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Nondualism, also called nonduality and sometimes , is a polyvalent term originating in Indian philosophy and religion, where it is used in various, related contemplative philosophies which aim to negate dualistic thinking or conceptual proliferation ( prapanca) and thereby realize nondual awareness, 'that which is beyond discursive thinking', a state of consciousness described in contemplative traditions as a background field of unified, immutable awareness that exists prior to conceptual thought.

The English term "nonduality" is derived from the Hindu term "" (अद्वैत), "not-two" or "one without a second," meaning that only , 'the one', is ultimately real while 'the world', or the multiplicity of thought-constructs, 'the second', is not fully real; and from the Buddhist term , which is also literally translated as "not two" and has various applications, including the negation of thinking in opposites such as ordinary, conventional truth versus ultimate truth, and in the deconstruction of the "apprehension of sensory objects as separate from the perceiving consciousness."

A perennialist view posits that nondual awareness, despite fundamental differences in the explanatory frameworks, is a common essence in various religious traditions. According to this view, nondual awareness is not only paradigmatic for advaita-traditions including and , and Buddhist advaya-traditions including , , and , but can also be found in Taoist philosophy, and in Western philosophy, Christian mysticism, and .

Nondualism is also used to refer to the , also called neo-advaita, for which nonduality is a central tenet, emphasizing or insight. The term may also refer to and nonplurality, the idea of a unitive essence behind the multiplicity of distinct entities. Related definitions include interconnectedness interdependence, and or 'wholism', the idea that "all the things "in" the world are not really distinct from each other but together constitute some integral whole." Further definitions are the rejection of thinking in binary opposites such as the mind–body dualism, while "nondualism" is also used as a synonym for , mystical experience, and .


Etymology
"Nondualism" and "nonduality" are the translation of the Sanskrit terms advaita and advaya (Tibetan: gNis-med, Chinese: pu-erh, Japanese: fu-ni) .

"Advaita" (अद्वैत) is from Sanskrit roots a, not; dvaita, "customarily translated as dual." As Advaita, it is usually translated as "not-two" or "one without a second", and most commonly as "nondualism", "nonduality" or "nondual," invoking the notion of a dichotomy. Fabian Volker, following Paul Hacker explains that dvaita does not mean "duality," but "the state in which a second is present," the second here being synonymous with , "conceptual proliferation," and with jagat, "the world." Advaita thus means that only , 'the one', is ultimately real, while the phenomenal world, or the , 'the second', is not fully real. The term thus does not emphasize two instances, but the notion that the second instance is not fully real, and advaita is better translated as "that which has no second beside it" instead of "nonduality," denying multiplicity and the proliferation of concepts "that tend to obscure the true state of affairs."

"Advaya" (अद्वय) is also a Sanskrit word that means "identity, unique, not two, without a second", and typically refers to ('emptiness') and the two truths doctrine of , especially , and the negation of the conceptual duality between observer and observed in . The term prapanca, conceptual proliferation and the creation of a multi-faceted world, is also used in these discourses. Hookham renders nisprapanca as "nonconceptual," explaining:

"Dual" comes from Latin "duo", two, prefixed with "non-" meaning "not"; "non-dual" means "not-two". The English term "nondual" was informed by early translations of the Upanishads in Western languages other than English from 1775. These terms have entered the English language from literal English renderings of "" subsequent to the first wave of English translations of the . These translations commenced with the work of Müller (1823–1900), in the monumental Sacred Books of the East (1879). He rendered "advaita" as "", as have many recent scholars.

(2025). 9789400924581, Springer Science. .
S Menon (2011), Advaita Vedanta, IEP, Quote: "The essential philosophy of Advaita is an idealist monism, and is considered to be presented first in the Upaniṣads and consolidated in the Brahma Sūtra by this tradition."
(2025). 9780823931804, The Rosen Publishing Group. .
However, some scholars state that "advaita" is not really monism.
(2025). 9780802847584, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. .
According to monism often leads to conceptualizing reality as a single entity, whereas nondualism points beyond conceptual frameworks entirely.


Definitions

Flavors of nonduality
Nonduality is a , for which many definitions can be found. Gibbons notes that "Terms such as "awakening" and "enlightenment" and "nonduality" undoubtedly mean different things to different people," and states that "in the widest sense these kinds of experiences fall under what is typically called in the west "mystical" experience." Gibson further notes that "the term "nondual" has in many circles become virtually synonymous with "spirituality" itself."


T. R. V. Murti
T. R. V. Murti gives the distinction between advaita and Madhyamikya advaya as follows:


David Loy
According to , since there are similar ideas and terms in a wide variety of and , ancient and modern, no single definition for the English word "nonduality" can suffice, and perhaps it is best to speak of various "nondualities" or theories of nonduality. Loy sees non-dualism as a common thread in , , and , and distinguishes "Five Flavors Of Nonduality":
  1. The nondifference of subject and object, where the observer and the observed are ultimately inseparable. This idea is central to , Advaita Vedanta, and Taoism, which describe reality as a unified field of experience beyond conceptual thought.
  2. The nonplurality of the world – Although we experience the world dualistically, "as a collection of discrete objects ... the world itself is nonplural, because all the things "in" the world are not really distinct but from each other but together constitute some integral whole." According to Loy, "the negation of dualistic thinking leads to the negation of this dualistically way of experiencing the world." According to Loy, this is expressed in notions like Brahman, One Mind, Tao, and , moving away from nonduality in the world to another kind of nonduality.
  3. The negation of dualistic thinking – Some nondual traditions reject binary oppositions such as self/other, good/evil, or existence/non-existence. The yin-yang symbol of Taoism reflects this transcendence of opposites.
  4. The identity of phenomena and the absolute – Nonduality in Buddhism and the two truths doctrine asserts that phenomena (relative truth) and emptiness (ultimate truth) are inseparable. This differs from monistic nonduality, as it denies a singular, unchanging essence.
  5. Mysticism and divine unity – Some mystical traditions describe a direct experience of unity between the individual and the divine, such as 's fana (self-annihilation), Christian mystical union, and .

Henning & Henning elaborate on Loy's subject-object nonduality, noting that humans are able to "mental self-awareness and subjectivity," which creates a "dualistic mental experience—in which the mental “subject” is separated from the “objects” in the subject’s environment," which is "a precondition for our ability to think abstractly, perceive time, construct narratives, invent tools, and use symbols." In "absolute nonduality," this "subject-object/perceiver-perceived relationship breaks down."

Like, Michael Taft, as quoted by Chris Grosso, explains that nondualism points to the working of the brain, which creates mental representations out of its sensory input, realizing that "you are simply the awareness of those sensory signals and are none of the content."

Loy sees the nondifference of subject and object as the "core doctrine" of nonduality, quoting Yasutani roshi as giving an example of this nonduality:

He also refers to pariniṣpanna-svabhāva, a Yogachara-term meaning "fully accomplished," "just pure seeing ... devoid of all concepts,"Siderits, Mark, Buddhism as philosophy, 2017 "experience without subject-object duality." Further references from Loy are to Guiseppe Tucci, who states that the awakening of shes rab ( prajna) is the final objective in Tibetan Buddhism, transcending the subject-object dichotomy. Another reference is to D. T. Suzuki as stating that is "the realization of nonduality, and to the story of , "which presents "the Zen concept of (Ch. wu-shin, Jap. mushin), which asserts, in effect, the nonduality of subject and object." Gibson also states that "the apparent disappearance of a separate, individual self" is an important aspect of nonduality.

Loy, writing in the early 1980s, takes a perennialist stance, suggesting that the nondifference of subject and object stem from a shared experience of reality. Since the late 1970s this common core thesis has been challenged, notably by , arguing that arguing that religious experiences is shaped by the frameworks being used, and takes different forms in different traditions. The perennial position is "largely dismissed by scholars" but "has lost none of its popularity."


Fabian Volker
Fabian Volker criticises Loy's analysis as being explicitly anti-transcendent and limiting the immanent aspect, stating that Loy "fails to provide a systematic typology of nonduality and nondual experiences," and that "his program does not hold up in terms of the historicity of religion or the phenomenology of religion." Volker further notes that adequate typologies of nonduality are lacking because of a lack of interest of "students of nonduality" in the "extensive research on mysticism." According to Volker, the two are not distinct fields of research, but are "two complementary and inextricably interwoven approaches to the same complex field."

Referring to Murti's distinction between advaita (ontology) and advaya (phenomenology), and Richard H. Jones' typology presentrd in Philosophy of Mysticism (2016). Fabian Volker distinguishes three types of nonduality:

  • Asymmetric-vertical nonduality, which postulates a transcendent but reality, which forms the ground or essence of the manifold phenomenal world. This is experienced in introvertive mysticism. Volker further divides this in three subtypes:
    • Nontheistic-personal experiences of this transcendental-immanent reality (Advaita Vedanta)
    • Theistic-personal experiences of this transcendental-immanent reality (Ramanuja)
    • Death-like trance
  • Symmetric-horizontal nonduality, or mystical mindfulness, which rejects the existence of an unchanging ultimate reality, but negates the distinction between observer and observed. This is akin to extroverted mystical experience
  • Existential nonduality: post-awakening experience of the phenomenal world

For Volker, nonduality lies in nisprapanca/aprapanca ('nonceptualization', "(that which is) beyond discursive thinking") the annihilation of (conceptualisation, creating multiplicity by multiplying concepts and subsequent creation of attachment) through insight or meditation:


Other views
Regarding the nonplurality of the world, Kazuaki Tanahashi suggests that "what is commonly called nonduality actually means nonplurality and should instead be called "singularity.""

Nondualism had also popularly been defined as interconnectedness and interdepence, and also seems to be synonymous with holism or 'wholism' in modern spirituality, akin to Loy's immanent "nonpluarility of the world," the idea that "the world itself is nonplural, because all the things "in" the world are not really ditinct from each other." Hartelius notes that "interconnectedness is not the nondual teaching of Advaita Vedanta, and the precise definition of nonduality within this tradition deserves to be maintained distinct from the very different notion and experience of interconnectedness."

Philip Renard notes that nondual awareness is rooted in direct experience or intuition of "the Real", and argues that nondualism differs from . Unlike monism, which may conceptualize reality as a unified whole, nondualism is understood as fundamentally "nonconceptual" and "not graspable in an idea". is credited with popularizing this distinction between nondualism and monism, particularly in The Supreme Identity (1950) and The Way of Zen (1957). He explained that monism often leads to conceptualizing reality as a single entity, whereas nondualism points beyond conceptual frameworks entirely.

Judith Blackstone defines nonduality as "a fundamental unconstructed dimension of our being or consciousness," as found in Dzogchen, Kashmir Shaivism, and Advaita Vedanta, and differentiates between "conceptual recognition of nondual states" and "an embodied realization of nonduality in which the body is fully recognized as this nondual luminosity." Yet, Glenn Hartelius criticises her definition, stating that "it is clearly not a state that is nondual in a way that is congruent with the teachings of lineage-based Advaita Vedanta."

"Nondualism" is also used as a synonym for or satsang-movement.


Nondual awareness
"Nondual awareness," also called "consciousness-as-such," "pure consciousness," "pure awareness," "open awareness," "contentless consciousness," "Pure Consciousness Event," and "Minimal Phenomenal Experience," refers to a state of consciousness described in contemplative traditions as a background field of unified, immutable awareness that exists prior to conceptual thought. According to Michael Taft, as quoted by Chris Grosso, "nondual awareness is an experience. Nondualism is a philosophy that talks about that experience and its meaning."

Nondual awareness is described in various ways across different traditions:


Nondual traditions
Different theories and concepts which can be linked to nonduality and nondual awareness are taught in a wide variety of religious traditions, including some western religions and philosophies. While their metaphysical systems differ, they may refer to a similar experience. These include:
  • Ancient speculations on Vedic hymns, according to Larson, gave rise to both the monistic (non-dual) and the Samkhya (dual) tradition, which possibly developed within ascetic milieus. These proto-Samkhya and non-Samkhya speculations are evidenced in the earliest and form the basis of Vedanta.
  • :
    • "Shūnyavāda (emptiness view) of the school", which holds that there is a non-dual relationship (that is, there is no true separation) between conventional truth and ultimate truth, as well as between samsara and nirvana.
    • "Vijnānavāda (consciousness view) of the school", which holds that there is no ultimate perceptual and conceptual division between a subject and its objects, or a cognizer and that which is cognized. It also argues against mind-body dualism, holding that there is only consciousness. In other words, consciousness is the fundamental and only reality.
    • -thought, which holds that all beings have the inborn potential to become Buddhas.
    • -buddhism, including traditions of and .
    • East Asian Mahāyāna Buddhist traditions like Pure Land and .
  • :
    • The of which teaches that the Atman is pure consciousness, and that a single pure consciousness, svayam prakāśa, is the only reality, and that the world is unreal (Maya).
    • Non-dual forms of Hindu Tantra including and the goddess centered . Their view is similar to Advaita, but they teach that the world is not unreal, but it is the real manifestation of consciousness.Ksemaraja, trans. by Jaidev Singh, Spanda Karikas: The Divine Creative Pulsation, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, p.119
  • , which teaches the idea of a single subtle universal force or cosmic creative power called (literally "way").
  • Western traditions:
  • Abrahamic traditions:
    • Jewish
    • Christian mystics who promote a "nondual experience", such as and Julian of Norwich . The focus of this Christian nondualism is on bringing the worshiper closer to God and realizing a "oneness" with the Divine.James Charlton, Non-dualism in Eckhart, Julian of Norwich and Traherne,: A Theopoetic Reflection, 2012, p. 2.


Scientific perspectives
Recent neuroscientific and phenomenological studies have examined nondual awareness as a distinct cognitive and experiential state. Josipovic describes it as a non-representational mode of consciousness, distinct from other mental states. Gamma & Metzinger (2021) propose that nondual awareness can be mapped phenomenologically, identifying factors such as luminosity, absence of egoic boundaries, and self-reflexivity.

However, scholars such as Robert Sharf argue that scientific studies risk reifying nonduality as a purely neurocognitive phenomenon, stripping it of its cultural and contexts.


Origins
According to Dasgupta and Mohanta, non-dualism developed in various strands of Indian thought, both Vedic and Buddhist, from the Upanishadic period onward.


Oldest traces
According to Cohen, the earliest traces are found in several hymns of the Vedas, such as the of the Ṛgveda

According to Gombrich, the oldest traces of nondualism in Indian thought may be found in the Chandogya Upanishad (8th to 6th century BCE), which pre-dates the earliest Buddhism. Pre-sectarian Buddhism may also have been responding to the teachings of the Chandogya Upanishad, rejecting some of its Atman-Brahman related metaphysics. However, Schayer and Lindtner notes that even the Nikayas (300 BCE)Stephen Phillips (2009), Yoga, Karma, and Rebirth: A Brief History and Philosophy, Columbia University Press; . preserve elements of an archaic form of Buddhism that is close to Brahmanical beliefs,and which later developed in the tradition. Lindtner argues that in precanonical Buddhism, is considered an actual existent.

One of the earliest uses of the word Advaita is found in verse 4.3.32 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (8th–5th century BCE)Fujii, M. 1997, "On the Formation and Transmission of the Jaiminīya-Upaniṣad-Brāhmaṇa", Inside the Texts, Beyond the Texts: New Approaches to the Study of the Vedas, ed. M. Witzel, Harvard Oriental Series, Opera Minora, 2], Cambridge, 89–102Stephen Phillips (2009), Yoga, Karma, and Rebirth: A Brief History and Philosophy, Columbia University Press; .Olivelle, Patrick (1998), Upaniṣads, Oxford University Press, , and in verses 7 and 12 of the Mandukya Upanishad (variously dated to have been composed between 500 BCE to 200 BCE).

(1999). 9788120812819, Motilal Banarsidass. .
The term appears in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.3.32, in the section with a discourse of the oneness of Atman (individual soul) and (universal consciousness), as follows:


Proto-samkhya
Indian ideas of nondual awareness also developed as proto- speculations in ascetic milieus in the 1st millennium BCE, with the notion of , the witness-conscious or 'pure consciousness'. While samkhya-like speculations can be found in the Rig Veda and some of the older Upanishads, Samkhya may have non-Vedic origins, and developed in ascetic milieus. Proto-samkhya ideas developed from the 8th/7th c. BCE onwards, as evidenced in the middle Upanishads, the , the Bhagavad Gita, and the Moksadharma-section of the . It was related to the early ascetic traditions and meditation, spiritual practices, and religious cosmology, and methods of reasoning that result in liberating knowledge ( vidya, jnana, viveka) that end the cycle of dukkha and rebirth. allowing for "a great variety of philosophical formulations". Brahmanical and non-Brahmanical (Buddhism, Jainism) ascetic traditions of the first millennium BCE developed in close interaction, utilizing proto-Samkhya enumerations (lists) analyzing experience in the context of meditative practices providing liberating insight into the nature of experience. Pre- karika systematic Samkhya existed around the beginning of the first millennium CE. The defining method of Samkhya was established with the (4th c. CE).

The Upanishads contain proto-Shamkhya speculations. 's exposition on the Self in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, and the dialogue between and his son Svetaketu in the Chandogya Upanishad represent a more developed notion of the essence of man ( Atman) as "pure subjectivity – i.e., the knower who is himself unknowable, the seer who cannot be seen", and as "pure conscious", discovered by means of speculations, or enumerations. According to Larson, "it seems quite likely that both the monistic trends in Indian thought and the dualistic samkhya could have developed out of these ancient speculations." According to Larson, the enumeration of in Samkhya is also found in Taittiriya Upanishad, Aitareya Upanishad and Yajnavalkya–Maitri dialogue in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad.

The in verses 3.10–13 and 6.7–11 describes a concept of puruṣa, and other concepts also found in later Samkhya., Sixty Upanishads of the Veda, Volume 1, Motilal Banarsidass, , pages 273, 288–289, 298–299 The Katha Upanishad, dated to be from about the middle of the 1st millennium BCE, in verses 2.6.6 through 2.6.13 recommends a path to Self-knowledge akin to Samkhya, and calls this path Yoga. (1962), Katha Upanishad, in The Upanishads – Part II, Dover Publications, , page 22


Development toward monism
The first millennium CE saw a movement towards postulating an underlying "basis of unity," both in the Buddhist and schools, and in , collapsing phenomenal reality into a "single substrate or underlying principle." also states that Indian thought since the Rig Veda tended toward , as shown in the development of Mahayana Buddhism in the first centuries CE toward monism, reflecting "the weakening of Buddhism as a social force and the revival of Brahmanism and Hinduism and the consequent brahmanization or "vedantinization" of Buddhism." Several Upanishads, including the , imply a quest for an undifferentiated oneness as the ultimate objective of human spiritual pursuit. According to the Īśā Upanishad, this goal transcends both the processes of becoming (saṃbhūti) and non-becoming (asaṃbhūti). The (second half of the first millennium BCE) employs a series of paradoxes to describe the supreme entity. The divine being is depicted as immovable, yet swifter than the human mind, surpassing even the fastest runners. It exists both far and near, within and outside. The term "" is used to convey that this entity transcends all dichotomies, encompassing wisdom and ignorance, existence and non-existence, and creation and destruction. It emphasizes that not only is the divine entity beyond dualities, but human seekers of immortality must also transcend their dualistic perception of the world.
(2017). 9781317636960, Routledge.


Hinduism
, the most prominent exponent of Advaita Vedānta tradition."I am other than name, form and action.

My nature is ever free!I am Self, the supreme unconditioned Brahman.I am pure Awareness, always non-dual."

Adi Shankara, 11.7]] Advaita argues that all of the universe is one essential reality, and that all facets and aspects of the universe is ultimately an expression or appearance of that one reality. It regards Atman-, Shiva or Shakti as the single universal existence beyond the plurality of the world, recognized as pure awareness or the witness-consciousness, as in , and . Although the term is best known from the Advaita Vedanta school of , advaita appears in different shades in various schools of Hinduism such as in , (), Vedanta (Vaishnavism), non-dual and , as well as modern schools and teachers. a

(2025). 9780195347135, Oxford University Press. .
;
b Jean Filliozat (1991), Religion, Philosophy, Yoga: A Selection of Articles, Motilal Banarsidass, , pp. 68–69;
c Richard Davis (2014), Ritual in an Oscillating Universe: Worshipping Siva in Medieval India, Princeton University Press, , p. 167 note 21, Quote (p. 13): "Some agamas argue a monist metaphysics, while others are decidedly dualist."
The advaita ideas of some Hindu traditions contrasts with the schools that defend dualism or , such as that of who stated that the experienced reality and are two (dual) and distinct.Betty Stafford (2010), Dvaita, Advaita, and Viśiṣṭādvaita. "Contrasting Views of Mokṣa, Asian Philosophy". An International Journal of the Philosophical Traditions of the East, Volume 20, Issue 2, pp. 215–224


Vedanta
The goal of is to know the "truly real" and thus negate false identifications. Several schools of Vedanta are informed by , the earliest Indian school of dualism, but teach a form of nondualism. The best-known is Advaita Vedanta, but other nondual Vedanta schools also have a significant influence and following, such as Vishishtadvaita Vedanta and , both of which are . Proto-Vedanta, as reflected in the Brahma Sutras, was majorly , viewing the jivatman and Brahman as both identical and different.
(2000). 9789004379114, BRILL. .


Advaita Vedanta
Strict nondual/monistic (advaita-'not two'-non-difference) ideas were developed and defended in the nascent Advaita Vedanta tradition, which reacted against Samkhya and Mimansa and moved closer to Mahayana thought, especially that of Nagarjuna, while Shankara reinterpreted these Mahayana influences giving them a Vedantic base and flavor using principal Upanishads, Bhagvad gita, and the Brahma sutras.N.V. Isaeva (1993), Shankara and Indian Philosophy, SUNY Press

In the Advaita Vedanta of , only Atman- is ultimately real; the individual jivAtman is ultimately non-different from Atman-Brahman, pure awareness, the witness-consciousness.Joseph Milne (1997), "Advaita Vedanta and typologies of multiplicity and unity: An interpretation of nondual knowledge", International Journal of Hindu Studies, Volume 1, Issue 1, pp. 165–188Craig, Edward (general editor) (1998). Routledge encyclopedia of philosophy: Luther to Nifo, Volume 6. Taylor & Francis. , . Source: [3] (accessed: Thursday 22 April 2010), p.476 According to Advaita Vedanta, Brahman is the highest Reality.PT Raju (2006), Idealistic Thought of India, Routledge, , p. 426 and Conclusion chapter part XII

The Mahāvākyas, as documented in the Upanishads, explain the unity of Brahman and Atman and form the basis of the Advaita Vedanta tradition. MAHAVAKYAS, Ayam Atma Brahma: Self is Absolute Entity, www.classicyoga.co.in (ইংরেজি ভাষায়)


Similarities and differences with Buddhism
Scholars state that Advaita Vedanta was influenced by , given the common terminology and methodology and some common doctrines.John Grimes, Review of Richard King's Early Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism, Journal of the American Academy of Religion Vol. 66, No. 3 (Autumn, 1998), pp. 684–686S. Mudgal, Advaita of Sankara, A Reappraisal, Impact of Buddhism and Samkhya on Sankara's thought, Delhi 1975, p.187" and Rohit Dalvi state:

Mahadevan suggests that adopted Buddhist terminology and adapted its doctrines to his Vedantic goals, much like early Buddhism adopted Upanishadic terminology and adapted its doctrines to Buddhist goals; both used pre-existing concepts and ideas to convey new meanings.John Plott (2000), Global History of Philosophy: The Patristic-Sutra period (325 – 800 AD), Volume 3, Motilal Banarsidass, , pp. 285–288 Michael Comans states there is a fundamental difference between Buddhist thought and that of Gaudapada, who accepts the premises and relies on the fundamental teaching of the Upanishads. Shankara harmonised 's ideas with the Upanishadic texts. Dasgupta and Mohanta note that Buddhism and Shankara's Advaita Vedanta are not opposing systems, but "different phases of development of the same non-dualistic metaphysics from the Upanishadic period to the time of Sankara".


Vishishtadvaita Vedanta
Vishishtadvaita Vedanta is another main school of Vedanta and teaches the nonduality of the qualified whole, in which Brahman alone exists, but is characterized by multiplicity. It can be described as "qualified monism", or "qualified non-dualism", or "attributive ".

According to this school, the world is real, yet underlying all the differences is an all-embracing unity, of which all "things" are an "attribute". , the main proponent of Vishishtadvaita philosophy contends that the ("The three courses") – namely the , the , and the – are to be interpreted in a way that shows this unity in diversity, for any other way would violate their consistency.

defines Vishishtadvaita using the statement: Asesha Chit-Achit Prakaaram Brahmaikameva Tatvam – ", as qualified by the sentient and insentient modes (or attributes), is the only reality."


Neo-Vedanta
Neo-Vedanta, also called "neo-Hinduism" is a modern interpretation of which developed in response to western and , and aims to present Hinduism as a "homogenized ideal of Hinduism" with Advaita Vedanta as its central doctrine.

It's development was influenced by Unitarian Universalism and western esoteric traditions, especially Transcendentalism, and Theosophy.

Neo-Vedanta, as represented by and , is indebted to Advaita vedanta, but also reflects Advaya-philosophy. A main influence on neo-Advaita was , himself a and tantrika, and the guru of Vivekananda. According to Michael Taft, Ramakrishna reconciled the dualism of formlessness and form. Ramakrishna regarded the supreme being to be both personal and impersonal, active and inactive, though he felt that "the distinction between them does not mean a difference", as they "are the same thing, like milk and its whiteness".

Radhakrishnan acknowledged the reality and diversity of the world of experience, which he saw as grounded in and supported by the absolute or Brahman. According to Anil Sooklal, Vivekananda's neo-Advaita "reconciles or dualism and Advaita or non-dualism":

According to Michael Hawley, Radhakrishnan also reinterpreted Shankara's notion of maya. According to Radhakrishnan, maya is not a strict absolute idealism, but "a subjective misperception of the world as ultimately real". It should be noted, though, that Shankara took a realistic stance, and his explanations are "remote from any connotation of illusion." It was the 13th century scholar , founder of the influential school, who introduced the notion that the world is illusory. According to Hacker, maya is not a prominent theme for Shankara, in contrast to the later Advaita tradition, and "the word maya has for Shankara hardly any terminological weight."

According to Sarma, standing in the tradition of Nisargadatta Maharaj, Advaitavāda means "spiritual non-dualism or absolutism", in which opposites are manifestations of the Absolute, which itself is immanent and transcendent:

Neo-Vedanta was well-received among Theosophists, Christian Science, and the movement; Christian Science in turn influenced the self-study teaching A Course in Miracles.


Kashmir Shaivism
Advaita is also a central concept in various schools of Shaivism, such as and which is generally known as .

Kashmir Shaivism is a school of Śaivism, described by as "paradvaita", meaning "the supreme and absolute non-dualism". It is categorized by various scholars as Kashmir Shaivism: The Secret Supreme, Swami Lakshman Jee, pp. 103 (absolute idealism, theistic monism,The Trika Śaivism of Kashmir, Moti Lal Pandit realistic idealism,

(1987). 9781438401744, State University of New York Press.
transcendental physicalism or concrete monism).

Kashmir Saivism is based on a strong monistic interpretation of the Tantras and its subcategory the Kaula Tantras, which were tantras written by the . There was additionally a revelation of the to . Kashmir Saivism claimed to supersede the dualistic . , the first theologian of monistic Saivism, was the teacher of , who was the grand-teacher of , who in turn was the teacher of .

The philosophy of Kashmir Shaivism can be seen in contrast to Shankara's Advaita. Advaita Vedanta holds that Brahman is inactive ( niṣkriya) and the phenomenal world is a false appearance ( māyā) of Brahman, like snake seen in semi-darkness is a false appearance of Rope lying there. In Kashmir Shavisim, all things are a manifestation of the Universal Consciousness, Chit or .Pratyãbhijñahṛdayam, Jaideva Singh, Moltilal Banarsidass, 2008 p.24-26The Doctrine of Vibration: An Analysis of Doctrines and Practices of Kashmir Shaivism, By Mark S. G. Dyczkowski, p.44 Kashmir Shavisim sees the phenomenal world ( ) as real: it exists, and has its being in Consciousness ( Chit).Ksemaraja, trans. by Jaidev Singh, Spanda Karikas: The Divine Creative Pulsation, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, p. 119

Kashmir Shaivism was influenced by, and took over doctrines from, several orthodox and heterodox Indian religious and philosophical traditions. These include Vedanta, Samkhya, Patanjali Yoga and Nyayas, and various Buddhist schools, including Yogacara and Madhyamika, but also Tantra and the Nath-tradition.


Contemporary Indian traditions
Primal awareness is also part of other Indian traditions, which are less strongly, or not all, organised in monastic and institutional organisations. Although often called "Advaita Vedanta", these traditions have their origins in vernacular movements and "householder" traditions, and have close ties to the , and traditions.


Natha Sampradaya
The Natha Sampradaya, with yogis such as , introduced , the concept of a spontaneous spirituality. According to Ken Wilber, this state reflects nonduality.
(2025). 9780834822702, Shambhala Publications. .


Neo-Advaita
Neo-Advaita is a new religious movement based on a modern Western interpretation of , especially the teachings of . It is a form of nondualism which emphasizes , and grew strongly in popularity since the 2000s. According to , neo-Advaita is part of a larger religious current which he calls immediatism. Neo-Advaita has been criticized for this immediatism and lack of philosophical groundedness, and its lack of preparatory practices. Notable neo-advaita teachers are H. W. L. Poonja and his students , Andrew Cohen, and .


Buddhism
Over time, Buddhism began shifting toward a more unified view of reality, moving away from the earlier pluralistic outlook of schools of Hīnayāna Buddhism, particularly the Sarvāstivāda. Concepts such as tathāgatagarbha (Buddha-nature) and ālaya-vijñāna (storehouse consciousness) were introduced into Buddhism, signaling not only a philosophical transformation but also a weakening of Buddhism's social influence. This period saw a growing absorption of Brahmanical ideas, often described as the "Brahmanization" of Buddhism. An example of this is found in the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra, where tathāgatagarbha is at times equated with ālaya-vijñāna, and its description bears a striking resemblance to the Vedāntic concept of Brahman. Terms like Brahman, Viṣṇu, and Īśvara are even used as synonyms for tathāgata, with the highest Brahman being presented as the ultimate reality.
(2000). 9789004379114, BRILL. .

There are different Buddhist views which resonate with the concepts and experiences of primordial awareness and non-duality or "not two" ( advaya). The does not use the term advaya in the earliest Buddhist texts, but it does appear in some of the , such as the Vimalakīrti.Watson, Burton, The Vimalakirti Sutra, Columbia University Press, 1997, p. 104. The Buddha taught meditative inquiry ( dhyana) and nondiscursive attention ( samadhi).


Indian Buddhism

Nirvana
In archaic Buddhism, Nirvana may have been a kind of transformed and transcendent consciousness or discernment ( viññana) that has "stopped" ( nirodhena).Johansson, Rune, The Psychology of Nirvana, 1969, p. 111. According to Harvey this nirvanic consciousness is said to be "objectless", "infinite" ( anantam), "unsupported" ( appatiṭṭhita) and "non-manifestive" ( anidassana) as well as "beyond time and spatial location".

Stanislaw Schayer, a Polish scholar, argued in the 1930s that the Nikayas preserve elements of an archaic form of Buddhism which is close to Brahmanical beliefs, and survived in the tradition. Schayer's view, possibly referring to texts where "'consciousness' ( vinnana) seems to be the ultimate reality or substratum" as well as to , saw nirvana as an immortal, deathless sphere, a transmundane reality or state. A similar view is also defended by C. Lindtner, who argues that in precanonical Buddhism nirvana is an actual existent. The original and early Buddhist concepts of nirvana may have been similar to those found in competing Śramaṇa (strivers/ascetics) traditions such as and Upanishadic Vedism. Similar ideas were proposed by and M. Falk, citing sources which speak of an eternal and "invisible infinite consciousness, which shines everywhere" as point to the view that nirvana is a kind of Absolute, and arguing that the nirvanic element, as an "essence" or pure consciousness, is immanent within samsara, an "abode" or "place" of prajña, which is gained by the enlightened.M. Falk (1943), Nama-rupa and Dharma-rupa

In the Theravada tradition, nibbāna is regarded as an uncompounded or unconditioned ( asankhata) (phenomenon, event) which is "transmundane", and which is beyond our normal dualistic conceptions.


Luminous mind
Another influential concept in Indian Buddhism is the idea of which became associated with Buddha-nature. In the Early Buddhist Texts there are various mentions of luminosity or radiance which refer to the development of the mind in meditation. In the Saṅgīti-sutta for example, it relates to the attainment of , where the perception of light ( āloka sañña) leads to a mind endowed with luminescence ( sappabhāsa). According to Analayo, the Upakkilesa-sutta and its parallels mention that the presence of defilements "results in a loss of whatever inner light or luminescence (obhāsa) had been experienced during meditation". The Pali Dhātuvibhaṅga-sutta uses the metaphor of refining gold to describe equanimity reached through meditation, which is said to be "pure, bright, soft, workable, and luminous". The Pali (A.I.8–10) states:Harvey, page 94. The reference is at A I, 8–10.

The term is given no direct doctrinal explanation in the Pali discourses, but later Buddhist schools explained it using various concepts developed by them.Harvey, page 99. The school identifies the "luminous mind" with the , a concept first proposed in the Theravāda Abhidhamma.Collins, page 238. The later schools of the identify it with both the Mahayana concepts of and . The notion is of central importance in the philosophy and practice of .


Buddha-nature
or (literally "Buddha womb") is that which allows sentient beings to become Buddhas. Various Mahayana texts such as the Tathāgatagarbha sūtras focus on this idea and over time it became a very influential doctrine in Indian Buddhism, as well in East Asian and Tibetan Buddhism. The Buddha nature teachings may be regarded as a form of nondualism. According to Sally B King, all beings are said to be or possess , which is nondual Thusness or Dharmakaya. This reality, states King, transcends the "duality of self and not-self", the "duality of form and emptiness" and the "two poles of being and non being".King, Sally (1991), Buddha Nature, SUNY Press, pp. 99, 106, 111.

There various interpretations and views on and the concept became very influential in India, China and Tibet, where it also became a source of much debate. In later Indian Yogācāra, a new sub-school developed which adopted the doctrine of into the Yogācāra system. The influence of this hybrid school can be seen in texts like the Lankavatara Sutra and the Ratnagotravibhaga. This synthesis of Yogācāra became very influential in later Buddhist traditions, such as Indian , and .Brunnhölzl, Karl , When the Clouds Part: The Uttaratantra and Its Meditative Tradition as a Bridge between Sutra and Tantra, Shambhala Publications, 2015, p. 118.


Advaya
According to Kameshwar Nath Mishra, one connotation of advaya in Sanskrit Buddhist literature is that it refers to the between two opposite extremes (such as and ), and thus it is "not two".Kameshwar Nath Mishra, Advaya (= Non-Dual) in Buddhist Sanskrit, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Summer 1988), pp. 3–11 (9 pages).

One of the , the Vimalakirti Sutra contains a chapter on the "Dharma gate of non-duality" ( advaya dharma dvara pravesa) which is said to be entered once a person understands how numerous pairs of opposite extremes are to be rejected as forms of grasping. These extremes which must be avoided in order to understand ultimate reality are described by various characters in the text, and include: birth and extinction, 'I' and 'mine', perception and non-perception, defilement and purity, good and not-good, created and uncreated, worldly and unworldly, samsara and nirvana, enlightenment and ignorance, form and emptiness and so on.Watson, Burton, The Vimalakirti Sutra, Columbia University Press, 1997, pp. 104–106. The final character to attempt to describe ultimate reality is the bodhisattva , who states:

It is in all beings wordless, speechless, shows no signs, is not possible of cognizance, and is above all questioning and answering.

responds to this statement by maintaining completely silent, therefore expressing that the nature of ultimate reality is ineffable ( anabhilāpyatva) and inconceivable ( acintyatā), beyond verbal designation ( prapañca) or thought constructs ( vikalpa). The Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra, a text associated with Buddhism, also uses the term " advaya" extensively.McCagney, Nancy, Nāgārjuna and the Philosophy of Openness, Rowman & Littlefield, 1 January 1997, p. 129.

In the Buddhist philosophy of , the two truths or ways of understanding reality, are said to be advaya (not two). As explained by the Indian philosopher , there is a non-dual relationship, that is, there is no absolute separation, between conventional and ultimate truth, as well as between and .

The concept of nonduality is also important in the other major Indian Mahayana tradition, the school, where it is seen as the absence of duality between the perceiving subject (or "grasper") and the object (or "grasped"). It is also seen as an explanation of emptiness and as an explanation of the content of the awakened mind which sees through the illusion of subject-object duality. However, in this conception of non-dualism, there are still a multiplicity of individual and thus Yogacara does not teach an idealistic monism.Kochumuttom, Thomas A. (1999), A buddhist Doctrine of Experience. A New Translation and Interpretation of the Works of Vasubandhu the Yogacarin, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, p. 1.

These basic ideas have continued to influence Mahayana Buddhist doctrinal interpretations of Buddhist traditions such as , , , and as well as concepts such as , , Indra's net, and shentong.


Madhyamaka
Madhyamaka, also known as Śūnyavāda (the emptiness teaching), refers primarily to a school of philosophy founded by Nāgārjuna. In Madhyamaka, Advaya refers to the fact that the two truths are not separate or different., as well as the non-dual relationship of (the round of rebirth and ) and (cessation of suffering, ). According to Murti, in Madhyamaka, Advaya is an theory, unlike the metaphysical view of Hindu Advaita. Madhyamaka advaya is closely related to the classical Buddhist understanding that all things are impermanent ( ) and devoid of self ( ) or essenceless ( niḥsvabhāva),
(2025). 9781134903528, Routledge. .
, Quote: "All phenomenal existence in is said to have three interlocking characteristics: impermanence, suffering and lack of soul or essence."
(1995). 9780791426319, State University of New York Press. .
and that this emptiness does not constitute an absolute reality in itself.

In Madhyamaka, the two truths doctrine refer to conventional ( saṃvṛti) and ultimate ( paramārtha) truth. The ultimate truth is , or non-existence of inherently existing things, and the "emptiness of emptiness": emptiness does not in itself constitute an absolute reality. Conventionally, things exist, but ultimately, they are empty of any existence on their own, as described in Nagarjuna's magnum opus, the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā (MMK).

As Jay Garfield notes, for Nagarjuna, to understand the two truths as totally different from each other is to reify and confuse the purpose of this doctrine, since it would either destroy conventional realities such as the Buddha's teachings and the empirical reality of the world (making Madhyamaka a form of ) or deny the dependent origination of phenomena (by positing eternal ). Thus the non-dual doctrine of the lies beyond these two extremes.

Emptiness is a consequence of pratītyasamutpāda (dependent arising), the teaching that no ("thing", "phenomena") has an existence of its own, but always comes into existence in dependence on other dharmas. According to Madhyamaka all dharma phenomena are empty of substance or essence () because they are dependently co-arisen. Likewise it is because they are dependently co-arisen that they have no intrinsic, independent reality of their own. Madhyamaka also rejects the existence of absolute realities or beings such as or Self. In the highest sense, "ultimate reality" is not an ontological Absolute reality that lies beneath an unreal world, nor is it the non-duality of a personal self ( atman) and an absolute Self (cf. ). Instead, it is the knowledge which is based on a deconstruction of such reifications and Conceptual proliferations.Abruzzi; McGandy et al., Encyclopedia of Science and Religion, Thomson-Gale, 2003, p. 515. It also means that there is no "transcendental ground", and that "ultimate reality" has no existence of its own, but is the negation of such a transcendental reality, and the impossibility of any statement on such an ultimately existing transcendental reality: it is no more than a fabrication of the mind. However, according to Nagarjuna, even the very schema of ultimate and conventional, samsara and nirvana, is not a final reality, and he thus famously deconstructs even these teachings as being empty and not different from each other in the MMK where he writes:

According to Nancy McCagney, what this refers to is that the two truths depend on each other; without emptiness, conventional reality cannot work, and vice versa. It does not mean that samsara and nirvana are the same, or that they are one single thing, as in Advaita Vedanta, but rather that they are both empty, open, without limits, and merely exist for the conventional purpose of teaching the .

Yuichi Kajiyama states that the later Madhyamikas developed the Advaya definition as a means to Nirvikalpa-Samadhi by suggesting that "things arise neither from their own selves nor from other things, and that when subject and object are unreal, the mind, being not different, cannot be true either; thereby one must abandon attachment to cognition of nonduality as well, and understand the lack of intrinsic nature of everything". Thus, the Buddhist nondualism or Advaya concept became a means to realizing absolute emptiness.


Yogācāra tradition
In the tradition of Yogācāra (Skt; "yoga practice"), adyava (Tibetan: gnyis med) refers to overcoming the conceptual and perceptual dichotomies of cognizer and cognized, or subject and object.Dreyfus, Georges B. J. Recognizing Reality: Dharmakirti's Philosophy and Its Tibetan Interpretations, SUNY Press, p. 438.Williams, Paul (editor), Buddhism: Yogācāra, the epistemological tradition and Tathāgatagarbha, Taylor & Francis, 2005, p. 138. The concept of adyava in Yogācāra is an epistemological stance on the nature of experience and knowledge, as well as a phenomenological exposition of yogic cognitive transformation. Early Buddhism schools such as and Sautrāntika, that thrived through the early centuries of the common era, postulated a dualism ( dvaya) between the mental activity of grasping ( grāhaka, "cognition", "subjectivity") and that which is grasped ( grāhya, "cognitum", intentional object).
(1991). 9788120807600, Motilal Banarsidass.
Yogacara postulates that this dualistic relationship is a false illusion or superimposition ( samaropa).

Yogācāra also taught the doctrine which held that only mental cognitions really exist ( vijñapti-mātra), instead of the mind-body dualism of other Indian Buddhist schools. This is another sense in which reality can be said to be non-dual, because it is "consciousness-only".Raymond E. Robertson, Zhongguo ren min da xue. Guo xue yuan, A Study of the Dharmadharmatavibhanga: Vasubandhu's commentary and three critical editions of the root texts, with a modern commentary from the perspective of the rNying ma tradition by Master Tam Shek-wing. Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Studies Association in North America, China Tibetology Publishing House, 2008, p. 218. There are several interpretations of this main theory, which has been widely translated as representation-only, ideation-only, impressions-only and perception-only.Cameron Hall, Bruce, The Meaning of Vijnapti in Vasubandhu's Concept of Mind, JIABS Vol 9, 1986, Number 1, p. 7.Siderits, Mark, Buddhism as philosophy , 2017, p. 146. Some scholars see it as a kind of subjective or epistemic (similar to Kant's theory) while others argue that it is closer to a kind of phenomenology or representationalism. According to Mark Siderits the main idea of this doctrine is that we are only ever aware of mental images or impressions which manifest themselves as external objects, but "there is actually no such thing outside the mind."Siderits, Mark, Buddhism as philosophy, 2017, p. 149. For Alex Wayman, this doctrine means that "the mind has only a report or representation of what the sense organ had sensed." Jay Garfield and Paul Williams both see the doctrine as a kind of Idealism in which only mentality exists.Garfield, Jay L. Vasubandhu's treatise on the three natures translated from the Tibetan edition with a commentary, Asian Philosophy, Volume 7, 1997, Issue 2, pp. 133–154.

However, even the idealistic interpretation of Yogācāra is not an absolute idealism like or , since in Yogācāra, even consciousness "enjoys no transcendent status" and is just a conventional reality. Indeed, according to Jonathan Gold, for Yogācāra, the ultimate truth is not consciousness, but an ineffable and inconceivable "thusness" or "thatness" ( tathatā). Also, Yogācāra affirms the existence of individual , and thus Kochumuttom also calls it a realistic pluralism.

The Yogācārins defined three basic modes by which we perceive our world. These are referred to in Yogācāra as the three natures ( trisvabhāva) of experience. They are:Siderits, Mark, Buddhism as philosophy, 2017, pp. 177–178.

  1. Parikalpita (literally, "fully conceptualized"): "imaginary nature", wherein things are incorrectly comprehended based on conceptual and linguistic construction, attachment and the subject object duality. It is thus equivalent to samsara.
  2. Paratantra (literally, "other dependent"): "dependent nature", by which the dependently originated nature of things, their causal relatedness or flow of conditionality. It is the basis which gets erroneously conceptualized,
  3. Pariniṣpanna (literally, "fully accomplished"): "absolute nature", through which one comprehends things as they are in themselves, that is, empty of subject-object and thus is a type of non-dual cognition. This experience of "thatness" ( tathatā) is uninfluenced by any conceptualization at all.

To move from the duality of the Parikalpita to the non-dual consciousness of the Pariniṣpanna, Yogācāra teaches that there must be a transformation of consciousness, which is called the "revolution of the basis" ( parāvṛtty-āśraya). According to , this transformation which characterizes awakening is a "radical psycho-cognitive change" and a removal of false "interpretive projections" on reality (such as ideas of a self, external objects, etc.).Lusthaus, Dan, Buddhist Phenomenology: A Philosophical Investigation of Yogacara Buddhism and the Ch'eng Wei-shih Lun, Routledge, 2014, p. 327.

The Mahāyānasūtrālamkāra, a Yogācāra text, also associates this transformation with the concept of non-abiding nirvana and the non-duality of samsara and nirvana. Regarding this state of , it states:

Its operation is nondual ( advaya vrtti) because of its abiding neither in samsara nor in nirvana ( samsaranirvana-apratisthitatvat), through its being both conditioned and unconditioned ( samskrta-asamskrtatvena).

This refers to the Yogācāra teaching that even though a Buddha has entered nirvana, they do no "abide" in some quiescent state separate from the world but continue to give rise to extensive activity on behalf of others. This is also called the non-duality between the compounded ( samskrta, referring to samsaric existence) and the uncompounded ( asamskrta, referring to nirvana). It is also described as a "not turning back" from both samsara and nirvana.Nagao, Gadjin M. Madhyamika and Yogacara: A Study of Mahayana Philosophies, SUNY Press, 1991, p. 28.

For the later thinker Dignaga, non-dual knowledge or advayajñāna is also a synonym for (transcendent wisdom) which liberates one from samsara.Harris, Ian Charles, The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogācāra in Indian Mahāyāna Buddhism, BRILL, 1991, p. 52.


Tantric Buddhism
, also known as Vajrayana, Mantrayana or Esoteric Buddhism, drew upon all these previous Indian Buddhist ideas and nondual philosophies to develop innovative new traditions of Buddhist practice and new religious texts called the Buddhist tantras (from the 6th century onwards).Williams, Wynne, Tribe; Buddhist Thought: A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition, pp. 205–206. Tantric Buddhism was influential in China and is the main form of Buddhism in the , especially . The concept of advaya has various meanings in Buddhist Tantra. According to Tantric commentator Lilavajra, Buddhist Tantra's "utmost secret and aim" is Buddha nature. This is seen as a "non-dual, self-originated Wisdom (), an effortless fount of good qualities".Wayman, Alex; Yoga of the Guhyasamajatantra: The arcane lore of forty verses : a Buddhist Tantra commentary, 1977, p. 56. In Buddhist Tantra, there is no strict separation between the sacred (nirvana) and the profane (samsara), and all beings are seen as containing an immanent seed of awakening or Buddhahood.Duckworth, Douglas; Tibetan Mahāyāna and Vajrayāna in "A companion to Buddhist philosophy", p. 100. The Buddhist Tantras also teach that there is a non-dual relationship between emptiness and compassion ( karuna), this unity is called .Lalan Prasad Singh, Buddhist Tantra: A Philosophical Reflection and Religious Investigation, Concept Publishing Company, 2010, pp. 40–41. They also teach a "nondual pristine wisdom of bliss and emptiness".Rinpoche Kirti Tsenshap, Principles of Buddhist Tantra, Simon and Schuster, 2011 , p. 127. Advaya is also said to be the co-existence of Prajña (wisdom) and (skill in means).Lalan Prasad Singh, Buddhist Tantra: A Philosophical Reflection and Religious Investigation, Concept Publishing Company, 2010, p. ix. These nondualities are also related to the idea of yuganaddha, or "union" in the Tantras. This is said to be the "indivisible merging of innate great bliss (the means) and clear light (emptiness)" as well as the merging of relative and ultimate truths and the knower and the known, during Tantric practice.Jamgon Kongtrul, The Treasury of Knowledge: Book Five: Buddhist Ethics, Shambhala Publications, 5 June 2003, p. 345.

Buddhist Tantras also promote certain practices which are , such as or the consumption of disgusting or repulsive substances (the "five ambrosias", feces, urine, blood, semen, and marrow.). These are said to allow one to cultivate nondual perception of the pure and impure (and similar conceptual dualities) and thus it allows one to prove one's attainment of nondual gnosis ( advaya jñana).Wedemeyer, Christian K. Making Sense of Tantric Buddhism: History, Semiology, and Transgression in the Indian Traditions, Columbia University Press, 6 May 2014, p. 145.

Indian Buddhist Tantra also views humans as a microcosmos which mirrors the macrocosmos. Its aim is to gain access to the awakened energy or consciousness of Buddhahood, which is nondual, through various practices.


East-Asian Buddhism

Chinese
Chinese Buddhism was influenced by the philosophical strains of Indian Buddhist nondualism such as the doctrines of emptiness and the two truths as well as and . For example, Chinese Madhyamaka philosophers like , discussed the nonduality of the two truths.Chang-Qing Shih, The Two Truths in Chinese Buddhism Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 2004, p. 153. Chinese Yogacara also upheld the Indian Yogacara views on nondualism. One influential text in Chinese Buddhism which synthesizes and Yogacara views is the Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana, which may be a Chinese composition.

In Chinese Buddhism, the polarity of absolute and relative realities is also expressed as "". This was a result of an ontological interpretation of the two truths as well as influences from native Taoist and Confucian metaphysics. In this theory, the absolute is essence, the relative is function. They can't be seen as separate realities, but interpenetrate each other.

(1983). 9780873956734, SUNY Press.
This interpretation of the two truths as two ontological realities would go on to influence later forms of East Asian metaphysics.

As Chinese Buddhism continued to develop in new innovative directions, it gave rise to new traditions like and , which also upheld their own unique teachings on non-duality.

The school for example, taught a threefold truth, instead of the classic "two truths" of Indian Madhyamaka. Its "third truth" was seen as the nondual union of the two truths which transcends both. Tiantai metaphysics is an immanent , which sees every phenomenon, moment or event as conditioned and manifested by the whole of reality. Every instant of experience is a reflection of every other, and hence, suffering and nirvana, good and bad, Buddhahood and evildoing, are all "inherently entailed" within each other. Each moment of consciousness is simply the Absolute itself, infinitely immanent and self reflecting.

Two doctrines of the (Flower Garland), which flourished in during the , are considered nondual by some scholars. King writes that the and the doctrine of the mutual containment and interpenetration of all phenomena ( dharmas) or "perfect interfusion" ( yuanrong, 圓融) are classic nondual doctrines. This can be described as the idea that all "are representations of the wisdom of Buddha without exception" and that "they exist in a state of mutual dependence, interfusion and balance without any contradiction or conflict." According to this theory, any phenomenon exists only as part of the total nexus of reality, its existence depends on the total network of all other things, which are all equally connected to each other and contained in each other. Another Huayan metaphor used to express this view, called Indra's net, is also considered nondual by some.


Zen
The Buddha-nature and Yogacara philosophies have had a strong influence on Chán and Zen. The teachings of Zen are expressed by a set of polarities: Buddha-nature – sunyata; absolute-relative; and gradual enlightenment.

The Lankavatara-sutra, a popular sutra in Zen, endorses the Buddha-nature and emphasizes purity of mind, which can be attained in gradations. The Diamond-sutra, another popular sutra, emphasizes sunyata, which "must be realized totally or not at all". The Sutras emphasize the non-duality of form and emptiness: form is emptiness, emptiness is form, as the says. According to , Zen points not to mere emptiness, but to suchness or the .

The idea that the ultimate reality is present in the daily world of relative reality fitted into the Chinese culture which emphasized the mundane world and society. But this does not explain how the absolute is present in the relative world. This question is answered in such schemata as and the .

The continuous pondering of the break-through kōan ( shokan) or , "word head", leads to , an initial insight into "seeing the ". According to Victor Sogen Hori, a central theme of many koans is the "identity of opposites", and point to the original nonduality. Hori describes , when attained through , as the absence of subject–object duality. The aim of the so-called break-through koan is to see the "nonduality of subject and object", in which "subject and object are no longer separate and distinct".

Zen Buddhist training does not end with kenshō. Practice is to be continued to deepen the insight and to express it in daily life, to fully manifest the nonduality of absolute and relative. To deepen the initial insight of kensho, shikantaza and kōan-study are necessary. This trajectory of initial insight followed by a gradual deepening and ripening is expressed by in his Three Mysterious Gates, the Four Ways of Knowing of , the , and the which detail the steps on the Path.


Korean
The polarity of absolute and relative is also expressed as "essence-function". The absolute is essence, the relative is function. They can't be seen as separate realities, but interpenetrate each other. The distinction does not "exclude any other frameworks such as neng-so or 'subject-object' constructions", though the two "are completely different from each other in terms of their way of thinking". In Korean Buddhism, essence-function is also expressed as "body" and "the body's functions".Park, Sung-bae (2009). One Korean's approach to Buddhism: the mom/momjit paradigm. SUNY series in Korean studies: SUNY Press. , . Source: [5] (accessed: Saturday 8 May 2010), p. 11 A metaphor for essence-function is "a lamp and its light", a phrase from the , where Essence is lamp and Function is light.Lai, Whalen (1979). "Ch'an Metaphors: waves, water, mirror, lamp". Philosophy East & West; Vol. 29, no.3, July, 1979, pp. 245–253. Source: [6] (accessed: Saturday 8 May 2010)


Tibetan Buddhism

Prasangika Madhyamaka
The Gelugpa school, following Tsongkhapa, adheres to the adyava Prasaṅgika view, which states that all phenomena are , empty of self-nature, and that this "emptiness" is itself only a qualification, not a concretely existing "absolute" reality.


Shentong
In Tibetan Buddhism, the essentialist position is represented by shentong, while the nominalist, or non-essentialist position, is represented by rangtong.

Shentong is a philosophical sub-school found in . Its adherents generally hold that the nature of mind ( svasaṃvedana), the substratum of the , is "empty" () of "other" (), i.e., empty of all qualities other than an inherently existing, ineffable nature. Shentong has often been incorrectly associated with the Cittamātra () position, but is in fact also Madhyamaka, and is present primarily as the main philosophical theory of the school, although it is also taught by the and schools.

(2005). 9781877294358, Zhyisil Chokyi Ghatsal Charitable Trust.
According to Shentongpa (proponents of shentong), the emptiness of ultimate reality should not be characterized in the same way as the emptiness of apparent phenomena because it is prabhāśvara-, or "luminous mindstream" endowed with limitless Buddha qualities. Lama Shenpen, Emptiness Teachings. Buddhism Connect (accessed March, 2010) It is empty of all that is false, not empty of the limitless Buddha qualities that are its innate nature.

The contrasting Prasaṅgika view that all phenomena are , empty of self-nature, and that this "emptiness" is not a concretely existing "absolute" reality, is labeled , "empty of self-nature".

The shentong-view is related to the Ratnagotravibhāga sutra and the Yogacara-Madhyamaka synthesis of Śāntarakṣita. The truth of sunyata is acknowledged, but not considered to be the highest truth, which is the empty nature of mind. Insight into sunyata is preparatory for the recognition of the nature of mind.


Dzogchen
Dzogchen is concerned with the "natural state" and emphasizes direct experience. The state of nondual awareness is called .
(1986). 9781559391351, Penguin Books.
This primordial nature is clear light, unproduced and unchanging, free from all defilements. Through meditation, the practitioner experiences that thoughts have no substance. Mental phenomena arise and fall in the mind, but fundamentally they are empty. The practitioner then considers where the mind itself resides. Through careful examination one realizes that the mind is emptiness.

(1326–1386) revealed "Self-Liberation through seeing with naked awareness" ( rigpa ngo-sprod,) which is attributed to . The text gives an introduction, or pointing-out instruction ( ngo-spro), into , the state of presence and awareness. In this text, Karma Lingpa writes the following regarding the unity of various terms for nonduality:


Garab Dorje's three statements
(c. 665) epitomized the Dzogchen teaching in three principles, known as "Striking the Vital Point in Three Statements" ( Tsik Sum Né Dek), said to be his last words. These three statements are believed to convey the heart of his teachings and serve as a concise and profound encapsulation of Dzogchen's view, its practice of contemplation, and the role of conduct. They give in short the development a student has to undergo:

Garab Dorje's three statements were integrated into the Nyingthig traditions, the most popular of which in the Longchen Nyingthig by (1730–1798). The statements are:

  1. Introducing directly the face of rigpa itself ( ngo rang tok tu tré). Dudjom Rinpoche states this refers to: "Introducing directly the face of the naked mind as the rigpa itself, the innate primordial wisdom."
  2. Deciding upon one thing and one thing only ( tak chik tok tu ché). Dudjom states: "Because all phenomena, whatever manifests, whether saṃsāra or nirvāṇa, are none other than the rigpa's own play, there is complete and direct decision that there is nothing other than the abiding of the continual flow of rigpa."
  3. Confidence directly in the liberation of rising thoughts ( deng drol tok tu cha). Dudjom comments: "In the recognition of namtok arising, whatever arises, whether gross or subtle, there is direct confidence in the simultaneity of the arising and dissolution in the expanse of dharmakāya, which is the unity of rigpa and śūnyatā."


Other eastern religions

Sikhism
Many newer, contemporary have suggested that human souls and the monotheistic God are two different realities (dualism),
(2025). 9781932705683, Sterling Publishers. .
distinguishing it from the monistic and various shades of nondualistic philosophies of other Indian religions.
(2025). 9780231519809, Columbia University Press. .
However, some Sikh scholars have attempted to explore nondualism exegesis of Sikh scriptures, such as during the neocolonial reformist movement by Bhai Vir Singh. According to Mandair, Singh interprets the Sikh scriptures as teaching nonduality. Sikh scholar Bhai Mani Singh is quoted as saying that Sikhism has all the essence of philosophy. Historically, the Sikh symbol of has had a monistic meaning, and has been reduced to simply meaning, "There is but One God", which is incorrect. Older exegesis of Sikh scripture, such as the Faridkot Teeka, has always described Sikh metaphysics as a non-dual, universe.


Taoism
According to Paul A. Erickson, the concept of yin and yang, often mistakenly conceived of as a symbol of dualism, is actually meant to convey the notion that all apparent opposites are complementary parts of a non-dual whole.Paul A. Erickson, Liam D. Murphy. A History of Anthropological Theory. 2013. p. 486

Taoism's (Chinese wu, not; wei, doing) is a term with various translations and interpretations designed to distinguish it from passivity. Commonly understood as "effortless action", wu wei encourages individuals to flow with the natural rhythms of existence, moving beyond dualistic perspectives and embracing a harmonious unity with the universe. This holistic approach to life, characterized by spontaneous and unforced action, emphasizes interconnectedness and oneness, and integrates effortless action in both physical deeds and mental states.

(2025). 9780195138993, Oxford University Press. .


Neo-Confucianism
is primarily a social and ethical philosophy that uses metaphysical ideas, some borrowed from , as its framework. Concepts like li (principle) and qi (energy) reflect certain monistic tendencies. However, unlike the dominant Buddhists of their time, the Neo-Confucians believed that reality existed and could be understood by humankind.


Western traditions
A modern strand of thought sees "nondual consciousness" as a universal psychological state, which is a common stratum and of the same essence in different spiritual traditions. It is derived from and , but has historical roots in , Western esotericism, and Perennialism. The idea of nondual consciousness as "the central essence" is a and perennialist idea, which is part of a modern mutual exchange and synthesis of ideas between western spiritual and esoteric traditions and Asian religious revival and reform movements.

Central elements in the western traditions are , which had a strong influence on Christian contemplation or mysticism, and its accompanying apophatic theology.


Western philosophy

Greek philosophy
Parmenides of Elea was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher of the 5th century BCE. He presented two views of reality. The first, the way of Aletheia (truth), describes how all reality is one: change is impossible, and existence is timeless and uniform. The second, the way of Doxa (opinion), refers to the world of appearances, where sensory perception leads to false and deceptive conceptions. Parmenides depicted his philosophy as a divine truth and rejected the evidence of the senses, believing that truth could only be attained through reason. However, he still considered both divine and mortal understandings worth learning, as mortal insights can carry meaning. His concept of eternal Being was one without reference to time; since change cannot occur within Being, there are no intervals by which time can be measured.

A number of similarities have been noted between the works of Sextus Empiricius and that of , the philosopher from the 2nd or 3rd century CE.Conze, Edward. Buddhist Philosophy and Its European Parallels. Philosophy East and West 13, p.9-23, no.1, January 1963. University press of Hawaii. Diogenes Laërtius' biography of Pyrrho reports that Pyrrho traveled with Alexander the Great's army to India and incorporated what he learned from the and the that he met in his travels into his philosophical system. Pyrrho would have spent about 18 months in as part of Alexander the Great's court during Alexander's conquest of the east.Adrian Kuzminski, Pyrrhonism: How the Ancient Greeks Reinvented Buddhism 2008 Christopher I. Beckwith

(2025). 9781400866328, Princeton University Press. .
draws comparisons between the Buddhist three marks of existence and the concepts outlined in the "Aristocles Passage". Ajñana, which upheld radical skepticism, may have been a more powerful influence on Pyrrho than Buddhism. The Buddhists referred to Ajñana's adherents as Amarāvikkhepikas or "eel-wrigglers", due to their refusal to commit to a single doctrine. Scholars including , Jayatilleke, and Flintoff, contend that Pyrrho was influenced by, or at the very least agreed with, Indian skepticism rather than Buddhism or Jainism, based on the fact that he valued , which can be translated as "freedom from worry".

The provided a unified account of the world, constructed from ideals of logic, monistic physics, and naturalistic ethics. These three ideals constitute virtue, which is necessary for 'living a well-reasoned life', seeing as they are all parts of a , or philosophical discourse, which includes the mind's rational dialogue with itself.

Neopythagoreanism was an attempt to re-introduce a religious element into Hellenistic philosophy in place of what had come to be regarded as an arid formalism. The founders of the school sought to invest their doctrines with the halo of tradition by ascribing them to and . They went back to the later period of Plato's thought, the period when Plato endeavoured to combine his theory of forms with Pythagorean , and identified the good with the monad (which would give rise to the Neoplatonic concept of "the One"), the source of the duality of the infinite and the measured with the resultant scale of realities from the one down to the objects of the material world.

also contains nondual elements. Plotinus taught that there is a supreme, totally transcendent "One", containing no division, multiplicity, nor distinction; likewise, it is beyond all categories of being and non-being. The concept of "being" is derived by us from the objects of human experience and is an attribute of such objects, but the infinite, transcendent One is beyond all such objects and, therefore, is beyond the concepts which we can derive from them. The One "cannot be any existing thing" and cannot be merely the sum of all such things (compare the Stoic doctrine of disbelief in non-material existence) but "is prior to all existents".


Modern philosophy
Western philosophers like Hegel, and Schopenhauer defended different forms of or .

's formulation of pantheism in the 17th century constitutes a seminal European manifestation of nondualism. His philosophical work, especially expounded in Ethics posits a radical idea that fuses divinity with the material world, suggesting that God and the universe are not separate entities but different facets of a single underlying substance. In his worldview, the finite and the infinite are harmoniously interwoven, challenging René Descartes' dualistic perspective.

(1988). 9780691020372, Princeton University Press.

One of Friedrich Nietzsche's philosophical insights also resonates with nondualism. Nietzsche wrote that "We cease to think when we refuse to do so under the constraint of language." This idea is explored in his book On Truth and Lies in a Nonmoral Sense. His scrutiny of conventional thought and language urges a departure from linguistic boundaries.

(2025). 9781400849222, Princeton University Press.
This perspective aligns with the nondual notion of transcending dualistic concepts and engaging with reality in a more immediate, intuitive manner.


Western esotericism
is a religious movement founded by , which holds a monist position that there exists a single divine Absolute and articulates an emanationist cosmology in which the universe is perceived as outward reflections from this Absolute. The purpose of human life is spiritual emancipation and the human soul undergoes reincarnation upon bodily death according to a process of . Drawing primarily from Advaita Vedanta, some strands of Mahayana Buddhism, and Neoplatonism, Theosophy identifies India as the center of a universal ancient wisdom-religion.
(1980). 9780520039681, University of California Press.
(2025). 9781585428632, Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin.
Some of its concepts were later distorted and racialized in the development of , a nationalist esoteric ideology, which misappropriated Theosophical ideas and contributed to the ideological background of Nazism.

has been described as gnostic, pantheist, and deist, but at its core is the mystical union of God, man, and nature. It teaches that God dwells within the individual human spirit as an inner source of magical power, but is also immanent within nature through the primal laws that govern the cycles of growth, decay, and renewal. It explicitly rejects a Mind-body dualism of spirit versus matter, or of God over or against nature. Humanity is therefore one with the universe, which entails an obligation to live in accordance with nature.

Other modern theories with non-dual elements include Quantum mysticism, which links spirituality to quantum mechanics and posits that consciousness causes collapse, and by , a metatheory unifying Western models and Eastern meditative traditions.


Hermeticism
In view, God is both the all (: to pan) and the creator of the all: all created things pre-exist in God and God is the nature of the cosmos (being both the substance from which it proceeds and the governing principle which orders it), yet the things themselves and the cosmos were all created by God. Thus, God ('the All') creates itself, and is both transcendent (as the creator of the cosmos) and (as the created cosmos). These ideas are also closely related to the .


Medieval Abrahamic religions

Christian contemplation and mysticism
In Christian mysticism, contemplative prayer and Apophatic theology are central elements. In contemplative prayer, the mind is focused by constant repetition a phrase or word. Saint recommended use of the phrase "O God, make speed to save me: O Lord, make haste to help me". John Cassian, Conferences, 10, chapters 10–11 Another formula for repetition is the name of Jesus
(1974). 9780913836125, St. Vladimir's Seminary Press. .
James W. Skehan, Place Me with Your Son (Georgetown University Press 1991 ), p. 89 or the , which has been called "the mantra of the Orthodox Church", although the term "Jesus Prayer" is not found in the Fathers of the Church. The author of The Cloud of Unknowing recommended use of a monosyllabic word, such as "God" or "Love". The Cloud of Unknowing (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature 2005 ), p. 18

Apophatic theology is derived from via Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite. In this approach, the notion of God is stripped from all positive qualifications, leaving a "darkness" or "unground", it had a strong influence on western mysticism. A notable example is , who also attracted attention from Zen-Buddhists like D.T. Suzuki in modern times, due to the similarities between Buddhist thought and Neo-Platonism.

The Cloud of Unknowing – an anonymous work of Christian mysticism written in in the latter half of the 14th century – advocates a mystic relationship with God. The text describes a union with God through the heart. The author of the text advocates , a form of inner silence. According to the text, God can not be known through knowledge or from intellection. It is only by emptying the mind of all created images and thoughts that we can arrive to experience God. Continuing on this line of thought, God is completely unknowable by the mind. God is not known through the intellect but through intense , motivated by love, and stripped of all thought.Paul de Jaegher Christian Mystics of the Middle Ages: An Anthology of Writings, translated by 2004, p. 86

, though not non-dual in the ordinary sense, considers the unity of God so absolute that even the duality of subject and predicate, to describe him, can be true only by . In Thomist thought, even the is only an approximate name, since "I am" involves a predicate whose own essence is its subject.Koren, Henry J (1955). An Introduction to the Science of Metaphysics. B. Herder Book Co. ,

The former nun and contemplative Bernadette Roberts is considered a nondualist by Jerry Katz.

is an incomplete form of non-duality applied to a tertiary entity, neglecting the subjective .


Jewish Hasidism and Kabbalism
According to , nonduality begins to appear in the medieval Jewish textual tradition which peaked in :

One of the most striking contributions of the Kabbalah, which became a central idea in Chasidic thought, was a highly innovative reading of the monotheistic idea. The belief in one God is no longer perceived as the mere rejection of other deities or intermediaries, but a denial of any existence outside of God.


Academic views

Orientalism
The western world has been exposed to Indian religions since the late 18th century. The first western translation of a Sanskrit text was made in 1785. It marked a growing interest in Indian culture and languages. The first translation of the dualism and nondualism discussing Upanishads appeared in two parts in 1801 and 1802 and influenced Arthur Schopenhauer, who called them "the consolation of my life". Early translations also appeared in other European languages.


Common-core thesis

Perennialism
The common-core thesis suggests that different mystical traditions may describe similar, if not identical, experiences, despite using different conceptual frameworks and terminologies. Proponents of , such as , argue that a universal mystical core underlies all religious traditions. Huxley, influenced by Vivekananda's and , promoted this idea in his book The Perennial Philosophy. However, scholarly critiques of this thesis argue that religious experiences are often culturally and doctrinally mediated, rather than pointing to a single, universal experience.

Elias Amidon describes this common essence as an "indescribable but definitely recognizable reality" that serves as the ground of all being. He suggests that various spiritual traditions refer to this reality by different names, including:


Critiques of the common-core thesis
Critics of the common-core thesis, often referred to as diversity theorists, argue that mystical experiences are not universal but instead culturally and doctrinally shaped. Scholars such as S. T. Katz and Wayne Proudfoot assert that all religious experiences are mediated by language, tradition, and conceptual frameworks rather than reflecting an unconditioned, universal mystical reality. Katz, in particular, writes that "No unmediated experience is possible, and that in the extreme, language is not simply used to interpret experience but in fact constitutes experience." This position challenges the idea that nondual awareness is a common mystical essence, arguing instead that what one experiences in religious practice is shaped by their specific cultural and doctrinal background.

Philosopher Keith Yandell further critiques the common-core thesis by distinguishing five distinct categories of religious experiences, each tied to a specific doctrinal framework:

  • experiences – Found in monotheistic traditions such as Judaism, Christianity, and Vedantic Hinduism.
  • experiences – Found in Buddhism, where one perceives the self as a bundle of fleeting states rather than a fixed entity.
  • experiences – Found in Jainism, where the self is understood as an indestructible subject of experience.
  • experiences – Found in Hinduism, with Brahman conceptualized either as a cosmic person or as an impersonal, qualityless absolute.
  • Nature mystical experiences – Found in traditions emphasizing union with nature rather than a transcendental or metaphysical realization.

This classification suggests that religious experiences vary significantly across traditions, contradicting the claim that all mystical experiences point to the same nondual essence.

Further criticism comes from Richard King and Robert Sharf, who argue that what one experiences in meditation or mystical practice is largely shaped by pre-existing doctrinal expectations. In this view, mystical experiences are not independent proofs of a given tradition's truth but are instead a result of the teachings and practices within that tradition.

For example, Bronkhorst traces the historical development of "liberating insight" in Buddhism, demonstrating that the concept evolved significantly over time. Early Buddhist texts did not provide a clear definition of what constituted enlightenment. Later, the Four Noble Truths became the dominant framework for understanding liberation. Over time, this emphasis shifted again; in some Hinayana schools, liberation was increasingly understood through the doctrine of no-self (anatta) as a fundamental realization. Schmithausen further observes that Buddhist scriptures contain multiple interpretations of enlightenment, suggesting that even within a single tradition, the nature of ultimate realization was not fixed but subject to doctrinal development and reinterpretation.

These variations challenge the idea that nondual awareness is a universal and timeless mystical experience, instead suggesting that different traditions construct different understandings of what constitutes ultimate reality.


Phenomenology
Nondual awareness, also called pure consciousness or awareness, contentless consciousness, consciousness-as-such, and Minimal Phenomenal Experience, is a topic of phenomenological research. As described in Samkhya-Yoga and other systems of meditation, and referred to as, for example, Turya and Atman, pure awareness manifests in advanced states of meditation. Pure consciousness is distinguished from the workings of the mind, and "consists in nothing but the being seen of what is seen". present twelve factors in their phenomenological analysis of pure awareness experienced by meditators, including luminosity; emptiness and non-egoic self-awareness; and witness-consciousness.


See also


Notes

Sources
  • G

  • (2025). 9780861715091, Wisdom Publications.
  • (2025). 157062450X, Shambhala Publications. 157062450X

  • (1996). 9780791430675, State University of New York Press.


Further reading

External links

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