232 Exceptions to Formal Samyasa

In GÄ«tā III.20 and IV. 15 it is said that Janaka and other ancient worthies sought perfection through action alone. Śaį¹…kara, with his emphasis on Liberation (perfection) through Knowledge alone, has to meet objections based on these texts. Commenting on GÄ«tā II.11, where the teachings begin, he says:

Those of them who were Knowers of truth (tattva-vid) had sought their perfection by Knowledge alone and had now reached the stage of formal saį¹ƒnyāsa: but as Kį¹£atriya kings they would have been already involved in actions. So realizing ā€˜it is guį¹‡a-s acting on guį¹‡a-sā€™, they continued in action for the sake of the other people (loka-saį¹…graha), to fulfil their past karmic involvement (prārabdhatvāt), though they were seeking perfection of Liberation through their Knowledge alone.
Those of them who were not yet Knowers sought perfection through action for self-purification and (then) rise of Knowledge.

Śaį¹…kara explains away the phrase ā€˜by action aloneā€™ in III.20 by glossing it as ā€˜not giving up actionā€™. He also cites the ā€˜thus knowingā€™ of IV.15.

His account under III.20 is nearly the same, except that here (as in other places) he makes it clear that this is no mere theoretical knowledge: he calls them now samyag-darsana-prāpta and a-prāpta. Samyag-dar- śana (Right Vision) is his strongest term for Knowledge-as-experience. He describes these ksatriya Knowers (vidvāį¹ƒsāh) as engaged in going to Liberation (mokį¹£am gantum pravį¹›ittāh) without abandoning action, thus fulfilling their past karmic involvement (prārabdha-karmatvāt).

The explanations under IV. 14 and 15 are similar: the Self-knowers (ātma-jna) or truth-knowers (tattva-vid) are seekers of Liberation (mumuksu) but may continue in activity for the sake of the world

Additional reasons why Knowers may continue in active involvement with the world are given here and there. Under III.21ā€“25, Kį¹›į¹£į¹‡a recommends vigorous action as an example to people at large.

Related to this may be ā€˜to avoid the displeasure of the learnedā€™ (śiį¹£į¹­ha-vigarhaį¹‡ÄparijihÄ«rį¹£Ä) under IV.20. This is probably a reference to Manu, who allows pursuit of Knowledge at any stage of life, but forbids pursuit of Liberation till the ā€˜debtsā€™ to ancestors, etc. have been discharged through a householderā€™s life.

There are blanket phrases like kutas nimitta and kutascit nimitta ā€˜(from) some causeā€™ in the commentary to IV.22: ā€˜… finding that for some reason it is impossible to abandon action.

Again, in VI.31 and XIII.23 there is the phrase about the Knower: ā€˜however he may behaveā€™ (sarvathā vartamāno ā€˜pi); and in V.7 ā€˜though doing, he is not taintedā€™ (kurvann api na lipyate). In these and other cases Śaį¹…kara cites prārabdha-karma, and/or lokasangraha.

There are borderline cases. The instruction to fight ā€˜as an instrumentā€™ is implemented at the end of the GÄ«tā in the consciousness, according to Śaį¹…kara, ā€˜There is nothing for me to doā€™ (na mama kartavyam asti).

It is noteworthy that in his commentary, when enjoining renunciation of actions on a Knower, Śaį¹…kara frequently quotes V.13. In line- for-line translation it would be:

Renouncing all actions by the mind, he sits happily in control,
The embodied in the citadel of nine gates, neither at all acting nor causing to act.

He cites this (sometimes the second line) in his commentary to II.21, III.1, V.19, VI.l, XVIII.10, 48 (twice), and 66.

He explains that an appearance of action remains as a result of unspent karma. He could easily have quoted from the GÄ«tā texts on outer renunciation as a reflection of inner renunciation, for instance XII.19: ā€™silent, content with anything, homeless….ā€™ But he chose this V.13 text, on renunciation by distinguishing mentally between action and non-action, and not necessarily entailing as corollary a physical renunciation. This is an indication of Śaį¹…karaā€™s recognition that the GÄ«tā is mainly a text for those who begin yoga when already heavily implicated in obligations in the world. They are not to be loaded with impracticable injunctions to renounce all physically.

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