The Vedanta-Sutras with the Commentary by Sankaracarya

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About The Book

To the sacred literature of the Brahmans in the strict sense of the term i.e. to the Veda there belongs a certain number of complementary works without whose assistance the student is according to Hindu notions unable to do more than commit the sacred texts to memory. In the first place all Vedic texts must in order to be understood be read together with running commentaries such as Sâyanas commentaries on the Samhitâs and Brâhmanas and the Bhâshyas ascribed to Sankara on the chief Upanishads. But these commentaries do not by themselves conduce to a full comprehension of the contents of the sacred texts since they confine themselves to explaining the meaning of each detached passage without investigating its relation to other passages and the whole of which they form part; considerations of the latter kind are at any rate introduced occasionally only. The task of taking a comprehensive view of the contents of the Vedic writings as a whole of systematising what they present in an unsystematical form of showing the mutual co-ordination or subordination of single passages and sections and of reconciling contradictions—which according to the view of the orthodox commentators can be apparent only—is allotted to a separate sâstra or body of doctrine which is termed Mîmâmsâ i.e. the investigation or enquiry viz. the enquiry into the connected meaning of the sacred texts.