PURUSHA AND PRAKRITI IN VEDANTHA
Dear All,
We read this part in the
post dated 19/04/2017.
“Sankhya says that Purusha
and Prakriti are self-created and eternal entities and there is nothing beyond
these two.
Later, in Vedanta and in Gita,
the above view was modified by declaring that there is a third principle,
eternal and beyond these two. In this enhanced view, Purusha and Prakriti
are no longer self-created entities but the two aspects of the Supreme One”.
Let us
learn about the third principle as given in vedantha and later in Gita (Bhagwad
Gita is the extension of vedantha, made more simpler for common man to grasp in
centuries to come).
In the
Gita, an entity / existence beyond Purusha and prakriti is explained as
PURUSHOTTAMA.
In the
Gita, Purusha and Purushottama words are used frequently and one is used for
the other term. Thus, if the existence of Purushottama is not properly grasped
by the readers, then Purusha word used in the Gita may be interpreted as
Purusha explained in the sankhya.
Thus, as per
Gita (and as in vedantha), the
exposition is as under:
In the
sankhya, Purusha and Prakriti, where Prakriti is not different from Purusha but
only the primordial matter of the Purusha existing as spirit, are understood to
be responsible for the creation,
If that be
so, where were this Purusha and Prakriti (or the identity of Purusha as Spirit
and Matter) before the creation took place?
Sankhya
maintans that purusha and prakriti were / are eternal.
Vedanta
gives the answer, which aligns with the flow given above:
“Purusha (as described in the traditional sankhya philosophy) and Prakriti are both
latent in the Supreme. At the time of creation, they became operative”.
This has
been explained in the initial posts in creation theme which can be referred now
to align with the description of Purushottama in the Gita.
The one who
/ which existed before the cosmic vibration, all alone is Purushottama.
Upon cosmic
vibration, when He willed to create, He emerged as Purusha and Prakriti and
then from here onwards, Vedanta and Sankhya are aligned perfectly.
Thus, to summarize,
“There was only one God (Purushottama / God / Brahman/ Parameswara). He then willed that there be
diversity (The Aitareya Upanishad verse last line- “LET ME CREATE” (Purusha).
This (thoughtless) thought separated Him, the Purusha from Prakriti or we may say, with this thought, He himself (purusha) became
prakriti (Maya Shakti)
Thereafter, Lord infused individual
objects with individual consciousness as needed (this can be understood in the
manner how air enters lungs).
No comments:
Post a Comment