Parā Vidyā (Sanskrit: परा विद्या) is a combination of two words – parā, in Hindu philosophy, means - existence, paramount object, the highest point or degree, final beatitude; and vidyā means - knowledge, philosophy, science, learning, scholarship

Para Vidya means – higher learning or learning related to the Self or the Ultimate Truth i.e

transcendental knowledge

Vedanta affirms that those who gain the knowledge of the Self attain kaivalya, they become liberated, they become Brahman

Saunaka, having asked – कस्मिन्नु भगवो विज्ञाते सर्वमिदं विज्ञातं भवतीति (" Revered Sir, what is that by the knowing of which all this becomes known? “), - was told by Angiras that –

द्वे विद्ये वेदितव्ये इति ह् स्म यद्ब्रह्मविदो वदन्ति परा चैवापरा च | तत्रापरा ऋग्वेदो यजुर्वेदः सामवेदोऽथर्ववेदः शिक्षा कल्पो व्याकरणं निरुक्तं छन्दो ज्योतिषमिति | अथ परा यया तदक्षरमधिग्म्यते || - (Mundaka Upanishad I i 3-5)there were two different kinds of knowledge to be acquired – ’the higher knowledge’ or Para Vidya (Sanskrit: परा विद्या )and ’the lower knowledge’ or Apara Vidya

The lower knowledge consists of all textual knowledge - the four Vedas, the science of pronunciation etc, the code of rituals, grammar, etymology, metre and astrology

The higher knowledge is by which the immutable and the imperishable Atman is realized, which knowledge brings about the direct realization of the Supreme Reality, the source of All

The knowledge of the Atman is very subtle; it cannot be obtained out of one’s own effort; the Atman cannot be intuitively apprehended by mere intellectual equipments

Thus, Angiras draws the distinction between the way of knowledge and the way of realization, as between opinion and truth

For understanding this for realizing the Reality the aspirant must seek a teacher

The teacher who has already realized his identity with the Atman alone can impart this much sought-after wisdom on the strength of his own experiences

A human being is blessed with the faculty of self-knowledge which is Apara Vidya or logical reasoning and also with the faculty of understanding and self-awareness which is Para Vidya or quantum logic

Para Vidya is defined as the intuitive vision of non-duality; it is the transcendental knowledge which is beyond all limits of knowledge, experience and reason, which is, beyond intellect, mind and sense

The Absolute, which is Truth, which is Reality, is neither an expression nor a reflection of itself; it is non-dual being devoid of otherness, and it cannot be an object of knowledge in the ordinary sense as it surpasses the intellect in subtleness

Knowledge is truth and truth is correspondence of an apprehension with its object

It is the intellect which moves within the sphere of duality resulting in delusion, wrong identification etc

Para Vidya is the intuitive level of vidya that stems from a unity, and manifests as a vision, manifests as an experience

The vision of the Nirguna Brahman is gained through Para Vidya, it is the highest of all knowledge

The method of self-realization involves sravana , manana and nididhyasana , and not rituals

Para Vidya is samyagdarcanam, the pure philosophic esoteric doctrine which teaches that Brahman is without attributes (gunas), without any distinction (vicesha) and without limitations (upadhis), that it undefinable, alone and without a second

Reality is incapable of increase; it does not change into anything else

When the true identity becomes known then the existence of the transmigrating soul and of Brahman as the creator, both vanish

Para Vidya, concerned with Brahman, the highest reality and value, and the final terminus, cannot be conceived as an inquiry; all scientific and ethical inquiries are Apara Vidya, nevertheless, the scientists engaged in such inquiries not only guide the selection of means to an end but also guide choice of the ends

Vedanta deals with the transition from avidya to vidya, that is, from the imagined life to the life of true perception

Maya is avidya

Vidya is tattvavidya, the knowledge of reality as it is in itself

Apara Vidya is rooted in “adhyasa” and “ignorance”, Para Vidya is transcendent of the Apara Vidya and aims at realizing Reality as it is and not as it appears, and it supplants and corrects conventional knowledge and conventional belief, both

Shankara’s concept of adhyasa involves the logical interpretation of the vedic vakyas

He explains that all epistemic, practical and socio-cultural distinctions are based on the mis-identification of the self as non-self (anatman) and of the non-self as the self

Para Vidya is absolute knowledge

Avidya lapses into Apara vidya, and again into Para Vidya

Avidya, Apara Vidya and Paravya are three fold phases of experience, the three transitions in knowledge of the transforming cognizer

Para Vidya alone is pramarthika jnana beyond all illusory appearances

Para Vidya is the knowledge of the Absolute whereas Apara Vidya is the knowledge of the world; the former has Reality as its content and possesses a unique quality of ultimacy which is singular and free from reason, senses, etc, but the latter has the phenomenal world as its content

Para Vidya does not require any support or proof, and is irrefutable

The aim of integral education is to integrate all dichotomies, to integrate the material and spiritual dimensions of the human personality; it does not recognize the description of vidya as Para Vidya (higher spiritual knowledge) and Apara Vidya (the knowledge of the senses and the surface mind) because the latter without the light and influence of the former is avidya or false knowledge