What does it even mean?
it means that you're throwing the baby out with the bathwater. you keep implying that it isn't an action. to be aware or unaware first involve "to be", it is a verb, an action first, a movement.
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What does it even mean?
it means that you're throwing the baby out with the bathwater. you keep implying that it isn't an action. to be aware or unaware first involve "to be", it is a verb, an action first, a movement.
it is physical because it has movement.
has nothing to do with any kind of scripture.
true but lila is eternal. only that which contains all conditions can itself be unconditional. maya is fixating on part of that reality because of time/space; which is fluid and not fixed.
Lila (Sanskrit: लीला, IAST līlā) or Leela can be loosely translated as the "divine play". The concept of Lila is common to both non-dualist and dualist philosophical schools of Indian philosophy, but has a markedly different significance in each. Within non-dualism, Lila is a way of describing all reality, including the cosmos, as the outcome of creative play by the divine absolute (Brahman).
The idea of three types of guna, innate nature and forces that together transform and keep changing the world is, however, found in numerous earlier and later Indian texts.[20]
What?
the illusion is with maya and not lila. lila is the never changing brahman. paradox