Advaita in the Aghori context is a fiercely embodied, non-intellectual expression of non-duality (advaita or advaitācāra — “non-dual conduct”) that radically enacts the Upaniṣadic and tantric truth: ātman = Brahman (or, in their Śaiva language, the individual is none other than Bhairava — the all-encompassing, terrifyingly free form of Śiva). While Ādi Śaṅkarācārya’s Advaita Vedānta employs viveka (discrimination) and neti-neti through śravaṇa-manana-nididhyāsana, the Aghori path — as the last living branch of the medieval Kāpālika tradition (4th–8th century CE) within left-hand (vāmācāra / Kaula) Śaivism — demands total experiential annihilation of every duality through deliberate, heroic transgression (vīra-sādhana). Nothing is “other”; everything is Śiva/Bhairava/Brahman.
Aghoris trace their lineage to Dattātreya, the archetypal avadhūta (one who has “shaken off” all conventions) and ādi-guru of the tradition, who is said to have offered his own flesh as prasād in cremation grounds.
All Is Bhairava: Aghoris Turn Horror into the Ultimate Homa of Non-Duality
Scriptural Foundations (Direct References)
The philosophical root is Vedic/Upaniṣadic monism, but the method is purely tantric:
- Chāndogya Upaniṣad 3.14.1: Sarvaṃ khalvidaṃ brahma (“Verily, all this is Brahman”). This is the constant Aghori refrain: if everything is Brahman, then cremation ash, human remains, excrement, and the “impure” are equally divine. No thing can defile the knower.
- Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad 1.4.10 & 4.4.25: Aham Brahmāsmi (“I am Brahman”) and tat tvam asi (“Thou art That”). Realized not as theory but as lived identity.
- Avadhūta Gītā (attributed to Dattātreya, the foundational text of Aghori/Avadhūta non-dualism):
- 1.2: “All that appears in this realm of forms is alone the Ātman… selfless, immutable, auspicious, One.”
- 1.4: “All is verily the absolute Self. Distinction and non-distinction do not exist. How can I say ‘It exists; it does not exist’? I am filled with wonder!”
- 1.13: “You are not born nor do you die… The scripture declares in many ways: ‘All is Brahman.’”
- 1.15: “There is no you, no me, nor is there this Universe. All is verily the Self alone.”
- 1.17: “For you there is neither birth nor death… neither bondage nor liberation, neither good nor evil.”
- 1.21: “Know that which has form to be false, that which is formless to be eternal. Through this truth there is no rebirth.”
- Vijñāna Bhairava Tantra (a chapter of the Rudrayāmala Tantra, the direct scriptural root of Aghori Bhairava worship):
- 163 verses presenting 112 dhāraṇās (centering techniques) for immediate entry into non-dual Bhairava consciousness.
- Void/emptiness meditations (verses 43–49, 58–60): e.g., verse 48 — meditate on the body as empty space (śūnya); verses 45 & 49 — on the empty space of the heart. This is the direct scriptural basis for śava-sādhanā (corpse meditation) and śmaśāna living.
- Equanimity in horror/fear/intense states (verses 100, 103, 123–126, 129): “Even in states of fear, anger, or intense pleasure, remain centered in the witness — that is Bhairava.”
- Closing verses (149): “Offering the elements, senses, mind into the fire of total dissolution into the Great Void… that is the real homa (fire sacrifice).”
- The entire text is framed as Bhairava teaching Bhairavī how to recognize that “I am the essence of all” — exactly the Aghori goal.
- Kularṇava Tantra (core Kaula text revered by Aghoris):
- 5.48: “Success is attained by those very things which lead to fall” (Yaireva patanaṃ dravyaiḥ siddhis-tair-eva coditā). This is the classic justification for using taboo substances.
- On purity/impurity: “The impure does not exist” for the knower (echoed in related Ucchiṣṭa-Mahābhairava Tantra: “The perceiver and the perceived are but one reality. Therefore, the impure does not exist.”).
- 5.91: The five makāras (wine, meat, fish, grain, sexual union) are permitted only after guru initiation and realization of non-duality — otherwise they cause downfall.
- Symbolic inner meaning (5.49–52): “Wine is Śakti, flesh is Śiva… the bliss arising from their union is mokṣa itself — the intimate form of Brahman.”
- “Jīva is Śiva and Śiva is Jīva; the only difference is bondage or freedom.”
- Other key tantras:
- Mālinīvijayottara Tantra 18.74: “Here there is neither purity nor impurity, nor deliberation about what may be eaten… neither duality nor non-duality.”
- Tantrāloka (Abhinavagupta, IV.240–241): “Impure is what has fallen away from consciousness; therefore everything stays pure once it achieves identity with consciousness.”
- Śivadṛṣṭi (Utpaladeva): “In things there is no purity or impurity whatsoever.”
- Māhānirvāṇa Tantra: Declares tantra (especially Kaula) as the path for Kali Yuga precisely because it destroys all dualistic distinctions.
How Aghoris Embody These Scriptural Teachings
Every Aghori practice is a living commentary on the above verses:
- Śmaśāna sādhanā & śava-sādhanā: Directly enacts VBT’s void meditations and Rudrayāmala’s cremation-ground rituals. By sitting on corpses or among burning pyres, the sādhaka experientially dissolves life/death duality (Avadhūta Gītā 1.13, 1.17).
- Embracing the “impure” (including rare historical use of human flesh, excreta, intoxicants): Literal application of Kularṇava 5.48 and the “perceiver-perceived = one” principle. If all is Brahman, nothing defiles.
- Vibhūti (ash) smearing & kapāla (skull) rituals: Symbolize impermanence and identity with the eternal (Avadhūta Gītā 1.21: form is false, formless is eternal).
- Rejection of caste, morality, taboos: Because “neither merit nor demerit exists for the Kaula” (Kularṇava).
These are not hedonism or shock tactics; they are precise yogic technologies prescribed in the Bhairava and Kaula āgamas to force the mind beyond every last trace of duality (dvaita-bhāva) into advaitācāra.
In essence, mainstream Advaita says “neti-neti” and contemplates. Aghori Advaita says “This too is Śiva — enter it fearlessly” and lives the scriptures. The realized Aghori is the avadhūta of the Avadhūta Gītā: one who sees “I am the One, beyond space, continuous… How can I see the Self as visible or hidden?” (1.10).
This path is extraordinarily rare and dangerous without a living guru, as the tantras repeatedly warn. Misuse leads to madness; correct application grants the direct, non-conceptual knowing: Aham Brahmāsmi not as words, but as one’s very being — total freedom in which even the most terrifying is revealed as Śiva. Everything — ash, corpse, ecstasy, horror — is the play of the One.