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Kalpa Dictionary

A Wisdom Archive on Kalpa Dictionary

Kalpa Dictionary

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Kalpa Dictionary

ARTICLES RELATED TO Kalpa Dictionary

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Bardo

Bardo (Tibetan) (from bar between + do two)

 

Between two; generally a gap, interval, or intermediate state, especially the state between two births. The term has become known in the West through the Bar do thos sgrol (bar-do tho-dol), "Liberation through Hearing in the Bardo," translated by W. Y. Evans-Wentz as The Tibetan Book of the Dead. According to the Bardo Thodol, there are six such "intervals": the bardo of birth, the bardo of dreams, the bardo of samadhi (meditation), the bardo of the moment before death, the bardo of dharmata, and the bardo of becoming.

 

The Bardo Thodol describes the last three of these, and is recited in the presence of the deceased believed to be experiencing these states, usually for a total period of 49 days. It is believed that the teaching contained in the text can enable the deceased to attain liberation while in the bardo states, or at least to attain the best possible rebirth.

 

Bardo is used in Tibet to refer to the many events and experiences undergone by the excarnate human being after death, generally considered to last from physical death until the next rebirth or reincarnation, though it is somewhat shorter than this. Since this period "may last from a few years to a kalpa" (ML 105), the bardo has more than the meaning commonly understood by the Tibetan populace which includes the time passed by the excarnate entity in kama-loka, in the intermediate or gestation period in which the entity is preparing for its birth into devachan, and the period of ineffable bliss and peace (illusory as it may be from the standpoint of reality) passed by the entity in the devachanic state itself. It also includes the later intermediate period -- usually carefully veiled from common knowledge -- existent between the ending of devachan and the rebirth of the reincarnating ego.

 

(See also: Bardo , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Eternity

Eternity (from Latin aeternus, aeviternus from aevum an age)

 

Originally eternity signified time divided into endless cycles stretching from the indefinite past through the present into the indefinite future, comprised within encompassing frontierless duration. Eternity therefore is the abstract sum total of endlessly cyclical time periods.

 

As used in The Secret Doctrine, eternity often means a kosmic mahakalpa or manifestation period; thus the seven eternities means seven kosmic periods equivalent to 100 Years of Brahma or 311,040,000,000,000 human years. Even in the Hindu Vishnu-Purana, immortality, which is given as a definition of eternity, means merely "existence to the end of the Kalpa" (2:8). Occasionally used as a synonym for duration.

 

The emblem of eternity is the serpent in the form of a circle, biting with its active head its passive tail, and from its emanations spring worlds, beings, and things.

 

(See also: Eternity , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Wiccan Pagan Dictionary on MEDITATION

MEDITATION - n. or adj.

1. art and science of contemplation and concentration spanning Paleolithic hunting rituals. Neolithic mysteries and historic religious traditions East and West, especially Zen, Yoga, Sufism and Coptic, Carmelite, Trappist and Quaker Christianity.

2. contemplation reflection, intuition, doing nothing; in duration from a movement to a kalpa, through most frequently for periods of 10 minutes to several hours or days; performed anytime, anywhere or in any position or activity, through often setting on the Earth, floor, a chair, rock or pennacle standing straight or holding a posture, walling, dancing, jogging, making love; sometimes accompanied by chanting silently or aloud alone or with a group; focusing on the breath, the chakras, the mind, parts of the body, light, sound, God, a tutelary deity, symbols, archetypes, a candle or another internal, external or transcendental object.

3. practice leading to cosmic consciousness, enlightenment truth-consciousness-bless, developing body consciousness, rooting in the here and now perfecting harmony and balance with the Earth.

5. discipline of mind awareness and control of thoughts, emotions and states of consciousness.

6. return to the source or emptiness to erase delusions, refresh ourselves day to day and begin a new. (Michio Kushi).

7. exercise or practice of just being experiencing ourselves at whatever we are, without any extra thing added. (Gary Snyder)

8. going into the mind to see wisdom for yourself-over and over again until it becomes the mind you live in. (Gary Snyder)

9. space to work or fears, hopes, neurotic games, self-deception. (Trungpa)

10. self-analysis, self-cultivation, self-enlightenment.

11. thought-form building, bring down to the concrete levels of the mental plane abstract ideas and intuitions and shattering of forms, establishing of a direct channel between the nomad and the purified personality and between the seven centers in the human etheric vehicle; freedom to work on any path (Bailey)

12. the Tao of cats n. mediator, meditativeness, adj. meditative. v. meditate (from meditari, Latin). (NAD)

 

(See also: MEDITATION , Wiccan Pagan, Paganism, Pagan Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Bhakti Yoga Dictionary on Anukalpa

Anukalpa - refers to acceptance by the bhakta of anu (a small amount) kalpa (for minimum capability) , meaning a quantity of food (which is not in the category of grains, beans etc.) to maintain sufficient energy for hari-seva.

 

(See also: Anukalpa , Bhakti, Bhakti Yoga, Bhakti Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Theosophy Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Nirvana

A Theosophical definition of Nirvana :

 

Nirvana

(Sanskrit) This is a compound: nir, "out," and vana, the past participle passive of the root va, "to blow," literallly meaning "blown out." So badly has the significance of the ancient Indian thought (and even its language, the Sanskrit) been understood, that for many years erudite European scholars were discussing whether being "blown out" meant actual entitative annihilation or not. But the being blown out refers only to the lower principles in man.

 

Nirvana is a very different thing from the "heavens." Nirvana is a state of utter bliss and complete, untrammeled consciousness, a state of absorption in pure kosmic Being, and is the wondrous destiny of those who have reached superhuman knowledge and purity and spiritual illumination. It really is personal-individual absorption into or rather identification with the Self  - the highest SELF. It is also the state of the monadic entities in the period that intervenes between minor manvantaras or rounds of a planetary chain; and more fully so between each seven-round period or Day of Brahma, and the succeeding day or new kalpa of a planetary chain. At these last times, starting forth from the seventh sphere in the seventh round, the monadic entities will have progressed far beyond even the highest state of devachan. Too pure and too far advanced even for such a condition as the devachanic felicity, they go to their appropriate sphere and condition, which latter is the nirvana following the end of the seventh round.

 

Devachan and nirvana are not localities. They are states, states of the beings in those respective spiritual conditions. Devachan is the intermediate state; nirvana is the superspiritual state; and avichi, popularly called the lowest of the hells, is the nether pole of the spiritual condition. These three are states of beings having habitat in the lokas or talas, in the worlds of the kosmic egg.

 

So far as the individual human being is concerned, the nirvanic state or condition may be attained to by great spiritual seers and sages, such as Gautama the Buddha, and even by men less progressed than he; because in these cases of the attaining of the nirvana even during a man's life on earth, the meaning is that one so attaining has through evolution progressed so far along the path that all the lower personal part of him is become thoroughly impersonalized, the personal has put on the garment of impersonality, and such a man thereafter lives in the nirvanic condition of the spiritual monad.

 

As a concluding thought, it must be pointed out that nirvana, while the ultima thule of the perfection to be attained by any human being, nevertheless stands less high in the estimate of mystics than the condition of the bodhisattva. For the bodhisattva, although standing on the threshold of nirvana and seeing and understanding its ineffable glory and peace and rest, nevertheless retains his consciousness in the worlds of men, in order to consecrate his vast faculties and powers to the service of all that is. The buddhas in their higher parts enter the nirvana, in other words, assume the dharmakaya state or vesture, whereas the bodhisattva assumes the nirmanakaya vesture, thereafter to become an ever-active and compassionate and beneficent influence in the world. The buddha indeed may be said to act indirectly and by long distance control, thus indeed helping the world diffusively or by diffusion; but the bodhisattva acts directly and positively and with a directing will in works of compassion, both for the world and for individuals.

 

See also: Nirvana , Mysticism, Body Mind and Soul

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Theosophy Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Manvantara

A Theosophical definition of Manvantara :

 

Manvantara

(Sanskrit) This word is a compound, and means nothing more than "between two manus"; more literally, "manu-within or -between." A manu, as said, is the entities collectively which appear first at the beginning of manifestation; the spiritual tree of life of any planetary chain of manifested being. The second verbal element of "manvantara," or antara, is a prepositional suffix signifying "within" or "between"; hence the compound paraphrased means "within a manu," or "between manus." A manvantara is the period of activity between any two manus, on any plane, since in any such period there is a root-manu at the beginning of evolution, and a seed-manu at its close, preceding a pralaya.

 

There are many kinds of manvantaras: prakritika manvantara  - universal manvantara; saurya manvantara  - the manvantara of the solar system; bhaumika manvantara  - the terrestrial manvantara, or manvantara of earth; paurusha manvantara  - the manvantara, or period of activity, of man.

 

A round-manvantara is the time required for one round: that is, the cycle from globe A to the last globe of the seven, and starting from the root-manu or collective "humanity" of globe A and ending with the seed-manu or collective "humanity" of Globe G.

 

A planetary manvantara  - also called a maha-manvantara or a kalpa  - is the period of the lifetime of a planet during its seven rounds. It is also called a Day of Brahma, and its length is 4,320,000,000 years.

 

See also: Manvantara , Mysticism, Body Mind and Soul

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Yuga

Yuga (Sanskrit). A 1,000th part of a Kalpa. An age of the World of which there are four, and the series of which proceed in succession during the manvantaric cycle. Each Yuga is preceded by a period called in the Puranas Sandhya, twilight, or transition period, and is followed by another period of like duration called Sandhyansa, "portion of twilight". Each is equal to one-tenth of the Yuga. The group of four Yugas is first computed by the divine years, or " years of the gods" - each such year being equal to 360 years of mortal men. Thus we have, in "divine" years:

 

1. Krita or Satya Yuga - - - 4,000

Sandhya - - - - 400

Sandhyansa - - - - 400

4,800

 

2. Treta Yuga - - - - 3,000

Sandhya - - - - 300

Sandhyansa - - - - 300

3,600

 

3. Dwapara Yuga - - - 2,000

Sandhya - - - - 200

Sandhyansa - - - - 200

2,400

 

4. Kali Yuga - - - - 1,000

Sandhya - - - - 100

Sandhyansa - - - - 100

1,200

 

Total 12,000

 

 

This rendered in years of mortals equals:

4800 X 360 = 1,728,000

3600 X 360 = 1,296,000

2400 X 360 = 864,000

1200 X 360 = 432,000

Total 4,320,000

 

The above is called a Mahayuga or Manvantara. 2,000 such Mahayugas, or a period of 8,640,000 years, make a Kalpa the latter being only a "day and a night", or twenty-four hours, of Brahma. Thus an "age of Brahma", or one hundred of his divine years, must equal 311,040,000,000,000 of our mortal years. The old Mazdeans or Magi (the modern Parsis) had the same calculation, though the Orientalists do not seem to perceive it, for even the Parsi Moheds themselves have forgotten it. But their "Sovereign time of the Long Period" (Zervan Daregha Hvadata) lasts 12,000 years, and these are the 12,000 divine years of a Mahayuga as shown above, whereas the Zervan Akarana (Limitless Time), mentioned by Zarathustra, is the Kala, out of space and time, of Parabrahm.

 

(See also: Yuga , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary,)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Samvarta

Samvarta (Sanskrit) A minor kalpa. {SD 1:368, 2:307n}

 

(See also: Samvarta , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Samvarta

Samvarta (Sanskrit). A minor Kalpa. A period in creation after which a partial annihilation of the world occurs.

 

(See also: Samvarta , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary,)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Mahakalpa

Mahakalpa (Sanskrit) [from maha great + kalpa age]

 

Great age; lifetime of Brahma consisting of 100 Divine Years, equivalent to 311,040,000,000,000 years. The time period between the beginning and end of a complete solar manvantara -- the entire lifetime of our solar system.

 

(See also: Mahakalpa , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Bhakti Yoga Dictionary on Japa

Japa - loud chanting or soft utterance of the holy names of Krsna to oneself; usually referring to the practice of chanting hari-nama on tulasi beads.

 

The word japa comes from the verbal root jap which means to utter or whisper repeatedly (especially prayers or incantations). In the Sabda-kalpa-druma, japa has been defined as the utterance of mantras either within the heart or verbally. In Haribhakti- vilasa (17.155-159) Srila Sanatana Gosvami describes japa in the following words: "In the Nrsimha-Purana it is said that japa-yajna is of three kinds:

(1) vacika (verbal) ,

(2) upamsu (in a whisper) , and

(3) manasika (within the mind).

 

When a mantra is pronounced very distinctly either in a high, low, or resonant voice it is known as vacika-japa. When a mantra is uttered slowly with slight movement of the lips and can be heard only by one’s own ears it is known as upamsu-japa. When one meditates on the meaning of the mantra by application of the intelligence going repeatedly from one syllable to the next and from one word to the next it is known as manasika-japa.”

 

(See also: Japa , Bhakti, Bhakti Yoga, Bhakti Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Buddhism Enlightenment Dictionary on Life Span of the Thus Come One chapter

Life Span of the Thus Come One chapter

(Jpn.: Nyorai-juryo-hon)

 

Abbreviated as the "Life Span" chapter. The sixteenth chapter of the Lotus Sutra, in which Shakyamuni Buddha reveals that he originally attained enlightenment in the far distant past rather than in his present life in India as his listeners generally thought.

 

The chapter title "The Life Span of the Thus Come One" means the duration of Shakyamuni's life as a Buddha, that is, how much time has passed since he originally attained Buddhahood. T'ien-t'ai (538-597) of China ranks it as the key chapter of the essential teaching, or the latter fourteen chapters of the sutra.

 

The chapter opens with three exhortations and four entreaties, in which the Buddha three times admonishes the multitude to believe and understand his truthful words, and the assembly four times begs him to preach. Shakyamuni then says, "You must listen carefully and hear of the Thus Come One's secret and his transcendental powers." He proceeds to explain that, while all heavenly and human beings and asuras believe that he first attained enlightenment in his present lifetime under the bodhi tree, it has actually been an incalculable length of time since he attained enlightenment. He then offers a dramatic description of the magnitude of this immeasurably long period. He describes taking a vast number of worlds, grinding them to dust, and then traversing the universe, dropping a particle each time one passes an equally vast number of worlds. Having exhausted all the dust particles, one takes all the worlds traversed, whether they have received a dust particle or not, and grinds them to dust. Then Shakyamuni says: "Let one particle represent one kalpa. The time that has passed since I attained Buddhahood surpasses this by a hundred, a thousand, ten thousand, a million nayuta asamkhya kalpas."

 

Commentaries on this chapter refer to this cosmically immense period as "numberless major world system dust particle kalpas." In the essential teaching of the Lotus Sutra, Shakyamuni thus refutes the view that he attained enlightenment for the first time in this life in India and reveals his original attainment of enlightenment in the remote past. T'ien-t'ai refers to this in The Words and Phrases of the Lotus Sutra and The Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sutra as "opening the near and revealing the distant," "casting off the transient and revealing the true," and "opening the transient and revealing the true." Here, "the transient" means Shakyamuni's transient status, and "the true" means his true identity. From his original attainment of Buddhahood, Shakyamuni declares, he has constantly been here in this saha world preaching the Law, appearing as many different Buddhas and using various means to save living beings. Though he says that he enters nirvana, he merely uses his death as a means to arouse in people the desire to seek a Buddha. He then illustrates this idea with the parable of the skilled physician and his sick children. In the parable, the children of a skilled physician have accidentally swallowed poison. Having lost their senses, they refuse the medicine their father offers them as an antidote. The father then goes off to a remote place and sends a message informing his children he has died. Shocked to their senses, the children take the medicine their father has left for them and are cured. The Buddha is compared to the father in this parable, living beings to the children who have drunk poison, and the Buddha's entry into nirvana to the father's report of his own death-an expedient means to arouse in people the aspiration for enlightenment. The chapter concludes with a verse section, which restates the important teachings of the preceding prose section.

 

In Profound Meaning, T'ien-t'ai interprets the "Life Span" chapter as revealing the three mystic principles of the true cause (the cause for Shakyamuni's original attainment of enlightenment), the true effect (his original enlightenment), and the true land (the place where the Buddha lives and teaches). He interprets the passage "Originally I practiced the bodhisattva way ... " as indicating the stage of non-regression, or the eleventh of the fifty-two stages of bodhisattva practice, which he explained as the true cause that enabled Shakyamuni to attain Buddhahood. In answer to the question of what Shakyamuni practiced in order to reach the stage of non-regression, Nichiren (1222-1282) identified it as the Law of Nam-myoho-renge-kyo.

 

(See also: Life Span of the Thus Come One chapter , Enlightenment, Buddhism Enlightenment, Buddhism Enlightenment Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Vaikunthas

Vaikunthas (Sanskrit) One of the names given in each kalpa to the twelve great gods or jayas who were emanated by Brahma as the first hierarchical productions in the formation and bringing forth of manifestation.

 

(See also: Vaikunthas , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Centaurs

Centaurs (Greek) Greek mythology preserves legends of monsters, half man, half horse, located in wild spots in Greece. "See, for comparison, the account of creation by Berosus (Alexander Polyhistor) and the hideous beings born from the two-fold principle (Earth and Water) in the Abyss of primordial creation: Neras (Naras)

 

(Centaurs, men with the limbs of horses and human bodies), and Kimnaras (men with the heads of horses) created by Brahma in the commencement of the Kalpa" (SD 2:65). The centaurs were also said to be the offspring of Ixion, king of the Lapith people, and a cloud shaped like Hera, sent by Zeus to test his wickedness; or as being offsprings of Ixion's son and mares. They were considered a rude, wild race living in the mountains of Thessaly.

 

From another standpoint, however, Greek mythology represents the centaurs as being wiser than men: thus Chiron, son of Kronos and Philyra, most famous of the Centaurs, is a teacher not only of the heroes, but instructed Apollo and Diana in hunting, medicine, music, and the art of prophecy. Later, centaurs were shown as forming part of the following of Dionysus.

 

(See also: Centaurs , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Narada

Narada (Sanskrit) One of the ten great rishis, mind-born sons of Brahma, or prajapatis; the most difficult to understand of the Vedic rishis because the most closely connected with occult doctrines.

 

"Narada is here, there, and everywhere; and yet, none of the Puranas gives the true characteristics of this great enemy of physical procreation. Whatever those characteristics may be in Hindu Esotericism, Narada -- who is called in Cis-Himalayan Occultism Pesh-Hun, the 'Messenger,' or the Greek Angelos -- is the sole confidant and the executor of the universal decrees of Karma and adi-Budh a kind of active and ever incarnating logos, who leads and guides human affairs from the beginning to the end of the Kalpa.

 

" 'Pesh-Hun' is a general not a special Hindu possession. He is the mysterious guiding intelligent power, which gives the impulse to, and regulates the impetus of cycles, Kalpas and universal events. He is Karma's visible adjuster on a general scale; the inspirer and the leader of the greatest heroes of this Manvantara. In the exoteric works he is referred to by some very uncomplimentary names; such as 'Kali-Karaka,' strife-maker, 'Kapi-vaktra,' monkey-faced, and even 'Pisuna,' the spy, though elsewhere he is called Deva-Brahma. . . .

 

"What Narada really is, cannot be explained in print; . . . But it may be remarked, that if there is in the Hindu Pantheon a deity which resembles Jehovah, in tempting by 'suggestion' of thoughts and 'hardening' of the hearts of those whom he would make his tools and victims, it is Narada. Only with the latter it is no desire to obtain a pretext for 'plaguing,' and thus showing that 'I am the Lord God.' Nor is it through any ambitious or selfish motive; but, verily, to serve and guide universal progress and evolution.

 

". . . It is he who has charge of our progress and national weal or woe. It is he who brings on wars and puts an end to them. In the old Stanzas Pesh-Hun is credited with having calculated and recorded all the astronomical and cosmic cycles to come, and with having taught the Science to the first gazers at the starry vault" (SD 2:48-9).

 

(See also: Narada , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Kurma-Purana

Kurma-Purana (Sanskrit) (from kurma tortoise)

 

One of the 18 principal Hindu Puranas, so named because it deals with the avataric incarnation of Vishnu in the form of a tortoise. The scripture was recited by Janardana (Vishnu) in the regions under the earth to Indradyumna and the rishis in the proximity of Sakra. It tells about the Lakshmi Kalpa, and treats of the objects of life: duty, wealth, pleasure, and liberation.

 

(See also: Kurma-Purana , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Asura

Asura (Sanskrit) (from the verbal root as to breathe)

 

A title frequently given to the hierarch or supreme spirit of our universe, as being the primal "Breather"; also a class of spiritual-intellectual beings. In Hinduism it commonly signifies elemental and evil gods or demons. "Primarily in the Rig-Veda, the 'Asuras' are shown as spiritual divine beings; their etymology is derived from asu (breath), the 'Breath of God,' and they mean the same as the Supreme Spirit or the Zoroastrian Ahura. It is later on, for purposes of theology and dogma, that they are shown issuing from Brahma's thigh, and that their name began to be derived from a privative, and sura, god (solar deities), or not-a-god, and that they became the enemies of the gods" (SD 2:59).

 

Further, the asuras "are the sons of the primeval Creative Breath at the beginning of every new Maha Kalpa, or Manvantara; in the same rank as the Angels who had remained 'faithful.' These were the allies of Soma (the parent of the Esoteric Wisdom) as against Brishaspati (representing ritualistic or ceremonial worship). Evidently they have been degraded in Space and Time into opposing powers or demons by the ceremonialists, on account of their rebellion against hypocrisy, sham-worship, and the dead-letter form" (SD 2:500).

 

Asura is employed with frequency in theosophical writings to signify the class of spiritual-intellectual beings called manasaputras, kumaras, or angishvattas. As a matter of fact, asuras, maruts, rudras, and daityas are but various ways of describing the intellectual gods or manasas, as contrasted with the as yet incompleted devas or suras.

 

Asura is used in the earliest Vedic literature as a title of the cosmic hierarch or supreme spirit. The Vedic Asura is nothing other than the Great Breath of archaic occult literature -- the Great Breath coming and going as manvantara and pralaya. The other Vedic gods mentioned so much more frequently in the slokas, such as Agni, Indra, and Varuna, are all subordinate hierarchically and cosmogonically to the Vedic Asura, which is really Brahman-pradhana or the Second Logos, Father-Mother; Varuna is the acme or summit of akasa-tattva; Agni is the summit or hierarch of cosmic taijasa-tattva; and Indra is often identified with Vayu as the summit of cosmic Vayu-tattva.

 

See also MAHASURA

 

(See also: Asura , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Sveta-lohita

Sveta-lohita (Sanskrit). The name of Siva when he appears in the 29th Kalpa as "a moon-coloured Kumara".

 

(See also: Sveta-lohita , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary,)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Jaya

Jaya (Sanskrit) (from the verbal root ji to conquer)

 

Conquering, winning, victorious. As a noun, conquest, victory, hence a favorite proper name, applied to gods and goddesses, Arjuna, the sun, etc. In the Puranas, the jayas are the twelve great gods (or twelve great hierarchies of beings) created by Brahma to assist him in his work of creation in the very beginning of the kalpa. Also termed chhandajas -- those born of their own will or svabhava, in human and other form. Being lost in samadhi they neglected to create, and therefore they were cursed to be born repeatedly in each manvantara until the seventh. They are called respectively: Ajitas, Tushitas, Satyas, Haris, Vaikunthas, Sadhyas, and Adityas. They are equivalent to the manasaputras or reincarnating egos.

 

Jaya-indriyanam is a philosophical term meaning victory over or restraint of the senses.

 

(See also: Jaya , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

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Sanskrit Dictionary - K,

Kaanda, Kaanuka, Kabanda, Kabandha, Kabandi Kathyayana, Kabir, Kachauri, kachauri, Kachchapa, Kadamba, kadamba, Kafni, Kaika, Kaikeyi, Kaila, Kailas, Kailasa, Kailasa Prastara, Kailash, Kaishora, kaishora, Kaitabha, Kaivalya Upanishad, Kaivalya-mukthi, Kakini, Kakuthstha, Kala, Kalabhairavasana, Kala-chakra, Kalagnirudra, Kala-naada, Kalanemi, Kala-sakti, Kalash, Kalayavana, Kali, Kali Yuga, Kalidasa, Kalindi, Kalinga, Kali-purusha, Kaliya, Kali-yuga, Kalki, Kalpa, Kalpana, Kalpanamatra, Kalpataru, Kalpatharu, Kalpavriksha, Kalpa-vriksha, Kalyaana Mantapa, Kalyana Kalpataru, Kalyana Mantap, kama, Kama Sutra, Kama-bija, kama-bija, Kamada, Kamadeva, Kamadhenu, Kama-dhenu, Kamakala, Kamakhya Pitha,

 

Here are links to all 7 661 archives related to Sanskrit:

Sanskrit Dictionary

Sanskrit Dictionary - A, Sanskrit Dictionary - B, Sanskrit Dictionary - C,

Sanskrit Dictionary - D, Sanskrit Dictionary - E , Sanskrit Dictionary - F,

Sanskrit Dictionary - G, Sanskrit Dictionary - H, Sanskrit Dictionary - I,

Sanskrit Dictionary - J, Sanskrit Dictionary - K, Sanskrit Dictionary - L,

Sanskrit Dictionary - M, Sanskrit Dictionary - N, Sanskrit Dictionary - O,

Sanskrit Dictionary - P, Sanskrit Dictionary - Q, Sanskrit Dictionary - R,

Sanskrit Dictionary - S, Sanskrit Dictionary - T, Sanskrit Dictionary - U,

Sanskrit Dictionary - V, Sanskrit Dictionary - W, Sanskrit Dictionary - X,

Sanskrit Dictionary - Y, Sanskrit Dictionary - Z, Sanskrit Dictionary - Numbers

 

More popular related archives:

Consciousness, Chakras, Kundalini, Kundalini Yoga, Cosmic Consciousness, Hinduism and Life after death, Prana, Mayan Calendar, 2012, Diksha, Enligtenment, Bhagavan, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Sai Baba Dictionary on Manu

Manu:

Manu: impersonation of Krishna as the ruler, father and legislator of humanity. There are fourteen of them for each day of Brahma or kalpa 308.6 millions of years ruling. Present Manu, the seventh: Sraddhadeva (also called Vaivasvata see further image)

 

- Writer of the Manu-samhita.

 

 - The first earthly creature created from Brahma

 

- The fourteen Manu's appearing in one day of Brahma are: (1) Svayambhuva, (2) Svarocisa, (3) Uttama, (4) Tamasa, (5) Raivata, (6) Caksusa, (7) Vaivasvata, (8) Savarni, (9) Daksa-savarni, (10) Brahma-savarni, (11) Dharma-savarni, (12) Rudra-savarni, (13) Deva-savarni and (14) Indra-savarni.

 

One Body was transformed into two and therefore, where there was one Will formerly, two appeared, one which attracted and the other which was drawn towards creation, the feminine and the masculine. Since the one attracted in a hundred distinct ways it was called, Satharupa (hundred-facetted) and Beloved of Brahma (Brahmapriya). The other was named, Manu (BV-30), (RRV-10a).

 

(See also: Manu , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Kalpa

Kalpa (Sanskrit) (from the verbal root klrip to be in order)

 

A generalizing term for a period or cycle of time.

 

(See also: Kalpa , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

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