UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Swami Vivekananda and Sri Aurobindo Ghosh
UNIT 6 HINDUISM : SWAMI VIVEKANANDA AND SRI AUROBINDO GHOSH Structure 6.2 Renaissance of Hi~~duis~iiand the Role of Sri Raniakrishna Mission 0.3 Swami ViveItananda's Philosopliy of Neo-Vedanta 6.4 Swami Vivckanalida on Nationalism 6.4.1 S\varni Vivcknnnnda on Dcrnocracy 6.4.2 Swami Vivckanar~daon Social Changc 6.5 Transition of Hinduism: Frolii Vivekananda to Sri Aurobindo 6.5. Sri Aurobindo on Renaissance of Hinduism 6.2 Sri Aurol>i~ldoon Evil EffLrcls of British Rulc 6.6 S1.i Aurobindo's Critique of Political Moderates in India 6.6.1 Sri Aurobilido on the Essencc of Politics 6.6.2 SI-iAurobindo oil Nationalism 0.6.3 Sri Aurobindo on Passivc Resistance 6.6.4 Thcory of Passive Resistance 6.6.5 Mcthods of Passive Rcsistancc 6.7 Sri Aurobindo 011 the Indian Theory of State 6.7.1 .J'olitical ldcas of Sri Aurobindo - A Critical Study 6.8 Summary 1 h 'i 6.9 Exercises j i 6.1 INTRODUCTION In 19"' celitury, India camc under the British rule. Due to the spread of moder~ieducation and growing public activities, there developed social awakening in India. The religion of Hindus wns very harshly criticized by the Christian n?issionaries and the British historians but at ~hcsanie timc, researches carried out by the Orientalist scholars revealcd to the world, lhc glorioi~s'tiaadition of the Hindu religion. The Hindus responded to this by initiating reforms in thcir religion and by esfablishing new pub'lie associations to spread their ideas of refor111 and social development anlong the people. -
Reg. No Name in Full Residential Address Gender Contact No
Reg. No Name in Full Residential Address Gender Contact No. Email id Remarks 20001 MUDKONDWAR SHRUTIKA HOSPITAL, TAHSIL Male 9420020369 [email protected] RENEWAL UP TO 26/04/2018 PRASHANT NAMDEORAO OFFICE ROAD, AT/P/TAL- GEORAI, 431127 BEED Maharashtra 20002 RADHIKA BABURAJ FLAT NO.10-E, ABAD MAINE Female 9886745848 / [email protected] RENEWAL UP TO 26/04/2018 PLAZA OPP.CMFRI, MARINE 8281300696 DRIVE, KOCHI, KERALA 682018 Kerela 20003 KULKARNI VAISHALI HARISH CHANDRA RESEARCH Female 0532 2274022 / [email protected] RENEWAL UP TO 26/04/2018 MADHUKAR INSTITUTE, CHHATNAG ROAD, 8874709114 JHUSI, ALLAHABAD 211019 ALLAHABAD Uttar Pradesh 20004 BICHU VAISHALI 6, KOLABA HOUSE, BPT OFFICENT Female 022 22182011 / NOT RENEW SHRIRANG QUARTERS, DUMYANE RD., 9819791683 COLABA 400005 MUMBAI Maharashtra 20005 DOSHI DOLLY MAHENDRA 7-A, PUTLIBAI BHAVAN, ZAVER Female 9892399719 [email protected] RENEWAL UP TO 26/04/2018 ROAD, MULUND (W) 400080 MUMBAI Maharashtra 20006 PRABHU SAYALI GAJANAN F1,CHINTAMANI PLAZA, KUDAL Female 02362 223223 / [email protected] RENEWAL UP TO 26/04/2018 OPP POLICE STATION,MAIN ROAD 9422434365 KUDAL 416520 SINDHUDURG Maharashtra 20007 RUKADIKAR WAHEEDA 385/B, ALISHAN BUILDING, Female 9890346988 DR.NAUSHAD.INAMDAR@GMA RENEWAL UP TO 26/04/2018 BABASAHEB MHAISAL VES, PANCHIL NAGAR, IL.COM MEHDHE PLOT- 13, MIRAJ 416410 SANGLI Maharashtra 20008 GHORPADE TEJAL A-7 / A-8, SHIVSHAKTI APT., Male 02312650525 / NOT RENEW CHANDRAHAS GIANT HOUSE, SARLAKSHAN 9226377667 PARK KOLHAPUR Maharashtra 20009 JAIN MAMTA -
Vedanta's Message for Our Time: Man's Need for the Eternal
Vedanta’s Message For Our Time: Man’s Need For The Eternal Philosophy By Swami Tathagatananda Since the advent of Shri Ramakrishna on the spiritual horizon of mankind, a new epoch of spiritual fraternity had been steadily unfolding. The West has been evincing its keen interest in the ancient truth of India’s heritage. Shri Ramakrishna demonstrated the reality of Divinity by realizing the Truth in his own life. This re-authentication of the ancient truths in the life of Shri Ramakrishna is a great example of hope and inspiration. Shri Ramakrishna proclaimed the fundamental unity of all religions to a world plagued by hostility, disharmony and persecution, all in the name of religion. Swami Vivekananda broadcast that teaching to the world when religious truths and the subjects of God, Soul and immortality had lost their reality and made a mockery of religion. Various dogmatic theologies with their anti-rational and anti-humanistic attitudes had denigrated the image of religion, which was ultimately abandoned in the modern period. In that bleak, hostile world, Swami Vivekananda preached the sublime truth of Vedanta that speaks of man’s spiritual depth and dimension. He taught about a new image of man as potentially Divine. According to Marie Louise Burke, “As Swamiji later wrote to Swami Ramakrishnananda, ‘I am careering all over the country. Wherever the seed of his power will fall, there it will fructify—be it today, or in a hundred years.’ . Throughout his life, wherever he was and whatever he was outwardly doing, he permanently lifted the consciousness of all with whom he came in contact. -
The Neo-Vedanta Philosophy of Swami Vivekananda
VEDA’S JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (JOELL) Vol.6 Issue 4 An International Peer Reviewed (Refereed) Journal 2019 Impact Factor (SJIF) 4.092 http://www.joell.in RESEARCH ARTICLE THE NEO-VEDANTA PHILOSOPHY OF SWAMI VIVEKANANDA Tania Baloria (Ph.D Research Scholar, Jaipur National University, Jagatpura, Jaipur.) doi: https://doi.org/10.33329/joell.64.19.108 ABSTRACT This paper aims to evaluate the interpretation of Swami Vivekananda‘s Neo-Vedanta philosophy.Vedanta is the philosophy of Vedas, those Indian scriptures which are the most ancient religious writings now known to the world. It is the philosophy of the self. And the self is unchangeable. It cannot be called old self and new self because it is changeless and ultimate. So the theory is also changeless. Neo- Vedanta is just like the traditional Vedanta interpreted with the perspective of modern man and applied in practical-life. By the Neo-Vedanta of Swami Vivekananda is meant the New-Vedanta as distinguished from the old traditional Vedanta developed by Sankaracharya (c.788 820AD). Neo-Vedantism is a re- establishment and reinterpretation Of the Advaita Vedanta of Sankara with modern arguments, in modern language, suited to modern man, adjusting it with all the modern challenges. In the later nineteenth century and early twentieth century many masters used Vedanta philosophy for human welfare. Some of them were Rajarammohan Roy, Swami DayanandaSaraswati, Sri CattampiSwamikal, Sri Narayana Guru, Rabindranath Tagore, Mahatma Gandhi, Sri Aurobindo, and Ramana Maharsi. Keywords: Female subjugation, Religious belief, Liberation, Chastity, Self-sacrifice. Author(s) retain the copyright of this article Copyright © 2019 VEDA Publications Author(s) agree that this article remains permanently open access under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 International License . -
Contents by Tradition Vii Contents by Country Ix Contributors Xi
CONTENTS Contents by Tradition vii Contents by Country ix Contributors xi Introduction • David Gordon White 1 Note for Instructors • David Gordon White 24 Foundational Yoga Texts 29 1. The Path to Liberation through Yogic Mindfulness in Early Āyurveda • Dominik Wujastyk 31 2. A Prescription for Yoga and Power in the Mahābhārata • James L. Fitzgerald 43 3. Yoga Practices in the Bhagavadgītā • Angelika Malinar 58 4. Pātañjala Yoga in Practice • Gerald James Larson 73 5. Yoga in the Yoga Upanisads: Disciplines of the Mystical OM Sound • Jeffrey Clark Ruff 97 6. The Sevenfold Yoga of the Yogavāsistha • Christopher Key Chapple 117 7. A Fourteenth-Century Persian Account of Breath Control and • Meditation Carl W. Ernst 133 Yoga in Jain, Buddhist, and Hindu Tantric Traditions 141 8. A Digambara Jain Description of the Yogic Path to • Deliverance Paul Dundas 143 • 9. Saraha’s Queen Dohās Roger R. Jackson 162 • 10. The Questions and Answers of Vajrasattva Jacob P. Dalton 185 11. The Six-Phased Yoga of the Abbreviated Wheel of Time Tantra n • (Laghukālacakratantra) according to Vajrapā i Vesna A. Wallace 204 12. Eroticism and Cosmic Transformation as Yoga: The Ātmatattva sn • of the Vai ava Sahajiyās of Bengal Glen Alexander Hayes 223 White.indb 5 8/18/2011 7:11:21 AM vi C O ntents m 13. TheT ransport of the Ha sas: A Śākta Rāsalīlā as Rājayoga in Eighteenth-Century Benares • Somadeva Vasudeva 242 Yoga of the Nāth Yogīs 255 14. The Original Goraksaśataka • James Mallinson 257 T 15. Nāth Yogīs, Akbar, and the “Bālnāth illā” • William R. Pinch 273 16. -
Tantra As Experimental Science in the Works of John Woodroffe
Julian Strube Tantra as Experimental Science in the Works of John Woodroffe Abstract: John Woodroffe (1865–1936) can be counted among the most influential authors on Indian religious traditions in the twentieth century. He is credited with almost single-handedly founding the academic study of Tantra, for which he served as a main reference well into the 1970s. Up to that point, it is practically impossible to divide his influence between esoteric and academic audiences – in fact, borders between them were almost non-existent. Woodroffe collaborated and exchangedthoughtswithscholarssuchasSylvainLévi,PaulMasson-Oursel,Moriz Winternitz, or Walter Evans-Wentz. His works exerted a significant influence on, among many others, Heinrich Zimmer, Jakob Wilhelm Hauer, Mircea Eliade, Carl Gustav Jung, Agehananda Bharati or Lilian Silburn, as they did on a wide range of esotericists such as Julius Evola. In this light, it is remarkable that Woodroffe did not only distance himself from missionary and orientalist approaches to Tantra, buthealsoidentifiedTantrawithCatholicism and occultism, introducing a univer- salist, traditionalist perspective. This was not simply a “Western” perspective, since Woodroffe echoed Bengali intellectuals who praised Tantra as the most appropriate and authen- tic religious tradition of India. In doing so, they stressed the rational, empiri- cal, scientific nature of Tantra that was allegedly based on practical spiritual experience. As Woodroffe would later do, they identified the practice of Tantra with New Thought, spiritualism, and occultism – sciences that were only re-discovering the ancient truths that had always formed an integral part of “Tantrik occultism.” This chapter situates this claim within the context of global debates about modernity and religion, demonstrating how scholarly approaches to religion did not only parallel, but were inherently intertwined with, occultist discourses. -
Why I Became a Hindu
Why I became a Hindu Parama Karuna Devi published by Jagannatha Vallabha Vedic Research Center Copyright © 2018 Parama Karuna Devi All rights reserved Title ID: 8916295 ISBN-13: 978-1724611147 ISBN-10: 1724611143 published by: Jagannatha Vallabha Vedic Research Center Website: www.jagannathavallabha.com Anyone wishing to submit questions, observations, objections or further information, useful in improving the contents of this book, is welcome to contact the author: E-mail: [email protected] phone: +91 (India) 94373 00906 Please note: direct contact data such as email and phone numbers may change due to events of force majeure, so please keep an eye on the updated information on the website. Table of contents Preface 7 My work 9 My experience 12 Why Hinduism is better 18 Fundamental teachings of Hinduism 21 A definition of Hinduism 29 The problem of castes 31 The importance of Bhakti 34 The need for a Guru 39 Can someone become a Hindu? 43 Historical examples 45 Hinduism in the world 52 Conversions in modern times 56 Individuals who embraced Hindu beliefs 61 Hindu revival 68 Dayananda Saraswati and Arya Samaj 73 Shraddhananda Swami 75 Sarla Bedi 75 Pandurang Shastri Athavale 75 Chattampi Swamikal 76 Narayana Guru 77 Navajyothi Sree Karunakara Guru 78 Swami Bhoomananda Tirtha 79 Ramakrishna Paramahamsa 79 Sarada Devi 80 Golap Ma 81 Rama Tirtha Swami 81 Niranjanananda Swami 81 Vireshwarananda Swami 82 Rudrananda Swami 82 Swahananda Swami 82 Narayanananda Swami 83 Vivekananda Swami and Ramakrishna Math 83 Sister Nivedita -
The Malleability of Yoga: a Response to Christian and Hindu Opponents of the Popularization of Yoga
Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies Volume 25 Article 4 November 2012 The Malleability of Yoga: A Response to Christian and Hindu Opponents of the Popularization of Yoga Andrea R. Jain Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/jhcs Part of the Religion Commons Recommended Citation Jain, Andrea R. (2012) "The Malleability of Yoga: A Response to Christian and Hindu Opponents of the Popularization of Yoga," Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies: Vol. 25, Article 4. Available at: https://doi.org/10.7825/2164-6279.1510 The Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies is a publication of the Society for Hindu-Christian Studies. The digital version is made available by Digital Commons @ Butler University. For questions about the Journal or the Society, please contact [email protected]. For more information about Digital Commons @ Butler University, please contact [email protected]. Jain: The Malleability of Yoga The Malleability of Yoga: A Response to Christian and Hindu Opponents of the Popularization of Yoga Andrea R. Jain Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis FOR over three thousand years, people have yoga is Hindu. This assumption reflects an attached divergent meanings and functions to understanding of yoga as a homogenous system yoga. Its history has been characterized by that remains unchanged by its shifting spatial moments of continuity, but also by divergence and temporal contexts. It also depends on and change. This applies as much to pre- notions of Hindu authenticity, origins, and colonial yoga systems as to modern ones. All of even ownership. Both Hindu and Christian this evidences yoga’s malleability (literally, the opponents add that the majority of capacity to be bent into new shapes without contemporary yogis fail to recognize that yoga breaking) in the hands of human beings.1 is Hindu.3 Yet, today, a movement that assumes a Suspicious of decontextualized vision of yoga as a static, homogenous system understandings of yoga and, consequently, the rapidly gains momentum. -
Topic for Dissertation MA Philosophy Semester
Topic for Dissertation M.A. Philosophy Semester - IV(CBCS) 2017-18 1. The epistemological issues embedded in the skeptical challenge to knowledge as found in Indian tradition. Select Bibliography: Original Sources: Vigrahavyavartani of Nagarjuna Tattopaplvasinha of Jayarashi Bhatta Khandanakhandakhadya of Shriharsha Other sources: ―Lokayata/ Carvaka: A Philosophical Study‖ by Dr. Gokhale Pradip, OUP, 2015 ‗Philosophy, Culture and Religion: Essays by B.K. Matilal‘, Jonardon Ganeri (Ed.) Oxford University Press, Delhi, 2002. 2. The debate between the Realists and the Constructivists in the Context of Indian Epistemology Select Bibliography: Gillon Brebdan S. (Ed.), ‗Logic in Earliest Classical India‘, Motilal Banarasidas, New Delhi, 2010. Bhattacharya H.M. `Jaina Logic and Epistemology‘, K.P. Bagchi &Co., Calcutta, 1994. Popper Karl, `Conjectures and Refutations‘, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1963 Shastri D.N. ―Critique of Indian Realism‖, Bharatiya Vidya Prakashan, 1972. Ayer A.J. `Problem of Knowledge‘, MacMillan, London, 1965. 3. Anekantavada as a paradigm for solving the philosophical issues: A Critical Study Select Bibliography: ‗Aptamimamsa: A Critique of an Authority‘, Editor, Dr. Nagin Shah Pub. Sanskrit- Sanskriti Granthamala, Ahmadabad, 1999. ‗The Central Philosophy of Jainism (Anekantavada)‘, Matilal B.K pub. L.D. Institute of Indology, Ahmadabad, 1981. Tattvartha Sutra,Commen. By Pt. Sukhlalji, Tr.Dixit, K.K. Pub. L.D. Institute of Indology, Ahmedabad, 2000. Harmaless Souls, Johnson, W.J., Motilal Banarasidas Pub. Delhi, 1995. Jaina Path of Purification, Jaini Padmanabh, Motilal Banarasidas, Delhi, 1979 1 Jainism: An Indian Religion of Salvation, Glasenapp, Helmuth Von, Eng. Trans. Shridhar Shrotri, Motilal Banarasidas Pub. Delhi,1999 Lectures on Jainism, Dr. Tatia, Nathmal , Pub. By Department of Jainology, University of Madras, 1998 4. -
03-Result Rollno
Advertisement No. MAHARASHTRA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 03/09/2021 6/2019 MAHARASHTRA CIVIL ENGINEERING SERVICES PRE EXAMINATION - 2020 Page No. 1 LIST OF QUALIFIED CANDIDATES AMRAVATI AM001012 UMEKAR ASHUTOSH VIJAYRAO AM001018 DESHMUKH ARPIT PRAMODRAO AM001080 KATHALE SAURABH NITIN AM001098 Wanode Vishal Anil AM001102 DHIRAJ RAJENDRA TAMGADGE AM001121 DHONDE LALIT MANOJ AM001128 GAWANDE SAURABH JAGANNATH AM001163 NAVDURGE SACHIN RAMESH AM001173 KALE GAYATRI GAJANAN AM001174 GULHANE VAISHNAVI JEEVAN AM001187 POOJARI KARTIK KURMAYYA AM001191 KALE SAURABH RAMESH AM001194 GAWANDE KOMAL WAMANRAO AM001214 UMALE PALLAVI TEJRAO AM001223 HUMANE SWAPNIL PUSHPARAJ AM001224 GHADEKAR SANGHARSH SUNIL AM001257 THAKARE ADESH RAJU AM001261 SHELKE KEDAR AMBADAS AM001264 DHANE GAURAV ARUN AM001277 GAYE JAYESH SUBHASH AM001297 GADE HRUSHIKESH VINOD AM001307 NIRMAL SHRITEJ ASHOK AM001311 DESHMUKH PAYAL PRAMOD AM001360 SHEREKAR VIKRANT VIJAYRAO AM001374 MEKHE ASHISH RAJESH AM001383 DHADVE NIKHIL ASHOK AM001413 JUWAR GAURAV RAJENDRA AM001431 BOKARE LAXMAN CHAMPATRAO AM002006 INGOLE PRATHMESH ARUN AM002050 SUYOG RAMESH BORKAR AM002065 BHOYAR SAGAR EKNATH AM002066 ADSOD AKANKSHA ANIL AM002085 KUMAWAT MUKESHKUMAR RAJENDRAPRASAD AM002100 GAWANDE AKSHAY VINAYAK AM002121 DESHMUKH RASHMI YOGESH AM002122 CHATARKAR MOHAN PURUSHOTTAM AM002141 HOLEY RUGVED RAJKUMAR AM002183 DHAMALE AJAY SANJAY AM002205 BHANGDIA YUDHISHTHIR DILIPKUMAR AM002231 KELO ANIKET SANJAY AM002255 ARBAT ANIKET WASUDEV AM002263 AKSHAY DILIPRAO KOTHE AM002271 NISHANE ABHISHEK PRAKASHRAO AM002281 UKADE -
History of Modern Maharashtra (1818-1920)
1 1 MAHARASHTRA ON – THE EVE OF BRITISH CONQUEST UNIT STRUCTURE 1.0 Objectives 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Political conditions before the British conquest 1.3 Economic Conditions in Maharashtra before the British Conquest. 1.4 Social Conditions before the British Conquest. 1.5 Summary 1.6 Questions 1.0 OBJECTIVES : 1 To understand Political conditions before the British Conquest. 2 To know armed resistance to the British occupation. 3 To evaluate Economic conditions before British Conquest. 4 To analyse Social conditions before the British Conquest. 5 To examine Cultural conditions before the British Conquest. 1.1 INTRODUCTION : With the discovery of the Sea-routes in the 15th Century the Europeans discovered Sea route to reach the east. The Portuguese, Dutch, French and the English came to India to promote trade and commerce. The English who established the East-India Co. in 1600, gradually consolidated their hold in different parts of India. They had very capable men like Sir. Thomas Roe, Colonel Close, General Smith, Elphinstone, Grant Duff etc . The English shrewdly exploited the disunity among the Indian rulers. They were very diplomatic in their approach. Due to their far sighted policies, the English were able to expand and consolidate their rule in Maharashtra. 2 The Company’s government had trapped most of the Maratha rulers in Subsidiary Alliances and fought three important wars with Marathas over a period of 43 years (1775 -1818). 1.2 POLITICAL CONDITIONS BEFORE THE BRITISH CONQUEST : The Company’s Directors sent Lord Wellesley as the Governor- General of the Company’s territories in India, in 1798. -
3.Hindu Websites Sorted Country Wise
Hindu Websites sorted Country wise Sl. Reference Country Broad catergory Website Address Description No. 1 Afghanistan Dynasty http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindushahi Hindu Shahi Dynasty Afghanistan, Pakistan 2 Afghanistan Dynasty http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jayapala King Jayapala -Hindu Shahi Dynasty Afghanistan, Pakistan 3 Afghanistan Dynasty http://www.afghanhindu.com/history.asp The Hindu Shahi Dynasty (870 C.E. - 1015 C.E.) 4 Afghanistan History http://hindutemples- Hindu Roots of Afghanistan whthappendtothem.blogspot.com/ (Gandhar pradesh) 5 Afghanistan History http://www.hindunet.org/hindu_history/mode Hindu Kush rn/hindu_kush.html 6 Afghanistan Information http://afghanhindu.wordpress.com/ Afghan Hindus 7 Afghanistan Information http://afghanhindusandsikhs.yuku.com/ Hindus of Afaganistan 8 Afghanistan Information http://www.afghanhindu.com/vedic.asp Afghanistan and It's Vedic Culture 9 Afghanistan Information http://www.afghanhindu.de.vu/ Hindus of Afaganistan 10 Afghanistan Organisation http://www.afghanhindu.info/ Afghan Hindus 11 Afghanistan Organisation http://www.asamai.com/ Afghan Hindu Asociation 12 Afghanistan Temple http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu_Temples_ Hindu Temples of Kabul of_Kabul 13 Afghanistan Temples Database http://www.athithy.com/index.php?module=p Hindu Temples of Afaganistan luspoints&id=851&action=pluspoint&title=H indu%20Temples%20in%20Afghanistan%20. html 14 Argentina Ayurveda http://www.augurhostel.com/ Augur Hostel Yoga & Ayurveda 15 Argentina Festival http://www.indembarg.org.ar/en/ Festival of