Baddha Ātmā — The Bound Soul
Baddha Ātmā (Sanskrit: baddha = bound + ātmā = soul; 'bound soul') refers to the jīvātmā that is currently enmeshed in saṃsāra — the cycle of repeated birth, death, and rebirth — driven by avidyā (ignorance), accumulated karma, and the influence of the three guṇas (sattva, rajas, tamas) of prakṛti.
Three Categories of Jīvātmā: The Tattva Trayam and related works classify all souls into:
- Baddha ātmā — bound in saṃsāra
- Mukta ātmā — liberated from saṃsāra
- Nitya ātmā (nityasūris) — eternally free, never bound
Why the Soul Is Bound: The baddha ātmā's essential nature is pure knowledge (jñānam) and bliss (ānandam), yet through beginningless avidyā, it mistakes the body for the self and pursues material pleasures as if they were the soul's true fulfilment. This generates karma → karma generates new bodies → new bodies generate new desires. The cycle perpetuates itself.
The Instruments of Bondage: The baddha ātmā is bound through the sūkṣma śarīra (subtle body) and sthūla śarīra (gross physical body), which carry the impressions (vāsanā) of past karma from birth to birth. Even after physical death, the subtle body persists until mokṣa is attained.
Liberation: Bhagavān's grace, mediated through the Āchārya and the path of prapatti, is the means by which the baddha ātmā is released from its bondage and transitions to become a mukta ātmā.