Samskara
Samskara
Samskara
The concept of Samskara is also discussed as Vasana (Sanskrit: वासना vāsanā), particularly in the
Vaiśeṣika school of Hinduism. Vasana also means "impression, inclination of anything remaining
unconsciously in the mind".[5][6]
Context
Samskara, or Sankhara, is a significant concept across major schools of Hindu philosophy as well
as Buddhism and Jainism.[7] The schools of Indian philosophy differ on the specific mechanisms
about how samskara operates at the subconscious level. For example, Buddhism considers
samskara as "causal continua" while being consistent with its "there is no self, no soul" premise,
whereas the Vedic traditions within Hinduism consider samskara as "relational properties" (an
impression, mark, impulse, tendency or a form of psychological potential energy within) that rests
inside the "self, soul" of every person.[7] In Yoga, Vedanta and Nyaya schools of Hinduism,
samskara constitute an affective and motivational field that contributes to the value structure
within the person. They subconsciously or consciously endorse the basic inner drives that propel a
human being in future action, future premises, future thoughts or future judgments.[7][8]
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Das states that the Samskara rites of passage is a subset of actions in a human being's life, where
going through the rite within the traditions of Hinduism, affects the individual internally as well as
externally in how society perceives the person.[9] This occurs in the form of impressions and
imprint within, that is samskara.
Hinduism
The Hindu schools differ in the details, but all posit that samskara are formed in every individual
by a number of ways. This includes perceptions (what one sees, hears, touches, tastes, smells),
chitta cognition (what one feels and thinks), willful actions, and also intentions before and during
the action.[7] Training and study, in these schools, is a form of exposition, introspective realization
and in many cases practice or repetition to make the "impression, imprint" part of one's nature,
where the practice reinforces the dispositions (samskara) and dispositions reinforce the practice,
in a circular feedback.[4] Scholars state that David Hume's "impressions" theory is similar to
Samskara theory of Hinduism.[7][10][11] The Hindu schools rely on samskara theory as one of the
pillars for their epistemology (pramana), wherein they explain how and why man knows anything,
remembers anything, expects anything, feels fulfillment, feels frustration, feels freedom and joy, or
feels suffering and pain.[4] Samskara are the impressions and dispositions that develop and
accumulate deep inside a person, according to these schools, from perception, inference, choices,
preparation, practice, interaction with others, thoughts, intent, willful actions and such karma.
These manifest, Hindu philosophies state, as habits, behavior, tendencies, psychological
predispositions and dispositions.[4][7]
Actions, studies, diligent preparation and inner resolutions trigger Samskaras – hidden
impressions or dispositions – in the psyche of an individual, and these influence how the individual
acts, perceives self and the manner in which the individual responds or accepts the karmic
circumstances and the future.[4] Ian Whicher explains that, in the philosophical theories of
Hinduism, every karma (action, intent) leaves a samskara (impression, impact, imprint) in the
deeper structure of human mind.[2] This impression then awaits volitional fruition, in the form of
hidden expectations, circumstances or unconscious sense of self-worth. It manifests as tendency,
karmic impulse, subliminal impression, habitual potency or innate dispositions.[2][3][12]
Samkhya-Yoga
In Samkhya and Yoga schools, Sankhara, also spelled as Samskara, are impressions or residues
that affect an individual's Gunas (behavior attributes).[7] These impressions constitute part of the
mechanistic foundation behind ancient Indian scholars' explanation on how karma theory works in
practice. Samskara are explained as dispositions, character or behavioral traits either as default
from birth or Samskara are behavioral traits perfected over time through Yoga, through conscious
shaping of inner self, one's desire, sense of moral responsibility and through practice.[2][7]
In Yoga school of Hinduism, all actions and intents lead to impressions and memories, whether
they are active or hidden, conscious or unconscious. A person may not remember his or her past
karma, yet the impressions shape his character, the habits, the circumstances, the essence of that
person because of the impressions left by the karma.[2] These tendencies, subtle traces and innate
characteristics, states the Yoga school, continue to affect the person's present actions, assumptions,
attitudes (bhava), mind (buddhi), moral response and interactions with everyone, everything and
self.[2][13] Vyasa, Patanjali and other ancient Indian scholars refer to these as karmic residues
(karmasaya). Personality, states Patanjali, is the sum total combination of all these impressions
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and subtle traces (samskaras). Individuals tend to do what they did in the past, man forms habit
and often returns to those habits, and behaviors tend to repeat because of these samskaras,
according to these Yoga scholars.[2][4]
Vedanta
These are viewed as traces or temperament that evolves through the refinement of an individual
inner consciousness and expressed personality, and is a form of "being-preparedness" in Vedantic
psychology.[7] All physical, verbal and mental activity, according to the Vedanta school of
Hinduism, creates Samskara, or traces inside a person. These Samskaras together then manifest
as inner personality and external circumstances, and depending then on individual's response
thereof, these then bear phala (fruit). In the state where an individual realizes Self and reaches
jivanmukti (moksha), Shankara, Mandana, Sarvajnatman and other Vedanta scholars suggest that
the causes of impressions such as ignorance disappear, the individual reaches inner resolution and
complete acceptance of self, thus becoming free of samskaras and consequent blissful state of
existence.[14]
In Nyaya school of Hinduism, Bhavana (Sanskrit: भावना) is synonymous with Samskara, a property
that manifests as impressions or traces on the soul.[15] It is a key concept in Nyaya philosophy, and
it applies the idea to both living and non-living world. For example, the vega (velocity) of vayu
(wind) is its samskara, in Nyaya literature.[15] The concept is intimately related to Nyaya's search
and reason-driven explanation of causes behind what happens in living and non-living world, and
why. All voluntary actions, state Nyayayikas, have a cause, and these are guided by Samskara. For
example, a newborn child voluntarily and instinctively acts to reach for the mother's breast.[16]
This action, explain Nyaya texts, must have a cause, but the newborn has neither been provided
that knowledge nor has the value of the mother's breast been explained by another, nor has the
newborn formed any Samskara in the new life. The newborn has that knowledge, that instinct,
from some impression, some trace within "from a prior experience".[17] That is an example of
Samskara, assert the Nyaya and Vaiśeṣika scholars.[16][17]
In Nyaya school of Hinduism, the existence of Samskara cannot be directly perceived, only
inferred.[15] Further, not all Samskara are psychological.[4] Some simply manifest as memories,
premises or beliefs shaped "from a prior experience".[16][18]
Buddhism
Saṃskāra or Saṅkhāra in Buddhism refers to mental "dispositions".[19] These result from past
volitions, and are causes of future volitions. Saṅkhāra also refers to that faculty within a person
wherein these dispositions are formed.[20] Buddhism emphasizes the need to purify dispositions
(Saṅkhāra) rather than eliminate them.[21]
Jainism
The activities of mind, speech and body, according to Jain philosophy, lead to Asrava, that is, the
influx and imprint of karmic residues to the jiva (soul) of the living being.[22] These residues bind
(bandha), forming karma sarira,[23] which can be stopped (saṃvara) and released (nirjara).[22]
The operating mechanism, consistent with the dualism premise of Jainism, is not Saṃskāra as
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See also
Saṅkhāra (Buddhist concept)
Saṃskāra (Hindu rites of passage)
Samskara (ayurvedic) (Ayurvedic medicinal process)
Meher Baba on Sanskaras
Engram (neuropsychology)
Engram (Scientology)
References
1. saMskAra (http://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/tamil/recherche) Monier-Williams'
Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Cologne Digital Sanskrit Lexicon, Germany
2. Ian Whicher (1999), The Integrity of the Yoga Darsana: A Reconsideration of Classical Yoga,
SUNY Press, ISBN 978-0791438152, pages 99-102
3. Jeaneane Fowler (2002), Perspectives of Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of
Hinduism, Sussex Academic Press, ISBN 978-1898723943, page 105
4. Stephen Philips (2014), Epistemology in Classical India: The Knowledge Sources of the Nyaya
School, Routledge, ISBN 978-1138008816, pages 7-46, 134, 163-170
5. vAsanA (http://spokensanskrit.de/index.php?tinput=vAsanA&direction=SE&script=HK&link=yes
&beginning=0) Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionary, Germany
6. Stephen Philips (2014), Epistemology in Classical India: The Knowledge Sources of the Nyaya
School, Routledge, ISBN 978-1138008816, page 134
7. Stephen Philips (2009), Yoga, Karma, and Rebirth: A Brief History and Philosophy, Columbia
University Press, ISBN 978-0231144858, Chapter 3: Karma
8. Howard Coward (1983), Psychology and karma, Philosophy East and West, Vol. 33, No. 1,
pages 49-60
9. L Das (2005), Culture as the Designer, Design Issues, MIT Press, Vol. 21, No. 4, pages 41-53
10. David Dilworth and Hugh Silverman (1978), A Cross-Cultural Approach to the De-Ontological
Self Paradigm, The Monist, Volume 61, Issue 1, pages 82-95, doi:10.5840/monist197861110 (h
ttps://doi.org/10.5840%2Fmonist197861110)
11. Clare Carlisle (2005), Creatures of habit: The problem and the practice of liberation,
Continental Philosophy Review, Vol. 38, Issue 1-2, pages 19-39
12. Larson and Potter (2011), The Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, Vol 12, Yoga: India's
philosophy of meditation, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120833494, page 83
13. Gerald Larson (2011), Classical Sāṃkhya: An Interpretation of Its History and Meaning, Motilal
Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120805033, page 244
14. Andrew Fort (1998), Jivanmukti in Transformation: Embodied Liberation in Advaita and Neo-
Vedanta, State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0791439036, pages 10-82
15. PB Shukla (2000), Metaphysics: Indian Philosophy (Editor: Roy Perrett), Routledge, ISBN 978-
0815336082, page 16
16. Stephen H. Phillips (2009), Yoga, Karma, and Rebirth: A Brief History and Philosophy,
Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0231144858, Chapter 4
17. John Derrett (1977), Essays in Classical and Modern Hindu Law, BRILL Academic, ISBN 978-
9004048089, pages 106-107
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External links
Mimi.hu - definitions of samskara (http://en.mimi.hu/yoga/samskara.html)
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