Karma A term, derived from the Sanskrit 'deed', which describes a fundamental concept in Hinduism and Buddhism that thoughts and deeds determine the consequences of one's life and rebirth.
Karma Karma is Sanskrit for "deed." In both Hinduism and Buddhism karma includes an individual's physical and mental actions which determine the consequences of the person's present life and sequential lives through rebirth.
Karma n : an ethical doctrine of the Hindu and Buddhist religions, based upon the principal that "as one sows, so shall one reap". See also reincarnation. Useful Links Recommended Reading ...
Individual Karma is the cumulative result of all of man's actions and thoughts, not only of his present life but also of his innumerable earlier existences.
KARMA (From The Light of Asia by Sir Edwin Arnold) It knows not wrath nor pardon; utter true ...
Karma Yoga. This is the school of Shri Krishna, based on the wisdom of the Bhagavad-Gita, the doctrine of love for humanity and all other beings and the general goodwill towards others. It relates to the Second Ray.
Karma ― Eastern name for the Law of Cause and Effect. The basic Law governing our existence in this solar system. Every thought, every action that we have and make sets into motion a cause.
Karma (Sans.) Physically, action; Metaphysically, the LAW of RETRIBUTION; the Law of Cause and Effect or Ethical Causation. It is Nemesis only in the sense of bad Karma.
Karma The Law of Cause and Effect. Physical action. The Law of Retribution. Karma of merit / demerit. The whole universe is conditioned by this law. Moral effect of an act committed which gratifies personal desire.
Karma Dumping Run American occult slang for a ritual process of visiting someone's "just deserts" upon them, by "concentrating the karma" they may have earned in their life (or recent past) and delivering it back to them in one brief period of time; ...
Karma: Karma follows the law of cause and effect. It is the belief that what one's actions do in this lifetime, will carry over to the next life and lives to come.
Karma.--The subjective law of tendency set in motion by the individual. The mental law acting through him. Karmic Law means the use that man makes of his mentality.
Karma-all that total of a soul Which is the things it did, the thoughts it had, The "self" it wove with woof of viewless time ...
Astrology, Karma & Transformation: The Inner Dimensions of the Birth Chart. Vancouver WA, CRCS, 1978. Astrology, Psychology, and the Four Elements: An Energy Approach to Astrology & Its Use in the Counseling Arts. Vancouver WA, CRCS, 1975.
In fact, the karma of previous incarnations plays quite a big role in this book, manipulating characters and circumstances like a puppet master pulling the strings of his puppets.
The belief free from all ideas but pleasure, the Karma through law (displeasure) speedily exhausts itself.
Karma Karma is the concept of "action" or "deed" in Dharmic religions understood as denoting the entire cycle of cause and effect described in Hindu, Jain, Sikh and Buddhist philosophies.
Symbolized by the Caduceus, two entwined serpents; THOTH is Lord of Karma, Time and the keeper of the Akashic Record (Akashia being one name of Mother Earth-Gaia).
lore), India (with certain plants and as derived from the union of male and female animal as in the Upanishads), reincarnation as explicitly taught by the "wise men of India" and of rebirth as "recompense in accordance with his former life" (karma) ...
Can you see that by starting with the leadership of the Great Father, we are overcoming karma? Where is the location of karma on the Tree of Life? Da'at.
The fourth cause of disease was what the Orientals called Karma, that is, the Law of Compensation, which demanded that the individual pay in full for the indiscretions and delinquencies of the past.
Evaluating the Theory of Karma Transcending Karma the Ramayana Amar Chitra Katha: Valmiki's Ramayana (comic book edition) Digital Prayer Wheels Virtual Thangka Gallery Free Eastern Texts Online The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali ...
The Christians believed that sins, even though forgiven, still carried a 'karma' that must be burned off in Purgatory before the soul can enter heaven.
The word akasha, like the word, karma, is Sanskrit. Loosely, akasha means sort of a primordial ether of the all-knowing.
The universe that we inhabit and our shared perception of it are the results of a common karma. Likewise, the places that we will experience in future rebirths will be the outcome of the karma that we share with the other beings living there.
Now in creating elementals, we are karmatically attached to everything they do.
It may be that we are unaware of Truth not because we are inadequate, unworthy, or because our karma does not permit it, but because we are not in a mental place in which such things may be told to us.
Yogacara is a form of subjective realism or consciousness only, which states that individual factors including karma contribute to an experience of reality that must be different for every being.
He made me know myself. He showered me with grace. He pulled out past karma... by its root.
See also: World, Spirit, Ritual, Spiritual, Christ
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