『MĀYĀ: Hidden Force Behind Reality, Consciousness, Attraction & Manifestation』のカバーアート

MĀYĀ: Hidden Force Behind Reality, Consciousness, Attraction & Manifestation

MĀYĀ: Hidden Force Behind Reality, Consciousness, Attraction & Manifestation

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(00:00:00) 0. Preface (00:09:03) 1. HISTORY OF THE WORD MAYA (00:47:17) 2. DEVELOPMENT OF THE CONCEPTION OF MAYA (02:20:06) 3. OBJECTIONS TO THE DOCTRINE WITHIN THE VEDANTA THE DOCTRINE OF MĀYĀ – The Vedantic Secret Behind Reality, Illusion, and Liberation by Prabhu Dutt Shastri.What is the true nature of the world we experience every day? Is reality exactly as it appears, or are we living within a vast cosmic illusion? Why do the sages of India speak of Māyā—the mysterious power that veils Truth and creates the appearance of multiplicity?In this profound episode of the Secret Law of Attraction Podcast, we explore The Doctrine of Māyā in the Philosophy of the Vedānta by Prabhu Dutt Shastri, a remarkable scholarly examination of one of the most subtle and misunderstood concepts in Eastern philosophy. The doctrine of Māyā lies at the heart of Advaita Vedānta, the non-dual philosophy most famously expounded by Adi Shankaracharya. Yet the idea is often oversimplified as merely "illusion." Shastri demonstrates that Māyā is far more profound. It is the principle through which the One appears as many, the Infinite appears as finite, and the Eternal appears as temporal. Understanding Māyā is essential for understanding the Vedantic view of consciousness, manifestation, self-realization, and liberation.This episode takes listeners on a fascinating journey through ancient Vedic texts, Upanishadic wisdom, philosophical debates, and centuries of interpretation to reveal how the concept evolved and why it remains one of the most powerful keys to spiritual awakening.Chapter I – History of the Word "Māyā"The first chapter traces the historical development of the word Māyā itself. Rather than beginning with later philosophical systems, Shastri starts at the earliest sources available—the Vedas. Through a careful examination of Vedic literature, linguistic scholarship, and traditional commentaries, he investigates how the word was originally used and how its meaning gradually evolved over time.The discussion explores the interpretations of leading Sanskrit scholars including Böthlingk, Roth, Geldner, Uhlenbeck, Grassmann, and Monier-Williams. Their analyses reveal that Māyā possessed multiple shades of meaning in ancient usage, including power, wisdom, skill, creative capacity, magical agency, and divine potency.Shastri examines references found in the Nighantu and Nirukta, two foundational works of Vedic interpretation, before analyzing the many occurrences of the term throughout the Rig Veda. Here listeners discover that Māyā was frequently associated with extraordinary powers possessed by gods and cosmic forces. It did not originally signify illusion in the later philosophical sense but rather a mysterious capacity for manifestation and creative activity.The chapter investigates important hymns where the term appears and evaluates various explanations offered by classical commentators such as Sayana. Special attention is given to distinguishing the concept of "power as will" from mere physical force. This distinction becomes crucial for understanding how the term gradually acquired deeper metaphysical significance.The discussion then follows the word through the Yajur Veda, Sama Veda, Atharva Veda, the Brāhmaṇas, and the Upanishads. By examining the writings of philosophers such as Gaudapada and Badarayana, listeners gain insight into how Māyā evolved from a descriptive term into a profound philosophical principle.The chapter concludes by presenting Māyā's two-fold conception: as creative power and as the principle responsible for appearance and concealment. Shastri skillfully demonstrates the interconnection between the various meanings and shows how the philosophical doctrine emerged organically from earlier Vedic ideas.Chapter II – Development of the Conception of MāyāThe second chapter forms the intellectual and spiritual heart of the book. Here Shastri examines how the idea of Māyā developed from its earliest seeds into one of the central doctrines of Advaita Vedānta.The journey begins with some of the most mysterious hymns of the Rig Veda, especially the famous Creation Hymn (Rig Veda X.129), which raises profound questions about existence, consciousness, and the origins of the universe. These ancient speculations reveal humanity's earliest attempts to understand the relationship between appearance and ultimate reality.As Vedic thought evolved, thinkers increasingly searched for unity behind the diversity of the world. This quest culminated in the Upanishads, where the emphasis shifted from ritual and cosmology toward direct knowledge of the Self.Shastri pays particular attention to the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, one of the most influential texts in Vedantic philosophy. Through the teachings of the sage Yajnavalkya, listeners encounter a revolutionary vision of reality in which the individual self and ultimate reality are fundamentally one.A central theme of this ...
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