Yogācāra and Advaita Vedānta — Two Idealisms, Two Metaphysical Anchors
Both traditions deny that there is an external world independent of consciousness. Both are forms of philosophical idealism. Yet they ground this idealism in fundamentally different metaphysical anchors: Advaita in Brahman — universal, self-luminous consciousness — and Yogācāra in a stream of consciousness without any self. The comparison reveals what is at stake in having, or not having, a universal self.
Yogācāra
Vasubandhu
c. 4th–5th c. CE
Advaita Vedānta
Śaṅkarācārya
c. 788–820 CE
The first fork
Where they diverge
Advaita grounds its idealism in Brahman — a universal, unchanging, self-luminous consciousness that is the substratum of all appearances. Individual consciousness (jīva) is ultimately Brahman. The world is Brahman appearing.
Yogācāra refuses a universal ground. The ālayavijñāna (store-consciousness) is a stream of moments — impermanent, not a substance. There is no universal Brahman underlying individual mind-streams. Each sentient being has their own ālayavijñāna. What makes the world consistent across beings is not a shared ground but shared karmic seeds.
The central disagreement
Ālayavijñāna vs Brahman
The deepest philosophical disagreement between these two traditions.
The deepest difference: for Advaita, consciousness is fundamentally one — Brahman — and the appearance of many individual consciousnesses is a further appearance within that one. For Yogācāra, consciousness is fundamentally multiple — there are as many mind-streams as there are sentient beings — and the consistency of the apparent world is explained by karmic causation across streams, not by a single underlying ground.
This generates different accounts of liberation. For Advaita, liberation is recognising that individual consciousness was always Brahman. For Yogācāra, liberation is the transformation of the ālayavijñāna at its base — the seeds of misperception no longer germinate.
The status of the individual
What happens to the self?
Advaita: the individual self is an apparent individual within Brahman — ultimately identical to Brahman, apparently separate through avidyā.
Yogācāra: the individual is a stream of experiential moments arising from the ālayavijñāna. There is no self (anātman). Liberation transforms the ālayavijñāna rather than dissolving the individual into a universal ground.
Liberation compared
Two accounts of the end of the path
Advaita: mokṣa — recognition of the identity of jīvātman and Brahman. The superimposition of individuality is removed.
Yogācāra: āśrayaparāvṛtti — the 'revolution at the base' of the store-consciousness. The habitual tendency to misperceive representations as external objects is uprooted. The result is described as the dharmakāya — the body of truth.
Verdict
Are they saying the same thing?
The two traditions are closer than they appear on the surface — both are forms of idealism, both deny external reality, both describe liberation as a recognition. But the difference is real: Advaita has a universal self; Yogācāra has no self at all. These generate genuinely different metaphysics of liberation, despite the surface resemblance.
Side by side
Systematic comparison
| Question | Yogācāra | Advaita Vedānta |
|---|---|---|
| Ultimate reality | Mind-only (vijñaptimātratā) — but no universal consciousness | Brahman — universal, self-luminous consciousness |
| Status of the world | Representations (vijñapti) within individual mind-streams | Appearance of Brahman through māyā |
| Ground of consistency | Shared karmic seeds across ālayavijñānas | Single Brahman as common ground of all experience |
| The individual | Stream of experiential moments — no inherent self | Ultimately identical with Brahman |
| Liberation | Āśrayaparāvṛtti — transformation of store-consciousness | Mokṣa — recognition of identity with Brahman |
| Verdict | Consciousness without a self — no universal ground | Consciousness as the universal self — the one ground |