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Brahman - Etymology | A Wisdom Archive on Brahman - Etymology |  | Brahman - Etymology A selection of articles related to Brahman - Etymology |  |
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Brahman, Brahman - <b>External links</b>, Brahman - Brahman and Atman, Brahman - Dvaita Vaishnava concept, Brahman - Enlightenment and Brahman, Brahman - Etymology, Brahman - Notes, Brahman - Semantics and pronunciation, Atman, Ishvara, Mysticism, Hinduism, Vedanta, Varnas, Caste, Kshatriya, Vaishya, Shudra, Dalit (outcaste), Aryan invasion theory, Nirguna Brahman
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Brahman - Etymology | |
 |  |  | Brahman - Etymology: Encyclopedia II - Brahman - EtymologyBrahman or brahma, and similar words, have various meanings, mostly related to Hinduism.
These words come from a Sanskrit root bŗh = " to swell, grow, enlargen", cognate with English "bulge". Some, including Georges Dumézil, say that the Latin word flāmen (= "priest") may be cognate to brahman. The Latin verb flāre = "to blow" may come from the same root. There is a possible connection with the Semitic root br' ברא "create, opening", but refuted by most linguists.
In the correct Indian pronunciation, the first a is long or short as indicated, and the h ...
See also:Brahman, Brahman - Etymology, Brahman - Semantics and pronunciation, Brahman - Brahman and Atman, Brahman - Enlightenment and Brahman, Brahman - Advaita concept, Brahman - Dvaita Vaishnava concept, Brahman - External links, Brahman - Notes Read more here: » Brahman: Encyclopedia II - Brahman - Etymology |
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 |  |  | Brahman - Etymology: Encyclopedia II - Brahman - Enlightenment and BrahmanWhile Brahman lies behind the sum total of the objective universe, some human minds boggle at any attempt to explain it with only the tools provided by reason. Brahman is beyond the senses, beyond the mind, beyond intelligence, beyond imagination. Indeed, the highest idea is that Brahman is beyond both existence and non-existence, transcending and including time, causation and space, and thus can never be known in the same material sense as one t ...
See also:Brahman, Brahman - Etymology, Brahman - Semantics and pronunciation, Brahman - Brahman and Atman, Brahman - Enlightenment and Brahman, Brahman - Advaita concept, Brahman - Dvaita Vaishnava concept, Brahman - External links, Brahman - Notes Read more here: » Brahman: Encyclopedia II - Brahman - Enlightenment and Brahman |
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 |  |  | Brahman - Etymology: Encyclopedia II - Brahman - Semantics and pronunciationIn the earliest Vedic Sanskrit:
The word stem (neuter gender) is Brahman (ब्रह्मन्, pronounced as /brəh mən/) and its nominative singular form is Brahma (ब्रह्म, pronounced as /brəh mə/). It means "growth", "development", "swelling"; and then "holy", "pious utterance", "worship", perhaps via the idea of saying during prayers and ceremonies that God or the deities are great. Later it came to mean the Supreme Cosmic Spirit.
If the word stem is still Brahma ...
See also:Brahman, Brahman - Etymology, Brahman - Semantics and pronunciation, Brahman - Brahman and Atman, Brahman - Enlightenment and Brahman, Brahman - Advaita concept, Brahman - Dvaita Vaishnava concept, Brahman - External links, Brahman - Notes Read more here: » Brahman: Encyclopedia II - Brahman - Semantics and pronunciation |
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 |  |  | Brahman - Etymology: Encyclopedia II - Brahman - Brahman and AtmanPhilosopher mystics of the Upanishads identify Brahman, the world soul, with atman, the inner essence of the human being, or the human soul. The Ultimate Truth is expressed as Nirguna Brahman, or Godhead. While Advaita philosophy considers Brahman to be without any form, qualities, or attributes, Dvaita philosophy understands nir-guna as without material form or without bad qualities.
In Dvaita, Vishnu is Brahman since the followers stress a personal God. Advaita, on the other hand, considers all personal forms of God including Vishnu and Shiva as different aspects of God in personal ...
See also:Brahman, Brahman - Etymology, Brahman - Semantics and pronunciation, Brahman - Brahman and Atman, Brahman - Enlightenment and Brahman, Brahman - Advaita concept, Brahman - Dvaita Vaishnava concept, Brahman - External links, Brahman - Notes Read more here: » Brahman: Encyclopedia II - Brahman - Brahman and Atman |
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