nor
asat in an absolute sense. Or rather
it may also be said in another way that the falsehood
of the world-appearance consists in this, that though
it appears to be the reality or an expression or manifestation
of the reality, the being,
sat, yet when the
reality is once rightly comprehended, it will be manifest
that the world never existed, does not exist, and
will never exist again. This is just what we find
in an illusory perception; when once the truth is
found out that it is a conch-shell, we say that the
silver, though it appeared at the time of illusory
perception to be what we saw before us as “this”
(this is silver), yet it never existed before, does
not now exist, and will never exist again. In
the case of the illusory perception of silver, the
“this” (pointing to a thing before me)
appeared as silver; in the case of the world-appearance,
it is the being (
sat), the Brahman, that appears
as the world; but as in the case when the “this”
before us is found to be a piece of conch-shell, the
silver is at once dismissed as having had no existence
in the “this” before us, so when the Brahman,
the being, the reality, is once directly realized,
the conviction comes that the world never existed.
The negation of the world-appearance however has no
separate existence other than the comprehension of
the identity of the real. The fact that the real
is realized is the same as that the world-appearance
is negated. The negation here involved refers
both to the thing negated (the world-appearance) and
the
444
negation itself, and hence it cannot be contended
that when the conviction of the negation of the world
is also regarded as false (for if the negation is
not false then it remains as an entity different from
Brahman and hence the unqualified monism fails), then
this reinstates the reality of the world-appearance;
for negation of the world-appearance is as much false
as the world-appearance itself, and hence on the realization
of the truth the negative thesis, that the world-appearance
does not exist, includes the negation also as a manifestation
of world-appearance, and hence the only thing left
is the realized identity of the truth, the being.
The peculiarity of this illusion of world-appearance
is this, that it appears as consistent with or inlaid
in the being (sat) though it is not there.
This of course is dissolved when right knowledge dawns.
This indeed brings home to us the truth that the world-appearance
is an appearance which is different from what we know
as real (sadvilak@sa@na); for the real is known
to us as that which is proved by the prama@nas, and
which will never again be falsified by later experience
or other means of proof. A thing is said to be
true only so long as it is not contradicted; but since
at the dawn of right knowledge this world-appearance
will be found to be false and non-existing, it cannot
be regarded as real [Footnote ref l]. Thus Brahman
alone is true, and the world-appearance is false;