Tantra - Definitions

Definitions

There are a number of different definitions of Tantra, not always mutually consistent. Robert Brownnotes that the term tantrism is a construction of western scholarship, not a concept that comes from the religious system itself. In other words, tāntrikas (practitioners of Tantra) never attempted to define Tantra as a whole the way Western scholars have. Rather, the Tantric dimension of each South Asian religion had its own name. For example, what scholars call Tantric Shaivism was known to its practitioners as the Mantramārga, Tantric Buddhism has the indigenous name of the Vajrayana, and Tantric Vaishnavism was known as the Pañcarātra. However, we may justifiably use the general term Tantra to denote all the teachings and practices found in the scriptures called tantras or āgamas, a synonym (hence we could equally substitute the adjective Āgamic anywhere we might use Tantric).

The Tantric tradition does offer two important definitions of what constitutes a tantra and why it is named such. The first comes from the Kāmikā-tantra:

Because it elaborates (tan) copious and profound matters, especially relating to the principles of reality (tattva) and sacred mantras, and because it provides salvation (tra), it is called a tantra.

The second traditional definition comes from the 10th century Tantric scholar Rāmakaṇṭha, who belonged to the dualist school called the Śaiva Siddhānta:

A tantra is a divinely revealed body of teachings, explaining what is necessary and what is a hindrance in the practice of the worship of God; and also describing the specialized initiation and purification ceremonies that are the necessary prerequisites of Tantric practice.

Modern scholars have also provided definitions of Tantra. David Gordon White of the University of California offers the following:

Tantra is that Asian body of beliefs and practices which, working from the principle that the universe we experience is nothing other than the concrete manifestation of the divine energy of the godhead that creates and maintains that universe, seeks to ritually appropriate and channel that energy, within the human microcosm, in creative and emancipatory ways.

According to the contemporary Indian philosopher and tantric author, founder of Ananda Marga school of Tantra Yoga, Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar, also known by his spiritual name, Shrii Shrii Anandamurti, tantra had its origin in India and South Asia. Tantra in its Káshmiirii and Gaod'iiya Schools did exist before Shiva, but in a scattered and crude form. Sarkar aka Shrii Shrii Anandamurti also describes who is a tantric and what is the "tantric cult": "A person who, irrespective of caste, creed or religion, aspires for spiritual expansion or does something concrete, is a Tantric. Tantra in itself is neither a religion nor an 'ism'. Tantra is a fundamental spiritual science. So wherever there is any spiritual practice it should be taken for granted that it stands on the Tantric cult". Other scholars have chosen to offer lists of defining features rather than an ostensive definition. Anthony Tribe, a scholar of Buddhist Tantra, offers this list: 1. centrality of ritual, esp. evocation and worship of deities; 2. centrality of mantras; 3. visualisation and self-identification with deity; 4. necessity of initiation / esotericism / secrecy; 5. importance of the teacher (guru, ācārya); 6. ritual use of maṇḍalas; 7. transgressive/antinomian acts; 8. revaluation of the body; 9. revaluation of the status and role of women; 10. analogical thinking ; and 11. revaluation of 'negative' mental states.

CHRONOLOGY: USE OF THE TERM "TANTRA" IN WRITTEN SCRIPTURES
Period Scripture or Author Meaning
1700–1100 B.C. Ṛgveda, X, 71.9 loom (or device for weaving)
1700-? B.C. Sāmaveda, Tandya Brahmana essence (or "main part", perhaps to denote the quintessence of the Sastras)
1200-900 B.C. Atharvaveda, X, 7.42 loom (or device for weaving)
1400-1000 B.C. Yajurveda, Taittiriya Brahmana, 11.5.5.3 loom (or device for weaving)
600-500 B.C. Pāṇini on Aṣṭādhyāyī tissue obtained from the frame (tantraka, derived from tantra)
600-300 B.C. Śatapatha Brāhmaṇa essence (or "main part", perhaps to denote the quintessence of the śastras)
350-283 B.C. Chanakya on Arthaśāstra strategy (political strategy, military etc.)
300 A.D. Īśvarakṛṣṇa author of Sānkhya Kārikā (kārikā 70) doctrine (it identifies Sankhya as a tantra)
320 A.D. Viṣṇu Purāṇa set of practices and rituals (speaks of śakti, Viṣṇu and Durgā cults with the use of wine, meat, etc..)
320-400 A.D. poet Kālidāsa on Abhijñānaśākuntalam deep understanding or mastery of a topic
423 A.D. Gangdhar Stone Inscription in Rajasthan set of practices and rituals of daily Tantric cult (Tantrobhuta)
500-600 A.D. Chinese Buddhist canon (Vol. 18–21: Tantra (Vajrayāna) or Tantric Buddhism set of doctrines or practices for obtaining spiritual enlightenment (including iconography of the subtle body with cakras, nāḍīs, Mantras and subtle energies etc..)
600 A.D. Kāmikāgama or Kāmikā-tantra copious knowledge (on principles of reality tattva and mantra) and bearer of liberation
606–647 A.D. Sanskrit scholar and poet Bāṇabhaṭṭa (in Harṣacarita and in Kādambari), in Bhāsa's Cārudatta and in Śūdraka's Mṛcchakatika set of practices and rituals with use of Mandalas and Yantras for propitiation of Mother Goddesses or Matrikas, etc.
788-820 A.D. philosopher Śankara system of thought or set of doctrines or practices
950-1000 A.D. philosopher Bhaṭṭa Rāmakaṇṭha set of doctrines or practices (divinely revealed) concerning the practice of spiritual worship
975-1025 A.D. philosopher Abhinavagupta in his Tantrāloka set of doctrines or practices, teachings and/or Śaiva doctrine
1150-1200 A.D. Jayaratha, Abhinavagupta's commentator on Tantrāloka set of doctrines or practices, teachings and/or Śaiva doctrine (as in Tantrāloka)
1690–1785 A.D. philosopher Bhāskararāya system of thought or set of doctrines or practices

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