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Buddhism: In Its Connexion with Brahmanism, and Hinduism, and In its Contrast with Christianity.

EBSCOhost Ebook Religion Collection - Worldwide Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Sir Monier Monier-Williams
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource (486 p.)
Place of Publication:
Sai ePublications
Summary:
In my recent work on Brahmanism I have traced the progress of Indian religious thought through three successive stages-called by me Vedism, Brahmanism, and Hinduism-the last including the three subdivisions of Saivism, Vaishnavism, and Saktism. Furthermore I have attempted to prove that these systems are not really separated by sharp lines, but that each almost imperceptibly shades off into the other.I have striven also to show that a true Hindu of the orthodox school is able quite conscientiously to accept all these developments of religious belief. He holds that they have their authoritative exponents in the successive bibles of the Hindu religion, namely, (1) the four Vedas-Rig-veda, Yajur-veda, Sama-veda, Atharva-veda-and the Brahmanas; (2) the Upanishads; (3) the Law-books-especially that of Manu; (4) the Bhakti-sastras, including the Ramayana, the Maha-bharata, the Puranas-especially the Bhagavata-purana-and the Bhagavad-gita; (5) the Tantras.The chief works under these five heads represent the principal periods of religious development through which the Hindu mind has passed.Thus, in the first place, the hymns of the Vedas and the ritualism of the Brahmanas represent physiolatry or the worship of the personified forces of nature-a form of religion which ultimately became saturated with sacrificial ideas and with ceremonialism and asceticism. Secondly, the Upanishads represent the pantheistic conceptions which terminated in philosophical Brahmanism. Thirdly, the Law-books represent caste-rules and domestic usages. Fourthly, the Ramayana, Maha-bharata, and Puranas represent the principle of personal devotion to the personal gods, Siva, Vishnu, and their manifestations; and fifthly, the Tantras represent the perversion of the principle of love to polluting and degrading practices disguised under the name of religious rites. Of these five phases of the Hindu religion probably the first three only prevailed when Buddhism arose; but I shall try to make clear hereafter that Buddhism, as it developed, accommodated itself to the fourth and even ultimately to the fifth phase, admitting the Hindu gods into its own creed, while Hinduism also received ideas from Buddhism.
ISBN:
1-310-17831-3

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