Non-dualism (advaya)

E491429

Non-dualism (advaya) is a philosophical and spiritual doctrine asserting that ultimate reality is a single, indivisible unity beyond all dualistic distinctions such as subject and object.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf metaphysical view
philosophical doctrine
spiritual doctrine
affirms single indivisible reality
aimsAt direct realization of ultimate reality
associatedWith Advaita Vedanta NERFINISHED
Buddhism NERFINISHED
Hindu philosophy NERFINISHED
Madhyamaka school NERFINISHED
Mahayana Buddhism NERFINISHED
Tantric traditions
Yogacara school NERFINISHED
centralConceptIn Mahayana Buddhist philosophy
characterizedBy rejection of inherent separation
transcendence of subject–object distinction
contrastsWith dualism
subject–object duality
substance dualism
critiques attachment to conceptual extremes
reification of self and world
denies ultimate duality
discussedIn Advaita Vedanta texts NERFINISHED
Buddhist sutras
Upanishads NERFINISHED
emphasizes non-conceptual insight
overcoming ignorance of separation
goalInPractice liberation from suffering
non-dual realization
hasEtymology from Sanskrit "a" (not) + "dvaya" (two)
hasTranslation non-duality
holdsThat all apparent multiplicity is ultimately one reality
ultimate reality is not two
influenced Asian contemplative traditions
modern non-dual spirituality
methodologicallyInvolves meditative practice
philosophical analysis of concepts
relatedConcept Brahman NERFINISHED
non-dual awareness
tathatā (suchness)
śūnyatā (emptiness)
teaches conventional distinctions are ultimately empty
ultimate reality is beyond conceptual distinctions
viewedAs realization of Brahman in Advaita Vedanta
ultimate truth in some Buddhist schools

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Tantrasāra coreDoctrine Non-dualism (advaya)