Life can have different meaning for different persons depending on their attitude and their behaviour. But one thing is sure,life exists in things which are moving continuously.Life is dynamic,it is not static,and for humans being joyous is life.
Life
Monday, April 15, 2013
Friday, April 1, 2011
Life according to Hinduism
Life can have different meaning for different persons depending on their attitude and their behaviour.
Hinduism or you can say Sanatan Dharma(Eternal Religion) is a religious category including many beliefs and traditions. Since Hinduism was the way of expressed meaningful living for quite a long time immemorial, when there was no need for naming this as a separate religion, Hindu doctrines are supplementary and complementary in nature, generally non-exclusive, suggestive and tolerant in content. Most believe that the atma (spirit, soul)—the person's true self—is eternal. In part, this stems from Hindu beliefs that spiritual development occurs across many lifetimes, and goals should match the state of development of the individual. There are four possible aims to human life, known as the purusharthas(ordered from least to greatest): kama (wish, desire, love and sensual pleasure), Artha(wealth, prosperity, glory), Dharma(righteousness, duty, morality, virtue, ethics, encompassing notions such as ahimsa(non-violence) and satya (truth)) and Moksha(liberation, i.e. liberation from sansara the cycle of reincarnation.
Hinduism or you can say Sanatan Dharma(Eternal Religion) is a religious category including many beliefs and traditions. Since Hinduism was the way of expressed meaningful living for quite a long time immemorial, when there was no need for naming this as a separate religion, Hindu doctrines are supplementary and complementary in nature, generally non-exclusive, suggestive and tolerant in content. Most believe that the atma (spirit, soul)—the person's true self—is eternal. In part, this stems from Hindu beliefs that spiritual development occurs across many lifetimes, and goals should match the state of development of the individual. There are four possible aims to human life, known as the purusharthas(ordered from least to greatest): kama (wish, desire, love and sensual pleasure), Artha(wealth, prosperity, glory), Dharma(righteousness, duty, morality, virtue, ethics, encompassing notions such as ahimsa(non-violence) and satya (truth)) and Moksha(liberation, i.e. liberation from sansara the cycle of reincarnation.
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