Decoding the Reality of the World
In the study of Advaita Vedānta, no single sentence is as frequently quoted or as foundational as the one attributed to Ādi Śaṅkara: brahma satyam jaganmithyā jīvo brahmaiva nāparaḥ. Translated, it declares: “Brahman is the reality; the world is mithyā (not in itself real); and the individual self is not different from Brahman”. To grasp the essence of this philosophy, one must dive deeply into the precise technical meanings of the two pivotal terms: satyam and mithyā.
For many seekers, these terms are the source of significant confusion. Does mithyā mean the world is a total hallucination? If Brahman is the only satyam, why do we still experience a solid, material universe? The resolution to these paradoxes lies in Advaita’s unique “two-level” approach to reality, which distinguishes between absolute truth (paramārtha) and transactional experience (vyavahāra).
Continue reading