I recently met a gentleman whose family tree traces itself to the 8th century philosopher and scholar Mandana Mishra of Mithila, Bihar

In the 8th century, a young man from Kerala called Shankara (now known as Adi Shankaracharya, the first teacher called Shankara) refused to marry. Instead, he became a monk and travelled across India determined to bring back the people's faith in Vedic thought, using words and logic as his weapons. He had two major opponents. The first was Buddhism, which rejected the idea that the Veda is the source of the truth. The second was Mimansika, which celebrated the idea that the Veda is the source of truth, but insisted it can only be realised through ritual, not discussion. Buddhism was a monastic order. Mimansika, however, favoured the married life for unless one is married one is not allowed to perform Vedic rituals. Shankara was a monk like the Buddhist, but he favoured the Vedic thought like the Mimansikas. Thus he embodied a new approach.
Shankara went to Kumarila Bhatta, who had successfully challenged many Buddhist and Vedic scholars to become the most revered Mimansika. But Kumarila was dying. So Kumarila directed him to Mandana Mishra. "You will know his house when you find there caged parrots discussing such abstract concepts such as whether the Veda self-validated, is the world a reality or a perception, is it karma or God that brings about results!"

Like Kumarila, Mandana was a ritualist and a married man. He was at first annoyed to see a celibate monk. He eventually relented and all the scholars of the land gathered to watch Mandana Mishra debate against Shankara. The difference between the two was stark: Mandana Mishra was older, married and a believer of rituals. Shankara was young, celibate, believed in philosophical speculation. Who would be the judge? Everyone agreed none was more suited for the role than Mandan's wife, Ubhaya Bharati.
Shankara's logic was razor sharp, his arguments incisive. Mandana Mishra was about to accept defeat when his wife said to Shankara. "You claim to have full knowledge of the world. But how can you? You are not married. You have no knowledge of kama-shastra." By kama-shastra, she meant knowledge of sex as well as all other sensory pursuits such as food, fashion, fine arts and performing arts. Shankara had to admit his knowledge of the world was incomplete.u00a0
u00a0To complete his education, Shankara is said to have entered the body of a dying king called Amaru, ruler of Kashmir, and experienced every aspect of kama-shastra. He recorded his experiences as a collection of erotic love poems titled Amaru-shataka, which also serve as metaphors for spiritual insight.
When Shankara returned, he bowed to Ubhaya Bharati for she was Saraswati, goddess of knowledge, to him.
And Mandana Mishra bowed to Shankara and described him as the mythic hermit, Shiva, who had beheaded Brahma, father of rituals. From that day onwards, Mimansa was divided into two schools: the old ritual school of Purva Mimansa and the new intellectual school of Uttar Mimansa. This later school evolved into what is today called Vedanta, acme of Vedic thought.u00a0
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Devdutt Pattanaik is a Mumbai-based mythologist who makes sacred stories, symbols and rituals relevant to modern times. Reach him at devdutt@ devdutt.comu00a0
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