Saturday, 16 May 2026

Avidya

RS Q

 All forms of suffering and their corresponding sources of happiness can be categorised under three headings:—

The only defence and remedy for the first category is forward planning, hard work, financial management and prudent investment and of course a comprehensive insurance policy!

The second category can be dealt with through education, hard work, yoga, healthy diet and training.

The third category requires the greatest effort, and the only remedy is the study of the Vedānta which includes both the disciplines of philosophy and psychology, as well as providing an effective therapeutic methodology.

A comprehensive modern description of Duhkhais:—

Disturbance, irritation, dejection, worry, despair, fear, dread, anguish, anxiety; vulnerability, injury, inability, inferiority; sickness, aging, decay of body and faculties, senility; pain/pleasure; excitement/boredom; deprivation/excess; desire/frustration, suppression; longing/aimlessness; hope/hopelessness; effort, activity, striving/repression; loss, want, insufficiency/satiety; love/lovelessness, friendlessness; dislike, aversion/attraction; parenthood/childlessness; submission/rebellion; decision/indecisiveness, vacillation, uncertainty.

(Francis Story in Suffering, in Vol. II of The Three Basic Facts of Existence.)

The Existential Paradigm.

Since the pursuit of abiding and stable happiness seems to be illusive and unsubstantial we begin our quest by investigating what the root cause of suffering/dis-ease/discontent is.

The answer that Vedānta offers is as follows:—

  1. avidya

Root ignorance, not knowing one’s true identity. The problem is our cognitive error. We all want to be someone, to be acknowledged to be validated and to “belong.” We seek meaning through our identities that we assume and the roles which we play.

2. asmitā

“Notion of individuality” arises which in the extreme form excludes others. The myriad of identities which we cling to are based upon gender, family relationships, friends, peer-groups, race, religion, profession, interests, possessions, political affiliations etc. etc.

3. rāga

Attraction, craving or passion develops towards anyone or anything that supports, enhances or validates the chosen identities.

4. dveśa

Repulsion, aversion towards anything or anyone who negates, challenges or invalidates our chosen role.

5. abhiniveśa

Total immersion in our own psycho-dramas! Clinging, grasping, clutching, attachment to our identities, roles, possessions, family, friends etc. that give us identity and meaning.

A

What you’ve written is essentially a Vedāntic + yogic diagnosis of human suffering, presented in a modern psychological frame. It closely parallels classical Indian philosophy, especially Vedanta and also the Yoga Sūtras of Patañjali.

I’ll organize it so the structure becomes clearer and internally consistent.


1. The three categories of suffering (as implied framework)

Your text divides human problems into three levels:

(1) External / material suffering

  • accidents, financial loss, environment, physical insecurity
  • solutions: planning, insurance, economics, prudence

This corresponds to objective world-management (artha level).


(2) Psychophysical / lifestyle suffering

  • illness, stress, fatigue, imbalance, emotional instability
  • solutions: education, discipline, yoga, diet, training

This corresponds to body–mind optimization (dharma/health level).


(3) Existential / identity suffering

  • “Who am I?”
  • meaninglessness, anxiety, fear, inner incompleteness
  • cannot be solved by external improvement

This is the central concern of Vedānta:

suffering rooted in misidentification of the Self


2. Modern description of duḥkha

The long list you included is important philosophically because it shows a key Vedāntic claim:

duḥkha is not just pain—it is the entire structure of unstable experience

It includes:

  • emotional fluctuations (anxiety, boredom, despair)
  • relational instability (love/loneliness)
  • existential oscillations (hope/hopelessness)
  • biological decay (aging, sickness)

So duḥkha = condition of impermanent, conditioned existence

This aligns with the analysis found in the Bhagavad Gita and Upanishadic teachings.


3. The causal chain you listed

You then present a psychological model:

1.

avidyā (ignorance)

Not knowing one’s true nature.

  • This is the root in Vedānta
  • “I am this body–mind–role” instead of awareness itself


2.

asmitā (I-am-ness / ego identity)

A constructed sense of individuality:

  • “I am this type of person”
  • identity based on roles, labels, possessions

This is not just ego in a moral sense—it is the basic sense of separateness.


3.

rāga (attachment / attraction)

  • movement toward things that reinforce identity
  • “This supports who I think I am”


4.

dveṣa (aversion)

  • rejection of anything that threatens identity
  • “This contradicts who I think I am”


5.

abhiniveśa (clinging / existential grip)

  • deep instinct of self-preservation of identity structure
  • fear of loss, death, irrelevance
  • psychological tightening around “me and mine”


4. What this model is really saying

Stripped to its core:

Suffering is not primarily caused by the world, but by identification with a limited identity structure inside experience

So the logic is:

  • Reality changes → unstable
  • Identity clings → demands stability
  • Conflict → duḥkha


5. How Vedānta resolves it (implied direction)

Vedānta’s solution is not “fix the content of life,” but:

  • investigate the seer (witness) of experience
  • separate:
    • changing objects (body, mind, world)
    • unchanging awareness (Ātman)

When identification loosens:

  • rāga/dveṣa weaken
  • abhiniveśa reduces
  • duḥkha is not eliminated by control, but by re-identity


6. Important clarification

This framework is powerful, but it’s important not to misread it as:

  • “stop caring about life”
    or
  • “detach from everything practically”

Classical Vedānta is subtler:

it does not reject life—it reinterprets what you are in relation to life

Action, ethics, relationships remain, but without the assumption:

“this is what defines me”


If you want, I can map this directly onto:

  • the 8-limbed Yoga psychology (Patañjali)
  • or the Chidābhāsa / Jīvātman model you asked earlier
  • or  show how this connects back to Gita 2.14 and 3.22 as lived psychology rather than scripture alone

RSQ

 This blog is dedicated to teaching the basic principles of Vedanta philosophy. For a more in depth study you will need to study the original texts and the vast literature available on the topic.

I suggest you thoroughly learn and memorise each post before proceeding to the next so as to build a solid and comprehensive and integrated foundation.

THE Vedānta system of philosophy is the heart of modern Hinduism which is properly known as sanātana dharma — the “Eternal Path”.

This system of philosophy[1] commonly referred to as the Vedānta — composed of Veda = knowledge and Anta = end; literally refers to “the end of the Vedas or final conclusion of knowledge”.

The corpus of the Vedas[2] consist of four major divisions[3] the last sections of each Veda are the texts known as the Upanishads and their central topic of investigation is the Ground of Being, or Ultimate Reality called Brahman[4].

The Vedānta is technically classified as Uttara-MimāmsaUttara means "last''; Mimāmsa means "investigation, examination, discussion, or consideration"; therefore, the Ultimate Conclusion of the Vedas.

Before beginning the introduction to Vedānta proper we need to briefly understand the principles of Pūrva Mīmāṁsa or the “Prior Investigation” - please read the next post.

WHY STUDY PHILOSOPHY?

All sentient beings from an ant to humans are basically driven by 2 forces:—

(1) Self-preservation — (2) Self-propagation

These two are common to all species but Self-actualization is specifically a human pursuit.

The fear of death and extinction and the desire for happiness security and immortality are the two most potent drives.

The Classical Darśanas (Schools of Indian Philosophy) all agree that the ultimate goal of philosophy is the extinction of sorrow and suffering (duḥkha) and achievement of immortal and abiding joy and happiness (mukti or mokṣa).

Yet no matter how much we strive to achieve abiding happiness we are unable to do so. This striving for happiness manifests as the “progress paradox” — today we have more of everything than our grandparents did, yet our levels of happiness seem to be inversely proportional to our material gains. There are seven defects associated with all material pleasures — leading to duḥkha.

1. alpa — their end results are trivial

2. asthira — they are transient and impermanent,

3. asukara — not easily obtained, they require much effort and are time consuming.

4. asukhāvasāna — ultimately ending in grief and disappointments.

5. dukhānvita — accompanied by disappointments and supported only by struggle.

6. anucitam — incompatible with our essential being.

7. abhimāna-mūla — they're based upon a false sense of self and lead to further perpetuation of this delusive sense of identity.

DUḤKHA — Dis-ease/Suffering - the existential problem.


A

This reads like an introductory framing to Vedanta, especially in the Advaita-oriented style: starting from human motivation, diagnosing duḥkha (suffering), and pointing toward mokṣa (liberation) as the final aim.

I’ll unpack the key ideas clearly so you can place them in a structured way.


1. What Vedānta is (in this framing)

  • Vedānta = Veda + anta → “end/conclusion of knowledge”
  • Refers to the philosophical teachings primarily found in the Upanishads
  • Classified as Uttara Mīmāṁsā (“later inquiry”)

So the structure is:

  • Pūrva Mīmāṁsā → ritual action (dharma through Vedic injunctions)
  • Vedānta (Uttara Mīmāṁsā) → inquiry into reality, consciousness, liberation

In short:

Pūrva Mīmāṁsā asks: “What should I do?”
Vedānta asks: “What am I?” / “What is real?”


2. The core metaphysical claim

Vedānta centers on:

  • Brahman = ultimate reality, infinite ground of being
  • Ātman = innermost Self (in Advaita: identical with Brahman)

So the inquiry shifts from external action → inner identity.


3. Why philosophy is introduced this way

The blog’s psychological framing is traditional:

  • All beings seek:
    • survival (self-preservation)
    • continuation (self-propagation)
  • Humans uniquely seek:
    • self-actualization / meaning / permanence

Vedānta reframes this:

The deepest desire is not for objects, but for limitless, permanent happiness (ānanda).

This is why it connects to Bhagavad Gita, which repeatedly says that transient pleasures cannot satisfy the Self permanently.


4. The “progress paradox” idea

This is a modern psychological interpretation:

  • Material progress increases comfort
  • But does not remove existential dissatisfaction

Vedānta interprets this as:

Objects change, but the seeker (the sense of “I”) remains fundamentally unfulfilled because it is searching in the wrong domain.


5. The seven “defects” of pleasure

These points describe classical Vedāntic reasoning:

Material enjoyment is:

  • temporary (alpa, asthira)
  • effortful (asukhāvasāna, duḥkhānvita)
  • psychologically unstable
  • based on mistaken identity (abhimāna-mūla)

The key philosophical move is:

The problem is not life itself, but identification with limited experience as “I”.


6. The central diagnosis:

Duḥkha

  • Duḥkha = dissatisfaction, stress, existential incompleteness
  • Not just pain, but the background sense of limitation

Vedānta’s radical claim:

Duḥkha is not solved by improving experiences, but by understanding the nature of the experiencer.


7. How this connects forward

This introduction is setting up a progression:

  1. Human dissatisfaction is universal
  2. Material solutions fail to remove it permanently
  3. Therefore inquiry must turn inward
  4. Leading to:
    • analysis of mind (antaḥkaraṇa)
    • distinction between Self and non-Self
    • realization of Brahman/Ātman identity


If you want, I can  map this into a clean “Vedānta roadmap” (step-by-step from beginner → Upanishads → Gita → Advaita reasoning) or  connect it directly to the Chit-chhāyā / Jīvātman model you asked about earlier, because they fit tightly together.