Adwait
His Holiness, Sri Sankaracharyya is the found Adwait Vedanta, and it is very difficult to understand it, as every time it means some thing deeper when we read it.
We know our capability, we are nowhere to assess this ocean of his understanding, but with our all honesty, knowledge andpurity, we are trying to put forward some philosophical issues in Adwait , and are trying to know few meaning of it as we are still learning it.
Aadi Shankaracharyya is one of the supreme teacher of the Adwait.
his most of work was on Upnishads, Shrimad Bhagwat Geeta and BrahmSutra and that
work became the core or main thoughts of Adwait philosophy. The philosophy of
Adwait, or oneness or non-dualism, gives all explanation or thoughts for the quest to understand brahman, the Origin of everything, the Soul, Ego, the Lord and Soul. The upanishads explore these issues from different angles. The advaita school teaches a complete essential identity between brahman and Atman. In other vedAntic traditions, the essential relationship between Atman and brahman is understood in different ways.
This website has been organized into four sections, as given in the index on
the left. The Introduction section has three pages - one explains the
transliteration scheme employed at this site and another has links to sam.skRta
Slokas, many of them attributed to Sankara. The advaita
vedAnta FAQ page describes various aspects of advaita in brief, and has
links to pages at this site and to related sites.
The main material on advaita vedAnta has been organized into three sections, named History, Philosophers and Philosophy. The "History" section deals with SankarAcArya, the issues involved in reckoning his date, the living advaita tradition and related topics. Pre-Sankaran vedAnta, gauDapAda, SankarAcArya, his disciples, maNDana miSra and post-Sankaran advaitins are discussed in appropriate pages under the "Philosophers" section. The "Philosophy" section starts with a brief introduction to various schools of Indian philosophy and a page on the source texts of vedAnta, the upanishads. Philosophical issues in advaita vedAnta are examined in various other pages in this section. More pages on different aspects of advaita vedAnta and its relation to other systems are under construction.
Paramhansa or The Supreme Swan: In the background is an artistic rendering of a swan, with the Sanskrit sentence Brahmaiva satyam - Brahman is the only Truth. The swan motif is seen in the seals of many advaita organizations. The figure seen here has been adapted from the official seal of the Sringeri maTha, an ancient and one of the most important centers of advaita vedAnta in India. The swan is a very popular motif in traditional Hindu symbolism. It can be found in oil-lamps used in temples and at shrines in people's homes.
The swan has a special association with advaita vedAnta. The swan is called hamsa in the sam.skRta language. The greatest masters in the advaita tradition are called paramahamsas - the great swans. The word hamsa is a variation of so'ham: I am He, which constitutes the highest realization. There are other equivalences between the swan and the advaitin, that make the swan a particularly apt symbol for advaita vedAnta. The swan stays in water, but its feathers remain dry. Similarly, the advaitin lives in the world, yet strives to remain unaffected by life's ups and downs. In India, the swan is also mythically credited with the ability to separate milk from water. Similarly, the advaitin discriminates the eternal Atman from the non-eternal world. The Atman that is brahman is immanent in the world, just like milk is seemingly inseparably mixed with water, but It can never be truly realized without the nitya-anitya-vastu viveka - right discrimination between the eternal and ephemeral - that is essential for the advaitin. The swan is thus a symbol for the jIvanmukta, who is liberated while still alive in this world, by virtue of having realized Brahman.
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