Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Mundaka 1.1.5 Trans & Comms

tatrāparā ṛgvedo yajurvedaḥ sāmavedo‘tharvavedaḥ śikṣā kalpo vyākaraṇaṁ niruktaṁ chando jyotiṣamiti. atha parā yayā tadakṣaram adhigamyate. (1.1.5) 

tatra – among the two; aparā – aparā; iti – is; ṛgvedaḥ – Ṛgveda; yajurvedaḥ – Yajurveda; sāmavedaḥ – Sāmaveda; atharvavedaḥ – Atharvaveda; śikṣā – phonetics; kalpaḥ – know-how of the rituals; vyākaraṇam – grammar; niruktam – etymology of Vedic words; chandaḥ – prosody; jyotiṣam – astronomy; atha – and; parā – parā; yayā – by which; tad – that; akṣaram – akṣaraṁ brahma; adhigamyate – is known

Among the two, the aparā-vidyā is Ṛgveda, Yajurveda, Sāmaveda, Atharvaveda, phonetics, know-how of rituals, grammar, etymology of Vedic words, science of metres, astronomy and astrology. And parā-vidyā is the one by which that imperishable Brahman is known.

To get parā-vidyā you have to acquire two types of qualifications. First is cognitive skill or the capacity to think properly, because the whole problem is due to aviveka, absence of ability to distinctly understand the real and the unreal. Therefore, the cognitive skill has to be honed. The second is, your life experiences should make you a complete person, in the sense of emotional maturity. Parā-vidyā is meant for a complete person, a compassionate person. The compassionate person alone is a mature person. Compassion towards yourself and the world implies maturity. Since aparā-vidyā gives viveka and maturity, it is presented first.

~Dayananda


There, the ‘lower knowledge’ is constituted of (the four Vedas) the Ṛg, the Sāma, the Yajur and the Atharva, and the (six Vedāṅgas) Śikṣā (phonetics), Kalpa (code of rituals), Vyākaraṇa (grammar), Nirukta (etymology), Chandas (metrics) and Jyotiṣa (astrology). Now the ‘Higher Knowledge’ is that which leads to immortality or that which goes beyond the word-meaning in languages.

This must have been a staggering revelation to the student who was then as much a victim of his generation as we are now of our own times. The great Śaunaka faithfully believed the declarations of Vedas and lived an entire life following strictly the ritualistic part of our immortal religion and at the end of his lifetime, when he reached the feet of a Master seeking the Supreme, he was told that he had squandered away the best part of his life in wooing but the ‘lower knowledge’.

~Chinmayananda


Of these two, the lower knowledge is the Rig-Veda, the Yajur-Veda, the Sama-Veda, the Atharva-Veda, siksha (phonetics), kalpa (rituals), vyakaranam (grammar), nirukta (etymology), chhandas (metre), and jyotis (astronomy); and the Higher Knowledge is that by which the Imperishable Brahman is attained. 

The Vedas generally-and especially in this context-signify the mere assemblage of words (sabdarasi) constituting their texts. In order to attain the Higher Knowledge, a student who has mastered the words of the scriptures must go to a qualified preceptor and cultivate such spiritual disciplines as discrimination and renunciation. Otherwise he cannot realize the Imperishable Brahman. 

~Nikhilananda

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