
Vivekacūḍāmaṇi – Summary, by Acharya Tadany
Class 126
Date: July 1, 2026
In this class, Acharya Tadany continued the analysis of anātmā (the not-self) through śloka 122, presenting Śaṅkarācārya’s systematic framework and addressing the Sāṅkhya philosophical background.
The 24 Tattvās (Sāṅkhya Framework)
Śaṅkarācārya adopts the Sāṅkhya system of 24 principles (caturviṃśati tattvāni) with important Vedāntic modifications:
- Māyā (also called Mūla-Prakṛti, Avyakta, Avidyā, or Śakti) — The root cause, the fundamental matter-energy principle.
- Mahat-tattva — The cosmic intelligence, the first product of Māyā.
- Ahaṅkāra — The ego principle.
- 16 Tattvās from Ahaṅkāra: 10 sense organs (daśa indriyāṇi), 5 subtle elements (pañca tanmātras), and the mind (manas).
- 5 Gross Elements (pañca sthūla bhūtāni) — Evolved from the subtle elements.
This totals 24 tattvās: 1 (Māyā) + 1 (Mahat) + 1 (Ahaṅkāra) + 16 + 5 = 24.
Māyā and Māyā Kāryam
Śaṅkarācārya defines the entire material universe as “Māyā and all its products”. Māyā is the cause (kāraṇam), while the other 23 tattvās are effects (kāryam). All 24 tattvās together constitute anātmā — everything that is not the Self. Their essential nature is jaḍa (inert, insentient).
Asat vs Sat: The Vedāntic Perspective
While Sāṅkhya views both Prakṛti (matter) and Puruṣa (consciousness) as equally real (dualism), Advaita Vedānta asserts that only consciousness (Ātmā/Brahman) is ultimately real (sat). Matter (anātmā/Māyā and all its products) is asat — meaning mithyā (having practical/transactional reality but no independent existence).
The Mirage Analogy (Maru-Marīcikā-Kalpam)
Śaṅkarācārya uses the analogy of a desert mirage to illustrate the nature of anātmā. A mirage is experienced and appears real, but has no substance of its own. Similarly, worldly accomplishments seem attractive and fulfilling from a distance, but cannot provide lasting peace, happiness, or fulfillment.
Consciousness vs Energy: A Critical Distinction
Acharya Tadany clarified that consciousness is not a form of energy. Energy is a subtle form of matter (jaḍa), subject to modification (savikāra). Consciousness is nirvikāra (unchanging) and cetana (sentient, self-aware). This distinction is crucial to avoid the common error of pursuing “energy alignment” as a path to self-realization.
Practical Application: Vairāgya and Purposeful Living
Vedānta does not advocate renouncing worldly pursuits. One can continue to achieve goals and enjoy life, but with the correct understanding that anātmā cannot provide ultimate fulfillment. This wisdom naturally leads to vairāgya (dispassion) — not through forced renunciation, but through clear vision.
Key Takeaways
- The entire universe, including Māyā and all its products, is anātmā.
- Only consciousness (Ātmā/Brahman) is ultimately real (sat); matter is mithyā.
- The mirage analogy shows that worldly accomplishments cannot provide lasting fulfillment.
- The discrimination between Ātmā and Anātmā (ātma-anātma viveka) is the foundation of spiritual progress.
Tadany Um refúgio para a alma e um convite à consciência.
