Consciousness,
according to Vedanta philosophy, is a field that exists separate from the
body. This field is a continuum which
means that it goes on endlessly in all directions like an infinite ocean. Each individual consciousness is a portion, a
small subsection, of the infinite field, the vast majority of which lies beyond
the realm of usual human experience.
Different
living beings possess varying amounts of this one continuous spectrum of
consciousness. Take for example an
ant. Compared to humans an ant has
significantly lower quantities of consciousness. An ant is not aware of the traffic jam
outside, for instance, nor is it worried about picking the kids up from
school.
But
now what if the consciousness of the ant expands so that it becomes aware of
more things? It, then, will find its
small body and brain insufficient and therefore will manifest a more capable
body the next time, say that of a cat.
Now,
in the evolutionary chain, a consciousness does not jump from an ant to a
cat. Rather there are many small
evolutionary steps in the middle. In
fact, in Vedanta a consciousness is said to travel through 8.4 million life
forms before it attains to human birth.
Nor
are human beings the final step in the chain.
While human consciousness has evolved significantly over that of other
animals, it is still restricted. Beyond
it is a state of super consciousness where a consciousness that has expanded
becomes boundless.
This
state is called by different names in different religions. In Vedanta it is called Samadhi; in Buddhism, Enlightenment; and in Christianity, Salvation.
It was attained by Swami Vivekananda, by his guru Sri Ramakrishna, by
Ramana Maharshi, by Jesus, and by Buddha, to name a few, and is the goal and
destiny of all living beings.
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