Thursday, January 22, 2026

Say Isvara

An individual is a component of the universal. Without the universal, there is no individual.

If a human individual possesses personality is that personality a component too?

Of a universal personality? Say Isvara? Let us pray.


~rj26

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Dominus Amazing

As scientific materialism is a paradigm, nonduality is the metaparadigm.

One doesn't lose consciousness. Only the mind turns on and off. As it is in deep sleep.

Maybe I am the ground within which everything appears in spring and disappears in the fall.


All Superimpositions Must Pass

One could say Brahman is smaller than a mustard seed and larger than the multiverse if Brahman didn't transcend space-time itself.

Brahman is, Gaudapada says, neither a seed of consciousness nor omniscient consciousness, neither unmanifested Maya nor that omnipotent Isvara.

Brahman is not reflected consciousness although reflected consciousness is Brahman. All brilliant names and shadowy forms appear in The Lake of Pure Consciousness. 



~rj25

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Light Knows

God is like an overcoat one wears when acting like an individual. When acting like a God, one wears nothing but being. In reality, who's acting?

Nonduality rains. Variety appears. Consciousness holds your undivided attention.

The world is doing or not doing, decisions, decisions. Real power in Maya is nondoing, evolution, the will of God. The ground of consciousness always knows.


~SR13 (A Divine Play in Three Acts; Raining Nonduality; Yoda Yoga)



A Divine Play in Three Acts

God is like an overcoat

one wears when acting

like an individual. 

When acting like a God

one wears nothing but being.

In reality, who's acting?


Raining Nonduality

Nonduality rains.

Variety appears. 

Consciousness holds

your undivided attention.


Yoda Yoga

The world is doing or not doing, decisions, decisions.

Real power in Maya is nondoing, evolution, the will of God.

The ground of consciousness knows.



Yoda Yoga

The world is doing or not doing, decisions, decisions.

Real power in Maya is nondoing, evolution, the will of God.

The ground of consciousness knows.





Raining Nonduality

Nonduality rains.

Variety appears. 

Consciousness holds

your undivided attention.





A Divine Play in Three Acts

God is like an overcoat

one wears when acting

like an individual. 

When acting like a God

one wears nothing but being.

In reality, who's acting?






Alston on Shankara toc

Shankara on Avidya (nescience)

Shankara on the Absolute as Lord

Shankara on the Unmoving Mover

Shankara on the Deeper Levels

Shankara on Cause, Effect, and the Absolute

Shankara on Vedic revelation

Shankara on Name and Form

Shankara on Adhyaropa and Apavada

Shankara on Defining the Absolute

Shankara on Satyam Jñānam Anantam Brahma

Shankara on Bliss

Shankara on Creation Texts

Shankara on Gaudapada's Acosmic Doctrines

On Shankara. Snippets on Shankara's Identity and True Works (plus Alston Info)

On Shankara: Gaudapada and Madhyamika Teaching

On Shankara: Schools of Advaita

On Shankara and Satcitananda

Shankara on the Soul

Shankara on the Intellect

Shankara on Soul and Lord


A. J. Alston Bibliography:

Shankara on the Absolute: Shankara Source Book Volume One Kindle Edition

Shankara on the Creation: Shankara Source Book Volume Two Kindle Edition

Shankara on the Soul: Shankara Source Book Volume Three Kindle Edition

The Thousand Teachings of Shankara: Upadeshasahasri






Shankara on Soul and Lord

A. J. Alston:

There are texts in the Upanishads and in the Epics and Purāṇas, including the Gītā, which imply that the individual soul is different from the Lord and that he should approach Him in devotion and that he may perhaps attain to Him or to ‘his world’ through his grace.

For Śaṅkara, these texts had validity within the world of nescience. But if they were to be taken as the final truth, they would conflict with the other texts speaking of the utter transcendence of the one and only non-dual Self, bereft of all duality and all empirically knowable characters.

While the individual soul in its true nature is identical with (is nothing other than) the Lord, the Lord in his true nature is not identical with the individual soul in its individual nature. In particular, the Lord is not in his true nature the transmigrant. The individual soul is dependent on the Lord for his power to act.

The relation between the individual soul and the Lord appears different from different standpoints. From the standpoint of nescience they may seem different, and identity with the Lord then appears to be a ‘goal’ that has to be ‘attained’.

From the standpoint of knowledge, this identity is a fact. Bondage and liberation, in turn, depend on whether the student feels himself to be different from or identical with the Lord.


~Alston, 'Shankara and the Soul', pp. 70-1







Friday, January 9, 2026

Shankara on the Intellect

A. J. Alston:

Our experiences force us to conclude that an unchanging, self-luminous principle must exist within the individual as the Witness of his passing states of experience.

Further it is the presence of this light which unifies and organizes the psychic and physical functions and enables perception and other cognitive acts to take place.

The mind and senses are composed of the material elements, and there must exist some self-luminous light perceiving them if there is to be experience at all.

The intellect is the chief instrument of this self-luminous principle in the case of the waking experience of an ordinary unenlightened man.

The intellect is the special and most intimate instrument of the Self in empirical knowledge. The intellect is lit by the light of the Self, and objects are lit by the intellect through the medium of the senses, and require to be so lit in order to be perceived at all.

The light of the Self within is reflected in the intellect, and this reflected light is passed on, by contact (samparka), to the lower mind, senses and the body.

People identify themselves with this or that aspect of the psycho-physical organism, depending on how far their powers of discrimination have developed and rescued them from crude self-identification with the body.

As long as there is failure to discriminate the Self from the intellect, the Self appears ‘like’ the appearances that come before it. But in truth it is pure light and does not really act or move.


~Alston, 'Shankara on the Soul' pp. 56-7