Samayā
Samaya (
Meaning
In contemporary usage, samayam means time in Dravidian languages such as Kannada, Malayalam, and Tamil,[4] and samay in Indo-Aryan languages such as Bengali, Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati.
Jainism
Meaning
Samaya represents the most infinitesimal part of time that cannot be divided further.[5] The blink of an eye, or about a quarter of a second, has innumerable samaya in it. For all practical purposes a second happens to be the finest measurement of time. Jainism, however, recognizes a very small measurement of time known as samaya, which is an infinitely small part of a second.
Measurements
The following are measures of time as adopted by Jainism:
- indivisible time = 1 samaya
- innumerable samaya = 1 avalika
- 16,777,216 avalika = 1 muhurta
- 30 muhurtas = 1 day and night
- 15 days and nights = 1 paksha (fortnight)
- 2 pakshas = 1 month
- 12 months = 1 year
- innumerable years = 1 palyopam
- 10 million million palyopams = 1 sāgaropam
- 10 million million sāgaropams = l utsarpiṇī or 1 avasarpiṇī
- 1 utsarpiṇī + avasarpiṇī = 1 kālchakra (one time cycle)
Example
When an Arihant reaches the stage of moksha (liberation), the soul travels to the Siddhashila (highest realm in universe) in one samaya.
Hinduism
Samayam is the basic unit of time in Hindu mythology. It is stated to be an epithet of Shiva in the Agni Purana.[6]
Other uses
The samayachakra is the great chariot wheel of time which turns relentlessly forward.
Samayam is a term used in
In Gandharva-Veda the day is divided into three-hour-long intervals: 4–7 a.m., 7–10 a.m., etc. The time concept in Gandharva-Veda is more strictly adhered to than it would be, for example, in Carnatic music.
See also
References
- ^ www.wisdomlib.org (2014-08-03). "Samaya, Samayā, Samāya, Shamaya: 30 definitions". www.wisdomlib.org. Retrieved 2023-01-05.
- ISBN 978-1-61429-454-2.
- ISBN 978-81-206-0369-1.
- ISBN 978-3-447-04455-4.
- ISBN 978-81-932726-1-9.
- ^ Books, Kausiki (2021-07-12). Agni Purana 1 : English Translation only. Kausiki Books. p. 460.