Saguna brahman
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Saguna brahman (lit. 'The Absolute with qualities';[1] from Sanskrit saguṇa 'with qualities', guṇa 'quality', and Brahman 'the Absolute') is a concept of ultimate reality in Hinduism, close to the concept of immanence, the manifested divine presence.
Yoga
Rājarshi (2001: p. 45) conveys his estimation of the historical synthesis of the School of
"Introducing the special tattva (principle) called Ishvara by yoga philosophy is a bold attempt to bring reconciliation between the transcendental, nondual monism of vedanta and the pluralistic, dualistic, atheism of sankhya. The composite system of yoga philosophy brings the two doctrines of vedanta and sankya closer to each other and makes them understood as the presentation of the same reality from two different points of view. The nondual approach of vedanta presents the principle of advandva (nonduality of the highest truth at the transcendental level.) The dualistic approach of sankhya presents truth of the same reality but at a lower empirical level, rationally analyzing the principle of dvandva (duality or pairs of opposites). Whereas, yoga philosophy presents the synthesis of vedanta and sankhya, reconciling at once monism and dualism, the supermundane and the empirical."[2]
Vedanta
According to
Other
See also
- Para Brahman
- Nirguna Brahman
- Brahman
- Mahavishnu
- Parasiva
- Turiya
- Harihara
Notes
References
- ISBN 1-57062-137-3
- ISBN 978-1-56718-441-9. Source: [1](accessed: Friday May 7, 2010), p.45
- ^ a b c d Iannone 2013, p. 78.
- ISBN 9788180900792. Retrieved 1 January 2005.
Bibliography
- Iannone, A. Pablo (2013). Dictionary of World Philosophy. Routledge. ISBN 9781134680443.