dc.description.abstract | BACKGROUND
The cultural and spiritual legacy of India is vast as well as rich. There is nothing sectarian or
regional about it. It is so universal in its appeal and so catholic in its approach that it belongs
to the whole world. This legacy is derived from the Vedas. They include all schools of
Indian thought except that of the Lokāyata, Buddhists and Jains. Each of them is subdivided
into Samhitā (collections), Brāhmaṇa (dealing with Vedic rituals, sacrificial rites), Āraṇyaka
(sacrificial rites) and Upaniṣads. Homogeneity can be found in all the Upaniṣads. They deal
with the topics of supreme reality (Brahman), individual soul (Ātman), world (jagat) and
their inter – relationships. These concepts are in the form of an enchanting dialogue between
a teacher and a student, father and son, mother and son and so on. In the Upaniṣads, we get
an intelligible body of verified and verifiable spiritual insights mixed with a mass of myths
and legends, cosmological speculation relating to the nature and origin of the universe. While
the former has universal validity, and has a claim on human intelligence in all ages, the latter
forswears all such claims. All positivistic knowledge contained in any literature, including
religious literature, is limited and conditioned by the level of contemporary scientific
knowledge. Among the ten Upaniṣads, Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad is taken for an analysis here.
In the brief compass of its twelve verses of the condensed thought, the Māṇḍūkya surveys the
whole of experience through a study of the three states of waking, dream, dreamless sleep,
and reveals the Ātman, the self of man, the Turīyā or the fourth, as it puts it, as pure
consciousness, eternal and non-dual. It proclaims in its second verse, the infinite dimension
of man in a pregnant utterance - one of the four mahāvākyas or “great utterances” of the
Upaniṣads: Ayam ātma brahmā - this Ātman (self of man) is Brahman. The four states are
analyzed here with Māṇḍūkya Kārika of Gauḍapāda. The Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad speaks of
mind and consciousness in various states and as comparison, modern psychological views
about mind, sleep and consciousness are broadly discussed here.
WESTERN VIEWS
In Indian philosophy both mind and matter are placed in the same category as they become
objects of knowledge. But in western philosophy both are based on a clear distinction
between mind and matter. In the Indian philosophical tradition, mind helps in knowing
consciousness whereas in the western paradigm, mind becomes the subject as well as the
object of knowing. Knowing gives an understanding of the truth and could lead to
realization. In the eastern tradition, knowing becomes a being and becoming. This knowledge
of the self (ātman) helps the individual in attaining happiness (sukha) and welfare
(abhyudaya) in this world, and realization of the supreme reality (Brahman) leading to
liberation (mokṣa). Thus knowing and understanding about consciousness become
complimentary in both the systems.
AIM AND OBJECTIVES
To study the concept of Waking state (jāgrat), Dream (svapnam), deep-sleep state (suṣupti)
and Turīyā in the Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad and in comparison with modern psychology.
LINES OF INVESTIGATION
Initially, the ten Upaniṣads were studied with the commentary of Ādi Śankarācārya, the
essence of the major ten Upaniṣads, namely Iśa, Kena, Kaṭa, Praśna, Mūṇḍa, Māṇḍūkya,
Taittirīya, Aitareya, Chāndogya, and Bṛhadāraṇyaka, were given in a nutshell. The
Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad with the commentary of Gauḍapāda was studied elaborately and
analysis was made regarding the four states of consciousness. The research method employed
here was analytical in nature. Secondly, a comparison of these three states was done with
modern psychology and wherever the similarities and dissimilarities were found, they were
brought out objectively. The significant contributions of Indian thought were highlighted.
Thirdly, Anveṣaṇa, the research department of SVYASA yoga University has done scientific
research on the state of mind, fickleness of mind (cancalatā), one pointedness of mind
(ekāgratā),) focused attention of mind (dhāraṇa) and deep concentration or attention
(dhyāna) for the last few years. Those selected research papers were examined, analyzed and
the contributions of those researchers and scholars were documented here. Thus, the study of
three states of Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad was compared with Indian philosophy and modern
scientific researches in an analytical way.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
As the PhD Thesis topic is literary and theoretical in nature, the general research
methodology used in the domains of language, philosophy or arts was used which involved a
broad study of the background subject, an analysis of the thesis topic, comparison with
modern psychology and final assessment and conclusions. Hence the standard research
methodology used in scientific researches such as experimental trials, random control trial
(RCT), interventions such as pre – and post interventions, limitations, inclusion principle,
exclusion principle, sample strategy, samples, empirical analysis etc., have not been
employed in this pure literary research. | en_US |