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Category:Becoming an Impersonalist

Theme Analysis

This analysis explores the psychological and philosophical reasons why spiritual seekers often fall into the trap of becoming an impersonalist. Śrīla Prabhupāda diagnoses this tendency as a reaction to material suffering; unable to utilize the senses properly for God, the conditioned soul attempts to kill the senses and the mind entirely, seeking a "mindless and senseless" existence. Philosophically, this arises from a "poor fund of knowledge"—specifically, the inability to conceive how the Supreme Lord can create the universe and pervade it while remaining a distinct Person. Śrīla Prabhupāda refutes this using the analogy of the spider, which creates a web from its own body yet remains a distinct entity. The analysis establishes that impersonalism is a preliminary stage, noting that while many impersonalists have advanced to become devotees, a pure devotee never degrades to the status of an impersonalist.

  • The Psychology of Escape: The desire to become impersonal is often a desperate attempt to escape the misery of material variety by negating variety altogether.
  • The Spider Analogy: Just as a spider creates a web without losing its identity, God creates the cosmic manifestation without becoming impersonal.
  • Incomplete Knowledge: Impersonalism results from studying Vedānta without the guidance of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam or a bona fide guru.
  • The One-Way Street: History shows impersonalists can elevate to devotion (like the Kumāras), but a devotee never descends to impersonalism.

Pages in category "Becoming an Impersonalist"

The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total.