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The
Philosophy of the Upanishads
The
term Upanishad denotes the study and practice of the innate truth.
The name is full of significance. 'Upa' means the process of studying with 'Nishta'
or steadfastness; 'shad' means the attainment of the Ultimate Reality. The
name Upa-ni-shad arose for these reasons. The Upanishads teach not only the
principles of Atmavidya; they indicate also the practical means of realisation.
They point out not only the duties and obligations one has to bear, but also
the actions to be done and those to be avoided.
The Gita is but the essence of the Upanishads. Arjuna acquired through the
lessons of the Gita the fruit of listening to the Upanishads. In the
Upanishads, the statement, "Thath-thwam-asi", "That thou
art", is found. In the Gita, Krishna says to Arjuna, "I am Arjuna
among the Pandavas", that is to say, "I and You are the same".
This is the same as saying "Thou art That", that Jiva and Iswara are
the same.
So, whether it is the Gita or the Upanishads, the teaching is Non-duality, not
Duality, or qualified Monism. The human eye cannot delve into the minute or
the magnitudinous. It cannot read the mystery of the virus or the atom or the
stellar universe. Therefore, scientists supplement the eye with the telescope
and the microscope. Similarly, sages are able to experience Divinity through
the eye of knowledge, gained by following the Dharma of moral conduct and
spiritual discipline. When the human eye stands in need of an extraneous
instrument to observe even the insignificant worm and virus, how can one
refuse to go through the process of manthra if he desires to see the
omnipresent transcendent Principle? It is very hard to acquire the eye of
wisdom. Concentration is essential for this. And, for concentration to develop
and stabilise itself, three things are very important: purity of
consciousness, moral awareness and spiritual discrimination. These
qualifications are difficult of attainment by ordinary folk.
Man is endowed with the special instrument of discrimination, of judgement, of
analysis and synthesis, which among all animals, he alone possesses. He has to
develop this and utilise it to the best purpose. Through this instrument, he
can realise the Immanent Divinity.
Instead, man pesters himself and others with the question: Where does God
reside? If He is real, why is He not seen? Hearing such queries, one feels
like pitying the poor questioners. For, they are announcing their own
foolishness. They are like the dullards who aspire for university degrees
without taking pains even to learn the alphabet. They aspire to realise God
without putting themselves to the trouble of practising the Sadhana required.
People who have no moral strength and purity talk of God and His existence and
decry efforts to see Him. Such people have no right to be heard.
Spiritual Sadhana is based on the holy Sastras. They cannot be mastered in a
trice. They cannot be followed through talk. Their message is summed up in the
Upanishads; hence, they are revered as authoritative. They are not the
products of human intelligence; they are the whisperings of God to man. They
are parts of the eternal Vedas. The Vedas shine gloriously through all their
parts.
The Upanishads are authentic and authoritative, as they share the glory of the
Vedas. They are 1180 in number, but, through the centuries, many of them
disappeared from human memory and only 108 have now survived. Of these, 13
have attained great popularity, as a result of the depth and value of their
contents.
The sage Vyasa classified the Upanishads and allotted them among the four
Vedas; The Rigveda has 21 branches and each branch has one Upanishad allotted
to it. The Yajurveda has 109 branches and 109 Upanishads. The Atharvanaveda
has 50 branches and 50 Upanishads were its share. The Samaveda has a thousand
branches and the balance, namely, 1000 Upanishads were its share. Thus, the
1180 Upanishads were assigned by Vyasa to the Four Vedas.
Sankaracharya raised the status of ten among the Upanishads by selecting them
for writing his commentaries and so they became especially important. Humanity
stands to gain or fall by these ten. Pundits and
those with faith should resolve to present before humanity these ten
Upanishads at least. They are Isa, Kena, Katha, Prasna, Mundaka, Mandukya,
Thaithiriya, Aithareya, Chandogya and Brihadaranyaka.
The Upanishads have also inspired other works on Geography, Astronomy,
Astrology, Economics and Political Theory, as well as the 18 Puranas
comprising Skanda, Siva, Garuda and others. The Vedas and the Upanishads are
the very foundation for Sanathana Dharma.
There is one interesting feature to be noted. This religion has no one Founder
as the others have. That invisible unknown founder is God, the source of all
wisdom. He is the Prophet of this Sanathana Dharma. He is the Founder; His
Grace and His Inspiration manifested through the pure Sages and they became
the spokesmen of this Dharma. When the moral purity of men degenerates, God
takes form as grace and inspiration in sages and teachers. He has also given
through the Upanishads the Sathya-Jnana, the Wisdom concerning the Reality.
The Lord, intent on the regeneration of the world, communicated Vedas through
Hiranyagarbha and Hiranyagarbha, in turn, passed Them on to his ten
Manasa-puthras, including Athri and Marichi. From them, the Vedas spread among
humanity, handed down from one generation to another. As time passed, ages
accumulated and continents moved, some Vedas got lost, or were neglected as
too difficult for comprehension, and only Four have survived into modern
times. These Four were taught by Vedavyasa, the greatest among the exponents
of the Vedas, to his disciples, in the Dwaparayuga.
When Vyasa was thus expounding the Vedas, engaged in spreading the sacred
scripture, one disciple of his, Yajnavalkya by name, incurred his wrath and as
a punishment, he had to regurgitate the Yajurveda that he had already learned,
into the custody of his guru and leave the place, to take refuge in Suryadeva,
the treasure-house of the Vedas. Just then, the Rishis who revere the Vedas,
flew into the place in the shape of Thiththiri birds and ate up the
regurgitated Yajurveda. That particular section of the Veda is called "Thaithiriyam".
Meanwhile Suryadeva was pleased with the devotion and steadfastness of the
unfortunate Yajnavalkya. He assumed the form of a Vaji or Horse and blessed
the sage with renewed knowledge of the Yajurveda. The sections thus taught by
the Vaji came to be called 'Vajasaneyi'. The Yajurveda as promoted by
Vedavyasa is called Krishna paksha Yajurveda and that handed down by Yajnavalkya as
the Sukla paksha Yajurveda. In these, the first few chapters are Manthras connected
with the Karmakanda and the last few sections deal with Jnanakanda.
While
these are the most important Upanishads, the others also have a lot to teach
us about the various aspects of Divinity and life.
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