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Ṛta

In the Vedic religion, Ṛta (/ɹ̩ta/; Sanskrit ऋत ṛta "order, rule; truth; logos") is the principle of natural order which regulates and coordinates the operation of the universe and everything within it.[1][note 1] In the hymns of the Vedas, Ṛta is described as that which is ultimately responsible for the proper functioning of the natural, moral and sacrificial orders. Conceptually, it is closely allied to the injunctions and ordinances thought to uphold it, collectively referred to as Dharma, and the action of the individual in relation to those ordinances, referred to as Karma – two terms which eventually eclipsed Ṛta in importance as signifying natural, religious and moral order in later Hinduism.[2] Sanskrit scholar Maurice Bloomfield referred to Ṛta as "one of the most important religious conceptions of the Rigveda, going on to note that, "from the point of view of the history of religious ideas we may, in fact we must, begin the history of Hindu religion at least with the history of this conception".[3]

Etymology Edit

Vedic ṛtá and its Avestan equivalent aṣ̌a both derive from Proto-Indo-Iranian *Hr̥tás "truth",[4] which in turn continues Proto-Indo-European *h2r-tós "properly joined, right, true", from a presumed root *h2er-. The derivative noun ṛta is defined as "fixed or settled order, rule, divine law or truth".[5]

As Mahony (1998) notes the term can be translated as "that which has moved in a fitting manner". Although this meaning is not actually cited by authoritative Sanskrit dictionaries it is a regular derivation from the verbal root ṛ, "to move" with ta, the suffix which forms the past participle, so it can be regarded as the putative origin of the word. More abstractly, it is translated as "universal law" or "cosmic order", or simply as "truth".[6] The latter meaning dominates in the Avestan cognate to Ṛta, aṣ̌a.[7]

The proper Sanskrit pronunciation of the word is ṛta, the ṛ being a vocalic r, like that in pert or dirt, when pronounced with a rhotic r, e.g. as in American, followed by a short a. The most common pronunciation of speakers of modern Indian languages is "rita", with short i and short a, due to the loss of the vocalic r by the successor languages to Sanskrit, the prakrits and modern Indo-Aryan languages.

The term appears in Vedic texts and in post-Vedic texts, both as Ṛta and derivatives of the term. For example, in the 2nd-century BCE text Mahābhāṣya of Patanjali, he explains Ṛtaka to be the grammatically correct form of name for a son, where then the name would mean "truthling".[8]

Origins Edit

In scholarship there is no common position about the origin of the concept of Ṛta. Similar concepts exist in many Indo-European cultures and the names can in addition be derived from an identical root word *h2r-tós. This is why some scholars take the position that the concepts in the Indo-European daughter cultures have a common ancestor in the Proto-Indo-European culture.[9]

In contrast Hermann Oldenberg (1894) surmised that the concept of Ṛta originally arose in the Indo-Aryan period from a consideration of the natural order of the world and of the occurrences taking place within it as doing so with a kind of causal necessity.[10] Both Vedic Ṛta and Avestan aša were conceived of as having a tripartite function which manifested itself in the physical, ethical and ritual domains.[11] In the context of Vedic religion, those features of nature which either remain constant or which occur on a regular basis were seen to be a manifestation of the power of Ṛta in the physical cosmos.[12] In the human sphere, Ṛta was understood to manifest itself as the imperative force behind both the moral order of society as well as the correct performance of Vedic rituals.[13] The notion of a universal principle of natural order is by no means unique to the Vedas, and Ṛta has been compared to similar ideas in other cultures, such as Ma'at in Ancient Egyptian religion, Moira and the Logos in Greek paganism, and the Tao.[14]

Vedas Edit

Due to the nature of Vedic Sanskrit, a term such as Ṛta can be used to indicate numerous things, either directly or indirectly, and both Indian and European scholars have experienced difficulty in arriving at fitting interpretations for Ṛta in all of its various usages in the Vedas, though the underlying sense of "ordered action" remains universally evident.[15] In the Rigveda, the term Ṛta appears as many as 390 times, and has been characterized as "the one concept which pervades the whole of Ṛgvedic thought".[16] The cosmic order, Ṛta, has three features:[17]

  • Gati, the continuous movement or change.
  • Samghatna, a system based on interdependent parts.
  • Niyati, an inherent order of interdependence and movement.

Ṛta appears most frequently as representing abstract concepts such as "law", "commandment", "order", "sacrifice", "truth", and "regularity", but also occasionally as concrete objects such as the waters, the heavens or the sun as manifestations of the operation of Ṛta in the physical universe. Ṛta is also frequently used in reference to various Vedic deities. Thus, Bṛhaspati is referred to as possessing a powerful bow with "Ṛta as its string" and as one prepared to "mount the chariot of Ṛta"; Agni is described as one who is "desirous of Ṛta", one who is "Ṛta-minded" and as he who "spread Heaven and Earth by Ṛta"; the Maruts are referred to as "rejoicing in the house of Ṛta" and as "knowers of Ṛta"; Ushas is described as having been "placed at the root of Ṛta"; Varuna is praised as "having the form of Ṛta" and, along with Mitra as Mitra-Varuna, as "destroying the foes by Ṛta" and as "professing Ṛta by Ṛta". Epithets such as "born of Ṛta" and "protector of Ṛta" are frequently applied to numerous divinities, as well as to the sacrificial fire and the sacrifice itself.[18]

Despite the abundance of such references, the gods are never portrayed as having command over Ṛta. Instead, the gods, like all created beings, remain subject to Ṛta, and their divinity largely resides in their serving it in the role of executors, agents or instruments of its manifestation.[19] As Day (1982) notes, the gods "do not govern Ṛta so much as immanentalize it through the particularities of divine ordinances and retributions concerning both rewards and punishments. In this sense they do not "govern" Ṛta; they serve it as agents and ministers".[20]

Varuna Edit

 
17th century watercolour depicting Varuna (here astride the Makara), a god closely associated with Ṛta in the Vedas.

While the concept of Ṛta as an abstract, universal principle generally remained resistant to the anthropomorphic tendencies of the Vedic period, it became increasingly associated with the actions of individual deities, in particular with those of the god Varuna as the omniscient, all-encompassing sky.[21] Although the Adityas as a group are associated with Ṛta, being referred to as "the charioteers of Ṛta, dwelling in the home of Ṛta", it is Varuna in particular who is identified as the "friend of Ṛta".[22] The connection of Varuna and Ṛta extended beyond the physical realm and into the sphere of ritual worship, with the sacrificial fire itself being lauded as that which "harnesses the steeds and holds the reins of Ṛta, becoming Varuna when he strives for Ṛta".[23] As James (1969) notes, Varuna attained the position of "universal Power par excellence maintaining Ṛta" and is celebrated as having "separated and established heaven and earth, spreading them out as the upper and lower firmaments, himself enthroned above them as the universal king, ordering the immutable moral law, exercising his rule by the sovereignty of Ṛta.[24]

Dharma Edit

Already in the earliest Vedic texts, Ṛta as an ethical principle is linked with the notion of cosmic retribution. A central concept of the Ṛgveda is that created beings fulfil their true natures when they follow the path set for them by the ordinances of Ṛta, and failing to follow those ordinances was thought to be responsible for the appearance of various forms of calamity and suffering.[25] Committing one's actions to the governance of Ṛta, referred to as its "Dharma", was therefore understood as imperative in ensuring one's own well-being.[26] In this vein, the individual who follows the ordinances of nature can be described as one who acts according to the "Dharma of Ṛta".[27] Dharma, then, was originally conceived of as a "finite or particularized manifestation of Ṛta inasmuch as it represents that aspect of the universal Order which specifically concerns the mundane natural, religious, social and moral spheres as expressed in ritualistic regulations, public laws, moral principles and laws of nature".[28]

Though originally understood as a subordinate component of the essentially metaphysical concept of Ṛta, Dharma eventually grew to overshadow Ṛta in prominence in later Vedic and early Hindu literature. According to Day (1982), the concept of Dharma,

...became so useful for framing religious, moral and social regulations, that interest in it and discussion of its applications to social and moral order eclipsed all discussions of metaphysical and theological ideas. Since, moreover, Dharma was made the central subject of a literary tradition which was to become vast and extensive throughout India, while the conception of Ṛta remained largely confined to the Vedas and their commentaries, it naturally took possession of brāhmaṇical thinking even at the expense of older, exalted concepts and conceptions.[29]

Karma Edit

As the notion of Dharma shifted emphasis away from the gods as executors of Ṛta and towards the individual as upholding Ṛta through his actions, the ethical responsibility and culpability of the individual received an increasing amount of emphasis towards the end of the Vedic period.[30] Central to the discussion of such culpability is the notion of Karma. Karma (lit. "action") refers to the works one performs, which can occur either in congruence with or in opposition to Dharma – and thus, to Ṛta – and which are posited to stand in a causal relationship to the pains and pleasures one experiences in life.[31]

The emergence of Karma as a central doctrine of the late Vedic and early Hindu tradition is due in part to the problem of theodicy. Given the inherent goodness of Ṛta and its absolute power over the operation of the universe, the presence of gross inequality and injustice in the world represented a serious religious, philosophical and ethical dilemma. The notion of Karma helped to overcome this problem as it was conceived as a "law of moral causation" which effectively excused the gods and Ṛta from the appearance of evil in the world, placing the responsibility for the same squarely upon the individual.[32]

Being an extension of Ṛta, Karma was conceived of as operating with the same absolute efficiency.[33] As Day (1982) notes, "acts are causally determinative in accordance with their good or evil nature, and their out-workings are inexorable; there is no intrusive or arbitrary factor which might overcome their potentiality for causing retributional effects, or otherwise interfering with the strictly mechanical efficiency of Karma. Since, moreover, an individual's fortunes and misfortunes are solely the outcome of his past actions, he has no ground for believing that life is kindlier or harsher than is deserved. He has no cause either for praising God's benevolence nor for lamenting God's wrath."[34]

In proper names Edit

Ṛta- or arta- sometimes appears as an element in Vedic and Indic personal names, as with Iranian.[35]

In India the vocalic 'ṛ' of Sanskrit is transformed into the modern 'ri', or in South India, 'ru'. Indian names include:

  • Rita
  • Ruta
  • Ritambhar
  • Ritik
  • Ritwik
  • Ritesh

Mitanni (non-Indian, Vedic) names include:

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Panikkar (2001:350-351) remarks: "Ṛta is the ultimate foundation of everything; it is "the supreme", although this is not to be understood in a static sense. [...] It is the expression of the primordial dynamism that is inherent in everything...."

References Edit

  1. ^ Holdrege (2004:215)
  2. ^ Holdrege (2004:215–216); Mahony (1998:3)
  3. ^ Bloomfield (1908:12–13)
  4. ^ "AṦA (Asha "Truth") – Encyclopaedia Iranica". Iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2013-02-21.
  5. ^ Monier-Williams (1899:223b)
  6. ^ Mahony (1998:3)
  7. ^ Oldenberg (1894:30). Cf. also Thieme (1960:308)
  8. ^ Hartmut Scharfe (2002). Handbook of Oriental Studies. BRILL Academic. p. 53. ISBN 90-04-12556-6.
  9. ^ Johnston, Lucas F.; Bauman, Whitney (2014). Science and Religion: One Planet Many Possibilities. Routledge. p. 181.
  10. ^ Oldenberg (1894:195)
  11. ^ Ara (2008:117). See Myers (2001:176–178) for a detailed discussion of the threefold function of Ṛta.
  12. ^ Oldenberg (1894:196)
  13. ^ Oldenberg (1894:197–198)
  14. ^ Cf. Ramakrishna (1965:153–168); James (1969:35–36); Premnath (1994:325–339); Rappaport (2002:344–370)
  15. ^ Cf. Ramakrishna (1965:45–46)
  16. ^ Ramakrishna (1965:45)
  17. ^ Sharma (1990:16)
  18. ^ Ramakrishna (1965:37–65)
  19. ^ Brown (1992:373): "The Ṛta [...] was not created or willed by any being or beings, the gods or any other above them. It existed before them but became known by them. They were powerless to alter it; they were only agents to execute it or supervise its execution."
  20. ^ Day (1982:29–30)
  21. ^ See James (1969:34–36) for a discussion of the historical development of the relationship of Varuna to Ṛta. Ramakrishna considers it possible that Varuna was originally conceived as the personalized aspect of the otherwise impersonal Ṛta, and that, as the importance of Ṛta began to wane in the late Vedic and post-Vedic periods, Varuna was demoted to the position of a god of the waters. Cf. Ramakrishna (1965:133–134)
  22. ^ RV 7.52.9; RV 8.25.2; RV 7.40.4. Quoted in Ramakrishna (1965:113). For a discussion of the Adityas and their relationship to Ṛta, cf. Heckaman (1979:15–20).
  23. ^ Quoted in James (1969:35)
  24. ^ James (1969:36, 34)
  25. ^ Day (1982:28). Also Brown (1992:373): "For example, if a man got dropsy, he knew that he had violated the Ṛta, and that the god Varuna, whose duty it was to supervise enforcement of Ṛta, had sent the disease as a punishment."
  26. ^ Cf. Bilimoria, Prabhu & Sharma (2007:33): "Since to do what is right safeguards the good of all qua Ṛta, it is assumed that it is more or less obligatory to do or perform the right acts."
  27. ^ Day (1982:45)
  28. ^ Day (1982:42–43)
  29. ^ Day (1982:42)
  30. ^ Cf. Rukmani (2008:157); Davis (1990:320). Also Leslie (1992:52–53).
  31. ^ Myers (2001:184)
  32. ^ Day (1982:78); Neufeldt (1986:2)
  33. ^ Cf. Kapur-Fic (1998:96); Brown (1992:373); Mahadevan (2000:37)
  34. ^ Day (1982:77)
  35. ^ Boyce (1987:390)
  36. ^ Hess (1993). Amarna Personal Names. Eisenmans. p. 38.

Sources Edit

  • Ara, Mitra (2008). Eschatology in the Indo-Iranian Traditions: The Genesis and Transformation of a Doctrine. New York: Peter Lang. ISBN 978-1-4331-0250-9.
  • Bilimoria, P.; Prabhu, J.; Sharma, R., eds. (2007). Indian Ethics: Classical Traditions and Contemporary Challenges. Vol. 1. Hampshire: Ashgate Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0-7546-3301-2.
  • Bloomfield, Maurice (1908). The Religion of the Veda: The Ancient Religion of India, from Rig-Veda to Upanishads. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
  • Boyce, Mary (1987). "Ardwashišt". Encyclopedia Iranica. Vol. 2. New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  • Brown, W. N. (1992). "Some Ethical Concepts for the Modern World from Hindu and Indian Buddhist Tradition". In Radhakrishnan, S. (ed.). Rabindranath Tagore: A Centenary Volume 1861–1961. Calcutta: Sahitya Akademi. ISBN 81-7201-332-9.
  • Davis, Winston (1990). "Natural Law and Natural Right: The Role of Myth in the Discourses of Exchange and Community". In Reynolds, F. E.; Tracy, D. (eds.). Myth and Philosophy. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-0417-X.
  • Day, Terence P. (1982). The Conception of Punishment in Early Indian Literature. Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 0-919812-15-5.
  • Heckaman, C. (1979). Toward a Comprehensive Understanding of Rta in the Rg Veda (Master's Thesis). McMaster University.
  • Holdrege, Barbara A. (2004). "Dharma". In Mittal, S.; Thursby, G. (eds.). The Hindu World. New York: Routledge. pp. 213–248. ISBN 0-415-21527-7.
  • James, Edwin O. (1969). Creation and Cosmology: A Historical and Comparative Inquiry. Leiden: E. J. Brill.
  • Kapur-Fic, Alexandra R. (1998). Thailand: Buddhism, Society and Women. New Delhi: Abhinav Publications. ISBN 81-701-7360-4.
  • Leslie, Julia (1992). Roles and Rituals for Hindu Women. Bangalore: Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 81-208-1036-8.
  • Mahadevan, T. M. P. (2000). Upaniṣads. Bangalore: Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 81-208-1611-0.
  • Mahony, William K. (1998). The Artful Universe: An Introduction to the Vedic Religious Imagination. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-3580-6.
  • Monier-Williams, Monier (1976) [1899]. A Sanskrit-English Dictionary. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Myers, Michael W. (2001). Brahman: A Comparative Theology. Surrey: Curzon Press. ISBN 0-7007-1257-7.
  • Neufeldt, Ronald W. (1986). Karma and Rebirth: Post Classical Developments. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-87395-990-6.
  • Oldenberg, Hermann (1894). Die Religion des Veda. Berlin: Verlag von Wilhelm Hertz.
  • Panikkar, Raimundo (2001). The Vedic Experience: Mantramañjari. Bangalore: Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 81-208-1280-8.
  • Premnath, D. N. (1994). "The Concepts of Ṛta and Maat: A Study in Comparison". Biblical Interpretation: A Journal of Contemporary Approaches. 2 (3): 325–339. doi:10.1163/156851594X00123.
  • Ramakrishna, G. (1965). Origin and Growth of the Concept of Ṛta in Vedic Literature (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Mysore.
  • Rappaport, Roy A. (2002). Ritual and Religion in the Making of Humanity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-22873-5.
  • Rukmani, T. S. (2008). "Value Ethics in the Early Unapishads: A Hermeneutic Approach". In Sharma, A; Sherma, R. (eds.). Hermeneutics and Hindu Thought: Towards a Fusion of Horizons. Springer Publications. ISBN 978-1-4020-8191-0.
  • Sharma, K.N. (1 March 1990). "Varna and Jati in Indian Traditional Perspective". Sociological Bulletin. Sage Publication, Inc. 39 (1–2): 15–31. doi:10.1177/0038022919900102. JSTOR 23634524. S2CID 151534129.
  • Thieme, Paul (1960). "The 'Aryan' Gods of the Mitanni Treaties". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 80: 308. JSTOR 595878.
  • Watkins, Calvert (2000). The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots (2nd ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-618-08250-6.

Ṛta, this, article, about, concept, hinduism, other, uses, vedic, religion, sanskrit, ऋत, ṛta, order, rule, truth, logos, principle, natural, order, which, regulates, coordinates, operation, universe, everything, within, note, hymns, vedas, described, that, wh. This article is about a concept in Hinduism For other uses see RTA In the Vedic religion Ṛta ɹ ta Sanskrit ऋत ṛta order rule truth logos is the principle of natural order which regulates and coordinates the operation of the universe and everything within it 1 note 1 In the hymns of the Vedas Ṛta is described as that which is ultimately responsible for the proper functioning of the natural moral and sacrificial orders Conceptually it is closely allied to the injunctions and ordinances thought to uphold it collectively referred to as Dharma and the action of the individual in relation to those ordinances referred to as Karma two terms which eventually eclipsed Ṛta in importance as signifying natural religious and moral order in later Hinduism 2 Sanskrit scholar Maurice Bloomfield referred to Ṛta as one of the most important religious conceptions of the Rigveda going on to note that from the point of view of the history of religious ideas we may in fact we must begin the history of Hindu religion at least with the history of this conception 3 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 3 Vedas 3 1 Varuna 4 Dharma 5 Karma 6 In proper names 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 SourcesEtymology EditVedic ṛta and its Avestan equivalent aṣ a both derive from Proto Indo Iranian Hr tas truth 4 which in turn continues Proto Indo European h2r tos properly joined right true from a presumed root h2er The derivative noun ṛta is defined as fixed or settled order rule divine law or truth 5 As Mahony 1998 notes the term can be translated as that which has moved in a fitting manner Although this meaning is not actually cited by authoritative Sanskrit dictionaries it is a regular derivation from the verbal root ṛ to move with ta the suffix which forms the past participle so it can be regarded as the putative origin of the word More abstractly it is translated as universal law or cosmic order or simply as truth 6 The latter meaning dominates in the Avestan cognate to Ṛta aṣ a 7 The proper Sanskrit pronunciation of the word is ṛta the ṛ being a vocalic r like that in pert or dirt when pronounced with a rhotic r e g as in American followed by a short a The most common pronunciation of speakers of modern Indian languages is rita with short i and short a due to the loss of the vocalic r by the successor languages to Sanskrit the prakrits and modern Indo Aryan languages The term appears in Vedic texts and in post Vedic texts both as Ṛta and derivatives of the term For example in the 2nd century BCE text Mahabhaṣya of Patanjali he explains Ṛtaka to be the grammatically correct form of name for a son where then the name would mean truthling 8 Origins EditSee also Asha In scholarship there is no common position about the origin of the concept of Ṛta Similar concepts exist in many Indo European cultures and the names can in addition be derived from an identical root word h2r tos This is why some scholars take the position that the concepts in the Indo European daughter cultures have a common ancestor in the Proto Indo European culture 9 In contrast Hermann Oldenberg 1894 surmised that the concept of Ṛta originally arose in the Indo Aryan period from a consideration of the natural order of the world and of the occurrences taking place within it as doing so with a kind of causal necessity 10 Both Vedic Ṛta and Avestan asa were conceived of as having a tripartite function which manifested itself in the physical ethical and ritual domains 11 In the context of Vedic religion those features of nature which either remain constant or which occur on a regular basis were seen to be a manifestation of the power of Ṛta in the physical cosmos 12 In the human sphere Ṛta was understood to manifest itself as the imperative force behind both the moral order of society as well as the correct performance of Vedic rituals 13 The notion of a universal principle of natural order is by no means unique to the Vedas and Ṛta has been compared to similar ideas in other cultures such as Ma at in Ancient Egyptian religion Moira and the Logos in Greek paganism and the Tao 14 Vedas EditDue to the nature of Vedic Sanskrit a term such as Ṛta can be used to indicate numerous things either directly or indirectly and both Indian and European scholars have experienced difficulty in arriving at fitting interpretations for Ṛta in all of its various usages in the Vedas though the underlying sense of ordered action remains universally evident 15 In the Rigveda the term Ṛta appears as many as 390 times and has been characterized as the one concept which pervades the whole of Ṛgvedic thought 16 The cosmic order Ṛta has three features 17 Gati the continuous movement or change Samghatna a system based on interdependent parts Niyati an inherent order of interdependence and movement Ṛta appears most frequently as representing abstract concepts such as law commandment order sacrifice truth and regularity but also occasionally as concrete objects such as the waters the heavens or the sun as manifestations of the operation of Ṛta in the physical universe Ṛta is also frequently used in reference to various Vedic deities Thus Bṛhaspati is referred to as possessing a powerful bow with Ṛta as its string and as one prepared to mount the chariot of Ṛta Agni is described as one who is desirous of Ṛta one who is Ṛta minded and as he who spread Heaven and Earth by Ṛta the Maruts are referred to as rejoicing in the house of Ṛta and as knowers of Ṛta Ushas is described as having been placed at the root of Ṛta Varuna is praised as having the form of Ṛta and along with Mitra as Mitra Varuna as destroying the foes by Ṛta and as professing Ṛta by Ṛta Epithets such as born of Ṛta and protector of Ṛta are frequently applied to numerous divinities as well as to the sacrificial fire and the sacrifice itself 18 Despite the abundance of such references the gods are never portrayed as having command over Ṛta Instead the gods like all created beings remain subject to Ṛta and their divinity largely resides in their serving it in the role of executors agents or instruments of its manifestation 19 As Day 1982 notes the gods do not govern Ṛta so much as immanentalize it through the particularities of divine ordinances and retributions concerning both rewards and punishments In this sense they do not govern Ṛta they serve it as agents and ministers 20 Varuna Edit nbsp 17th century watercolour depicting Varuna here astride the Makara a god closely associated with Ṛta in the Vedas While the concept of Ṛta as an abstract universal principle generally remained resistant to the anthropomorphic tendencies of the Vedic period it became increasingly associated with the actions of individual deities in particular with those of the god Varuna as the omniscient all encompassing sky 21 Although the Adityas as a group are associated with Ṛta being referred to as the charioteers of Ṛta dwelling in the home of Ṛta it is Varuna in particular who is identified as the friend of Ṛta 22 The connection of Varuna and Ṛta extended beyond the physical realm and into the sphere of ritual worship with the sacrificial fire itself being lauded as that which harnesses the steeds and holds the reins of Ṛta becoming Varuna when he strives for Ṛta 23 As James 1969 notes Varuna attained the position of universal Power par excellence maintaining Ṛta and is celebrated as having separated and established heaven and earth spreading them out as the upper and lower firmaments himself enthroned above them as the universal king ordering the immutable moral law exercising his rule by the sovereignty of Ṛta 24 Dharma EditAlready in the earliest Vedic texts Ṛta as an ethical principle is linked with the notion of cosmic retribution A central concept of the Ṛgveda is that created beings fulfil their true natures when they follow the path set for them by the ordinances of Ṛta and failing to follow those ordinances was thought to be responsible for the appearance of various forms of calamity and suffering 25 Committing one s actions to the governance of Ṛta referred to as its Dharma was therefore understood as imperative in ensuring one s own well being 26 In this vein the individual who follows the ordinances of nature can be described as one who acts according to the Dharma of Ṛta 27 Dharma then was originally conceived of as a finite or particularized manifestation of Ṛta inasmuch as it represents that aspect of the universal Order which specifically concerns the mundane natural religious social and moral spheres as expressed in ritualistic regulations public laws moral principles and laws of nature 28 Though originally understood as a subordinate component of the essentially metaphysical concept of Ṛta Dharma eventually grew to overshadow Ṛta in prominence in later Vedic and early Hindu literature According to Day 1982 the concept of Dharma became so useful for framing religious moral and social regulations that interest in it and discussion of its applications to social and moral order eclipsed all discussions of metaphysical and theological ideas Since moreover Dharma was made the central subject of a literary tradition which was to become vast and extensive throughout India while the conception of Ṛta remained largely confined to the Vedas and their commentaries it naturally took possession of brahmaṇical thinking even at the expense of older exalted concepts and conceptions 29 Karma EditAs the notion of Dharma shifted emphasis away from the gods as executors of Ṛta and towards the individual as upholding Ṛta through his actions the ethical responsibility and culpability of the individual received an increasing amount of emphasis towards the end of the Vedic period 30 Central to the discussion of such culpability is the notion of Karma Karma lit action refers to the works one performs which can occur either in congruence with or in opposition to Dharma and thus to Ṛta and which are posited to stand in a causal relationship to the pains and pleasures one experiences in life 31 The emergence of Karma as a central doctrine of the late Vedic and early Hindu tradition is due in part to the problem of theodicy Given the inherent goodness of Ṛta and its absolute power over the operation of the universe the presence of gross inequality and injustice in the world represented a serious religious philosophical and ethical dilemma The notion of Karma helped to overcome this problem as it was conceived as a law of moral causation which effectively excused the gods and Ṛta from the appearance of evil in the world placing the responsibility for the same squarely upon the individual 32 Being an extension of Ṛta Karma was conceived of as operating with the same absolute efficiency 33 As Day 1982 notes acts are causally determinative in accordance with their good or evil nature and their out workings are inexorable there is no intrusive or arbitrary factor which might overcome their potentiality for causing retributional effects or otherwise interfering with the strictly mechanical efficiency of Karma Since moreover an individual s fortunes and misfortunes are solely the outcome of his past actions he has no ground for believing that life is kindlier or harsher than is deserved He has no cause either for praising God s benevolence nor for lamenting God s wrath 34 In proper names EditṚta or arta sometimes appears as an element in Vedic and Indic personal names as with Iranian 35 In India the vocalic ṛ of Sanskrit is transformed into the modern ri or in South India ru Indian names include Rita Ruta Ritambhar Ritik Ritwik RiteshMitanni non Indian Vedic names include Artatama I Artashumara Artamanya leader of Ziribashani 36 See also Edit nbsp Look up ऋत in Wiktionary the free dictionary Arthashastra Asha Zoroastrianism Darna Romuva Logos Maat Egyptian religion Me Sumerian religion Moira Greek paganism Tao Chinese Taoism Wyrd Germanic paganism Rod Rodzanice or Prav Slavic paganism Notes Edit Panikkar 2001 350 351 remarks Ṛta is the ultimate foundation of everything it is the supreme although this is not to be understood in a static sense It is the expression of the primordial dynamism that is inherent in everything References Edit Holdrege 2004 215 Holdrege 2004 215 216 Mahony 1998 3 Bloomfield 1908 12 13 AṦA Asha Truth Encyclopaedia Iranica Iranicaonline org Retrieved 2013 02 21 Monier Williams 1899 223b Mahony 1998 3 Oldenberg 1894 30 Cf also Thieme 1960 308 Hartmut Scharfe 2002 Handbook of Oriental Studies BRILL Academic p 53 ISBN 90 04 12556 6 Johnston Lucas F Bauman Whitney 2014 Science and Religion One Planet Many Possibilities Routledge p 181 Oldenberg 1894 195 Ara 2008 117 See Myers 2001 176 178 for a detailed discussion of the threefold function of Ṛta Oldenberg 1894 196 Oldenberg 1894 197 198 Cf Ramakrishna 1965 153 168 James 1969 35 36 Premnath 1994 325 339 Rappaport 2002 344 370 Cf Ramakrishna 1965 45 46 Ramakrishna 1965 45 Sharma 1990 16 Ramakrishna 1965 37 65 Brown 1992 373 The Ṛta was not created or willed by any being or beings the gods or any other above them It existed before them but became known by them They were powerless to alter it they were only agents to execute it or supervise its execution Day 1982 29 30 See James 1969 34 36 for a discussion of the historical development of the relationship of Varuna to Ṛta Ramakrishna considers it possible that Varuna was originally conceived as the personalized aspect of the otherwise impersonal Ṛta and that as the importance of Ṛta began to wane in the late Vedic and post Vedic periods Varuna was demoted to the position of a god of the waters Cf Ramakrishna 1965 133 134 RV 7 52 9 RV 8 25 2 RV 7 40 4 Quoted in Ramakrishna 1965 113 For a discussion of the Adityas and their relationship to Ṛta cf Heckaman 1979 15 20 Quoted in James 1969 35 James 1969 36 34 Day 1982 28 Also Brown 1992 373 For example if a man got dropsy he knew that he had violated the Ṛta and that the god Varuna whose duty it was to supervise enforcement of Ṛta had sent the disease as a punishment Cf Bilimoria Prabhu amp Sharma 2007 33 Since to do what is right safeguards the good of all qua Ṛta it is assumed that it is more or less obligatory to do or perform the right acts Day 1982 45 Day 1982 42 43 Day 1982 42 Cf Rukmani 2008 157 Davis 1990 320 Also Leslie 1992 52 53 Myers 2001 184 Day 1982 78 Neufeldt 1986 2 Cf Kapur Fic 1998 96 Brown 1992 373 Mahadevan 2000 37 Day 1982 77 Boyce 1987 390 Hess 1993 Amarna Personal Names Eisenmans p 38 Sources EditAra Mitra 2008 Eschatology in the Indo Iranian Traditions The Genesis and Transformation of a Doctrine New York Peter Lang ISBN 978 1 4331 0250 9 Bilimoria P Prabhu J Sharma R eds 2007 Indian Ethics Classical Traditions and Contemporary Challenges Vol 1 Hampshire Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7546 3301 2 Bloomfield Maurice 1908 The Religion of the Veda The Ancient Religion of India from Rig Veda to Upanishads New York G P Putnam s Sons Boyce Mary 1987 Ardwashist Encyclopedia Iranica Vol 2 New York Routledge amp Kegan Paul Brown W N 1992 Some Ethical Concepts for the Modern World from Hindu and Indian Buddhist Tradition In Radhakrishnan S ed Rabindranath Tagore A Centenary Volume 1861 1961 Calcutta Sahitya Akademi ISBN 81 7201 332 9 Davis Winston 1990 Natural Law and Natural Right The Role of Myth in the Discourses of Exchange and Community In Reynolds F E Tracy D eds Myth and Philosophy Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 0417 X Day Terence P 1982 The Conception of Punishment in Early Indian Literature Ontario Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 0 919812 15 5 Heckaman C 1979 Toward a Comprehensive Understanding of Rta in the Rg Veda Master s Thesis McMaster University Holdrege Barbara A 2004 Dharma In Mittal S Thursby G eds The Hindu World New York Routledge pp 213 248 ISBN 0 415 21527 7 James Edwin O 1969 Creation and Cosmology A Historical and Comparative Inquiry Leiden E J Brill Kapur Fic Alexandra R 1998 Thailand Buddhism Society and Women New Delhi Abhinav Publications ISBN 81 701 7360 4 Leslie Julia 1992 Roles and Rituals for Hindu Women Bangalore Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 1036 8 Mahadevan T M P 2000 Upaniṣads Bangalore Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 1611 0 Mahony William K 1998 The Artful Universe An Introduction to the Vedic Religious Imagination Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 3580 6 Monier Williams Monier 1976 1899 A Sanskrit English Dictionary Oxford Clarendon Press Myers Michael W 2001 Brahman A Comparative Theology Surrey Curzon Press ISBN 0 7007 1257 7 Neufeldt Ronald W 1986 Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 0 87395 990 6 Oldenberg Hermann 1894 Die Religion des Veda Berlin Verlag von Wilhelm Hertz Panikkar Raimundo 2001 The Vedic Experience Mantramanjari Bangalore Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 1280 8 Premnath D N 1994 The Concepts of Ṛta and Maat A Study in Comparison Biblical Interpretation A Journal of Contemporary Approaches 2 3 325 339 doi 10 1163 156851594X00123 Ramakrishna G 1965 Origin and Growth of the Concept ofṚtain Vedic Literature Doctoral Dissertation University of Mysore Rappaport Roy A 2002 Ritual and Religion in the Making of Humanity Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 22873 5 Rukmani T S 2008 Value Ethics in the Early Unapishads A Hermeneutic Approach In Sharma A Sherma R eds Hermeneutics and Hindu Thought Towards a Fusion of Horizons Springer Publications ISBN 978 1 4020 8191 0 Sharma K N 1 March 1990 Varna and Jati in Indian Traditional Perspective Sociological Bulletin Sage Publication Inc 39 1 2 15 31 doi 10 1177 0038022919900102 JSTOR 23634524 S2CID 151534129 Thieme Paul 1960 The Aryan Gods of the Mitanni Treaties Journal of the American Oriental Society 80 308 JSTOR 595878 Watkins Calvert 2000 The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo European Roots 2nd ed Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 618 08250 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ṛta amp oldid 1146511766, 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