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How does Advaita Vedanta differ from Dvaita and Vishishtadvaita schools?
Advaita Vedanta, Vishishtadvaita and Dvaita may spring from the same Vedic well, but they sail very different waters.
Advaita Vedanta (Shankara) • Core claim: Absolute non-duality. Brahman alone exists; the world and individual selves (jivas) are mithyā (illusory). • Method: Jñāna-mārga (path of knowledge) through śravaṇa (hearing), manana (reflection) and nididhyāsana (deep meditation). Neti neti (“not this, not that”) peels away layers of false identity to reveal the one Self. • Modern echo: The surge in non-dual mindfulness workshops and neuroscience conferences on consciousness often cite Advaita’s teaching that subject and object dissolve into pure awareness.
Vishishtadvaita (Ramanuja) • Core claim: Qualified non-duality. Brahman is reality but possesses infinite attributes (the jivas and the cosmos). Soul and world are real parts (śarīra) of the divine body. • Method: Bhakti-jñāna combination. Loving devotion to personal God (often Viṣṇu/Nārāyaṇa) unites worshipper and worshipped without erasing individual identities. • Current reference: International Day of Yoga 2023 events frequently wove together Ramanuja’s vision of devotional inclusivity, celebrating personal relationship with the divine alongside meditation.
Dvaita (Madhva) • Core claim: Radical dualism. God (Viṣṇu), souls and the world are eternally distinct. Difference (bheda) is as real as the sun’s warmth. • Method: Pure bhakti with strict theism. Salvation means eternal service to God in Vaikuntha, not merging into divine essence. • Cultural note: Contemporary Gaudiya and Madhva festivals still uphold Madhva’s insistence on personal deity worship, emphasizing devotional fervor over metaphysical abstraction.
Each school offers its own flavor—Advaita’s clear-as-day oneness, Vishishtadvaita’s tapestry of unity-in-diversity, and Dvaita’s steadfast dual devotion—shaping seekers’ journeys in distinct yet interwoven ways.