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Moksha - the ultimate aim of Hindu philosophy

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Zebra

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Nov 8, 2009, 4:42:48 AM11/8/09
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"Moksha (Sanskrit: ?????, liberation) or Mukti (Sanskrit:
????????, release) refers, in general, to liberation from
the cycle of death and rebirth. In higher Hindu philosophy,
it is seen as a transcendence of phenomenal being, of any
sense of consciousness of time, space, and causation
(karma). It is not seen as a soteriological goal in the same
sense as in, say, a Christian context, but signifies
dissolution of the sense of self, or ego, and the overall
breakdown of nama-roopa (nam ... "

****

You see how here transcendence and NONE ego and and NONE
self are taught?
This is more advance than what Brian Fletcher teaches, but
is what we ourselves have been teaching.
You can read more on this if you search on Google.

The aim is to escape life/death/reincarnation/karma/self and
these kind of concepts/notions.
You can achieve Moksha during your life.
(As we have).

****

THE BORG

Kevin B. Murphy

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Nov 10, 2009, 10:57:37 AM11/10/09
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The tortured envy the torturer... is the basis for reincarnation... in the
next life the tortured are the torturers.

--
Denial of Free Will makes the Knowledge of Order Absolute.

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