What Is Moksha Approved.Cdr
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
ADVAITA-SAADHANAA (Kanchi Maha-Swamigal's Discourses)
ADVAITA-SAADHANAA (Kanchi Maha-Swamigal’s Discourses) Acknowledgement of Source Material: Ra. Ganapthy’s ‘Deivathin Kural’ (Vol.6) in Tamil published by Vanathi Publishers, 4th edn. 1998 URL of Tamil Original: http://www.kamakoti.org/tamil/dk6-74.htm to http://www.kamakoti.org/tamil/dk6-141.htm English rendering : V. Krishnamurthy 2006 CONTENTS 1. Essence of the philosophical schools......................................................................... 1 2. Advaita is different from all these. ............................................................................. 2 3. Appears to be easy – but really, difficult .................................................................... 3 4. Moksha is by Grace of God ....................................................................................... 5 5. Takes time but effort has to be started........................................................................ 7 8. ShraddhA (Faith) Necessary..................................................................................... 12 9. Eligibility for Aatma-SAdhanA................................................................................ 14 10. Apex of Saadhanaa is only for the sannyAsi !........................................................ 17 11. Why then tell others,what is suitable only for Sannyaasis?.................................... 21 12. Two different paths for two different aspirants ...................................................... 21 13. Reason for telling every one .................................................................................. -
A Study of Advaita Vedanta with Factors of Affecting Perceptions
Vol-4 Issue-6 2018 IJARIIE-ISSN(O)-2395-4396 A Study of Advaita Vedanta with Factors of Affecting Perceptions Ranjan Kumar Mishra1, Dr. Rajeev Kumar Awasthi2 1Research Scholar, OPJS University Churu Rajasthan 2Associate Professor, OPJS University Churu Rajasthan Abstract Advaita Vedanta is one of Indian classical thought's most learned and influential schools. It became the highest of Indian religious philosophies even in the medieval period, a trend enhanced in modern times due to the western interests in Advaita Vedanta, and the subsequent influence on western perceptions of Indian Hinduism. Advaita Vedanta is considered an idealistic monism most commonly. The Buddhist Madhyamaka and Yogacara were highly influenced, and he further developed monistic concepts, which are already present in the Uppanishads, to their extreme end. Gaudapada Gaudapadakarika is associated, according to Dandekar, with Buddhist ideas that are Upanishadic and "greatly impressed" that these ideas are mutually compatible. According to Milne, advaita is a negative word that means the' negation of a discrepancy' between the object and the subject or the perceiver. Milne argues that the word "monistic" is misleading because it confuses "denial of distinction" with "conflation into one." German then teaches monistic unity, but with the different assumptions of various theories regarding monisms. It is also misleading to call advaina vedanta "monistic." Jacqueline Hirst says that Adi Shankara puts a strong focus on "one's" mindset, as applied to all Upanishads, in his Brahma-sutra Bhasya. Nicholson points out that Advaita Vedanta includes rational elements of thought, both in its most ancient sources and in the writings of Shankara. -
Adoration 3. Brahman-God Working Through Us 4. Feeling and Devotion 5
1 1. Worshiping Brahman-God 2. Striving to Realize Brahman-God (Adoration 3. Brahman-God Working Through Us 4. Feeling and Devotion 5. Religious Experience and Contextualization 6. Liberated-Saved Through Faith 7. Bhavamukha 8. Jivanmukta --------------------------------------- IX. Brahman-God Realization 1. Worshiping Brahman-God Indian: “Having realized Atman, the seer becomes satisfied with that Knowledge. Their souls are established in the Supreme Self, they are free from passions and they are tranquil in mind. Such calm souls, ever devoted to the Self, behold everywhere the omnipresent Brahman and in the end enter into It, which is all this. Having well ascertained the Self, the goal of the Vedantic knowledge, and having purified their minds through the practice of sannyas, the seers, never relaxing their efforts, enjoy here supreme Immortality and at the time of the great end attain complete freedom in Brahman” (Mun. Up. 3:2.5-6). “Ever glorifying Me [Lord Krishna] ... remaining firm in their vows, bowing before me, they worship Me with love and unwavering steadiness” (BG 9:14; cf. 4:11; 6:47; 9:22, 33; 11:54; 12:20). “The wise know this and worship Me with all their heart. With their thought fixed on Me, with their life absorbed in Me, enlightening one another about Me, and always conversing about Me, they derive satisfaction and delight” (BG 10:8-9; cf. 13:10). Old and New Testament: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might” (Dt. 6:5; cf. 6:13. -
Neuroscience of Meditation
Review Article TheScientificWorldJOURNAL (2006) 6, 2239–2253 TSW Holistic Health and Medicine ISSN 1537-744X; DOI 10.1100/tsw.2006.353 Neuroscience of Meditation Vinod D. Deshmukh Flagler Hospital, 300 Health Park Boulevard, Suite 5010, St Augustine, FL 32086 E-mail: [email protected] Received September 24, 2006; Revised October 12, 2006; Accepted October 12, 2006; Published November 16, 2006 Dhyana-Yoga is a Sanskrit word for the ancient discipline of meditation, as a means to Samadhi or enlightenment. Samadhi is a self-absorptive, adaptive state with realization of one’s being in harmony with reality. It is unitive, undifferentiated, reality-consciousness, an essential being, which can only be experienced by spontaneous intuition and self- understanding. Modern neuroscience can help us to better understand Dhyana-Yoga. This article discusses topics including brain-mind-reality, consciousness, attention, emotional intelligence, sense of self, meditative mind, and meditative brain. A new hypothesis is proposed for a better understanding of the meditative mind. Meditation is an art of being serene and alert in the present moment, instead of constantly struggling to change or to become. It is an art of efficient management of attentional energy with total engagement (poornata, presence, mindfulness) or disengagement (shunyata, silence, emptiness). In both states, there is an experience of spontaneous unity with no sense of situational interactive self or personal time. It is a simultaneous, participatory consciousness rather than a dualistic, sequential attentiveness. There is a natural sense of well being with self- understanding, spontaneous joy, serenity, freedom, and self-fulfillment. It is where the ultimate pursuit of happiness and the search for meaning of life resolve. -
Integral Drama: Culture, Consciousness and Identity Introduction
Integral Drama: Culture, Consciousness and Identity Introduction Drama and The Natyashastra The seven plays examined in this book focus on the difference between the experience of pure consciousness and our socially constructed identities and suggest how these two aspects of identity can coexist. In analyzing these plays, I apply theories of consciousness developed in Advaita (nondual) Vedanta (the sixth system of Indian philosophy) and the Indian philosophical treatise The Natyashastra, which deals with theatre aesthetics, as well as theories developed in the context of consciousness studies, a thriving interdisciplinary field that includes philosophy, neuroscience, psychology, physics and biology and increasingly focuses on the phenomenology of first- person experience. The seven plays analyzed here include Harold Pinter’s The Birthday Party and The Homecoming, Eugène Ionesco’s Rhinoceros, Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia, Luigi Pirandello’s Six Charac- ters in Search of an Author, Jean Genet’s The Balcony and Wole Soyinka’s A Dance of the Forests. As these plays demonstrate, performance has the effect of taking the characters and audience from an awareness of something toward awareness per se, and then toward having awareness per se simultaneously with the intentional content of the mind, thereby providing a glimpse of higher states of conscious- ness. The three ordinary states of consciousness are waking, dreaming and sleep, and the higher states include the fourth state of pure con- sciousness (Atman or turiya, the fourth), cosmic consciousness and unity consciousness. As Eliot Deutsch says in Advaita Vedanta, pure consciousness or 8 Integral Drama Atman (or paramatman, the highest Self), for Advaita Vedanta, is that pure, undifferentiated self-shining consciousness, timeless, spaceless, and unthinkable, that is not different from Brahman and that underlies and supports the individual human person. -
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 -
News Letter Jun2014-Aug2014
Dharma Sandesh kÉqÉïxÉlSåzÉ a quarterly newsletter of Bharatiya Mandir, Middletown, NY AÉ lÉÉå pÉSìÉÈ ¢üiÉuÉÉå rÉliÉÑ ÌuɵÉiÉÈ| Let noble thoughts come to us from everywhere. RigVeda 1.89.1 n Dharma. Let us all pray to the Paramatma (mÉUqÉÉiqÉÉ) to lÉqÉxiÉå Namaste shower His blessings upon all His children!! Á – OM. With the blessings and grace of the Sincerely, Supreme Lord (mÉUqÉÉiqÉÉ), we are proud to start our Your Editorial Board sixth year of the publication of Dharma Sandesh. Web: www.bharatiyamandir.org Email: [email protected] Summer is in full swing here. After the brutal winter, we welcome the warmer weather with open arms and full smiles. People are making vacation plans and xÉÑpÉÉÌwÉiÉÉ Subhaashitaa children are happy that school is almost over. In this section, we present a Sanskrit quotation and its Many children are graduating from high school and interpretation/meaning. college, and they are excited to move on to new and exciting programs and endeavors in their lives. The xÉÇUÉåWÌiÉ AÎalÉlÉÉ SakÉÇ uÉlÉÇ mÉUzÉÑlÉÉ WûiÉqÉç | Mandir, as it does every year, has arranged for a Puja uÉÉcÉÉ SÒÂMçüiÉÇ oÉÏpÉixÉÇ lÉ xÉÇUÉåWÌiÉ uÉÉMçü ¤ÉiÉqÉç || by all the graduating students on Sunday, July 6. All graduates are invited to participate in the Puja and samrohati- agninaa-dagdham-vanam-parashunaa-hatam | seek the blessings of Paramatma (mÉUqÉÉiqÉÉ). vaachaa-duruktam-bibhatsam-na-samrohati-vaak-kshatam|| We will be performing Akhand Ramayan Paath A forest burnt down by a fire will eventually grow (AZÉhQû UÉqÉÉrÉhÉ mÉÉPû) under the guidance of Swami Sri back. A forest cut down by an axe will eventually Madanji of Panchavati Ashram on June 28 and 29. -
Death Beliefs in Hinduism: an Analysis of Hindu Sacred Texts
Research Articles Death Beliefs in Hinduism: An Analysis of Hindu Sacred Texts Dr Veenat The sacred literature in Hinduism has been written since ceremony for Hindus. The Aranyakas (forest books) and the coming of Aryans and collected over centuries and Upanishads (collection of philosophical doctrines) brought composed for so many years later also. Majorly, the the philosophical transformation in Hindu tradition. entire literature is categorized in two parts, Śruti (heard/ From an actual sacrifice to abstract symbolism; for revealed) and Smriti (remembered). Śruti literature instance, in Brihadaranyaka, a very popular, Vedic sacrifice, evolved in the early phase of Hinduism and the major ashvamedha, which involved actual sacrificing of a horse, themes in Hindu philosophy that are prevalent even is explained in the light of mediation. In Upanishads the in present times emerged from the Śruti canon. And, emphasis is placed on inner, mystical experience, called gradually, in the later phases, as the Smriti literature was as an ‘internalization of the sacrifice’ than performing the written, the variety of practices and rituals for various actual sacrifice1. Upanishads have contributed in laying aspects of life and righteous code of conduct for Hindus the philosophical foundations of Hinduism. Philosophies emerged. Śruti literature is called ‘heard literature’ on universe, birth, death, doctrine of reincarnation, because for centuries it survived orally. The teachings transmigration of souls and salvation, etc. have emerged were transmitted by guru (teacher) to shishya (disciple) from Upanishads. verbally. It is believed that the ancient seers were endowed Smriti literature contains the whole body of sacred with such powers that when they would get deeper into wisdom remembered by rishis (sages) based on their their inner self, the truths of the universe would appear in interpretation of Śruti texts. -
Inside Ecumenism
Volume XVI, No. 3, August 2009 Ecumenism by Sri Swami Satchidananda Ecumenism is Integral Yoga. Though we follow one teacher, we learn to respect all other teachers. The teachings may vary, but the central teaching is always the same—to know our True Self. That is the first and foremost goal. Once we know the Self, then it is easy to know all other things. Until we “know” our Self, all our knowing will be a big “no.” Because we try to know everything through our conditioned minds, all our knowing will be conditioned, prejudiced, limited, and colored. Real knowing is only with the pure, neutral, and unconditioned mind. We should have that clear and uncolored vision, and that is the purpose underlying all these practices—to remove all the coloring. The mind should be freed from all these limitations and preconditioned ideas. We literally should wash the brain. Wash it clean of all colors and conditions. Don’t merely switch from one prejudice to another; simply see clearly for yourself. That is the purpose behind all the teachings—whether they originated from Moses, Jesus, Buddha, Mohammed, Shankara, Krishna, Rama, or Siva—to keep the mind clean. With all that, even though all the religions teach essentially the same message, we still can appreciate the differences—just as we would want a good garden to have a variety of flowers. If you have only chrysanthemums for acres and acres, you wouldn’t even call it a garden; you would call it a farm. Even if the garden is small and doesn’t have that many flowers, if it has a variety, you call it beautiful. -
In Search of Fullness 87-09-13
1 In Search of Fullness – 87-09-13 Om. A-sa-to ma sad gam-ma-ya. Ta-ma-so-ma jyo-tir gam-ma-ya. Mri-tyor ma a-mri-tam ga-ma-ya. Avir avir ma e-dhi. Rudra yat te dak-shi-nam mu-kham. Tena mam pahi nityam. Tena mam pahi nityam. Tena mam pahi nityam. Lead us from the unreal to the Real. Lead us from darkness unto Light. Lead us from death to Immortality. Reveal to us Thy Resplendent Truth and evermore protect us, Oh Lord, by Thy Sweet and Compassionate Face, by Thy Sweet and Compassionate Face, by Thy Sweet and Compassionate Face. The title of my talk this morning is: The Search for Fullness. The experience of “fullness” is very well known to us in many situations of our life. Before going to a long distance journey we have be sure whether our car is filled with gas. When we are hungry, the stomach is empty, we have to fill our stomach with food. But we should be careful not to overfill! Just the other day in our monastery one resident devotee, he had finished the general course and there was a very delicious dessert. But he said, “Oh, I shall not take any dessert. When I am filled, I don’t care for dessert.” And that is a good policy. Now, somebody buys a house, a big house because he’s a rich man, and, the wife has a craziness for things, for furniture, for vases, for lights, for pictures. And she wants the house to be filled with furniture and other things. -
Sankara's Doctrine of Maya Harry Oldmeadow
The Matheson Trust Sankara's Doctrine of Maya Harry Oldmeadow Published in Asian Philosophy (Nottingham) 2:2, 1992 Abstract Like all monisms Vedanta posits a distinction between the relatively and the absolutely Real, and a theory of illusion to explain their paradoxical relationship. Sankara's resolution of the problem emerges from his discourse on the nature of maya which mediates the relationship of the world of empirical, manifold phenomena and the one Reality of Brahman. Their apparent separation is an illusory fissure deriving from ignorance and maintained by 'superimposition'. Maya, enigmatic from the relative viewpoint, is not inexplicable but only not self-explanatory. Sankara's exposition is in harmony with sapiential doctrines from other religious traditions and implies a profound spiritual therapy. * Maya is most strange. Her nature is inexplicable. (Sankara)i Brahman is real; the world is an illusory appearance; the so-called soul is Brahman itself, and no other. (Sankara)ii I The doctrine of maya occupies a pivotal position in Sankara's metaphysics. Before focusing on this doctrine it will perhaps be helpful to make clear Sankara's purposes in elaborating the Advaita Vedanta. Some of the misconceptions which have afflicted English commentaries on Sankara will thus be banished before they can cause any further mischief. Firstly, Sankara should not be understood or approached as a 'philosopher' in the modern Western sense. Ananda Coomaraswamy has rightly insisted that, The Vedanta is not a philosophy in the current sense of the word, but only as it is used in the phrase Philosophia Perennis... Modern philosophies are closed systems, employing the method of dialectics, and taking for granted that opposites are mutually exclusive. -
Beyond Dissociation and Appropriation: Evaluating the Politics of U.S
Antioch University AURA - Antioch University Repository and Archive Student & Alumni Scholarship, including Dissertations & Theses Dissertations & Theses 2020 Beyond Dissociation and Appropriation: Evaluating the Politics of U.S. Psychology Via Hermeneutic Interpretation of Culturally Embedded Presentations of Yoga Genelle N. Benker Antioch University Seattle Follow this and additional works at: https://aura.antioch.edu/etds Part of the Alternative and Complementary Medicine Commons, Applied Ethics Commons, Bilingual, Multilingual, and Multicultural Education Commons, Communication Commons, Comparative Literature Commons, History Commons, and the Psychology Commons Recommended Citation Benker, Genelle N., "Beyond Dissociation and Appropriation: Evaluating the Politics of U.S. Psychology Via Hermeneutic Interpretation of Culturally Embedded Presentations of Yoga" (2020). Dissertations & Theses. 554. https://aura.antioch.edu/etds/554 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Student & Alumni Scholarship, including Dissertations & Theses at AURA - Antioch University Repository and Archive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations & Theses by an authorized administrator of AURA - Antioch University Repository and Archive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. BEYOND DISSOCIATION AND APPROPRIATION: EVALUATING THE POLITICS OF U.S. PSYCHOLOGY VIA HERMENEUTIC INTERPRETATION OF CULTURALLY EMBEDDED PRESENTATIONS OF YOGA A Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of Antioch