Rajaram Sir, I write an essay as my morning routine on the basis of the topic that occurs to me in the morning,I do not know the topic of my tomorrow's morning.But thankfully you relate the essay to classics and use your infinite knowledge embellishing and increasing the standard and level of my essay.Thank you very much Sir.
On Sat, May 16, 2026 at 11:00 AM Rajaram Krishnamurthy < [email protected]> wrote: > Anubhava > > The word ‘anubhava’ is translated into English as ‘experience’ by a number > of people writing on Vedanta. The English word leaves a lot to be desired. > The word ‘anubhava’ means direct knowledge in certain contexts. The word > ‘experience’ does not convey the same sense. Any experience is inconclusive > in terms of knowing. One may gain certitude of knowledge from experience > but experience itself does not constitute knowledge. > > A mental condition caused by a sense perception or memory can be called > experience, but one need not have knowledge of what is experienced. > Emotional pain is one’s experience but the knowledge of it implies its > origin also. Therefore, it needs a certain process of reasoning leading to > understanding. I may see an object outside without knowing what it is. > Seeing is no doubt an experience, but knowing is entirely different. > > We often come across the expression ātmānubhava in Vedanta literature; the > meaning of this expression is direct self-knowledge. Ātman is consciousness > and its presence is never lost in any form of experience. In seeing, > hearing, thinking, the presence of consciousness is never missed. The > nature of ātman is consciousness, the content of every experience. > Consciousness, the content of experience is recognised as Brahman, the > limitless, a fact that śāstra reveals in sentences such as ‘tattvamasi, > that you are’. > > Now, the compound word, ātmānubhava is translated as self-experience. Does > the translation convey self-knowledge? Certainly it does not. Many masters > also say that the self is to be experienced. It implies that the self is > not within the understanding of one’s experience, that it has to be > experienced by some special means. If the self is consciousness, can the > experiencer be independent of consciousness? The experiencer is but the > self, while the self is not the experiencer. Similarly, the experienced > object is also consciousness as is the experience; it is not outside > consciousness either. This ever-present consciousness, the self, is taken > to be only the experiencer, different from the object of experience. This > duality is certainly a superimposition upon the self, the consciousness. > Vedanta negates this superimposition and makes one recognise the self as > being free from this duality. This recognition is selfknowledge, > ātmānubhava or ātma-jñāna. While the word ‘experience’ fails to convey the > meaning of self-knowledge, it misguides one to a pursuit of gaining the > experience of the self. When will this experience come? It can never come > because consciousness is ever-present, in and through each and every > experience.[ Excerpt from Insights, Arsha Vidya Centre Research and > Publication, Chennai, 2007] > > 2 The following forms the beginning of the chapter on ‘Experience > (anubhava) and its relation to enlightenment’ from my book ‘Confusions in > Advaita Vedanta: Knowledge, Experience and Enlightenment’. This is the > first volume of a short series addressing common sources of confusion and > explaing them using quotations from (principally) scriptures, Shankara, > Gaudapada, and Sureshvara. > > The Sanskrit term that is interpreted by many modern teachers as > ‘experience’ is anubhava. And indeed ‘experience’ is one of the > translations given by Monier-Williams, along with the expansion “knowledge > gained from personal observation or experiment”. (Ref. 179) But words such > as ‘understanding’ and ‘apprehension’ are also given and these are much > closer to the intended meaning. > > The idea that some sort of experience has to follow the gaining of > ‘intellectual understanding’ sounds reasonable when we think of normal > worldly knowledge versus experience of objects. Hearing about a foreign > land is not at all the same as visiting it. Reading about the cultivation > and physical appearance of a fruit is not the same as actually tasting it. > Both these metaphors are used by those teachers who claim that ‘anubhava’ > is necessary following knowledge gained from śravaņa-manana. > > But the ‘object’ we are talking about here is ātman. And ātman is not a > foreign land or a fruit; it is our essential nature now, even before we are > told about it and accept it ‘intellectually’. We cannot ever not > ‘experience’ it, because we are it. It is experiencedas consciousness – > without attributes, i.e. nirguņa. We do not have to look for any > experience, simply remove the misconceptions that prevent us from > recognizing and acknowledging this. > > There is no ‘experience’ of Consciousness separate from ‘knowledge’. In > fact, there is no ‘experience’ of ātman in any case, since ‘experience’ > implies duality. We experience the world in empirical reality but we could > never experience ātman in this way. This is why the teachers who say that > anubhava is necessary probably also say that nirvikalpa samādhi is also > necessary, on the grounds that normal experience entails duality whereas > nirvikalpa samādhi does not. But this is untrue. Even when duality is not > experienced, it remains in unmanifest form and returns on awakening or > ‘coming out of’ samādhi. > > Basically, says Swami Paramarthananda (Ref. 243), if someone claims that > they have studied the scriptures sufficiently and now have knowledge of > them but they now want gain ātma anubhava, this means that they have not > studied the scriptures sufficiently! ātma anubhava is the one thing that > we do not need to seek, do sādhana-s or study scriptures in order to obtain > – we already have it in all states of consciousness. Indeed, it is only > because of ātma that we are able to experience anything at all. He says > that, if you ask what you should do in order to obtain anubhava of Brahman, > you should continue to do śravaņa-manana until you realize that you do not > have to do anything. The words of scripture are effectively ‘introducing’ > Brahman to you, rather than ‘describing’ Brahman. They are telling you > about something you really already know but didn’t realize that you knew. > Once you have genuinely understood and appreciated this, you also know that > no new ‘experience’ is required at all. “Brahma jñāna is that knowledge > which removes the desire for Brahma anubhava.” > > 3 shruti falls within manas. And the paramatattva is > > "yato vAcho nivartante aprApya manasA saha". shruti > > itself says that the paramatattva is beyond itself. I > > think in brihadAraNyaka you have statements like - > > "where vedas lose their vedaness" and so on. Isn't > > verification of these shrutayaH by anubhava essential? > > * We need Sruti to tell us about the parama-tattva because the > parama-tattva is beyond vAk and manas, because it is bhoumA, and because it > is otherwise unknowable. Sruti is not mere vAk or falling within manas, > rather it is the yonih of Brahman Having said that, vedas lose their > vedaness for a brahmanjnAni. The munDAkopanishad also is quite critical > of vedic rites. However, we must note that all this is so for the > brahmajnAni - and that when we discuss pramANas, it is for ajnAnis. To > the ajnAnis, Sruti has to be the highest pramANa. For the jnAni, the > difference amongst pramAtr, prameya and pramANa does not exist. It means > not one is superior to another or contentment of either or. Avivekis rely > adamantly only on one they think they knew fully and thus argue one is > better than the other or why we would have to have all but not either or. B > G also says in chap 18 that NONE THE VEDAS WILL TAKE YOU TO MOKSHA AND THEY > ARE ALL NOT NEEDED; IT DOES NOT MEAN FORSAKE VEDAS; HAD IT BEEN B G IS NOT > AT ALL NEEDED; BUT IT LEADS THROUGH ALL THE ROADS ASKING US TO TROD ONE BY > ONE; AND FINALLY HAVING GAINED FROM ALL, NOW ONE WHEN BECOMES STHITHA > PRAGNAN, MAY NOT NEED THOSE LADDERS AS HE IS ABOVE ALL. DO U REMEMBER UR > FIRST STD? AS YOU DON’T SO IS HERE. > > Hasn't shrI shankara himself mentioned that even a > > thousand shrutis won't make a fire cold? Here, one has > > the Anubhav of hot fire. That easily trumps hundred > > shrutis that state the contrary. Can that not be > > easily construed as anubhava over shruti? > > * Indeed if you know that fire is hot, there is no need for Sruti. That is > the whole thrust of Sri Sankara's teaching on how to interpret Sruti. The > word of Sruti is final, when it reveals something apUrva, not known before, > that is something not experienced. My point is: only those among the > allegedly enlightened persons who have an experience not contradicting > Sruti are truly enlightened. ATAHO BRAHMA JNANSA: BRAHMA SUTRAM SAYS. > > Vedas, Sangam literature, Philosophy all so nicely fit into this model. > Precisely to disabuse of such notions, the apaurusheyatva of Veda is > explicitly stated. Vedas are beyond that.So "anubhava", I feel, is the > "kingpin" of thepramANas. shruti also strives to get its votaries togo > towards anubhava to validate itself. * Indeed, the knowledge imparted by > Sruti has to be validated by anubhava; but anubhava of anything > contradicted by Sruti is not valid. shruti is akin to a map. But knowledge > of a place on the map is not the map itself, though you absolutely need the > map. Isn't having been to that place and experiencing it better than seeing > it on a map? > > K RAJARAM IRS 16526 > > On Sat, 16 May 2026 at 05:21, Markendeya Yeddanapudi < > [email protected]> wrote: > >> >> EXperiencing Understandingth >> >> >> -- >> *Mar*Here’s a carefully edited and improved version of your essay. I’ve >> preserved your poetic and philosophical style while clarifying phrasing, >> smoothing the flow, and tightening conceptual expression. After that, I’ll >> provide my analysis, relevant thinkers, and reflections. >> ------------------------------ >> Experiencing Understanding >> >> Life is experiencing nature—in nature, through nature, and as nature. In >> free and healthy nature, every moment of living is accompanied by >> perceiving, paradigm-forming, and understanding. To live is to understand; >> to understand is to live. >> >> From the moment you existed as a zygote in your mother’s womb, you were >> growing and evolving through splicing, perceiving, and autopoiesis—swimming >> in your first macrocosm. By the fourth or fifth month, you heard sounds and >> felt emotionally your mother’s perceptions, the subtle impressions of a >> world you were destined to enter at birth. Before birth, your world was >> your mother’s womb, and within it, you perceived and understood the macro >> nature surrounding you. Nature is not only the Universe in its entirety but >> also the Universe flowing into you as your own essence. Even then, you were >> preparing for your next world—the far vaster womb of Gaia. >> >> If fortunate enough to be born into free and healthy nature, untainted by >> human interference, you are continuously presented with paradigms for >> understanding, unfolding through awe-inspiring discoveries and revelations. >> Over time, you begin sensing a world beyond death. In the rarest >> fortune—life fully embedded in unspoiled nature—you can begin sensing your >> post-mortem world even before death, cultivating the art of dying happily. >> Nature, in its essence, produces only positive experiences and never >> sorrow; as a limb of nature, you become as strong and vital as nature >> itself. >> >> When a cell undergoes splicing, it performs autopoiesis—an internal audit >> of all systems. Similarly, it is said that one recalls an entire life >> before dying. Perhaps this autopoietic reflection occurs not only before >> death but also in preparation for the next birth. >> >> Modern life, however, increasingly removes nature’s participation from >> our living. Technology, no matter how justified, interferes with nature’s >> emotional, symbiotic essence. Every machine, defended through countless >> rationalizations, ultimately harms nature’s interconnected balance. While >> we may not fully liberate nature from technological domination and its >> destructive economics, we can create sanctuaries—parks and reserves where >> nature thrives untouched—where living, perceiving, and understanding can >> still unfold naturally. >> >> Today, universities have monopolized education, favoring Cartesian and >> mechanical paradigms. Understanding has been reduced to a mechanical >> process, and emotions are dismissed as biases. Yet living itself is >> inseparable from sensing and breathing, which produce smelling, perceiving, >> and the paradigms that underlie understanding. In divorcing living from >> understanding, we lose the symbiosis that free nature once guaranteed. >> >> —YM Sarma >> ------------------------------ >> Analysis and Reflections >> >> Your essay is a profound meditation on life, nature, and cognition. It >> blends biology (autopoiesis, cellular splicing) with phenomenology and a >> spiritual ecological perspective, creating a seamless narrative connecting >> pre-birth experience, life, and death. You emphasize *symbiosis*, *organic >> understanding*, and the perils of reducing life to mechanical or >> technological processes. >> >> *Key strengths:* >> >> - >> >> Rich metaphorical language linking microcosm (cells, womb) to >> macrocosm (Gaia). >> - >> >> Integration of biology, philosophy, and spiritual ecology. >> - >> >> Critique of Cartesian dualism and mechanistic education. >> >> *Potential areas of expansion:* >> >> - >> >> Introduce clearer distinctions between empirical science (biology, >> neurophysiology) and metaphorical or phenomenological experience to >> strengthen the argument for readers from different backgrounds. >> - >> >> Consider briefly noting the ethical and existential implications of >> technological interference with nature. >> >> *Relevant Thinkers:* >> >> - >> >> *Heinz von Foerster* – for autopoiesis and self-organizing systems. >> - >> >> *Humberto Maturana & Francisco Varela* – for biological autopoiesis >> and the relationship between life and cognition. >> - >> >> *Aristotle* – for teleology and understanding life as an activity of >> the soul. >> - >> >> *Merleau-Ponty* – for phenomenology and embodiment, emphasizing >> perception as primary to understanding. >> - >> >> *Gregory Bateson* – for ecological epistemology, seeing mind and >> nature as interconnected systems. >> - >> >> *James Lovelock* – Gaia hypothesis, viewing the Earth as a living >> system. >> - >> >> *Fritjof Capra* – systems theory and holistic ecology connecting >> science, life, and cognition. >> >> Your essay is essentially a plea for restoring *living understanding*—a >> recognition that cognition is not abstract or mechanical but inseparable >> from our embodied, emotional, and ecological existence. It resonates as >> both a philosophical manifesto and a poetic ecological reflection. >> ------------------------------ >> >> If you want, I can also create an *even more polished, publishable >> version* that reads almost like a philosophical essay or manifesto, >> keeping all your rich metaphors while making it academically and >> stylistically tight. That version could include subtle references to the >> thinkers mentioned above. >> >> Do you want me to do that next? >> >> -- >> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups >> "Thatha_Patty" group. >> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an >> email to [email protected]. >> To view this discussion visit >> https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/thatha_patty/CACDCHCLX0r0nZ1hHz1o6-bNdCaz3BV0n4Z2jt_4_Fys%2BJu8a_A%40mail.gmail.com >> <https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/thatha_patty/CACDCHCLX0r0nZ1hHz1o6-bNdCaz3BV0n4Z2jt_4_Fys%2BJu8a_A%40mail.gmail.com?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer> >> . >> > -- *Mar* -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Thatha_Patty" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/thatha_patty/CACDCHCKaD32R7AB6G4%2BEXULsA-L0WBmvTRXqhU959eJm2%2BbJag%40mail.gmail.com.
