Hello, all.
About Advaita or Vishishtadvaita Vedanta:
I just happened to be reading internet pages today to look more into Hinduism and fell stuck comprehending it all. Hope someone here can enlighten me on these questions.
The concept of ParaBrahman: Correct me if I'm wrong but; Brahman is the All, the Absolute, right? If so, what could be beyond Brahman?
And: Is Anatman synonymous with subjective reality (the world as I, you, or they see it compared to the world as it is)? Or maybe with materialistic reality, a world focused on materialistic pleasures and achievements, indulging in the physical? Or something else?
What is the significance of any other God (or entity in general) beyond Brahman if all are Brahman?
I would say that the basic essence of the advaita and vishistadvaita philosophies is unselfishness . And this fact can be traced back to two main life changing events of the founders of these two philosophies themselves i.e Shankaracharya and Ramanuja.
Shankaracharya ,who was an orthodox brahmin, was walking along a path, when he saw a hunter bloodstained, with a bleeding deer on his shoulders, coming along the same path, surrounded by dogs trying to lick the blood of the dead deer which was dripping down.
Shankaracharya, immediately yelled at the hunter to move away, upon which the hunter replied. What is it that should move, the one consciousness that pervades you and me, or this body , made up of the gunas and elements, and which is perishable!!
Hearing this wisdom coming from the hunter, Shankaracharya prostrated before the hunter, who changed into Lord Shiva . Lord Shiva blessed him and vanished.
I would say Shankaracharya probably understood intuitively then what Krishna had stated in the Gita ,"The humble sages, by virtue of true knowledge, see with equal vision a learned and gentle brāhmana, a cow, an elephant, a dog and a dog-eater (outcaste) ".
Regarding Ramanuja, the founder of the vishistadvaita philosophy, Ramanuja too exemplified this trait of seeing the Lord in all , and serving all.
Ramanuja's Guru, pleased with him, gave him his mantra, stating that its chanting will lead him to the path of salvation . The guru at the same time warned him not to give the mantra to anyone else, saying that would lead him to hell, not salvation.
Ramanuja however, went up to the top of the temple,calling all people towards him, and gave the mantra to everyone by reciting it loudly, exhorting them to chant it to gain salvation.
The Guru, furious, demanded an explanation , to which Ramanuja stated that "I will gladly suffer the tortures of hell myself if millions of people could get salvation by hearing the Mantra through me".
This deeply pleased Ramanuja's Guru, who embraced Ramanuja and blessed him.
One can find that , in both the cases of Shankaracharya and Ramanuja, the underlying message is that of empathetic inter-connectedness with all, and loving service to all .
Perhaps from these stories, one can understand intuitively what the philosophies of advaita and vishistadvaita are really trying to convey and aiming at.