Conceptual proliferation


In Buddhism and Advaita Vedanta, conceptual proliferation or, alternatively, mental proliferation or conceptual elaboration, refers to unbounded conceptualization, "tend to obscure the true state of affairs."

Etymology

According to the Sanskri Dictionary, prapanca means "visible world," "manifoldness of form," "expansion of the universe." According to Mayrhofer, prapanca originally meant and 'endless exposition', as well as "counting on five fingers."
The translation of papañca as conceptual proliferation was first made by Katukurunde Nyanananda Thera in his research monograph Concept and Reality.

Buddhism

Prapanca

Andrew Olendzki explains that:

Aprapanca/nisprapanca

Aprapanca is " beyond discursive thinking," as stated in the Gaganagañjaparipṛcchā, the eighth chapter of the Mahāsaṃnipāta Sūtra.
Nisprapapanca/'nippapañca is the stopping of discursive thought or conceptualisation. Buswell and Lopez explain nisprapanca as follows:

Advaita

Fabian Volker explains that prapanca is central to the notion of advaita. "Advaita" is from Sanskrit roots a, not; dvaita, "customarily translated as dual." As Advaita, it is usually translated as "not-two" or "one without a second", and most commonly as "nondualism", "nonduality" or "nondual," invoking the notion of a dichotomy. Fabian Volker, following Paul Hacker explains that dvaita does not mean "duality," but "the state in which a second is present," the second here being synonymous with prapanca, "conceptual proliferation," and with jagat, "the world." Advaita thus means that only Brahman, 'the one', is ultimately real, while the phenomenal world, or the conceptual multiplicity, 'the second', is not fully real. The term thus does not emphasize two instances, but the notion that the second instance is not fully real, and advaita is better translated as "that which has no second beside it" instead of "nonduality," denying multiplicity and the proliferation of concepts "that tend to obscure the true state of affairs."

Nonduality

According to Volker, in both Advaita and Mahayana nonduality is the realization of nisprapanca/aprapanca the annihilation of prapanca through insight or meditation:

Textual usage

The term is mentioned in a variety of suttas in the Pali canon, such as the Madhupindika Sutta, and is mentioned in Mahayana Buddhism and Advaita Vedanta as well.
Anguttara Nikaya IV.173 states: