The Irish Druid’s Analysis of Śakara's Invention of Atman = Brahman

 

Abstract

The druid examines the widely accepted Advaita Vedānta doctrine of Ātman = Brahman as formulated by Śaṅkara (8th century CE). He demonstrates, through philological and textual analysis, that the claim of absolute identity between ātman (self) and brahman (ultimate reality) is not explicitly stated in the early Upanishads. Drawing on modern Sanskrit scholarship, particularly the works of Patrick Olivelle and Joel Brereton, he argues that Śaṅkara's assertion is a personal philosophical construct superimposed upon ambiguous scriptural aphorims, subsequently institutionalized as doctrinal truth.

 

1. Introduction

Shankara’s doctrine of non-duality (Advaita) in Vedānta, especially the equation Ātman = Brahman, has become one of the most influential interpretations of Hindu metaphysics. While this claim is often cited as the central teaching of the Upanishads, contemporary philological research reveals that its textual foundations are uncertain. The druid’s essay critically examines the rare few Upanishadic sutras (i.e. threads) traditionally marshalled in support of this claim and highlights the dubious interpretative leaps made by Śaṅkara to systematize his invention of ‘non-duality’ as the purported essence of Vedic revelation.

 

2. The Ambiguity of Atman in Early Texts

In early Vedic and Upanishadic usage, ātman carries multiple meanings: breath, body, individual person, essence, and in later philosophical contexts, pure consciousness, being-consciousness-bliss. This semantic fluidity is crucial for understanding the passages upon which Śaṅkara builds his doctrine. Without presupposing ātman as an eternal witnessing consciousness, no unequivocal equation with brahman emerges from the texts.

 

3. The Mahāvākyas and Their Context

3.1 Tat Tvam Asi (Chāndogya Upaniṣad 6.8.7)

Traditionally rendered as "That Thou Art," this refrain underpins Advaita's claim of individual-absolute identity. However, Olivelle and Brereton argue that tat functions adverbially, translating more accurately as "In that way are you, Śvetaketu." The passage describes a shared vital essence in all beings, not an ontological oneness of self and ultimate reality. Śaṅkara's reading recasts this grammatical construction falsely into a metaphysical identity statement.

3.2 Aham Brahmāsmi (Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad 1.4.10)

This declaration, "I am Brahman," lacks a specified referent for the pronoun "I." It may signify a cosmic self or an enlightened state, not the empirical human subject. Śaṅkara interprets it universally, assuming identity for all selves without textual warrant.

3.3 Ayam Ātmā Brahma (Māṇḍukya Upaniṣad 2)

This is the only statement potentially equating self and ultimate reality. Yet its force depends entirely on inferring (and then defining) ātman as pure consciousness. Given the term's semantic ambiguity, the claim of ontological identity is interpretative, not explicit.

3.4 Prajñānam Brahma (Aitareya Veda)

While consciousness (as indeed being and bliss) may be identified with brahman, the text does not conflate individual subjectivity with the universal absolute in the manner of Advaita.

 

4. Śaṅkara's Philosophical Construction

Faced with scant, ambiguous scriptural materials, Śaṅkara nevertheless produces a very dodgy philosophical synthesis:

·         Redefinition of terms: Ātman is restricted to pure witnessing consciousness.

·         Projection of non-duality: Grammatical and contextual readings are overridden to fit an ontology of strict identity.

·         Doctrinal absolutism: The resulting interpretation is presented as the definitive meaning of the Upanishads, not as a personal philosophical innovation.

This method transforms a speculative leap of imagination into authoritative truth. Later Advaita tradition canonized this interpretation, obscuring its speculative and non-textual origins.

 

5. Modern Philological Perspectives

Recent scholarship challenges Advaita's hermeneutic assumptions:

·         Olivelle (1998) and Brereton (2006) show that Tat Tvam Asi is grammatically misread in Advaita exegesis.

·         The Mahāvākyas, when read in context, suggest shared essence or participation in a cosmic principle, not strict self-absolute identity.

·         No Upanishadic sutra provides direct, unambiguous support for Ātman = Brahman as a universal metaphysical claim.

 

6. Conclusion

The non-dualistic doctrine Ātman = Brahman, central to Advaita Vedānta, cannot be established as a direct teaching of the early Upanishads. It emerges instead as a philosophical construction by Śaṅkara, a personal fiction founded on selective and speculative reinterpretation of ambiguous, apodictic sutras (-as-minims). By reimagining terms and overriding grammar and context, Śaṅkara, as Brahmin scholiast, crafted a powerful metaphysical vision subsequently presented as scriptural truth. Modern scholarship exposes this as a creative doctrinal development, indeed artifice, rather than a demonstrable or empirically verifiable revelation.

The Jivanmukta

Ekattva Axioms

 

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