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Madhyamaka and Advaita Vedānta — Emptiness and Fullness as Two Names for One Reality?

Two traditions arrive at structurally similar conclusions — that ultimate reality cannot be adequately described by ordinary thought and language — through diametrically opposite routes. Nāgārjuna refuses any ultimate positive claim; Śaṅkara makes the maximally positive claim: Brahman alone is real. The question is whether this difference is fundamental or merely expressive.

Madhyamaka

Nāgārjuna

c. 150–250 CE

vs

Advaita Vedānta

Śaṅkarācārya

c. 788–820 CE

The shared starting point

What they agree on

Both traditions agree that ordinary perception and thought cannot access ultimate reality. Both insist that the apparent multiplicity of the world — distinct, independent objects with their own natures — is somehow not the final story. Both use the two-truths framework (conventional and ultimate) and both have practitioners who describe liberation in similar terms: a falling-away of the sense of a separate self.

Both reject naive realism. Both argue that the 'self' of ordinary experience is not ultimately real. Both claim their position is misunderstood as nihilism (Madhyamaka) or as a form of rigid monism (Advaita) — and both vigorously defend themselves from these charges.

The shared context: both traditions emerged from intense debate with Buddhist and Brahmanical opponents respectively, and both were shaped by the need to articulate a position that was neither 'the world is real and independent' nor 'the world is simply nothing.'

The first fork

Where they diverge

Śaṅkara: ultimate reality is Brahman — pure consciousness, infinite, blissful. It is the fullest possible being. The world is not a separate reality but Brahman appearing through māyā. The individual self (jīvātman) is ultimately identical with Brahman.

Nāgārjuna: there is no ultimate positive reality. Śūnyatā (emptiness) is not a thing, a substance, or a ground. It is the absence of svabhāva (inherent existence) from all phenomena — including Brahman, including consciousness, including emptiness itself. Any positive ultimate — even pure consciousness — would require a nature of its own, which is exactly what Madhyamaka denies.

The central disagreement

Śūnyatā vs Brahman

The deepest philosophical disagreement between these two traditions.

The deepest disagreement: Advaita requires an ultimate substratum — Brahman — that is the ground of all appearance. Without such a ground, the appearance of the world would be 'appearance of nothing.' Madhyamaka denies that any ground is needed or coherent. Appearance does not require a substance that appears. The two-truths doctrine: at the conventional level, the world functions perfectly; at the ultimate level, nothing has inherent existence — including Brahman.

Śaṅkara would respond: Nāgārjuna's śūnyatā is itself a concept. If emptiness is predicated of all things, then emptiness is something. Either it has inherent existence or it doesn't — if it doesn't, the claim 'all things are empty' is itself empty, and Madhyamaka destroys itself. Nāgārjuna anticipated this objection (Vigrahavyāvartanī) and argued that his statements about emptiness are themselves conventional statements — not ultimate truths — which is why emptiness is empty of inherent existence too.

The status of the individual

What happens to the self?

Advaita: the individual self (jīva) is ultimately identical with Brahman. The sense of individuality is a superimposition (adhyāsa) on pure consciousness. Liberation is the recognition of this identity.

Madhyamaka: there is no self, no individual consciousness, no Brahman — at the ultimate level. The apparent individual is a conventional designation for a causally connected process. Liberation (nirvāṇa) is the cessation of the conditions that sustain suffering, not the revelation of an underlying true self.

Liberation compared

Two accounts of the end of the path

Advaita: liberation (mokṣa) is the recognition that the individual self was always already Brahman. Nothing is added; a false identification is removed. The liberated person (jīvanmukta) continues in the world but without the superimposition of individuality.

Madhyamaka: nirvāṇa is the cessation of dependent origination's suffering-producing chain — not a special state but the absence of the conditions for suffering. Crucially, nirvāṇa is not different from saṃsāra at the ultimate level — both are equally empty of inherent existence.

Verdict

Are they saying the same thing?

Philosophers disagree sharply. Some (notably David Kalupahana) argue Madhyamaka and Advaita are fundamentally different — one refuses any ultimate reality, the other posits it. Others (T.R.V. Murti, some Tibetan commentators) argue the two-truths framework in both traditions points at the same inexpressible ultimate.

The most honest verdict: the practical descriptions of liberation are strikingly similar; the metaphysical frameworks for grounding those descriptions are genuinely different. Whether the difference matters ultimately may itself be a question both traditions would decline to answer definitively.

Side by side

Systematic comparison

Systematic comparison of Madhyamaka and Advaita Vedānta
QuestionMadhyamakaAdvaita Vedānta
Ultimate realityŚūnyatā — absence of inherent existence in all phenomenaBrahman — pure consciousness, infinite, the only real
Status of the worldConventionally real, ultimately empty of svabhāvaAppearance of Brahman through māyā — not separately real
Why the world appearsDependent origination — conditions give rise to experienceMāyā / avidyā — superimposition of multiplicity on Brahman
The individual selfConventional designation for a causal process — no inherent selfUltimately identical with Brahman — individuality is superimposition
LiberationNirvāṇa — cessation of conditions sustaining sufferingMokṣa — recognition of identity with Brahman
Primary methodPrasaṅga — showing every thesis leads to absurdityMahāvākya contemplation — 'tat tvam asi' / 'aham brahmāsmi'
VerdictReality has no inherent nature — including this claimReality is pure self-luminous consciousness