| Paper Title |
The Five Sheaths of the Self: Understanding the Panchkosh |
| Author(s) | Divyaraj Singh. |
| Country | India |
| Abstract |
The very concept of Panchkosh or five-sheaths first articulated in the Brahmananda Valli of the Taittiriya Upaniṣhad which offers one of the oldest and most carefully structured maps of human existence in any wisdom tradition. It pictures the individual as a layered being whose innermost reality, the Atman, is progressively veiled by five concentric layers: Annamaya, the sheath of food or the gross physical body, Pranamaya, the sheath of vital energy, Manomaya, the sheath of mind and emotions, Vigyanamaya, the sheath of intellect and discernment, and Anandamaya, the bliss sheath. This paper revisits the doctrine in its original scriptural setting and reads it alongside the Maṇḍukya Upanishad's analysis of the three bodies and the four states of consciousness, the Chandogya Upanishad's teaching on the Infinite and the space within the heart, the Kaṭha Upanishad's graded hierarchy of senses, mind and intellect, the Bhagavad Geeta's account of the three gunas and the imperishable Self, and the Yoga Vashishtha's insistence that the mind alone binds and liberates. It further proposes a reasoned correspondence between the five sheaths and the seven chakras of the tantric tradition, and shows how the framework, through the paired categories of Adhi (mental affliction) and Vyadhi (bodily disease), continues to inform yoga therapy, Ayurveda and modern holistic models of health. The aim throughout is to recover the Panchkosh as a living instrument of self-knowledge and most importantly to make the concept easily understandable to students of all age groups across diverse backgrounds. |
| Keywords | Panchkosh, Taittiriya Upaniṣhad, Atman, Chakras, Holistic Health. |
| Subject Area | Philosophy |
| Issue | Volume 3, Issue 4 (July - August 2026) |
| Published | 2026/07/06 |
| How to Cite | Singh, D. (2026). The Five Sheaths of the Self: Understanding the Panchkosh. International Journal of Social Science Research (IJSSR), 3(4), 8–15. |
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