Moksha
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 (name-form). It is, in
Hinduism,
viewed as analogous to Nirvana, though Buddhist
thought tends to differ with even the Advaita Vedantist reading of
liberation. Jainism also believes in Moksha.
Hinduism, in support of the idea of Moksha, posits the idea of
atman and Brahman .
A common mistake is to view them, both spoken of as Self, as a monist
being of sorts, something possessing substances. In actuality, Hindu
scripture like the Upanishads and
Bhagavad Gita,
and especially the non-dual Hindu school of
Advaita Vedanta,
say that the Self or Super-Soul is beyond being and non-being, beyond any sense
of tangibility and comprehension. Moksha is seen as a final release from one's
worldly conception of self, the loosening of the shackle of experiential
duality and a re-establishment in one's own fundamental nature, though
the nature is seen as ineffable and beyond sensation.
 | In Advaita, the concepts of Moksha and
Buddhist Nirvana are
not so disunited as to be incomparable. Indeed, there is much overlap in their
views of consciousness and attainment of enlightenment. For Advaitists, the
ultimate truth is not a singular Godhead, per se, but rather
is oneness without form or being, something that essentially is without
manifestation, and this, by many liberal Advaitists, is seen
as complementing, rather than denying, the 'voidness' of
Buddhism.
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 | In dualist Hinduism, on the other hand,
Moksha is not quite analogous to Nirvana in Buddhism. For Vaishnavites
and Shaivites, Moksha means union with God.
Buddhism, being a non-theistic religion, does not focus on God. |
Means to achieve Moksha
There are four
yogas
(unions) or margs (paths) for the attainment of Moksha. They are the ways of
selfless work, of self-dissolving love, of absolute discernment, and of 'royal'
meditative immersion. Different schools of Hinduism place varying emphasis on
one path or other, some of the most famous being the
tantric
and yogic practices developed in Hinduism. Today, the two major
schools of thought are Advaita Vedanta and
Bhakti branches.
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Bhakti sees the Self as
God, most often a personified monotheistic conception of
Vishnu,
Shiva or
Devi (the Mother Goddess).
Unlike in Abrahamic traditions, this monotheism does not prevent a Hindu from
worship of other aspects of God, beings or teachers, as they are all seen as
rays from a single source. However, it is noteworthy to note that the Bhagavad
Gita condemns worship of demigods as it does not lead to Moksha. The concept
is essentially of self-dissolution in love, since the ideal nature of being is
seen as that of harmony, euphony, its manifest essence being love. By
immersing oneself in the love of God, one's Karmas (good or
bad, regardless) slough off, one's illusions about beings decay and 'truth' is
soon known and lived. |
 |
Vedanta finds itself split three-fold,
though the dualist and modified non-dualist schools are primarily associated
with the foregoing thought of Bhakti. The most famous today is Advaita
Vedanta, a non-dual (i.e. no separation between the individual and
reality/God/etc.) perspective which often played the role of Hindu foil to
contemporary
Buddhist philosophy.
In general, it focused on intense
meditation
and moral realignment, its bedrock being the Upanishads, Brahma Sutras
and the teachings of its putative founder, Adi Shankara.
Through discernment of the real and the unreal, as a peeling of the layers of
an onion, the sadhak (practitioner) would unravel the
maya
(illusion) of being and the cosmos to find nothing within, a nothingness which
was paradoxically being, and transcendentally beyond both such inadequate
descriptions. This was Moksha, this was atman and Brahman
realized as the
substance and void of existential duality. |
Moksha
in the sacred Hindu temple dance, as in the classical
Indian dance too, is symbolized by Shiva raising his right leg, as if
freeing himself fr om
the gravitation of the material world.
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