Title: Some%20Additional%20Themes%20(to%20add%20to%20James
1Some Additional Themes (to add to James typology
of mysticism)
- Learning, spiritual pathway, difficulty (like
seeing the sun the first time, it takes getting
used to and focusing your goal a.k.a. telos)
2Some Additional Themes (to add to James typology
of mysticism)
- Mysticism of ascent process includes rigor,
intellect, rationality - Diotima
- Virasaivas
3Some Additional Themes (to add to James typology
of mysticism)
- Gender equality/equity
- Spiritual experiences in general, and mysticism
in particular in the literate traditions, tends
to be an equal opportunity experience! (Diotima,
AkkaMahadevi, Julian of Norwich) - This can extend to issues of class, education,
etc.
4Some Additional Themes (to add to James typology
of mysticism)
- Unconventional nature of spiritual experience
- Questioning convention
- Questioning the status quo
- Questioning the nature of reality itself (i.e.
the images in the cave are not real)
5India Hinduism Basics
6(No Transcript)
7Indian Sphere of Cultural Influence
8Indian Diversity
- There are 16 official languages in India (English
not shown) - Basic division between Sanskritic and Dravidian
language groups - Sanskritic languages are Indo-European (ex.
Hindi) Dravidian languages are not (ex. Tamil) - Multiple scripts create need for transliteration
- systems for consistently transcribing words
between writing systems
9World Religious Systems
- There are three widespread cosmological
frameworks as mentioned before - Indigenous polytheisms and nature-based religions
(includes Greek, Roman, Egyptian, Mesopotamian,
Germanic and Celtic) - Monotheism directed through revelation (Abrahamic
religions of the book Judaism, Christianity,
Islam) - Karmic religions rooted in meditation
ignorance/knowledge paradigm (Hinduism, Buddhism,
Jainism, and most forms of Confucianism and
Taoism)
10Karmic Cosmologies
- Karma literally means action, implying that all
actions, and their consequences, are ultimately
balanced. All action, though, embeds one in a
dangerous web - Karma creates the wheel of samsara the cycle of
birth-death-rebirth-REDEATH - The wheel of samsara is a bad loop like
Groundhog Day, the repetition of lives is a
vicious cycle one should want to escape
11Ignorance and Knowledge
- What those in the west would call sin (and
sinfulness) is understood in karmic cosmologies
as ignorance. - When you put your hand on a hot stove, is that a
sin, or a mistake? - If you burn your hand, you learn not to touch
such places again youve moved from ignorance to
knowledge. - To paraphrase the great medieval Indian
philosopher, Sankara, Action cannot destroy
ignorance, only knowledge can
12Ignorance and Knowledge
- Take the same principle in relation to murder. Is
murder a sin, or a mistake? - Even though your punishment for the mistake of
murder might not be as immediate as a burned
hand, that punishment is certain in a karmic
cosmology (in which no one gets away with
murder). It may take many lifetimes. But you
will be punished.
13Ignorance and KnowledgeCultivating Knowledge
through Discipline
- When you understand this principle, you will want
to escape the wheel of samsara. To do so will
lead to enlightenment. - Yoga is a form of discipline that uses knowledge
and control of the body to dispel ignorance - This is a contemporary sculpture of Siva as the
original practitioner of yoga
14Indus Valley Civilization
- 3000-1500 BCE
- Urban river culture
- Culturally static
- Evidence of yoga, zoomorphic dieties
- Mohenjo-daro and Harrapa principal cities
- Conquered by nomadic Aryans
15Indus Valley Civilization
Daily baths at public pool
Dancing Girl
Small seals are the art form most represented from
Indus Valley
16Yoga in the Indus Valley
- Yogic positions have been found on seals from the
Indus Valley - Both male and female yogi-s were present
- Male yogi-s shown with erect phallus, indicating
combination of ascetic and erotic
17Aryan Invasion
- Nomadic people from steppes of Asia
- Trade routes existed between Indus Valley and
Mesopotamia - Most likely an invasion
18Indo-Aryan Culture and Nomadic Societies
- Not much visual art work
- Religious abstractions and rituals valued
- Military success, and blood rituals involving
animal sacrifice, are documented - Sacred books, called the four Vedas, are
primarily concerned with ritual
19Indo-Aryan Vedic Dieties
- Deities often are meteorological or astrological
in character - Disproportionate representation of male deities
in pantheon - Indra wind god
- Surya sun god
- Sarasvati originally a river goddess
- Gods are not often represented visually at this
time period
20Caste System
- Caste system may have been based on racial
distinctions - Caste system homologized to the hierarchy of the
body
21Two Versions of a Hindu Trinity
- Brahma - Creator god
- Visnu - Sustainer god
- Siva - Destroyer/Creator God
- Devi - a.k.a. Durga/Kali/Parvati - The Goddess -
Sakti, energy
22Brahma
- Creator deity, does not receive much explicit
worship (fewer than five temples in all of India) - Attributes - number of heads, instruments held in
hands - Spoon/scepter for pouring holy oil prayer beads
for measuring time small jar for water as
essence of creation copy of the Rg Veda four
heads (a fifth burned off) four arms
23Visnu (Vishnu)
- Visnu is the deity who sustains the world
- Appears in an embodied form when demons have
gained too much power - These embodiments are called avatar-s there have
been nine so far, with one more enroute - Rama, the hero of the Ramayana, is one of those
avatar-s - Rama, Sita, Laksmana, and Hanuman
24Visnu
- Visnus standard attributes include an umbrella
of cobras, conch-shell trumpet for battlefield
leadership, spinning discus representing time
being sustained, lotus flower representing the
ever-emerging life, and the mace to represent
discipline and strength
25Siva (Shiva)
- Combines opposites Erotic/Ascetic
- Destroyer of the world, often seen as both
creator and destroyer - Most famous iconic representation is Dancing Siva
- Cosmic fire circle surrounds image
- Fire destruction drum (damaru) creation
(time) - One hand signals do not fear, while the other
points to the demon of ignorance being crushed
underfoot
26Ganesa
- Elephant-headed deity
- May demonstrate continuity with Indus Valley
- Auspicious for new enterprises
- Remover of obstacles
- Unites opposites
- Attributes Saivite forehead markings bowl of
sweets an ax to cut through obstacles hand
raised in gesture of peace opening lotus and
most famously, a mouse vehicle
27Durga
- Other gods are so scared, they are hiding in the
clouds! - This nine-armed goddess holds weapons and
attributes - Note how her arms form a circle of movement
28Durga
- Form of Devi, the Goddess
- Manifested to slay Buffalo Demon
- She and her lion mount remain calm while the
demon and its buffalo are slain - and achieve
enlightenment
29Iconic Imagination
- Devi/Durga appears to Siva, Visnu Brahma,
sages - Powers of multiple limbs
- Iconic yet active - Hindu paradox of erotic /
ascetic
30Kali
Name cognate with time Necklace of
skulls Necrophilia Described as the Mad
Mother Represents confluence of birth and
death Represents absolute power of divine She
is, as a deity, a focus of death meditation for
her devotees
31Ramayana
- One of two great Indian epics
- Rama, Sita, Laksmana in the forest exile
32Ramayana
- Building the bridge to Lanka
- Rama, Laksmana, Hanuman and the other monkey
leaders
33Vira-saiva movement
- Vira-saiva, lit. heroic, militant faith in Siva
- Kalyana - city in Karnataka where Vira-saiva-s
met - Allamu Prabhu - leader of Vira-saiva
- Basavanna - older brother, most talented poet
and organizer of group, important civil leader as
well - Anubhavamantapa - The Mansion of Experience where
the Vira-saiva-s met
34Saguna and Nirguna
- Terms from Sanskrit
- Saguna - conditioned
- Divine has attributes, characteristics
- Personal divinity
- Nirguna - unconditioned
- Sacred is abstract, conceived philosophically
- Impersonal
Both are necessary to experience infinitude
within any given religious system
35AkkaMahadevi (ca. 1135-1160)
- Famous Vira-saiva saint and poet
- After leaving marriage, she wandered in search of
other Vira-saiva-s, clothed only in her long hair - Reaching Kalyana, she and Allama Prabhu engaged
in a poetry contest to test her validity as a
mystic - She became an honored member of the
Anubhavamantapa the name akka is an honorific
bestowed by the community, meaning older sister - In the poems that follow, Cennamallikarjuna,
Mallikarjuna, and Lord White as Jasmine are
all synonyms for Siva
36AkkaMahadevi (ca. 1135-1160)
- All the Vedas, scriptures and
- Sacred lore, canons and codes,
- Are but grist and husk ground in the mill.
- Why grind this, why winnow?
- When you behead the mind that
- Flows here and there,
- O Cennamallikarjuna, jasmine-tender,
- There remains eternal space.
37Loves Marvelous Ways
Look at love's marvellous ways if you shoot
an arrow plant it till no feather shows if
you hug a body, bones must crunch and
crumble weld, the welding must vanish Love
is then our lord's love
38Linga imagery
- My heart is pierced with Linga ecstasy
- How, then, can I
- Be part and parcel of Thyself?
- How, then, O Lord, can I unite with Thee?
- Tell me, O Mallikarjuna, where
- I can attain the Absolute,
- With my heart full and overflowing with
- The peace that comes of the supremest bliss.
39Panentheism material immanence
- When I didn't know myself
- where were you?
- Like the colour in the gold,
- you were in me.
- I saw in you,
- lord white as jasmine,
- the paradox of your being
- in me
- without showing a limb.
40The Notion that I know - another AkkaMahadevi
vacana
- The notion that 'I know' must miss the point,
- As sod kicked by the foot must swerve aside.
- The heart, forgetful of the world, engrossed
- In Linga, is sickened of all circumstance.
- Does arrow burnt in fire sport its feather?
- One must unite with Lord Cenna Mallikarjuna,
- As the wind blowing wantonly
- Absorbs the scent.