ॐ साईं राम

तत् त्वम् असि • Love is God • अयम् आत्मा ब्रह्म • Help Ever Hurt Never • ब्रह्मन् • Omnipotent • सर्वं खल्विदं ब्रह्म • Vedas are Breath of God • यद् भावं तद् भवति • Omniscient Love All Serve All • प्रज्ञानम् ब्रह्म • अहम् ब्रह्म अस्मि • God is Love  • Omnipresent

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Brahma-anucintanam Book

Brahma-anucintanam

Brahma-Anucintanam (also spelled Brahmānucintanam) is a philosophical and contemplative text rooted in the tradition of Advaita Vedanta. The term Brahma refers to Brahman, the ultimate, infinite reality in Vedanta philosophy, and Anucintanam means deep contemplation or reflection. Thus, Brahma-Anucintanam literally means “Contemplation on Brahman.”

The text serves as a manual for seekers who wish to attain liberation (moksha) through the constant remembrance, inquiry, and contemplation of Brahman — the formless, changeless, eternal Self that underlies all of existence.


Purpose of the Text

The goal of Brahma-Anucintanam is to help the aspirant shift attention from the world of names and forms to the inner reality, which is pure consciousness. Unlike texts that focus on rituals or devotion to personal gods, this work emphasizes inquiry, discrimination, and inner meditation to realize the non-dual Self.

It’s not merely a philosophical exploration but a practical spiritual guide, aiming to lead the seeker from intellectual understanding to direct realization.


Key Themes and Teachings

  1. Nature of Brahman:
    The text describes Brahman as infinite, formless, indivisible, and beyond time and space. It is the substratum of the universe, the reality that remains even when all else changes. It cannot be grasped by the senses or the mind but is known through direct realization.
  2. The Illusion of the World:
    The world is presented as a projection of maya, the cosmic illusion. Just as a dream seems real while it lasts but disappears upon waking, the world appears real due to ignorance but vanishes upon the dawn of Self-knowledge.
  3. The Self and Brahman Are One:
    The core message of the text aligns with the mahavakya (great Vedic saying) “Tat Tvam Asi” – “That Thou Art.” The individual self (Atman) is not different from Brahman. The appearance of duality is due to ignorance alone.
  4. Need for Contemplation (Anucintanam):
    Mere study of scriptures is not enough. The seeker must constantly reflect upon and meditate on Brahman, until all false identification with the body, mind, and ego drops away. Through deep contemplation, the truth becomes firmly established.
  5. Liberation Through Knowledge:
    Liberation is not something new to be gained, but the removal of ignorance about one’s true nature. The text emphasizes jnana yoga (path of knowledge) as the means to liberation, though it respects other paths as preliminary aids.
  6. Practical Advice:
    The aspirant is encouraged to withdraw the senses, control the mind, renounce desires, and fix the intellect on the Self. One should live with dispassion, discrimination, and constant awareness of Brahman.
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