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five sense organs | A Wisdom Archive on five sense organs |  | five sense organs A selection of articles related to five sense organs |  |
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ARTICLES RELATED TO five sense organs | |
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Jnanendriya
Jnanendriya (Sanskrit) (from jnana intelligence, knowledge + indriya sense organ) Organ of sensation or perception, sense organ; especially the five human inner senses of perception in contradistinction to the karmendriyas -- the five physical senses through which the former work. Synonymous with buddhindriya, which mystically could mean the organ of buddhi, but commonly describes the physical organs of perception and sensation through which intelligence works: the eye, ear, nose, tongue, and skin. See also INDRIYA; SENSES (See also: Jnanendriya, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Sixth Sense Sixth Sense The five senses which are at present physically developed need a sixth sense to register and record them, and this is what is now functioning as mental perception. A sixth sense, with its properly evolved sense organ, is also mentioned as not yet being manifested physically, but beginning to be manifested during the sixth root-race. Its rudiments already exist in sensitive people, who have feelings and presentiments hard to define and not referable to any of the usual five senses. See also SENSES (See also: Sixth Sense, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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 |  |  | five sense organs: Yoga And Its ConsummationYoga is the art of uniting the individual soul with the Supreme Soul, of uniting the Kundalini Sakti lying dormant in the Muladhara Chakra with Siva in the Sahasrara Chakra. By convention, all practices that help the attainment of this goal are also called Yoga. From "Kundalini Yoga" by Sri Swami Sivananda Read more here: » Yoga: Yoga And Its Consummation |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: Hurdles and obstacles in YogaYoga enables us to unite the individual soul with the ultimate eternal One. This union is the chief purpose of human life and in our endeavour to achieve this, we are faced with innumerable obstacles. But all hurdles are removed when the sadhaka or practitioner of yoga obtains the grace of God. Fourteen obstacles have been observed formally by yogis. Nine of them are classified as main obstacles and another five, as sub-obstacles. When these nine hurdles are encountered, five more obstacles appear according to the circumstances: Read more here: » Yoga obstacles: Hurdles and obstacles in Yoga |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: The Breath of God Is Our Breath of LifeKriya Yoga: The Breath of God Is Our Breath of Life Kriya Yoga gives extreme importance to the breath. It teaches that breath control is self control, breath mastery is self mastery, it is deathlessness. If you take a very short breath and seek God in the fontanel and the pituitary, you will attain calmness and God realization. The Bhagavad Gita, verse 5:27, mentions this short breath: "We are to fix our attention in the pituitary, take a very short breath and touch Him in the pituitary and in the fontanel." The breath must be so short that if you place your finger in front of your nose, the outgoing breath will not touch the finger. Read more here: » Kriya Yoga: The Breath of God Is Our Breath of Life |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: Hindu Philosophy . The SankhyaThe word - Sankhya - means - number -. The system gives an enumeration of the principles of the universe, twenty-five in number. Hence the name is quite appropriate. The term - Sankhya - is used in the sense of - Vichara - or - philosophical reflection - also. In the Sankhya system, there is no analytical enquiry into the universe as actually existing, arranged under topics and categories. There is a synthetical system, starting from an original primordial Tattva or Principle, called Prakriti, that which evolves or produces or brings forth (Prakaroti) everything else. Excerpt from All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda Read more here: » Sankhya: Hindu Philosophy . The Sankhya |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: : Yoga Sutras Of
Patanjali - The Steps To
Union (Part II of III)The Tibetan Master Djwhal Kuhl has said that the Sutra's of Patanjali will be the system used to train disciples in mind control for the next 7,000 years. What makes this translation special is that Djwhal Kuhl translated the meaning behind Patanjali's writings rather than a literal translation which is impossible from Sanskrit to English. Master Djwhal Kuhl was able to tune into the thought form behind the words and render them into English. Now you can use these Sutras to write your own commentaries as you do daily seed thought meditation on each Sutra. The Yoga Sutras Of Patanjali translated by the Tibetan Master Djwhal Kuhl. Read more here: » Yoga Sutras Of
Patanjali - The Steps To
Union (Part II of III) |
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Benefits of FastingFasting controls passion. It checks the emotions. It controls the senses also. It is a great penance. It purifies the mind and the heart. It destroys a multitude of sins. Fasting controls the tongue in particular which is the deadliest enemy of man. Fasting overhauls the respiratory, circulatory, digestive and urinary systems. It destroys all the impurities of the body and all sorts of poisons. It eliminates uric acid deposits. Just as impure gold is rendered pure by melting it in the crucible again and again, so also this impure mind is rendered purer by repeated fasting. From " Hindu Fasts & Festivals " by Sri Swami Sivananda. Read more here: » Fasting:
Benefits of Fasting |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: Mind is Matter - Nurture It Results of recent studies published in the British Journal of Psychiatry pronounce that diet has a direct bearing on the behaviour of juvenile delinquents. Certain types of food brought about - though very gradually - distinct changes in the behavioural pattern of the delinquents. Foods affect animal behaviour as well. For instance, a dog fed on raw meat for any length of time turns out to be more ferocious than a similar breed fed on vegetarian foods. Sastras explain that mind is also matter, albeit subtle, and, like the body, is nourished by food. The Chandogya Upanishad says: "Mind consists of food, prana (life force) of water and speech of fire." (See also: Body mind and soul, Faith and Belief, Spiritual Guidance, God and Religion, Peace on Earth, Peace of Mind, Love and Happiness, Life and Beyond, Body Mind and Soul)
Read more here: » Body mind and soul: Mind is Matter - Nurture It |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: The Constitution of Man - The JivaHinduism and Jiva: The Constitution of Man - The Jiva In Hinduism man is the microcosm who contains within himself all the constituents and manifestations of the Universal Self. It is by looking into oneself, by knowing and understanding oneself, one can experience the Truth of the Supreme Self. In the Katha Upanishad, Lord Yama declares to Nachiketa that it is through self-contemplation (adhyatma-yogadhigamena) that the wise man realizes the Primal God and leaves behind him both joy and sorrow (mortal existence). Read more here: » Hinduism and Jiva: The Constitution of Man - The Jiva |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: Strike a BalanceHealth is a key factor in the human evolutionary process. Health is not just physical fitness or absence of disease. In ancient India, the term health had a much wider connotation; it was something that went beyond physical and mental dimensions. The spiritual dimension reinforces and also uplifts the physical and mental dimensions of health. Read more here: » Mind,
Body, Spirit: Strike a Balance |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: Secrets
of the Five PranasPrana - Secrets of the Five Pranas To change something we must alter the energy which creates it. This fact is true in the practice of Yoga. To bring about positive changes in body and mind we must understand the energy through which they work. This is called Prana in Sanskrit, meaning primary energy. It is sometimes translated as breath or vital force, though it is more than these. Read more here: » Prana: Secrets
of the Five Pranas |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: Vedic Philosophy - The GunasThe Gunas: Guna means a cord. The Gunas bind the soul with a triple bond. These Gunas are not the Nyaya-Vaiseshika Gunas. They are the actual substances or ingredients, of which Prakriti is constituted. They make up the whole world evolved out of Prakriti. They are not conjoined in equal quantities, but in varying proportions, one or the other being in excess. Just as Sat-Chit-Ananda is the Vedantic trinity, so also the Gunas are the Sankhyan trinity. Excerpt from All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda Read more here: » Gunas: Vedic Philosophy - The Gunas |
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 |  |  | five sense organs: Hindu Philosophy - The YogaThe word Yoga comes from the root Yuj which means to join. Yoga is restraint of the activities of the mind, and is the union of the individual soul with the Supreme Soul. Hiranyagarbha is the founder of the Yoga system. The Yoga founded by Patanjali Maharshi is a branch or supplement of the Sankhya. It has its own charm for students of a mystic temperament and of a contemplative type. It claims greater orthodoxy than the Sankhya proper by directly acknowledging the existence of a Supreme Being (Isvara). Excerpt from All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda Read more here: » Yoga: Hindu Philosophy - The Yoga |
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