Sri Ramanuja wrote nine works in Sanskrit on the philosophy of
Visishtadvaita. Of these, the Vedartha-sangraha occupies a unique
place inasmuch as this work takes the place of a commentary on the
Upanishads, though not in a conventional sense or form. The work
mirrors a total vision of the Upanishads, discussing all the
controversial texts in a relevent, coherent manner. It is in fact an
independent exposition of the philosophy of the Upanishads. Prof. M.
Hiriyanna describes it as "an independent treatise explaining in a
masterly way his philosophic position, and pointing out the basis
for it in the Upanishads". Sudarsana Suri, the celebrated
commentator on the Sri-bhashya and the Vedartha-sangraha, says that
the work was expounded in the form of a lecture before Lord
Srinivasa at Tirumalai. Thus it is his testament at the feet of the
Lord whom he served throughout his life. Sri Ramanuja refers to this
work more than once in his Sri-bhashya.
The Vedartha-sangraha is
written in a lucid, vigorous prose without the usual divisions of
chapters, but the structure of the thesis is developed in a
scientific manner. Sri Ramanuja refers in this work to ancient
teachers of theistic tradition, Bodhayana, Tanka, Dramida, Guhadeva,
Kapardin and Bharuci, besides his own teacher, Sri Yamunacharya.
Tanka and Dramida are quoted profusely to support his
interpretation. He takes abundant help from the Brahma-Sutras, the
Ramayana, the Mahabharata, the Vishnu Purana, the Manu Smrti and
other genuine smrtis in the exposition of his philosophy.
At the outset Sri Ramanuja states that the Upanishads, which lay
down the welfare of the whole world, move around three fundamental
notions:
1. A seeker must acquire a true knowledge of the individual self
and the Supreme;
2. He must devote himself to meditation, worship and the
adoration of the Supreme;
3. This knowledge with discipline leads him to the realization of
the Supreme.
To put it briefly, the first affirms the tattva or the nature of
the Reality, the second declares the hita or the means, and the
third states the purushartha or the ideal of human endeavour.
A chief difficulty in understanding the meaning of the Upanishads
arises in determining the relation of Brahman to the individual self
on the one hand, and to the non-sentient world on the other. There
are some texts which declare that the world is only an appearance in
the ultimate analysis. There are other texts which affirm that the
world is not an appearance, but real and distinct.
Bhartrprapanca, who was anterior to Sri Sankara, held that the
self and the universe are identical with and different from Brahman,
the triad constituting a unity in variety. That is to say that the
reality is at once one as Brahman and many as the self and the
world. For example, an ocean consists of water, foam, waves, etc. As
the water is real, so also are the foam, waves, etc. The world,
which is a part and parcel of Brahman, is necessarily real. The
import of all this is that according to this view the Upanishads
teach the eternal difference and identity between Brahman on the one
hand, and the self and the world on the other.
Sri Sankara rejects the view of Bhatrprapanca, because mutually
contradictory attributes cannot be predicated of one and the same
thing. According to Sri Sankara the passages which affirm
manifoldness and reality of the world do not embody the essential
teaching of the Upanishads. It is a concession made to the empirical
view that demands a real world having causal connection with
time-space. Since variety is but an appearance having no foundation
in the ultimate Reality, the true essential doctrine of the
Upanishads, according to him, is only pure unity. The individual
self is nothing but Brahman itself appearing as finite due to
limiting adjuncts which are superimposed on it.
Sri Ramanuja also attempts to systamatize the philosophy of the
Upanishads, taking the cue from the ancient theistic philosophers.
He recognises three lines of thought in the Upanishads concerning
the relation between Brahman, the self and the world:
1. Passages which declare difference of nature between the world,
the self and Brahman. Here the world is the non-sentient matter
(acit) which is the object of experience, the self is the
experiencing conscious subject (cit), and Brahman, the absolute
ruling principle. These may be named analytical texts.
2. Passages which teach that Brahman is the inner self of all
entities which constitute his body. For instance, "He who dwells in
the earth and within the earth, whom the earth does not know, whose
body the earth is, and who rules the earth within, he is thy Self,
the ruler within, the immortal" etc. (Br. III, vii, 3-23). These are
called ghataka-srutis or mediating texts.
3. Passages which proclaim the unity of Brahman with the world in
its causal as well as effected aspect. The famous text, 'That thou
art, O Svetaketu' (Cha. VI 2-8) comes under this category. These may
be termed as synthetic passages. Sri Ramanuja lays down that the
interpretation of the various passages must be such that they are
not made to contradict each other, and not a single passage should
be so interpreted as to be divested of its primary significance.
The first group of texts distinguishes Brahman from the world and
the individual selves. In a way it emphasizes the transcendent
character of Brahman. The second group of texts declares Brahman to
be the inner self of all entities. Neither the individual self nor
the world can exist by itself. They are inseparably connected with
Brahman as his body, and thus are controlled by him. These texts
teach duality in so far as distinction is made between body and
self, and unity in so far as the self, the substantive element,
predominates over and controls the body, its attribute. The last
group of texts aim at proclaiming the non-dual character of Brahman
who alone constitutes the ultimate Reality. The self and the world,
though distinct from each other and real, have a different value.
They only exist as a mode or attribute of Brahman. They are
comprehended in the reality of Brahman. They exist because Brahman
exists.
On this principle of interpretation, Sri Ramanuja recognizes that
the passages declaring distinction between Brahman, the world and
the self, and those affirming Brahman to be the same in the causal
as well as effected aspects, do not in any way contradict the
mediating passages which declare that the individual selves and the
world form the body of Brahman, and they in their causal state do
not admit the distinction of names and forms while in the effected
state they possess distinct character.
The notion of unity may be illustrated by the example, "A purple
robe." Here purpleness is quite different from robe. The latter is a
substance while the former is an attribute. This integral and
essential relation is not found in the case of a man wearing a
wrist-watch. If the former relation is inseparable (aprthaksiddhi),
the latter is separable and external. A word signifying attribute
does not stop after denoting the usual meaning, but extends till it
reaches the substantive. This is the true significance of an
attribute. The individual selves and the world constitute the body
of Brahman who is their inner self. Brahman is the integral
principle without whom neither the self nor the world can exist.
Hence all names finally denote him.
The way in which Sri Ramanuja interprets the famous text, 'That
thou art' (tat tvam asi) is unique. This is done by means of
co-ordinate predication (samanadhikaranya). In a co-ordinate
predication the identity of the substantive should not be
established through the rejection of the natural significance of
co-ordinate terms. The identical import of terms taken in their
natural signification should be brought out. The Mahabhashya of
Patanjali defines co-ordinate predication thus: "The signification
of an identical entity by several terms which are applied to that
entity on different grounds is co-ordinate predication." In such a
proposition the attributes not only should be distinct from each
other but also different from the substance, though inseparable from
it. In the illustration of a "purple robe", the basic substance is
one and the same, though "purpleness" and "robeness" are different
from it as well as from each other. That is how the unity of a
"purple robe" is established. In the co-ordinate predication
asserting identity between "that" and "thou", Brahman himself with
the self as his mode, having the self as his body, is pointed out.
The term "thou" which usually stands for the self here stands for
Brahman ("that") who is the indweller of the self and of whom the
self is the mode as a constituent of his body. The term "thou" does
not mean the physical body or the individual self. Since Brahman has
interpenetrated all matter and self, "thou" signifies Brahman in the
ultimate analysis. The term "that" signifies Brahman himself as the
ground of the universe and the soul of all individual selves. Hence
in the identity of "that" and "thou" there is no rejection of the
specific connotation of the co-ordinate terms. The upshot of the
dictum is that the individual selves and the world, which are
distinct and real attributes, are comprehended in Brahman. Brahman
as the inner self of the jiva and Brahman as the ground of the
universe are one. The central principle is that whatever exists as
an attribute of a substance, that being inseparable from the
substance is one with that substance.
Thus Sri Ramanuja upholds all the three streams of thoughts in
the Upanishads, namely, unity, plurality and both. He himself
clinches the argument:
We uphold unity because Brahman alone exists with all other
entities as his modes. We uphold both unity and plurality, as the
one Brahman himself has all the physical and spiritual entities as
his modes and thus exists qualified by a plurality. We uphold
plurality as the three entities -- the individual selves, the world
and the supreme Lord -- are mutually distinct in their substantive
nature and attributes and there is no mutual transposition of their
characteristics.
II
The summum bonum is the vision of the supreme Person, known as
Brahman or Sriman-Narayana. The chief obstacle in the path towards
perfection is the accumulation of evil tendencies. These can be
destroyed only by the cultivation of good tendencies. This is
followed by self-surrender which generates an inclination towards
life divine. Then one has to acquire the knowledge of the Reality
from the scriptures aided by the holy teachers. Then the practice of
virtues like the control of mind and sense, austerity, purity,
non-violence, compassion, etc., becomes easy. Nitya and naimittika
duties are to be performed, and prohibited actions are to be
avoided, the whole conduct being conceived as the worship of God.
God, the embodiment of love and compassion, showers his grace on the
aspirant, which puts an end to all his obstacles. Finally bhakti
rises which is an enjoyment of bliss in itself. Bhakti is but
meditation which has assumed the character of the most vivid and
direct perception of the Supreme.
Yamunacharya, declares that bhakti succeeds the twofold training
of the mind by karma and jnana. Karma-yoga is performance of duties
of one's station in life [*] with no thought of reaping any personal
benefit in the spirit of the Gita's teachings. Karma that is
performed in this manner cleanses the heart. Jnana-yoga, which
immediately follows the previous discipline, is meditation upon the
individual self as distinct from matter like body, mind, etc., with
which it is associated. It helps the aspirant to determine the true
nature of one's self in relation to the Supreme. He realizes that he
is absolutely subservient to God.
The discipline does not stop with the knowledge of one's self
alone. It is incomplete without the knowledge of God.
Here the word bhakti does not connote the popular sense in which
it is understood. Bhakti-yoga is loving meditation upon God. When
the meditation attains the form of "firm remembrance"
(dhruva-anusmrtih) characterised by intense love, the vision of the
Supreme is attained. It must be mentioned here that the final
release is attained after the dissolution of the body. One endowed
with such bhakti and self-surrender attains the fitness to earn the
grace of the Lord. This bhakti itself is upasana or vidya mentioned
in the Upanishads. It is same as knowledge spoken of in the srutis:
"One who knows Brahman attains the Supreme," (Tai. II.1), "He who
knows him becomes immortal here," (Pu. 20), and "He who knows
Brahman becomes Brahman," (Mu. 3.2.9). As the vision of the Supreme
is not possible through ordinary means of perception, he can be seen
only through bhakti, which is a unique form of knowledge. This is in
consonance with the Gita declaration, "I am attainable only through
undivided bhakti" (9.54).
III
It was already mentioned that the ideal to be realized is the
vision of the Supreme. It is an experience of absolute peace,
perfection, bliss and freedom, untouched by the cosmic limitations
of space and time. Sri Ramanuja is accused of having given a
"picturesque description" of the ideal realm. But a little insight
into the spirit of his writings reveals that the ideal is not such a
fairyland as it is made out to be. The domain, he points out, is of
the nature of pure immutable sattva. It is transcendent without the
taints of the material gunas of sattva, rajas and tamas. Similarly
the individual self also, in the state of moksa, gives up its
material body and assumes a transcendent form. The substance of
suddha sattva is common to God, the self and the realm of the ideal
known as nitya-vibhuti. The first chapter of the Kausitaki Upanishad
gives a figurative account of the pilgrim's progress till he reaches
the feet of God.
The individual self is the essence of knowledge. This knowledge
in its attributive aspect (dharma-bhuta-jnana) gets more or less
contracted in samsara, but it expands infinitely in the state of
moksa. It becomes all-knowing and enjoys perfect bliss and love in
divine communion. In short it is an ineffable enjoyment. In this
natural state it yields its spirit to the will, glory and adoration
of God. Ramanuja characterises this state as 'ananya-prayojana',
having no other end except itself. In this ideal place there is no
break in the enjoyment of divine communion.
Sri Ramanuja is not unaware of the criticism that there is
subservience to and dependence upon God in his conception of moksa,
The critics say that subordination in any form cannot conduce to the
joy of self. The divine fetters are not less strong to bind. Further
Manu says that servitude is a dog's life. Sri Ramanuja effectively
meets this criticism in his characteristic way. He enunciates a
principle "that what an individual pursues as a desirable end
depends upon what he conceives himself to be." Different people
pursue different and mutually conflicting values. Hence the notion
that independence is happiness proceeds from the misconception that
one is identical with the body, mind, etc. This attachment to the
body is a sort of dependence itself. Instead of dependence on God,
it is dependence on matter. The metaphysical fact is that he is not
the body, and consequently there must be something else with which
his self is related. There cannot be relation of the principal
entity and the subsidiary (sesin and sesa) between any finite
objects. The only object with which such a relation can exist is
God. Hence dependence on anything other than God is painful
andsubservience to God is joy and freedom. Similarly bondage is
indeed a dog's life when one serves those who are unworthy of
service. The only entity which is worthy of love, adoration and
service is God. Sri Ramanuja clinches the issue by quoting a text,
"He is to be served by all." The emancipation consists in service of
God, and true bondage is independence of God and service of body.
SWAMI ADIDEVANANDA
From Vedartha-sangraha of Sri Ramanujacarya,, English translation
by S.S. Raghavachar, Foreword by Swami Adidevananda, Mysore:
Ramakrishna Ashrama, 1978.
The above article is reproduced from
http://www.ramanuja.org/sv/acharyas/ramanuja/vedarthasangraha.html