So when the Hindu and Buddhist philosophers speak of detachment from all this apparent world of separate beingsâdetachment means âgoing withâ this whole thing and not resisting its change. And you can afford to go with it, you can afford to get mixed up in life, and to fall in love, and to get involved with all sorts of things. You can afford it if you know that itâs an illusion. But this is not illusion in a bad sense of the word.
Hereâs this Hindu wordâcrucialâthe world is called mÄyÄ. This word, mÄyÄâyes, it means âillusion,â it means âmagic,â it means âart,â it means âdelineation,â or âmeasurementââand so from matr we get âmeter,â and we also get âmatter,â âmaterial.â Isnât it funny that the way we say âmaterialââtoday, we mean something very real, but the root of the word is âillusion.â So, you seeâI mean, measurement is kind of an illusion. You donât find inches lying around; you canât pick up an inch. So, in the same way that hours and inches and pounds and dollars and so on are actually imaginaryâtheyâre elaborate systems of cosmic bookkeeping with their little scratches on paper, little hairlines on dialsâso in exactly that way the distinction between things is mÄyÄ, is imaginary. But what an imagination! In a way, to say that the world is mÄyÄ is at the same time to say that what lies behind mÄyÄ is immaterial. Look at the reversal of the word. Oh, itâs immaterial, it doesnât matter. What matters is all this.
But that gets us to a deeper point yet. The Selfâthe real Selfâdoesnât matter, which is another way of saying it doesnât exist for any purpose. It doesnât need to exist for any purpose. What purpose would it exist for, when itâs what there is! It wonât find anything in the future, has nothing in the past that it has to go back and remember. Itâs now. An eternal now. And so, in that way it doesnât matter. But therefore, the most important thing in the universe is the one thing that doesnât matter. The one thing thatâs totally and completely useless, and that nobody can find anything for.
Once, a Zen master was asked, What is the most valuable thing in the world?
And he answered, The head of a dead cat.
Why?
Because no one can put a price on it.
So this Self, the Brahman, is like the head of a dead cat. But you see, if, then, you say, Mmm, I really ought to get that dead catâs head because... something spiritual about it and itâd be very good for me. After all, if I knew the Self I might be a better person. People might like me more. Iâd be more constructive in society. I would do this, that, and the other. You see, thatâs putting the cart before the horse. Thatâs trying to make the tail wag the dog.
The knowledge of Brahman, the Self, never does anybody any good if theyâre trying to make it do them some good. Only when they are not concerned with whether it does them any good or not does it do them any good. Itâs like when you relax and you go out and play. Americans, in particular, donât know how to do this because they always justify it. They always say, Itâs good for me. Itâs exercise. Itâs just a change from work, and thatâll be able to make me work better. See? Everything they do is done for some serious reasons. Itâs the Protestant conscience. And so we never play, except very exceptionally. Because play is that which is done just for itselfâfor fun.
So the Selfâthe Ätman, the Brahmanâexists for fun. See, there is no reason to exist; itâs completely useless. And it isâtherefore, mÄyÄ is linked with the word lÄ«lÄ, and that means âplay.â Also, of course, the word âillusion,â in English, is derived from the Latin ludere, âto play.â
So the nature, you might say, of the Self is that it does no work, it only plays. Work is something serious, you now, that you do for a purpose because you believe that youâve got to go on living; you work to survive, because you think you have to survive. That was one of the things they told you as a little child. Youâve got to go on, man!
You donât have to. This thing doesnât have to go onâthatâs why it does. I know that sounds paradoxical, but thereâs so many things in life that are like that. If Iâm trying to impress people I usually donât. If you try too hard with anything you usually make a mess of it. And so this basic thing, then, is that the Selfâthe Brahman behind the worldâis engaged in play. It is in this sense that the Hindu philosophers say, Brahman does not actually become the world. The meaning of that is: heâs playing at being itâor itâs playing at being itâas distinct from working at it.
And so, in certain Oriental countries, when one refers to noble people of high birth it is often said, Lord So-and-so has died. The Japanese would say heâs played at dying. Or will he play at taking a journey to Tokyo? Also, remember this: although I have constantly used in this talk the word âoneâ to apply to the Selfâand âcentralââthe Hindus donât use this word except speaking poetically and loosely. The Self is not one. The Self is called ânon-dualââbecause, you see, the idea of one has an opposite. The opposite of one is manyâor none. But the which then which there is no whicher has no opposite; thereâs nothing outside it, so you canât call it âone.â Because âoneâ is an exclusive idea, it excludes âtwo.â So they call it, instead of âone,â they call it ânon-dual,â which is advaita. This is from the word, you seeâdva is the root meaning âtwo;â the âvâ becomes âu,â so we get âdual;â and âaâ is the meaningâin Sanskrit, oftenâânon.â Non-dual, advaita.
And so it doesnât exclude anything. âOneâ is an exclusive word. Advaita is meant to be a totally inclusive kind of unity. Now, of course, this word itselfâwhen you look at it from a logical standpointâis a dualistic word, just like âone.â Itâs the opposite of dvaita. Dvaita and advaita. But the idea here, in Indian philosophy, is to use this word in a certain way. Now, you know that on a flat surface you canât draw three dimensions. Anything you draw will be in two dimensions. But why do we see three dimensions? Because of an artistic convention called one-point perspective, which will give you the illusion of a third dimension.
Now, in other words, a two-dimensional line is being used to imply a third dimension which can never be expressed on a flat surface. So, in exactly the same way, advaita is a word used specially to designate what lies beyond all logical categories.