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Swami Tattvavidananda | Advaita Vedanta @swamitv-eng Collection of various clips where Swamiji talks about the distortions and misrepresentations of Adi Shankara's vision by traditional orthodox Acharyas, Peetams, Mathas of the last few centuries which has depleted the spiritual strength of Hindus. source links for all the full videos of these clips: Lecture on the text "Upadesa Sahasri" of Adi Shankaracharya • #7 of Upadesha Sahasri (2019) Talks by Swa... Lecture titled "Science and Spirtuality" on Shankar Jayanti • Science and Spirituality - Swami Tatvavida... An Interview titled "Conversations on Consciousness" • Conversations On Consciousness with Swami ... Lectures on the text "Dhammapadam" https://www.youtube.com/live/yDL7kngH... and https://www.youtube.com/live/BZc5eD-1... and • 19."DHAMMAPADAM" class in English by Sw Ta... Q/A session • #3 Questions with Swami Tattvavidananda S... and • #4 Questions with Swami Tattvavidananda Sa... Here is a **concise topic-wise summary (within 4000 letters)**: --- 1. Śaṅkara as Revolutionary, Not Ritualist The speaker presents Adi Shankaracharya as a radical philosopher of oneness, not a religious icon. He questions conventional dating (8th century CE), suggesting institutional “maṭha politics” shaped historical narratives. India’s weak historiographical tradition allowed myths to dominate over evidence. Śaṅkara, like Gautama Buddha and Krishna, was later distorted by followers. What began as transformative insight became ritualistic orthodoxy. --- 2. Critique of Śaṅkara Vijayas and Institutional Myth There are many “Śaṅkara Vijaya” biographies, but the speaker claims they are largely poetic and politically motivated. Competing monastic institutions allegedly sponsored texts to legitimize their supremacy. Miraculous stories and debate victories are described as imagination rather than history. The real Śaṅkara, he argues, neither founded ritual empires nor promoted sectarian dominance. --- 3. Core Philosophy of Advaita Śaṅkara’s essential teaching: There is one higher reality (Brahman). It is non-dual (one without a second). That reality is your true Self (not body or mind). The same Self exists in all beings. Thus, the God worshipped externally is your own inner essence. Advaita is universal and inclusive, beyond caste, gender, race, or religion. --- 4. Rejection of Caste and Gender Segregation The speaker strongly condemns discrimination in the name of religion. He claims caste-based and gender-based exclusion contradict Advaita’s vision of oneness. He suggests both Buddha and Śaṅkara opposed rigid ritualism and social stratification. Modern religious heads, he argues, maintain segregation indirectly while publicly speaking of unity. --- 5. Human-Centric Spirituality Śaṅkara’s vision is described as human-centric, not theocentric. The Upaniṣadic and Gītā teaching does not present a distant theological God but asks one to discover the divine within. This echoes Swami Vivekananda’s idea that every soul is potentially divine. --- 6. Three Elements of Religion Every dharma has three components: 1. *Karma* – Ritual action 2. *Upāsanā/Bhakti* – Devotion 3. *Jñāna* – Knowledge/spiritual realization Karma and devotion form religion; knowledge is spirituality. In ancient India, ritual and devotion were guided by philosophy (karma-yoga, bhakti-yoga). Today, ritual often functions without philosophical depth, becoming mechanical or dogmatic. --- 7. Science and Spirituality The speaker insists there is no conflict between science and Advaita. Lack of scientific temper leads to superstition and blind belief. Mere scriptural scholarship without rational inquiry prevents genuine realization. Philosophy and scientific thinking should reinforce each other. --- 8. Criticism of Orthodoxy He criticizes monastic institutions for: Prioritizing ritual over inquiry Restricting Vedānta access Treating tradition as unquestionable Promoting external practices that contradict “I am not the body” He calls tradition “frozen thought” passed down without reflection and urges independent thinking. --- 9. Dust of Centuries Over millennia, mythologies and sectarian practices accumulated, covering the original Upaniṣadic vision. The task today is to remove this “dust” and rediscover pure Advaita. --- 10. Hindu Renaissance The revival began with Swami Vivekananda in 1893, followed by teachers like Swami Chinmayananda and Swami Dayananda Saraswati, who brought Vedānta beyond caste and institutional walls. --- Central Message True Advaita is: Radical spiritual oneness Rational and inquiry-based Inclusive and human-centered Free from sectarian politics Śaṅkara’s real legacy is the realization that the same reality shines in all beings.