Christopher
Isherwood was a novelist and initiate of the Vedanta Society of Southern
California, headed by Swami Prabhavananda. In his introduction to the collection of essays Vedanta for Modern Man,
Isherwood points out that Vedanta is a nondualistic philosophy that teaches that Brahman (the
Ultimate Reality behind the phenomenal universe) is “one without a second.”
Brahman,
he says, is beyond attributes. Brahman
is not conscious; Brahman is consciousness. Brahman does not exist; Brahman is
existence. Brahman is the Atman (the
Eternal Nature) of every human being, creature and object.
Vedanta
teaches that Life has no other purpose than the following: that we shall learn to know ourselves for
what we really are, that we shall reject the superficial ego-personality that
claims that “I am Mr. Smith; I am other than Mr. Brown,” and know, instead,
that “I am the Atman; Mr. Brown is the Atman; the Atman is Brahman; there is
nothing anywhere but Brahman; all else is appearance, transience, and
unreality.”
No comments:
Post a Comment