A Study of the Bhagavadgita :10-2. Swami Krishnananda.

 ===============================================================


===============================================================

Saturday, March 05, 2022. 19:00.

Chapter-10. The Hidden Meaning of the Seventh Chapter of the Gita-2.

===============================================================



When we were discussing the Sankhya doctrine of the Second Chapter, we had occasion to digress into the details of Sankhya cosmology. This detail is not to be found in the Second Chapter; only the word ‘Sankhya' is used, and it is said that Sankhya is essential. Arjuna was lacking knowledge of Sankhya, on account of which he could not be an expert in the Yoga of action. But it is good to have at least some idea of the outline of the entire process of cosmic creation, which you remember as it has been told to you.


Now the Gita takes up this very subject in the Seventh and Eighth Chapters, etc. – the cosmic evolutionary process, the structure of the universe. The description of this reality of the universe becomes necessary for the purpose of enlightening the individual already perfected through the first six chapters for direct communion with the cosmic 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Srimad Bhagavad Geeta : Chapter-7. Slokam-4.


"Bhumir-apo ’nalo vayuh kham mano buddhir eva cha

ahankara itiyam me bhinna prakritir ashtadha."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Translation :

bhūmiḥ—earth; 

āpaḥ—water; 

analaḥ—fire; 

vāyuḥ—air; 

kham—space; 

manaḥ—mind; 

buddhiḥ—intellect; 

eva—certainly; 

cha—and; 

ahankāraḥ—ego; 

iti—thus; 

iyam—all these; 

me—my; 

bhinnā—divisions; 

prakṛitiḥ—material energy; 

aṣhṭadhā—eightfold.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BG 7.4 :Slokam Meaning :


" Earth, water, fire, air, space, mind, intellect, and ego—these are eight components of My material energy."

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Commentary :


The energy that composes this material world is incredibly complex and fathomless. To make it comprehensible to our finite intellect, we have classified it into various categories and sub-categories.  Modern science propagates matter to be a combination of elements, and the 118 elements discovered so far, are sectioned under the Periodic Table.


However, the Vedic philosophy and the Bhagavad Gita present a profoundly different classification of the material world. Matter is considered as part of God’s energy and called prakṛiti. It is further divided into eight forms, as listed in this verse. It is amazing how insightful the knowledge in these ancient scriptures is in comparison to the developing trends in modern science.


Albert Einstein was the first to propound the concept of Mass-Energy Equivalence in 1905. In his Annus Mirabilis papers, he stated that it is possible to convert mass into energy and numerically presented it by an equation E=mc2. His Theory of Relativity replaced an earlier concept of the universe made of solid matter. Both these theories were challenged in 1920 by Niels Bohr and other scientists with Quantum Theory, which proposes a dual particle-wave nature of matter. Ever since, the scientific community has been on the lookout for a single field or Unified Field Theory, which could expound on the relationship between matter and all forces of the universe.


More than 5000 years ago, long before the development of modern science, Lord Krishna had disclosed the perfect Unified Field Theory. He said to Arjun, “All that exists in the universe has manifested from My material energy.” Just one material energy has extended itself into myriad shapes, forms, and entities of this world. 

The Taittirīya Upaniṣhad has elaborated on this:


tasmadvā etasmādātmana ākāśhaḥ sambhūtaḥ

ākāśhādvāyuḥ vāyoragniḥ agnerāpaḥ adbhyaḥ pṛithivī

pṛithivyā oṣhadhayaḥ oṣhadhībhyo ’nnam annātpuruṣhaḥ

sa vā eṣha puruṣho ’nnarasamayaḥ   (2.1.2)


"From My material energy the ākāśhaḥ (ether) was created, from ether the air; from air, fire; from fire, water; from water, earth; from earth, plants; from plants, food and from food, man. This man is made of food-essence."


The material energy in its primordial form is called prakṛiti. God glances at it when He wishes to create the world. His glance agitates and creates mahān. (There is no equivalent word for it in English, as modern science is yet to discover such a subtle level of energy) Mahān further manifests into ahankār even this is unknown to modern science. Ahankār, in turn, forms the pañch-tanmātrās or the five perceptions of – taste, touch, smell, sight, and sound. And from these, the five gross elements— space, air, fire, water, and earth manifest.


Lord Sri Krishna includes the mind, intellect, and ego along with the five gross elements as different manifestations of His material energy. In this verse, He states that all these eight elements are simply parts of Maya, His material energy. In the next verse, He describes another of His superior energy; the soul energy.


In our description of the Sankhya cosmology, we noted there is Purusha, Prakriti, Mahat, Ahamkara, and a threefold distribution of force into the adhyatma, the adhibhuta, and the adhidaiva which is between; the adhibhuta was constituted of the elements, or tanmatras, called shabda, sparsha, rupa, rasa, gandha, and the elements prithvi, jala, tejo, vayu, akash – earth, water, fire, air and ether.

Next -But there is something above them. That is the Supreme Purusha. (Gita 7.5). 

To be continued...


================================================================

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Stabilising the Mind in God: The Twelfth Chapter of the Bhagavadgita-2. Swami Krishnananda

The Teachings of the Bhagavadgita - 8.1. Swami Krishnananda.

Gita : Ch-7. Slo-26.