By the way Karika also regards rituals/idol worship etc as an inferior pratice to Jnana:
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A permenant solution to curing the three kinds of pain is inquiry. Other means only offer temporal relief.
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The ritualistic means is impure and does not produce certain removal of the pain. Discriminative knowledge of the unmanifest, manifest and the cognizer offers a permenant solution.
The highest scriptures of Hinduism thus all take a critical stance on rituals/idol worship etc and advocate Jnana. Hence the behavior of Hindus today is indeed very ironic!
You have bought the view of the 18th century reformist groups like the Arya Samaj and the Brahmo Samaj. There is no puritanical Arya Dharma that is better than all other practices of Hinduism. You obviously have not studied the vedas, otherwise you would know that they are highly ritualistic and devotional and only sparingly deal with philosophical topics. There are more passages related to jnana and yoga in the puranas, agamas and tantras than there are in the vedas.
I do not support the Arya Samaaj, I consider them to be Hindu fundamentalists. The Arya Samaaj is basically a Hindu nationalistic reactionary movement to Christianity, which tries to reinterpret Hinduism along Abrahamic lines.
It is simply incorrect to say that there was no original Arya dharma. There was indeed, as we can find very clearly stated in the Veda Samhita. It says again and again to cultivate Aryan qualities and enjoins upon the Aryans to make the whole world Aryan. Synonymous with the word Aryan is dharma(the path of virtue). Hindu scriptures also advocate that we must protect dharma. The Gita takes the most radical stance here, where god himself incarnates in the form of an avatar whenever dharma is threatened. So I identify with the Aryan mission which is expressed very clearly in the Veda Samhitas: Know the ultimate reality, cultivate virtue and higher character, do noble deeds.
The most accurate and authentic articulation of the Aryan mission is in the Upanishads and the systems of philosophy which are derived from the Upanishads path of Jnana. Samkhya, Yoga and Vedanta are all different articulations of the path of Jnana as prescribed in the Veda Samhitas.
It is true that even in Vedic times there was a strong and dominant ritualistic culture as contained within the Brahmanas, and a community of Brahmins who performed ritualistic sacrifices. This was challenged by the seers of the Upanishads who argued that the Brahmins had missed the deeper esoteric meaning of the Vedas, and thus they made an attempt to distill this out of the Vedas. It is clear they succeeded, because Brahmanical Vedism subsequently declined like the OT declined in Christianity, and was replaced by the NT of the Upanishads.
Unfortunately, the ritualism returned with the Puranas after the common era. The Puranas can be seen as the continuation of the old OT Brahmanical Vedism in a new avatar of devotionalism. The same thing the Upanishadic seers rose against.
If you had any knowledge of the yoga sutra, you would know that they are unintelligable in many places without the commentaries of vyasa. That doesn’t mean that the commentary has the same authority, but without it, you simply cannot get a good grasp of the sutras. The fact that you do not know this says a lot about your scholarship in Hindu philosophy.
The Yoga sutras are quite concise and can be read without any commentaries I have found. However, you keep overlooking that I have read dozens of commentaries, by Sanskrit scholars who have read the commentaries of Vyassa et al. Thus I have been indirectly exposed to Vyassa’s commentaries too. Your insistence that my scholarship on the Yoga sutras is faulty simply because I have not read your pet favorite commentary is dogmatic and unfair to say the least. I actually have a very deep understanding of the Yoga sutras and it one of the few texts that I keep reading over and over and over again. I am currently working on my own translation and commentary. Again, not to say I consider Vyasa’s commentary unimportant, but you are certainly blowing its importance out of proportion, and at the same time undermining all other commentaries to the text as unimportant.
Obviously, you do not follow Shankaracharya, since you are ignoring many things Shankaracharya has said and you are even vilifying the practices that are widely used in Shankara maths throughout India.
Your statement that I am ignoring many things Sankara said is unintelligible without examples of what those things are.