An important aspect of our awake world is that we do not perceive it simply because it “exists out there,” much like we do not perceive a dream merely because it exists. A notion (pratyaya) first arises in the intellect, and we then project it outward to appear as an “object” external to us. This mechanism is common to both dream objects and waking objects. The same process underlies both sacred ritualistic acts and ordinary worldly activities. Through constant repetition and habitual engagement with objects day after day, we gradually become convinced that they are independently real and “exist outside as the world.”
Consider this: when the mind ceases to imagine waking-world objects and becomes occupied with dream objects, the waking world disappears from experience. When neither the waking world nor the dream world is conceived, no object is perceived at all; this is the condition of deep sleep.
If one remains as pure “Vision” alone, instead of identifying oneself as the ‘seer’ engaged with the objects ‘seen,’ one transcends the three states (avasthAtraya) — waking, dream, and deep sleep. Such transcendence is immortality. This state is called the Fourth (turIya). Ordinary worldly knowledge concerns itself only with the three states and can reveal no more than them. Higher Knowledge, the Knowledge of the Self, alone reveals turIya. Continue reading