Vedika
TraditionsComparisonsĀjīvika vs Sāṃkhya
Ājīvika · Makkhali GosālavsSāṃkhya · Kapila / Īśvarakṛṣṇa

Ājīvika and Sāṃkhya — Niyati (Fixed Fate) vs Vivekakhyāti: Does the Path Matter?

Two Indian traditions that agree liberation is real and inevitable — but give completely different answers to whether what we do between now and liberation makes any difference. Ājīvika's niyati (absolute fate) says no; Sāṃkhya's vivekakhyāti (discriminative knowledge) says yes. The comparison isolates the question of whether effort can change the structure of reality.

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Shared starting point

Both traditions accept that liberation is real and possible. Both reject a creator God. Both have detailed ontologies. Both are in the Śramaṇa tradition that challenged Vedic sacrificial authority.

Both traditions accept that liberation is in some sense 'natural' to the soul — it is the soul's return to its own intrinsic nature, not the acquisition of something foreign.

Where the traditions diverge

Ājīvika: niyati — absolute fate. Every soul's liberation is scheduled at a fixed point in a cosmic cycle of 8,400,000 mahākalpas. No action, no asceticism, no knowledge can alter this schedule by one moment. The cosmos is a closed causal system in which every event is fixed.

Sāṃkhya: vivekakhyāti — discriminative knowledge. The Puruṣa (pure consciousness) has always been free; its apparent bondage is the confusion of Puruṣa with Prakṛti. Liberation comes when this confusion is seen through — when the buddhi (intellect) achieves the discrimination (viveka) between Puruṣa and Prakṛti. This requires effort: the cultivation of sattva (clarity) through yoga, ethical discipline, and philosophical inquiry.

Central disagreement

Niyati vs vivekakhyāti

The deepest question: can human effort alter the timeline of liberation? Ājīvika says definitively no — the cosmic schedule cannot be accelerated. Sāṃkhya says yes — the cultivation of discriminative knowledge is the efficient cause of liberation.

But there is a paradox in Sāṃkhya too: if Puruṣa was never really bound, then liberation is the recognition of what was always true. In that sense, liberation does not produce something new — it reveals what was always the case. This raises the question: if Puruṣa's freedom was always real, why is discriminative knowledge needed? Sāṃkhya's answer: because the confusion of Puruṣa with Prakṛti is real (at the conventional level), discriminative knowledge is the appropriate response — not because it creates liberation but because it removes the veil of confusion.

The individual

Ājīvika: every soul will be liberated — no exceptions, no accelerations. The individual is on a cosmic conveyor belt.

Sāṃkhya: each Puruṣa achieves kaivalya through its associated Prakṛti-stream developing discriminative knowledge. Liberation is plural — many Puruṣas, each on their own path.

Liberation compared

Ājīvika: liberation arrives automatically when the cosmic schedule is complete. The quality of one's actions is causally irrelevant.

Sāṃkhya: kaivalya — achieved through vivekakhyāti. The effort of yoga and philosophical discrimination is the path.

Verdict

The practical difference is stark: Ājīvika offers radical equanimity — nothing can be done to accelerate liberation, so the wise person lives without striving. Sāṃkhya offers a path — discriminative knowledge is achievable, and its achievement is liberation. The metaphysical question of whether determinism or libertarian freedom better describes the cosmos remains open in contemporary philosophy as it was in ancient India.

Comparison matrix

Question

Ājīvika

Sāṃkhya

Is fate fixed?

Absolutely — niyati determines every soul's liberation schedule

No — vivekakhyāti (discriminative knowledge) is the efficient cause of liberation

Does effort matter?

No — all effort is causally inert with respect to liberation

Yes — yoga and philosophical discrimination accelerate liberation

The soul

Every soul on a fixed cosmic schedule — liberation inevitable

Puruṣa always free — apparent bondage is confusion with Prakṛti

Liberation

Automatic — when the cycle of 8,400,000 mahākalpas is complete

Kaivalya — Puruṣa stands alone through vivekakhyāti

God

No god — the cosmos is a self-running deterministic system

No god — Puruṣa and Prakṛti are the ultimate reals

Verdict

Radical determinism — liberation is guaranteed and unavoidable

Liberation is real and achievable — the path is discriminative knowledge

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