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Hindu Dictionary

A Wisdom Archive on Hindu Dictionary

Hindu Dictionary

A selection of articles related to Hindu Dictionary

We recommend this article: Hindu Dictionary - 1, and also this: Hindu Dictionary - 2.
Hindu Dictionary, Hinduism Dictionary, Spiritual Dictionariy, Hindu Dictionaries, Hinduism Dictionaries, Spiritual Dictionaries, Sanskrit Dictionary, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary


ARTICLES RELATED TO Hindu Dictionary

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Supplicate

supplicate (supplication): To ask for humbly. To earnestly pray for.

(See also: Supplicate , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Destiny

destiny: Final outcome. The seemingly inevitable or predetermined course of events.

See: adrishta, fate, karma.

(See also: Destiny , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Transcendent

transcendent: Surpassing the limits of experience or manifest form. In Saiva Siddhanta, a quality of God Siva as Absolute Reality, Parasiva, the Self. Distinguished from immanent.

See: atattva, Parasiva.

(See also: Transcendent , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Annihilate

annihilate: To destroy completely, to reduce to nothing.

(See also: Annihilate , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Diksha

diksha: (Sanskrit) "Initiation."

 

Solemn induction by which one is entered into a new realm of awareness and practice by a teacher or preceptor through the bestowing of blessings and the transmission of pranas. Denotes initial or deepened connection with the teacher and his lineage and is usually accompanied by ceremony. Initiation, revered as a moment of awakening, may be conferred by a touch, a word, a look or a thought.

 

Most Hindu schools, and especially Saivism, teach that only with initiation from a satguru is enlightenment attainable. Sought after by all Hindus is the diksha called shaktipata, "descent of grace," which, often coming unbidden, stirs and arouses the mystic kundalini force. Central Saivite dikshas include samaya, vishesha, nirvana and abhisheka.

See: grace, shaktipata, sound.

(See also: Diksha , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Aghori

Aghori: (Sanskrit) "Nonterrifying." An order of Saiva ascetics thought to be derived from the Kapalika order (ca 14th century). Following the vamachara, "left-hand ritual of the tantras," they are widely censured for radical practices such as living in cemeteries and using human skulls as eating bowls.

(See also: Aghori , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Anchorite

anchorite: "Hermit." A monk or aspirant who lives alone and apart from society, as contrasted with cenobite, a member of a religious order living in a monastery or convent. See: monk, nunk.

(See also: Anchorite , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Sakha marga

sakha marga: (Sanskrit) "Friend's path."

See: attainment, pada.

(See also: Sakha marga , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Fate

fate: From the Latin fatum, "prophetic declaration, oracle." In Western thought, fate is the force or agency, God or other power, outside man's control, believed to determine the course of events before they occur. According to Hindu thought, man is not ruled by fate but shapes his own destiny by his actions, which have their concomitant reactions.

 

The Hindu view acknowledges fate only in the limited sense that man is subject to his own past karmas, which are a driving force in each incarnation, seemingly out of his own control. But they can be mitigated by how he lives life, meaning how he faces and manages his prarabdha ("begun, undertaken") karmas and his kriyamana ("being made") karmas.

See: adrishta, karma, destiny.

(See also: Fate , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Sadhvi

sadhvi: (Sanskrit) Feminine counterpart of sadhu.

See: sadhu.

(See also: Sadhvi , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: : Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Dieu Siva est amour omniprˇsent et Rˇalitˇ transcendante:

Dieu Siva est amour omniprˇsent et Rˇalitˇ transcendante: French for "God Siva is Immanent Love and Transcendent Reality." It is an affirmation of faith which capsulizes the entire creed of monistic Saiva Siddhanta.

(See also: Dieu Siva est amour omniprˇsent et Rˇalitˇ transcendante: , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Brahma

Brahma: (Sanskrit) The name of God in His aspect of Creator. Saivites consider Brahma, Vishnu and Rudra to be three of five aspects of Siva. Smartas group Brahma, Vishnu and Siva as a holy trinity in which Siva is the destroyer.

 

Brahma the Creator is not to be confused with

1)    Brahman, the Transcendent Supreme of the Upanishads;

2)    Brahmana, Vedic texts;

3)    brahmana, the Hindu priest caste (also spelled brahmin).

See: Brahman, Parameshvara.

(See also: Brahma , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Samsara

samsara: (Sanskrit) "Flow." The phenomenal world. Transmigratory existence, fraught with impermanence and change.

 

The cycle of birth, death and rebirth; the total pattern of successive earthly lives experienced by a soul. A term similar to punarjanma (reincarnation), but with broader connotations.

See: evolution of the soul, karma, punarjanma, reincarnation.

(See also: Samsara , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Consciousness

consciousness: Chitta or chaitanya.

 

1)    A synonym for mind-stuff, chitta; or

2)    the condition or power of perception, awareness, apprehension.

 

There are myriad gradations of consciousness, from the simple sentience of inanimate matter to the consciousness of basic life forms, to the higher consciousness of human embodiment, to omniscient states of superconsciousness, leading to immersion in the One universal consciousness, Parashakti. Chaitanya and chitta can name both individual consciousness and universal consciousness.

 

Modifiers indicate the level of awareness, e.g.,

-       vyashti chaitanya, "individual consciousness;"

-       buddhi chitta, "intellectual consciousness;"

-       Sivachaitanya, "God consciousness."

 

Five classical "states" of awareness are discussed in scripture:

1)    wakefulness (jagrat),

2)    "dream" (svapna) or astral consciousness,

3)    "deep sleep" (sushupti) or subsuperconsciousness,

4)    the superconscious state beyond (turiya "fourth") and

5)    the utterly transcendent state called turiyatita ("beyond the fourth").

See: awareness, chitta, chaitanya, mind (all entries).

(See also: Consciousness , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Light

light: In an ordinary sense, a form of energy which makes physical objects visible to the eye. In a religious-mystical sense, light also illumines inner objects (i.e., mental images).

(See also: Light , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Moksha

moksha: (Sanskrit) "Liberation."

 

Release from transmigration, samsara, the round of births and deaths, which occurs after karma has been resolved and nirvikalpa samadhi - realization of the Self, Parasiva - has been attained. Same as mukti.

See: jivanmukta, kaivalya, kundalini, nirvikalpa samadhi, Parasiva, raja yoga, videhamukti.

(See also: Moksha , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Dance

dance: See: tandava, Nataraja.

(See also: Dance , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Parvati

Parvati: (Sanskrit) "Mountain's daughter."

 

One of many names for the Universal Mother. Prayers are offered to Her for strength, health and eradication of impurities. Mythologically, Parvati is wedded to Siva.

See: Goddess, Shakti.

(See also: Parvati , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Sushumna nadi

sushumna nadi: (Sanskrit) "Most gracious channel." Central psychic nerve current within the spinal column.

See: kundalini, nadi, samadhi.

(See also: Sushumna nadi , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Penance

penance: Prayashchitta. Atonement, expiation.

 

An act of devotion (bhakti), austerity (tapas) or discipline (sukritya) undertaken to soften or nullify the anticipated reaction to a past action.

 

Penance is uncomfortable karma inflicted upon oneself to mitigate one's karmic burden caused by wrongful actions (kukarma). It includes such acts as prostrating 108 times, fasting, self-denial, or carrying kavadi (public penance), as well as more extreme austerities, or tapas. Penance is often suggested by spiritual leaders and elders. Penitence or repentance, suffering regret for misdeeds, is called anutapa, meaning "to heat."

See: evil, kavadi, papa, prayashchitta, sin, tapas.

(See also: Penance , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Saiva Agamas

Saiva Agamas: (Sanskrit) The sectarian revealed scriptures of the Saivas. Strongly theistic, they identify Siva as the Supreme Lord, immanent and transcendent. They are in two main divisions: the 64 Kashmir Saiva Agamas and the 28 Saiva Siddhanta Agamas. The latter group are the fundamental sectarian scriptures of Saiva Siddhanta. Of these, ten are of the Sivabheda division and are considered dualistic: 1) Kamika, 2) Yogaja, 3) Chintya, 4) Karana, 5) Ajita, 6) Dipta, 7) Sukshma, 8) Sahasraka, 9) Amshumat and 10) Suprabheda.

 

There are 18 in the Rudrabheda group, classed as dual-nondual: 11) Vijaya, 12) Nihshvasa, 13) Svayambhuva, 14) Anala, 15) Vira (Bhadra), 16) Raurava, 17) Makuta, 18) Vimala, 19) Chandrajnana (or Chandrahasa), 20) Mukhabimba (or Bimba), 21) Prodgita (or Udgita), 22) Lalita, 23) Siddha, 24) Santana, 25) Sarvokta (Narasimha), 26) Parameshvara, 27) Kirana and 28) Vatula (or Parahita).

 

Rishi Tirumular, in his Tirumantiram, refers to 28 Agamas and mentions nine by name. Eight of these - Karana, Kamika, Vira, Chintya, Vatula, Vimala, Suprabheda and Makuta - are in the above list of 28 furnished by the French Institute of Indology, Pondicherry. The ninth, Kalottara, is presently regarded as an Upagama, or secondary text, of Vatula. The Kamika is the Agama most widely followed in Tamil Saiva temples, because of the availability of Aghorasiva's manual-commentary (paddhati) on it. Vira Saivites especially refer to the Vatula and Vira Agamas.

 

The Saiva Agama scriptures, above all else, are the connecting strand through all the schools of Saivism. The Agamas themselves express that they are entirely consistent with the teachings of the Veda, that they contain the essence of the Veda, and must be studied with the same high degree of devotion.

See: Agamas, Vedas.

(See also: Saiva Agamas , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Hindu Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Commitment

commitment: Dedication or engagement to a long-term course of action.

(See also: Commitment , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 






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