Huh? Dvaita and VA don't accept the existence of Nirguna Brahman.
Do you mean to say that VA and dvaita ignore the 'nirgunam' definition of brahman, as in Gita (13.15 and 13.32)? The three Vedanta schools are based on Upanishads, Brahma Sutras, and Gita.
It is not the question of acceptance in the sense as if there were two brahman-s. It is true that the VA and Dvaita do not accept the two fold understanding of Brahman. But it is not true that they do not accept the Nirgunam. Kindly find out how Dvaita and VA translations of Bhagavat Gita 13.13 read. They simply consider the Nirgunam aspect as subordinate to Krishna-Narayana (although Gita calls this Nirgunam aspect as Paramatman, which is not different from Brahman). Where Gita says that the divisions between objects are all apparent, the VA however, considers Brahman as comprised of cit acit parts and at the same time taking support from satyam-jnanam-anantam definition of Brahman given in Taittriya Up. How Brahman, which is jnanam, actualluy gives rise to acit - the unconscious?
And what is sakshi, the witness, principle in dvaita? Because dvaita holds that jiva and brahman are eternally separate, it needs a sakshi principle, at the least, to make communication and knowledge possible. So, what is that sakshi?
As per advaita the highest Brahman is impersonal, Nirguna (without Gunas or attributes), Nirakara (formless), Nirvisesha (without special characteristics), immutable, eternal and Akarta (non-agent).
Both VA and dvaita include these in some components/aspects of Brahman, without naming that 'nirgunam' and also making the nirgunam aspect subordinate to some other brahmic qualities (that appear to me as plain worldly). They also define 'nirgunam' in their own way, claiming that 'nirgunam' does not mean absence of transcendental qualities.
Well. I am not equipped to comment on the transcendental qualities. And I think no one is.
And the idea of Brahman being an emanation of bhagavan exists only in Gaudiya Vaishnavism.
No. I did not use a term Bhagavan. Are you familiar with the concept of Para, Vyuha, Antaryamin, Vibhava, and Arca? Para is transcendental. What is Vyuha?
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