Yoga-Vasishta
– a philosophical text written by Valmiki
Yoga-Vasishta
is a philosophical
text written by Valmiki. It consists of metaphysical conversations,
taking place over several days, between Prince Rama and the Vedic
sage Vasishta, on the illusory nature of the manifest world and the
principles of non-duality. It is a very long text composed of 32,000
slokas and includes many direct doctrinal discourses, indirect
teaching stories, anecdotes about the gods and other famous vedic
individuals, and the occasional allegory. The text is known by
several alternative names: Maha-Ramayana, Arsha Ramayana, Vasishta
Ramayana, and Jnanavasishta.
The
Yoga-Vasishta of Valmiki, together with the Dasbodha of Samartha
Ramdass, were the two books most valued by Nisargadatta's teacher,
Siddharameshwar. Some conceptual similarities can be detected in the
teaching of Siddharameshwar and Nisargadatta which are probably
derived from the Yoga Vasishta.
Vasishta
appears to have had an intimate knowledge of Kapila's Yoga system.
Scholars have analysed the Yoga-Vasishta, and believe it contains a
mixture of doctrines derived from different traditions, including:
Vedanta, Jainism, Yoga, Samkhya, Saiva Siddhanta, and Mahayana
Buddhism. The original text dates from at least the 10th
century, which was then subjected to enlargement and editing during
the 11th
to 14th
centuries to make its teaching align closer to the philosophy of
Vedanta.
The
book teaches a seven stage process of spiritual development: 1.
Subheccha or longing for the Truth. The sadhaka must distinguish
between the permanent and the impermanent, cultivate aversion to
pleasure, and acquire control over the gross material body and the
mind. He also should develop a yearning for liberation from Samsara.
2. Tanumanasa or the reduction of mental activity. The sadhaka begins
to abandon the many and concentrates on the one. 3. Sattvapatti or
the attainment of sattva, purity. The yogi now becomes a knower of
Brahman. He practices Samprajnata Samadhi, contemplation. But, the
consciousness of duality persists. 4. Asamsakti or being unaffected
by anything. He performs activities and duties without involvement.
5. Padartha abhavana or seeing Brahman everywhere. The separation of
subject and object becomes dissolved. Actions are performed without
any sense of being the one who does them. Sancita and Agami Karma are
destroyed. Only a small amount of Prarabdha Karma remains. 6. Turiya
or permanent Samadhi. The yogi no longer performs any action. Neither
promptings coming from within himself, nor from any other person, can
induce him to perform action. 7. After entering this final stage, the
gross material body falls away after approximately three days.
[source: Wikipedia].
The
Yoga-Vasishta
is divided into six parts: 1. Dispassion. 2. The Method of Final
Liberation. 3. Evolution of the World. 4. Existence. 5. Dissolution
of the World. 6. Liberation.
On
Dispassion, Vasishta says: the conception of the world is a mistake.
Although we see the world and its objects by means of the senses, it
has no real existence. Enquire into it and you will never find it to
be real. The conviction of the non-existence of the objects of the
senses, leads to the removal of their impressions from the mind. Upon
perfecting this, there will enter the supreme and eternal bliss of
self-extinction. The best state of liberation is actually the
complete abandonment of desires. Desires bind us strongly by strings
to the prison of the body. Impure desires are the cause of
transmigration, whereas pure desires serve to destroy transmigration.
The
purification or absence of desires leads to the extinction of mental
actions, which in a liberated-while-still-living man appear like
inner wheels and cogs which do not turn. When the mind becomes free
from desire, the sense organs are relieved from their action, and the
soul becomes devoid of the results of its past actions, just as it is
of those actions it has left undone. The mind being set free from
desire, the organs of action are restrained from their activities,
just like an engine stopped in motion.
On
the Method of Final Liberation, Vasishta states: the millions of
beings who are dead, those who are dying, and those who will die in
future, are all to be born according to the different desires in
their minds. The external world appearing as a reality, is in truth
only a creation of our desires, like a magical scene spread before
us. Bondage consists in the belief that the visible world is real,
and release depends on the negation of the phenomenal.
There
is an interminable ignorance, resembling an immense sea, enveloping
the face of creation, breaking into uncrossable streamlets. All
beings here are but the waves of this sea of ignorance. Destiny has
no form, no action, no movement, no power, because it is a false
concept rooted in the minds of the ignorant. Destiny is a word which
has come into fashion from the idea of the future retribution of
one's past actions, as retributive justice, and this justice is
designated 'destiny'. In this manner the ignorant are led to believe
that there is a thing called destiny. There is no co-operative power
of invisible destiny perceptible in the actions of men, consequently
destiny is a meaningless word. If destiny is the main cause and
source of the movements of all beings in the three worlds, then all
creatures can rest in the assurance that destiny will perform their
parts. Thus the fool imagines he has a destiny and relies on it to
his own disadvantage, whereas the wise raise themselves to better
states by means of their exertion. The wise do not wait for destiny
in this world. It is a man's activity, and no other, that is the
cause of all his actions, and the recipient of their consequences.
On
the Evolution of the World, Vasishta teaches: that whoever is born in
this world continues to progress until he at last attains his final
liberation, or ascends towards heaven, or falls into hell. Whatever
appears, as either moving or unmoving in this world, know them all as
appearances in a dream in a state of sound sleep, which become
extinct at the end of the Kalpa. At the end, there remains a
nameless, unevolved 'thing', in a state of deep dark abyss, without
any light. This great existence is given the name Mahat-atman. It
next shows itself in another form which is called Jivatman, the
living conscious self. The inert living principle, the jiva, becomes
the moving principle, the akul-atman, which, due to its power of
thought, manana, becomes the mind. Lastly, it becomes the embodied
self, bhuta-atman. In this process, mind is produced and changed from
the stillness of the Great Supreme Spirit, into a state of
restlessness, asthirakara, which is personified as Hiranyagarbha. The
mind soon evolves itself into a self-willed power which exercises its
desires at all times, and consequently the extensive magical scene of
the world is displayed to our view. This is Viraj-murti, the
manifestation of the desires of the will of the Divine Mind, the
offspring of Brahma. To the enlightened understanding, even spiritual
bodies are non-existent.
On
Existence, Vasishta declares: that it is not true that the mundane
world exists in the form of a seed in the final sleep of Brahma. He
argues that the mind is a very fine and minute substance, or
particle, which logically cannot be born of itself, nor become the
seed of the universe. The Supreme Spirit, being finer than subtle
space, cannot have the form of a seed. That which is zero, or the
equivalent of nothing, cannot be a seed without which nothing can
sprout. Nothing comes out of itself, and that which is material does
not comes out of immaterial spirit. It is Brahma who abides in his
self, in the form of creation, at the beginning of the world. This
creation is as formless as the creator himself, and there is no
relation of cause and effect between them. There neither is, nor was,
nor ever will be, a separate world in existence. It is the one
intelligence of the Divinity that displays the creation in itself.
Brahma himself is all and everything. The appearance of the visible
world is a mere conception of the mind. The ineffable light, which is
projected into the mind by the Divine Intellect, shows itself as the
baseless fabric of the creation. The creation of the world, and all
created things, are located in the mind of Brahma, and make their
repeated appearance, as phantoms, before him. In reality, there
exists no I, nor you, nor visible world, nor anything else, but all
these merge, upon right reasoning, in the One, which remains and
subsists after all other existences.
On
the Dissolution of the World, Vasishta explains: when the thinking
principle, or mind, is wasted and weakened, and it appears to be
extinct or null, the intellect which remains in common in all beings,
is called the universal intelligence of all. When this intellect is
devoid of its intellection and becomes as transparent as if it is
nothing of itself, then it is called the common universal intellect.
When it ignores the knowledge of all its internal and external
objects, then it remains as the common universal intellect, which is
unconscious of any personality. When all visible objects are
considered to have a common existence and to be of the same nature
with oneself, this is designated to common universal intelligence.
This common view of all existence is entertained by all great and
liberated beings. Having attained this state of perfection, there is
freedom from fear, or of falling. One who attains this immeasurable
state is filled with supreme and infinite bliss, having neither
beginning nor end, which is a reality without any property assignable
to itself.
The
mind is attached to the world and is said to be bound to it, but that
which is detached from it is said to be free from it. It is internal
attachment and detachment of the mind which are the causes of its
bondage and liberation. The wise man watches the movements of the
mind. The Mahat, the great soul, exists beyond the body and is
situated in its own intellect. It looks on the body from a distance,
like a spectator observing a crowd of moving people. The wise man,
although he may be moving about in busy affairs, is yet ever quiet in
the disengagement of his soul from them. He may be assailed by
outward sorrow, yet his inward soul shines as an image of the sun.
The soul, being without beginning, is never born, and being unborn it
is never destroyed. It is unbounded by time and space, is never
confined to any place, and being always unconfined, it requires no
liberation. Give up the thoughts of your imaginary bondage and
liberation
On
Liberation, Vasishta reveals: there exists but one Brahma, unlimited
by space and time, and he is the world himself. He is tranquil and
shines with equal effulgence upon all bodies. Because of his nature
of universality, he cannot be any particular thing. Knowing the
nature of Brahma you will become free from your egoism, knowing
yourself as the same with him, knowing yourself as bodiless and as
great as he. There is no mind, nor ignorance, nor any life principle,
prana... they are all fictitious concepts. It is the same
beginningless and endless Brahma who spreads himself like a boundless
and unfathomable ocean, supporting all bodies and things, and present
in whatever we consider as favourable or unfavourable to ourselves,
as our friends and our enemies.
The
fiction of the mind continues, like a dragon, as long as we are
unacquainted with the knowledge of Brahma, and believe the phenomenal
world to be real, and continue selfishly to believe the body and the
person and its personality, as well as a distinct mind, to be our
own. The body of a living-liberated man has a mind which is employed
in its duties, but free from its desires. Such minds are no longer
self-willed free agents, but are acted upon by their paramount
duties. They are mindless and unmindful of everything except their
duty. They know no duality. Such a mind, purified by reason, is
called the Sattva. It does not give rise to error. It is the opposite
of the chitta, which is the active mind that has the quality of being
born, on account of its desires and actions. The seed of the active
mind, the chitta, is burned by the fire of sattva. The truly
liberated man is unmoved under all circumstances, and has nothing to
gain or lose in his prosperity or adversity, nor anything to elate or
depress him in either state.
The
blind see the world as all dark, while those who are conscious find
it fully bright and shining, and so the wise are blessed with the
knowledge of the Oneness of the whole, while the ignorant are
immersed in misery by their lack of such knowledge. There is nothing
in the world that lives of itself, nor dies away to nothingness.
Everything equally exists in God at all time. All beings are located
in the universal Self, as waves in the vast expanse of the ocean,
therefore it is an error to believe that one resides in the spirit
and another lives outside it. The spirit of God dwells in the form of
the universe, displaying various shapes to awareness by the inner
light of the spirit. There is nobody, nor no being, except the being
of Brahma, just as all waves, foam and bubbles of the sea are the
same water as the waters of the deep. So are all beings productions
of spirit in the Infinite Spirit.
The
infinite intelligence of God, filling all space and spacelessness, by
its own will, takes a subtle and minute form, which is comprehensible
by the name of 'intellect'. It is this which is expressed by the
concept 'jiva' or living soul. The jiva is the pure intellect with
consciousness of itself. It is nothing at all. It is identical with
the nature, the property, and the quality of any object whatever that
exists anywhere. Whatever this jiva thinks of anything, in any
manner, in any place or time, it immediately becomes the same thing,
by its idea of it. The jiva is misled to think of its individuality
as the ego, the I am, by the dullness of its intellect, and it
supposes itself to be confined within a limited place of space and
time, and with limited powers of action and understanding. It assumes
to itself an unreal form, or body, and believes it is real. The jiva,
thinking of itself as being transformed into a gross material form,
as that of Virat the macrocosm, views itself as bright but spotted,
like the Moon. Then suddenly, he finds himself in union with the five
senses of perception, which have appeared within him of themselves.
These five senses of perception are discovered to have five organs of
sensation, which are their inlets. Virat is also known as Purusha,
the first male power. Purusha manifests himself into five other
forms: the sides (space), air, the sun (fire), water, and the land
(earth), which are the objects of the five senses. He then becomes
the myriad forms, according to the infinity of objects within his
knowledge. Although he manifests into objective forms, he is quite
unknown to us in his unmanifest, subjective, causal form, which is
unchanging. Virat-Purusha originally derives from the Supreme Being
as mental energy and therefore is not the five elemental forms, but
is the Self within the five elements. He is known as the Supreme Lord
of All, the macrocosm of the world, who arises in a moment
spontaneously by himself, by his own will, and expands his own
essence over the whole universe, and after enduring for a long time,
at last contracts the whole back into himself, then subsides in
himself.
As
subtle space, Virat-Purusha, is invisible, but becomes visible as the
sky, as subtle and gross air. In the form of Brahma, he sang the four
Vedas from his four mouths. He determined the significations of
words, and established the rules of conduct, still applicable today.
As the Lord of Life, he causes the body, the nature, the thoughts and
actions of all living beings. Nothing whatsoever has its particular
nature of itself, unless it is implanted in it by the intelligence of
God, by the infusion of the subtle element of water, the moisture of
divine intelligence. All our thoughts are agitated by inspiration of
prana, the breath of the great intellect. Know your thoughts
therefore as proceeding from the void, the nothingness of the entity
of the Supreme Brahma. By his will, Virat-Purusha produces the gods,
Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva from himself. All the celestial deities and
demons are the creations of his mind. By the light of the sun and
moon he produces the vegetable food which supports all living beings,
producing their minds and thoughts which become actions, and even the
birth of future persons. In this manner, thousands of Virats, and
hundreds of MahaKalpa ages have come and passed away, and there are
many yet to appear. Virat is collectively the aggregate of all
beings, but he is also distributed into the jiva, or soul, of every
individual being. The same Virat is manifested in the meanest insect
as well as in the highest Rudra, or god, and he even extends into
atoms.
Being
deluded by the illusion of the world, the jiva sees duality instead
of its unity. The jiva, converted to the breathing of prana, vital
life, has lost sight of the Self which is hidden, underlying it. We
thus remain confined to this world of ignorance as long as we enjoy
the idea of ego, I am. But as soon as we give up the idea of ego, we
are free. Liberation is therefore self extinction. There is no
confinement in this world, no bondage, no liberation, no salvation,
no sat (being) and no asat (non-being), and when you know this, then,
here and now, you will be truly free.
----------------
The
Yoga-Vasishta text exists in two main forms, full and abridged:
The
Brihat Yoga Vasishta is the larger version which consists of the full
text of some 36,000 granthas, written in Sanskrit. There are several
English translations, perhaps not easily obtained: by Swami
Jyotirmayananda, by Vidvan Bulusu Ventateswaraulu,
by Vihari
Lala Mitra, by Swami Venkatesananda etc.
Vihari
Lala Mitra produced a translation in 1891 (3,650 pages), which reads
well and is not noticeably dated. This translation will eventually
become available at the Project Gutenberg, but a preview is presently
published online at the URL:
http://www.scribd.com/collections/2493058/Yoga-Vasishtha-Mitra-translation.
A full scanned version is available at:
https://archive.org/details/YogaVasishthaMaharamayana
The
Laghu Yoga Vasishta is the smaller abridged version which consists of
6,000 granthas. The original abridgement was made by Abhinananda of
Kashmir. He kept almost all of the significant teaching text of the
full version and deleted only the descriptive stories and the
anecdotal sections.
An
English translation of the Laghu version by Swami Venkatesananda is
published (1993) by State University of New York Press (768 pages).
This translation is considered authoritative. Swami Venkatesananda
was the private secretary to Swami Sivananda, at his Rishikesh
ashram. Price about $26, £15, or €17.
There
is a free online English translation of the Laghu version (738 pages)
by K Narayanaswami Aiyer available at this URL...
http://www.holybooks.com/wp-content/uploads/laghu-yoga-vasishta-english-translation.pdf
NB. K N
Aiyer was a member of the Theosophical Society which perhaps does not
have the highest objective scholastic reputation.
Several
other more severe abridgements exist but are not particularly recommended.
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