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« : 21.11.2010 11:21:45 » |
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Rtam-bharaa prajñaa (usein nykyään muodossa pragyaa, joka vastaa paremmin modernia ääntämystä) tarkoittanee kirjaimellisesti 'totuutta-kantava tietoisuus'.
Se viittaa ainakin yoga-suutraan I 48:
Rtam-bharaa tatra prajñaa
Adverbi 'tatra' on viittaus edelliseen suutraan, I 47
nirvicaara-vaishaaradye 'dhyaatma-prasaadaH.
Noh, saMprajñaata-samaadhissa on Patañjalin mukaan neljä eri tasoa, karkeimmasta hienoimpaan:
vitarka vicaara aananda asmitaa
Ainakin kahden ekan välissä on kai jonkinlainen siirtymävaihe, jota ilmaisee prefiksi 'nir':
nirvicaara (ilman vicaaraa, lausu vitshaaraa)
Åbo Akademin uskontotieteen dosentti Måns Broo kääntää tuon suutran I 47 seuraavasti:
Ei-pohtivassa menestyttyä sisäisen itsen kirkkaus.
Teosofi I. K. Taimnin käännös:
On attaining the utmost purity of the nirvicaara stage (of samaadhi) there is the dawning of the spiritual light.
Måns'in käännös I 48:aan
Siinä ymmärrys on totuutta kantava.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi kommentoi tuota nirvicaaraan perustuvaa Rtambharaa - tasoa seuraavasti:
Ritam from MMY View (1966 Kumbah Mela)
" There was that point some day to express more clearly what ritam bhara pragya is. Ritam means satyam. Satyam means `truth`. Bhara (...?) which accepts only the truth. That state of intellect which only accepts the truth, or which only reflects the truth. In that state only the truth is reflected.
That ritam bhara pragya is that state of intellect, which conceives or perceives things as they are. In that state of celestial experience, if Krishna comes, then he is real Krishna. If Shiva comes, he is real Shiva. If Divine Mother comes, she is real Divine Mother. There is no mental hallucination, there is no other than the real form in that perception.
Until that thing has happened we don't want to desire to see anything. Otherwise, much before that state is gained, you could desire and something flashes, but there won't be the guarantee for truth of it. Something may be right, something may be wrong. Therefore we don't think to see anything until the celsetial vision becomes clear.
And once that is clear, anything could be seen in that state. We desire something and it is there in its true colour. There won't be any mistake in there."
------------------------ —Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, 26 July 1971 Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
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