 | Nondualism: Encyclopedia II - Nondualism - Nondual religious and spiritual traditions
Nondualism - Nondual religious and spiritual traditions
Nondualism - Zen
Zen, either in isolation or as a spiritual belief (Zen Buddhism), is a tradition or philosophy which is non-dual. It can be considered a religion, a philosophy, or simply a practice depending on one's perspective. It has also been described as a way of life, work, and an art form.
Nondualism - Buddhism
In the Buddhist canon, the Diamond Sutra presents an accessible nondual view of "self" and "beings", while the Heart Sutra asserts shunyata — the "emptiness" of all "things". The fullest philosophical exposition is the Madhyamaka; by contrast many laconic pronouncements are delivered as koans. Advanced views and practices are found in the Mahamudra and Maha Ati, which emphasize the vividness and spaciousness of nondual awareness.
Mahayana Buddhism, in particular, tempers the view of nonduality (wisdom) with respect for the experience of duality (compassion) — ordinary dualistic experience, populated with selves and others (sentient beings), is tended with care, always "now". This approach is itself regarded as a means to disperse the confusions of duality (i.e. as a path). In Theravada, that respect is expressed cautiously as non-harming, while in the Vajrayana, it is expressed boldly as enjoyment (especially in tantra).
Nondualism - Dzogchen
Dzogchen is a relatively esoteric (to date) tradition concerned with the "natural state", and emphasizing direct experience. This tradition is found in the Nyingma tradition of Tibetan Buddhism, where it is classified as the highest of this lineages nine yanas, or vehicles of practice. Similar teachings are also found in the non-Buddhist Bön tradition. In Dzogchen, the primordial state, the state of nondual awareness, is called rigpa.
Nondualism - Advaita
Advaita (Sanskrit a, not; dvaita, dual) is a nondual tradition from India, with Advaita Vedanta as its philosophical arm. The theory was first consolidated by Sri Adi Shankaracharya in the 8th century AD. Adherents to this theory of the nature of the soul (Brahman) are known as Smartha's.
According to Ramana Maharshi, the jnani (one who has realised the Self) sees no individual ego, and does not regard himself (or anyone else) as a "doer" of actions. The state of recognition is called jnana which means "knowledge" or "wisdom" reffering to the idea that in this state of being, one is constantly aware of the Self. Bob Adamson (Melbourne, Australia), once a student of Nisargadatta Maharaj who belonged to the Navanath Sampradaya lineage says that a 'Jnani' is the 'knowing presence' which abides with all (of us) yet this knowing is seemingly covered over by identification with the 'minds content'. However, teachers like Adamson point to the fact that the content of the mind is known, recognized by a prescence or awareness that is independent of the minds content. Adamson teaches that we form an idenity based on the content of the mind (feelings, sensations, hopes, dreams, thoughts), however our true identify or nature is that which observes all of these things- the seer, the witness or the Self.
Nondualism - Taoism
Taoism's wu wei (Chinese wu, not; wei, doing) is a term with various translations (e.g. inaction, non-action, nothing doing, without ado) and interpretations designed to distinguish it from passivity. From a nondual perspective, it refers to activity that does not imply an "I".
Nondualism - Sufism
Sufism (Arabic تصوف taṣawwuf) is a mystic tradition of Islam based on the pursuit of spiritual truth as it is gradually revealed to the heart and mind of the Sufi (one who practices Sufism).
The central doctrine of Sufism, sometimes called Wahdat al-Wujud or Unity of Being, is the Sufi understanding of Tawhid. Put very simply Tawhid states that all phenomena are manifestations of a single reality, or Wujud (being), which is indeed al-Haq (Truth, God). The essence of being/Truth/God is devoid of every form and quality, and hence unmanifest, yet it is inseparable from every form and phenomenon either material or spiritual. It is often understood to imply that every phenomenon is an aspect of Truth and at the same time attribution of existence to it is false. The chief aim of all Sufis then is to let go of all notions of duality (and therefore of the individual self also), and realize the divine unity which is considered to be the truth.
Other related archivesA Course in Miracles, Adi Shankaracharya, Advaita, Advaita Vedanta, Asia, Aurobindo, Baruch Spinoza, Bhartrhari, Brahman, Buddhist, Bön, David R Hawkins, Diamond Sutra, Dzogchen, Eckhart Tolle, Enlightenment, F. H. Bradley, Gaudapada, Heart Sutra, Hildegard of Bingen, Hinayana, Islam, John of the Cross, Kahlil Gibran, Ken Wilber, Lao Tzu, Madhyamaka, Maha Ati, Mahamudra, Mahatma Gandhi, Mahayana, Meister Eckhart, Nagarjuna, Nisargadatta Maharaj, Nyingma, Oneness, Plotinus, Ramana Maharshi, Ramesh Balsekar, Richard Bach, Sanskrit, Schelling, Shankaracharya, Smartha's, Stuart Davis, Sufism, Taoism, Teresa of Avila, Theravada, Tibetan Buddhism, Vajrayana, Yajnavalkya, Zen, Zen Buddhism, advaita, deconstruction, dichotomy, distinction, dualism, duality, experience, ineffable, jnana, koans, matter, mind, monism, perspective, philosophical, pluralism, postmodern, postmodern feminism, problematization, realization, religious, rigpa, shunyata, subject-object, tantra, theory
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