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GREAT SYSTEMS OF YOGA
SHANKARACHARYA'S GNYANA-YOGA
p. 62 p. 63
CHAPTER FOUR
SHANKARACHARYA'S GNYANA-YOGA
THIS Teacher, who founded monasteries in India for the study of
Vedānta philosophy, is believed by many of his followers to have
lived several centuries before Christ, though other scholars place
him much later. The date does not matter to us today, but his
philosophy does, for it is regarded by some millions of people, and
especially by the intellectuals, as the very pinnacle of Aryan
thought. It was not that he originated a new philosophy, though he
did propound a self-culture or discipline necessary to the
understanding of it.
Shankarāchārya expounded with great clarity and completeness the
already existing philosophy of the Upanishads—a section of the Vedas
often called the Vedānta, or end of the Veda, containing the "last
word" or highest teaching about the nature of Brahman (God),
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man and the world. This teaching summed up its conclusions in a
number of Great Sayings, including "There is one reality, but the
intellectual persons speak of it variously," "All this certainly is
Brahman," "That is the reality," "That, thou art" and other similar
sentences to be (r) listened to, (2) thought about and (3) meditated
upon, for the attainment of knowledge of the deepest truth, the very
secret of life, the discovery which reveals the unalloyed freedom
and happiness of our true self, when false ideas are put aside.
Gnyāna or Jnāna is knowledge. The central doctrine of this
philosophy is that everything is one, and it can be known. But that
knowing is only by being. We know ourselves not by words but by
being ourselves, do we not? And this is happiness, for it seems that
though this consciousness of self that we find ourselves to be is
troubled, we always ascribe that trouble to something else—something
outside—which restricts or annoys us. Who is there who blames
himself for his sorrow? Even the thoughtful person who calls himself
imperfect ascribes his troubles and sorrows to the imperfections,
and says that if he could be without them he would be happy.
Generally he tries to get rid of them. So it is by the study of the
self that this philosophy proceeds to disclose the occult or secret
truth which removes the imperfections and leaves the self free and
joyous.
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Shankarāchārya says in one word what all these imperfections are,
what it is that we suffer from—it is ignorance, avidyā. It will be,
then, the very height of practical occultism to dispel that
ignorance. Because of wrong assumptions we make mistakes, even with
the best of intentions—even the intentions are imperfect because of
ignorance. So thoughts, intentions and actions are all clouded by
ignorance. Finally, even actions are tremendously confused, and
without power, because of ignorance.
This is true occultism, then—the dissolution of ignorance at its
source, not any small potterings for the gaining of petty pleasures
or for the removal of petty pains, but to look behind the veil and
find the pure self and no longer play about in the fields of
ignorance. This is the real business of life, the Upanishads assert,
which can be done, and has been done by successful human beings, who
have seen the error and mastered it. At the very least it is better
not to walk into new trouble than to busy oneself merely with
removing the old.
First of all, Shankarāchārya makes a distinction between people who
want to have and those who want to know. To have is connected with
external things. The whole world consists of things to have.
Shankara does not deny the infinity of worlds or the existence of
"higher planes," containing lofty and glorious beings or gods, or
that by desiring things
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of higher planes or heavens and by worshipping the gods people may
obtain centuries and even millennia of delight in various lofty
heavens; but he affirms that all those things are the playthings of
children or the tinsel of fools, who are making them all for
themselves because they have not thought about the eternal
realities.
He therefore draws a decided distinction between dharma-jignāsa (the
desire to know what should be done in order to obtain better
conditions on earth and in heaven) and Brahma-jignāsa (the desire to
know that which is eternal). This is discussed very decisively in
Shankara's commentary on the first of the Brahma-Sūtras or
aphorisms. The desire for the "heavens" must be preceded by
sense-experience, and confidence in the Vedas, which declare that
the heavens exist; but the desire for Brahman must be preceded by
thought, thought and more thought (vichāra), especially with
reference to an understanding of the distinction (viveka) between
the eternal (nitya) and temporary (anitya) realities. In emphasizing
thought, however, Shankara does not leave out study of the Vedānta,
which contains much information and advice about seeking the
eternal. Shankara's emphasis on thinking is very clear in his
Aparokshānubhūti: "Thinking should be done for the sake of attaining
knowledge of the Self. Knowledge
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is not attained by any means other than thinking, just as objects
are never seen without light. 'Who am I?' 'How is this world
produced?' 'Who made it?' and 'What is the material?'—such is the
enquiry." 1
It is well known that we do not see things as they really are,
because of our limited point of view, and yet there is in us the
craving for greater understanding, because the human soul is one
with the divine or universal soul. Each one of us reflects that,
just as the disc of the sun may be reflected in many little pools of
water. We have thus a dual nature, and though the lower may be
satisfied, still the higher makes its claim in a ceaseless desire to
understand. If human power and love were to grow so great, as to
make our life on earth a perfect paradise of peace and plenty for
all, still men would say, "Now, we want to know why all this is so."
There are the needs of the personality—food, clothing and shelter,
amusement and education, exercise and rest—but beyond these there
are spiritual needs, and among them is the real hunger for
understanding.
It is not supposed by Shankara that the average or ordinary man can
think straight in these matters. He prescribes a course of what may
be called purification as a preparation. This is called the
sādhanachatushtayam, the "group of four accomplishments."
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[paragraph continues] They present three departments of
self-training, and a concluding condition of mind, as will be seen
in the following table:
NAME OF ACCOMPLISHMENT
Function
involved
In Sanskrit
In English
1. Viveka
Discrimination
Thought
2. Vairāgya
Uncoloredness
Feelings
3. Shatsampatti
6 Successes
The Will
4. Mumukshatwa
The State of Longing for Liberation
Viveka is the practice of discrimination between the fleeting and
the permanent. This is the first of three preliminary yogas in this
school. It is here that the thinking, thinking, thinking, begins. It
is to be applied to oneself, to others and to the whole business of
life. It is an inspection of the contents of one's ordinary self, to
discriminate between the relatively temporary and permanent. First
one may dwell upon the body and realize that it is only an
instrument for the conscious self to play upon. Then, one may dwell
on the habits of feeling and emotion which have been accumulated
during the present lifetime (or, strictly, bodytime), and realize
these also to be part of the instrument—"I am surely not my feelings
and emotions towards things and people." Thirdly, one must meditate
upon the fact that the lower mind, the collection of information,
ideas and opinions that one
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has acquired up to this period, is also not the self, but merely an
internal library more or less imperfectly indexed, in which the
books have a tendency to open at certain places because they have
been opened there many times before.
This meditation may then be applied to other people, so that one
comes to think of them as the consciousness beyond the personality,
and in dealing with them to assist and further the higher purposes
of the Self within them rather than the desires rising from the
personality. Being a material thing, even up to the mental plane,
that personality has its own quality of inertia, and dislikes the
discomfort involved in new thinking and willing and feeling, until
it is well trained and learns to rejoice in the sharing of a life
more than its own. But we must also help to bring the day of triumph
nearer for all whom we contact, as Shrī Shankarāchārya did, for he
was one of the world's busiest men.
This meditation must be extended still further to all the business
of life, to the family, the shop, the field, the office, society.
All these things must be considered as of importance not as they
minister to the laziness, selfishness or thoughtlessness of the
personality, but as they bear on the advancement in power of will,
love and thought of the evolving consciousness in all concerned. It
will be seen that works and
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their objects pass away, but the faculty and ability gained by them
remains in the man.
Fifteen to thirty minutes of this kind of meditation each day is
sufficient to establish very soon an entirely new outlook in the
personality. Emerson speaks of something of the same kind in his
essay on "Inspiration," as the way to an altogether richer life than
any of us can possibly reach without it. It can often be practiced
to some extent under unfavorable conditions, as for example in the
railway train, if one makes up one's mind to take the various
disturbances of it with a sweet temper, and lend oneself to the
rhythm of its noise.
The second requirement is vairāgya, an emotional condition in which
one does not respond at once to impressions coming from the outer
world, but first submits the matter to the discriminative power
rising from viveka. If you strike an ordinary man, he will get hot
and strike back, or run away, or do something else spontaneous and
scarcely rational; but a man having vairāgya would use his spiritual
intelligence before responding. The literal meaning of the word
vairāgya is "absence of color," and in this connection it means
absence of passion. Rāga is coloring, especially redness. People
everywhere take their emotional coloring from their environment,
according to well known psychological laws; like pieces of glass
placed on blue or red or green paper, they change
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their color. Likes and dislikes rise up in them without reason, at
the mere sight of various objects, and the appearance of different
persons calls up pride, anger, fear and other personal emotions.
They are constantly judging things not with their intelligence but
by their feelings and emotional habits. "This is good, that is bad,"
means generally nothing more than, "I like this; I do not like
that." A man dislikes a thing because it disturbs his physical or
emotional convenience or his comfortable convictions, "I thought I
had done with thinking about that—take it away, confound you,"
grumbles the man comfortably settled in his opinions, as in a big
armchair.
Vairāgya is the absence of agitation due to things outside. A
mistaken idea which is sometimes associated with this word is that
it implies absence of emotion. That is not so. The purified
personality responds to the higher emotions, the love emotions that
belong to the real self. Those emotions come from that aspect of the
indwelling consciousness which feels other lives to be as
interesting as one's own. This is the root of all the love
emotions—admiration, kindness, friendship, devotion and others—which
must not be confused with any sort of passion, which is personal or
bodily desire. If a man has vairāgya and he is still at all
emotional, his emotion must express some form of love.
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Vairāgya may be developed by a form of meditation in which the
aspirant should picture and turn over in mind the various things
that have been causing him agitation, or the disturbing emotions of
pride, anger and fear. Having made a picture of the cat spilling the
ink on the best tablecloth, or of your enemy putting in a bad word
for you with your employer or superior behind your back, you calmly
look at it, meditate on it, and the light of your own intelligence
will see the real value of the experience and this removal of
ignorance will also remove the agitating emotion. This is a question
of feeling, not of action. Do not here substitute the deadly
coldness that some people sometimes feel instead of anger, and
imagine that to be the calm state.
The calmness obtained in this way will soon make all the other
meditation far more effective than before, because meditation best
opens the door to the inner world and all its inspiration when the
body is quiet, the emotions are calm, and the attention is turned to
the subject of thought without any muscular or nervous strain or
physical sensation whatever. Incidentally it should be said that
meditation with physical sensation or strain may prove injurious to
health, but meditation rightly done in this way can never do the
least harm.
The third requirement is called shatsampatti,
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which may be translated "the six forms of success." The will is now
used to make all conditions favorable for the further development of
viveka. To understand the function of the will, it is necessary to
realize that it is the faculty with which we change ourselves.
Thought is kriyashakti, the power of mind that acts upon matter; but
it is the will with which we change our thoughts and other inward
conditions. Now will-power is to be used to bring the whole life of
the man within the purpose of jnāna-yoga. This work is the
equivalent of the tapas of Patanjali and the sevā of Shrī Krishna.
The six forms of success are: (1) shama, control of mind, (2) dama,
control of body; (3) uparati, which means cessation from eagerness
to have certain persons and things around one, and therefore a
willing acceptance of what the world offers—contentment with regard
to things and tolerance with regard to persons, a glad acceptance of
the material available for a life's work. The fourth is titikshā,
patience, the cheerful endurance of trying conditions and the
sequence of karma. The fifth is shraddhā, fidelity and sincerity,
and therefore confidence in oneself and others. The sixth is
samādhāna, steadiness, with all the forces gathered together and
turned to the definite purpose in hand.
Every one of these six practices shows the will at
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work producing that calm strength which is its own special
characteristic. This is necessary for yoga, and anything in the
nature of fuss or push, or excitement is against it. In no case does
this calmness mean the reduction of activity or work, but always
that the work is done with greater strength but less noise. Success
is marked by quietness, the best indication of power. Thus the mind
and body will be active but calm; and there will be contentment,
patience, sincerity and steadiness.
The three branches of training already mentioned make the entire
personality exceedingly sensitive to the higher self, so that a
great longing arises for a fuller measure of realization. This is
called mumukshatwa, eagerness for liberation.
To complete this occult knowledge one must combine the māyā doctrine
with the self-realization doctrine. It is, of course, the
self-realization of itself that is the full achievement. And since
māyā does not mean something unreal but something outside the
categories of both the real and unreal, and is in fact nothing but
error, we shall have to say that the power of māyā is a power of the
self itself, and that all that is not unreal in the māyā is beyond
time and space, a part of the self itself, whatever "parts" may
mean-in the indivisible. The general dictum of all the yogas is
fulfilled here—that never will the yogī find something that could be
anticipated, but only something
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unknown before, which, however, by universal testimony, is true
being, pure consciousness and incredible joy. All the explanations
given in this chapter and much more will be found in my book on
Vedānta entitled The Glorious Presence. 2
It will be useful now to see that the same three means of
self-guidance are employed in all the three schools we have studied
so far—of Patanjali, of Shrī Krishna and of Shankarāchārya. It
becomes obvious when we thus compare them that all are aiming at
maturity of mind, the ripening of the three functions of will, love
and thought. They put these three in different order, however,
indicating the different temperaments of those who take to the
different schools of occult practice and thought. The following
table will make the comparison clear.
Patanjali
Krishna
Shankara
1. Tapas
(Will)
1. Pranipāta
(Love)
1. Viveka
(Thought)
2. Swādhyāya
(Thought)
2. Pariprashna
(Thought)
2. Vairāgya
(Love)
3. Ishwara-pranidhāna
(Love)
3. Sevā
(Will)
3. Shatsampatti
(Will)
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When the student has followed this preliminary training with some
success he will be ready for two things (1) the understanding of the
doctrine of māyā, and (2) the direct visioning of the Self.
Māyā has often been translated "illusion," whence it has been
thought that Shankara teaches that all this world does not exist,
and people only imagine that it does so—that there is nothing there.
That is not so. He does not deny the existence of objects, but
affirms that we see them wrongly—just as a man may see a piece of
rope on the ground and mistake it for a snake, or as he may see a
post in the distance and think it to be a man.
It is necessary to know that māyā has two functions: "covering-up"
(āvarana) and "throwing-out" (vikshepa). 3 The first is declared to
be the effect of tamas, which hides or obstructs the life, and the
second the result of rajas, or energy. 4 "Covering-up" implies that
although we are—every one—universal in our essential nature, our
attention is now given to less than the whole. Most of the reality
is covered up, and since we see only the remainder, it must
necessarily become unsatisfying and stupid and even painful, when we
have played with it long enough to exhaust its lessons for us. When
we have read a book
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and absorbed the ideas in it, we do not want to read it again. If it
is forced upon us, the experience will be painful. We may laugh at a
good joke told by a friend to-day, but if he persists in telling us
the same story again and again it will be far from a joke. Our life
must be moving on, and overcoming the āvarana; there is no
long-lasting pleasure or gain in standing still on any platform of
knowledge that we may have gained at any time or stage.
"Covering-up" does not mean that objects of experience lack reality.
The māyā or illusion is that we do not see their full reality; we
see too little, not too much. So far as they go they have an
excellent flavor of reality, but their incompleteness is
unsatisfying.
The second function of māyā, "throwing-out" (vikshepa), means that
we put forth our thought and energy in reference to that part of
reality which for us individually has not been covered up, and
thereby we produce the world of māyā or created things, which are
only temporary (anitya).
The power of "throwing-out" is not merely of the mind, but is
actually creative, and this it is which produces all the forms
around us, the world of manifestation. The objects therein are very
much like pictures painted by an artist. They represent his
expression of such part of the reality as is not covered up. As he
looks at the picture and realizes how defective
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and even nonsensical it is, the hunger arises in him for something
more satisfying, which then works at removing the "covering-up."
Thereby arises what is called intuition, which always comes as the
result of a complete study of any fact or group of facts in the
world of experience. It is in this manner that experience is
educative. It gives us nothing from the outside, but enables us to
introduce ourselves to a fuller part of reality. So āvarana
resembles concentration, and the result of experience can be
compared to contemplation. Thus māyā, while not reality, is also not
unreality.
Shankara speaks in very strong language about the effect of āvarana
and vikshepa in practical life: "The function of āvarana, made of
tamas, covers up the shining Self, which has unlimited faculties,
just as the shadow of the moon hides the disc of the sun. When there
is thus the obscuration of a man's real and stainlessly radiant
Self, he thinks he is the body, which is not the Self. Then the
great power of rajas called vikshepa afflicts him by the binding
qualities of passion, anger, etc., so that this unintelligent man,
deprived of real knowledge of the Self, through being swallowed by
the crocodile of the great delusion, wanders about, rising and
falling in the ocean of limited existence. As clouds produced by the
sun obscure the sun as they develop, so does egotism arising
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from the Self obscure the Self as it flourishes. And as on a bad day
when thick clouds swallow the sun, and they also are afflicted by
sharp cold winds, so does the power of acute vikshepa annoy the man
of confused intelligence with many troubles. By these two powers the
man is bound; deluded by them he wanders about, thinking the body to
be himself." 5
Then comes the question how to remove these two: "Unless the āvarana
function ceases completely, vikshepa cannot be conquered. When
subject and object are separated, like milk from water, then āvarana
disappears on its own account in the Self. Perfect discrimination,
arising from clear perception, having distinguished the subject and
the object, cuts away the bondage of delusion made by māyā, and then
for the free man there is no more wandering about." 6
The substance of material things is called sat, or being.
Consciousness, with its powers of will, love and thought, is called
chit. Beyond those three aspects of consciousness is ānanda, the
true life that is sheer happiness. The being of true life is
happiness. First a man must get over the delusion that he is the
body, and realize that he is consciousness using the body. He has a
body. Then, later on, he must realize that he is not the powers of
consciousness, but that he simply
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uses these. Then he will be his own true self, ānanda, happiness,
which is the nature of our pure being. But that happiness is one
with consciousness (chit) and being (sat), as the man will find on
reaching illumination; so the world of sat is real, part of his own
true life, and not illusion. Māyā was the practical effect of the
mistake (avidyā) by which he confused together, first consciousness
and external being, and then consciousness and his psychological or
internal being.
The analogy of dreaming is employed to illustrate these points. Just
as on waking we realize that our dream was irrational, so on waking
from the dream that we now call waking we shall realize the truth
that will make our present outlook appear irrational. Not that it is
irrational, but that the true vision has the correct data or
perception. Even our present knowledge, it is said, is ignorance, or
better unwisdom, because we are always looking at things with the
eyes of the flesh, while we ought to look at them with the eyes of
the spirit, that is, from the standpoint of the imperishable
consciousness.
The question then arises—what is the best practical way to attain
reality. To this two answers may be given: (1) Realize the infinite
possibilities of every finite experience, and (2) do not mix
yourself with your objects of experience. As to the first, it means
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simply that we can learn from one thing what we can learn from many
things. For example, a man has one mother. If he has learnt to love
that mother, then he is predisposed to love any mother whom he may
meet. He does not need to learn the lesson all over again in
connection with those other mothers. As instructed in the Gītā, by
attending to his own experience a man reaches perfection.
Another instance of the same principle is the use of the human body.
If we had to attain some kind of perfection which involved knowledge
of all things which people are making for themselves by their
"throwing-out," this body would not be enough. In such a case we
should need seven-league boots and a hundred or a thousand arms and
legs instead of only two of each. But this is not the way of the
evolution of life. It can reach its perfection through an ordinary
body with two arms and two legs. It need not have the muscular
system of a professional athlete or the mental capacity of a German
chemist or lexicographer. Realize the infinite possibilities of the
moment's experience, cease to resent any of the experience, and
immediately most of the pain and sorrow that it may contain is
emptied out of it, and it becomes immensely fruitful.
There are two ways in which we may live our lives amidst events of
the world, without retiring at all
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from that world. In both cases the mixing with the world will be the
same, but in one there is real confusion (that is, fusing together)
and in the other merely mixing. For example, if milk and water are
put together it is very difficult to separate them, but if oil and
water are mixed together, although they are together they retain
their individuality. So in relation to the world we are to be like
oil in water, not milk in water. We must distinguish between "the
world," "my world" and "myself"—three things, not two. It is like a
person playing a game of chess. The board is there—my world. The
pieces have been moved into a certain position. A good player does
not become excited and flustered, whether he is winning or losing.
He cannot, in fact, really in himself either win or lose. Even if
his pieces are captured one by one, if he has played the game to the
best of his ability he has developed his faculties, and on the whole
he is a little more likely to profit by a lost than by a won game.
These facts being established, people sometimes raise the academic
question: "Whence comes this ignorance which hides the full
reality?" With regard to this Buddha's advice was: "Sink not the
string of thought into the fathomless." The fact is that we have to
begin our reasoning and our activity from the place in which we find
ourselves. We are apparently
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on a ladder, which goes upwards out of sight. The important thing is
that it goes upwards. But one would not avoid the ultimate question.
The answer to it is that space and time are a creation of
ignorance—they come into being through the "covering-up," and
disappear for us when the covering is removed. How, then, can the
questions, "where" and "whence," which ask for an answer in terms of
time and space, be applied to this matter? Evidently there is some
sort of evolution or unfoldment, but it is not a change in time and
space. That this is so is indicated by the unchanging character of
our feeling of "I" which is the same point of reference in youth and
age, and whether we be here or there, and standing on our heads or
on our feet.
The meditations of Shankara are practical, because they are not
merely thoughts about things, considered as objects, dwelt upon in
the third grammatical person. First, the student must say to
himself, "I am not it"—"it" being the personality, physical and
psychological, composed of body, personal emotions and fixed ideas.
This means not simply the set of "vehicles" as they stand, but also
their habits of action, emotion and thought—the entire personality.
He must put that outside himself. Secondly, he must say, "I am not
you," referring now to that in himself which he would call "you" in
another person—the
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collection of thinkings, lovings and willings or powers of
consciousness. The personality is something that you use—not
something that you are. So also the conscious powers are something
that you use, not something that you are. Thirdly, he must say, "I
am I. I can take up and put down these powers of consciousness. I
can enlarge or reduce them." But in the second stage he must take
care to think of his own ordinary consciousness always as you, never
as it, nor as I, otherwise he will remain in the you, and not reach
the I.
All happiness in life is beyond the limited consciousness and is
experienced when that activity is forgotten. All the delight that
comes from response to beauty, love and truth in the world, and from
the powers of will, love and thought in consciousness, lie in the
Self beyond, when the world and the limited self are forgotten, and
time and space have been swallowed up in something greater, beyond
their limitations. Beyond common consciousness, in a state better
than that limited consciousness, we are, and all clinging to mental
ideas about oneself, pleasurable or not, bars the realization of
that truth. That unchanging I is ānanda, happiness, the one reality.
To know this directly, not by logic, is the high purpose of the
Vedānta.
Footnotes
67:1 Op. cit., 10-12, abridged translation.
75:2 Published by E. P. Dutton and Co., Inc., New York; Rider and
Co., Ltd., London, England; Messrs Payot, Paris (in French), and
Editorial Orion, Mexico City (in Spanish). It gives a clear and
complete exposition of the entire subject.
76:3 See Shrī-Vākhya-Sudhā, 13-19, 35.
76:4 See Viveka-Chudāmani, 113, 115.
79:5 Vivekachūdāmani, 141-146, abridged translation.
79:6 Ibid., 345-348, abridged translation.
from: Great Systems of Yoga