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Glossary›The Absolute

Glossary

The Absolute

The ultimate, all-encompassing reality beyond all categories and distinctions, conceived as the ground of existence in both Eastern and Western philosophical and spiritual traditions.

What is The Absolute?

The Absolute refers to ultimate reality that is unconditioned, infinite, and beyond all conceptual categories or attributes. It denotes that which is complete in itself, not dependent on anything else, and serves as the fundamental ground from which all existence arises. Derived from the Latin absolutus, it means “not dependent on, conditional on, relative to or restricted by anything else; self-contained, perfect, complete.”

The term functions as both a philosophical concept and a contemplative reality across traditions. In the Upanishads, brahman is “the supreme existence or absolute reality.” In Western philosophy, particularly in Hegel’s thought, the Absolute “can be understood as the ultimate reality that encompasses and reconciles all contradictions within its totality.” In Neoplatonism, Plotinus’s “One” is “the highest principle” and “an ultimate, ineffable source of all reality.”

While formulations differ across lineages, the Absolute consistently denotes what cannot be reduced to parts, what precedes all duality, and what remains when all limiting conditions are removed. It is neither “this” nor “that,” neither being nor non-being in the conventional sense, yet paradoxically the source and substance of all that exists.

Origins & Lineage

The concept appears in the Upanishads (circa 800-200 BCE), where brahman is defined as “eternal, conscious, irreducible, infinite, omnipresent, and the spiritual core of the universe of finiteness and change.” The Taittiriya Upanishad (2.1.1) declares: “Brahman is Truth, Knowledge, and Infinity.” In Advaita Vedanta, Para Brahman is “the attribute-less Absolute, which, according to Advaita vedanta, transcends conceptualisation, including both emptiness and infiniteness.”

The term advaita (“not-two”) “first occurs in a recognizably Vedantic context in the prose of Mandukya Upanishad,” and “the Vedic sage Yajnavalkya (8th or 7th-century BCE) is credited to be the one who coined it.” The Advaita Vedanta tradition “begins with the Commentary on the Mandukya Upanishad, written by Gaudapada around the seventh Century CE.” “The medieval Indian philosopher Shankara, or Shankaracharya (c. 700–750), builds further on Gaudapada’s foundation, principally in his commentary on the Brahma-sutras.”

In the West, “the first clear case of Absolute-Idealist thinking in Greek philosophy” appears in “the third century CE, for the Neoplatonism of Plotinus,” who “transformed Platonism into something radically new, indeed, into the West’s first full-blown system of Absolute Idealism.” Plotinus developed “the One” in his work The Enneads, describing it as “the ultimate source and principle of all existence, transcending all categories of being, thought, and description.”

In 19th-century Germany, “Absolute Idealism” became “chiefly associated with G.W.F. Hegel and Friedrich Schelling, both German idealist philosophers of the 19th century.” “Schelling, though similar to Hegel in that he also believed in the Absolute Idea, differed from him in identifying the Absolute as the undifferentiated, or featureless, unity of opposites.”

How It’s Practiced

The Absolute is not “practiced” in the conventional sense but realized through contemplative inquiry and direct experience. In Advaita Vedanta, “moksha (liberation) is possible by overcoming the delusion of maya, and thereby seeing the identity of Atman with Brahman.”

“The practical side of the non dual philosophy is known as Adhyatma Yoga, the way of Self-Knowledge,” and “methods also include meditation and related practices.” Ramana Maharshi “taught that self-realization, or the realization of the oneness of who we are, is not some distant goal that only a few can attain,” and “through simple self-inquiry, we can awaken from the dream of a separate self to the reality of Oneness.”

Shankara employed the method called Adhyaropa Apavada, “in which a property is imposed (adhyaropa) on Atman to convince one of its existence, whereafter the imposition is removed (apavada) to reveal the true nature of Atman as nondual and undefinable.” The Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upanishad “describes Brahman as ‘neti, neti’ (‘not this, not this’), emphasizing that it transcends all descriptions and conceptualizations.”

In Neoplatonism, henosis—“mystical ‘oneness’, ‘union’, or ‘unity’”—aims at “union with what is fundamental in reality: the One,” and “one can reach a state of tabula rasa, blank state where the individual may grasp or merge with The One.”

The Absolute Today

Contemporary seekers encounter the Absolute through multiple channels. The term is central to “the satsang movement, also called neo-advaita, for which nonduality is a central tenet, emphasizing sudden awakening or insight.” Teachers in this lineage offer dialogues, silent retreats, and inquiry-based practices.

Advaita Vedanta remains taught through traditional gurukula systems in India and through Western teachers who studied with Indian masters. The Science and Nonduality (SAND) conference, founded in 2009, bridges contemplative traditions with contemporary science and philosophy. Books such as I Am That by Nisargadatta Maharaj and The Collected Works of Ramana Maharshi serve as foundational texts.

In academic philosophy, scholars study Absolute Idealism through Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit and the Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences. The Cambridge Companion series and Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy provide rigorous analysis of German Idealist conceptions.

Online platforms offer recorded satsangs, guided self-inquiry sessions, and study groups exploring Upanishadic texts, Shankara’s commentaries, and Plotinus’s Enneads. Vipassana and Zen meditation retreats, while arising from Buddhist contexts, share contemplative methods that point toward non-conceptual awareness.

Common Misconceptions

The Absolute is not God in the personal sense. “F. H. Bradley distinguishes the concept of absolute from God, whereas Josiah Royce, a neo-Hegelian and founder of the American idealism school of philosophy, has equated them.” While devotional traditions may relate to the Absolute through deity forms, the philosophical concept transcends personality and attributes.

The Absolute is not “everything is one” in a simplistic sense. “Some scholars state that advaita is not really monism. According to Alan Watts, monism often leads to conceptualizing reality as a single entity, whereas nondualism points beyond conceptual frameworks entirely.” It is not sameness but the recognition that distinctions arise within a non-dual ground.

Realizing the Absolute does not require rejecting the world. Shankara “did not mean to negate the phenomenal universe, but the identification of our True Nature with ephemeral structures such as the body, psyche, and mind.” The teaching concerns mistaken identity, not the unreality of experience.

The Absolute is not attained through intellectual understanding alone. “Reason alone cannot prove whether the non dual teachings on the nature of the Self are true or not, and they are not meant to be accepted only intellectually. The teaching is that Self and Reality can be discovered directly in and as our own being.”

How to Begin

Begin with classical source texts: the Upanishads (particularly Mandukya, Brihadaranyaka, and Chandogya), Shankara’s Vivekachudamani (“Crest-Jewel of Discrimination”), and Plotinus’s Enneads (especially Ennead V.1, “On the Three Primary Hypostases”). Modern introductions include Eliot Deutsch’s Advaita Vedanta: A Philosophical Reconstruction and Frederick Copleston’s A History of Philosophy, Volume VII (on German Idealism).

For contemplative practice, explore self-inquiry (atma-vichara) as taught by Ramana Maharshi. Be As You Are (edited by David Godman) provides accessible instruction. Consider attending satsang with qualified teachers in the Advaita lineage or joining online communities focused on non-dual inquiry.

Establish a daily meditation practice to cultivate witnessing awareness—the capacity to observe thoughts, sensations, and experiences without identification. This creates experiential ground for recognizing what remains constant amid changing phenomena.

Approach philosophical study and contemplative practice as complementary. The mind clarifies concepts; direct experience dissolves the separation between knower and known. Neither alone suffices; together they constitute the traditional path to realization.

Related terms

brahmannondualityadvaita vedantathe oneatmanself inquiry
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