The Universal Self and the Individual self in Vedanta

In the ancient Hindu philosophy known as Vedanta, the mind — understood as an accumulation of memories, desires, emotions, thoughts, etc., including the self, that is, the ‘I’-thought present in every conscious experience — is said to be a sense like any other physical sense: see, hear, touch, taste...

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Main Author: Syamala D. Hari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Society of Philosophy and Cosmology 2018-10-01
Series:Философия и космология
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ispcjournal.org/journals/2018-21/Hari_PhC_vol_21_2018.pdf
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spelling doaj-cfbba0058b4144e580753cc04c52c3632021-08-02T10:19:48ZengInternational Society of Philosophy and CosmologyФилософия и космология2307-37052518-18662018-10-0121617310.29202/phil-cosm/21/7The Universal Self and the Individual self in VedantaSyamala D. Hari0 Retired Distinguished Member of Technical Staff, Lucent Technologies In the ancient Hindu philosophy known as Vedanta, the mind — understood as an accumulation of memories, desires, emotions, thoughts, etc., including the self, that is, the ‘I’-thought present in every conscious experience — is said to be a sense like any other physical sense: see, hear, touch, taste, or smell. The implication is that mind is also instrumental in creating our conscious experiences but it is not awareness itself. One may ask: if mind is also a sense, then similarly to a sensory experience which need not involve all the five physical senses, do we ever have a conscious experience with no ‘I’ in it? Indeed, Vedanta elaborately describes such a state of consciousness called Samadhi, which lies beyond waking, dreaming, or deep sleep. Vedanta also affirms the existence of a state in which one’s self does not see itself as belonging to only one’s own body/brain and mind but one sees nobody and nothing in the universe as different from oneself; in other words, this awareness (called Universal Self) identifies itself with everything in the universe, whether living or lifeless. Vedanta claims that in our ordinary lives, in those moments when we express love and sympathy towards others, we are indeed in that state of infinite oneness whether we know it or not, and that the expression of love is a manifestation of nothing but the Universal Self. We will attempt in this article, to examine the rationale for this claim using the notion of an ever-widening circle of identification. We will describe a simple analogy used by Vedanta in its analysis of consciousness, mind, and body relations, to explain how the individual self associated with one’s body and mind arises from the Universal Self. We will also summarize Vedanta’s theory of mind-body interactions and suggest that it offers solution to the ‘hard problem’ of today’s consciousness researches in a way compatible with modern sciencehttp://ispcjournal.org/journals/2018-21/Hari_PhC_vol_21_2018.pdfselfUniversal Selfconsciousnesshard problemVedantamind-body interaction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Syamala D. Hari
spellingShingle Syamala D. Hari
The Universal Self and the Individual self in Vedanta
Философия и космология
self
Universal Self
consciousness
hard problem
Vedanta
mind-body interaction
author_facet Syamala D. Hari
author_sort Syamala D. Hari
title The Universal Self and the Individual self in Vedanta
title_short The Universal Self and the Individual self in Vedanta
title_full The Universal Self and the Individual self in Vedanta
title_fullStr The Universal Self and the Individual self in Vedanta
title_full_unstemmed The Universal Self and the Individual self in Vedanta
title_sort universal self and the individual self in vedanta
publisher International Society of Philosophy and Cosmology
series Философия и космология
issn 2307-3705
2518-1866
publishDate 2018-10-01
description In the ancient Hindu philosophy known as Vedanta, the mind — understood as an accumulation of memories, desires, emotions, thoughts, etc., including the self, that is, the ‘I’-thought present in every conscious experience — is said to be a sense like any other physical sense: see, hear, touch, taste, or smell. The implication is that mind is also instrumental in creating our conscious experiences but it is not awareness itself. One may ask: if mind is also a sense, then similarly to a sensory experience which need not involve all the five physical senses, do we ever have a conscious experience with no ‘I’ in it? Indeed, Vedanta elaborately describes such a state of consciousness called Samadhi, which lies beyond waking, dreaming, or deep sleep. Vedanta also affirms the existence of a state in which one’s self does not see itself as belonging to only one’s own body/brain and mind but one sees nobody and nothing in the universe as different from oneself; in other words, this awareness (called Universal Self) identifies itself with everything in the universe, whether living or lifeless. Vedanta claims that in our ordinary lives, in those moments when we express love and sympathy towards others, we are indeed in that state of infinite oneness whether we know it or not, and that the expression of love is a manifestation of nothing but the Universal Self. We will attempt in this article, to examine the rationale for this claim using the notion of an ever-widening circle of identification. We will describe a simple analogy used by Vedanta in its analysis of consciousness, mind, and body relations, to explain how the individual self associated with one’s body and mind arises from the Universal Self. We will also summarize Vedanta’s theory of mind-body interactions and suggest that it offers solution to the ‘hard problem’ of today’s consciousness researches in a way compatible with modern science
topic self
Universal Self
consciousness
hard problem
Vedanta
mind-body interaction
url http://ispcjournal.org/journals/2018-21/Hari_PhC_vol_21_2018.pdf
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