Richard, I am interested. And admit that the Vedic aphorism: Brahman says, "My 
indestructible maya" completely resonates with me and acts as a koan for me, 
letting my whatever settle to deeper fathoms. But sometimes I enjoy your back 
and forth with emptybill about it. Otherwise, I don't have much to say about it.





On Wednesday, January 22, 2014 9:30 AM, Richard Williams <pundits...@gmail.com> 
wrote:
 
  
> I have already provided a scholarly synopsis of the real differences between
> Shankara's Advaita and Vijñanavada Buddhism...
>
You cited zero Vedantic scholars in the synopsis in this thread. And, you 
failed to cite any common ideas between Shankara's Advaita and Vijñanavada 
Buddhism. And, you even failed to define the Sanskrit term "maya". Everyone 
knows that the term maya means different things when used in the Vedas, the 
Upanishads, in the Bhagavad Gita, in the Mahayana and in Shankara;s Advaita.   

Judging by the number of comments posted to this thread it looks like nobody is 
very interested in the classical Advaita Vedanta's meaning of the term "maya" 
or it's relationship to Mahayana Buddhism. Go figure.

That's probably because TM practice is based on the tantras and on yoga and not 
on the meaning of the term maya used in Shankara's Advaita Vedanta. SBS was a 
Sri Vidya proponent - that's the interesting point I'm trying to make. TMers 
want to know tantra, about what works for daily living, not read about some dry 
metaphysical explanations of why Brahman created maya - the latter is the 
business of monks, not common householders. Even the illusory nature of maya is 
an is itself an illusion. Go figure.

The question is, why did the sannyasins of the Shankara Tradition go over to 
the worship of Shakti as the Supreme Transcendental absolute? 

Apparently you are not very familiar with Bhaskara, the famous Sri Vidya 
scholar who wrote the commentary on Shankara's Soundaryalahari. According to 
Dasgupta, "He [Bhaskara] speaks in very strong terms against the commentator 
[Shankara] who holds the maya doctrine and is a Buddhist in his views. But, 
though he was opposed to Shankara, it was only so far as Shankara had 
introduced the maya doctrine, and only so far as he thought the world had 
sprung forth not as a real modification of Brahman, but only through maya." 

And, you don't seem to be very familiar with Swami Laksmanjoo's comments on 
Kashmere Tantrism. The term "maya" and it's meaning in Advaita Vedanta is not 
the same as the meaning in Sri Vidya and in Kashmere Trika. Kashmere Tantrism 
is idealistic non-dualism. The question is, how did the Shankara tradition come 
to include the Kashmere tantras?


The idea of maya or illusion is in fact of Buddhist Mahayana origin. "In the 
Tibetan Dzogchen tradition the perceived reality is considered literally 
unreal, in that objects which make-up perceived reality are known as objects 
within ones mind, and that, as we conceive them, there is no pre-determined 
object, or assembly of objects in isolation from experience that may be 
considered the "true" object, or objects." 

Works cited:

'A History of Indian Philosophy'
by Surendranath Dasgupta 
Cambridge University Press, 1955
p. 1

Maya (illusion):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_%28illusion%29#Mahayana



On Wed, Jan 22, 2014 at 8:25 AM, <emptyb...@yahoo.com> wrote:

 
>  
>I have already provided a scholarly synopsis of the real differences between 
>Shankara's Advaita and Vijñanavada Buddhism. Many times I have also explained 
>how and why Shankara refuted the same.
>
>
>You answer has always been the same - "Yeah, but ... and then you continue 
>onward without considering it at all. You only want to appear as "Mr. 
>Professor" so you continue to repeat stuff you read that was written 10-20 
>years ago. 
>
>
>You simply waste my time. Therefore I don't want to waste more with your b.s. 
>and your "it is all about Prof..Willy P-Dog". 
>
>
>This is apparently how you understand both Advaita and Trika: 
>
>"I am the Universe. It's all about Me. It's my Maya".
>
>
>
>---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <punditster@...> wrote:
>
>
>There is nothing absurd about any of my citations and they have not been 
>refuted by any scholars that I know of. If you have any sources you'd like to 
>cite, please list them so we can read them for ourselves.
>
>
>mAyA - illusion , unreality , deception , fraud , trick , sorcery , witchcraft 
>magic RV; an unreal or illusory image, phantom , apparition ib. (esp. ibc= 
>false, unreal, illusory; duplicity (with Buddhists one of the 24 minor evil 
>passions) Dharmas. Illusion (identified in the Samkhya with Prakriti or 
>Pradha1na and in that system, as well as in the Vedanta, regarded as the 
>source of the visible universe.
>
>
>Cologne Digital Sanskrit Lexicon:
>http://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/tamil/recherche
>
>
>
>On Tue, Jan 21, 2014 at 8:46 PM, <emptybill@...> wrote:
>>
>> 
>>>  
>>>All of these absurd assertions have long ago been refuted by excellent 
>>>scholars. You simply don't know what you are talking about - to put it quite 
>>>plainly.
>>

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