- The Upanishads Sanskrit: उपनिषद् Upaniṣad [ʊpɐnɪʂɐd]) are late Vedic Sanskrit texts of religious teachings which form the foundations of Hinduism. They are the most recent part of the oldest scriptures of Hinduism, the Vedas, that deal with meditation, philosophy, and ontological knowledge; other parts of the Vedas deal with mantras, benedictions, rituals, ceremonies, and sacrifices. Among the most important literature in the history of Indian religions and culture, the Upanishads played an important role in the development of spiritual ideas in ancient India, marking a transition from Vedic ritualism to new ideas and institutions. Of all Vedic literature, the Upanishads alone are widely known, and their central ideas are at the spiritual core of Hinduism.
The Upanishads are commonly referred to as Vedānta. Vedanta has been interpreted as the "last chapters, parts of the Veda" and alternatively as "object, the highest purpose of the Ve The concepts of Brahman (ultimate realit and Ātman (soul, self) are central ideas in all of the Upanishads, and "know that you are the Ātman" is their thematic focus. Along with the Bhagavad Gita and the Brahmasutra, the mukhya Upanishads (known collectively as the Prasthanatrayi) provide a foundation for the several later schools of Vedanta, among them, two influential monistic schools of Hinduism.
Around 108 Upanishads are known, of which the first dozen or so are the oldest and most important and are referred to as the principal or main (mukhya) Upanishads. The mukhya Upanishads are found mostly in the concluding part of the Brahmanas and Aranyakas and were, for centuries, memorized by each generation and passed down orally. The mukhya Upanishads predate the Common Era, but there is no scholarly consensus on their date, or even on which ones are pre- or post-Buddhist. The Brhadaranyaka is seen as particularly ancient by modern scholars.
Of the remainder, 95 Upanishads are part of the Muktika canon, composed from about the last centuries of 1st-millennium BCE through about 15th-century CE New Upanishads, beyond the 108 in the Muktika canon, continued to be composed through the early modern and modern era, though often dealing with subjects that are unconnected to the Vedas.
With the translation of the Upanishads in the early 19th century they also started to attract attention from a Western audience. German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer was deeply impressed by the Upanishads and called it "the most profitable and elevating reading which... is possible in the world". Modern era Indologists have discussed the similarities between the fundamental concepts in the Upanishads and major Western philosophers.
Etymology
The Sanskrit term Upaniṣad (from upa "by"
and ni-ṣad "sit down") translates to
"sitting down near", referring to the student sitting down near the
teacher while receiving spiritual knowledge.(Gurumukh) Other dictionary
meanings include "esoteric doctrine" and "secret
doctrine". Monier-Williams' Sanskrit
Dictionary notes – "According to native authorities, Upanishad
means setting to rest ignorance by revealing the knowledge of the supreme
spirit."
Adi Shankaracharya explains
in his commentary on the Kaṭha and Brihadaranyaka
Upanishad that the word means Ātmavidyā, that is,
"knowledge of the self", or Brahmavidyā "knowledge
of Brahma". The word appears in the verses of many Upanishads, such as the
fourth verse of the 13th volume in first chapter of the Chandogya
Upanishad. Max Müller as
well as Paul Deussen translate
the word Upanishad in these verses as "secret
doctrine", Robert Hume translates it as "mystic meaning", while Patrick Olivelle translates it as
"hidden connections".
Development
Authorship
The authorship of most Upanishads is uncertain and
unknown. Radhakrishnan states, "almost all the early literature of India
was anonymous, we do not know the names of the authors of the Upanishads". The
ancient Upanishads are embedded in the Vedas, the oldest of Hinduism's
religious scriptures, which some traditionally consider to be apauruṣeya, which means "not of a
man, superhuman" and "impersonal, authorless". The Vedic
texts assert that they were skillfully created by Rishis (sages),
after inspired creativity, just as a carpenter builds a chariot.
The various philosophical theories in the early
Upanishads have been attributed to famous sages such as Yajnavalkya, Uddalaka Aruni, Shvetaketu, Shandilya, Aitareya, Balaki, Pippalada, and Sanatkumara. Women, such as Maitreyi
and Gargi participate
in the dialogues and are also credited in the early Upanishads. There are
some exceptions to the anonymous tradition of the Upanishads. The Shvetashvatara
Upanishad, for example, includes closing credits to sage Shvetashvatara,
and he is considered the author of the Upanishad.
Many scholars believe that early Upanishads were
interpolated and expanded over time. There are differences within
manuscripts of the same Upanishad discovered in different parts of South Asia,
differences in non-Sanskrit version of the texts that have survived, and
differences within each text in terms of meter, style, grammar and
structure. The existing texts are believed to be the work of many authors.
Chronology
Scholars are uncertain about when the Upanishads were
composed. The chronology of the early Upanishads is difficult to resolve,
states philosopher and Sanskritist Stephen
Phillips, because all opinions rest on scanty evidence and analysis of
archaism, style and repetitions across texts, and are driven by assumptions
about likely evolution of ideas, and presumptions about which philosophy might
have influenced which other Indian philosophies. Indologist Patrick Olivelle says that "in spite
of claims made by some, in reality, any dating of these documents [early
Upanishads] that attempts a precision closer than a few centuries is as stable
as a house of cards".
Some scholars have tried to analyse similarities
between Hindu Upanishads and Buddhist literature to establish chronology for
the Upanishads. Precise dates are impossible, and most scholars give only
broad ranges encompassing various centuries. Gavin Flood states that "the
Upanisads are not a homogeneous group of texts. Even the older texts were
composed over a wide expanse of time from about 600 to 300 BCE." Stephen
Phillips places the early or "principal" Upanishads in the 800 to 300
BCE range.
Patrick Olivelle, a Sanskrit Philologist and Indologist, gives the following chronology for
the early Upanishads, also called the Principal Upanishads:
· The Brhadaranyaka and the Chandogya are the two earliest Upanishads. They are edited texts, some of whose sources are much older than others. The two texts are pre-Buddhist; they may be placed in the 7th to 6th centuries BCE, give or take a century or so.
· The three other early prose Upanisads—Taittiriya, Aitareya, and Kausitaki come next; all are probably pre-Buddhist and can be assigned to the 6th to 5th centuries BCE.
· The Kena is the oldest of the verse Upanisads followed by probably the Katha, Isa, Svetasvatara, and Mundaka. All these Upanisads were composed probably in the last few centuries BCE. According to Olivelle, "All exhibit strong theistic tendencies and are probably the earliest literary products of the theistic tradition, whose later literature includes the Bhagavad Gita and the Puranas."
· The two late prose Upanisads, the Prasna and the Mandukya, cannot be much older than the beginning of the common era.
Meanwhile, the Indologist Johannes Bronkhorst argues
for a later date for the Upanishads than has generally been accepted.
Bronkhorst places even the oldest of the Upanishads, such as the Brhadaranyaka as
possibly still being composed at "a date close to Katyayana and Patañjali [the
grammarian]" (i.e. circa 2nd century BCE).
The later Upanishads, numbering about 95, also called
minor Upanishads, are dated from the late 1st-millennium BCE to mid
2nd-millennium CE. Gavin Flood dates
many of the twenty Yoga Upanishads to be
probably from the 100 BCE to 300 CE period. Patrick Olivelle and other scholars date
seven of the twenty Sannyasa Upanishads to
likely have been complete sometime between the last centuries of the
1st-millennium BCE to 300 CE. About half of the Sannyasa
Upanishads were likely composed in 14th- to 15th-century CE.
Geography
Geography of the Late Vedic Period
The general area of the composition of the early
Upanishads is considered as northern India. The region is bounded on the west
by the upper Indus valley, on the east by lower Ganges region, on the north by
the Himalayan foothills, and on the south by the Vindhya mountain range. Scholars
are reasonably sure that the early Upanishads were produced at the geographical
center of ancient Brahmanism, comprising the regions of Kuru-Panchala and Kosala-Videha together with the areas
immediately to the south and west of these. This region covers modern Bihar, Nepal, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, eastern Rajasthan, and northern Madhya Pradesh.
While significant attempts have been made recently to
identify the exact locations of the individual Upanishads, the results are
tentative. Witzel identifies the center of activity in the Brihadaranyaka
Upanishad as the area of Videha, whose king, Janaka, features prominently in
the Upanishad. The
Chandogya Upanishad was probably composed in a more western than eastern
location in the Indian subcontinent, possibly somewhere in the western region
of the Kuru-Panchala country.
Compared to the Principal Upanishads, the new
Upanishads recorded in the Muktikā belong to an entirely
different region, probably southern India, and are considerably relatively
recent. In the fourth chapter of the Kaushitaki Upanishad, a location
named Kashi (modern Varanasi) is mentioned.
Classification
Muktika canon: major and
minor Upanishads
There are more than 200 known Upanishads,
one of which, the Muktikā Upanishad,
predates 1656 CE and
contains a list of 108 canonical Upanishads, including itself as the last.
These are further divided into Upanishads associated with Shaktism (goddess Shakti), Sannyasa (renunciation, monastic
life), Shaivism (god Shiva), Vaishnavism (god Vishnu), Yoga,
and Sāmānya (general, sometimes referred to as
Samanya-Vedanta).
Some of the Upanishads are categorized as
"sectarian" since they present their ideas through a particular god
or goddess of a specific Hindu tradition such as Vishnu, Shiva, Shakti, or a
combination of these such as the Skanda Upanishad. These traditions sought to
link their texts as Vedic, by asserting their texts to be an Upanishad, thereby
a Śruti. Most of these sectarian
Upanishads, for example the Rudrahridaya
Upanishad and the Mahanarayana
Upanishad, assert that all the Hindu gods and goddesses are the
same, all an aspect and manifestation of Brahman, the Vedic concept for metaphysical
ultimate reality before and after the creation of the Universe.
Mukhya Upanishads
The Mukhya Upanishads can be grouped
into periods. Of the early periods are the Brihadaranyaka and
the Chandogya, the oldest.
A page of Isha Upanishad manuscript
The Aitareya, Kauṣītaki and Taittirīya Upanishads may
date to as early as the mid 1st millennium BCE, while the remnant date from
between roughly the 4th to 1st centuries BCE, roughly contemporary with the
earliest portions of the Sanskrit epics. One chronology assumes that
the Aitareya, Taittiriya, Kausitaki, Mundaka, Prasna, and Katha
Upanishads has Buddha's influence, and is consequently placed after
the 5th century BCE, while another proposal questions this assumption and dates
it independent of Buddha's date of birth. After these Principal Upanishads are
typically placed the Kena, Mandukya and Isa
Upanishads, but other scholars date these differently. Not much is
known about the authors except for those, like Yajnavalkayva and Uddalaka,
mentioned in the texts. A few women discussants, such as Gargi and
Maitreyi, the wife of Yajnavalkayva, also
feature occasionally.
Each of the principal Upanishads can
be associated with one of the schools of exegesis of the four Vedas (shakhas). Many Shakhas are said to
have existed, of which only a few remain. The new Upanishads often
have little relation to the Vedic corpus and have not been cited or commented
upon by any great Vedanta philosopher: their language differs from that of the
classic Upanishads, being less subtle and more formalized. As a
result, they are not difficult to comprehend for the modern reader.
|
Veda-Shakha-Upanishad association |
|||
|
Veda |
Recension |
Shakha |
Principal Upanishad |
|
Rig Veda |
Only one recension |
Shakala |
Aitareya |
|
Sama Veda |
Only one recension |
Kauthuma |
Chāndogya |
|
Jaiminiya |
Kena |
||
|
Ranayaniya |
|||
|
Yajur Veda |
Krishna Yajur Veda |
Katha |
Kaṭha |
|
Taittiriya |
Taittirīya |
||
|
Maitrayani |
|||
|
Hiranyakeshi (Kapishthala) |
|||
|
Kathaka |
|||
|
Shukla Yajur Veda |
Vajasaneyi Madhyandina |
Isha and Bṛhadāraṇyaka |
|
|
Kanva Shakha |
|||
|
Atharva Veda |
Two recensions |
Shaunaka |
Māṇḍūkya and Muṇḍaka |
|
Paippalada |
Prashna Upanishad |
||
New Upanishads
There is no fixed list of the Upanishads as
newer ones, beyond the Muktika anthology of 108 Upanishads, have continued to
be discovered and composed. In 1908, for example, four previously unknown
Upanishads were discovered in newly found manuscripts, and these were
named Bashkala, Chhagaleya, Arsheya,
and Saunaka, by Friedrich Schrader, who
attributed them to the first prose period of the Upanishads. The text of
three of them, namely the Chhagaleya, Arsheya,
and Saunaka, were incomplete and inconsistent, likely poorly
maintained or corrupted.
Ancient Upanishads have long enjoyed a revered
position in Hindu traditions, and authors of numerous sectarian texts have
tried to benefit from this reputation by naming their texts as Upanishads. These
"new Upanishads" number in the hundreds, cover diverse range of
topics from physiology to renunciation to sectarian theories. They were
composed between the last centuries of the 1st millennium BCE through the early
modern era (~1600 CE). While over two dozen of the minor Upanishads are
dated to pre-3rd century CE, many of these new texts under the title of
"Upanishads" originated in the first half of the 2nd millennium CE, they
are not Vedic texts, and some do not deal with themes found in the Vedic
Upanishads. The main Shakta Upanishads,
for example, mostly discuss doctrinal and interpretative differences between
the two principal sects of a major Tantric form of Shaktism called Shri Vidya upasana. The many extant lists of
authentic Shakta Upaniṣads vary, reflecting the sect of their
compilers, so that they yield no evidence of their "location" in
Tantric tradition, impeding correct interpretation. The Tantra content of these
texts also weaken its identity as an Upaniṣad for non-Tantrikas. Sectarian
texts such as these do not enjoy status as shruti and thus the authority of the new
Upanishads as scripture is not accepted in Hinduism.
Association with Vedas
All Upanishads are associated with one of the four
Vedas—Rigveda, Samaveda, Yajurveda (there are two primary versions
or Samhitas of the Yajurveda: Shukla Yajurveda, Krishna Yajurveda), and Atharvaveda. During the modern era, the
ancient Upanishads that were embedded texts in the Vedas, were detached from
the Brahmana and Aranyaka layers of Vedic text, compiled
into separate texts and these were then gathered into anthologies of the Upanishads. These
lists associated each Upanishad with one of the four Vedas, many such lists
exist, and these lists are inconsistent across India in terms of which
Upanishads are included and how the newer Upanishads are assigned to the
ancient Vedas. In south India, the collected list based on Muktika Upanishad, and
published in Telugu language,
became the most common by the 19th-century and this is a list of 108 Upanishads. In
north India, a list of 52 Upanishads has been most common.
The Muktikā Upanishad's list of 108
Upanishads groups the first 13 as mukhya, 21 as Sāmānya Vedānta,
20 as Sannyāsa, 14
as Vaishnava, 12 as Shaiva, 8 as Shakta, and 20 as Yoga. The
108 Upanishads as recorded in the Muktikā are shown in the
table below. The mukhya Upanishads are the most important and highlighted.
|
Veda-Upanishad association |
||||||||
|
Veda |
No |
Mukhya |
Sāmānya |
Sannyāsa |
Śākta |
Vaiṣṇava |
Śaiva |
Yoga |
|
Ṛigveda |
10 |
Aitareya, Kauśītāki |
Ātmabodha, Mudgala |
Nirvāṇa |
Tripura, Saubhāgya- lakshmi, Bahvṛca |
- |
Nādabindu |
|
|
Samaveda |
16 |
Chāndogya, Kena |
Vajrasūchi, Maha, Sāvitrī |
Āruṇi, Maitreya, Brhat-Sannyāsa, Kuṇḍika (Laghu-Sannyāsa) |
- |
Vāsudeva, Avyakta |
Rudrākṣa, Jābāli |
Yogachūḍāmaṇi, Darśana |
|
|
32 |
Taittiriya, Katha, Śvetāśvatara, Maitrāyaṇi |
Sarvasāra, Śukarahasya, Skanda, Garbha, Śārīraka, Ekākṣara, Akṣi |
Brahma, (Laghu, Brhad) Avadhūta, Kaṭhasruti |
Sarasvatī-rahasya |
Nārāyaṇa, Kali-Saṇṭāraṇa |
Kaivalya, Kālāgnirudra, Dakṣiṇāmūrti, Rudrahṛdaya, Pañcabrahma |
Amṛtabindu, Tejobindu, Amṛtanāda, Kṣurika, Dhyānabindu, Brahmavidyā, Yogatattva, Yogaśikhā, Yogakuṇḍalini, Varāha |
|
Shukla Yajurveda |
19 |
Bṛhadāraṇyaka, Īśa |
Subala, Mantrika, Niralamba, Paingala, Adhyatma, Muktika |
Jābāla, Bhikṣuka, Turīyātītavadhuta, Yājñavalkya, Śāṭyāyaniya |
- |
Tārasāra |
- |
Advayatāraka, Haṃsa, Triśikhi, Maṇḍalabrāhmaṇa |
|
Atharvaveda |
31 |
Muṇḍaka, Māṇḍūkya, Praśna |
Ātmā, Sūrya, Prāṇāgnihotra |
Āśrama, Nārada-parivrājaka, Paramahamsa, Paramahaṃsa parivrājaka, Parabrahma |
Sītā, Devī, Tripurātapini, Bhāvana |
Nṛsiṃhatāpanī, Mahānārāyaṇa (Tripād vibhuti), Rāmarahasya, Rāmatāpaṇi, Gopālatāpani, Kṛṣṇa, Hayagrīva, Dattātreya, Gāruḍa |
Atharvasiras, Atharvaśikha, Bṛhajjābāla, Śarabha, Bhasma, Gaṇapati |
Śāṇḍilya, Pāśupata, Mahāvākya |
|
Total Upanishads |
108 |
13 |
21 |
19 | ||||
Philosophy
Impact of a drop of water, a common analogy for Brahman and the Ātman
The Upanishadic age was characterized by a pluralism
of worldviews. While some Upanishads have been deemed 'monistic', others,
including the Katha Upanishad,
are dualistic. The
Maitri is one of the Upanishads that inclines more toward dualism, thus
grounding classical Samkhya and Yoga schools of Hinduism, in contrast to
the non-dualistic Upanishads at the foundation of its Vedanta school. They
contain a plurality of ideas Sarvepalli
Radhakrishnan states that the Upanishads have dominated Indian
philosophy, religion and life ever since their appearance. The Upanishads are
respected not because they are considered revealed (Shruti), but because they present
spiritual ideas that are inspiring. The Upanishads are treatises on
Brahman-knowledge, that is knowledge of Ultimate Hidden Reality, and their
presentation of philosophy presumes, "it is by a strictly personal effort
that one can reach the truth". In the Upanishads, states
Radhakrishnan, knowledge is a means to freedom, and philosophy is the pursuit
of wisdom by a way of life. The Upanishads include sections on philosophical
theories that have been at the foundation of Indian traditions. For example,
the Chandogya Upanishad includes
one of the earliest known declarations of Ahimsa (non-violence) as an ethical
precept. Discussion of other ethical premises such as Damah (temperance,
self-restraint), Satya (truthfulness), Dāna (charity), Ārjava (non-hypocrisy), Daya (compassion) and others are found in
the oldest Upanishads and many later Upanishads. Similarly, the Karma
doctrine is presented in the Brihadaranyaka
Upanishad, which is the oldest Upanishad.
Development of thought
While the hymns of the Vedas emphasize rituals and the
Brahmanas serve as a liturgical manual for those Vedic rituals, the spirit of
the Upanishads is inherently opposed to ritual. The older Upanishads
launch attacks of increasing intensity on the ritual. Anyone who worships a
divinity other than the self is called a domestic animal of the gods in
the Brihadaranyaka
Upanishad. The Chāndogya Upanishad parodies those
who indulge in the acts of sacrifice by comparing them with a procession of
dogs chanting Om! Let's eat. Om! Let's drink.
The Kaushitaki Upanishad asserts
that "external rituals such as Agnihotram offered in the morning and in
the evening, must be replaced with inner Agnihotram, the ritual of
introspection", and that "not rituals, but knowledge should be one's
pursuit". The Mundaka Upanishad declares how man has
been called upon, promised benefits for, scared unto and misled into performing
sacrifices, oblations and pious works. Mundaka thereafter asserts this is
foolish and frail, by those who encourage it and those who follow it, because
it makes no difference to man's current life and after-life, it is like blind
men leading the blind, it is a mark of conceit and vain knowledge, ignorant
inertia like that of children, a futile useless practice. The Maitri Upanishad states,
The performance of all the sacrifices, described in the Maitrayana-Brahmana, is
to lead up in the end to a knowledge of Brahman, to prepare a man for
meditation. Therefore, let such man, after he has laid those fires, meditate
on the Self, to become complete and perfect.
— Maitri Upanishad
The opposition to the ritual is not explicit in the
oldest Upanishads. On occasions, the Upanishads extend the task of the
Aranyakas by making the ritual allegorical and giving it a philosophical
meaning. For example, the Brihadaranyaka interprets the practice of
horse-sacrifice or ashvamedha allegorically.
It states that the over-lordship of the earth may be acquired by sacrificing a
horse. It then goes on to say that spiritual autonomy can only be achieved by
renouncing the universe which is conceived in the image of a horse. In similar
fashion, Vedic gods such
as the Agni, Aditya, Indra, Rudra, Visnu, Brahma,
and others become equated in the Upanishads to the supreme, immortal, and
incorporeal Brahman-Atman of the Upanishads, god becomes synonymous with self,
and is declared to be everywhere, inmost being of each human being and within
every living creature. The one reality or ekam sat of the
Vedas becomes the ekam eva advitiyam or "the one and only
and sans a second" in the Upanishads. Brahman-Atman and
self-realization develops, in the Upanishad, as the means to moksha (liberation; freedom in this life
or after-life).
According to Jayatilleke, the thinkers of Upanishadic texts
can be grouped into two categories. One group, which includes early
Upanishads along with some middle and late Upanishads, were composed by metaphysicians
who used rational arguments and empirical experience to formulate their
speculations and philosophical premises. The second group includes many middle
and later Upanishads, where their authors professed theories based on yoga and
personal experiences. Yoga philosophy and practice, adds Jayatilleke, is
"not entirely absent in the Early Upanishads".The development of
thought in these Upanishadic theories contrasted with Buddhism, since the
Upanishadic inquiry fails to find an empirical correlate of the assumed Atman, but nevertheless assumes its existence, "[reifying]
consciousness as an eternal self." The Buddhist inquiry "is
satisfied with the empirical investigation which shows that no such Atman
exists because there is no evidence," states Jayatilleke.
Brahman and Atman
Two concepts that are of paramount importance in the
Upanishads are Brahman and Atman. The
Brahman is the ultimate reality and the Atman is individual self (soul). Brahman
is the material, efficient, formal and final cause of all that exists. It is the
pervasive, genderless, infinite, eternal truth and bliss which does not change,
yet is the cause of all changes. Brahman is "the infinite source,
fabric, core and destiny of all existence, both manifested and unmanifested,
the formless infinite substratum and from which the universe has grown".
Brahman in Hinduism, states Paul Deussen, as the "creative principle
which lies realized in the whole world".The word Atman means
the inner self, the soul, the immortal spirit in an individual, and all living
beings including animals and trees. Ātman is a central idea in all
the Upanishads, and "Know your Ātman"
their thematic focus. These texts state that the inmost core of every
person is not the body, nor the mind, nor the ego, but Atman –
"soul" or "self". Atman is the spiritual essence in
all creatures, their real innermost essential being. It is eternal, it is
ageless. Atman is that which one is at the deepest level of one's existence.
Atman is
the predominantly discussed topic in the Upanishads, but they express two
distinct, somewhat divergent themes. Younger Upanishads state that Brahman
(Highest Reality, Universal Principle, Being-Consciousness-Bliss) is identical
with Atman, while older upanishads state Atman is
part of Brahman but not identical. The Brahmasutra by Badarayana (~ 100 BCE)
synthesized and unified these somewhat conflicting theories. According to
Nakamura, the Brahman sutras see Atman and Brahman as both different and
not-different, a point of view which came to be called bhedabheda in later times. According
to Koller, the Brahman sutras state that Atman and Brahman are different in
some respects particularly during the state of ignorance, but at the deepest
level and in the state of self-realization, Atman and Brahman are identical,
non-different. This
ancient debate flowered into various dual, non-dual theories in Hinduism.
Reality and Maya
Two different types of the non-dual Brahman-Atman are
presented in the Upanishads, according to Mahadevan. The one in which the
non-dual Brahman-Atman is the all-inclusive ground of the universe and another
in which empirical, changing reality is an appearance (Maya).
The Upanishads describe the universe, and the human
experience, as an interplay of Purusha (the eternal, unchanging
principles, consciousness) and Prakṛti (the temporary, changing material
world, nature). The former manifests itself as Ātman (soul,
self), and the latter as Māyā. The Upanishads refer to the knowledge
of Atman as "true knowledge" (Vidya), and the
knowledge of Maya as "not true knowledge" (Avidya,
Nescience, lack of awareness, lack of true knowledge).
Hendrick Vroom explains, "the term Maya [in
the Upanishads] has been translated as 'illusion,' but then it does not concern
normal illusion. Here 'illusion' does not mean that the world is not real and
simply a figment of the human imagination. Maya means that the
world is not as it seems; the world that one experiences is misleading as far
as its true nature is concerned." According to Wendy Doniger, "to say that the universe
is an illusion (māyā) is not to say that it is unreal; it is to say, instead,
that it is not what it seems to be, that it is something constantly being made.
Māyā not only deceives people about the things they think they know; more
basically, it limits their knowledge."
In the Upanishads, Māyā is the perceived changing
reality and it co-exists with Brahman which is the hidden true reality. Maya,
or "illusion", is an important idea in the Upanishads, because the
texts assert that in the human pursuit of blissful and liberating
self-knowledge, it is Maya which obscures, confuses and
distracts an individual.
Schools of Vedanta
Adi Shankara, expounder of Advaita Vedanta and commentator (bhashya) on the Upanishads
The Upanishads form one of the three main sources for
all schools of Vedanta, together with the Bhagavad Gita and the Brahmasutras. Due to the wide variety of
philosophical teachings contained in the Upanishads, various interpretations
could be grounded on the Upanishads. The schools of Vedānta seek to answer
questions about the relation between atman and
Brahman, and the relation between Brahman and the world. The schools of
Vedanta are named after the relation they see between atman and Brahman:
· According to Advaita Vedanta, there is no difference.
· According to Vishishtadvaita the jīvātman is a part of Brahman, and hence is similar, but not identical.
· According to Dvaita, all individual souls (jīvātmans) and matter as eternal and mutually separate entities.
Other schools of Vedanta include Nimbarka's Dvaitadvaita, Vallabha's Suddhadvaita and
Chaitanya's Acintya Bhedabheda. The philosopher Adi Sankara has provided commentaries on
11 mukhya Upanishads.
Advaita Vedanta
Advaita literally means non-duality, and it is a monistic system of thought. It deals
with the non-dual nature of Brahman and Atman. Advaita
is considered the most influential sub-school of the Vedanta school
of Hindu philosophy. Gaudapada
was the first person to expound the basic principles of the Advaita philosophy
in a commentary on the conflicting statements of the Upanishads. Gaudapada's
Advaita ideas were further developed by Shankara (8th century CE). King
states that Gaudapada's main work, Māṇḍukya Kārikā, is infused with
philosophical terminology of Buddhism, and uses Buddhist arguments and
analogies. King also suggests that there are clear differences between
Shankara's writings and the Brahmasutra, and many ideas of
Shankara are at odds with those in the Upanishads. Radhakrishnan, on the
other hand, suggests that Shankara's views of Advaita were straightforward
developments of the Upanishads and the Brahmasutra, and many
ideas of Shankara derive from the Upanishads.
Shankara in his discussions of the Advaita Vedanta
philosophy referred to the early Upanishads to explain the key difference
between Hinduism and Buddhism, stating that Hinduism asserts that Atman (soul,
self) exists, whereas Buddhism asserts that there is no soul, no self.
The Upanishads contain four sentences, the Mahāvākyas (Great Sayings), which were
used by Shankara to establish the identity of Atman and Brahman as scriptural
truth:
· "Prajñānam brahma" - "Consciousness is Brahman" (Aitareya Upanishad)
· "Aham brahmāsmi" - "I am Brahman" (Brihadaranyaka Upanishad)
· "Tat tvam asi" - "That Thou art" (Chandogya Upanishad)
· "Ayamātmā brahma" - "This Atman is Brahman" (Mandukya Upanishad)
Although there are a wide variety of philosophical
positions propounded in the Upanishads, commentators since Adi Shankara have usually followed him in
seeing idealist monism as the dominant force.
Vishishtadvaita
The second school of Vedanta is the Vishishtadvaita,
which was founded by Sri Ramanuja (1017–1137 CE).
Sri Ramanuja disagreed with Adi Shankara and the Advaita school. Visistadvaita
is a synthetic philosophy bridging the monistic Advaita and theistic Dvaita
systems of Vedanta. Sri Ramanuja frequently cited the Upanishads, and
stated that Vishishtadvaita is grounded in the Upanishads.
Sri Ramanuja's Vishishtadvaita interpretation of the
Upanishad is a qualified monism. Sri Ramanuja
interprets the Upanishadic literature to be teaching a body-soul theory, states
Jeaneane Fowler – a professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies, where the
Brahman is the dweller in all things, yet also distinct and beyond all things,
as the soul, the inner controller, the immortal. The
Upanishads, according to the Vishishtadvaita school, teach individual souls to
be of the same quality as the Brahman, but quantitatively they are distinct.
In the Vishishtadvaita school, the Upanishads are
interpreted to be teaching an Ishwar (Vishnu), which is the seat of all
auspicious qualities, with all of the empirically perceived world as the body
of God who dwells in everything. The school recommends a devotion to
godliness and constant remembrance of the beauty and love of personal god. This
ultimately leads one to the oneness with abstract Brahman. The Brahman in
the Upanishads is a living reality, states Fowler, and "the Atman of all
things and all beings" in Sri Ramanuja's interpretation.
Dvaita
The third school of Vedanta called the Dvaita school
was founded by Madhvacharya (1199–1278
CE). It is regarded as a strongly theistic philosophic exposition of the
Upanishads. Madhvacharya,
much like Adi Shankara claims for Advaita, and Sri Ramanuja claims for
Vishishtadvaita, states that his theistic Dvaita Vedanta is grounded in the
Upanishads.
According to the Dvaita school, states Fowler, the
"Upanishads that speak of the soul as Brahman, speak of resemblance and
not identity". Madhvacharya interprets the
Upanishadic teachings of the self becoming one with Brahman, as "entering
into Brahman", just like a drop enters an ocean. This to the Dvaita school
implies duality and dependence, where Brahman and Atman are different
realities. Brahman is a separate, independent and supreme reality in the
Upanishads, Atman only resembles the Brahman in limited, inferior, dependent
manner according to Madhvacharya.
Sri Ramanuja's Vishishtadvaita school and Shankara's
Advaita school are both nondualism Vedanta schools, both are premised on
the assumption that all souls can hope for and achieve the state of blissful
liberation; in contrast, Madhvacharya believed that some souls are eternally
doomed and damned.
Similarities with Platonic thought
Several scholars have recognised parallels between the
philosophy of Pythagoras and Plato and
that of the Upanishads, including their ideas on sources of knowledge, concept of justice and
path to salvation, and Plato's allegory of the cave.
Platonic psychology with its divisions of reason, spirit and appetite, also
bears resemblance to the three gunas in
the Indian philosophy of Samkhya.
Various mechanisms for such a transmission of knowledge
have been conjectured including Pythagoras traveling as far as India; Indian
philosophers visiting Athens and meeting Socrates; Plato encountering the ideas when in
exile in Syracuse; or, intermediated through Persia.
However, other scholars, such as Arthur Berriedale
Keith, J. Burnet and A. R. Wadia,
believe that the two systems developed independently. They note that there is
no historical evidence of the philosophers of the two schools meeting, and
point out significant differences in the stage of development, orientation and
goals of the two philosophical systems. Wadia writes that Plato's metaphysics
were rooted in this life and his primary aim was to develop an
ideal state. In contrast, Upanishadic focus was the individual, the self
(atman, soul), self-knowledge, and the means of an individual's moksha (freedom, liberation in this life
or after-life).
Translations
The Upanishads have been translated into various
languages including Persian, Italian, Urdu, French, Latin, German, English, Dutch, Polish, Japanese, Spanish and Russian. The Mughal Emperor Akbar's
reign (1556–1586) saw the first translations of the Upanishads into Persian. His great-grandson, Dara Shukoh, produced a collection
called Sirr-i-Akbar in
1656, wherein 50 Upanishads were translated from Sanskrit into Persian.
Anquetil
Duperron, a French Orientalist received a manuscript of the Oupanekhat and
translated the Persian version into French and Latin, publishing the Latin
translation in two volumes in 1801–1802 as Oupneck'hat. The French translation was
never published. The Latin version was the initial introduction of the
Upanishadic thought to Western scholars. However, according to Deussen, the
Persian translators took great liberties in translating the text and at times
changed the meaning.
The first Sanskrit to English translation of the Aitareya Upanishad was
made by Colebrooke, in
1805 and the first English translation of the Kena Upanishad was made by Rammohun Roy in 1816.
The first German translation appeared in 1832 and
Roer's English version appeared in 1853. However, Max Mueller's 1879 and 1884
editions were the first systematic English treatment to include the 12
Principal Upanishads. Other major
translations of the Upanishads have been by Robert Ernest Hume (13 Principal
Upanishads), Paul Deussen (60
Upanishads), Sarvepalli
Radhakrishnan (18 Upanishads), Patrick Olivelle (32 Upanishads in two
books) and Bhānu Swami (13 Upanishads with commentaries of Vaiṣṇava
ācāryas). Olivelle's translation won the 1998 A.K. Ramanujan Book Prize for
Translation.
Throughout the 1930's, Irish-poet W. B. Yeats worked with the Indian-born mendicant-teacher Shri Purohit Swami on
their own translation of the Upanishads, eventually titled The Ten
Principal Upanishads and published in 1938. This
translation was the final piece of work published by Yeats before his death
less than a year later.
Reception
in the West
German 19th century philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, impressed by the Upanishads, called the texts "the production of the highest human wisdom".
The German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer read
the Latin translation and praised the Upanishads in his main work, The
World as Will and Representation (1819), as well as in
his Parerga and
Paralipomena (1851). He found his own philosophy was
in accord with the Upanishads, which taught that the individual is a
manifestation of the one basis of reality. For Schopenhauer, that fundamentally
real underlying unity is what we know in ourselves as "will".
Schopenhauer used to keep a copy of the Latin Oupnekhet by his
side and commented,
It has been the solace of my life, it will be the
solace of my death.
Another German philosopher, Friedrich
Wilhelm Joseph Schelling, praised the ideas in the Upanishads, as did others. In the
United States, the group known as the Transcendentalists were influenced by the
German idealists. Americans, such as Emerson and Thoreau embraced
Schelling's interpretation of Kant's Transcendental
idealism, as well as his celebration of the romantic, exotic,
mystical aspect of the Upanishads. As a result of the influence of these
writers, the Upanishads gained renown in Western countries.
The poet T. S. Eliot, inspired by his reading of the
Upanishads, based the final portion of his famous poem The Waste Land (1922) upon one of its
verses. According
to Eknath Easwaran,
the Upanishads are snapshots of towering peaks of consciousness.
Juan Mascaró, a professor at the University of
Barcelona and a translator of the Upanishads, states that the Upanishads
represents for the Hindu approximately what the New Testament represents for the
Christian, and that the message of the Upanishads can be summarized in the
words, "the kingdom of God is within you".
Paul Deussen in
his review of the Upanishads, states that the texts emphasize Brahman-Atman as
something that can be experienced, but not defined. This
view of the soul and self are similar, states Deussen, to those found in the
dialogues of Plato and elsewhere. The Upanishads insisted on oneness of soul,
excluded all plurality, and therefore, all proximity in space, all succession
in time, all interdependence as cause and effect, and all opposition as subject
and object. Max Müller, in his review of the Upanishads, summarizes the
lack of systematic philosophy and the central theme in the Upanishads as
follows,
There is not what could be
called a philosophical system in these Upanishads. They are, in the true sense
of the word, guesses at truth, frequently contradicting each other, yet all tending
in one direction. The key-note of the old Upanishads is "know
thyself," but with a much deeper meaning than that of the γνῶθι σεαυτόν of the Delphic Oracle. The "know thyself"
of the Upanishads means, know thy true self, that which underlines thine Ego,
and find it and know it in the highest, the eternal Self, the One without a
second, which underlies the whole world.
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