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Explore key terms like Braham, Atman, Maya, Advaita, Dharma, Karma, Samsara, Moksha, and Bhakti in Hinduism. Learn about the Indian worldview, common beliefs, and the ultimate reality of Brahman. Understand concepts like Saguna Brahman and Nirguna Brahman. Discover the significance of Atman, Karma, and Dharma in Hindu philosophy.
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Hinduism Basic Worldview
Key Terms Braham: The all-pervading, self-existent power, the cosmic unity. Atman: The true self; The essence or principle of life: reality in its individual forms, as distinct from brahman; n.b. this is not individual soul rather it is the universal self Maya: Literally ‘illusion’; this world is neither real nor unreal Advaita: Only one reality exists. All things are one. A strict form of this belief called ‘monism’ was taught by Shankara. Dharma: moral and religious duty
Key Terms Karma: Literally ‘action’; the inexorable moral law of cause and effect governing the future: bad actions lead to rebirth in the lower orders, perhaps as an animal; good actions lead to rebirth in the higher orders, perhaps as a priest. Samasara: The bondage of life, death and rebirth, governed by the law of karma Moksha: Literally ‘release’; liberation from the continuous round of rebirths Bhakti: Devotion or worship (often but not always offered to a single deity); Liberation by faith as distinct from liberation by works or knowledge.
Indian World View • Diversity as essential element of Hinduism • No need to select exclusively • Flexibility • Divine is manifested in a number of ways • Truth transcends all conceptualizations or verbalizations
Common Beliefs • Common beliefs include: • Recognition of Veda as revelatory and authoritative • Even if content is largely unknown to many Hindus • Recognition of Brahman priests • Bear and teach the Vedas • Ideal of ritual purity • Brahman as ultimate • samsara • Transmigration of atman • Karma
World View: Cycles & Reality • Endless ages and cycles of death & rebirth • There are creation stories, though Upanishads suggest that source of creation is unknowable • Each falls into period of decline • Present point of cycle is one of increasing evil & chaos • Ultimate Reality Diversity of approaches but two main strands: • Brahman as the Sacred Ultimate • Theistic Hinduism
Ultimate Reality:Brahman • Brahman as the Sacred Ultimate • Evolution of understanding • Stress on oneness • All-embracing principle • The one behind all differentiation • Precedes any forms of multiplicity • The ultimately real • Transcendent and immanent • Immanent because Brahman permeates all reality/existence (monism), including gods
Ultimate Reality: Brahman • Grounds all reality • Ultimate cause, source and goal of all existence • Preserves universe • All things emanate from Brahman • Uncreated • Infinite • Apophatic quality • Beyond description on conceptualization • Impersonal • No personal attributes • IMPORTANT: Atman=Brahman
SagunaBrahman Lower level of knowledge . Stress on immanence Manifest Changing………………… Active With form:differentiated Bounded Personal god With attributes Creative force in the universe NirgunaBrahman Highest level of knowledge Stress on transcendence Unmanifest Non-changing; beyond change Non-active Formless: undifferentiated Unbounded Impersonal Beyond all attributes - Two ways of knowing Brahman(see esp. philosopher Shankara)
Indian World View:Atman • What is eternal is atman or self • More real than empirical self • Atman = Brahman- pure consciousness • Through mediation one may come to experience the atman and achieve unity with Brahman • Atman is eternal, immaterial & immortal • Ego (the ‘I’) is impermanent • Mistake true nature if excessive focus on the ‘I’ • Result is one is caught in bondage of samsara • N.b. that for many in India, liberation is not communion w/personal God
Indian World View:Karma • Law of karma • Every action has a consequence which leads to rebirth • Karma binds one to wheel of existence, samsara • Three paths: karma (action), jnana (knowledge), bhakti (devotion) • Liberation achieved through path of jnana or bhakti
Indian World View:Dharma • Law of dharma • One’s dharma is conditioned by karma from previous lifetimes • Dharma is duty to live in the state of life which has been determined
Dharma (cont.) • Two aspects of dharma: • Dharma as cosmic ordering principle • Dharma as expression of cosmic order in the social order • Dharma on these two levels are linked in that • The social order represents (is a microcosm) of the the cosmic order • Dharma is focus in day to day existence • All things have proper place & function • Understand what our place is, its associated duties & follow it to best of ability • We have duty to contribute to dharma which keeps world functioning • Ignorance & selfishness cause us to fail to take our proper place in divine, cosmic order • Maintaining divinely ordered society is central to Hindu way of life
Doctrine of Maya Doctrine of Maya • saguna Brahman – what we subjectively experience w/ our senses • Finite world does exists, but it is not the ultimate reality • Shankara’s rope illustration
Indian World View:Basic Problem • Basic Problem: We fail to realize our true nature: atman = Brahman • Ignorance of our true nature (identify w/Brahman) causes egotism • We act as if the phenomenal world is ultimate reality & we pursue selfish desires • Pursuit of desires causes desire for worldly existence • Which leads to actions which have consequences (karma) • Karma (the chain of acts & consequences) then produces bondage to physical world through cycle of samsara • Solutionis moksha from samsara so that the atman can attain union with Brahman • Thus it is our ignorance & selfish desire that creates conditions for next lifetime • Realization of our true nature comes from insight