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Surat Shabda Yoga

A Wisdom Archive on Surat Shabda Yoga

Surat Shabda Yoga

A selection of articles related to Surat Shabda Yoga

We recommend this article: Surat Shabda Yoga - 1, and also this: Surat Shabda Yoga - 2.
Sura, Yoga, Prana

ARTICLES RELATED TO Surat Shabda Yoga

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - The word yoga

The word "yoga" - from the Sanskrit root yuj ("to yoke") - is generally translated as "union" or "integration." This may be understood as union with the Divine, or integration of body, mind, and spirit. One who practices yoga is called a yogi or in Sanskrit, a yogin (masculine) or yogini (feminine). These designations are sometimes reserved for advanced practitioners. The word "yoga" may also be written יוגה, योग, ಯೋಗ, Joga, Ioga, Joog ...

See also:

Yoga, Yoga - Yoga practice and intention, Yoga - The word yoga, Yoga - Diversity of yoga, Yoga - Yoga and religion, Yoga - Common themes, Yoga - Origins, Yoga - Hindu yoga, Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, Yoga - Patanjali, Yoga - God in Yoga philosophy, Yoga - Hatha yoga, Yoga - Natya yoga, Yoga - Buddhist yoga, Yoga - Yoga and tantra, Yoga - Notable Yogis

Read more here: » Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - The word yoga

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Science-based beliefs

Science, strictly speaking, deals only with observable phenomena. Anything that cannot be observed (either directly or indirectly) is, by definition, not a subject of scientific investigation. Scientists look for patterns among observations, which give rise to hypotheses to be tested against further observations. If a hypothesis passes these tests, it is then called a scientific theory, which again is subje ...

See also:

Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Accepted mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonia, Origin belief - Buddhism, Origin belief - China, Origin belief - Christianity, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greece, Origin belief - Hinduism, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Maya, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Science-based beliefs

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs

Several religions have creation stories, some of which account for the existence and present form of the Universe by the act of creation by a supreme being or the Creator God. Most of these accounts depict one or several gods fashioning things out of themselves, or from pre-existing material (for example chaos or prakriti). The scholastic traditions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam for the most part speak of creation ex nihilo. This is typified, for example, by the assumption that the first verse of the Christian Bible ("In ...

See also:

Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Accepted mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonia, Origin belief - Buddhism, Origin belief - China, Origin belief - Christianity, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greece, Origin belief - Hinduism, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Maya, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - Yoga practice and intention

Modern yoga practice often includes traditional elements inherited from Hinduism, such as moral and ethical principles, postures designed to keep the body fit, spiritual philosophy, instruction by a guru, chanting of mantras (sacred syllables), quietening the breath, and stilling the mind through meditation. These elements are sometimes adapted to meet the needs of non-Hindu practitioners. Proponents of yoga see daily practice as beneficial in itself, leading to improved health, emotional well-being, mental clarity, and joy in living. ...

See also:

Yoga, Yoga - Yoga practice and intention, Yoga - The word yoga, Yoga - Diversity of yoga, Yoga - Yoga and religion, Yoga - Common themes, Yoga - Origins, Yoga - Hindu yoga, Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, Yoga - Patanjali, Yoga - God in Yoga philosophy, Yoga - Hatha yoga, Yoga - Natya yoga, Yoga - Buddhist yoga, Yoga - Yoga and tantra, Yoga - Notable Yogis

Read more here: » Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - Yoga practice and intention

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - Yoga and tantra

Yoga is often mentioned in company with Tantra. While the two have deep similarities, most traditions distinguish them from one another. They are similar in that both amount to families of spiritual texts, practices, and lineages with origins in the Indian subcontinent. (Coincidentally, both have been popularized to some extent in the West, with perhaps a shallower understanding of their nature.) It should be noted however that ...

See also:

Yoga, Yoga - Yoga practice and intention, Yoga - The word yoga, Yoga - Diversity of yoga, Yoga - Yoga and religion, Yoga - Common themes, Yoga - Origins, Yoga - Hindu yoga, Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, Yoga - Patanjali, Yoga - God in Yoga philosophy, Yoga - Hatha yoga, Yoga - Natya yoga, Yoga - Buddhist yoga, Yoga - Yoga and tantra, Yoga - Notable Yogis

Read more here: » Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - Yoga and tantra

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - Common themes

Samkhya Nyaya Vaisheshika Yoga Purva Mimamsa Advaita Vedanta Vishishtadvaita Dvaita Carvaka Jain Buddhist Logic Common to most forms of yoga is the practice of concentration (dharana) and meditation (dhyana). Dharana, according to Patanjali's definition, is the "binding of consciousness to a single point." The awareness ...

See also:

Yoga, Yoga - Yoga practice and intention, Yoga - The word yoga, Yoga - Diversity of yoga, Yoga - Yoga and religion, Yoga - Common themes, Yoga - Origins, Yoga - Hindu yoga, Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, Yoga - Patanjali, Yoga - God in Yoga philosophy, Yoga - Hatha yoga, Yoga - Natya yoga, Yoga - Buddhist yoga, Yoga - Yoga and tantra, Yoga - Notable Yogis

Read more here: » Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - Common themes

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems

Some creation beliefs are part of a named system of beliefs and are labeled as such below. Some creation beliefs seem to be better characterized according to time and/or place as they are part of a human culture in a time/place. Origin belief - Babylonian. The Babylonian creation myth is described in Enûma Elish. It existed in various versions and copies, the oldest dating to at least 1700 B.C.E. In the poem, the god Marduk arms himself and sets out to challenge the original Mother Tiamat. Marduk d ...

See also:

Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonian, Origin belief - Buddhist, Origin belief - Chinese, Origin belief - Christian, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greek, Origin belief - Hindu, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Mayan, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Macrocosm and microcosm - Medieval and modern thought

The English physician and alchemist Robert Fludd (1574-1637) expicitly based his work Utriusque Cosmi Historia (The history of the two worlds) upon the macro/micro correspondence; as does Sir Thomas Browne in his binary Discourses of 1658: Hydriotaphia, Urn Burial depicts the small, temporal world of man, whilst The Garden of Cyrus represents the macrocosm, in which the ubiquitous a ...

See also:

Macrocosm and microcosm, Macrocosm and microcosm - Ancient thought, Macrocosm and microcosm - Medieval and modern thought, Macrocosm and microcosm - Bibliography

Read more here: » Macrocosm and microcosm: Encyclopedia II - Macrocosm and microcosm - Medieval and modern thought

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Surat Shabd Yoga - Movements and masters

Adherents believe Surat Shabda Yoga has been expressed through the movements of many different masters. However, because a basic principle of Surat Shabd Yoga's tradition is the requirement for an outer Living Master to initiate followers onto the Path, those movements whose historical Satgurus have died and their successors do not purport themselves to be Surat Shabd Yoga Satgurus, usually are not considered currently to be Surat Shabd Yoga movements, either by thei ...

See also:

Surat Shabd Yoga, Surat Shabd Yoga - Basic principles, Surat Shabd Yoga - Movements and masters, Surat Shabd Yoga - Variations in movements, Surat Shabd Yoga - Notes and references

Read more here: » Surat Shabd Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Surat Shabd Yoga - Movements and masters

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - Notable Yogis

History is replete with Yogis that have inspired people for many generations. Yogini Meera from the Bhakti tradition, Shankaracharya from the Jnana Yoga tradition, Patanjali, who formalized the system of Raja Yoga, are just a few examples. Among modern Yogis, Shri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, a Bhakti Yogi, stands tall. A devotee of Mother Kali and a teacher of Advaita Vedanta, he preached that "all religions lead to the same goal." His student, Swami Vivekananda, a follower of Adva ...

See also:

Yoga, Yoga - Yoga practice and intention, Yoga - The word yoga, Yoga - Diversity of yoga, Yoga - Yoga and religion, Yoga - Common themes, Yoga - Origins, Yoga - Hindu yoga, Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, Yoga - Patanjali, Yoga - God in Yoga philosophy, Yoga - Hatha yoga, Yoga - Natya yoga, Yoga - Buddhist yoga, Yoga - Yoga and tantra, Yoga - Notable Yogis

Read more here: » Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Yoga - Notable Yogis

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems

Some creation beliefs are part of a named system of beliefs and are labeled as such below. Some creation beliefs seem to be better characterized according to time and/or place as they are part of a human culture in a time/place. Origin belief - Babylonian. The Babylonian creation myth is described in Enûma Elish. It existed in various versions and copies, the oldest dating to at least 1700 B.C.E. In the poem, the god Marduk arms himself and sets out to challenge the monster Tiamat. Marduk destroys ...

See also:

Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonian, Origin belief - Buddhist, Origin belief - Chinese, Origin belief - Christian, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greek, Origin belief - Hindu, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Mayan, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems

Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - List of spirituality-related topics - Eastern

List of spirituality-related topics - Esotericism and mysticism. Eckankar Harold Klemp Quan Yin Method Suma Ching Hai Sant Mat Baba Sawan Singh Radha Soami Satsang Beas Sant Baljit Singh Sant Kirpal Singh Sant Thakar Singh Shiv Dayal Singh Surat Shabda Yoga

  • See also:

    List of spirituality-related topics, List of spirituality-related topics - Introductory topics, List of spirituality-related topics - Cults, List of spirituality-related topics - Eastern, List of spirituality-related topics - Esotericism and mysticism, List of spirituality-related topics - Philosophy and religion, List of spirituality-related topics - Spirituality, List of spirituality-related topics - Left-hand path, List of spirituality-related topics - Magick and occult, List of spirituality-related topics - Martial arts, List of spirituality-related topics - New age and alternative medicine, List of spirituality-related topics - People, List of spirituality-related topics - Spiritual and occult practices, List of spirituality-related topics - Concentration, List of spirituality-related topics - Divination, List of spirituality-related topics - Other, List of spirituality-related topics - Western, List of spirituality-related topics - Esotericism and mysticism, List of spirituality-related topics - Occultism and practical mysticism

    Read more here: » List of spirituality-related topics: Encyclopedia II - List of spirituality-related topics - Eastern

  • Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Logos - Similar concepts

    Within Eastern religions there are ideas with varying degrees of similarity to the philosophical and Christian uses. Two concepts with some parallels to Logos are Tao, dharma, and Aum (from Hindu cosmology). In New Age mysticism, the Odic force is sometimes described as "the physical manifestation of the creative Logos." In ancient Egyptian mythology, Hu was the deification of the word spoken to create existence. In Surat Shabda Yoga, Shabda is considered to be analogous to the Logos as representa ...

    See also:

    Logos, Logos - Use in ancient philosophy, Logos - Use in rhetoric, Logos - Use in Christianity, Logos - Similar concepts

    Read more here: » Logos: Encyclopedia II - Logos - Similar concepts

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - List of religions - Nonsectarian and trans-sectarian religious movements and practices

    List of religions - Esotericism. Alchemy Anthroposophy Esoteric Christianity Freemasonry Gnosticism Kabbalah Occultism Rosicrucian Ancient Mystical Order Rosae Crucis Confraternity of the Rose Cross Rosicrucian Fellowship Surat Shabda Yoga List of religions - Mysticism. Christian mysticism Gnosticism Hindu mysticism ...

    See also:

    List of religions, List of religions - Fictional religions, List of religions - Forms of religion or alternative beliefs, List of religions - Nonsectarian and trans-sectarian religious movements and practices, List of religions - Esotericism, List of religions - Mysticism, List of religions - Magic religion, List of religions - Ritualism, List of religions - Organizations promoting Ecumenism

    Read more here: » List of religions: Encyclopedia II - List of religions - Nonsectarian and trans-sectarian religious movements and practices

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Surat Shabd Yoga - Basic principles

    The stated purpose of Surat Shabda Yoga is to realize the individual's True Self (Self-Realization), True Essence (Spirit-Realization) and True Divinity (God-Realization) while living in the human physical body. This Journey of Soul involves reuniting in stages with what is called the Essence of the Absolute Supreme Being, the Shabd. Attaining self-realization and above also results in jivan moksha/mukti, liberation/release from samsara, the cycle of karma and reincarnation while in the physic ...

    See also:

    Surat Shabd Yoga, Surat Shabd Yoga - Basic principles, Surat Shabd Yoga - Movements and masters, Surat Shabd Yoga - Variations in movements, Surat Shabd Yoga - Notes and references

    Read more here: » Surat Shabd Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Surat Shabd Yoga - Basic principles

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Dharmic religions - What is Dharma?

    Main Article: Dharma The word Dharma (Sanskrit; "धर्म" in the Devanagari script) or dhamma (Pali) is used in most or all philosophies and religions of Indian origin, the dharmic faiths, namely Hinduism (Sanatana Dharma), Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism. Dharma also is practiced in the Surat Shabda Yoga traditions. In its oldest form, dharman, it first appears in the Vedas. It is difficult to provide a single concise definition for Dharma (life fails to convey its con ...

    See also:

    Dharmic religions, Dharmic religions - The Dharmic faiths, Dharmic religions - Hinduism, Dharmic religions - Jainism, Dharmic religions - Buddhism, Dharmic religions - Sikhism, Dharmic religions - What is Dharma?, Dharmic religions - Birth and history, Dharmic religions - Common modern practices, Dharmic religions - Exchanges with Abrahamic religions, Dharmic religions - Influences from Islam and Christianity, Dharmic religions - Influences on Abrahamic religions

    Read more here: » Dharmic religions: Encyclopedia II - Dharmic religions - What is Dharma?

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Dharma - Meanings and origins of the word Dharma

    The word Dharma (Sanskrit; "धर्म" in the Devanagari script) or dhamma (Pali) is used in most or all philosophies and religions of Indian origin, the dharmic faiths, namely Hinduism (Sanatana Dharma), Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism. Dharma also is practiced in the Surat Shabda Yoga traditions. In its oldest form, dharman, it first appears in the Vedas. It is difficult to provide a single concise definition for Dharma (life fails to convey its connoted complexity). The word has a long and ...

    See also:

    Dharma, Dharma - Meanings and origins of the word Dharma, Dharma - Dharma in Hinduism, Dharma - Origin and development in Hinduism, Dharma - Proto-dharma: rta in the Vedas, Dharma - Developing conceptions, Dharma - Dharma as a Purushartha, Dharma - Kane's view, Dharma - In Jainism, Dharma - The two Dharmas, Dharma - In Buddhism, Dharma - The teachings of the Buddha, Dharma - Qualities of Buddha Dharma, Dharma - Dharmas in Buddhist phenomenology, Dharma - Dharma as righteousness

    Read more here: » Dharma: Encyclopedia II - Dharma - Meanings and origins of the word Dharma

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation

    While many scenarios are proposed by religion and science to identify 'first cause' and the origin of creation (ontology), there are some fundamental limits to the knowledge of humankind that present a barrier to finding any definitive answer. Post-modern philosophy currently holds that there is nothing that one can know for certain. Immanuel Kant's philosophy can be seen as a forerunner of this idea — that because we view the universe through the lens of the mind, which is 'shaped' by space, time, and the things embedded in space a ...

    See also:

    Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonian, Origin belief - Buddhist, Origin belief - Chinese, Origin belief - Christian, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greek, Origin belief - Hindu, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Mayan, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

    Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Creation myths

    Origins beliefs commonly refer to creation myths — mytho-religious stories which explain the beginnings of the universe as a deliberate act of "creation" by a supreme being. "Origin belief" may be generalized to include non-religious claims and theories based in contemporary science or philosophy—the Big Bang, origin of life, panspermia and theory of evolution fall into this category. The term creation myth may be seen as offensive when used to describe stories which are still believed today, as the term myth ...

    See also:

    Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonian, Origin belief - Buddhist, Origin belief - Chinese, Origin belief - Christian, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greek, Origin belief - Hindu, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Mayan, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

    Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Creation myths

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Science-based beliefs

    Science, strictly speaking, deals only with observable phenomena. Anything that cannot be observed (either directly or indirectly) is, by definition, not a subject of scientific investigation. Scientists look for patterns among observations, which give rise to hypotheses to be tested against further observations. If a hypothesis passes these tests, it is then called a scientific theory, which again is subje ...

    See also:

    Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonian, Origin belief - Buddhist, Origin belief - Chinese, Origin belief - Christian, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greek, Origin belief - Hindu, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Mayan, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

    Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Science-based beliefs

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo

    Creation ex nihilo (Latin: out of nothing) is at odds with our everyday experiences, in that nothing spontaneously comes into (or vanishes from) existence but instead matter and energy merely change forms. However, quantum mechanics allows for energy to be spontaneously created from the vacuum as long as the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is not violated (usually, by the spontaneous annihilation of the created particles, e.g. the Lamb shift). This may give a means by which creation ex nihilo can be achieved, but nevertheless ...

    See also:

    Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonian, Origin belief - Buddhist, Origin belief - Chinese, Origin belief - Christian, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greek, Origin belief - Hindu, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Mayan, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

    Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo

    Surat Shabda Yoga: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs

    Several religions have creation stories, some of which account for the existence and present form of the Universe by the act of creation by a supreme being or the Creator God. Most of these accounts depict one or several gods fashioning things out of themselves, or from pre-existing material (for example chaos or prakriti). The scholastic traditions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam for the most part speak of creation ex nihilo. This is typified, for example, by the assumption that the first verse of the Christian Bible ("In ...

    See also:

    Origin belief, Origin belief - Creation myths, Origin belief - Science-based beliefs, Origin belief - Mainstream scientific theories, Origin belief - Beliefs grounded in philosophical naturalism, Origin belief - Creation ex nihilo, Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs, Origin belief - Limits to the ontology of creation, Origin belief - Creation within various belief systems, Origin belief - Babylonian, Origin belief - Buddhist, Origin belief - Chinese, Origin belief - Christian, Origin belief - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Origin belief - Creek, Origin belief - Egyptian, Origin belief - Classical Greek, Origin belief - Hindu, Origin belief - Hopi, Origin belief - Hmong, Origin belief - Inca, Origin belief - Islam, Origin belief - Japan, Origin belief - Jainism, Origin belief - Judaism, Origin belief - Mayan, Origin belief - Māori, Origin belief - Navajo, Origin belief - Norse, Origin belief - Polynesian, Origin belief - Randomness, Origin belief - Sami, Origin belief - Surat Shabda Yoga, Origin belief - Taoism, Origin belief - Zen, Origin belief - Zoroastrianism

    Read more here: » Origin belief: Encyclopedia II - Origin belief - Religious creation beliefs




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