j. What is Advaita?

j. What is Advaita?

Since the Vedic scriptures are highly cryptic, several schools of philosophical thought emerged in Hinduism, owing to different interpretations. Among them the most prominent one is the Advaita School.

The term Advaita refers to the darshana or philosophy that Brahman alone is ultimately real, the phenomenal transient world is an illusory appearance (maya) of Brahman, and the true Self, atman, is not different from Brahman.

Advaita is the path of knowledge. By removing ignorance of Self, knowledge is attained. It is a path of self-enquiry that leads to realization.

In Advaita you have to come to the knowledge that you are not the body, you are not the mind. Advaita leads to the knowledge that there is no self. Through that knowledge it leads to the state of no-self.

Advaita is the idea that there is only Brahman, and that everything is Brahman–non-dualism or monism.


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Other reading material:

Relevant videos: Swami Tadatmanda on reincarnation

Contributor: Rajeev Singh

Location of this post (1j): https://www.hinduspeakers.org/ufaqs/what-is-advaita/

Category: 01. God Concept
Tags: Advaita, Brahman, scripture, Self, vedic
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