- Know what is
Darsana and are Sad Darsanas. Explore each of the Ṣaḍ Darśanas: Many Views, One
Vision.
For many
centuries, Indian thinkers have spoken of the ṣaḍ darśana, or “six views” on reality. This article will explore the concept of darśana, the question of precisely which
views are intended when the term ṣaḍ
darśana is used, and the six views that have come to be accepted as
belonging to this group of perspectives.
What
is Darśana?
Many have spoken
in recent years of the untranslatability of certain Sanskrit terms in any
simple, one-to-one fashion. The
rendering of particular Sanskrit words into English, such as dharma into religion, or śāstra into scripture, inevitably involves a major
distortion of what these words mean in their original contexts: a loss of much
of the original meaning, as well as an addition of connotations never
intended. The word darśana is no exception.
Darśana (or darśan
in modern Indian languages such as Hindi) is derived from the Sanskrit verbal
root dṛś, or “see.” Darśanam
literally means seeing. Building on this foundation, darśana has come to hold two very
specific meanings in Hindu traditions. A very well known meaning of darśana is the act of seeing and being seen by a deity in
the context of worship, usually in a temple.
The deity is present in a mūrti,
or image, which a devotee beholds. A
spiritual communion thus occurs between the devotee and the deity, through the
medium of sight. And such darśana is not limited to the use of mūrtis.
It is also possible to have darśana of a living human teacher, such as one’s guru.
The other
meaning of darśana, more relevant to
our discussion here, is a specific system of ideas used to perceive reality:
that is, a perspective or worldview.
It has become a
common practice to translate darśana,
in reference to this second concept, as philosophy. Here, though, is a case where we see the
problem of distortion if we fail to attend to unwanted nuances that this
translation brings into the conversation.
To the degree that philosophy
has come to refer, in most modern universities, to a purely academic activity
of a highly technical nature, with little or no reference to lived human experience,
this term is an inadequate translation of darśana,
which is always understood to occur within the context of a way of life,
usually (though not always) one aimed at the goal of mokṣa, or liberation from the cycle of rebirth, the highest of the puruṣārthas, the aims of human
existence.
It might
therefore be tempting to translate darśana
as theology; for
theology has come to refer increasingly to any reflection on the basic
questions of life that occurs self-consciously from within the context of a lived
tradition of practice, which is a pretty good account of darśana.
However, due to its long association with the Christian tradition, as
well as to its original Greek meaning, which refers to reflection specifically
on the nature of divinity, many hold a deep aversion to applying this term to
any activity in the Hindu tradition.
In this article,
therefore, I shall utilize the common practice of translating darśana as philosophy, with the proviso that the reference here is not to the denaturalized activity of many contemporary philosophers–particularly Anglophone philosophers, Continental philosophy being far more self-conscious about its location within a reflective tradition–but to philosophia as this was conceived by the ancient Greeks: as not
only an abstract set of cogitations, but as reflection occurring within the
context of a way of life aimed at the realization of the ultimate good. This is a very appropriate translation, which
really does capture the sensibility surrounding the traditional activity of darśana.
What
are the Ṣaḍ Darśanas?
For many
centuries, Indian thinkers who have written about the practice of darśana have referred to ṣaḍ darśana, or six systems of philosophy. However, many more systems of philosophy have
developed in India than this. To speak,
therefore, of the six systems of
Indian philosophy does a major disservice to the Indian philosophical
tradition. There are dozens of systems
of Indian philosophy.
Many scholars
who have written of six darśanas have
used this number, it seems, as a convenient way to limit the purview of
discussion to what they regarded, in their particular times and places, as the
major systems of thought then seen as making serious claims about the nature of
reality: claims which any thinker worthy of the name needed to consider and reflect
upon (even if ultimately rejecting one or more of them).
Probably the
earliest Indian thinker to write about six darśanas
was the Mahāyāna Buddhist philosopher, Bhāvaviveka, who lived in the 5th
century CE. In addition to his own
Madhyamaka system (established by Nāgārjuna), Bhāvaviveka engages with earlier
Buddhist thought (which he labels as Śrāvakayāna
or Hīnayāna), Yogācāra (a Mahāyāna
Buddhist school that developed after Madhyamaka), Vaiśeṣika, Sāṃkhya, Vedānta,
and Mīmāṃsā. An early 6th
century Tamil Buddhist text lists the six darśanas
as Lokāyata, Bauddha (Buddhist), Sāṃkhya, Nyāya, Vaiśeṣika, and Mīmāṃsā. The 8th century Jaina (Jain)
thinker Haribhadra lists them as Bauddha, Nyāya, Sāṃkhya, Jaina, Vaiśeṣika, and
Mīmāṃsā (Pahlajrai, 3).
Again, the basis
for classifying a darśana as one of
the six systems in these works seems simply to be the fact that it is well
known to the author. But at least as
early as the 10th century Advaita Vedānta thinker Vācaspatimiśra,
another way of conceiving of the six darśanas
had emerged. This system of organization
had become commonplace by the nineteenth century, and is presupposed, for
example, by Swami Vivekananda (Complete Works, Volume 3, 397-398).
According to
this system, although there are certainly many more than six schools of Indian
philosophy, six of these schools are regarded as āstika, a word often translated as orthodox. The precise meaning of the word āstika, too, has shifted over time. Today, it most often refers to belief in Īśvara, the Supreme Being, with a nāstika–the opposite of āstika–being an atheist. For the Jain thinker Haribhadra, though, āstika referred to belief in the
principle of karma, the cycle of rebirth, and the possibility of
liberation. In regard to the
categorization of the ṣaḍ darśanas
that has become standard today, however, āstika
means affirming the authority of the Vedas. And because affirmation of Vedic authority is
seen as definitive of Hindu identity, the six āstika systems of philosophy refer to what are now seen as the
Hindu systems of philosophy.
The ṣaḍ darśanas, according to this
categorization, are Sāṃkhya, Yoga, Nyāya, Vaiśeṣika, Mīmāṃsā (Pūrva Mīmāṃsā),
and Vedānta (Uttara Mīmāṃsā). Left out
of this categorization are the systems of philosophy that do not affirm the
authority of the Vedas, such as the various
Buddhist systems, Jainism, and Lokāyata.
Although Buddhism and Jainism affirm the principle of karma, the cycle
of rebirth, and the pursuit of mokṣa (and are therefore, from Haribhadra’s perspective, āstika), they reject Vedic authority, while the Lokāyata system, a
form of ancient Indian materialism, rejects both Vedic authority and the
cosmology of karma, rebirth, and liberation, as well as the existence of
Īśvara.
Exploring
the Ṣaḍ Darśanas: Many Views, One Vision
The six systems
of Hindu philosophy can be further categorized into a set of three pairs, based
on shared assumptions and affinities. These pairings are: Sāṃkhya with Yoga, Nyāya with Vaiśeṣika, and Mīmāṃsā with Vedānta.
Sāṃkhya and Yoga
share a common worldview (with one exception, which we shall discuss below) and
terminology. Nyāya and Vaiśeṣika share
so much in common that they eventually fused into a single system, known as
Nyāya-Vaiśeṣika. Mīmāṃsā and Vedānta
share the fact that both are focused on the interpretation of the Vedas.
Mīmāṃsā, however, focuses upon the earlier karma kanda, the action portion of the Vedas that is concerned primarily with ritual. Vedānta is focused on the later jñāna kanda, or knowledge portion of the
Vedas: the Upaniṣads. In the cases of
Sāṃkhya and Yoga and of Nyāya and Vaiśeṣika, the first member of each pair can
also be seen as having a relationship with the second of theory to
practice. That is, there is a sense in
which Yoga is applied Sāṃkhya, and Vaiśeṣika applied Nyāya.
These systems of philosophy seem originally to have been independent schools of thought, even at times engaging one another polemically, their adherents disagreeing with and critiquing one another’s ideas and approaches. Again, though, beginning at least as early as Vācaspatimiśra, thinkers over the course of the last millennium have come to see these systems as complementary, and as reflecting different, but not wholly incompatible, approaches to different dimensions of a shared reality. This is in keeping with Hinduism as an internally pluralistic system that allows for diverse approaches and interpretations of reality for persons with different bents of mind, akin to the four Yogas as presented by Swami Vivekananda.
Sāṃkhya
is a very ancient system of thought, traced to the sage Kāpila (for whom the city of the Buddha’s upbringing, Kāpilavastu, was named). Sāṃkhya is dualistic. It affirms, in other words, that there are two fundamental types of thing making up reality. These are puruṣa,
or spirit, and prakṛti, meaning
nature or materiality. There are as many
puruṣas as there are living beings. They
are numerically many. Their nature,
however, is one; and this nature is pure consciousness. The puruṣas passively observe the operations
of active prakṛti, or material nature.
Prakṛti is in constant motion, and oscillates through three modes of
being, or guṇas.
These guṇas, or
qualities, are known as sattva, rajas, and tamas. Rajas is the active quality. It could be translated as dynamism. Tamas is inertia. Sattva is a peaceful state of equilibrium between these two. From a spiritual perspective, to be tamasic is the worst state to cultivate, in which one makes no progress, nor has any interest in doing so. A tamasic person–one in whom this quality is predominant–could be called a spiritual “couch potato.” The predominance of rajas causes one to be very active in the world: a better state than tamas, but nonetheless one in need of transcendence. The best of the guṇas is sattva, a calm but alert state in which one can view reality with more objectivity than the desire-driven states of rajas and tamas. Even sattva, though, is to be transcended; for the ultimate goal of Sāṃkhya philosophy is the liberation of the puruṣa, which has become so transfixed with the activities of prakṛti that it has falsely identified itself with them. The most obvious example of this identification is our identification with the physical body, which is itself a bundle of prakṛti.
The reader may
note that no reference has been made in this account of Sāṃkhya to Īśvara, the
Supreme Being. This is because this
system, at least in the preponderance of its texts, is non-theistic.
In
this respect, Sāṃkhya is quite similar to Jainism, which is also a form of dualism
that sees the universe as consisting of countless centers of life and
consciousness (called, in Jainism, jīvas
rather than puruṣas) that are striving for freedom from bondage to materiality
(known as ajīva, the Jain equivalent
of prakṛti). As Andrew Nicholson has
noted, not all Sāṃkhya authors deny the existence of Īśvara (Nicholson
2010). But an understanding of Sāṃkhya
as non-theistic has been the predominant view of most scholarly commentators on
this tradition.
Affirmation (or
not) of the existence of Īśvara is the primary difference between Sāṃkhya and
the Yoga darśana with which it is
traditionally paired. Yoga does affirm the existence of Īśvara, which it
defines as a puruṣa that has never been bound to prakṛti. Īśvara is an ever free being; and
contemplation of Īśvara (Īśvarapraṇidhāna)
is one of the practices that the Yoga system commends for the attainment of
liberation.
Yoga, as
mentioned earlier, could be seen as a practice built upon the Sāṃkhya theory of
the nature of reality. The Yoga darśana accepts the Sāṃkhya worldview,
but adds to this worldview an eight-step or eight-limbed (aṣṭāṅga) system of practice for the purpose of liberating puruṣa
from prakṛti.
These eight steps, as enumerated by the sage Patañjali in his Yoga Sūtra, the root text of this system, are yama, niyama, āsana, prāṇayama, pratyāhāra, dhāraṇā, dhyāna, and samādhi. Yama and Niyama are ethical restraints which
one must master before one even begins the process of meditation. The yamas are nonviolence (ahiṃsā), telling the truth (satya), not stealing (asteya), self-control in all areas of
life, especially in the area of sexuality (brahmacarya),
and detachment (aparigraha). The niyamas are purity (śauca), contentment (santoṣa),
asceticism (tapas), study, including
self-study (svādhyāya), and the
aforementioned contemplation of Īśvara (īśvarapraṇidhāna). Āsana is the posture in which one practices
meditation. Interestingly, given the
complex system of āsanas that are developed in the related system of Haṭha Yoga
(and expanded upon in modern yoga practice),
Patañjali tells us that the only absolute requirements for posture are that one be in a clean and comfortable place and that one keep one’s back straight (to aid breathing). Prāṇayama is control of the breath. Pratyāhāra is control of one’s response to external stimuli. One is gradually withdrawing one’s attention and identification from prakṛti and directing it inwardly, toward the puruṣa, which is one’s real identity. Dhāraṇā consists of concentration on a single object, which is a preparation for Dhyāna, or meditation. The culmination of Dhyāna, is Samādhi, or complete absorption in the object of meditation: the puruṣa.
Samādhi itself
has two modes: savikalpa samādhi,
where there is a residual awareness of the distinction between subject and
object, and nirvikalpa samādhi, where
this distinction has gone completely.
The practitioner is now fully one with the puruṣa.
Turning now to
the next pair of darśanas, Nyāya is a
system of logic and a theory of knowledge (what philosophers call epistemology), and Vaiśeṣika is a
realist account of the nature of the universe revealed to our common
experience. Developed by the sage
Gautama (not to be confused with the sage Siddhārtha Gautama, the Buddha),
Nyāya is focused primarily upon establishing a firm foundation for
knowledge. How do we know what we
know? How do we support the truth claims
that we make? In Indian philosophy a
basis for making a knowledge claim is called a pramāṇa. The various darśanas accept different sets of pramāṇas,
and the pramāṇas that a system of philosophy accepts is one basis for
distinguishing one system from one another.
One principle of
Indian philosophy accepted by all schools is that, when one is debating with an
adherent of another darśana, one
should only use pramāṇas that the other accepts. If, for example, one is an adherent of a
Vedic system debating with a Buddhist or a Jain, citing the authority of the Vedas as the basis for one’s claims will carry no weight with one’s interlocutors. In order to be persuasive, one would need to cite sensory experience or inferential logic–both of which Buddhists and Jains accept–in one’s argument. Nyāya accepts four pramāṇas: sensory
perception (pratyakṣa), inferential
logic (anumāna), comparison (upamāna), and “word” (śabda), which is the speech of an
authoritative person or text (such as the Vedas).
Vaiśeṣika is a
system of cosmology. It describes the
types of entity that make up the world revealed in common experience. The types or category (padārtha) of entity are six in number: substance (dravya), quality (guṇa–bearing a somewhat different meaning than this term carries in Sāṃkhya and Yoga), activity (karma),
universality or generality (sāmānya),
particularity (viśeṣa), and
inherence, or the relation between a quality and a substance (samavāya). Some Vaiśeṣikas add to these six a seventh
category of absence, or non-being (abhāva).
One can already begin to perceive how these various systems, each with its own emphasis and terminology, could be seen either as distinct systems, with potential areas of contradiction and conflict, or as different approaches to a common reality. Again, it is the latter view which eventually held sway among a wide array of Indian philosophers, mostly adherents of the Vedānta tradition, which gradually “absorbed” these systems into itself.
The final two views, Mīmāṃsā and Vedānta, are sometimes referred to as Pūrva Mīmāṃsā and Uttara Mīmāṃsā–or as “earlier interpretation” and “later interpretation,” respectively. Pūrva Mīmāṃsā, as mentioned above, is focused on the interpretation of the earlier portion of the Vedas, which is concerned with ritual
action. Uttara Mīmāṃsā, or Vedānta, is
focused on the interpretation of the later portion of the Vedas, also known as the Upaniṣads,
which is concerned with knowing Brahman, or the Supreme Reality. The name Vedānta
itself refers both to the fact that the Upaniṣads are literally the “end of the Veda” and that the knowledge of Brahman is the ultimate goal or “end” of Vaidika or Vedic thought and practice.
Although they do
not deny the possibility of mokṣa,
the adherents of Mīmāṃsā were not traditionally concerned with this puruṣārtha so much as with the
attainment of more worldly (laukika)
ends through the correct performance of Vedic ritual, or yajña. Some of the greatest philosophical achievements of these Mīmāṃsikas were in the area of linguistics, given the importance of the correct usage of Sanskrit in Vedic practice. In addition to language, with regard to ritual itself, the entire structure–what one might call the “grammar”–of Hindu ritual is based upon Mīmāṃsā principles.
Vedānta, probably the
best known of the darśanas, itself
consists of many diverse schools of thought, each with its own conception of
the relationship of Brahman both to the self and to the world. There is Advaita Vedānta, whose best-known
exponent is the teacher Śaṅkara, which affirms the non-duality of Brahman and
the world. Sarvaṃ khalvidaṃ Brahman: all this, indeed, is Brahman, in the words of the Upaniṣads. There is Viśiṣṭādvaita Vedānta, developed by
Rāmāṇuja, which affirms the identity of Brahman with all of existence, but does
not see the distinctions between self, world, and Īśvara as a mere appearance,
or māyā, but as reflecting real
difference within Brahman. Then there is Dvaita Vedānta, established by Madhva, which affirms a distinction among Īśvara, the living beings (or jīvas–the same term we saw previously in Jainism), and the world. And then there are a variety of systems, such as Bhedābheda, each of which seeks to affirm, in some fashion, both the unity of existence as Brahman, and the reality of the diversity of the world.
Conclusion
Each of these darśanas has added to the richness, and the sum total of the insight, that is available from within the vast field of Indian philosophy. The conclusions reached by each system are the result of the presuppositions and categories with which it begins its inquiry into reality. One may analyze one’s experience in terms of the categories of Sāṃkhya. One may add to that analysis a practice of Yoga, to make the fruits of this analysis concrete in one’s experience. One may apply the logic of Nyāya to the claims that one wishes to make, and that are made by others, in order to sort out real possibilities from things which do not hold together coherently. One may apply the categories of Vaiśeṣika to the analysis of the external world, just as one applies those of Sāṃkhya to one’s inner life. One may perform karma and embody bhakti utilizing the ritual science of Mīmāṃsā. And one may synthesize all of this into a Vedāntic vision of totality.
Each system
contributes its share of insight to form a more complete and ever-unfolding
view of existence.
Works Cited
1. Andrew
Nicholson, Unifying Hinduism: Philosophy
and Identity in Indian Intellectual History (New York: Columbia University
Press, 2010)
2. Prem Pahlajrai, “Doxographies–Why six darśanas? Which six?”
http://faculty.washington.edu/prem/Colloquium04-Doxographies.pdf
3. Swami
Vivekananda, The Complete Works of Swami
Vivekananda (Kolkata: Advaita Ashrama, 1979)
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1. Characteristics
of Indian Philosophy
2. Six systems of
Hindu Philosophy