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Spiritual - Theosophy
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Sata-rupa Sata-rupa (Sanskrit) [from sata hundred + rupa form, body] The hundred-formed one; applied to Vach who, as the feminine Brahma or universal nature, assumes myriad forms. Hundred here does not denote a specific numerical limit, but is used as the Greek word myriad (10,000) often is, to signify an immense quantity; albeit the number has a distinct occult significance likewise. According to archaic Hindu legend, Sata-rupa, as nature, was the daughter of Brahma, and likewise the mother of the first manu, called Svayambhuva. (See also: Sata-rupa, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Sai Baba Dictionary on Vaivasvata Manu Vaivasvata Manu: Vaivasvata Manu: an original father and law-giver of the human race. There are fourteen Manus appearing in one day of Brahma, namely 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. (See also: Vaivasvata Manu, Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)
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Maharshi, maharsi Maharshi maharsi (Sanskrit) [from maha great + rishi sage, seer] Also Maharishi. A great sage or seer, especially referring to the ten maharshis who were the mind-born sons of Prajapati or Manu Svayambhuva: Marichi, Atri, Angras, Pulastya, Pulaha, Kratu, Prachetas, Vasishtha, Bhrigu, and Narada. They are also called the ten (or seven) prajapatis. See also MUNI (See also: Maharshi, maharsi, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Dictionary on Androgyne Ray Androgyne Ray An expression for the second stage of manifestation -- the Second Logos in the system of emanations of the logoi; the Father-Mother in the cosmic conception adopted by Blavatsky; and the Sanskrit Brahma-prakriti or Purusha-prakriti. Each is the producing cause of manifestation through its son, the manifested Third Logos, which in a planetary chain is designated as the primordial or originate in Manu Svayambhuva. "These two, Brahma and Prakriti, are really one, yet they are also the two aspects of the one Life-ray acting and reacting upon itself" (OG 97). (See also: Androgyne Ray, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Dictionary on Apava Apava (Sanskrit) (from Ap water) Water-mover; associated with Narayana, "he who moves in or on the waters of space," and hence with Vishnu and Brahma. In the Harivamsa, Apava performed the office of Brahma: dividing himself into male and female he produced Vishnu, who produced Viraj, who in turn brought the first manu, Manu Svayambhuva, into being. This manu then brought forth the ten prajapatis, the progenitors of the manifested world (cf VP 1:7). In the Mahabharata, a name of the prajapati Vasishtha. (See also: Apava, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Theosophy Dictionary on Agnishtoma, agnistoma Agnishtoma agnistoma (Sanskrit) (from agni fire + stoma praise, a hymn from the verbal root stu to praise, eulogize) Praise of Agni, fire; an ancient Vedic ceremony or sacrifice performed by a Brahmin desirous of obtaining svarga (heaven), who himself maintained the sacred fire. The offering to Indra and other deities was the soma. The ceremonies continued for five days, with 16 priests officiating. Although in later times it may have become merely a matter of form, originally the agnishtoma was connected with the initiation rites of the soma Mysteries. In the Puranas, Agnishtoma is given as the seventh son of Manu Chakshusa, the sixth manu descended from the first manu, Svayambhuva (cf VP 1:177). (See also: Agnishtoma, agnistoma, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Priyavrata Priyavrata (Sanskrit) A son of Manu-Svayambhuva; the Bhagavata-Purana states: "Priya-vrata being dissatisfied that only half the earth was illuminated at one time by the solar rays, followed the sun seven times round the earth in his own flaming car of equal velocity, like another celestial orb, resolved to turn night into day." Brahma stopped him and the ruts which were formed by the motion of his chariot wheels were the seven oceans. Thus the seven continents were made, which may also refer to the seven globes of our planetary chain. As Priyavrata is one of the sons of Manu the self-generated -- the first in serial order of the manus -- it is evident that Priyavrata corresponds to one of the first or primordial human races referred to in theosophical literature. (See also: Priyavrata, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Theosophy Dictionary on Agnidhra Agnidhra (Sanskrit) (from agnidh kindler from the verbal root agni fire + the verbal root indh to kindle, light) Fire kindler; eldest of the ten sons of Priyavarta, the eldest son of Svayambhuva Manu. Three of Priyavarta's sons became mendicants, the other seven became kings famed for valor and wisdom. Priyavarta divided the earth into seven dvipas or continental islands, giving one of each of his king-sons to administer. Agnidhra ruled over Jambu-dvipa which he in turn apportioned among his nine sons (VP 2:1). Blavatsky correlates the Puranic allegory to the seven globes of a planetary chain, Jambu-dvipa being equivalent to globe D in the theosophical scheme. Sometimes spelled Agnidhra, especially with reference to the priest who kindles the sacrificial fire (RV 2:36:4). (See also: Agnidhra, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Theosophy Dictionary on Adam Qadmon 'Adam Qadmon (Hebrew) (from 'adam mankind + qadam to be before, precede) Primordial man, Adam Primus; in the Qabbalah macrocosmic man in contrast to the earthly Adam, the microcosm. Often called the Heavenly Man because symbolically he is the Sephirothal Tree of Life, each of the Sephiroth having its correspondence with a part of the body, the head being Kether (Crown), and the feet standing for Malchuth (Kingdom). 'Adam Qadmon corresponds mystically to the Hindu Purusha: both are generalizing terms used to represent the cosmic Logos or hierarch of their respective hierarchies. Blavatsky compares 'Adam Qadmon to the first manu, Svayambhuva, "the synthesis of the fourteen Manus" (TG 206); also to the Greek Prometheus and the divine Pymander of the Hermetica -- the power of the thought divine "in its most spiritual aspect" (IU 1:298). (See also: Adam Qadmon, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Manu A Theosophical definition of Manu : Manu Manu in the esoteric system is the entities collectively which appear first at the beginning of manifestation, and from which, like a cosmic tree, everything is derived or born. Manu actually is the spiritual tree of life of any planetary chain of manifested being. Manu is thus in one sense the third Logos; as the second is the father-mother, the Brahma and prakriti; and the first is what we call the unmanifest Logos, or Brahman (neuter) and its cosmic veil pradhana. In other words, the second Logos, father-mother, is the producing cause of manifestation through their son, which in a planetary chain is Manu, the first of the manus being called in the archaic Hindu system Svayambhuva. During a Day of Brahma or period of seven rounds, fourteen subordinate or inferior manus appear as patrons and guardians of the race cycles or life-waves (See also H. P. Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine, passim; also Manvantara). Manu is likewise the name of a great ancient Indian legislator, the alleged author of the Laws of Manu (Manava-dharma-sastra). See also: Manu , Mysticism, Body Mind and Soul
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Vasishtha Vasistha Vasishtha Vasistha (Sanskrit) The most wealthy; a celebrated Vedic rishi, representing the typical Brahmin sage. Many legends have clustered about him, especially in regard to his conflict with the sage Visvamitra -- the king who raised himself from the Kshatriya to the Brahmanical class. Many hymns of the Rig-Veda are attributed to these two sages: one hymn represents Vasishtha as the family priest of King Sudas, and in the Rig-Veda (7:33:11) he is called the son of the apsaras Urvasi by Mitra and Varuna, hence his name Maitravaruni. He is also supposed to have owned Nandini, the cow of plenty (offspring of Surabhi). As this cow was able to grant the sage all his wishes, he became the master of every vasu (desirable object). In Manu (1:35) Vasishtha is enumerated as one of the ten prajapatis, the patriarchs produced by Manu-Svayambhuva for the peopling of the earth. In the Mahabharata he is regarded as the family priest of the Suryavansa (solar race), and also as one of the seven great rishis associated with the seven stars of the Great Bear. In the Puranas, Vasishtha is represented as one of the arrangers of the Vedas in a dvapara yuga of a certain chatur yuga, and as the father of seven celebrated sons. (See also: Vasishtha Vasistha, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)
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Svayambhu Svayambhu (Sanskrit) Also Swayambhuva. Self-generating, self-evolving; in Hindu metaphysics the cosmic primordial beginnings of the solar system from the womb on Aditi, or the spatial Deeps. Less accurately, the Self-existent, or Self-manifesting. A name applied to Brahma, issuing from the still more abstract essence of Brahman, equivalent to universal spirit, not the Boundless or infinitude, but the self-manifesting spiritual essence in the beginnings of its cosmic appearance, which lies at the root of any solar system. "Each Cosmic Monad is 'Swayambhuva,' the self-born, which becomes the Centre of Force, from within which emerges a planetary chain (of which chains there are seven in our system), and whose radiations become again so many Manus Swayambhuva (a generic name, mysterious and meaning far more than appears), each of these becoming, as a Host, the Creator of his own Humanity" (SD 2:311). Thus svayambhu means the primordial or self-evolving monad of a celestial entity, whether solar system or an individual body such as a planetary chain. Not to be confused with Svayambhuva, a name of the first manu. (See also: Svayambhu, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)
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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)
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Manu Manu (Sanskrit) [from the verbal root man to think] In Hindu mythology, the son of Svayambhuva, father and husband of Ila, parents of humanity as well as the prajapatis and other manus, who are the entities collectively which appear first at the beginning of manifestation, and from which everything is derived. They are identical with the sishtas, and function as prajapatis in a smaller but strictly analogical manner. Manu is collective humanity: "Manu is the synthesis perhaps of the Manasa, and he is a single consciousness in the same sense that while all the different cells of which the human body is composed are different and varying consciousnesses there is still a unit of consciousness which is the man. But this unit, so to say, is not a single consciousness: it is a reflection of thousands and millions of consciousnesses which a man has absorbed. "But Manu is not really an individuality, it is the whole of mankind. You may say that Manu is a generic name for the Pitris, the progenitors of mankind. They come . . . from the Lunar Chain. They give birth to humanity, for, having become the first men, they give birth to others by evolving their shadows, their astral selves. They not only give birth to humanity but to animals and all other creatures. . . . But, as the moon receives its light from the Sun, so the descendants of the Lunar Pitris receive their higher mental light from the Sun or the 'Son of the Sun.' For all you know Vaivasvata Manu may be an Avatar or a personification of Mahat, commissioned by the Universal Mind to lead and guide thinking Humanity onwards" (TBL 78). The manus are said to have emanated the ten prajapatis or progenitors of mankind, called also maharshis (great rishis). It is said of Brahma that he emanated himself as Manu, and that he was born of, and was identical with, his original self, while he constituted his female portion Sata-rupa (hundred forms). There are 14 manus in any manvantara ("between manus") arranged in pairs, a root-manu and a seed-manu for each portion of a cycle. These pairs of manus in a planetary round, a root-manu on globe A and a seed-manu on globe G, are given as: 1) Svayambhuva, Svarochisha; 2) Auttami, Tamasa; 3) Raivata, Chakshusha; 4) Vaivasvata (our progenitor), Savarna; 5) Daksha-savarna, Brahma-savarna; 6) Dharma-savarna, Rudra-savarna; 7) Rauchya, Bhautya. "Vaivasvata, thus, though seventh in the order given, is the primitive Root-Manu of our fourth Human Wave (the reader must always remember that Manu is not a man but collective humanity), while our Vaivasvata was but one of the seven Minor Manus, who are made to preside over the seven races of this our planet. Each of these has to become the witness of one of the periodical and ever-recurring cataclysms (by fire and water) that close the cycle of every Root-race. And it is this Vaivasvata -- the Hindu ideal embodiment, called respectively Xisuthrus, Deukalion, Noah and by other names -- who is the allegorical man who rescued our race, when nearly the whole population of one hemisphere perished by water, while the other hemisphere was awakening from its temporary obscuration" (SD 2:309). Manu is in one sense the Third Logos; in another the spiritual man, the monad, the real and deathless spiritual ego in us, which is the direct emanation of the one Life or the absolute deity of our universe. The manus collectively, in this sense, are the four higher classes of dhyani-chohans who were the fathers of the concealed man -- the subtle inner man. Thus root-manus and seed-manus are sishtas, for the seed-manu at the end of a life-wave's evolution on a globe is virtually identic with the root-manu on that same globe when the life-wave reaches it again to begin on that globe a new course of racial development or evolution. The difference between root- and seed-manus being that the root-manus are really the seed-manus plus the most evolved monads of the life-waves reaching the globe first, conjoining with the seed-manus and thus slightly modifying things. Manu is likewise the name of a great ancient Indian legislator, the alleged author of the Manava-dharma-sastra or Laws of Manu. (See also: Manu, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Self-born Self-born Parentless, in Sanskrit aupapaduka or aja -- terms used of the head of a hierarchy, such as the Logos, corresponding to the Son, the second person of the Christian Trinity. From another aspect, it is the cosmic dragon in the highest of its septenary meanings. All gods and beings born through and from will, whether of deity or adept, are said to be self-born, e.g., the pitris, who issued from Brahma's body of twilight; or Daksha, a self-born power who sprang from his father's body. Each cosmic monad is svayambhuva (the self-become or self-born) and in its turn becomes a center of force from within which emerges a planetary chain. The first root-race is called self-born, for the individuals of this race were the astral shadows of their progenitors, and their method of reproduction was by fission. Seven self-born primordial gods emanated from the triadic One. The self-born were the primary creation of seven creations, otherwise emanations of self-born gods, or 'elohim, as the Hebrews call them. Theosophic philosophy postulates four methods of reproduction (chatur-yoni) in the manifested realms which run from the divine through many intermediate degrees to the physical: 1) the highest or self-born (aupapaduka), such as the inner birth at will of gods and bodhisattvas; 2) birth from the seeds of life of various kinds on the different planes, whether they be monads or physical seminal germs; 3) egg-born (andaja), such as reptiles and birds; and finally 4) womb-born (yonija), such as man and other mammalia. These four modes of birth are not given here in the order of their importance or spirituality, for human beings, who are womb-born, at a later stage through initiation and inner development finally attain the aupapaduka birth again. (See also: Self-born, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Root-manu, Seed-manu Root-manu and Seed-manu Fourteen manus preside over our planetary chain during its life-cycle, there being two principal or round-manus for each round. The first of each pair, appearing at the beginning of a round, is called the root-manu; the second, appearing towards the end, before the intervening twilight or nirvana, is the seed-manu, who presides over the holding of the seeds of life until the coming of the life-waves at the beginning of the next round. The root-manu appears on globe A, the seed-manu on the seventh globe (globe G). Root- and seed-manu, in certain relations, are spoken of as being respectively the prime cause and its accumulated final effect at the end of the round. As we are now in the middle of the fourth round, there have so far been seven principal or round-manus. By reason of nature's analogical procedures, there is for each globe of a planetary chain a root-manu at the beginning of its several succeeding periods of activity, and a seed-manu at the end of the same; as being their spiritual offspring, the names are the same as those by which the principal or round-manus are known. This list of root- and seed-manus for each round is given in The Laws of Manu (cf SD 2:309): 1) Svayambhuva, Svarochi or Svarochisha; 2) Auttami, Tamasa; 3) Raivata, Chakshusha; 4) Vaivasvata (our progenitor), Savarna; 5) Daksha-savarna, Brahma-savarna; 6) Dharma-savarna, Rudra-savarna; and 7) Rauchya, Bhautya. Vaivasvata is the primitive root-manu of our fourth human wave. Manu, insofar as the human life-wave is concerned, is not a man but collective humanity; yet it is likewise true that Manu is a spiritual individual -- a difficult doctrine to grasp at first presentation. The name Vaivasvata is also used for one of the seven minor manus who preside over the seven root-races of our planet. It is this latter that among other peoples is called Xisuthrus, Deucalion, Noah, etc. See also MANU (See also: Root-manu, Seed-manu, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Laws of Manu, Laws of Manava-dharma-sastra Laws of Manu, Laws of Manava-dharma-sastra Also called the Manu-samhita; The Code of Manu (or Institutes of Manu). Well-known archaic Hindu codes or institutes comprising maxims of various kinds, attributed to the first manu, known as Svayambhuva, who according to archaic records lived nearly 30 million years ago during the satya yuga of the race during which he appeared. One of the most important Smriti (unwritten traditional teachings). The Laws of Manu is one of the main pillars of ancient Hindu law, and is held in the highest reverence. Tradition says that Manu wrote down the laws of Brahma in 100,000 slokas, which formed 24 books and a thousand chapters. He gave the work to Narada, one of the archaic sages, who abridged it for the use of mankind to 12,000 verses. Narada in his turn gave the Code to Sumati, a son of Bhrigu who for greater convenience reduced it to 4,000 verses. The Laws of Manu is recognized as approaching the Vedas in age. It is not merely a law book in the European sense of being a mere code of legal enactments; the chief topics of its twelve extant books are 1) cosmogony; 2) the sources of the law, sacraments, initiation, discipleship; 3) marriage and the duties of a householder or the second social order; 4) means of subsistence, and private study and morals; 5) diet, purification, and the duties of women; 6) the duties of a recluse and ascetic, or the third and fourth social orders; 7) government, and the duties of a king and the military caste; 8) judicature and law, civil and criminal; 9) duties of husband and wife, miscellaneous regulations concerning conduct and the duties of a king; 10) duties and occupations of the castes and mixed castes; 11) penances and expiations; and 12) metempsychosis and final liberation. (See also: Laws of Manu, Laws of Manava-dharma-sastra, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Manifestation A Theosophical definition of Manifestation : Manifestation A generalizing term signifying not only the beginning but the continuance of organized kosmic activity, the latter including the various minor activities within itself. First there is of course always the Boundless in all its infinite planes and worlds or spheres, aggregatively symbolized by the circle; then parabrahman, or the kosmic life-consciousness activity, and mulaprakriti its other pole, signifying root-nature especially in its substantial aspects. Then the next stage lower, Brahman and its veil pradhana; then Brahma-prakriti or Purusha-prakriti (prakriti being also maya); the manifested universe appearing through and by this last, Brahma-prakriti, "father-mother." In other words, the second Logos or father-mother is the producing cause of manifestation through their son which, in a planetary chain, is the primordial or the originating manu, called Svayambhuva. When manifestation opens, prakriti becomes or rather is maya; and Brahma, the father, is the spirit of the consciousness, or the individuality. These two, Brahma and prakriti, are really one, yet they are also the two aspects of the one life-ray acting and reacting upon itself, much as a man himself can say, "I am I." He has the faculty of self-analysis or self-division. All of us know it, we can feel it in ourselves - one side of us, in our thoughts, can be called the prakriti or the material element, or the mayavi element, or the element of illusion; and the other is the spirit, the individuality, the god within. The student should note carefully that manifestation is but a generalizing term, comprehensive therefore of a vast number of different and differing kinds of evolving planes or realms. For instance, there is manifestation on the divine plane; there is manifestation also on the spiritual plane; and similarly so on all the descending stages of the ladder or stair of life. There are universes whose "physical" plane is utterly invisible to us, so high is it; and there are other universes in the contrary direction, so far beneath our present physical plane that their ethereal ranges of manifestation are likewise invisible to us. See also: Manifestation , Mysticism, Body Mind and Soul
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S This is a sitemap for topic pages related to Hinduism. Click on a link and you will find multiple articles related to the topic: Hinduism Dictionary - S, Sacrament, Sacred thread, Sacrifice, Sadachara, Sadasiva, Sadhaka, Sadhana, Sadhana marga, Sadharana dharma, Sadhu, Sadhvi, Saguna Brahman, Sahasra lekhana sadhana, Sahasrara chakra, Saiva, Saiva Agamas, Saiva Siddhanta, Saiva Vishishtadvaita, Saivism, Saivism six schools, Saivite, Sakha marga, Sakshin, Sama Veda, Samadhi, Samarasa, Samavartana, Sambandar, Samhara, Samhara, Samhita, Sampradaya, Samsara, Samsari, Samskara, Samskaras of adulthood, Samskaras of birth, Samskaras of childhood, Samskaras of later life, San Marga, San Marga Sanctuary, Sanatana Dharma, Sanatkumara, Sanchita karma, Sanctify, Sanctum sanctorum, Sandalwood, Sandhya upasana, Sangama, Sankalpa, Sankhya, Sannidhana, Sannyasa, Sannyasa ashrama, Sannyasa dharma, Sannyasa diksha, Sannyasa Upanishad, Sannyasin, Sanskrit, SANT, Santosha, Sarasvati, Saravana, Sari, Sarvabhadra, Sarvajnanottara Agama, Sat, Satan, Satchidananda, Satguru, Satgurunatha, Satsanga, Sattva guna, Satya, Satyaloka, Saucha, Saumanasya, Savikalpa samadhi, Sayujya, Scarlet, Scepter, Scripture, Secluded, Seed karma, Seer, Self God, Self Realization, Self-assertive, Self-conceit, Self-luminous, Self-reflection, Servitude, Seva, Seval, Sexuality, Shabda kosha, Shad darshana, Shakahara, Shakta, Shakta Tantrism, Shakta Tantrism, Shakti, Shakti Vishishtadvaita, Shaktipat, Shaktipata, Shaktism, Shaktopaya, Shakya, Shamanism, Shambhavopaya, Shandilya Upanishad, Shankara, Shankara, Shankaracharya pitha, Shanmata sthapanacharya, Shanmukha, Shanmukha Gayatri, Sharana, Sharira, Shashtyabda purti, Shastra, Shastri, Shatapatha Brahmana, Shatkona, Shatsthala, Shatter, Sheath, Shikhara, Shiksha Vedanga, Shishya, Shloka, Shraddha, Shraddhadharana, Shrauta, Shrauta Shastra, Shruti, Shubha muhurta, Shuddha Saiva Siddhanta, Shuddha tattvas, Shuddhashuddha tattvas, Shuddhavidya, Shudra, Shukla Yajur Veda, Shulba Shastra, Shum, Shunya Sampadane, Shuttle, Siddha Marga, Siddha Siddhanta, Siddha Siddhanta Paddhati, Siddha yoga, Siddha yogi, Siddha Yogi Sampradaya, Siddhanta, Siddhanta shravana, Siddhi, Sikhism, Simantonnayana, Sin, Siva, Siva Advaita, Siva consciousness, Siva Drishti, Siva Purana, Siva Rakshamani Dipika, Siva Samhita, Siva Sutra, Sivachaitanya, Sivachara, Sivacharya, Sivajnanabodham, Sivakarnamrita, Sivalaya, Sivalinga, Sivaloka, Sivaloka, Sivamaya, Sivamayakosha, Sivanadiyar, Sivananda, Sivaness, Sivanubhava Mandapa, Sivaratri, Siva's five faces, Sivasayujya, Siva-Shakti, Sivasharana, Sivathondu, Sivaya Namah, Sivena saha Nartanam, Skanda, Skanda Shashthi, Slaughter, Smarta, Smarta Sampradaya, Smartism, Smriti, Snare, Social dharma, Solace, Solemn, Soliloquy, Solitaire, Somananda, Somanath Temple, Soul, Sound , Soundless Sound, Sovereign, Sow, Span, Spanda Karika, Spark, Spectrum, Speculate, Sphatika, Sphere, Spiritual evolution, Spiritual unfoldment, Splendor, Spouse, Sri, Sri Aurobindo, Sri Chakra, Sri Lanka, Sri Rudram, Srikantha, Srikumara, Srinagara, Srinatha, Srishti, Srishti, Stave off, Steadfast, Sthapati, Sthapatyaveda, Sthiti, Sthiti, Sthula sharira, Stingy, Stoics, Straits, Stranglehold, Stratification, Stri dharma, Stri dharma, Subala Upanishad, Subatomic, Subconscious mind, Subconscious mind, Subjective, Sublime, Subliminal, Subramanya, Subramuniyaswami, Subside, Substance, Substratum, Subsubconscious mind, Sub-subconscious mind, Subsuperconscious mind, Subsuperconscious mind, Subtle body, Subtle plane, Successor, Suchi, Suicide, Sukshma sharira, Sully, Sundaranathar, Sundarar, Superconscious mind, Superconscious mind, Superconscious mind, Supernatural, Supplicate, Suprabheda Agama, Supreme, Supreme God, Surdas, Surpass, Surrender, Surya, Sushumna nadi, Sushumna nadi, Sustainable, Sustenance, Suta Samhita, Sutala, Sutra, Svadharma, Svadharma, Svadhishthana, Svadhyaya, Svarga, Svarloka, Svatmarama, Svayambhu Linga, Svayambhuva Agama, Svayambhuva Sutra, Svetashvatara Upanishad, Swami, Swami Sivananda, Swami Vivekananda, Swami Vivekananda, Swami Vivekananda, Swamini, Swastika, Swirl, Symbolism, Syncretism, Synonymous, Synthesis, Hinduism Dictionary , Hinduism Dictionary - A-Z, Hinduism Dictionary - A, Hinduism Dictionary - B, Hinduism Dictionary - C , Hinduism Dictionary - D, Hinduism Dictionary - E, Hinduism Dictionary - F , Hinduism Dictionary - G, Hinduism Dictionary - H, Hinduism Dictionary - I , Hinduism Dictionary - J, Hinduism Dictionary - K, Hinduism Dictionary - L , Hinduism Dictionary - M, Hinduism Dictionary - N, Hinduism Dictionary - O , Hinduism Dictionary - P, Hinduism Dictionary - Q, Hinduism Dictionary - R , Hinduism Dictionary - S, Hinduism Dictionary - T, Hinduism Dictionary - U , Hinduism Dictionary - V, Hinduism Dictionary - W, Hinduism Dictionary - X , Hinduism Dictionary - Y, Hinduism Dictionary - Z, Also see these pages: Hinduism Dictionary , Buddhism Dictionary, Spiritual Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary , Parapsychology Dictionary, Paganism Dictionary, Mysticism Dictionary , Theosophy Dictionary , Alternative Health Dictionary ,
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