Aparokṣānubhūti is a compound consisting of aparokṣa ("perceptible") and anubhūti (अनुभूति)("knowledge"), meaning "direct cognition" or "direct experience of the Absolute."
Aparokshanubhuti reveals profound insights into the nature of reality, highlighting the illusory nature of the world and the individual self's true identity as part of the Universal Self.
The Aparokshanubhuti is a work attributed to Adi Shankara It is a popular introductory work that expounds Advaita Vedanta philosophy. In Advaita Vedanta, it refers to the realization of the identity of the individual self (Atman) with the ultimate reality (Brahman). This realization is not an intellectual understanding but a direct, experiential awareness. This experience is not based on inference or reasoning but on a direct, intuitive understanding that goes beyond the limitations of ordinary perception.
Aparokṣānubhūti is a compound consisting of aparokṣa ("perceptible") and anubhūti (अनुभूति)("knowledge"), meaning "direct cognition" or "direct experience of the Absolute."
Aparokshanubhuti reveals profound insights into the nature of reality, highlighting the illusory nature of the world and the individual self's true identity as part of the Universal Self.
The Aparokshanubhuti is a work attributed to Adi Shankara It is a popular introductory work that expounds Advaita Vedanta philosophy. In Advaita Vedanta, it refers to the realization of the identity of the individual self (Atman) with the ultimate reality (Brahman). This realization is not an intellectual understanding but a direct, experiential awareness. This experience is not based on inference or reasoning but on a direct, intuitive understanding that goes beyond the limitations of ordinary perception.

Verse 94
Objection: The scriptures (e.g. “From which all beings are born…”) declare that the world, including body and objects, is truly born of Brahman. If so, how can it be said to be mere appearance (prātibhāsika)?
Answer: The notion of causality must be understood carefully. There are two kinds of cause:
Vedānta declares that the material cause of the world is ajñāna (ignorance, māyā) — “Know Māyā as Prakṛti” (Śvetāśvatara 4.10). And because the śruti also includes Brahman as cause (by the conjunctive “and”), both Brahman and ajñāna together must be considered.
The example is clay and pots:
Thus, when ajñāna is destroyed by Brahma-vidyā, the appearance of multiplicity (world, jīva, īśvara) vanishes. Brahman alone remains.