Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Lecture based on Dr Raffaele Torella’s recent work on Isvara Pratyabhijna-vivritti of Utpaladeva organized by Ishwar Ashram Trust on 23-10-2013 at 6:00pm

Dr. Torella a renowned Indologist and an exponent of Kashmir Saiva tradition delivered a lecture on Utpaladeva’s work on Pratyabhijna. Before embarking on the main topic he delved on the  various currents of philosophical thoughts prevalent during Utpala’s time especially focusing on Buddhist Mahayana Tantricism. Dr. Torella suggested that Tantricism provided a break from the Absolutist Buddhist philosophy and that is why Buddhists incorporated it in a big way in their belief system and soon came up with a complex system of Tantrik iconography. Also interestingly Dr. Torella sees this change as Tantricism coming out of the shackles of Asceticism and entering a world of a householder and altering it for ever. One of the examples is the inclusion of mysterious Non dual Bhairava Tantras reserved earlier for ascetics, in the religious and ritualistic life of a common man.

Somananda’s ‘Siva Drsti’ was the first philosophical text of Pratyabhijna school which has sown the seeds for later philosophical and metaphysical treatises to come. According to Abhinavagupta Utpala’s works are reflections on Siva Drsti. Hence we can see Abhinavagupta, Utpala and Somananda as Pratyabhijna triad out of which Abhinavagupta became most popular for his elaborate commentaries , compilations and brilliant works like Tantraloka.

The dry logic of the Epistemological schools of Buddhist philosophy was soon countered by this very dynamic and vibrant system of thought  which focused on the Svatantriya sakti of Lord Siva.Utpaladeva took some linguistic ideas from Bhartrhari whom Torella calls as his ‘grammarian ally’. The thought that the language has the potential to reveal the nature of universe opened vistas for symbolic significance of language, including omnipresence of Siva.

He further went on to focus on universal appeal  of Pratyabhijna philosophy saying that Utpaladeva’s work is a blend of both rational and emotional side of man and hence deals with an array of subjects comprising metaphysics , epistemology , aesthetics and philosophy. He also suggested that the concept of Chamatkara which later was developed as an elaborate theory by Abhinavagupta was initially introduced by Utpala. Talking about the interdependence of scholars Dr. Torella said, “ Without Utpaladeva no Abhinavagupta would have been possible and to  understand Utpaladeva completely one needs to know about Dharmakirti”  hence  suggesting that to understand various ideas and concepts of so called Kashmir Saivism it is necessary to understand the Buddhist thought at that time. He was even of the opinion that we can consider Sankarananda, oten quoted by Abhinavagupta as an authority as a Buddhist which I am not quite sure about but reserve my comments as I don’t know much about the scholar.

In the end he stressed on the fact that texts should be understood philologically and not in isolation but in context of other texts written around the same time. This lucid and basic lecture was followed by a question answer session where the queries were more about his interaction with Swami Laxmanjoo than what he spoke.