Vedant
one of the six orthodox systems (darshans) of Indian
philosophy and the one that forms the basis of most modern schools of Hinduism.
The term Vedanta means in Sanskrit the "conclusion" (anta) of the
Vedas, the earliest sacred literature of India; it applies to the Upanishads,
which were elaborations of the Vedas, and to the school that arose out of the
"study" (mimamsa) of the Upanishads. Thus Vedanta is also referred to
as Vedanta-Mimamsa ("Reflection on Vedanta"), Uttara-Mimamsa
("Reflection on the Latter Part of the Vedas"), and Brahma-Mimamsa
("Reflection on Brahma").The three fundamental Vedanta texts are: the
Upanishads (the most favoured being the longer and older ones such as the
Brhadaranyaka, the Chandogya, the Taittiriya, and the Katha); the Brahma-sutras
(also called Vedanta-sutras), which are very brief, even one-word
interpretations of the doctrine of the Upanishads; and the famous poetic
dialogue, the Bhagavadgita ("Song of the Lord"), which, because of
its immense popularity, was drawn upon for support of the doctrines found in
the Upanishads.No single interpretation of the texts emerged, and several
schools of Vedanta developed, differentiated by their conceptions of the nature
of the relationship and the degree of identity between the individual self
(atman) and the absolute (brahma). These range from the nondualism (Advaita;)
of the 8th-century philosopher Shankara to the theism (Vishistadvaita; ) of the
11th-12th-century thinker Ramanuja and the dualism (Dvaita; ) of the
13th-century thinker Madhva.The Vedanta schools do, however, hold in common a
number of beliefs; transmigration of the self (samsara) and the desirability of
release from the cycle of rebirths; the authority of the Veda on the means of
release; that Brahman is both the material (upadana) and the instrumental
(nimitta) cause of the world; and that the self (atman) is the agent of its own
acts (karma) and therefore the recipient of the fruits, or consequences, of
action (phala). All the Vedanta schools unanimously reject both the heterodox
(nastika) philosophies of Buddhism and Jainism and the conclusions of the other
orthodox (astika) schools (Nyaya, Vaishesika, Samkhya, Yoga, and, to some
extent, the Purva-Mimamsa).The influence of Vedanta on Indian thought has been
profound, so that it may be said that, in one or another of its forms, Hindu
philosophy has become Vedanta. Although the preponderance of texts by Advaita
scholastics has in the West given rise to the erroneous impression that Vedanta
means Advaita, the nondualistic Advaita is but one of many Vedanta schools.
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