and consequently not Individuals. At that moment, all distinctions are extinguished and the Universe becomes Self-Conscious, and consequently, Time and Space cease to exist. The state of the Universe becomes MU, a non-State of Be-ing.

As a result, the question that has plagued western philosophers about whether it is the One or the Many dissolves before our very eyes with this awareness. As the text of the Aparokshãnubhuti says at verses 138-39, that when the Effect dissipates, so too does the very Cause, saying that if the Universe becomes immanently self-conscious, then the effect of being a manifold of existence ceases to exist, and then likewise, so does the Cause of there being an existence at all. In other words, both Creation and Creator cease to exist with this awareness. Moreover, it is not a holistic awareness as Parmenides said that All is One, but rather, something much more in line with Advaita’s own paradox, namely, when the predicate is commutative with the subject, resulting in a much more descriptive solution, that is simply: The One IS the Many, in that Brahman as Atman is both the One and the Many. And, when the Many cease to be relevant, so too does the One.

MU

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Navel Gazing and Letting Go


kãrye hi kãrnam pasyet pascãt kãryam visarjayet

kãrnatvam tato gacchedavistam bhavenmunih

The cause, or action, must indeed be seen in the effect, but then the effect must be let go completely, and the causality then dissipates, and what is left, that is what the See-er becomes.

In the Aparokshãnubhuti or the "Self Awareness" of Shankara, the aspirant of Advaita Vedanta must meditate deliberately upon Brahman, with the goal of realization that the individual Atman, or Soul, cannot be dis-entangled from the Universal Atman.

However, the very act of this meditation necessitates that very dis-entangling, for how else can one mediate on an object if one is that very object?

A paradox. A conundrum. An Enigma.

We can sit all day long, gazing at a navel orange, and ultimately, at the end of the day, that orange is just an orange. We can trace the entire chain of cause and effects to get us to that moment of gazing upon that orange. The rain that caused the seed to grow, the sun that helped the tree to grow, the caterpillar that ate the buds of other oranges that did not have the chance to blossom to become that particular orange, the person who plucked the orange, the transportation needed to get to the store, the impetus to go to the store to buy food, the action of buying the orange, the action of contemplating the orange, the action of eating the orange, the feces that the orange becomes that is flushed away to re-join the world, to become the soil in which a new orange tree will grow one day, and so on, and so on, ad infinitum, ad astera...

But, so what?

At some point, such contemplation will get us nowhere. We have to Let Go of the chain of Cause and Effect, and to gaze inwardly, into our Self, to view the Quality behind the gaze.

We will all do things in Life, some things we will take great pride in, others, shame and guilt. However, those events are transitory, they are fleeting.

When we are able to let that go, to step back, to see who is the Gazer, we can see that actions that we do, the karma that we enact, will have consequences, but we cannot know them, nor can we control the effects, nor the reactions of others. What we can do, is to know that we are part of a much, much larger whole, that such actions are merely just a drop in the Ocean of Time, and how we live our lives after the Orange becomes an simple orange again, and not the chain of cause and effect that got it there, then we can enjoy The Orange for the sake of being just an orange.

Without such awareness though, there is no sweetness.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

What The Thunder (Didn't) Say


We hear what we want to hear.

The universe speaks to us on a daily basis, but how are we interpreting the message? The message is the same for all of us, but how we (choose to) interpret it may be that which causes miscommunication, or at least conflict.

Every utterance, no matter how benign or charged, can be interpreted as either good or bad, positive or negative, depending on how it is received. What may bring Joy and Bliss to one may simultaneously bring upon Sorrow and Despair for another. Language is communication, and communication is likewise information. Yet, information in itself is indifferent, impartial, and indeterminate. What we do with that information, how we interpret it and then further incorporate this into our lives is what initiates the determination, causing discrepancies and discrimination, for better or for worse. It is the transformative moment when the One becomes Many, the unbreachable gap between silence and sound.

Sometimes the most profound things said are that which is actually not said. Perhaps there is no greater example of this that I know than what T.S. Eliot also picked up from the Brihadaranyaka Upanisad, that being the “lesson” that the Thunder gave. But, what lesson did it truly impart?

As the story goes, the Thunder merely says, "Da, Da, Da," but each listener heard a different message.

One heard,

Da-tta- given, offered, a thing given, a gift?

The next,

Da-myata- composed, moderation, temperance, control?

And, the third,

Da-yadham- compassion, sympathy, empathy?


What did you hear when the last Time that the Thunder spoke?