Sankaracarya Adi

Śaṅkara's Upadeśasāhasrī. translated and edited by Sengaku Mayeda - 1st - Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers 2006. - 265

Sankara, the eighth-century Indian philosopher, is generally regarded as the greatest thinker in the long history of Indian philosophy as well as in the metaphysical tradition known as Vedanta. Advaita Vedanta, the school or system founded by him, stresses the Advaita or nondualist approach to the problem of existence and ultimate reality and has been the main current of thought in India for hundreds of years. Most of Sankara's works are commentaries on other classics of Indian thought, like Upanisads, the Bhagavadgita and the Brahmasutra. The Upadesasahasri, or " A Thousand Teachings" here critically edited and translated into English is however, the only independent and non-commentary work that can safely be attributed to him, the other independent writings traditionally ascribed to him are all probably spurious.

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Advaita.
Vedanta

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