Avidyā (Hinduism)

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Template:Short description Template:For Template:Hindu philosophy Avidyā is a Sanskrit word that can translate as ignorance, misconceptions, misunderstandings, or incorrect knowledge; it is the opposite of Vidya.<ref name=mmwp918/> It is used extensively in Hindu texts, including the Upanishads, and in other Indian religions such as Buddhism and Jainism, particularly in the context of metaphysical reality.<ref name=alexwayman21/><ref name=ryanjones57/><ref name="GombrichScherrer2008p209">Template:Cite book</ref>

Avidyā, in all Dharmic systems, represents fundamental ignorance and misperception of the phenomenal world.<ref name=ryanjones57/> However, the Indian religions disagree on the details, for example with Hinduism considering a denial and misconceptions of Atman (soul, self) as a form of Avidya, and Buddhism considering the denial and misconceptions of An-atman (non-soul, non-self) as a form of Avidya.<ref name=alexwayman21/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Etymology and meaning

Avidyā (अविद्या) is a Vedic Sanskrit word, and is a compound of "a" and "vidya", meaning "not vidya". The word vidya is derived from the Sanskrit root Vid, which means "to know, to perceive, to see, to understand".<ref name=mmwp918>Template:Cite book</ref> Therefore, avidya means to "not know, not perceive, not understand". The Vid*-related terms appears extensively in the Rigveda and other Vedas.<ref name=mmwp918/> Avidya is usually rendered as "ignorance" in English translations of ancient Indian texts, sometimes as "spiritual ignorance".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The word avidyā is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *weid-, meaning "to see" or "to know". It is a cognate of Latin vidēre (which would turn to "video") and English "wit".

While Avidya found in Indian philosophies is translated as "ignorance", states Alex Wayman, this is a mistranslation because Avidya means more than ignorance. He suggests the term "unwisdom" to be a better rendition.<ref name=alexwayman21>Template:Cite journal</ref> The term includes not only ignorance out of darkness, but also obscuration, misconceptions, mistaking illusion to be reality or impermanent to be permanent or suffering to be bliss or non-self to be self (delusions).<ref name=alexwayman21/> Incorrect knowledge is another form of Avidya, states Wayman.<ref name=alexwayman21/>

Avidya represents fundamental ignorance, state Jones and Ryan, a misperception of the phenomenal world.<ref name=ryanjones57>Template:Cite book</ref> In Hinduism, Avidya includes confusing the mundane reality to be the only reality, and it as a permanent though it is ever changing.<ref name=ryanjones57/> Its doctrines assert that there is a spiritual reality consisting of Atman-Brahman, one that is the true, eternal, imperishable reality beyond time.<ref name=ryanjones57/><ref>[a] M Hiriyanna (2000), The Essentials of Indian Philosophy, Motilal Banarsidass, Template:ISBN, pp. 25, 160-161;
[b] Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty (1986), Dreams, Illusion, and Other Realities, University of Chicago Press, Template:ISBN, pages 118-119</ref><ref name=lynnfoulston14>Lynn Foulston and Stuart Abbott (2009), Hindu Goddesses: Beliefs and Practices, Sussex Academic Press, Template:ISBN, pages 14-16</ref>

In the Vedic texts and Upanishads

Avidya in the earliest Vedic texts is ignorance, and in later Vedic texts evolves to include anything that is a "positive hindrance" to spiritual or nonspiritual knowledge.<ref name=scharfstein376/> In the Upanishads, the concept includes "lack of knowledge, inadequate knowledge and false knowledge".<ref name=scharfstein376>Template:Cite book</ref>

Isha Upanishad refers to vidya and avidya in verses 9-11:

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It's far different from knowledge, they say, Different also from ignorance, we're told- so have we heard from wise men, who have explained it to us.

Template:PbKnowledge and ignorance- a man who knows them both together, Passes beyond death by ignorance, and by knowledge attains immortality.{{#if:|

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Wallowing in ignorance, but calling themselves wise, thinking themselves learned, the fools go around, staggering about like a group of blind men, led by a man who is himself blind.{{#if:|

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Wallowing in ignorance time and again, the fools imagine, "We have reached our aim!" Because of their passion, they do not understand, these people who are given to rites"{{#if:|

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In Yoga Darsana

Avidya is described in the Yoga Sutras by Patanjali, as the first of the five kleshas, the knots of affliction, and the productive field of all them that follow.<ref>Yoga Sutras, II.4</ref> In Yoga Sutras II.5, Patanjali defines Avidya as confusing the nature of the soul with the body:Template:Sfn

अनित्याशुचिदुःखानात्मसु नित्यशुचिसुखात्मख्यातिरविद्या॥ ५॥
Template:IAST
Ignorance is the notion that takes the self, which is joyful, pure, and eternal, to be the nonself, which is painful, unclean, and temporary.Template:Sfn

In Yogra Sutras II.2, Patanjali gives Kriya yoga as a method for overcoming Avidya and other klesas.Template:Sfn

In Advaita Vedanta

Template:Refimprove section The effect of avidya is to suppress the real nature of things and present something else in its place. In effect it is not different from Maya (pronounced Māyā) or illusion. Avidya relates to the individual Self (Ātman), while Maya is an adjunct of the cosmic Self (Brahman). In both cases it connotes the principle of differentiation of an experienced reality into the subject ('I') and an object, as is implicit in human thinking. Avidya stands for that delusion which breaks up the original unity (refer: nonduality) of what is real and presents it as subject and object and as doer and result of the deed. What keeps humanity captive in Samsara is this avidya. This ignorance, "the ignorance veiling our true self and the truth of the world",<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> is not lack of erudition; it is ignorance about the nature of 'Being' (Sat). It is a limitation that is natural to human sensory or intellectual apparatus. This is responsible for all the misery of humanity. Advaita Vedanta holds that the eradication of it should be humanity's only goal and that will automatically mean realisation of the Self (Ātman).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Adi Shankara says in his Introduction to his commentary on the Brahma Sutras, Template:Quote

In the view of his later followers, avidya cannot be categorized either as 'absolutely existent' or as 'absolutely non-existent'.Template:Sfn

See also

References

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Sources