Shântoham;3811223 said:
No. It is an ISKCON related question. ISKCON teaches that when the impersonalist merges into the impersonal Absolute he then falls back into material nature due to loneliness.
Seems funny claim... Do ( Iskconians ) have any Shastra Pramana for this? Have
they read Upanishads rather than reading charitamrita? Have they read Bhagavata Purana rather than reading Charitamrita?
Veda says Brahman is Ekmeva - Alone - where's no any duality. What support do you have to prove Brahman has duality? Show me some supports from scriptures.
Below is the verse of kena Upanishad which is clearly refuting personal Brahma and establishes impersonal Brahma as the ultimate highest above all - Nirguna Parabrahma.
यन्मनसा न मनुते येनाहु: मनो मतम् ।
तदेव ब्रम्ह त्वं विद्धि नेदं यदिदमुपासते kenopanishad 1.5।
: " That which is not the subject of mind but by what mind thinks, know this alone to be Brahman, not that which is being worshipped here "
And to support Brahma is formless. I've this.
"अशब्दं अस्पर्शं अरुपं अव्ययं तथा अरसं नित्यं अगन्धं यत्
अनादि अनन्तं महत: परं ध्रुवं निच्चाय तन्मृत्युमुखात्प्रमुच्यते ।कठोपनिषद् 1.3.15 ।
: That which is beyond the scope of words, which is formless, without touch of the mind, without Rasa, without beginning, omnipresent, beyond Mahat and which is steady, knowing such Brahman Purusha gets rid of Death. He's not born again "