TY - BOOK AU - Vidyananda saraswathi TI - Tatwamasai Athava Advaita memamsa U1 - 108.83 V669 T PY - 2012/// CY - Hariyana PB - Ramlal kapoor trust KW - Sanskrit Philosophy N1 - Part of a series on Advaita SwansCygnus olor.jpg Schools[show] Concepts[show] Practices[show] Moksha[show] Texts[show] Teachers[show] Influences[show] Monasteries and Orders[show] Scholarship[show] Categories[show] vte Part of a series on Hindu philosophy Om symbol.svg Orthodox Samkhya Yoga Nyaya Vaisheshika Mimamsa Vedanta Advaita Vishishtadvaita Dvaita Vedanta Bhedabheda Dvaitadvaita Achintya Bheda Abheda Shuddhadvaita Heterodox Charvaka Ājīvika Buddhism Jainism Other schools[show] Teachers (Acharyas)[show] Major texts[show] Hinduism Other Indian philosophies vte Part of a series on Vaishnavism Vishnu.jpg Supreme deity[show] Important deities[show] Holy scriptures[show] Sampradayas[show] Philosophers–acharyas[show] Related traditions[show] Aum Om red.svg Hinduism portal vte Tat Tvam Asi (Devanagari: तत्त्वमसि), a Sanskrit phrase, translated variously as "Thou art that," (That thou art, That art thou, You are that, or That you are, or You're it) is one of the Mahāvākyas (Grand Pronouncements) in Vedantic Sanatana Dharma. It originally occurs in the Chandogya Upanishad 6.8.7, in the dialogue between Uddalaka and his son Śvetaketu; it appears at the end of a section, and is repeated at the end of the subsequent sections as a refrain. The meaning of this saying is that the Self - in its original, pure, primordial state - is wholly or partially identifiable or identical with the Ultimate Reality that is the ground and origin of all phenomena; Anadi tatwa, Eshwara, Jeevatma ER -