The Puzzle of Playful Matters in Non-Dual Śaivism and Sāṃkhya: Reviving Prakṛti in the Sāṃkhya Kārikā through Goethean Organics
Abstract
:“Nature loves to hide.”
“Nobody is more tender than nature. When she realizes, ‘I have been seen,’ she never again comes into the sight of the witness-self.”Īśvarakṛṣṇa, Sāṃkhya Kārikā 612
1. Introduction
broke important new ground in the analysis and presentation of Buddhist thought and its relation to [the Pratyabhijñā position]… and, in doing so, quite transformed the nature of the argument between these competing forces, in effect replacing a clash of abstracted, depersonalized and dehistoricized philosophical positions with a narrative account, in which the proponents of the various Buddhist positions each develops his own view through the analysis and critique of his predecessors (2016, pp. 263–64).4
In his evaluation of Buddhist philosophy, Abhinava regarded Śaṅkaranandana as a “predecessor” or “good thinker” whose “views” could serve as “bridges and [a] foundation” to be “developed” on the pathway to “the correct conclusive view of the thing to be known”—in this case, the interrelation between omnipresent consciousness, the seemingly external world, and the means by which we become aware of how things are. Prajñākara, however, was deprived of such recognition (Abhinava deletes him from his story in spite of his actual influence). These choices involved circumscribing intellectual historical questions (e.g., “What exactly did Buddhist idealists assert?”) within a philosophical inquiry (“What ought it mean to be an idealist?”). Abhinava’s study of Buddhist idealism was already delimited by the Pratyabhijñā concern to develop ontological and epistemological frameworks that could support the growth of recognitive awareness (which for Abhinava entailed rejecting both the existence of mind-independent objects and the necessity of adhyavasāya for valid awareness). Founded upon the mythical narrative of Śiva at play with his consort and other, Śakti, Abhinava deployed an interpretive strategy that acknowledged the historicity of both texts and our understanding of them (including the alterity of texts and the limits of our understanding of texts). However, this hermeneutic did not reduce the object of study to a history that unfolds independent of the researcher. It rather sought to investigate how consciousness (e.g., the consciousness of the interpreter) understands itself by othering and subsequently recognizing itself in the object (e.g., the text). Abhinava situated the views of his Buddhist opponents by presenting them as seemingly consciousness-independent facts-in-themselves and then carefully recasting them (unless he excludes them outright) as supporting actors in a drama whose outcome has been determined ahead of time, namely, the conclusive victory of non-dual Śaivism.is made possible by the series of stairs-of-discernment constructed by the predecessors [e.g., Śaṅkaranandana]. It would, I think, be quite surprising if anyone could by themselves arrive at the correct conclusive view of the thing to be known, just in the first go, without any previous support. Once, of course, you have been put on the right path to a destination, the building of bridges and foundation of a new dwelling-place, etc., are not that surprising. Therefore … I have not denigrated the views of the good thinkers (who have come before me), but it is those very (apparently rejected) views which I have developed, improved and distilled.10
2. The Pratyabhijñā Critique of Causality and Manifestation in Sāṃkhya
In order for manifestation to take place, there must first be a unified entity that self-manifests as the causal process—a process that includes both the apparent material cause (e.g., the clay pot) and the effect (the appearance of the pot). Consciousness represents just such an entity. From an inward intentionality, consciousness turns outward or externalizes itself as the clay, the pot, and even the potter and his instruments. Abhinava explains in the IPV, using the example of a mirror:[In fact] this [production of the manifestation] is not new at all. For [when we say] “the lamp produces the manifestation of, e.g., an already existing pot”, [in fact] it is the thing itself [i.e., the pot,] that is acted upon [and therefore constitutes the effect of the action]. And so just as [one can say that] there is a production called the “manifestation” of an existing [effect] such as the pot, in the same way, [one can say] that there is a production by a lamp for instance of the manifestation itself, which [insofar as it is regarded as an effect, merely] consists in the thing [itself, so that just as the thing itself, it] already exists… Therefore, the thesis that the effect exists [before the operation of its cause] is equally applied to everything, since even manifestation, insofar as it is not distinct from the [object that it manifests], is equivalent with the [already] existing effect that is the thing. And manifestation is the fact that… [it] consists in the manifesting [agent] (prakāśa); it is the existence (avasthāna) in this or that form of the manifesting [agent] that is consciousness, [a manifesting agent] that is devoid of beginning or end (anādinidhana), [i.e.,] that [always] already exists.
Like a mirror, consciousness reveals various forms (clay, a pot, a potter, etc.) without failing to exist as the self-same entity—namely, the omnipotent, omni-present, shape-shifting super-agent, Śiva (Ratié 2014). “[S]uch [an agency] is possible in the unitary [and] limpid [entity] consisting in consciousness,” Utpala writes, “because [in it] there is no contradiction [between its unity and] its receiving manifold reflections (pratibimba).”19 Abhinava echoes this point in the IPV:[O]ne cannot say that being an object of knowledge for both [internal and external] sense organs is in turn either existing or nonexistent [before the operation of the cause], because the [following] is the ultimate truth as regards this [property of being the object of sense organs]: just as, when there is a reflection, inside a mirror, of e.g., a pot that is [in the process of] being created by a potter [also reflected in the mirror], the might (mahimān) of such a manifestation belongs to the mirror alone; in the same way, [when there is a reflection], in the vision of a dream, [of a pot being created by a potter, the might of such a manifestation] belongs to [the dreaming] consciousness.18
Consciousness bears a universal, dynamic power of illumination (prakāśa) that does not get diminished through seemingly incompatible manifestations. In theorizing this, non-dual Śaivas believe that they explain not just how the material pot gets produced but how the manifestation or consciousness of the pot arises. The pot, the manifestation of the pot, and indeed, the potter’s consciousness of the pot, all exist as everlasting consciousness revealing itself in a particular form (e.g., the pot) and whose necessary existence resides “beyond rational examination (acintya) and cannot be put into question (aparyanuyojya),” as Abhinava tells us (Shastri and Shastri 1918–1921, p. 141; quoted in Ratié 2014, p. 148).[T]he sovereign power (māhātmya) [called] ‘limpidity’ is both a differentiation into innumerable manifestations, and unity. And [somebody] standing on the top of a mountain [embraces] in one single cognition the manifestation of the innumerable things found in a city; therefore, agency is possible only for that which consists in consciousness, because [only consciousness] can possess the power of action, since [only consciousness] is capable of assuming differentiation [while remaining] undifferentiated.20
3. Shortcomings in the Standard Modern Interpretation of Sāṃkhya
Both analytically and synthetically, we are dealing with a closed causal system of reductive materialism… From an analytic point of view, every ‘component’ of the system is a ‘part’ of the totally functioning ‘whole’ (and may well explain why the Sāṃkhya lends itself to a purely mathematical formulation…). From a synthetic point of view, every empirical manifestation is an ‘effect’ that is finally a mere modification of one ultimate, unconscious (acetana) material ‘cause’ (mūlaprakṛti)(1983: 230; text in parentheses is from Larson).
The jar (effect) exists latently in the clay (material cause) as one of its possibilities, and change involves the mere transformation (or rearrangement) of that which was already present. Wilhelm Halbfass and Larson call attention to SK 9 as “the locus classicus for the satkāryavāda” and its usage of the expression “upādāna-grahaṇāt,” or “because of the need [grahaṇāt] for an (appropriate) material cause [upādāna]” (Halbfass 1992, p. 56; Larson 1969a, p. 258).46 Elsewhere (e.g., SK 3) the text appears to detail how the 23 manifest tattvas and perceptible objects flow forth as the causal effects of mūlaprakṛti (and other tattvas endowed with creative capacities).47 All of the manifest tattvas, it would seem, are latent within and materially derive from mūlaprakṛti, just as the jar (as effect) latently exists in and derives from the clay (the material cause).A lump of clay is shaped by the potter as a jar. Here nothing that did not exist before comes into existence, but there is only change of position in space of the particles of the stuff. Anyone who could see the clay in minute portions will see that those portions are only rearranged in a particular manner in the jar. But those who see the whole and are familiar with the use of a jar, will call it a jar and in common parlance may say that a thing that was not in existence before has come into existence. In reality, however, there is only a spread of the mass of clay in a particular manner(Aranya 1977, p. 27; quoted in Burley 2007, p. 93).
4. A Goethean Interpretation of the Sāṃkhya Kārikā
5. Why Non-Dual Kashmir Śaivas Misread the Sāṃkhya Kārikā
5.1. Reliance upon Classical Sāṃkhya Commentaries
Going further (and echoing the early discussion in this paper), Abhinava (along with Utpala) defends “the ontological status of the effect” in a manner that “is reminiscent” of how the Māṭharavṛtti introduces satkāryavāda (Ratié 2014, p. 132).81[These texts] vary greatly as regards the number of theses [that are given in kārikā 9 about satkāryavāda]… almost all these Sāṃkhya commentaries introduce the verse in the same way, i.e., by insisting that there is a disagreement (vipratipatti) among various masters on the subject, so that the list of reasons adduced to prove the satkāryavāda is necessary so as to get rid of the doubt (saṃśaya) bound to arise due to the multiplicity of contradictory theses held in this regard(2014, pp. 133–34).
5.2. Utpala and Abhinava as Philosophical Readers
5.2.1. Anti-Dualism Bias
But this excludes the formulations of nature and manifestation in the SK. As I have argued above, Īśvarakṛṣṇa’s vyaktaprakṛti is not passive, unintelligent matter, but self-animating, directed, living nature that bears its own capacities to conceal its integral unity (i.e., the non-duality of cognizing self and cognized object) in the midst of disclosing its many organic forms. Prakṛti denotes the power (or śakti) of procreation. This power construed as vyaktaprakṛti includes the capacity to manifest or reveal an interplay of shapes, forms, and identities. From this, the śakti of living nature in the SK is not different than the manifestation of Śiva’s non-dual consort, Śakti, although this dynamism (in the SK) pertains to nature itself, not consciousness. But Utpala and Abhinava neglect this subtle but important nuance, and this at least partly results from a hermeneutic attitude that oversimplifies Sāṃkhya as a subject–object dualism—likely in order to discredit the dualist vision of their closest rivals, the Saiddhāntikas.The non-dualist Śaivas, on the other hand, can afford to solve the problem of abhivyakti by merely playing with the two principles that constitute the very foundation of their metaphysics: everything is a manifestation of consciousness, and the essence of consciousness is a freedom to apprehend itself as what it is not without ceasing to be itself. The Sāṃkhya/Saiddhāntika notion of potentiality (śakti) thus gets filled with a completely different meaning: it no longer designates a latent, unmanifest and passive state, but rather, the ever manifest power that consciousness has of concealing itself while remaining manifest—a power that eventually is just another way for consciousness of manifesting itself(2014, pp. 167–68).
5.2.2. Anti-Naturalism Bias
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Quoted at Hadot 2006, p. 17: Φύσις κρύπτεσθαι φιλεῖ. |
2 | Own translation: prakṛteḥ sukumārataraṃ na kiñcid astīti me matir bhavati । yā dṛṣṭāsmīti punar na darśanam upaiti puruṣasya. The full translation is: “The thought occurs to me, ‘Nobody is more tender than nature.’ When she realizes, ‘I have been seen,’ she never again comes into the sight of the witness-self.” |
3 | McCrea writes: “Abhinavagupta’s bibliographically ambitious and historically nuanced recapitulation of Buddhist thought on the bāhyārtha [external objects exist] issue, and on many others of course, forms one of the central components of what is arguably his magnum opus, and is one of the features that most obviously sets it apart from both earlier and later works in the Pratyabhijñā tradition” (2016, p. 283). |
4 | Pratyabhijñā is a medieval school of thought from Kashmir, India, that sought to articulate the personality of the divine figure, Śiva, and the non-dual relation of the devotee with Śiva consciousness. To this end, it articulated an idealist philosophy whereby one could experience the “recognition” (“pratyabhijñā”) of one’s essential identity with Śiva. |
5 | A point of contention between many Buddhists of Abhinava’s time concerned how to interpret Dharmakīrti’s metaphysical stance. Vijñānavādins took Dharmakīrti to be one of their own (i.e., “one who affirms that only consciousness exists”), while bāhyārthavādins viewed him as “one who affirms that external objects exist.” |
6 | Abhinava never quotes the Pramāṇavārttikālaṃkāra, and in the lone instance where Abhinava names Prajñākara, he does not refer to Prajñākara’s views on determination (adhyavasāya) (McCrea 2016, p. 281). |
7 | McCrea explains: “This interesting and distinctive doctrine of Prajñākara’s, which Eli Franco has investigated in some detail, is fairly recondite, and Abhinavagupta’s familiarity with it suggests that he had more than a casual, second-hand awareness of Prajñākaragupta’s work and most likely had access to his Pramāṇavārttikālaṃkāra” (2016, p. 281). See Franco 2007. |
8 | This is in keeping with the spirit of McCrea’s own inquiry. He writes: “Abhinavagupta’s turn toward intellectual history should itself be seen as a noteworthy historical event in Kashmiri intellectual and cultural life at the turn of the millennium, and richly deserves to be made the subject of long and searching scrutiny” (2016, p. 283). |
9 | This is clearly argued in Lawrence 2013. This issue is also explored in the context of Abhinava’s writings on aesthetics, specifically, his treatment of Śaṅkuka’s writings on anukṛti (mimesis, imitation, or representation). For more on this, see Dave-Mukherji 2016; Ashton 2019. |
10 | “Ūrdhvordhvamāruhya yadarthatattvam dhīḥ paśyati śrāntimavedayantī । phalaṃ tadādyaiḥ parikalpitānāṃ vivekasopānaparamparāṇām ‖ citraṃ nirālambanameva manye prameyasiddhau prathamāvatāram । sanmārgalābhe iti setubandhaprurapratiṣṭādi na vismayāya । tasmātsatāmatra na dūṣitāni matāni tānyeva tu śodhitāni” (Abhinava’s commentary on Bharata’s Nāṭyaśāstra, 6.33, in the Abhinavabhāratī. Translation by Arindam Chakrabarti. Personal correspondence.) For more on this well-known and often translated section from the Abhinavabhāratī, see Cuneo 2017 (especially pp. 239–47). In this piece, Danielle Cuneo examines various interpretations of this verse with a view to exploring how Abhinavagupta negotiates tradition and innovation. |
11 | As Gadamer writes, “it is senseless to speak of a perfect knowledge of history, and for this reason it is not possible to speak of an ‘object in itself’ toward which its research is directed” (1994, p. 285). For this reason, he concludes that historical knowledge cannot “stand on par with the knowledge of nature achieved by modern science” (1994, p. 277). |
12 | David Lawrence illustrates this in his analysis of how the Pratyabhijñā school formulated a critical epistemology and ontology that could be suitably intelligible to others as a kind of “denaturalized discourse.” In order to internalize selected concerns of the Hindu orthodoxy with its iconographic symbolism and social-ritual praxis, Abhinava and other non-dual Śaivas put their own theological presuppositions at risk. See Lawrence 1999, pp. 13, 29. |
13 | Abhinava is the victor not just in his rendering of the debate but also in the memory of South Asian intellectual history. The Saṃ̣khya tradition would continue its slide into relative obscurity, especially compared to the growing influence that nondual Śaivism would enjoy. Abhinava’s cogent refutation of Saṃ̣khya and defense of his own tradition are but one amongst other reasons for this. Ratié aptly observes how persuasive Abhinava’s formulation of satkāryavāda is over and against that of Saṃ̣khya (2014). |
14 | In important respects, this approach is not unlike what Jonardon Ganeri and others have called Global Philosophy (Ganeri 2016). |
15 | Concerning this point, Ratié writes: “Śaiva traditions (both dualistic and non-dualistic) have early on integrated many aspects of Saṃ̣khya to their metaphysics, cosmology and psychology, so much so in fact that Śaiva authors sometimes feel the need to specify that ‘the Sāṃkhyas too’ hold theses that were obviously borrowed from them. From this point of view, Utpaladeva’s borrowing of the satkāryavāda is in keeping with the general Śaiva attitude towards Sāṃkhya” (2014, p. 128). |
16 | Ratié explains that “the argument used here is obviously the first reason adduced in Sāṃkhyakārikā 9 in favour of the satkāryavāda, namely, ‘because there is no production of the non-existent’ (asadakaraṇāt)” (2014, p. 132). She later notes how Utpaladeva re-states “the reason that legitimates the Sāṃkhyas’ satkāryavāda: the effect must exist before the operation of its cause, because according to the first reason adduced in Sāṃkhyakārikā 9, there can be no production of what is non-existent, since such a production would be contradictory with its non-existent nature” (2014, pp. 134–35). Please note that my analysis of Utpala’s and Abhinava’s treatment of these themes in Sāṃkhya literature is largely based upon Ratié’s impressive 2014 study. |
17 | Ratié notes that Utpala and Abhinava utilize standard criticisms (and their corresponding examples, namely, clay and pot) of Īśvarakṛṣṇa. This includes Nāgārjuna’s (1977) critique of Sāṃkhya in the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā (in particular, MMK 1.6) and Uddyotakara’s comments in the Nyāyabhāṣyavārttika, which “put forward a somewhat similar argument [to that of Nāgārjuna]” (Ratié 2014, pp. 135–36). |
18 | Shastri and Shastri 1918–1921, p. 141 (quoted in Ratié 2014, p. 148): “na ca vācyam ubhayendriyavedyatvam api sad asad veti, yato’yam atra paramārtho yathā darpaṇāntaḥ kumbhakāranirvartyamānaghaṭādipratibimbe darpaṇasyaiva tathāvabhāsanamahimā, tathā svapnadarśane saṃvidaḥ.” |
19 | The entire passage reads: “jaḍasyābhinnātmano bhedenāvasthiter virodhād ayuktam, svacche cidātmany ekasminn evam anekapratibimbadhāraṇenāvirodhād yujyate” (Torella 2002, p. 60; quoted in Ratié 2014, p. 154). In his vṛtti on the Śivadṛṣṭi, Utpala likewise comments that “all effects [are indeed mere manifestations of the cause but] exclusively consist in Śiva, who is nothing but consciousness, according to the principle [stated in] the Īśvarapratyabhijñā [treatise]” (iti cinmayaśivarūpataiva sarvakāryāṇām īśvarapratyabhijñoktanyāyena) (Torella 2002, p. 186; quoted in Ratié 2014, p. 154). Abhinava similarly explains in the IPV that consciousness is like a mirror that can take several forms: “For it is experience itself [that makes us know that] the form of a limpid [entity] such as a mirror can be differentiated into innumerable forms—such as a mountain, an elephant, and so on—while its own nature remains perfectly intact” (anubhavād eva hi svacchasyādarśāder akhaṇḍitasvasvabhāvasyaiva parvatamataṅgajādirūpasahasrasaṃbhinnaṃ vapur upapadyate) (Shastri and Shastri 1918–1921, p. 177; quoted in Ratié 2014, p. 155). |
20 | Shastri and Shastri 1918–1921, p. 177 (quoted in Ratié 2014, p. 155): “nirmalatāmāhātmyam etad yad anantāvabhāsasaṃbhedaś caikatā ca. giriśikharoparivartinaś caikatraiva bodhe nagaragatapadārthasahasrābhāsa iti cidrūpasyaiva kartr̥ tvam upapannam, abhinnasya bhedāveśasahiṣṇutvena kriyāśaktyāveśasaṃbhavāt.” |
21 | Ratié points us to IPK 2.4.19, where Utpala states: “And such [an agency] is not possible for [something] insentient, because of the contradiction between the difference and identity [that would ensue for this insentient entity] due to the difference between [various] manifestations [that transformation involves]; whereas it is possible in the unitary [entity] consisting in consciousness” (na ca yuktaṃ jaḍasyaivaṃ bhedābhedavirodhataḥ । ābhāsabhedād ekatra cidātmani tu yujyate) (Torella 2002, p. 186; quoted in 2014, p. 154). Abhinava comments (in the IPV) on Utpala’s views: “‘Such [an agency’ means the following.] The agency in the action that is transformation (pariṇamana)—which [Utpaladeva] has described [earlier] as characterized by the freedom (svātantrya) to divide and unite numerous, constantly flowing properties [and] as belonging to a property-bearer having an undivided nature—is not possible for [something] such as matter, because [matter] is insentient. For what [we] call insentient has a [self-]confined (pariniṣṭhita) nature, it has fallen into the state of object of knowledge; and [if we assume it to be such an agent, we] must declare that it is differentiated (bhinna) due to the difference between the [various] forms [that it supposedly assumes,] such as blue and yellow, etc.; and [yet], since it has a unitary nature, [it must be] undifferentiated, as the blue is. But the same nature cannot bear to be both differentiated and undifferentiated, because [this would entail] a contradiction between an affirmation and [its] negation with regard to the same [thing] at the same time” (evam ityabhinnarūpasya dharmiṇaḥ satatapravahadbahutaradharmabhedasaṃbhedasvātantryalakṣaṇaṃ pariṇamanakriyākartr̥katvaṃ yad uktaṃ tat pradhānāder na yuktaṃ jaḍatvāt. jaḍo hi nāma pariniṣṭhitasvabhāvaḥ prameyapadapatitaḥ; sa ca rūpabhedād bhinno vyavasthāpanīyo nīlapītādivat; ekasvabhāvatvāc cābhinno nīlavat. na tu sa eva svabhāvo bhinnaś cābhinnaś ca bhavitum arhati vidhiniṣedhayor ekatraikadā virodhāt) (Shastri and Shastri 1918–1921, pp. 176–77; quoted in Ratié 2014, p. 154). |
22 | Pratyabhijñā thinkers leveled additional criticisms against Sāṃkhya related to this topic. Analysis of these complicated arguments is beyond the scope of this paper (in many ways these criticisms are elaborations on the arguments summarized already). For more on Somānanda’s and Utpala’s criticism that Sāṃkhya cannot explain the relation between unmanifest material cause (prakṛti) and manifestation (abhivyakti), see Ratié 2014, pp. 152–60. An additional criticism that nondual Śaivas bring against Sāṃkhya is the “infinite regress” argument. For more on this, see Ratié 2014, pp. 145–47, 163–67. I respond to these and other non-dual Śaiva arguments brought against Sāṃkhya in a separate in-progress paper on the buddhi. |
23 | This brief overview is widely confirmed in scholarship on these topics. For more on the early history of modern science, its roots in Cartesianism, and the prevailing influence of the Cartesian–Newtonian paradigm in modern thinking about nature, see Collingwood 1945 (this monograph on the history and philosophy of science is well-known), Brady 1998 (which focuses upon Goethe’s response to these issues), and Lafleur 1950 (a short but clear account of these issues). |
24 | Descartes famously conceived of animals as machines (“bête machine”), specifically, machines that are unable to think. This differentiated animals apart from humans (“l’homme machine”). This mechanistic attitude pervades Descartes’ physiology. For more on this topic, see Antoine-Mahut and Gaukroger 2017. |
25 | The following studies of Sāṃkhya and/or the SK (this being a non-exhaustive list) exhibit scientific realist predilections: Colebrooke and Wilson 1837; Davies 1894; Sastri 1948; Radhakrishnan 1927; Sinha 1958; Eliade 1969; Catalina 1968; Mainkar 1972; Larson 1969a; Hiriyanna 1993; King 1999; Berger 2015. Burley’s 2007 monograph brilliantly diagnoses the external realist biases of Sāṃkhya scholarship. However, he does not identify the modern scientific basis of this trend in Sāṃkhya scholarship. |
26 | Gerald Larson, among others, uses these translations. See 1969a, p. 242. |
27 | Larson writes: “it must be stressed that the manifest world is not derived from puruṣa. It is derived, rather, from the mūlaprakṛti, which is characterized by the three guṇas and which emerges or evolves itself in terms of satkāryavāda—i.e., transformation, or modification of itself, but always in terms of itself” (1969a, pp. 176–77). |
28 | Consider, for example, that the customary reading of Sāṃkhya metaphysics takes the material world (prakṛti)—e.g., the mahābhūtas as the “atomic particles,” “gross elements,” or building blocks of complex entities, and so on—to exist independent of and external to our experience. Burley examines such theories that predominate in modern readings of Sāṃkhya (2007, pp. 116–24). |
29 | The external realist thesis continues to have purchase in scholarship on classical Sāṃkhya. For example, Berger’s very impressive study of the concepts of luminosity and personhood across the philosophical traditions of South and East Asia holds to this view. Berger writes about the orientation of the puruṣa toward material reality: “It is these modifications, and the temporal determinations that emerge from them, that are the objects of the conscious, primordial person (puruṣa), which itself supposedly never changes. The experience of temporality, then, in Sāṃkhya, involves the apprehension by spirit [puruṣa] of various kinds of actual modifications of primal matter” (2015, p. 77). |
30 | Larson’s 1969a study frequently implies (although seemingly with some ambivalence) that the puruṣa makes sense of or is conscious of its object, “the world” (prakṛti). He writes: “the world is understood primarily from the point of view of the individual, witnessing puruṣa. The analysis of the world in classical Sāṃkhya is in terms of how the world appears to the individual consciousness. In one sense, then, the classical Sāṃkhya analysis is a description of what consciousness sees” (Larson 1969a, p. 178). In his 1983 essay, however, he explicitly notes that the puruṣa cannot at all be understood in a Cartesian light. He explains: “Whether one considers the Cartesian position or… the modern, analytic restatement of it, the interpreter of Sāṃkhya must admit that the Sāṃkhya is not a dualism in these senses” (1983, p. 219). Larson then clarifies that Sāṃkhya (and specifically, the doctrine of the SK) is not such a dualism on account of its conceiving of the puruṣa as not a typical “ghost in the machine,” but as an “eccentric ghost in the machine”: “Sāṃkhya represents a critique of the traditional or conventional dualist position and approaches [e.g., Platonic, Aristotelian, Paulinian, Augustinian, Cartesian, Kantian, Jain, Vedāntin]… [it rather advocates] a philosophical view which ‘reduces’ ‘mind’-talk or ‘mentalistic’-talk to ‘brain-processes’-talk or, in other words, construes mind, thought, ideas, sensations, and so forth, in terms of some sort of material stuff, or energy, or force… For, according to classical Sāṃkhya, the experiences of intellect (buddhi), ego (ahaṃkāra), and mind (manas), and the ‘raw-feels’ such as ‘pain’ (duḥkha) or ‘pleasure’ (sukha)… are simply subtle reflections of a primordial materiality (prakṛti)—a primordial materiality undergoing continuous transformation… Sāṃkhya, as it were, refurbish[-es] the ‘ghost [in the machine],’ stripping it of its conventional attributes and reintroducing it as what I am calling in this paper ‘an eccentric ghost,’ eccentric in the sense that it no longer has anything to do with ‘mind’-talk or ‘mentalist’-talk or ‘ego-talk, all of which are fully reducible to guṇa-talk in good reductive materialist fashion” (1983, p. 220). |
31 | (Larson’s 1969a) monograph stands as his most influential work on the subject and arguably the most authoritative interpretation of Sāṃkhya and the SK. |
32 | Note Larson’s intrigue with a mathematical approach to Sāṃkhya—an approach that is compelling but nonetheless portrays Sāṃkhya metaphysics as an inquiry into something static, formal, and lifeless. He writes: “Sāṃkhya philosophy can be construed as generating the natural world utilizing a ‘mathematical’ model or paradigm in a manner not unlike that of ancient Pythagorean philosophy… [C]onstruing Sāṃkhya as a kind of archaic mathematical physics (on analogy with Pythagoreanism) may provide one useful avenue for attempting to decipher the nature of the peculiar Sāṃkhya dualism and its ‘eccentric ghost in the machine’” (1983, pp. 224–25). Mathematics, of course, became a core feature of Cartesian and modern scientific thinking about nature. |
33 | In the early 1900s, the natural sciences were deeply entrenched in the methodologies of the physical sciences. I comment upon this more below. |
34 | Seen in this light, Larson’s 1969a and 1983 analyses represent part of an unmistakable trend in Sāṃkhya scholarship that still prevails. As just noted, Larson’s depictions of prakṛti as “nature” envision a field of lifeless machinery that extends on a map of numerical, Cartesian coordinates and performs unchanging physical operations. |
35 | The prakṛtic evolutes generate experience itself, with the very awareness of being an “I” at all resulting from the activity of prakṛti, namely, when the ahaṃkāra produces an ego (SK 24). Burley was attuned to this. He notes that we can speak of prakṛti as “matter,” but only insofar as this implies “everything that is not the pure subject [i.e., puruṣa]—including acts and formal structures of experience as well as experiential content—as material… [I]f we do use ‘material’ in this broad sense, then we ought to take special care not to conflate it with its narrower sense of mere experiential content” (2007, p. 100). |
36 | Another problematic translation of prakṛti frequently employed by realist interpreters is “substance” (see Radhakrishnan 1927). Larson, who uses similar terminology with respect to mūlaprakṛti, does recognize that these translations are in some ways incomplete. But he does not tell us exactly why they are problematic, and he continues to use some of these translations (1969a). |
37 | This view is exemplified in the writings of Sāṃkhya scholars such as Mircea Eliade, Jadunath Sinha, and Berger, among others. Eliade writes: “For Sāṃkhya and Yoga, the world is real (not illusory—as it is, for example, in Vedānta)” (1969: 9; quoted in Burley 2007, pp. 76–77, 125). Sinha, meanwhile, naively remarks that “According to the Sāṃkhya-Yoga, perception depends upon two metaphysical conditions. In the first place, it implies the existence of an extra-mental object. In the second place, it implies the existence of the self (puruṣa)” (1958, I: 124; quoted in Burley 2007, pp. 76–77, 125). Even Berger implies the realist misreading that the empirical world exists independently of puruṣa (which, for its part, merely “reveals” the world). “Without this luminosity [of puruṣa], while the natural world would still undoubtedly be there, and would still bring about things, bodies, impulsive affects, and constant dynamic transformation, none of this would be revealed to anyone and would never serve anything that could deservedly be called a purpose [e.g., puruṣa-artha]” (2015, pp. 194–95). Puruṣa-prakṛti dualism, as demonstrated in this section, is not equivalent to mind-world dualism—if for no other reason than because prakṛti (in either its unmanifest or manifest form) does not correspond to an extra-mental object. Interestingly, some of Larson’s earlier writings hint at a more nuanced interpretation of Sāṃkhya metaphysics along the lines of Jean-Paul Sartre’s phenomenological ontology (Larson 1969b). Presumably, this approach underlies Larson’s “humanization” of Sāṃkhya metaphysics in his larger, more prominent work, Classical Sāṃkhya. But this monograph (Classical Sāṃkhya) does not work out the philosophical nuances of Sartrean phenomenology for Sāṃkhya metaphysics, and consequently falls prey to many of the same problems found in other realist interpretations. For example, Larson’s reading carries many of the same realist misunderstandings concerning the nature of prakṛti examined above. He frequently translates “prakṛti” as “matter” or “nature,” and elsewhere applies the term “world” in an uncritical manner that bears clear realist connotations (1969a, p. 175). |
38 | For more on this topic, see Ashton 2018. |
39 | I take the term, saṃyoga, to be duplicated, as implied by “vad.” I translate it as “compresence” in order to convey the sense in which mūlaprakṛti and puruṣa are ontologically distinct from each other (the basis of Īśvarakṛṣṇa’s dualism), and yet, insofar as vyaktaprakṛti exists, they are mutually present or together with each other. |
40 | SK 21: “puruṣasya darśanārthaṃ kaivalyārthaṃ tathā pradhānasya । paṅgvandhavadubhayorapi saṃyogastatkṛtaḥ sargaḥ.” All translations of the SK are my own unless noted otherwise. |
41 | By virtue of its lame-ness, puruṣa cannot generate even a thought, feeling, desire, or volition, let alone an object or event. |
42 | The passages preceding SK 21 corroborate this interpretation. I briefly take this up later in the paper. |
43 | Burley deserves credit for bringing attention to this puzzle (as a result of which, vyaktaprakṛti is seen to be the outgrowth of mūlaprakṛti, with these two together comprising a consciousness- or mind-independent prakṛti). For more on this topic, see Burley 2007, pp. 72–82. |
44 | This problem applies to Larson’s model, and it is one for which he does not pretend to have an answer. Larson writes that “Clearly the exposition of the Sāṃkhyakārikā on this point leaves much to be desired” (1969, p. 196). This puzzle hinges on the notion that “the world” (prakṛti) does not continue after attaining liberation (kaivalya)—with it either dissolving immediately upon the isolation of the puruṣa, or continuing temporarily just until the moment of the subtle body’s death, as suggested by SK 68. Questions concerning the exact nature of kaivalya in Sāṃkhya persist. Most interpreters understand liberation to consist in the cessation of experience (including Burley 2004; Pflueger 1998). Others, such as Eliade, suggest that what terminates is simply the relation between the individual (among many) puruṣa and the singular “world” (prakṛti). He writes: “It [kaivalya] is the enstasis of total emptiness… [it is] without sensory content or intellectual structure, an unconditioned state that is no longer ‘experience’ (for there is no further relation between consciousness and the world) but ‘revelation’” (1969, p. 93). For more on this topic, see Burke 1988; Burley 2004; Catalina 1968; Larson 1983; Sharma 2004. |
45 | My analysis of this puzzle is informed by Burley’s writings in 2007. I am grateful for Burley’s clarification of this issue and his conclusion that standard, i.e., realist models cannot account for this problem. |
46 | The term “grahaṇa” means “grasping.” A more accurate translation (not inconsistent with Larson’s) is “because of the grasping [grahaṇāt] of a material cause [upādāna].” For more on this, see Burley 2007, pp. 94–95. |
47 | SK 3 reads as follows: “Root-procreativity (mūlaprakṛti) is uncreated; the seven—the great one (mahat) and so on—are procreative and created, though the 16 are [merely] created; the puruṣa is neither procreative nor created.” (mūlaprakṛtiravikṛtirmahadādyāḥ prakṛtivikṛtayaḥ sapta । ṣoḍaśakastu vikāro na prakṛtirna vikṛtiḥ puruṣaḥ). The 23 manifest tattvas are divided into two groups. The essential difference between these two groups is that each member of the set of seven (buddhi [or mahat], ahaṃkāra, and the five tanmātras, which cause the mahābhūtas) has creative power, while the 16 other tattvas (manas, the buddhīndriyas, the karmendriyas, and the mahābhūtas) are not productive, i.e., they lack causal power with respect to other tattvas. |
48 | The most influential Kantian-based studies of the SK include Burley 2007 and Bhattacharya 1956. Other readings of the SK that display at least some idealist leanings include, among others, Davies 1894 and Singh 1976. To my knowledge, there is no study of Īśvarakṛṣṇa’s Sāṃkhya through the lens of Kant’s organics. In a larger work (currently in progress), I explore the implications of such an approach in greater detail. |
49 | Kant attempts to refashion biology as a science of how life appears to us in terms of the concept-forming activity of the understanding. But this merely re-inscribes several of the core assumptions of modern science (i.e., objects are shaped by fixed natural laws) within his analysis of the powers of reason (for Kant, “natural” laws are laws of the understanding). That is, his study of living nature re-locates the powers that produce an organism’s unity (the unity of the various parts of the living thing) within the transcendental ego. Kant’s primary comments on the teleology of organic phenomena (to be distinguished from organic things-in-themselves) are given in the second part of his Critique of Judgment (1987). |
50 | Goethe was a contemporary of Kant and a committed interlocutor of “the philosopher,” as Goethe referred to Kant. But he rejected Kant’s rational organics for the reasons just given. Above all, he believed that Kant failed to establish an appropriate science of life as living. |
51 | Goethe first uses the term morphology in his 1796 notes, although he only uses it in the context of a larger philosophy of biology in his 1817 essay, Zur Morphologie. See Goethe 2016. |
52 | In order to demonstrate how the organism discloses itself through limbs, structures, and movements that are coordinated in terms of a vital program, Goethe here borrows Spinoza’s distinction between natura naturata (“nature already natured” or determined) and natura naturans (“nature in its naturing”). Others (notably, those in the “New Materialism” circle) have since used Spinoza (among others) in order to show how all material processes, including inorganic ones, have their own creativity, agency, and self-organization. |
53 | In his experiments with color, Goethe demonstrated that the Urphänomen of color was not an extra-mental property that could be quantifiably measured in relation to white light. Rather, it is produced in the converging boundary between light and darkness, and hence is itself half-darkness just as much as it bears a degree of lightness. He applies this analysis to living forms. For more on this, see Goethe’s Theory of Colours (Goethe 1982). |
54 | Goethe explains that the primal plant comes into being through the dialectical equipoise of a “vertical tendency” (the “inescapable need to grow upward”) and an “horizontal tendency” (“the nourishing, expanding principle that gives solidity to the plant”) (Seamon 1998, p. 4). He further links the polarity in plants to a creative tension between nutritive energies (as pure, unrestrained life force) and the organic form of the primal leaf (with its structuring laws). |
55 | Brady elaborates Goethe’s view: all forms of the plant are engaged in “the act of becoming something else… [they] emerge as partial and become a disclosure of another sort of form,” such as when one leaf modification gives way to the next (1998, p. 106). |
56 | This distinction between the originary life forms of Darwinian evolution and Goethean morphology is corroborated by Goethe’s warning against a Gestalt-based formulation of life. He explains: “The Germans have a word for the complex of existence presented by a physical organism: Gestalt. With this expression they exclude what is changeable and assume that an interrelated whole is identified, defined, and fixed in its character. But if we look at all these Gestalten, especially the organic ones, we will discover that nothing in them is permanent, nothing is at rest or defined—everything is in a flux of continual motion” (Goethe 2016, p. 979). Ascertaining a living thing in terms of its supposed Gestalt renders an identified stage of development into “an abstraction held in arrest by our sensible experience” (Brady 1998, p. 105). This mistakenly implies the organism’s self-completion within the specified phase of growth and obstructs the dynamic interdependence between this and other stages. Darwin’s model indeed represents an advance over Linnaeus’s strong dependence upon permanent structures (in his taxonomic categorization of plants into parts, shapes, and other structural features, as generic characteristics of immutable, natural kinds, species, family, etc.). Nonetheless, a Goethean interpretation suggests that Darwin’s evolutionary study typifies the Gestalt-approach. Darwin reifies the so-called historically original form of a given organism. This smuggles into living nature a fixity of representation by stabilizing (and hence, subordinating) the self-manifesting vitality of multiple “derivative” forms in terms of a purported “original,” uniquely self-determining one. The organic variations with which Goethe was concerned emerge differently. They reveal the differing outward expressions of the Urphänomen as an animating power that may weaken from one moment to the next but nonetheless continues to overflow from an intensified present, not an ever-receding past. My analysis here is influenced by Brady’s study of Goethean organics and Darwinian evolution (see Darwin 1859; Brady 1998). |
57 | Pāṇini addresses this ambiguity at 3.3.94: “-ti” is to be used in the feminine gender as the primary derivational affix to the verb in the sense of the action itself and/or in the sense of a participant in the action other than the agent (striyām ktin bhāve akartari ca kārake… kṛt-pratyaya). Although this sūtra, 3.3.94, merely states “striyām ktin,” it can be clarified further by reference to 3.3.18–19. I am grateful to Sthaneshwar Timalisina, David Buchta, and Danielle Cuneo for drawing my attention to these passages and their help in thinking through these passages’ significance for the meaning of “prakṛti” (personal communications). |
58 | There is some scholarly thinking that “pra-kṛti” includes “kṛti” as a present participle form, hence suggesting “procreating.” While this is philosophically provocative, this interpretation appears to lack substantial philological support. Nevertheless, the meaning of the noun, “prakṛti,” is active, which supports the argument presented here and helps to prevent its more sterile connotations elsewhere as static, inert matter. |
59 | Here I borrow Cuneo’s interesting translation of “prakṛti” as “procreatress” (personal communications with Cuneo). The Sanskrit “prakartrī” also can be rendered as “procreatress,” although its grammatical construction carries more explicitly agential connotations that Pāṇini disallows for “prakṛti.” As for the notion that prakṛti could be an organ, this follows from the discussion above. The term śruti (formed of the verbal root “√śru” and the suffix, “-ti”) can refer to both the act of “hearing” and the “ear” (Apte 1998, p. 1577). Similarly, the meaning of “prakṛti” as “√pra” + kṛti” includes both the act of procreating and the organ or instrument of procreating (since this organ is one among other participants in the procreative act, and yet it is not the grammatical agent). |
60 | Although the term matrix typically conjures up more recent meanings of “matrix” as some sort of mathematical organizational structure, it originally indicated “mother” (“mater”), “breeding female” (Latin), and “womb” (Middle English). These associations are found in the Sanskrit term for mother, “mātṛ” (Partridge 1966, pp. 1921–22). |
61 | Sonali Bhatt Marwaha oddly refers to Chattopadhyaya’s characterization of Sāṃkhya as one of “reductive materialism” (2013, p. 195). She uses this characterization in explicit reference to Larson’s interpretation of Sāṃkhya, doing so presumably in order to legitimate her interpretation by appealing to an influential reading of the Sāṃkhya system. However, this “reductive materialist” characterization (which she only gives once in the paper) is inconsistent with the rest of her otherwise very persuasive study of materialism in early Sāṃkhya—which really implies an organic materialism, not material qua inert, lifeless matter. |
62 | Borrowing from B. N. Seal, Marwaha refers to prakṛti as “a positive principle based on the conservation, the transformation, and the dissipation of energy” (Seal 1915, p. 251; quoted in Marwaha 2013, p. 186). |
63 | Simon Brodbeck observes similar organicist connections (even portraying vyaktaprakṛti as an embryo) in pre-kārikā texts that deploy Sāṃkhya categories. He writes: “The end and re-beginning of the cyclic cosmos (on which we see Śvetāśvatara Upaniṣad 4.1, with śakti as the female; Bhagavadgītā 8.17-19) matches the death of one body and ātman’s taking another. The ‘evolutionary’ cosmic model, whereby the material principle is gradually ‘unpacked’, fits the sexual model: the fertilized egg/foetus develops and grows. The four sets of five in the sāṃkhya tattva-lists are like fingers and toes” (Brodbeck 2007, p. 169, n. 36). |
64 | Mūlaprakṛti’s transcendence comes from below, i.e., from “mūla” as the “root,” “foundation,” or “the bottom” of vyaktaprakṛti. Its self-concealment owes to its resting submerged just beneath the surface of the field of experience. In this respect, mūlaprakṛti is characterized by a certain gravitas: a force or potency that pulls downward into a gravitational epicenter. Nonetheless, this ubiquitous power cannot be perceived directly; mūlaprakṛti is known only through its effecting things of weight. Puruṣa, meanwhile, transcends vyaktaprakṛti from above. Many of the world’s religions, Indo-European ones especially, deploy motifs of levitation and lightness in order to convey the otherworldliness of a pure, ethereal self. This holds for Sāṃkhya as well. The SK comprises part of a long and rich history of nuanced Sāṃkhya usages of “puruṣa” as a cosmic, spiritual essence that is detached from worldly affairs. Burley makes the suitable comparison between the puruṣa and Wittgenstein’s “philosophical self” or “metaphysical subject,” which is “not the human being, not the human body, or the human soul, with which psychology deals, but rather… the limit of the world—not a part of it” (Wittgenstein [1921] 1974, p. 70 [5.641]; quoted in Burley 2007, p. 148). Each individual puruṣa passively observes the happenings of space and time from a periphery that demarcates vyaktaprakṛti just as it recedes from it. But going beyond other formulations of a transcendental consciousness (e.g., Wittgenestein, Husserl), Sāṃkhya’s puruṣa represents more than just an outsider peering into an arena of experience. The SK makes the puruṣa into a metaphysical principle that counterposes mūlaprakṛti. The puruṣa denotes a kind of lifting force that extends vyaktaprakṛti in an upward direction through its positive resistance to the rooting of mūlaprakṛti. |
65 | Just above I referenced SK 39’s account of how vyaktaprakṛti unfurls as the fertilized seed of “mother and father” (mātāpitṛjāḥ). This exemplifies what Marwaha calls a “genealogical cosmogony”: the universe was produced, she writes, “by sexual urge (kāma)… born of the female (vamobhāva) and as the result of her union with the male” (Marwaha 2013, p. 182). Here Marwaha is elaborating on Chattopadhyaya’s view. |
66 | SK 20: “tasmāt tatsaṃyogādacetanaṃ cetanāvadiva liṅgam । guṇakartṛtve ca tathā karteva bhavatyudāsīnaḥ.” |
67 | Notably, the cosmos in the “original” Sāṃkhya was not a cosmic man (as depicted in the Puruṣa Sūkta) but a fertile mother. We find this here as well: vyaktaprakṛti denotes the manifestation of the feminine procreatress (not to be confused with roo-procreativity, and certainly not representing the self-manifestation of a cosmic puruṣa). |
68 | To make this claim more precise, it is not the case that the dialectical form of vyaktaprakṛti is inscribed within mūlaprakṛti or the puruṣa, with one of these duads subsequently incorporating its other. |
69 | SK 22: “prakṛtermahāṃstato’haṅkārastasmād gaṇaśca ṣoḍaśakaḥ । tasmādapi ṣoḍaśakāt pañcabhyaḥ pañca bhūtāni.” |
70 | Though there are some striking philosophical parallels and a deep historical connection between Buddhism and Sāṃkhya, Īśvarakṛṣṇa does not subscribe to the mereological thinking of Abhidharma. Osto 2018 explores some interesting themes at the intersection of Classical Sāṃkhya and Theravāda, but the topic of part–whole relations (so far as it concerns Sāṃkhya and Buddhism) is not discussed here or in any other research literature, to my knowledge. |
71 | This does not forgo that mūlaprakṛti is a cause in the broad sense of the term: it participates in or contributes to the emergence of vyaktaprakṛti in some way. But modern scientific-based models of causality (material, efficient, final) cannot capture this. |
72 | The first word in SK 22 is prakṛti. In his commentary on this verse, Larson makes it clear that “prakṛti” should be taken to mean “mūlaprakṛti.” He explains that it is mulaprakrti that “undergo[-es] transformation or modification [and] issues in the manifest world” (1969a, p. 173). |
73 | Burley points to Partridge 1966, p. 683, and contends that “sarga” may be cognate with the English “surge,” which derives from the Latin “surgere” (“to rise up, swell, arrive”) (Burley 2007, p. 112). These terms are certainly equivalent in sound, but deeper etymological connections are difficult to corroborate. In any case, relating the meaning of “sarga” in terms of “surge” is philosophically revealing. |
74 | Cross-referencing passage 22 against others in the text supports this claim. As SK 3 relates, the tattvas fall into four broad categories: (1) that which is procreative but is not itself created (“avikṛtiḥ”), which includes only mūlaprakṛti; (2) that which is procreative and created (“prakṛtivikṛtayaḥ”), including “the seven” (“sapta”): mahat-buddhi, ahaṃkāra, and the five tanmātras; (3) that which is not procreative but is still created (vikāraḥ na prakṛtiḥ), which includes “the 16” (ṣoḍaśakaḥ): manas, the 10 indriyas, and the five mahābhūtas; and (4) that which is neither procreative nor created, including only puruṣa. Karika 3’s attention to group (2) is especially important for understanding SK 22. The same “seven” (and only these seven) tattvas of the second category are indicated in verse 22, and they are again mentioned in association with their procreative powers. My rendering of “prakrteh” in the genitive case captures this: amongst the manifest tattvas, only mahat-buddhi, ahaṃkāra, and the five tanmātras are “of the nature of procreativity (prakrteh).” This is not an anomaly. The grouping of “the seven” by virtue of their prakṛtic prowess occurs elsewhere in the text. SK 8, for example, relates that the seven tattvas of passage 3 share the “same procreative nature” (“prakṛtisarūpaṃ”) as mūlaprakṛti, while the other vikṛtic tattvas (i.e., the group of sixteen) do not. SK 9 continues by linking “prakṛti” to the doctrine of satkāryavāda: the effect (kārya) is “of the [same] nature as the cause” (“kāraṇa-bhāvāt”). This gives important clues to the kind of cause–effect relation that is at stake between mūlaprakṛti and vyaktaprakṛti, particularly at SK 22, and it does so within the broader context of saṃyoga’s dynamic intensity. Rather than comprising part of an unbroken series of ablative-declined terms that connote successive material causations (with the final cause or telos latent within mūlaprakṛti as “fundamental matter”), “prakrteh” indicates that procreativity is a basic feature that these seven tattvas inherit from mūlaprakṛti (by way of a kind of genetic trait inheritance). |
75 | To give another example: a caterpillar does not cease to be what it essentially is when it transforms into a butterfly (that is, when a butterfly manifests from or as a caterpillar). |
76 | In keeping with many scientists, poets, and philosophers before him in the history of Western studies of nature, Goethe often comments on Heraclitus’ cryptic observation that “Nature loves to hide.” For more on this theme, see Hadot 2006. Heraclitus and Goethe occupy a central place in Hadot’s study. |
77 | Ratié tells us that Abhinavagupta “emphasizes that the main goal of the nondualist Śaivas in appropriating the Sāṃkhya satkāryavāda is to show that the relationship between the Sāṃkhya notions of potentiality (śakti) and manifestation (vyakti/abhivyakti) can only make sense if they are interpreted along Śaiva non-dualistic lines” (2014, p. 166). She then cites Abhinava’s IPVV: “Therefore it is only in the doctrine of the non-duality [of everything with] consciousness (cidadvayavāda), [i.e.,] if one acknowledges that all entities consist in reflections (pratibimba) in the mirror of consciousness, that the distinction between potentiality (śakti) and manifestation (vyakti) becomes possible, [since this distinction is then understood as] having as its real nature the acts of folding (nimeṣaṇa) and unfolding (unmeṣaṇa) [through which consciousness conceals and manifests its nature and] which take [infinitely] variegated appearances (citrita) thanks to the power of consciousness—and not otherwise” (tasmāc cidadvayavāda eva saṃviddarpaṇapratibimbarūpebhāvakalāpe’bhyupagamyamāne śaktivyaktivibhāgaḥ saṃvicchakticitritanimeṣaṇonmeṣaṇaparamārtha upapadyate, nānyathā) (Shastri 1938–1943, pp. 312–13). |
78 | The whole quotation from Ratié is as follows: “The Sāṃkhya/Saiddhāntika notion of potentiality (śakti) thus gets filled with a completely different meaning: it no longer designates a latent, unmanifest and passive state, but rather, the ever manifest power that consciousness has of concealing itself while remaining manifest—a power that eventually is just another way for consciousness of manifesting itself, so that for the nondualist Śaivas, śakti and abhivyakti are only two different aspects of the same reality: the pure dynamism of consciousness” (2014, p. 168). |
79 | On the importance of Sāṃkhya for nondual Śaivism, see Torella 1999. |
80 | Utpala and Abhinava may (or may not) have misread other Sāṃkhya texts as well. This question is not at issue here and is beyond the scope of this paper. My concern is simply with how, in the process of their presenting the Sāṃkhya position, they overlooked important nuanced differences between Īśvarakṛṣṇa’s ideas and those of later Sāṃkhya thinkers, and in doing so, how they misrepresented the philosophy of the SK. |
81 | Ratié notes that Abhinava’s IPVV argument in favor of satkāryavāda “is obviously the first reason adduced in Sāṃkhyakārikā 9” (2014, p. 132). She further writes that Abhinava’s “dismissal of the thesis that the effect is inexplicable, i.e., both and neither existent and nonexistent, is quite close to that found in the Māṭharavṛtti” (2014, pp. 133–34). |
82 | Moriyama observes this. He writes: “For instance, with regard to the above term sādhyatvāt, Wezler and Motegi have documented a marginal note found in a Kashmir manuscript of the YD as follows: ‘YD, p. 123, marginal note (5): sādhyatvād iti. na hi sarvathaivāpsu na vidyate ’ ṅkuraḥ. yā hy āpo bījadeśānupraveśenāsīnād upādānād antarviparivarttitayāṅkuraṃ janayantīti tāsv apy aṅkuro ’sty eveti’. According to the editors’ introduction (YD, pp. xxiv-xxv), ‘[t]he author, or one of the authors, … was remarkably familiar with Mahāyāna Buddhism, a fact that would suggest that he/they may have lived before the extinction of Buddhism in Kashmir, i.e., in the 14th century A.D.’ There is also another marginal note where we find the words ‘Abhinavagupta’s Sāṃkhyanirṇaya,’ which A. Sanderson has identified as a section of the Tantrāloka (YD, p. xxv). From such information, it is at least possible to say that this unique Sāṅkhya text had a certain impact in the Kashmir region, where it was studied together with Kashmir Śaiva texts” (2016, pp. 292–93). Elsewhere Moriyama writes concerning Utpala’s familiarity with the YD: “is there any evidence for Utpaladeva’s familiarity with the YD? The latter is not unimaginable when considering Kashmir Śaivism’s close relation to the Sāṅkhya text” (2016, p. 292). |
83 | Ratié cites Vācaspati Miśra: “[The author of the Sāṃkhyakārikās] states the reason why [the effect must exist before the operation of its cause by saying] ‘because there is no production of the non-existent.’ [That is to say:] if the effect is nonexistent before the operation of its cause, its existence cannot be produced; for even innumerable artists cannot make the blue yellow!” (atra hetum āha: asadakaraṇāt. asac cet kāraṇavyāpārāt pūrvaṃ kāryaṃ nāsya sattvaṃ kartuṃ śakyam. na hi nīlaṃ śilpisahasreṇāpi pītaṃ kartuṃ śakyate) (Srinivasan 1967, pp. 96–98; quoted in Ratié 2014, p. 134). |
84 | Ratié elucidates: “Thus the Yuktidīpikā, relying on Vārṣagaṇya’s assertion that the universe appears and disappears without coming into being or being altogether destroyed, explains that although the effect is not made to exist by the cause—since it already exists in the cause in a latent form or as a potentiality (śakti)—it is revealed or made manifest by the cause; and just as it is not really produced but merely manifested by the cause, in the same way, it does not really suffer destruction but only ceases to be manifested. The effect is thus the result of a process of transformation (pariṇāma) explained in terms of mere appearance (āvirbhāva) and disappearance (tirobhāva) and not in terms of arising and annihilation” (2014, pp. 136–37). In support of this claim, she cites the YD: “kāraṇānāṃ tu yaḥ parasparasaṃsargāt saṃsthānaviśeṣaparigrahaḥ, tasya virodhiśaktyantarāvirbhāvād vyaktis tirodhīyata ity etad vināśaśabdena vivakṣitam. tathā ca vārṣagaṇāḥ paṭhanti–tad etat trailokyaṃ vyakter apaiti na sattvāt. apetam apy asti vināśapratiṣedhāt. saṃsargāc cāsya saukṣmyaṃ saukṣmyāc cānupalabdhiḥ. tasmād vyaktyapagamo vināśaḥ.” “Rather, the manifestation (vyakti) of the [effect], which has assumed a particular arrangement through the merging of [its] causes into one another, disappears due to the manifestation of another potentiality (śakti) that contradicts [the first one]—this is what the word ‘destruction’ [really] means. And accordingly, the followers of Vr̥ṣagaṇa teach [the following]: ‘All this threefold world withdraws from manifestation, [but] not from existence. [And] even though it withdraws [from manifestation], it exists, because [we] deny [the possibility of] destruction. And because of its merging [into primordial nature, the world] is subtle; and due to its subtlety, it is not perceived. Therefore, destruction is the disappearance of manifestation” (Wezler and Motegi 1998, pp. 128–29). |
85 | As alluded to earlier, there are countless examples of post-kārikā commentaries that use the clay-pot analogy, including the YD, the TK, and the Māṭharavr̥tti. Much of this is demonstrated in Ratié 2014, (e.g., pp. 132–33, 138) and Moriyama 2016, (e.g., p. 291). |
86 | Abhinava and other non-dual Kashmir Śaiva philosophers often sought to articulate the Sāṃkhya view of causality in terms of a network of causal factors. This is seen as early as the writings of Somānanda, who also seems to have articulated the Sāṃkhya doctrine in terms of the YD and TK commentaries. Ratié explains: “In a particularly telling passage, Somānanda reminds us that the Sāṃkhyas justify the preexistence of the effect in its cause by arguing that the effect can only arise if it is related to the factors of action, so that it must exist when these factors of action engage in activity, because their action must be exerted on something: according to the Yuktidīpikā, the object on which the causes act, i.e. the effect, must exist when they start acting, otherwise the relation (sambandha) between the effect and the factors of action would remain inexplicable” (2014, p. 151). |
87 | It also is not the case that the puruṣa is a “soul” in Sāṃkhya (or at least, not in the SK), counter to Moriyama’s translation at 2016, p. 293. It is unclear whether this is Moriyama’s own translation of “puruṣa” or whether this translation gets suggested by the YD itself. |
88 | Several Sāṃkhya scholars contend that the YD largely fails to develop the philosophy of the SK. Burley, for example, writes: “Although its rediscovery has been heralded by some as being of such great significance as to render all previous scholarship ‘outdated,’ my own view is that such claims are exaggerated. The Yuktikipika’s significance derives mostly from the information it provides about disputes between proponents of Sāṃkhya and those of rival Indian systems, especially Buddhism. What it does not do, in my opinion, is shed any new light upon the meaning of the classical text itself. While I have, then, consulted the available editions, I have not treated the Yuktidīpikā as any more or less authoritative than the other traditional commentaries” (2007, pp. 9–10). I agree with Burley’s point here. |
89 | The SK uses the metaphor of a lamp (pradīpa) in order to relate the meaning of the mahat-buddhi. It appears to do so in order to specify two features or powers of the mahat-buddhi (notably, two operations that are commonly thematized in Indian epistemologies): illumination (prakāśa) and discernment (adhyavasāya). Īśvarakṛṣṇa specifies the buddhi (not just prakṛti or the kāraṇa) as the precise source of prakāśa. However, much Sāṃkhya scholarship muddies this issue by wrongly attributing illumination to puruṣa. Classical Sāṃkhya commentators help to perpetuate this misunderstanding. Vācaspati Miśra and Vijñānabhikṣu, for example, tell us that the buddhi makes the subtle body (liṅgam) appear “as if conscious” (cetanāvad iva, SK 20) by reflecting the light (prakāśa) of puruṣa. However, the SK positively denies that puruṣa bears any aptitudes, per se (since puruṣa is “lame” [paṅgu]). As a passive witnesshood (akartṛbhāvaḥ, sākṣitvam), the puruṣa does not possess the capacity for assertion—not even shining (prakāśa) (SK 19). Furthermore, Īśvarakṛṣṇa himself, in contrast with later commentators, never mentions together “prakāśa” and “puruṣa,” and even implies that the illuminatory potencies of the buddhi stem from its relation with mūlaprakṛti. Consider that prakāśa is attributed to the buddhi due to its uniquely high concentration of the sattva guṇa; it is sattva which enables the buddhi to shine a light “like a lamp” (pradīpa-vat, SK 13). But the sattva guṇa (along with rajas and tamas) derives from mūlaprakṛti, not puruṣa. This represents an important deviation from the Vedāntic-leaning texts of adhyātma (as well as a distinction from classical schools such as Nyāya), wherein the buddhi participates in the reality of the self. According to Īśvarakṛṣṇa’s more unorthodox view, the buddhi cannot represent an attribute or stage in the evolution of the self (puruṣa). For further analysis of this issue, see Ashton 2018. |
90 | In the least, non-dual Śaivas recognized Sāṃkhya’s puruṣa to be a purely passive witness consciousness. Ratié cites Abhinava’s introduction to IPK 2.4.19, where he writes that Sāṃkhyans “do not consider that this [matter] has no agency, contrary to the Person (puruṣa) [who remains inactive]” (na hi puruṣavad asyākartṛ tvam iṣyata) (2014, p. 154). Of course, this meaning becomes altered in the Pratyabhijñā system. Meanwhile, non-dual Śaivas do not appear to have a correlative category for mūlaprakṛti. |
91 | Ratié elaborates: “While criticizing the way in which the Sāṃkhyas understand the distinction between potentiality and manifestation, the Śaiva non-dualists might thus be implicitly targetting by the same token their dualist cousins: whereas a Saiddhāntika scripture such as the Mṛgendratantras adopts the theory of abhivyakti but shows no knowledge of the dilemma that the asatkāryavādins oppose to this theory and that the Śaiva non-dualists exploit, his commentator Nārāyaṇakaṇṭha (an important Saiddhāntika author who had read Utpaladeva) seems to be painfully aware of it. Quite amusingly, he justifies this scriptural silence as an expression of contempt for a purely sophistic argument, but the way in which he himself attempts to overcome this difficulty seems to leave unresolved the problematic statement that the effect’s manifestation preexists in some unmanifest state” (2014, p. 167). |
92 | According to Chattopadhyaya, Tantra is older than the written form, and for this reason it is difficult to trace its origins. He points to concrete material relics that were found in the Indus ruins, which he suggests place Tantra’s origins or existence to at least 5000 BCE (Chattopadhyaya 1973, pp. 320–23). He further notes that, according to S.B. Dasgupta, “Tantrism is neither Buddhist or Hindu in origin: it seems to be a religious undercurrent, originally independent of any abstruse metaphysical speculation, flowing on from an obscure point of time in the religious history of India” (Dasgupta 1946, p. 27; quoted in Chattopadhyaya 1973, p. 182). |
93 | The details of this hypothesis are beyond the scope of this work. Marwaha, however, does offer the following note concerning Chattopadhyaya’s justification for this thesis. She writes: “References supporting this hypothesis are found in the Kapilasya Tantra, the Saṣṭitantra, also in the Sāṃkhya Kārikā, the Patañjala Tantra and the Atreya Tantra. He further adds that if the term Lokāyata originally stood for the beliefs and practices broadly referred to as Tantrism, the original Sāṃkhya may be viewed as the most important development of the Lokāyata tradition in Indian philosophy. This implies that original Sāṃkhya was a form of uncompromising atheism and materialism” (Chattopadhyaya 1973, pp. 362–63; cited in Marwaha 2013, pp. 185–86). |
94 | Oldenberg, for example, sees Sāṃkhya as originating in the early Upaniṣads. Chattopadhyaya instead hypothesizes that Sāṃkhya originates much earlier but is only acknowledged here (cited in Marwaha 2013, p. 187). |
95 | Bādarāyaṇa, for example, refers to Sāṃkhya as “pradhāna vāda” and “pradhāna kāraṇa vāda” (“the doctrine of primal nature” and “the doctrine of primal nature as the first cause,” respectively) (quoted in Marwaha 2013, pp. 187–88). Marwaha explains: “This was in contrast to the Vedānta philosophy of Brahma vāda or Brahma kāraṇa vāda, wherein Brahman was the first cause, the ultimate reality and the principle cause of consciousness. As Chattopadhyaya notes (1973, pp. 372–75), Bādarāyaṇa devotes a considerable portion of the Brahma Sūtra [to] the refutation of the materialist position of early Sāṃkhya. Of the 555 sūtras of the text, at least 60 were designed to refute the doctrine of the pradhāna, while only 43 were devoted to the refutation of other rival schools such as the Jaina and Buddhist views. Furthermore, of the 60 aphorisms refuting the doctrine of pradhāna, 37 were designed to prove its non-Vedic and anti-Vedic character. After a further analysis, Chattopadhyaya concludes that if Sāṃkhya was not understood as a materialistic tradition, there would have been no need for the substantial opposition that it faced from the idealistic schools, which held that the first cause was a spiritual principle. However, the later Sāṃkhya Kārikā and the Sāṃkhya Sūtra compromised on the original position and conceded to the orthodox Vedāntic viewpoint” (2013, p. 189). |
96 | Marwaha makes the following keen observation about the puruṣa (and prakṛti) from a Tantric point of view: “If the tradition of the original Sāṃkhya is traced back to [the] early Tantra view (with primacy [ascribed] to the procreation process, [and with] the literal meaning of the term puruṣa as male and prakṛti as female), then referring to the original meaning of puruṣa [as male] may be more appropriate. Chattopadhyaya cites the Sāṃkhya Kārikā to clarify the meaning of puruṣa, where words such as pumān and puṁsaḥ (meaning, the male) (Sāṃkhya Kārikā, 11, 60) are used as substitutes for puruṣa. The puruṣa of Sāṃkhya is not to be seen in the Vedāntic sense; rather, it is conceived as the solitary, bystander, spectator and passive witness of procreation. It was the passive spectator of an essentially real-world process. Chattopadhyaya reminds us of the Tantra view of the human body as a replication of the larger universe. Thus, just as a child in the [early] matriarchal society has no real kinship with the father, so the universe, in spite of being real, has no real relationship with the puruṣa. (1973, pp. 407–8)” (cited in 2013, p. 193). |
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Ashton, G. The Puzzle of Playful Matters in Non-Dual Śaivism and Sāṃkhya: Reviving Prakṛti in the Sāṃkhya Kārikā through Goethean Organics. Religions 2020, 11, 221. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11050221
Ashton G. The Puzzle of Playful Matters in Non-Dual Śaivism and Sāṃkhya: Reviving Prakṛti in the Sāṃkhya Kārikā through Goethean Organics. Religions. 2020; 11(5):221. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11050221
Chicago/Turabian StyleAshton, Geoffrey. 2020. "The Puzzle of Playful Matters in Non-Dual Śaivism and Sāṃkhya: Reviving Prakṛti in the Sāṃkhya Kārikā through Goethean Organics" Religions 11, no. 5: 221. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11050221
APA StyleAshton, G. (2020). The Puzzle of Playful Matters in Non-Dual Śaivism and Sāṃkhya: Reviving Prakṛti in the Sāṃkhya Kārikā through Goethean Organics. Religions, 11(5), 221. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11050221