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{{Short description|Religious movement}}
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{{Distinguish|Neo-Vedanta}}
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'''Neo-Advaita''', also called '''the Satsang-movement'''{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=17}} is a ], emphasizing the direct recognition of the non-existence of the "I" or "ego," without the need of preparatory practice. Its teachings are derived from, but not authorised by, the teachings of the 20th century sage ],<ref group=web name="Frawley"></ref> as interpreted and popularized by ] and several of his western students.{{sfn|Swartz|2008|p=306-307}}
{{Advaita Vedanta}}

'''Neo-Advaita''' is a term used by critics to designate a modern, western form of ] in which the traditional prerequisites of knowledge of the scriptures{{sfn|Davis|2010|p=48}} and "renunciation as necessary preparation for the path of ''jnana''-yoga"{{sfn|Davis|2010|p=48}} have been discarded,{{sfn|Yogani|2011|p=805}} and the inducement of direct experience are emphasized. It has it's origins in the teachings of ], but also the Hindu modernism of ]{{sfn|Smart|2009|p=268}} and Radakrishnan.{{sfn|D'Costa|2000|p=68}} Notable neo-advaita teachers are ] and hist student ].
It is part of a larger religious current called '']'' by ],{{sfn|Versluis|2014}}<ref group=web name="AV-7Q">{{cite web|url=https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/sacredmatters/2015/01/12/seven-questions-for-arthur-versluis/|title=''American Gurus: Seven Questions for Arthur Versluis''|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160417164207/https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/sacredmatters/2015/01/12/seven-questions-for-arthur-versluis/|archive-date=2016-04-17}}</ref> which has its roots in both western and eastern spirituality.{{sfn|Versluis|2014}} Western influences are western esoteric traditions like Transcendentalism, and "], self-empowerment and self-therapy".{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=108-109}}{{sfn|Versluis|2014}}

Neo-Advaita makes little use of the "traditional language or cultural frames of ]",{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=109}} and some have criticised it{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=110}}{{sfn|Lucas|2014}}{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=233}} for its lack of preparatory training,{{sfn|Davis|2010|p=48}}{{sfn|Yogani|2011|p=805}}{{refn|group=note|Alan Jacobs: "What Neo-Advaita presents is the seductive formula that 'there is nothing you can do or need to do, all you have to know is that there is no one there.'",{{sfn|Jacobs|2004|p=81}}}} and regard enlightenment-experiences induced by Neo-Advaita as superficial.{{sfn|Marek|2008|p=10, note 6}}{{sfn|Jacobs|2004|p=82}}{{refn|group=note|Frawley: "nstead of looking into the background and full scope of Ramana’s teachings, there is often only a focus only on those of his teachings that seem to promise quick realization for all."<ref group=web name="Frawley"/>}}

==Teachings==
The basic practice of neo-Advaita is ], via the question "Who am I?",{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=96}} or simply the direct recognition of the non-existence of the "I" or "ego." This recognition is taken to be equal to the Advaita Vedanta recognition of the identity of ] and ], or the recognition of the "Formless Self." According to neo-Advaitins, no preparatory practice is necessary, nor prolonged study of religious scriptures or tradition: insight alone suffices.<ref group=web name="JF"></ref><ref group=web name="trap" /><ref group=web name="Frawley"/><ref group=web name=Conway/>

Poonja, who is credited as one of the main instigators of the neo-Advaita movement, saw this realization as in itself liberating from karmic consequences and further rebirth. According to Poonja "karmic tendencies remained after enlightenment, the enlightened person was no longer identified with them and, therefore, did not accrue further karmic consequences."{{sfn|Gleig|2013|p=194}} According to Cohen, Poonja "insisted that the realization of the Self had nothing to do with worldly behavior, and he did not believe fully transcending the ego was possible."{{sfn|Gleig|2013|p=194}} For Poonja, ethical standards were based on a dualistic understanding of duality and the notion of an individual agent, and therefore were not indicative of "non-dual enlightenment:{{sfn|Gleig|2013|p=194}} "For Poonja, the goal was the realization of the self; the illusory realm of relative reality was ultimately irrelevant."{{sfn|Gleig|2013|p=194}}


==History== ==History==
{{See also|Ramana Maharshi|Self-enquiry}}
Advaita Vedanta can be dated back prior to the common era. It's greatest proponent was ].


According to Lucas{{sfn|Lucas|2011}} and ],<ref group=web name="Frawley"/> the spiritual root of neo-Advaita is Ramana Maharshi, whose teachings, and method of self-inquiry could easily be transposed to North America’s liberal spiritual subculture.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=93}} Popular interest in Indian religions goes as far back as the early 19th century, and was stimulated by the American ]{{sfn|Versluis|2014}} and the ].{{sfn|Renard|2010|p=185-188}}{{sfn|Sinari|2000}} In the 1930s Ramana Maharshi's teachings were brought to the west by ], a Theosophist, in his ''A Search in Secret India''.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=99}} Stimulated by ], in the 1960s Bhagawat Singh actively started to spread Ramana Maharshi's teachings in the USA.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=99}}
The intellectual root of neo-Advaita lies in the reform and emancipation-movements from leading Hindus such as Radakrishnan, Vivekenanda and sri Aurobindo. In the 19th century Hinduism took on a new self-consciousness, in reaction to but also under influence of the British rule.


Since the 1970s western interest in Asian religions has seen a rapid growth. Ramana Maharshi's teachings have been further popularized in the west via ] and his students.{{sfn|Swartz|2008|p=306-307}}{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=94}} Poonja, better known as Papaji, "told, inferred, or allowed hundreds of individuals to believe they were fully enlightened simply because they'd had one, or many, powerful experiences of awakening."{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=16-17}} It was those students who initiated the "neo-Advaita", or "satsang" movement,{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=16-17}} which has become an important constituent of popular western ].{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=109}}{{sfn|Versluis|2014}} It is being spread by websites and publishing enterprises, which give an easy access to its teachings.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=109}}
Vivekenanda saw all religions as paths leading to the same goal.{{sfn|Smart|2009|p=268}} This appoach presents ultimate reality in a substantialist way.{{sfn|Smart|2009|p=268}} This essentialist approach resembles the ], but has also been opposed. For example, it contradicts the Buddhist doctrine of ].{{sfn|Smart|2009|p=268}}


==The "Ramana effect"==
The spiritual root of neo-Advaita is Ramana Maharshi, via his student Poonja.
{{Main|Ramana Maharshi|Advaita Vedanta|Nondualism}}
{{quote|One of the tragedies of Poonjaji's teaching ministry is that he either told, inferred, or allowed hundreds of individuals to believe they were fully enlightened simply because they'd had one, or many, powerful experiences of awakening. These "enlightened" teachers then proceeded to enlighten their own students in a similar way, and thus was born what is known as the "neo-Advaita", or "satsang" movement in western culture.{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=16-17}}}}
{{See also|Charismatic authority}}

Lucas has called the popularisation of Ramana Maharshi's teachings in the west "the Ramana effect".{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=96}} According to Lucas, ] was the greatest modern proponent of Advaita Vedanta, well known for emphasizing the enquiry of the question "Who am I?" as a means to attain awakening.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=96}} According to Lucas, following Thomas Csordas, the success of this movement is due to a "portable practice" and a "transposable message".{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=96}} Ramana Maharshi's main practice, self-inquiry via the question "Who am I?", is easily practiceable in a non-institutionalized context.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=96}} His visitors and devotees did not have to adopt the Vedantic culture, nor to commit themselves to an institution or ideology, to be able to practice self-inquiry.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=96}} Ramana's teachings are transposable into a western context. Ramana Maharshi himself did not demand a shift in religious affiliation, and was himself acquainted with western religions, using quotes from the Bible.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=96}} Neo-Advaita teachers have further deemphasized the traditional language and worldframe of Advaita, using a modern, psychologized worldframe to present their teachings as a form of self-help, which is easily accessible to a larger audience.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=97}}

==Western discourses==
{{See also|New Age|Perennial philosophy|Orientalism|Nondualism}}

The western approach to "Asian enlightenment traditions"{{sfn|Gleig|2011|p=9}} is highly eclectic, drawing on various Asian traditions, as well as "numerous Western discourses such as psychology, science, and politics."{{sfn|Gleig|2011|p=9}} Neo-Advaita uses western discourses, such as "], ], self-empowerment and self-therapy"{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=108-109}} to transmit its teachings. It makes little use of the "traditional language or cultural frames of Advaita Vedanta,"{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=109}} and is framed in a western construction of experiential and perennial mysticism,{{sfn|Gleig|2011|p=5}} "to the disregard of its social, ethical and political aspects."{{sfn|Gleig|2011|p=5}} This "modern experiential and perennialist mystical framework" emphasizes ], the idea that there is a common, mystical core to all religions, which can be empirically validated by ]. It has pervaded the western understanding of Asian religions, and can be found in ] and ]'s ], but also in the works of ] and his "decontextualized and experiential account" of ].{{sfn|Gleig|2011|p=5}} It can also be found in the ], and the contemporary ] culture, with influences like ] '']'' and '']'', and writers like ].{{sfn|Gleig|2011|p=5-6}}{{refn|group=note|See also Sharf's "Buddhist Modernism and the Rhetoric of Meditative Experience".{{sfn|Sharf|1995}}}}

Gregg Lahood also mentions Neo-Advaita as an ingredient of "cosmological hybridization, a process in which spiritual paradises are bound together",{{sfn|Lahood|2010|p=31}} as exemplified in American Transcendentalism, ], ] and the works of ] are examples:{{sfn|Lahood|2010|p=33}} Brown and Leledaki place this "hybridization" in a ] approach,{{sfn|Brown|Leledaki|2010|p=127}} pointing out that this is an "invented tradition", which is a response to a novel situation, although it claims a continuity with a "historic past", which is "largely facticious."{{sfn|Brown|Leledaki|2010|p=127}} Brown and Leledaki see these newly emerging traditions as part of western ], the fascination of western cultures with eastern cultures, but also the reduction of "Asian societies, its people, practices and cultures to essentialist images of the 'other'".{{sfn|Brown|Leledaki|2010|p=129}} Brown and Leledaki also note that this Orientalism is not a one-way affair, but that "there has been a dynamic interaction between Asian and Western representatives of various religious traditions over the last 150 years," and that this "blending of thought and practice" is a co-creation from modernist religious movements in both East and West.{{sfn|Brown|Leledaki|2010|p=131}}{{refn|group=note|See also the influence of the ] on Theravada Buddhism and the ],{{sfn|Gombrich|1996}} and the influence of the Theosophical Society and western modernism on ],{{sfn|McMahan|2008}} especially ].}}

According to ], neo-Advaita is part of a larger religious current which he calls ''immediatism'',{{sfn|Versluis|2014}}<ref group=web name="AV-7Q"/> "the assertion of immediate spiritual illumination without much if any preparatory practice within a particular religious tradition."<ref group=web name="AV-7Q"/> Its origins predate American ].<ref group=web name="AV-7Q"/> In ''American Gurus: From Transcendentalism to New Age Religion'', Versluis describes the emergence of immediatist gurus: gurus who are not connected to any of the traditional religions, and promise instant enlightenment and liberation.{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=1,2}} These include ], and ].{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=1}} "Immediatism" refers to "a religious assertion of spontaneous, direct, unmediated spiritual insight into reality (typically with little or no prior training), which some term 'enlightenment'."{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=2}} According to Versluis, immediatism is typical for Americans, who want "the fruit of religion, but not its obligations."<ref group=web name="AV-7Q" /> Although immediatism has its roots in European culture and history{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=2}} as far back as ],{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=3}} and also includes ],{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=4}} Versluis points to ] as its key ancestor,{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=2}} who "emphasized the possibility of immediate, direct spiritual knowledge and power."{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=3}}


==Criticism== ==Criticism==
Neo-Advaita has been called a "controversial movement,"<ref group=web name="ConwayNondualSpirituality"></ref>{{sfn|Michaelson|2009|p=79}} and has been criticized,{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=110}}{{sfn|Lucas|2014}}{{refn|group=note|Lucas: ... serious critiques leveled at Neo-Advaitins by more traditional Advaitins in India and North America. Disputes over the authenticity of a transposed tradition are a commonplace in the history of missionization and the spread of traditions across cultures.{{sfn|Lucas|2011|p=110}}}}{{sfn|Versluis|2014|p=233}} for its emphasis on insight alone, omitting the preparatory practices.<ref group=web name=Conway></ref><ref group=web name=Swartz></ref>{{refn|group=note|David Frawley: "The teachings of Ramana Maharshi are often the starting point for neo-Advaitic teachers, though other influences also exist in the movement. However, instead of looking into the background and full scope of Ramana’s teachings, there is often only a focus only on those of his teachings that seem to promise quick realization for all."<ref group=web name="Frawley"/>}} It has also been criticised for its references to a "lineage" of Ramana Maharshi, whereas Ramana never claimed to have disciples{{citation needed|date=April 2013}} and never appointed any successors.<ref group=web name="jd6" /><ref group=web name="MilchCow" />
The neo-Advaita movement has been severely critisized.


===Insight and practice===
Traditional Advaita Vedanta...
{{quote|nvolves decades of study and practice under the guidance of a qualified teacher and has little to do with the "enlightenment" that is proclaimed in much of the present-day neo-Advaita movement.{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=17}}}}


====Insight alone is not enough====
The enlightenment-experiences induced by these teachers and their satsangs are considered to be superficial:
{{See also|Kenshō#Training after kenshō|l1=Post-satori training|Four stages of enlightenment}}
{{quote|To assume that such temporary experiences of perceiving emptiness and enlightenment are the end of the path is a grave error.{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=17}}}}

Some critics say that seeing through the ] is the main point of neo-Advaita, and that this does not suffice.<ref group=web name="trap"></ref>{{refn|group=note|"Traditional Advaita says that the ego is an illusion. The ‘Satsang Prophets’ emphasize this as THE starting point, completely omitting that this realization may only occur at the end of years of self-inquiry and work on oneself (and not necessarily with any certainty). Once this premise is understood and the self-cheating is engaged, one obtains a constant very pleasant feeling of superiority and invulnerability. This is what they regard as being the ultimate accomplishment."<ref group=web name="trap" />}} According to Caplan, the enlightenment-experiences induced by these teachers and their satsangs are considered to be superficial.{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=17}}

====Practice is necessary====
{{See also|Indian philosophy|Jnana Yoga|Self-enquiry}}

According to Dennis Waite, neo-Advaita claims to remove ignorance, but does not offer help to remove ignorance.<ref group=web name=Waite></ref> According to Caplan, traditional Advaita Vedanta takes years of practice, which is quite different from the neo-Advaita claims.{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=17}} Classical Advaita Vedanta uses the ] (''sādhana-catustaya''){{sfn|Puligandla|1997|p=253}} to train students and attain ]. Years of committed practice is needed to sever or destroy the "occlusion"{{sfn|Jacobs|2004|p=84}} the so-called "],<ref group=web name=Swartz/> ], ] and ]s", and the "granthi{{refn|group=note|See }} or knot forming identification between ] and mind,"{{sfn|Jacobs|2004|p=85}} and prepare the mind for the insight into non-duality.<ref group=web name=Swartz/>{{refn|group=note|Swartz: "Traditional Vedanta completely insists that a person be discriminating, dispassionate, calm of mind, and endowed with a ‘burning’ desire for liberation along with other secondary qualifications like devotion, faith, perseverance and so on. In other words it requires a mature adult with a one-pointed desire to know the Self."<ref group=web name=Swartz/>}} After awakening, "post awakening sadhana," or ] is necessary: "all of the great ones had a post awakening sadhana, including Ramana Maharishi, who spent many years sitting alone in Samadhi before he ever accepted his first student."<ref group=web name=Muzika/>{{refn|group=note|Jacobs: "The main Neo-Advaita fallacy ignores the fact that there is an occlusion or veiling formed by vasanas, samskaras, bodily sheaths and vrittis, and there is a granthi or knot forming identification between Self and mind, which has to be severed The Maharshi's remedy to this whole trap is persistent effective ], and/or complete ] of the 'phantom ego' to Self or God, until the granthi is severed, the vasanas are rendered harmless like a burned out rope.{{sfn|Jacobs|2004|p=84-85}}<br /><br />Ramana Maharshi:"Therefore, leaving the corpse-like body as an actual corpse and remaining without even uttering the word 'I' by mouth, if one now keenly enquires, 'What is it that rises as "I"?’ then in the Heart a certain soundless sphurana, 'I-I', will shine forth of its own accord. It is an awareness that is single and undivided, the thoughts which are many and divided having disappeared. If one remains still without leaving it, even the sphurana – having completely annihilated the sense of the individuality, the form of the ego, 'I am the body' – will itself in the end subside, just like the flame that catches the camphor. This alone is said to be liberation by great ones and scriptures. (The Mountain Path, 1982, p. 98)."<ref group=web name="deathexp2"></ref>}} After realization, further practice is necessary 'to ripen the fruit', as stated by Nisargadatya Maharaj: "the fruit falls suddenly, but the ripening takes time."{{sfn|Maharaj|1987|p=p.169 (talk 38); see also p.99 (talk 26)}} Ed Muzika refers to Nisargadatta Maharaj, stating
{{quote|He met his teacher in 1933 and had his awakening in 1936. He then traveled as a wandering monk for two years visiting many shrines, temples, and teachers across India, until he recognized there was no difference in his beingness no matter where he was. So he returned home to his wife and business in 1938. Apparently he spend many years discussing all aspects of consciousness and the absolute with another disciple of his teacher, wherein they both worked out the concepts he put forward in the book “I Am That.” He did not accept students for another 13 years, in 1951. You see, he was still maturing, learning, changing, even though he already had a firm grasp on the absolute.<ref group=web name=Muzika>Ed Muzika, </ref>}}

===Lineage===
{{See also|Sampradaya|Guru-shishya tradition}}

Western critics object to the perceived relation between Ramana Maharshi and Neo-Advaita,{{refn|group=note|James Swartz: "Then in the Eighties the Western spiritual world became reacquainted with Ramana Maharshi The rediscovery of Ramana roughly coincided with the rise of ‘Neo-Advaita.’ Neo-Advaita is basically a ‘satsang’ based ‘movement’ that has very little in common with either traditional Vedanta or modern Vedanta or even its inspiration, Ramana except the doctrine of non-duality."<ref group=web name=Swartz/>}} noting that Ramana never promoted any lineage,{{refn|group=note|"There have been many senior devotees of Bhagavan who, in their own right, had both the ability and authority to teach in his name. Muruganar, Sadhu Natanananda and Kunju Swami are some of those who immediately spring to mind. None of them to my knowledge ever claimed pre-eminence and the prerogative to teach. They knew two things. One, there would be many who would bow to their superior knowledge and set them up as an independent source, but secondly, they also knew that to abrogate for themselves the privilege would run contrary to Bhagavan’s mission or purpose."}} did not publicize himself as a guru,{{sfn|Forsthoefel|2005|p=37}} never claimed to have disciples,{{citation needed|date=April 2013}} and never appointed any successors.<ref group=web name="jd6"></ref><ref group=web name="MilchCow"></ref>{{refn|group=note|"In actuality each of us is privy to his knowledge and blessing without any intermediary if we are open and receptive to the teachings. Each of us legitimately can claim lineage from Bhagavan although he himself was not part of any succession but stood alone, and in that sense of linear continuity he neither received nor gave initiation. But that is not the point, because though we each have the right to receive his grace, it is entirely different when it comes to assuming authority to disseminate the teachings. It is here we need to be very clear and separate the claims of wannabe gurus from the genuine devotees who are grateful recipients of grace."}} Despite this, there are numerous contemporary teachers who assert, suggest, or are said by others, to be in his lineage.{{sfn|Lucas|2011}}<ref group=web></ref><ref group=web name="rs2"></ref><ref group=web name="MilchCow" />{{refn|group=note|Most of them are connected with Ramana Maharshi via ], who has been criticised for too easily sending students out to "teach".{{sfn|Caplan|2009|p=16-17}} See, for examples, ],{{citation needed|date=April 2013}} ],<ref group=web></ref> Other examples are Sri Lakshmana and Mathru Sri Sarada.<ref group=web></ref>}}{{refn|group=note|The reference by those teachers to Ramana fits into ] notion of ], which is part of the ], the socio-cultural context in which a set of beliefs and assumptions is accepted as "real" (see .{{sfn|Berger|1990|p=29–51}} Ramana's "lineage" lends legitimacy to the position and teachings of those teachers.}} These assertions have been disputed by other teachers,<ref group=web name=Swartz/><ref group=web name=Conway/> stating that there is no lineage from Ramana Maharshi.{{refn|group=note|Timothy Conway: "...there's NO LINEAGE FROM MAHARSHI and most of these figures are NOT fully enlightened or liberated in any really meaningful sense of the term.<ref group=web name=Conway/>}} Critics have also noted that Ramana and like-minded teachers like ]<ref group=web name=Conway/> did not charge fees or donations.<ref group=web name=Conway/>

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]ing

==Notes==
{{reflist|group=note|2}}


==References== ==References==
{{reflist|2}} {{reflist|20em}}


==Sources== ==Sources==

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{{refend}} {{refend}}

===Web-sources===
{{self published|date=August 2023}}
{{reflist|group=web}}


==Further reading== ==Further reading==
* {{Citation | last =Sharf | first =Robert H. | year =2000 | title =The Rhetoric of Experience and the Study of Religion | journal =Journal of Consciousness Studies | volume =7 | issue =11–12 | pages =267–87 | url =http://buddhiststudies.berkeley.edu/people/faculty/sharf/documents/Sharf1998,%20Religious%20Experience.pdf | access-date =2015-09-14 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20130513104227/http://buddhiststudies.berkeley.edu/people/faculty/sharf/documents/Sharf1998,%20Religious%20Experience.pdf | archive-date =2013-05-13 | url-status =dead | ref=none }}
* {{Citation | last =Fort | first =Andrew O. | year =1998 | title =Jīvanmukti in Transformation: Embodied Liberation in Advaita and Neo-Vedanta | publisher =SUNY Press | url =http://books.google.nl/books?id=UcQOutKqsQoC&printsec=frontcover&hl=nl#v=onepage&q&f=false}}
* {{Citation | last =Lucas | first =Phillip Charles | year =2011 | title =When a Movement Is Not a Movement. Ramana Maharshi and Neo-Advaita in North America | journal =Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions. Vol. 15, No. 2 (November 2011) (pp. 93-114) | url =http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/nr.2011.15.2.93}}


==External links== ==External links==

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Religious movement Not to be confused with Neo-Vedanta.
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Neo-Advaita, also called the Satsang-movement is a new religious movement, emphasizing the direct recognition of the non-existence of the "I" or "ego," without the need of preparatory practice. Its teachings are derived from, but not authorised by, the teachings of the 20th century sage Ramana Maharshi, as interpreted and popularized by H. W. L. Poonja and several of his western students.

It is part of a larger religious current called immediatism by Arthur Versluis, which has its roots in both western and eastern spirituality. Western influences are western esoteric traditions like Transcendentalism, and "New Age millennialism, self-empowerment and self-therapy".

Neo-Advaita makes little use of the "traditional language or cultural frames of Advaita Vedanta", and some have criticised it for its lack of preparatory training, and regard enlightenment-experiences induced by Neo-Advaita as superficial.

Teachings

The basic practice of neo-Advaita is self-inquiry, via the question "Who am I?", or simply the direct recognition of the non-existence of the "I" or "ego." This recognition is taken to be equal to the Advaita Vedanta recognition of the identity of Atman and Brahman, or the recognition of the "Formless Self." According to neo-Advaitins, no preparatory practice is necessary, nor prolonged study of religious scriptures or tradition: insight alone suffices.

Poonja, who is credited as one of the main instigators of the neo-Advaita movement, saw this realization as in itself liberating from karmic consequences and further rebirth. According to Poonja "karmic tendencies remained after enlightenment, the enlightened person was no longer identified with them and, therefore, did not accrue further karmic consequences." According to Cohen, Poonja "insisted that the realization of the Self had nothing to do with worldly behavior, and he did not believe fully transcending the ego was possible." For Poonja, ethical standards were based on a dualistic understanding of duality and the notion of an individual agent, and therefore were not indicative of "non-dual enlightenment: "For Poonja, the goal was the realization of the self; the illusory realm of relative reality was ultimately irrelevant."

History

See also: Ramana Maharshi and Self-enquiry

According to Lucas and Frawley, the spiritual root of neo-Advaita is Ramana Maharshi, whose teachings, and method of self-inquiry could easily be transposed to North America’s liberal spiritual subculture. Popular interest in Indian religions goes as far back as the early 19th century, and was stimulated by the American Transcendentalists and the Theosophical Society. In the 1930s Ramana Maharshi's teachings were brought to the west by Paul Brunton, a Theosophist, in his A Search in Secret India. Stimulated by Arthur Osborne, in the 1960s Bhagawat Singh actively started to spread Ramana Maharshi's teachings in the USA.

Since the 1970s western interest in Asian religions has seen a rapid growth. Ramana Maharshi's teachings have been further popularized in the west via H. W. L. Poonja and his students. Poonja, better known as Papaji, "told, inferred, or allowed hundreds of individuals to believe they were fully enlightened simply because they'd had one, or many, powerful experiences of awakening." It was those students who initiated the "neo-Advaita", or "satsang" movement, which has become an important constituent of popular western spirituality. It is being spread by websites and publishing enterprises, which give an easy access to its teachings.

The "Ramana effect"

Main articles: Ramana Maharshi, Advaita Vedanta, and Nondualism See also: Charismatic authority

Lucas has called the popularisation of Ramana Maharshi's teachings in the west "the Ramana effect". According to Lucas, Ramana Maharshi was the greatest modern proponent of Advaita Vedanta, well known for emphasizing the enquiry of the question "Who am I?" as a means to attain awakening. According to Lucas, following Thomas Csordas, the success of this movement is due to a "portable practice" and a "transposable message". Ramana Maharshi's main practice, self-inquiry via the question "Who am I?", is easily practiceable in a non-institutionalized context. His visitors and devotees did not have to adopt the Vedantic culture, nor to commit themselves to an institution or ideology, to be able to practice self-inquiry. Ramana's teachings are transposable into a western context. Ramana Maharshi himself did not demand a shift in religious affiliation, and was himself acquainted with western religions, using quotes from the Bible. Neo-Advaita teachers have further deemphasized the traditional language and worldframe of Advaita, using a modern, psychologized worldframe to present their teachings as a form of self-help, which is easily accessible to a larger audience.

Western discourses

See also: New Age, Perennial philosophy, Orientalism, and Nondualism

The western approach to "Asian enlightenment traditions" is highly eclectic, drawing on various Asian traditions, as well as "numerous Western discourses such as psychology, science, and politics." Neo-Advaita uses western discourses, such as "New Age millennialism, Zen, self-empowerment and self-therapy" to transmit its teachings. It makes little use of the "traditional language or cultural frames of Advaita Vedanta," and is framed in a western construction of experiential and perennial mysticism, "to the disregard of its social, ethical and political aspects." This "modern experiential and perennialist mystical framework" emphasizes Perennialism, the idea that there is a common, mystical core to all religions, which can be empirically validated by personal experience. It has pervaded the western understanding of Asian religions, and can be found in Swami Vivekananda and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan's Neo-Vedanta, but also in the works of D.T. Suzuki and his "decontextualized and experiential account" of Zen Buddhism. It can also be found in the Theosophical Society, and the contemporary New Age culture, with influences like Aldous Huxley's The Perennial Philosophy and The Doors of Perception, and writers like Ken Wilber.

Gregg Lahood also mentions Neo-Advaita as an ingredient of "cosmological hybridization, a process in which spiritual paradises are bound together", as exemplified in American Transcendentalism, New Age, transpersonal psychology and the works of Ken Wilber are examples: Brown and Leledaki place this "hybridization" in a "structurationist" approach, pointing out that this is an "invented tradition", which is a response to a novel situation, although it claims a continuity with a "historic past", which is "largely facticious." Brown and Leledaki see these newly emerging traditions as part of western Orientalism, the fascination of western cultures with eastern cultures, but also the reduction of "Asian societies, its people, practices and cultures to essentialist images of the 'other'". Brown and Leledaki also note that this Orientalism is not a one-way affair, but that "there has been a dynamic interaction between Asian and Western representatives of various religious traditions over the last 150 years," and that this "blending of thought and practice" is a co-creation from modernist religious movements in both East and West.

According to Arthur Versluis, neo-Advaita is part of a larger religious current which he calls immediatism, "the assertion of immediate spiritual illumination without much if any preparatory practice within a particular religious tradition." Its origins predate American Transcendentalism. In American Gurus: From Transcendentalism to New Age Religion, Versluis describes the emergence of immediatist gurus: gurus who are not connected to any of the traditional religions, and promise instant enlightenment and liberation. These include Eckhart Tolle, and Andrew Cohen. "Immediatism" refers to "a religious assertion of spontaneous, direct, unmediated spiritual insight into reality (typically with little or no prior training), which some term 'enlightenment'." According to Versluis, immediatism is typical for Americans, who want "the fruit of religion, but not its obligations." Although immediatism has its roots in European culture and history as far back as Platonism, and also includes Perennialism, Versluis points to Ralph Waldo Emerson as its key ancestor, who "emphasized the possibility of immediate, direct spiritual knowledge and power."

Criticism

Neo-Advaita has been called a "controversial movement," and has been criticized, for its emphasis on insight alone, omitting the preparatory practices. It has also been criticised for its references to a "lineage" of Ramana Maharshi, whereas Ramana never claimed to have disciples and never appointed any successors.

Insight and practice

Insight alone is not enough

See also: Post-satori training and Four stages of enlightenment

Some critics say that seeing through the 'illusion of ego' is the main point of neo-Advaita, and that this does not suffice. According to Caplan, the enlightenment-experiences induced by these teachers and their satsangs are considered to be superficial.

Practice is necessary

See also: Indian philosophy, Jnana Yoga, and Self-enquiry

According to Dennis Waite, neo-Advaita claims to remove ignorance, but does not offer help to remove ignorance. According to Caplan, traditional Advaita Vedanta takes years of practice, which is quite different from the neo-Advaita claims. Classical Advaita Vedanta uses the "fourfold discipline" (sādhana-catustaya) to train students and attain moksha. Years of committed practice is needed to sever or destroy the "occlusion" the so-called "vasanas, samskaras, bodily sheaths and vrittis", and the "granthi or knot forming identification between Self and mind," and prepare the mind for the insight into non-duality. After awakening, "post awakening sadhana," or post-satori practice is necessary: "all of the great ones had a post awakening sadhana, including Ramana Maharishi, who spent many years sitting alone in Samadhi before he ever accepted his first student." After realization, further practice is necessary 'to ripen the fruit', as stated by Nisargadatya Maharaj: "the fruit falls suddenly, but the ripening takes time." Ed Muzika refers to Nisargadatta Maharaj, stating

He met his teacher in 1933 and had his awakening in 1936. He then traveled as a wandering monk for two years visiting many shrines, temples, and teachers across India, until he recognized there was no difference in his beingness no matter where he was. So he returned home to his wife and business in 1938. Apparently he spend many years discussing all aspects of consciousness and the absolute with another disciple of his teacher, wherein they both worked out the concepts he put forward in the book “I Am That.” He did not accept students for another 13 years, in 1951. You see, he was still maturing, learning, changing, even though he already had a firm grasp on the absolute.

Lineage

See also: Sampradaya and Guru-shishya tradition

Western critics object to the perceived relation between Ramana Maharshi and Neo-Advaita, noting that Ramana never promoted any lineage, did not publicize himself as a guru, never claimed to have disciples, and never appointed any successors. Despite this, there are numerous contemporary teachers who assert, suggest, or are said by others, to be in his lineage. These assertions have been disputed by other teachers, stating that there is no lineage from Ramana Maharshi. Critics have also noted that Ramana and like-minded teachers like Nisargadatta Maharaj did not charge fees or donations.

See also

Notes

  1. Alan Jacobs: "What Neo-Advaita presents is the seductive formula that 'there is nothing you can do or need to do, all you have to know is that there is no one there.'",
  2. Frawley: "nstead of looking into the background and full scope of Ramana’s teachings, there is often only a focus only on those of his teachings that seem to promise quick realization for all."
  3. See also Sharf's "Buddhist Modernism and the Rhetoric of Meditative Experience".
  4. See also the influence of the Theosophical Society on Theravada Buddhism and the Vipassana movement, and the influence of the Theosophical Society and western modernism on Buddhist modernism, especially D. T. Suzuki.
  5. Lucas: ... serious critiques leveled at Neo-Advaitins by more traditional Advaitins in India and North America. Disputes over the authenticity of a transposed tradition are a commonplace in the history of missionization and the spread of traditions across cultures.
  6. David Frawley: "The teachings of Ramana Maharshi are often the starting point for neo-Advaitic teachers, though other influences also exist in the movement. However, instead of looking into the background and full scope of Ramana’s teachings, there is often only a focus only on those of his teachings that seem to promise quick realization for all."
  7. "Traditional Advaita says that the ego is an illusion. The ‘Satsang Prophets’ emphasize this as THE starting point, completely omitting that this realization may only occur at the end of years of self-inquiry and work on oneself (and not necessarily with any certainty). Once this premise is understood and the self-cheating is engaged, one obtains a constant very pleasant feeling of superiority and invulnerability. This is what they regard as being the ultimate accomplishment."
  8. See The Knot of the Heart
  9. Swartz: "Traditional Vedanta completely insists that a person be discriminating, dispassionate, calm of mind, and endowed with a ‘burning’ desire for liberation along with other secondary qualifications like devotion, faith, perseverance and so on. In other words it requires a mature adult with a one-pointed desire to know the Self."
  10. Jacobs: "The main Neo-Advaita fallacy ignores the fact that there is an occlusion or veiling formed by vasanas, samskaras, bodily sheaths and vrittis, and there is a granthi or knot forming identification between Self and mind, which has to be severed The Maharshi's remedy to this whole trap is persistent effective Self-enquiry, and/or complete unconditional surrender of the 'phantom ego' to Self or God, until the granthi is severed, the vasanas are rendered harmless like a burned out rope.

    Ramana Maharshi:"Therefore, leaving the corpse-like body as an actual corpse and remaining without even uttering the word 'I' by mouth, if one now keenly enquires, 'What is it that rises as "I"?’ then in the Heart a certain soundless sphurana, 'I-I', will shine forth of its own accord. It is an awareness that is single and undivided, the thoughts which are many and divided having disappeared. If one remains still without leaving it, even the sphurana – having completely annihilated the sense of the individuality, the form of the ego, 'I am the body' – will itself in the end subside, just like the flame that catches the camphor. This alone is said to be liberation by great ones and scriptures. (The Mountain Path, 1982, p. 98)."
  11. James Swartz: "Then in the Eighties the Western spiritual world became reacquainted with Ramana Maharshi The rediscovery of Ramana roughly coincided with the rise of ‘Neo-Advaita.’ Neo-Advaita is basically a ‘satsang’ based ‘movement’ that has very little in common with either traditional Vedanta or modern Vedanta or even its inspiration, Ramana except the doctrine of non-duality."
  12. "There have been many senior devotees of Bhagavan who, in their own right, had both the ability and authority to teach in his name. Muruganar, Sadhu Natanananda and Kunju Swami are some of those who immediately spring to mind. None of them to my knowledge ever claimed pre-eminence and the prerogative to teach. They knew two things. One, there would be many who would bow to their superior knowledge and set them up as an independent source, but secondly, they also knew that to abrogate for themselves the privilege would run contrary to Bhagavan’s mission or purpose."
  13. "In actuality each of us is privy to his knowledge and blessing without any intermediary if we are open and receptive to the teachings. Each of us legitimately can claim lineage from Bhagavan although he himself was not part of any succession but stood alone, and in that sense of linear continuity he neither received nor gave initiation. But that is not the point, because though we each have the right to receive his grace, it is entirely different when it comes to assuming authority to disseminate the teachings. It is here we need to be very clear and separate the claims of wannabe gurus from the genuine devotees who are grateful recipients of grace."
  14. Most of them are connected with Ramana Maharshi via H. W. L. Poonja, who has been criticised for too easily sending students out to "teach". See, for examples, Andrew Cohen, Gangaji, Other examples are Sri Lakshmana and Mathru Sri Sarada.
  15. The reference by those teachers to Ramana fits into Berger's notion of legitimacy, which is part of the plausibility structure, the socio-cultural context in which a set of beliefs and assumptions is accepted as "real" (see . Ramana's "lineage" lends legitimacy to the position and teachings of those teachers.
  16. Timothy Conway: "...there's NO LINEAGE FROM MAHARSHI and most of these figures are NOT fully enlightened or liberated in any really meaningful sense of the term.

References

  1. ^ Caplan 2009, p. 17.
  2. ^ Swartz 2008, p. 306-307.
  3. ^ Versluis 2014.
  4. ^ Lucas 2011, p. 108-109.
  5. ^ Lucas 2011, p. 109.
  6. ^ Lucas 2011, p. 110.
  7. ^ Lucas 2014.
  8. ^ Versluis 2014, p. 233.
  9. Davis 2010, p. 48.
  10. Yogani 2011, p. 805.
  11. Jacobs 2004, p. 81.
  12. Marek 2008, p. 10, note 6.
  13. Jacobs 2004, p. 82.
  14. ^ Lucas 2011, p. 96.
  15. ^ Gleig 2013, p. 194.
  16. ^ Lucas 2011.
  17. Lucas 2011, p. 93.
  18. Renard 2010, p. 185-188.
  19. Sinari 2000.
  20. ^ Lucas 2011, p. 99.
  21. Lucas 2011, p. 94.
  22. ^ Caplan 2009, p. 16-17.
  23. Lucas 2011, p. 97.
  24. ^ Gleig 2011, p. 9.
  25. ^ Gleig 2011, p. 5.
  26. Gleig 2011, p. 5-6.
  27. Sharf 1995.
  28. Lahood 2010, p. 31.
  29. Lahood 2010, p. 33.
  30. ^ Brown & Leledaki 2010, p. 127.
  31. Brown & Leledaki 2010, p. 129.
  32. Brown & Leledaki 2010, p. 131.
  33. Gombrich 1996.
  34. McMahan 2008.
  35. Versluis 2014, p. 1,2.
  36. Versluis 2014, p. 1.
  37. ^ Versluis 2014, p. 2.
  38. ^ Versluis 2014, p. 3.
  39. Versluis 2014, p. 4.
  40. Michaelson 2009, p. 79.
  41. Puligandla 1997, p. 253.
  42. Jacobs 2004, p. 84.
  43. Jacobs 2004, p. 85.
  44. Jacobs 2004, p. 84-85.
  45. Maharaj 1987, p. p.169 (talk 38); see also p.99 (talk 26).
  46. Forsthoefel 2005, p. 37.
  47. Berger 1990, p. 29–51.

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Printed sources

This article lacks ISBNs for the books listed. Please help add the ISBNs or run the citation bot. (August 2023)
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Web-sources

This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self-published sources. Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately. (August 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
  1. ^ David Frawley, Misconceptions about Advaita. The Mountain Path, Sri Ramanashram
  2. ^ "American Gurus: Seven Questions for Arthur Versluis". Archived from the original on 2016-04-17.
  3. Jeff Foster, The birth and death of fundamentalism in non-duality and Advaita teachings.
  4. ^ Spiritualteachers.org (Author unknown), "Neo-Advaita Demystified"
  5. ^ Timothy Conway, Neo-Advaita or Pseudo-Advaita and Real Advaita-Nonduality
  6. Timothy Conway, Nondual Spirituality or Mystical Advaita
  7. ^ James Swartz, What is Neo-Advaita?
  8. ^ John David, An Introduction to Sri Ramana's Life and Teachings. David Godman talks to John David. Page 6
  9. ^ arunachala-ramana.org, Bhagavan Sri Ramana Maharshi – Great Sage or Milch cow?
  10. Non-Duality Magazine, Dennis Waite. Interview with Non-Duality Magazine
  11. ^ Ed Muzika, Edward Muzika, Awakening versus Liberation
  12. David Godman (23 June 2008), More on Bhagavan's death experience
  13. Advaita Vision, Disciples of Ramana Maharshi
  14. Rob Sacks, An Interview with David Godman. By Rob Sacks for Realization.org. Page 2
  15. Gangaji.orgg, The Lineage
  16. Elizabeth Reninger, Guide Review: David Godman's "No Mind, I Am The Self" The Lives & Teachings Of Sri Lakshmana Swamy & Mathru Sri Sarada. About.com Taoism

Further reading

External links

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