[Advaita-l] Advaita vedanta and Sri Adi Sankara

sriram srirudra at vsnl.com
Tue Oct 3 11:18:06 CDT 2006


Dear Sri Kathiresan
I donot agree with Sri Ramesh that Advaita Vedanta is different from Sri
Sankara`s teachings.It is Sri Sankara who by writing the Brahma sutra
bhashya established that our Vedas tell that Brahman alone is sathya and the
world as we experience it is simply a mithya.Brahman and Jivathma are one
and the same and that is there is no duality.This came to be known as
Advaita philosophy.For the same Brahma sutra we have Sri Ramanuja`s bhashyam
based on His advocation that came to be called as qualified
Advaita-viz.,Visishtadvaita.We have Sri Madhva`s bhashyam for the same
Brahma sutra explaining dualism that Brahman and Jivatma are both eternal
but different and only with His grace the jivatma can attain liberation.All
the three bhashyas are adhering faithfully to  Vedas teachings in explaining
the eternal quest of jivathama in seeking Brahman.
R.Krishnamoorthy.


----- Original Message -----
From: K Kathirasan NCS <kkathir at ncs.com.sg>
To: A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta
<advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2006 7:26 AM
Subject: RE: [Advaita-l] Re: Pa~nchapAdikAchArya


Namaste Rameshji,

There are people who prefer to discuss Advaita and there are people who
would like to realise Advaita. And there are also people who like to
defend it. The list can go on and on..... Everyone looks at Advaita
Vedanta from the standpoint of their pursuits. Even so in perspectives
of Sampradaya.

So let us take our opinions (myself included) lightly. But if we choose
to be serious, then let us be open and OBJECTIVE. Cheers.

Kathirasan

-----Original Message-----
From: advaita-l-bounces at lists.advaita-vedanta.org
[mailto:advaita-l-bounces at lists.advaita-vedanta.org] On Behalf Of Ramesh
Krishnamurthy
Sent: Monday, October 02, 2006 9:30 PM
To: A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta
Subject: Re: [Advaita-l] Re: Pa~nchapAdikAchArya

Namaste Abhishek-ji,

I agree with what you have mentioned above. I have gone through the link
also.

However, if my understanding is correct, what Sri Ramakrishnan means
by tradition is somewhat different from what you are referring to
above. He is using tradition to mean 'sampradaya'.

Sampradaya is not merely a word that connotes tradition in the sense
of "this is the way things have always been done". Rather, sampradaya
is the vehicle that transmits the teaching. In fact, sampradaya is the
authority on the teaching.

I am probably not the best person to explain the importance & spirit
of sampradaya. So here's a link you may want to look at:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/advaitin/message/33306

Like yourself, I am eagerly awaiting Sri Ramakrishnan's critique of
the writings of SSS. While I am no expert on SSS, the impression that
I get from some of his *followers* is that they dont respect the
concept of sampradaya.

One of the consequences of not going by the sampradaya is an excessive
focus on trying to identify Sankara's "genuine" works, and then
speculating about where this or that acharya differs from Sankara.
While such an exercise has its academic merits and no sampradayavit
would ignore it, it does not help us in understanding the teaching the
way it has been passed down by the sampradaya.

For example, the Vivekachudamani is undoubtedly a sterling work of the
Advaita parampara. In fact, it is probably the most widely known and
widely read text in Advaita-Vedanta. And yet one finds some SSS
followers dismissing it because they think it may not have been
written by Sankara, or that it differs in some aspects from what they
think is Sankara's "true teaching".

In what respects the VC differs from Sankara's other works can be
debated (though it is quite likely to be an endless debate). But the
fundamental point is that its authorship is immaterial. What is
material is that the text has been considered important by several
advaita acharya-s over the centuries.

Advaita-Vedanta is not "Shankaraism". Advaita Vedanta does not derive
its greatness from Sankara. It is Sankara who derives his greatness
from Advaita Vedanta.

Ramesh
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