InSamkhya,pradhāna (Sanskrit: प्रधान) is the "primal matter," "the first principle from which all material things have evolved.[1] It is an alternate term forprakriti ('material nature' and material desires) in a state of equilibrium of the threegunas –sattva,rajas andtamas, the three modes of prakrti. Whenpurusha (primal consciousness) comes in contact with prakriti, the balance is distorted, and the 23 principles ('the world') evolves from prakriti.[2]
Badarayana’sBrahma sutras state thatpradhana isasabadam, 'not mentioned in the Upanishads', and therefor to be rejected as the first cause.[3] Instead, the later Advaita tradition postulates Brahman as the intelligent, conscious first principle and material and efficient cause of the universe.
Pradhāna (Sanskrit: प्रधान) is an adjective meaning "most important, prime, chief or major".[web 1] TheShatapatha Brahmana (शतपथ ब्राह्मण) gives its meaning as "the chief cause of the material nature" (S.B.7.15.27) or "the creative principle of nature" (S.B.10.85.3).[web 2]
In Samkhya,pradhāna (Sanskrit: प्रधान) is an alternate term forprakriti ('material nature' and material desires), the "primal matter" and "the first principle from which all material things have evolved."[1] It is a state of equilibrium of the threegunas –sattva,rajas andtamas, the three modes of prakrti. Whenpurusha (primal consciousness) comes in contact with prakriti, the balance is distorted, and the 24 principles ('the world') evolves from prakriti.[2]
The term 'samkhya' is derived from the wordsankhya (numbers), referring to the listing or numbering of the basic principles,purusha, the twenty-four principles of prakrti, and the 'right discrimination' between these principles.Purusha is unproduced, free from all action and modification, without attributes, all-pervading consciousness, individual and separate for each body. When Pradhana manifests it becomes the efficient and the material cause of creation.[4]Prakrti is eternal and all-pervading, unlimited and the material cause, eternally producing everything but insentient.[4]
TheBrahma Sutras ofBadarayana are the oldest extent comprehensive treatment in a systematic manner of the vast corpus ofVedic Thought. In B.S.I.i.5, Badarayana states that pradhana isasabadam, 'not mentioned in the Upanishads', and therefor to be rejected.
Brahma Sutra I.i.5 states:
The Pradhana of the Samkhyas is not the cause of the universe, because it is not mentioned in the Upanishads, which fact is clear from the fact of seeing (or thinking).[5]
Sankara (andRamanuja) interpret the wordasabadam (meaning 'not mentioned in the Upanishads') in ईक्षतेर्नाशब्दम् to mean the pradhana of the Samkhyas, andna (meaning not) as the denial of pradhana being the cause of the universe, because it is not mentioned in theUpanishads. For Badarayana, the word 'ikshate' (meaning seeing or thinking) refers to Brahman, who visualized and createdprana (the vital force,Prasna Upanishad VI.3-4), and created the worlds (Aitareya Upanishad I.i.1-2).
Sankara, in his commentary on the Brahma Sutras, argues:[6]
According to Chattopadhyaya, sutra I.i.12 – आनन्दमयोऽभ्यासात्, is textually wrong, it should have been wordedanandobhyasat becauseananda is absolute freedom; ifananda is embodied it becomes non-limited, i.e. subjected to limitation.[7]
According to Sivananda, the inert pradhana cannot create, because activity is necessary for creation. It is not a directive intelligent entity which could initiate activity, and there is no external agency to urge it to act, or restrain it from action. A spontaneous action of pradhana is not possible; it cannot modify in the absence of purpose, and it cannot have a desire to evolve. Purusa is intelligent and indifferent, but there is no third agency to bring Purusa near Pradhana to effect a connection between the two for starting the activity of creation. Pradhana cannot be active, because there can be no relation of principal or subordinate guna, when the gunas are in equilibrium to constitute Pradhana. Creation cannot proceed from inert or dead matter.[8]
Madhva, the founder of Tattvavada (Realism), interprets the wordasabadam to refer to Brahman, who is inexpressible because he is an object of knowledge.[9] Madhva contends that an object presented in illusory perception is an absolute unreality, and no illusion can be explained without the acceptance of two necessary reals –adhisthana ('substratum') andpradhana ('prototype') of the superimposed object (aropya). In theDvaita school ofHindu philosophy,Ishvara, the cause of the universe is thesvatantra tattva ('independent reality'), and the created universe is theasvatantra tattva ('dependent reality'), which is a transformation of pradhana ('matter').[10]