VISISTADVAITA


Meaning of VISISTADVAITA in English

(Sanskrit: Nonduality of the Qualified), one of the principal schools of Vedanta, an orthodox philosophy of India. This school grew out of the Vaisnava (worship of the god Vishnu ) devotional movement prominent in South India from the 7th century on. One of the early Brahmans (class of priests) who began to guide the movement was Nathamuni (10th century), head priest of the temple at Srirangam (in modern Tamil Nadu state). He was succeeded by Yamuna (11th century), who wrote some philosophic treatises but no commentaries. The most towering figure is his successor, Ramanuja, or Ramanujacarya (master Ramanuja, c. 10501137), who wrote commentaries on the Brahma-sutras (the Sribhasya, Beautiful Commentary) and on the Bhagavadgita; and a treatise on the Upanisads, the Vedarthasamgraha (Summary of the Meaning of the Veda). Ramanuja was the first of the Vedanta thinkers who made the identification of a personal God with the Brahman of the Upanisads and the Vedanta-sutras the cornerstone of his system. As a personal God, Brahman possesses all the good qualities in a perfect degree, and Ramanuja does not tire of mentioning them. He interprets the relationship between the unitary and infinite Brahman and the plural and finite world in a novel way, which, however, has some support in the Upanisads. For him the relation between the infinite and the finite is like that between the soul and the body. Hence nonduality is maintained, while differences can still be stated. Soul and matter are totally dependent on God for their existence, as is the body on the soul. God has two modes of being, as cause and as product. As cause, he is in his essence qualified only by his perfections; as product, he has as his body the souls and the phenomenal world. There is a pulsating rhythm in these periods of creation and absorption. For Ramanuja, release is not a negative separation from transmigration, or series of rebirths, but, rather, the joy of the contemplation of God. This joy is attained by a life of exclusive devotion (bhakti) to God, singing his praise, performing adulatory acts in temple and private worship, and constantly dwelling on his perfections. God will return his grace, which will assist the devotee in gaining release. Visistadvaita flourished after Ramanuja, but a schism developed over the importance of God's grace. For the southern, Sanskrit-using school, the Vadakalai, God's grace in gaining release is important, but man himself should make his best efforts. This school is represented by the thinker Venkatanatha, who was known by the honorific name of Vedantadesika (Teacher of Vedanta). The northern, Tamil-using school, the Tenkalai, holds that God's grace alone is necessary. The influence of Visistadvaita spread far to the north, where it played a role in the devotional renaissance of Vaisnavism, particularly under the Bengal devotee Caitanya (14851533). In southern India the philosophy itself is still an important intellectual influence.

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