By the light of brahman [View all]
Ideas from classical Indian philosophy help illuminate the enigmas of selfhood, consciousness and the nature of reality
https://aeon.co/essays/how-classical-indian-philosophy-helps-us-understand-the-self


The
Kaṭha Upaniṣad tells a story about a boy named Naciketas who meets the God of Death, named Yama. Naciketas is granted three wishes by Yama. To Yamas surprise, the boy does not ask for worldly riches or great powers. Instead, he wants answers to the kind of questions that only the God of Death can answer: what happens when we die? What is the secret of immortality? Yama pleads for Naciketas to ask for something else, but the boy stands firm. He demands that Yama not renege on his word. Nothing that Yama can say will change his mind. So Yama complies.
To answer Naciketass questions, Yama explains that the true hidden nature of reality is that there is only one, all-pervading consciousness called
brahman, which is timeless, unchanging and the only non-illusory thing that was and ever will be. And it is this
brahman, says Yama, that is also immanent in all living things as
ātman, the individual ego or self:

Naciketas presses Yama for clarity about the nature of the relationship between
brahman and the world of experienced reality. Yama says that the way to think of consciousness is that it is the thing that illuminates and that allows for all mental phenomena. Consciousness, in turn, is itself illuminated by
brahman the one and only source of all illumination. Without
brahman there would be no light of consciousness and therefore no experience, no knowledge, no perception. Him alone, as he shines, do all things reflect; this whole world radiates with his light.
There is only one reality,
brahman, which takes myriad illusory forms, but like fire it is both an individual flame and a blaze. This one reality is both the transcendental
brahman and the immanent
ātman. Everything else is fleeting, illusory, sprung from ignorance. Consciousness is illumination. As the light of a blazing lamp brightens a dark room, so consciousness lights up life.
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