Monday, April 13, 2020

That which eventually dies - Chapter 23


Of everything that is in the realm of anatma (अनात्मा) and is confused for the Self or atman (आत्मन्) it is the gross body that is most the conspicuous.  It is referred to as the gross body because it is available for perception by the sense organs. The grossness of an entity is determined by the number of sense organs that can perceive it and the gross body being available for perception by all the sense organs is the grossest. When one identifies very strongly with the attributes of the gross body (gender, complexion, sturdiness or the lack of it, health or the lack of it) one is mistaking the gross body for the Self or atman (आत्मन्). To be able to cognitively separate the attributes of the gross body from the attribute-less atman (आत्मन्) one needs to understand the constituents and composition of the gross body and its attributes and it is for this reason that the student now asks of the teacher that he elaborate on the gross body.

स्थूलशरीरं किम् ?
पञ्चीकृतपञ्चमहाभूतैः कृतं सत्कर्मजन्यं
सुखदुःखादिभोगायतनं शरीरम्
अस्ति जायते वर्धते विपरिणमते अपक्षीयते विनश्यतीति
षड्विकारवदेतत्स्थूलशरीरम् ।

What is the gross body?
That which is made up of the five great elements that have undergone the process of grossification, that which is born as a result of the good actions of the past, that which is the abode of our experiences of happiness, sadness, etc, and that which is subject to six modifications namely; to exist, to be born, to grow, to mature to decay and to die – is the gross body.

Air, water, fire, earth, sky are the five great elements accordingly to the creation models given in the shastras. Here the learned teacher says that these five great elements go through a process of grossification (that shall be explained in detail later in the text) and it the grossified five great elements that the gross body is made up of. We can look at this as the general cause or the samanya karanam (सामान्य करणं). Now if all gross bodies were made up of the five great elements what determines the specific attributes such as gender, species, physical features etc? Shastras seek to explain this using the karma model where in a perpetual cycle all living beings accumulate punyam (पुण्यं) and paapam (पापं) through their actions and the same then guided by the laws of karma results in births and also in all the favourable and unfavourable circumstances one finds oneself in. It is thus that ones satkarma (सत्कर्म) or good deeds becomes the visesha karanam (विशेष करणं) or the special cause of the gross body. The function of this gross body thus born is to act as an ayatanam (आयतनम्) or abode for all the experiences of a living being that come in pairs of opposites.

The gross body is further described as that which goes through 6 modifications - comes into existence as a foetus in a womb, is born and comes into the outer world, grows nourished by food, matures and attains physical vitality, decays with time and dies eventually. ‘I’ the pure Self am a witness to all the modifications that the gross body goes through. ‘I’ am neither born and nor do ‘I’ die. Seeing the gross body thus as merely a medium that one uses to transact with the world and not identifying with it as ‘I’ is the cognitive discrimination one needs to foster.


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The one with 17 parts - Chapter 24

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