Samkhya The
Samkhya philosophy regards the
Universe as consisting of two eternal realities:
Purusha and
Prakrti. It is therefore a strongly
dualist philosophy. The
Purusha is the centre of
consciousness, whereas the
Prakrti is the source of all material
existence. The twenty-five
tattva system of Samkhya concerns itself only with the tangible aspect of creation, theorizing that
Prakrti is the source of the world of becoming. It is the first
tattva and is seen as pure potentiality that evolves itself successively into twenty-four additional
tattvas or principles.
Shaivism In
Shaivism, the
tattvas are inclusive of consciousness as well as material existence. The 36 tattvas of Shaivism are divided into three groups: •
Shuddha tattvas • :The first five tattvas are known as the
shuddha or 'pure'
tattvas. They are also known as the
tattvas of universal experience. •
Shuddha-ashuddha tattvas • :The next seven
tattvas (6–12) are known as the
shuddha-ashuddha or 'pure-impure'
tattvas. They are the
tattvas of limited individual experience. •
Ashuddha tattvas • :The last twenty-four
tattvas (13–36) are known as the
ashuddha or 'impure'
tattvas. The first of these is
prakrti and they include the
tattvas of mental operation, sensible experience, and materiality.
Vaishnavism Within
Puranic literatures and general
Vaiśnava philosophy,
tattva is often used to denote certain categories or types of beings or energies such as: •
Viṣṇu-tattva • :The Supreme God Śrī
Viṣnu. The causative factor of everything including other Tattvas. •
Kṛṣṇa-tattva • :Any
incarnation or
expansion of Śrī Viṣnu as Śrī Kṛṣṇa. •
Śakti-Tattva • :The multifarious energies of Śrī Viṣnu as Śrī Kṛṣṇa. It includes his internal potencies,
Yogamaya,
Prakṛti. •
Jīva-tattva • :The multifarious living souls (
jivas). It includes Śrī
Brahmā. •
Śiva-tattva • :Śrī
Śiva is not a
jiva and not a
god but a personal creation of Viṣṇu as between Viṣṇu and Brahmā in qualities and powers. •
Mahat-tattva • :The total material energy (
Prakṛti) of the universe.
Gaudiya Vaishnavism In
Gaudiyā Vaiśnava philosophy, there are a total of five primary tattvas described in terms of living beings, which are collectively known as the
Pancha Tattvas and described as follows:
Dvaita Vedanta Madhvacharya categorizes all
tattva, reality, into dependent and independent entities. The one independent entity is Vishnu, and all other entities depend on him for existence and operation.
Tantra In Hindu
tantrism, there are five tattvas (
pañcatattva) which create global energy cycles of
tattvic tides beginning at dawn with
Akasha and ending with
Prithvi: •
Akasha (Aether tattva) – symbolized by a black egg. •
Vayu (Air tattva) – symbolized by a blue circle. •
Agni (Fire tattva) – symbolized by a red triangle. •
Apas (Water tattva) – symbolized by a silver crescent. •
Prithvi (Earth tattva) – symbolized by a yellow square. Each complete cycle lasts two hours. This system of five tattvas which each can be combined with another, was also adapted by the
Golden Dawn (
Tattva vision).
Panchatattva in Ganachakra and Pañcamakara John Woodroffe (1918), affirms that the
Panchamrita of Tantra, Hindu and Buddhist traditions are directly related to the
mahābhūta or great elements and that the
pañcamakara is actually a vulgar term for the
pañcatattva and affirms that this is cognate with Ganapuja: "Chakrapuja" is cognate with
Ganachakra or Ganachakrapuja. ==Ayyavazhi==