THE TECHNIQUE OF ANTARA IN THE VIJŇANA BHAIRAVA TANTRA: A TEXTUAL ANALYSIS OF THE CONCEPT ON THE GAP IN CONSCIOUSNESS

Authors

  • Ni Wayan Sri Prabawati Kusuma Dewi Universitas Hindu Negeri I Gusti Bagus Sugriwa Denpasar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25078/vidyottama.v10i1.6297

Abstract

This article analyzes the concept of antara (interval/gap) in the Vijñāna Bhairava Tantra as a direct method for recognizing nondual consciousness within the Kashmir Śaivism tradition. The study employs a textual hermeneutic analysis of dhāraṇā verses that contain instructions concerning the middle point (madhya), the pause between breaths, the gap between thoughts, and the cessation of perception. Terminological analysis shows that the terms antara, madhya, śūnya, and visrānti function operationally rather than merely descriptively, as they guide attention to experiential intervals where subject object duality weakens. The linguistic structure of the text is instructive-performative, marked by aphoristic and paradoxical formulas that encourage experiential realization rather than conceptual construction. A typology of interval techniques can be mapped into respiratory, cognitive, and sensory forms, with breath pauses serving as the most explicit model of the mechanism for revealing non-conceptual awareness. This study also places the concept of antara in critical dialogue with contemporary consciousness studies, particularly gap awareness theory and micro-phenomenology, while emphasizing the limits of cross-traditional interpretation. The findings indicate that antara functions as a practical epistemological device for deconstructing duality and recognizing reflexive awareness. Thus, the Vijñāna Bhairava Tantra makes a significant contribution to contemplative discourse and the philosophy of consciousness.

 

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Published

2026-06-30

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