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Moksha
The final meaning is Moksha and it is the hardest to conquer because it can take many generations and many lifetimes. In refers to enlightment and oneness with God. This is important because in offers liberation from reincarnation or rebirth and allows the person to unite with God.
Kama
The third meaning is to seek Kama; Kama refers enjoyment in life. Unlike other Eastern philosophies like Taoism which denies that one should seek joy and follow their desire, Hindu's have fun as one of their meanings in life.
Artha
The second meaning is to achieve wealth and richness in one's life. The richness can be achieved by any means but the person should stay in the boundaries of the Dharma and not cause harm on his journey to prosperity.
Dharma
The word Dharma means law, teaching and religion. For Hindu's, world means one's predetermined destiny. Most of the time it points towards one's vocation or job, which is usually influenced by class and family. This means, if a Hindu is a tea-maker, then his descendants will also become tea-makers. In addition, Dharma also represents the 5 debts, these are debts a Hindu is born with and must repay them throughout life. It is also known as karma or wrong doings.
5 Debts
Debt to guests; repaid by treating them as if they were gods visiting one's home
Debt to parents and teachers; paid by supporting them, having children of one's own and passing along knowledge
Debt to other human beings; repaid by treating them with respect
Debt to all other living beings; repaid by offering good will, food or any other help that is appropriate
Debt to the gods for their blessings; paid by rituals and offerings
Saguna Brahman
In the Saguna form, Brahman has a name, form, identity, and purpose which may vary from time to time. Through this, the people get the ability to understand Brahman's many forms and how it manifests in reality. It allows the people to prey to statues and images, also known as "murtis" in Hindi.
Nirguna Brahman
This refers to Brahman as beyond time and space. It focuses on Brahman is having no form and living inside everyone. This allows mediators and gurus to focus on the inner form of Brahman or the soul to align with it and feel its power. Nirguna is unique as it allows others to focus on its eternal qualities than to get distracted by its many names and forms.
Transcendent
In Brahmans transcendent form, it is void of name and form, sex, and any attributes. It is a formless being. Through its inscrutable power called Maya, it has the power to make anyone or anything believe in whatever, this is an illusion to everyone but not to Brahman.
Immanent
In its Immanent form, Brahman resides with everyone and any living creature. Its power can be felt through within when one aligns with the cosmos and nature. Immanence is an inner understanding the you are special without needing to hear it from someone. Self-recognition is one's personal value that reflects the light within someone. Immanent also points to the need for enlightenment by dissolving the ego and and attaching the mind with the inner-self that possesses the power. The power that can be felt inside because of the Brahman existing in everything.
Attainment Of Superhuman Physical Abilities
Focusing one's attention on the body through diet, exercise and mindfulness.
Longevity Of Life
Regulating the breath and circulating its energy throughout the body. Obtaining sexual energy by retaining semen and sending its power throughout the body.
Eternal Life
Searching for the Isles of the Blessed. This is where the immortals live and may be persuaded to tell their secrets to immortality.
Yin and yang symbolize the need for ultimate balance in ones life. It involves the discarding of unique and complex plans to escape the inevitable or the bad. Instead of trying to improve oneself through rigorous action, it is better understood as accepting the suffering of the world and welcoming it into one's life. This involves giving up ones desire or need for materialistic things and living life with flow or as water. It emphasizes that one should accept life as it is instead of preparing for it and trying to alter one's destiny. Attempting to change the future always leads to imbalance which leads to adverse effects and chaos.
Usually defined as the path or the route. Tao is seen as a way of life or the way of nature and ultimate reality. It flows through all life. A happy and joyful life is the one that is aligned with the Tao and Nature. For Taoism, Tao is the thing that unifies all of nature and the universe, and the one thing that exists. Tao existed before the universe and heaven were created. It is formless though complete in its way. Tao is the greatest mystery of mysteries.
The ideal man that can live with poverty; Junzi does more and speaks less. A Junzi is loyal, obedient and knowledgeable. Junzi disciplines himself. Among these, ren is the core of becoming Junzi. Ren is being courtesy, having breadth, good faith, diligence and clemency. Thus, being the perfect man morally.
Heaven
In Confucian philosophy, Heaven refers to the universe and when talking about Earth, the material and nature world. Confucians believe that Heaven is the source of all meaning and value. Heaven is usually stated as having its own Dao which governs and organizes the universe. Although the term Heaven is usually said to have different meanings in Confucian because of Confucius lack of meaning in his texts, it is often given two meanings. In the spiritual and heavenly world, it is understood as a supreme being who governs the material and human world. In nature, it is conceptualized to the Natural Law Theory. In any case, Heaven is known as the ultimate source of norm-activity.
The Dao
Early Confucian writings put emphasize on the immanent form of the Dao rather than the transcendent aspect. For example, followers of the Confucian philosophy say that the Dao is very close to human beings. Dao is therefore accessible and knowable but that does not mean it is not mysterious too. Confucius did not deny transcendent realities but he preferred to analyze reality from the ground up or from the matter that exists.
Consciousness: awareness of or sensitivity to an object, but without conceptualization
Mental Formations: includes habits, prejudices, mental states both virtuous and non virtuous, causes and effects of karma
Sensation: Made up of feelings, both emotional and physical, and our five senses
Form: our physical form
Perception: takes in what we call thinking-conceptualization, cognition, reasoning
The Four Noble Truths
There is a path that leads from dukkha. Although Buddha throws all the responsibility back at the individual and his/her mind for the cause of all suffering. He also provides a The Eight-fold path to change people's lives through actions they can take themselves.
The cessation of dukkha comes with the cessation of craving. Since humans are the cause of all suffering or of all dukkha, they are also the solution to everything. Humans cannot change their response to what happens around them but they can change how they react by controlling their mind.
The cause of dukkha is craving. Humans normally blame their difficulties on the things outside. To Buddha, the real cause exists in the mind as that is the reason for all desires. Particularly, our tendency to grasp for things places us at the odds for seeing the actual way of life.
All existence is dukkha. Dukkha means suffering. According to Buddha, everyone's life is filled with struggle, and people do not find ultimate happiness or satisfaction in anything they experience. This is a major problem in one's existence.
The Eight-fold Path
Right Concentration
Right Mindfulness
Right Effort
Right Livelihood
Right Action
Right Speech
Right Thought
Right Understanding