2.2.9

Understanding the Self

Test yourself on Understanding the Self

Test your knowledge with free interactive questions on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

Understanding the Self

Three Hindu thinkers have tried to explore this of what is the self.

Shankara

Shankara

  • Shankara was an Indian thinker from the 8th Century CE.
    • He started from the belief that there is an absolute reality, Brahman, who creates and sustains the universe.
  • Shankara believed that Brahman is the spirit that is part of everything.
    • This spirit exists in every being and is what directs their life.
Shankara and the self

Shankara and the self

  • For Shankara, God is impersonal. It is more like energy and not, for example, like the idea of God as a father which is present in Christianity.
    • He also believed that the self and Brahman are essentially one.
  • Once a person understands the impersonal nature of the self, then they achieve moksha.
    • This is liberation from the cycle of rebirth, and reunites them with Brahman.
Ramanuja

Ramanuja

  • Ramanuja developed his ideas a few hundred years after Shankara.
  • He disagreed with Shankara on some important topics.
    • Ramanuja believed in a personal God.
    • He had a personal devotion to Vishnu. He believed it was important for people to look up to and worship a God as a being superior to them.
  • Because of this he taught that the person, the self, and God are distinct.
    • This also means that each ‘self’ is different from the other.
Ramanuja and personal Gods

Ramanuja and personal Gods

  • But Ramanuja also believed that everything that exists is part of Brahman.
    • The only way to know Brahman is through its attributes.
  • Worshipping a personal God means you can observe these attributes and imitate them.
    • This leads to becoming more like God and the path to Brahman.
Madhva

Madhva

  • Madhva emerged as a Hindu philosopher in the 13th Century CE.
  • His way of understanding the self and God is quite different from the two previous thinkers.
    • Madhva believed the self and God are quite separate.
    • Braham is the creator and has perfect knowledge and power.
Madhva and relationships to God

Madhva and relationships to God

  • Madhva believed each person has their personal self, and the self responds to God in an individual way.
    • In our lives, we show the love of God, for example, and surrender to God.
  • They need an image of God, an icon, to which they can relate. Then, with God’s help, they can achieve moksha, liberation from the cycle of rebirth.
    • This belief is similar to the Christian belief in each person having a personal soul, and developing a relationship with a personal God.
Jump to other topics
1

Year 7

1.1

Origins of Abrahamic Faith

1.2

Judaism

1.3

Christianity

1.4

Disciplinary Knowledge

2

Year 8

2.1

Islam

2.2

Hindu Dharma (Hinduism)

2.3

Buddhism

2.4

Sikhi

2.5

Atheism

2.6

Philosophy of Religion

2.7

Disciplinary Knowledge

3

Year 9

3.1

Life & Death

3.2

Extremism

3.3

Equality

4

Additional Concepts

Practice questions on Understanding the Self

Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
Answer all questions on Understanding the Self

Unlock your full potential with Seneca Premium

  • Unlimited access to 10,000+ open-ended exam questions

  • Mini-mock exams based on your study history

  • Unlock 800+ premium courses & e-books

Get started with Seneca Premium