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advaita-siddhi - 17 - The third definition of mithyAtva
Having seen the first two definitions of mithyAtva (unreality), we will now study the
third definition of mithyAtva that MadhusUdana deals with in the advaita-siddhi. Previous
articles on the advaita-siddhi may be retrieved from the archives by searching for the key
word "siddhi." These articles also include the background in nyAya that is
useful in making sense out of MadhusUdana's work which is certainly one of the finest
polemical treatises in the whole of Indian philosophy.
Recall that the first definition of mithyAtva said that what is mithyA is characterized by
"sadasadanadhikaraNatva", not being the substratum of either sat (Existence) or
asat (nonexistence). And the second definition of mithyAtva said that what is mithyA
(unreal) is characterized as being the counterpositive (pratiyogin) of an absolute
negation in the very substratum where it (the thing that is mithyA) is cognized.
The third definition that is now taken up in the advaita-siddhi simply says:
GYAnanivartyatvaM vA mithyAtvam.h |
Alternatively, unreality is the property of being sublated by knowledge or cognition.
This is an extremely pithy definition which must only be understood by careful analysis,
not just brushed off as something obvious and trivial. The definition comes from the
VivaraNAchArya, PrakAshAtman.
First of all, let us do a simple analysis. We know that GYAna and aGYAna are like light
and darkness. aGYAna, ignorance is sublated, negated by GYAna. Further, what is aGYAna,
ignorance, is also unreal. If I am ignorant of something, I have erroneous information
about that thing. This erroneous information does not represent any true state of affairs.
So it is false. When do I eliminate the erroneous information? Only when I have the
correct information, GYAna of the thing in question.
Next, let us try to analyse the definition in a deeper and technical manner using nyAya.
In any philosophical debate, any definitions that you make must be unambiguous and must
withstand close scrutiny by the opponent. This is especially true in the advaita-siddhi
context because the opponents here happen to be led by the mAdhva exponent VyAsa-tIrtha,
who in the words of contemporary mAdhva scholar BNK Sharma (if my memory serves me
right), subjects all theories to "microscopic scrutiny." We'd better make sure
the definition is "air-tight" with no holes whatsoever.
A significant difficulty with the definition, when we take a closer look, is this. The
definition should apply to ordinary cases of illusion such as the silver-in-nacre and
snake-on-rope as well as the quite extra-ordinary and fantastic illusion of the world on
Brahman. The cognition of the rope as rope (or nacre as nacre) ends the ordinary illusion.
Now what ends the illusion of the world? Surely, Brahman cannot be cognized in the same
objective way that a piece of rope or nacre is cognized. The cognition of an object, such
as a rope, of the form of "this is a rope" is fundamentally different from the
GYAna of Brahman or BrahmasAxAtkAra, the direct realization of Brahman. What is it that is
so fundamentally different between the two types of GYAna? Let us investigate further with
the help of nyAya, more specifially the tarka-saMgraha of aNNaMbhaTTa.
tatra niShprakArakaM GYAnaM nirvikalpakam.h|
saprakArakaM GYAna savikalpakam.h |
An indeterminate cognition (nirvikalpaka-GYAna) is one with no attribute (prakAra). A
determinate cognition (savikalpaka-GYAna) is one with an attribute (prakAra).
Any savikalpaka-GYAna can be broken down into three components, as per nyAya. Or more
precisely, any savikalpaka-GYAna has an objective content (viShaya) consisting of 1) a
visheShya or qualificand, 2) a visheShaNa (also prakAra), ie. a qualifier, and 3) a
saMsarga or relation between the qualificand and qualifier. This also corresponds roughly
to the subject-predicate form of a sentence in natural language.
Consider the Sanskrit sentence "nIlo ghaTaH" (the pot is blue.) Here the
visheShya is "pot", the visheShaNa is "nIla" and the relation between
them is that of inherence of blue color in the pot. Such a relation is called
"samavAya" in nyAya.
In the language of navya-nyAya, the cognition corresponding to the sentence (nIlo ghaTaH)
is analysed as follows:
nIlatva-avachchhinnaprakAratAnirUpita-ghaTatva-avachchhinna-
visheShyatAnirUpita-samavAyatva-avachchhinna-saMsargatA-
nirUpita-viShayitAshAli-GYAnam.h |
An awkward English translation is:
It is a cognition whose subjectness is described by the qualificandness delimited by
potness, described by the qualifierness delimited by blue-ness, and described by the
relation-ness delimited by inherence-ness.
The naiyAyikas say that in a nirvikalpaka cognition, it is not possible to identify the
visheShya, the visheShaNa, and the saMsarga, even though they may be present. This is
where the advaitins part company with the naiyAyikas. The advaitins hold that in a
nirvikalpaka-GYAna, only Existence (Brahman) is presented. There is no visheShya, no
visheShaNa, no saMsarga.
Finally now, we can be satisified that the definition of mithyAtva as
"GYAnanivartyatvaM vA mithyAtvam.h" applies to ordinary illusions as well as the
world-on-Brahman illusion. When an ordinary illusion such as a snake-on-rope is negated in
an ordinary fashion, the cognition which negates the illusion is the savikalpaka type,
"this is a rope." When the world-illusion is negated by Brahma-GYAna, this GYAna
is of the nirvikalpaka type.
In the next part, we will see how the opponent launches a new line of attack on the
definition.
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