In particular, it offers the first study in any European language of the a major work of religious literature dedicated to the god Siva and one of the only extant witnesses to the trajectory of Sanskrit literary culture in fourteenth-century Kashmir. This dissertation also contributes to the ...
The Gayatri was first recorded in the Rig Veda (iii, 62, 10) which was written in Sanskrit about 2500 to 3500 years ago, and by some reports, the mantra may have been chanted for many generations before that. Having prayed for enlightenment and peace through unity with God, the transcende...
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In Buddhism, the world is not made up of material elements but compounded by causality. Causality in Sanskrit is Hetu-Pratyaya. Hetu means a direct or far cause; Pratyaya means an indirect or near cause. A seed, for example, is a direct cause of a plant, while sunshine, water, and e...
The mere fact such religious stories, beliefs, experiences and practices of human beings over several thousand years across the globe have been expressed in widely different and far from well-translated or well-understood languages – Egyptian, Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, Pali, Tibetan...
In Buddhism, the world is not made up of material elements but compounded by causality. Causality in Sanskrit is Hetu-Pratyaya. Hetu means a direct or far cause; Pratyaya means an indirect or near cause. A seed, for example, is a direct cause of a plant, while sunshine, water, and ...
In Buddhism, the world is not made up of material elements but compounded by causality. Causality in Sanskrit is Hetu-Pratyaya. Hetu means a direct or far cause; Pratyaya means an indirect or near cause. A seed, for example, is a direct cause of a plant, while sunshine, water, and ...
In Buddhism, the world is not made up of material elements but compounded by causality. Causality in Sanskrit is Hetu-Pratyaya. Hetu means a direct or far cause; Pratyaya means an indirect or near cause. A seed, for example, is a direct cause of a plant, while sunshine, water, and ...
In Buddhism, the world is not made up of material elements but compounded by causality. Causality in Sanskrit is Hetu-Pratyaya. Hetu means a direct or far cause; Pratyaya means an indirect or near cause. A seed, for example, is a direct cause of a plant, while sunshine, water, and ...
In Buddhism, the world is not made up of material elements but compounded by causality. Causality in Sanskrit is Hetu-Pratyaya. Hetu means a direct or far cause; Pratyaya means an indirect or near cause. A seed, for example, is a direct cause of a plant, while sunshine, water, and ...