Literature The Vedas Words related to and containing
Māyā, such as
Mayava, occur many times in the
Vedas. These words have various meanings, with interpretations that are contested, and some are names of deities that do not appear in texts of 1st millennium BCE and later. The use of word Māyā in Rig Veda, in the later era context of "magic, illusion, power", occurs in many hymns. One titled
Māyā-bheda (मायाभेद:, Discerning Illusion) includes hymns 10.177.1 through 10.177.3, and the battle which unfolds between good and evil is as follows: Rig Veda does not connote the word Māyā as always good or always bad, it is simply a form of technique, mental power and means. Rig Veda uses the word in two contexts, implying that there are two kinds of Māyā: divine Māyā and undivine Māyā, the former being the foundation of truth, the latter of falsehood. Elsewhere in Vedic mythology,
Indra uses Maya to conquer
Vritra.
Varuna's supernatural power is called Maya. In the
Aitareya Brahmana Maya is also referred to as Dirghajihvi, hostile to gods and sacrifices. The hymns in Book 8, Chapter 10 of Atharvaveda describe the primordial woman
Virāj (, chief queen) and how she willingly gave the knowledge of food, plants, agriculture, husbandry, water, prayer, knowledge, strength, inspiration, concealment, charm, virtue, vice to gods, demons, men and living creatures, despite all of them making her life miserable. In hymns of 8.10.22,
Virāj is used by Asuras (demons) who call her as Māyā, as follows, {{quote| She rose. The Asuras saw her. They called her. Their cry was, "Come, O Māyā, come thou hither" !! Her cow was Virochana Prahradi. Her milking vessel was a pan of iron. Dvimurdha Artvya milked this Māyā. The Asuras depend for life on Māyā for their sustenance. One who knows this, becomes a fit supporter [of gods]. The contextual meaning of Maya in Atharva Veda is "power of creation", not illusion. Maya stands for anything that has real, material form, human or non-human, but that does not reveal the hidden principles and implicit knowledge that creates it.
The Upanishads paintings such as the
Waterfall – redrawn in this sketch – demonstrates the Hindu concept of Maya, states Jeffrey Brodd. The impression of water-world the sketch gives, in reality is not what it seems. The
Upanishads describe the universe, and the human experience, as an interplay of
Purusha (the eternal, unchanging principles, consciousness) and
Prakṛti (the temporary, changing material world, nature). The former manifests itself as
Ātman (Soul, Self), and the latter as Māyā. The Upanishads refer to the knowledge of Atman as "true knowledge" (
Vidya), and the knowledge of Maya as "not true knowledge" (
Avidya, Nescience, lack of awareness, lack of true knowledge). Lynn Foulston states, "The world is both real and unreal because it exists but is 'not what it appears to be'." Māyā pre-exists and co-exists with
Brahman – the Ultimate Principle, Consciousness. Maya is perceived reality, one that does not reveal the hidden principles, the true reality. Maya is unconscious, Atman is conscious. Maya is the literal, Brahman is the figurative
Upādāna – the principle, the cause. Gaudapada in his Karika on
Mandukya Upanishad explains the interplay of Atman and Maya as follows, {{quote| The Soul is imagined first, then the particularity of objects, External and internal, as one knows so one remembers. As a rope, not perceived distinctly in dark, is erroneously imagined, As snake, as a streak of water, so is the Soul (Atman) erroneously imagined. As when the rope is distinctly perceived, and the erroneous imagination withdrawn, Only the rope remains, without a second, so when distinctly perceived, the Atman. When he as Pranas (living beings), as all the diverse objects appears to us, Then it is all mere Maya, with which the Brahman (Supreme Soul) deceives himself. Sarvasara Upanishad refers to two concepts:
Mithya and
Maya.
The Puranas In
Puranas and Vaishnava theology,
māyā is described as one of the nine shaktis of
Vishnu.
Māyā became associated with sleep; and Vishnu's
māyā is sleep which envelopes the world when he awakes to destroy evil. Vishnu, like Indra, is the master of
māyā; and
māyā envelopes Vishnu's body. The magic creative power,
Māyā was always a monopoly of the central Solar God; and was also associated with the early solar prototype of Vishnu in the early Aditya phase. Maya that causes attachment to the world, is neither particular to men or women, but in their mutual attraction.
Tamil texts The basic grammar of the third and final
Tamil Sangam is
Tholkappiyam composed by
Tholkappiyar, who according to critics is referred as Rishi
Jamadagni's brother
Sthiranadumagni and uncle of
Parshurama. He categorically uses a
Prakrit (Tamil:Pagatham)
Tadbhava Mayakkam, which is the root of the word Maya(m). He says that the entire creation is a blurred flow between
State of matter or
Pancha Bhutas. This concept of Maya is of the school of
Agastya, who was the first Tamil grammarian and the
guru of Tholkappiyar. In Sangam period Tamil literature as well as the later hymns of the Tamil Alvars, Krishna and Narayana are found as
Māyon; with other attributed names are such as Mal, Tirumal, Perumal and Mayavan. In the Tamil classics, Durga is referred to by the feminine form of the word, viz.,
māyol; wherein she is endowed with unlimited creative energy and the great powers of Vishnu, and is hence
Vishnu-Maya.
Schools of Hinduism Need to understand Māyā The various schools of Hinduism, particularly those based on naturalism (
Vaiśeṣika), rationalism (
Samkhya) or ritualism (
Mimamsa), questioned and debated what is Maya, and the need to understand Maya. The Vedanta and Yoga schools explained that complete realization of knowledge requires both the understanding of ignorance, doubts and errors, as well as the understanding of invisible principles, incorporeal and the eternal truths. In matters of Self-knowledge, stated Shankara in his commentary on
Taittiriya Upanishad, The need to understand Maya is like the metaphorical need for a road. Only when the country to be reached is distant, states Shankara, that a road must be pointed out. It is a meaningless contradiction to assert, "I am right now in my village, but I need a road to reach my village." {{quote| The Vedas cannot show you Brahman, you are That already. They can only help to take away the veil that hides truth from our eyes. The cessation of ignorance can only come when I know that God and I are one; in other words, identify yourself with Atman, not with human limitations. The idea that we are bound is only an illusion [Maya]. Freedom is inseparable from the nature of the Atman. This is ever pure, ever perfect, ever unchangeable. The text
Yoga Vasistha explains the need to understand Maya as follows, The discussion of Maya theory, calling it into question, appears after the theory gains ground in Vedanta school of Hinduism.
Vācaspati Miśra's commentary on the
Samkhyakarika, for example, questions the Maya doctrine saying "It is not possible to say that the notion of the phenomenal world being real is false, for there is no evidence to contradict it".
James Ballantyne, in 1885, commented on Kapila's Sánkhya aphorism 5.72 which he translated as, "everything except nature and soul is uneternal". According to Ballantyne, this aphorism states that the mind, ether, etc. in a state of cause (not developed into a product) are called Nature and not Intellect. He adds, that scriptural texts such as
Shvetashvatara Upanishad to be stating "He should know Illusion to be Nature and him in whom is Illusion to be the great Lord and the world to be pervaded by portions of him'; since Soul and Nature are also made up of parts, they must be uneternal". However, acknowledges Ballantyne, In continuation of the Samkhya and Upanishadic view, in the Bhagavata philosophy, Maya has been described as 'that which appears even when there is no object like silver in a shell and which does not appear in the atman'; with maya described as the power that creates, maintains and destroys the universe.
Nyaya school The realism-driven Nyaya school of Hinduism denied that either the world (Prakrti) or the soul (Purusa) are an illusion. Naiyayikas developed theories of illusion, typically using the term
Mithya, and stated that illusion is simply flawed cognition, incomplete cognition or the absence of cognition. The insights on theory of illusion by Nyaya scholars were later adopted and applied by Advaita Vedanta scholars.
Yoga school Maya in Yoga school is the manifested world and implies divine force. Yoga and Maya are two sides of the same coin, states Zimmer, because what is referred to as Maya by living beings who are enveloped by it, is Yoga for the Brahman (Universal Principle, Supreme Soul) whose yogic perfection creates the Maya. Maya is neither illusion nor denial of perceived reality to the Yoga scholars, rather Yoga is a means to perfect the "creative discipline of mind" and "body-mind force" to transform Maya. The concept of Yoga as power to create Maya has been adopted as a compound word
Yogamaya (योगमाया) by the theistic sub-schools of Hinduism. It occurs in various mythologies of the Puranas; for example, Shiva uses his
yogamāyā to transform Markendeya's heart in
Bhagavata Purana's chapter 12.10, while Krishna counsels Arjuna about
yogamāyā in hymn 7.25 of
Bhagavad Gita.
Vedanta schools Maya is a prominent and commonly referred to concept in Vedanta philosophies. It is a complex concept in Vedanta philosophy, and its interpretation varies among different Vedanta schools.
Vishishtadvaita Vishishtadvaita Vedanta does have a concept that resembles Maya, referred to as
Prakriti, and its nature and role within the philosophy differ significantly from the concept of Maya.
Prakriti is considered real and is integral to the creative process of the universe within the framework of Vishishtadvaita.
Dvaita In Dvaita Vedanta, Maya is considered the power or energy of God. While Advaita considers the world to be a manifestation of Maya and thus illusory, Dvaita sees the world as real and a creation of God (
Vishnu). Each school's perspective on Maya influences its understanding of the nature of reality and the path to liberation. Unlike the Vishishtadvaita and Advaita schools, the Dvaita school does not attribute the difference between God, souls, and the universe, to maya.
Advaita In
Advaita Vedanta philosophy, there are two realities:
Vyavaharika (empirical reality) and
Paramarthika (absolute, spiritual reality). Māyā is the empirical reality that entangles consciousness. Māyā has the power to create a bondage to the empirical world, preventing the unveiling of the true, unitary Self – the Cosmic Spirit also known as
Brahman. The theory of māyā was developed by the ninth-century Advaita Hindu philosopher
Adi Shankara. However, competing theistic Dvaita scholars contested Shankara's theory, and stated that Shankara did not offer a theory of the relationship between Brahman and Māyā. A later Advaita scholar Prakasatman addressed this, by explaining, "Maya and Brahman together constitute the entire universe, just like two kinds of interwoven threads create a fabric. Maya is the manifestation of the world, whereas Brahman, which supports Maya, is the cause of the world." Vivekananda addressed that to say the world is maya does not mean that it is an illusion, or there is no external world. Māyā is a fact in that it is the appearance of phenomena. Since Brahman is the sole metaphysical truth, Māyā is true in epistemological and empirical sense; however, Māyā is not the metaphysical and spiritual truth. The spiritual truth is the truth forever, while what is empirical truth is only true for now. Since Māyā is the perceived material world, it is true in perception context, but is "untrue" in spiritual context of Brahman. Māyā is not false, it only clouds the inner Self and principles that are real. True Reality includes both
Vyavaharika (empirical) and
Paramarthika (spiritual), the Māyā and the Brahman. The goal of spiritual enlightenment, state Advaitins, is to realize Brahman, realize the fearless, resplendent Oneness.
Tantra Tantric devotees do not completely view being in maya as suffering. Being in the world does not cause suffering for a perfect devotee since they experience the divine in all parts of life.
Western interpretation The English composer
Gustav Holst spent many years studying Sanskrit literature, and adapted some of its texts for his music. He explored the concept of maya in his chamber opera,
Sāvitri. ==Buddhism==