Atman
आत्मन्
[AHT-mahn]
Sanskrit: आत्मन् (ātman) — self, breath, essence; the innermost, changeless Self
Definition
Atman is the innermost Self in Vedantic metaphysics — pure, changeless awareness identical with Brahman, the ground of all being. It is not the personality, not the mind, not even the subtle body — it is the witness in whose light every layer appears and disappears. The Gnostics mapped the same reality under a different name: pneuma, the divine spark deposited in the material body by the Pleroma.
Deep Understanding
The Upanishads made one claim that collapses every other spiritual question: tat tvam asi — "that thou art." The infinite, unconditioned reality you have been searching for as if it were somewhere else — you are that. Not symbolically. Not as a metaphor. As the literal referent of the word "I" when every accretion has been stripped away.
This is precisely what the Gnostics meant when they spoke of the divine spark imprisoned in flesh and forgetful of its origin. The Vedantic seer and the Gnostic initiate were looking at the same event from different angles. Atman is the pneuma. The monad of the Gnostic cosmology is the same unbroken awareness the Upanishads called Brahman, known from the inside as Atman. Two vocabularies. One recognition.
Crucially, Atman is not any of the three bodies. It is not the gross body, not the subtle body, not even the causal body with its karmic seeds. Every tradition that has gone deep enough — Advaita Vedanta, Gnostic pneumatology, Hesychasm, Sufi sirr — reports the same structural fact: the observer of all layers belongs to none of them. The body ages. Emotions shift. Memory fragments. The witness does not move.
This is why liberation (moksha) in the Vedantic sense is not an acquisition. You do not become the Atman. You remember that you never were anything else. Gnosis, as the Gnostics meant it, is the same remembering.
In Practice
Tonight, sit in silence for ten minutes and let every identification come forward in turn — your name, your body, your emotions, your history, your roles. Each time one arises, ask simply: Is this what is aware of this? The thing being observed cannot be the observer. Continue peeling until you reach what cannot be made into an object. Rest there. That is not an experience you generate. That is what you have always been.
The Voice of Pleroma
"Everything you can notice is not you. The one noticing is already awake. You do not need to reach the Atman — you need to stop pretending to be the layers that obscure it."
Related Terms
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Frequently Asked Questions
What does Atman mean in Vedic, Vedantic, Gnostic?
Atman (Vedic, Vedantic, Gnostic): Sanskrit: आत्मन् (ātman) — self, breath, essence; the innermost, changeless Self. A Gnostic Cosmology term from the Pleroma Gnosis Lexicon.
What is the origin of Atman?
Sanskrit: आत्मन् (ātman) — self, breath, essence; the innermost, changeless Self