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Dharma

Dharma (/ˈdɑːrmə/;[7] Sanskrit: धर्म, romanizedDharma, pronounced [dʱɐrmɐ] ; Pali: Dhamma) is a key concept with multiple meanings in the Indian religions of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, among others.[8] Although no single-word translation exists for dharma in English (or other European languages),[9] the term is commonly understood as referring to "order and custom" that sustain life, "virtue", or "religious and moral duties".[10][11]

Dharma
Virtues such as ahimsa (non-violence)[1]
Yoga, personal behaviour[2]
Law and justice[3]
Rituals and rites of passage[4]
Sannyasa and stages of life[5]
Duties, such as learning from teachers[6]

In Hinduism, dharma denotes behaviours that are considered to be in accord with Ṛta—the "order and custom" that makes life and universe possible.[12][note 1] This includes duties, rights, laws, conduct, virtues and "right way of living".[13] The concept is believed to have a transtemporal validity,[14] and is one of the four Puruṣārthas.

In Buddhism, dharma refers to "cosmic law and order",[12][15] as expressed by the teachings of the Buddha.[12][15] In Buddhist philosophy, dhamma/dharma is also the term for "phenomena".[16][note 2] Dharma in Jainism refers to the teachings of Tirthankara (Jina)[12] and the body of doctrine pertaining to the purification and moral transformation of humans. In Sikhism, dharma indicates the path of righteousness, proper religious practices, and performing one's own moral duties.[17]

The concept of dharma was in use in the historical Vedic religion, and its meaning and conceptual scope has evolved over several millennia.[18] The ancient Tamil text Tirukkuṟaḷ, despite being a collection of aphoristic teachings on dharma (aram), artha (porul), and kama (inpam),[19]: 453 [20]: 82  is completely and exclusively based on aṟam, the Tamil term for dharma.[21]: 55  As with the other components of the Puruṣārtha, the concept of dharma is pan-Indian. The antonym of dharma is adharma.

Etymology edit

 
The Prakrit word "dha-ṃ-ma"/𑀥𑀁𑀫 (Sanskrit: Dharma धर्म) in the Brahmi script, as inscribed by Emperor Ashoka in his Edicts of Ashoka (3rd century BCE)

The word dharma has roots in the Sanskrit dhr-, which means to hold or to support, and is related to Latin firmus (firm, stable).[22] From this, it takes the meaning of "what is established or firm", and hence "law". It is derived from an older Vedic Sanskrit n-stem dharman-, with a literal meaning of "bearer, supporter", in a religious sense conceived as an aspect of Rta.[23]

In the Rigveda, the word appears as an n-stem, dhárman-, with a range of meanings encompassing "something established or firm" (in the literal sense of prods or poles). Figuratively, it means "sustainer" and "supporter" (of deities). It is semantically similar to the Greek themis ("fixed decree, statute, law").[24]

In Classical Sanskrit, and in the Vedic Sanskrit of the Atharvaveda, the stem is thematic: dhárma- (Devanagari: धर्म). In Prakrit and Pali, it is rendered dhamma. In some contemporary Indian languages and dialects it alternatively occurs as dharm.

In the 3rd century BCE the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka translated dharma into Greek and Aramaic and he used the Greek word eusebeia (εὐσέβεια, piety, spiritual maturity, or godliness) in the Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription and the Kandahar Greek Edicts.[25] In the Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription he used the Aramaic word קשיטא (qšyṭ’; truth, rectitude).[26]

Definition edit

Dharma is a concept of central importance in Indian philosophy and religion.[27] It has multiple meanings in Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism and Jainism.[8] It is difficult to provide a single concise definition for dharma, as the word has a long and varied history and straddles a complex set of meanings and interpretations.[28] There is no equivalent single-word synonym for dharma in western languages.[9]

There have been numerous, conflicting attempts to translate ancient Sanskrit literature with the word dharma into German, English and French. The concept, claims Paul Horsch,[29] has caused exceptional difficulties for modern commentators and translators. For example, while Grassmann's[30] translation of Rig-Veda identifies seven different meanings of dharma, Karl Friedrich Geldner in his translation of the Rig-Veda employs 20 different translations for dharma, including meanings such as "law", "order", "duty", "custom", "quality", and "model", among others.[29] However, the word dharma has become a widely accepted loanword in English, and is included in all modern unabridged English dictionaries.

The root of the word dharma is "dhr̥", which means "to support, hold, or bear". It is the thing that regulates the course of change by not participating in change, but that principle which remains constant.[31] Monier-Williams, the widely cited resource for definitions and explanation of Sanskrit words and concepts of Hinduism, offers[32] numerous definitions of the word dharma, such as that which is established or firm, steadfast decree, statute, law, practice, custom, duty, right, justice, virtue, morality, ethics, religion, religious merit, good works, nature, character, quality, property. Yet, each of these definitions is incomplete, while the combination of these translations does not convey the total sense of the word. In common parlance, dharma means "right way of living" and "path of rightness".[31] Dharma also has connotations of order, and when combined with the word sanatana, it can also be described as eternal truth.[33]

The meaning of the word dharma depends on the context, and its meaning has evolved as ideas of Hinduism have developed through history. In the earliest texts and ancient myths of Hinduism, dharma meant cosmic law, the rules that created the universe from chaos, as well as rituals; in later Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas and the Epics, the meaning became refined, richer, and more complex, and the word was applied to diverse contexts.[18] In certain contexts, dharma designates human behaviours considered necessary for order of things in the universe, principles that prevent chaos, behaviours and action necessary to all life in nature, society, family as well as at the individual level.[12][18][34][note 1] Dharma encompasses ideas such as duty, rights, character, vocation, religion, customs and all behaviour considered appropriate, correct or morally upright.[35] For further context, the word varnasramdharma is often used in its place, defined as dharma specifically related to the stage of life one is in.[36]

The antonym of dharma is adharma (Sanskrit: अधर्म),[37] meaning that which is "not dharma". As with dharma, the word adharma includes and implies many ideas; in common parlance, adharma means that which is against nature, immoral, unethical, wrong or unlawful.[38]

In Buddhism, dharma incorporates the teachings and doctrines of the founder of Buddhism, the Buddha.

History edit

According to Pandurang Vaman Kane, author of the authoritative book History of Dharmaśāstra, the word dharma appears at least fifty-six times in the hymns of the Rigveda, as an adjective or noun. According to Paul Horsch,[29] the word dharma has its origin in Vedic Hinduism. The hymns of the Rig Veda claim Brahman created the universe from chaos, they hold (dhar-) the earth and sun and stars apart, they support (dhar-) the sky away and distinct from earth, and they stabilise (dhar-) the quaking mountains and plains.[29][39]

The gods, mainly Indra, then deliver and hold order from disorder, harmony from chaos, stability from instability – actions recited in the Veda with the root of word dharma.[18] In hymns composed after the mythological verses, the word dharma takes expanded meaning as a cosmic principle and appears in verses independent of gods. It evolves into a concept, claims Paul Horsch,[29] that has a dynamic functional sense in Atharvaveda for example, where it becomes the cosmic law that links cause and effect through a subject. Dharma, in these ancient texts, also takes a ritual meaning. The ritual is connected to the cosmic, and "dharmani" is equated to ceremonial devotion to the principles that gods used to create order from disorder, the world from chaos.[40]

Past the ritual and cosmic sense of dharma that link the current world to mythical universe, the concept extends to an ethical-social sense that links human beings to each other and to other life forms. It is here that dharma as a concept of law emerges in Hinduism.[41][42]

Dharma and related words are found in the oldest Vedic literature of Hinduism, in later Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas, and the Epics; the word dharma also plays a central role in the literature of other Indian religions founded later, such as Buddhism and Jainism.[18] According to Brereton, Dharman occurs 63 times in Rig-veda; in addition, words related to Dharman also appear in Rig-veda, for example once as dharmakrt, 6 times as satyadharman, and once as dharmavant, 4 times as dharman and twice as dhariman.[43]

Indo-European parallels for "dharma" are known, but the only Iranian equivalent is Old Persian darmān "remedy", the meaning of which is rather removed from Indo-Aryan dhárman, suggesting that the word "dharma" did not have a major role in the Indo-Iranian period, and was principally developed more recently under the Vedic tradition.[43]

However, it is thought that the Daena of Zoroastrianism, also meaning the "eternal Law" or "religion", is related to Sanskrit "dharma".[44]

Ideas in parts overlapping to Dharma are found in other ancient cultures: such as Chinese Tao, Egyptian Maat, Sumerian Me.[31]

Eusebeia and dharma edit

 
The Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription is from Indian Emperor Asoka in 258 BCE, and found in Afghanistan. The inscription renders the word dharma in Sanskrit as eusebeia in Greek, suggesting dharma in ancient India meant spiritual maturity, devotion, piety, duty towards and reverence for human community.[45]

In the mid-20th century, an inscription of the Indian Emperor Asoka from the year 258 BCE was discovered in Afghanistan, the Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription. This rock inscription contains Greek and Aramaic text. According to Paul Hacker,[45] on the rock appears a Greek rendering for the Sanskrit word dharma: the word eusebeia.[45]

Scholars of Hellenistic Greece explain eusebeia as a complex concept. Eusebia means not only to venerate gods, but also spiritual maturity, a reverential attitude toward life, and includes the right conduct toward one's parents, siblings and children, the right conduct between husband and wife, and the conduct between biologically unrelated people. This rock inscription, concludes Paul Hacker,[45] suggests dharma in India, about 2300 years ago, was a central concept and meant not only religious ideas, but ideas of right, of good, of one's duty toward the human community.[46]

Rta, maya and dharma edit

The evolving literature of Hinduism linked dharma to two other important concepts: Ṛta and Māyā. Ṛta in Vedas is the truth and cosmic principle which regulates and coordinates the operation of the universe and everything within it.[47][48] Māyā in Rig-veda and later literature means illusion, fraud, deception, magic that misleads and creates disorder,[49] thus is contrary to reality, laws and rules that establish order, predictability and harmony. Paul Horsch[29] suggests Ṛta and dharma are parallel concepts, the former being a cosmic principle, the latter being of moral social sphere; while Māyā and dharma are also correlative concepts, the former being that which corrupts law and moral life, the later being that which strengthens law and moral life.[48][50]

Day proposes dharma is a manifestation of Ṛta, but suggests Ṛta may have been subsumed into a more complex concept of dharma, as the idea developed in ancient India over time in a nonlinear manner.[51] The following verse from the Rigveda is an example where rta and dharma are linked:

O Indra, lead us on the path of Rta, on the right path over all evils...

— RV 10.133.6

Hinduism edit

Dharma is an organising principle in Hinduism that applies to human beings in solitude, in their interaction with human beings and nature, as well as between inanimate objects, to all of cosmos and its parts.[31] It refers to the order and customs which make life and universe possible, and includes behaviours, rituals, rules that govern society, and ethics.[12][note 1] Hindu dharma includes the religious duties, moral rights and duties of each individual, as well as behaviours that enable social order, right conduct, and those that are virtuous.[52] Dharma, according to Van Buitenen,[53] is that which all existing beings must accept and respect to sustain harmony and order in the world. It is neither the act nor the result, but the natural laws that guide the act and create the result to prevent chaos in the world. It is innate characteristic, that makes the being what it is. It is, claims Van Buitenen, the pursuit and execution of one's nature and true calling, thus playing one's role in cosmic concert. In Hinduism, it is the dharma of the bee to make honey, of cow to give milk, of sun to radiate sunshine, of river to flow.[53] In terms of humanity, dharma is the need for, the effect of and essence of service and interconnectedness of all life.[31][45]

In its true essence, dharma means for a Hindu to "expand the mind". Furthermore, it represents the direct connection between the individual and the societal phenomena that bind the society together. In the way societal phenomena affect the conscience of the individual, similarly may the actions of an individual alter the course of the society, for better or for worse. This has been subtly echoed by the credo धर्मो धारयति प्रजा: meaning dharma is that which holds and provides support to the social construct.

In Hinduism, dharma generally includes various aspects:

  • Sanātana Dharma, the eternal and unchanging principals of dharma.[54]
  • Varṇ āśramā dharma, one's duty at specific stages of life or inherent duties.[55]
  • Sva dharma, one's own individual or personal duty.[56][10]
  • Āpad dharma, dharma prescribed at the time of adversities.[10]
  • Sadharana dharma, moral duties irrespective of the stages of life.[57][note 3]
  • Yuga dharma, dharma which is valid for a yuga, an epoch or age as established by Hindu tradition and thus may change at the conclusion of its time.[11][59]

In Vedas and Upanishads edit

The history section of this article discusses the development of dharma concept in Vedas. This development continued in the Upanishads and later ancient scripts of Hinduism. In Upanishads, the concept of dharma continues as universal principle of law, order, harmony, and truth. It acts as the regulatory moral principle of the Universe. It is explained as law of righteousness and equated to satya (Sanskrit: सत्यं, truth),[60][61] in hymn 1.4.14 of Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, as follows:

धर्मः तस्माद्धर्मात् परं नास्त्य् अथो अबलीयान् बलीयाँसमाशँसते धर्मेण यथा राज्ञैवम् ।
यो वै स धर्मः सत्यं वै तत् तस्मात्सत्यं वदन्तमाहुर् धर्मं वदतीति धर्मं वा वदन्तँ सत्यं वदतीत्य् एतद्ध्येवैतदुभयं भवति ॥

Nothing is higher than dharma. The weak overcomes the stronger by dharma, as over a king. Truly that dharma is the Truth (Satya); Therefore, when a man speaks the Truth, they say, "He speaks the Dharma"; and if he speaks Dharma, they say, "He speaks the Truth!" For both are one.

In the Epics edit

The Hindu religion and philosophy, claims Daniel Ingalls,[62] places major emphasis on individual practical morality. In the Sanskrit epics, this concern is omnipresent.

In the Second Book of Ramayana, for example, a peasant asks the King to do what dharma morally requires of him, the King agrees and does so even though his compliance with the law of dharma costs him dearly. Similarly, dharma is at the centre of all major events in the life of Rama, Sita, and Lakshman in Ramayana, claims Daniel Ingalls.[63] Each episode of Ramayana presents life situations and ethical questions in symbolic terms. The issue is debated by the characters, finally the right prevails over wrong, the good over evil. For this reason, in Hindu Epics, the good, morally upright, law-abiding king is referred to as "dharmaraja".[64]

In Mahabharata, the other major Indian epic, similarly, dharma is central, and it is presented with symbolism and metaphors. Near the end of the epic, the god Yama, referred to as dharma in the text, is portrayed as taking the form of a dog to test the compassion of Yudhishthira, who is told he may not enter paradise with such an animal, but refuses to abandon his companion, for which decision he is then praised by dharma.[65] The value and appeal of the Mahabharata is not as much in its complex and rushed presentation of metaphysics in the 12th book, claims Ingalls,[63] because Indian metaphysics is more eloquently presented in other Sanskrit scriptures; the appeal of Mahabharata, like Ramayana, is in its presentation of a series of moral problems and life situations, to which there are usually three answers given, according to Ingalls:[63] one answer is of Bhima, which is the answer of brute force, an individual angle representing materialism, egoism, and self; the second answer is of Yudhishthira, which is always an appeal to piety and gods, of social virtue and of tradition; the third answer is of introspective Arjuna, which falls between the two extremes, and who, claims Ingalls, symbolically reveals the finest moral qualities of man. The Epics of Hinduism are a symbolic treatise about life, virtues, customs, morals, ethics, law, and other aspects of dharma.[66] There is extensive discussion of dharma at the individual level in the Epics of Hinduism, observes Ingalls; for example, on free will versus destiny, when and why human beings believe in either, ultimately concluding that the strong and prosperous naturally uphold free will, while those facing grief or frustration naturally lean towards destiny.[67] The Epics of Hinduism illustrate various aspects of dharma, they are a means of communicating dharma with metaphors.[68]

According to 4th-century Vatsyayana edit

According to Klaus Klostermaier, 4th-century CE Hindu scholar Vātsyāyana explained dharma by contrasting it with adharma.[69] Vātsyāyana suggested that dharma is not merely in one's actions, but also in words one speaks or writes, and in thought. According to Vātsyāyana:[69][70]

  1. Adharma of body: hinsa (violence), steya (steal, theft), pratisiddha maithuna (sexual indulgence with someone other than one's partner)
  2. Dharma of body: dana (charity), paritrana (succor of the distressed) and paricarana (rendering service to others)
  3. Adharma from words one speaks or writes: mithya (falsehood), parusa (caustic talk), sucana (calumny) and asambaddha (absurd talk)
  4. Dharma from words one speaks or writes: satya (truth and facts), hitavacana (talking with good intention), priyavacana (gentle, kind talk), svadhyaya (self-study)
  5. Adharma of mind: paradroha (ill will to anyone), paradravyabhipsa (covetousness), nastikya (denial of the existence of morals and religiosity)
  6. Dharma of mind: daya (compassion), asprha (disinterestedness), and sraddha (faith in others)

According to Patanjali Yoga edit

In the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali the dharma is real; in the Vedanta it is unreal.[71]

Dharma is part of yoga, suggests Patanjali; the elements of Hindu dharma are the attributes, qualities and aspects of yoga.[71] Patanjali explained dharma in two categories: yamas (restraints) and niyamas (observances).[69]

The five yamas, according to Patanjali, are: abstain from injury to all living creatures, abstain from falsehood (satya), abstain from unauthorised appropriation of things-of-value from another (acastrapurvaka), abstain from coveting or sexually cheating on your partner, and abstain from expecting or accepting gifts from others.[72] The five yama apply in action, speech and mind. In explaining yama, Patanjali clarifies that certain professions and situations may require qualification in conduct. For example, a fisherman must injure a fish, but he must attempt to do this with least trauma to fish and the fisherman must try to injure no other creature as he fishes.[73]

The five niyamas (observances) are cleanliness by eating pure food and removing impure thoughts (such as arrogance or jealousy or pride), contentment in one's means, meditation and silent reflection regardless of circumstances one faces, study and pursuit of historic knowledge, and devotion of all actions to the Supreme Teacher to achieve perfection of concentration.[74]

Sources edit

Dharma is an empirical and experiential inquiry for every man and woman, according to some texts of Hinduism.[45][75] For example, Apastamba Dharmasutra states:

Dharma and Adharma do not go around saying, "That is us." Neither do gods, nor gandharvas, nor ancestors declare what is Dharma and what is Adharma.

— Apastamba Dharmasutra[76]

In other texts, three sources and means to discover dharma in Hinduism are described. These, according to Paul Hacker, are:[77] First, learning historical knowledge such as Vedas, Upanishads, the Epics and other Sanskrit literature with the help of one's teacher. Second, observing the behaviour and example of good people. The third source applies when neither one's education nor example exemplary conduct is known. In this case, "atmatusti" is the source of dharma in Hinduism, that is the good person reflects and follows what satisfies his heart, his own inner feeling, what he feels driven to.[77]

Dharma, life stages and social stratification edit

Some texts of Hinduism outline dharma for society and at the individual level. Of these, the most cited one is Manusmriti, which describes the four Varnas, their rights and duties.[78] Most texts of Hinduism, however, discuss dharma with no mention of Varna (caste).[79] Other dharma texts and Smritis differ from Manusmriti on the nature and structure of Varnas.[78] Yet, other texts question the very existence of varna. Bhrigu, in the Epics, for example, presents the theory that dharma does not require any varnas.[80] In practice, medieval India is widely believed to be a socially stratified society, with each social strata inheriting a profession and being endogamous. Varna was not absolute in Hindu dharma; individuals had the right to renounce and leave their Varna, as well as their asramas of life, in search of moksa.[78][81] While neither Manusmriti nor succeeding Smritis of Hinduism ever use the word varnadharma (that is, the dharma of varnas), or varnasramadharma (that is, the dharma of varnas and asramas), the scholarly commentary on Manusmriti use these words, and thus associate dharma with varna system of India.[78][82] In 6th century India, even Buddhist kings called themselves "protectors of varnasramadharma" – that is, dharma of varna and asramas of life.[78][83]

At the individual level, some texts of Hinduism outline four āśramas, or stages of life as individual's dharma. These are:[84] (1) brahmacārya, the life of preparation as a student, (2) gṛhastha, the life of the householder with family and other social roles, (3) vānprastha or aranyaka, the life of the forest-dweller, transitioning from worldly occupations to reflection and renunciation, and (4) sannyāsa, the life of giving away all property, becoming a recluse and devotion to moksa, spiritual matters.

The four stages of life complete the four human strivings in life, according to Hinduism.[85] Dharma enables the individual to satisfy the striving for stability and order, a life that is lawful and harmonious, the striving to do the right thing, be good, be virtuous, earn religious merit, be helpful to others, interact successfully with society. The other three strivings are Artha – the striving for means of life such as food, shelter, power, security, material wealth, and so forth; Kama – the striving for sex, desire, pleasure, love, emotional fulfilment, and so forth; and Moksa – the striving for spiritual meaning, liberation from life-rebirth cycle, self-realisation in this life, and so forth. The four stages are neither independent nor exclusionary in Hindu dharma.[85]

Dharma and poverty edit

Dharma being necessary for individual and society, is dependent on poverty and prosperity in a society, according to Hindu dharma scriptures. For example, according to Adam Bowles,[86] Shatapatha Brahmana 11.1.6.24 links social prosperity and dharma through water. Waters come from rains, it claims; when rains are abundant there is prosperity on the earth, and this prosperity enables people to follow Dharma – moral and lawful life. In times of distress, of drought, of poverty, everything suffers including relations between human beings and the human ability to live according to dharma.[86]

In Rajadharmaparvan 91.34-8, the relationship between poverty and dharma reaches a full circle. A land with less moral and lawful life suffers distress, and as distress rises it causes more immoral and unlawful life, which further increases distress.[86][87] Those in power must follow the raja dharma (that is, dharma of rulers), because this enables the society and the individual to follow dharma and achieve prosperity.[88]

Dharma and law edit

The notion of dharma as duty or propriety is found in India's ancient legal and religious texts. Common examples of such use are pitri dharma (meaning a person's duty as a father), putra dharma (a person's duty as a son), raj dharma (a person's duty as a king) and so forth.[89] In Hindu philosophy, justice, social harmony, and happiness requires that people live per dharma. The Dharmashastra is a record of these guidelines and rules.[90] The available evidence suggest India once had a large collection of dharma related literature (sutras, shastras); four of the sutras survive and these are now referred to as Dharmasutras.[91] Along with laws of Manu in Dharmasutras, exist parallel and different compendium of laws, such as the laws of Narada and other ancient scholars.[92][93] These different and conflicting law books are neither exclusive, nor do they supersede other sources of dharma in Hinduism. These Dharmasutras include instructions on education of the young, their rites of passage, customs, religious rites and rituals, marital rights and obligations, death and ancestral rites, laws and administration of justice, crimes, punishments, rules and types of evidence, duties of a king, as well as morality.[91]

Buddhism edit

In Buddhism dharma means cosmic law and order,[12][15] but is also applied to the teachings of the Buddha.[12][15] In Buddhist philosophy, dhamma/dharma is also the term for "phenomena".[15][16]

Buddha's teachings edit

For practising Buddhists, references to "dharma" (dhamma in Pali) particularly as "the dharma", generally means the teachings of the Buddha, commonly known throughout the East as Buddhadharma. It includes especially the discourses on the fundamental principles (such as the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path), as opposed to the parables and to the poems. The Buddha's teachings explain that in order to end suffering, dharma, or the right thoughts, understanding, actions and livelihood, should be cultivated.[94]

The status of dharma is regarded variably by different Buddhist traditions. Some regard it as an ultimate truth, or as the fount of all things which lie beyond the "three realms" (Sanskrit: tridhatu) and the "wheel of becoming" (Sanskrit: bhavachakra). Others, who regard the Buddha as simply an enlightened human being, see the dharma as the essence of the "84,000 different aspects of the teaching" (Tibetan: chos-sgo brgyad-khri bzhi strong) that the Buddha gave to various types of people, based upon their individual propensities and capabilities.

Dharma refers not only to the sayings of the Buddha, but also to the later traditions of interpretation and addition that the various schools of Buddhism have developed to help explain and to expand upon the Buddha's teachings. For others still, they see the dharma as referring to the "truth", or the ultimate reality of "the way that things really are" (Tibetan: Chö).

The dharma is one of the Three Jewels of Buddhism in which practitioners of Buddhism seek refuge, or that upon which one relies for his or her lasting happiness. The Three Jewels of Buddhism are the Buddha, meaning the mind's perfection of enlightenment, the dharma, meaning the teachings and the methods of the Buddha, and the Sangha, meaning the community of practitioners who provide one another guidance and support.

Chan Buddhism edit

Dharma is employed in Chan Buddhism in a specific context in relation to transmission of authentic doctrine, understanding and bodhi; recognised in dharma transmission.

Theravada Buddhism edit

In Theravada Buddhism obtaining ultimate realisation of the dhamma is achieved in three phases; learning, practising and realising.[95]

In Pali

  1. Pariyatti – the learning of the theory of dharma as contained within the suttas of the Pali canon
  2. Patipatti – putting the theory into practice and
  3. Pativedha – when one penetrates the dharma or through experience realises the truth of it.[95]

Jainism edit

The word dharma in Jainism is found in all its key texts. It has a contextual meaning and refers to a number of ideas. In the broadest sense, it means the teachings of the Jinas,[12] or teachings of any competing spiritual school,[96] a supreme path,[97] socio-religious duty,[98] and that which is the highest mangala (holy).[99]

The Tattvartha Sutra, a major Jain text, mentions daśa dharma (lit.'ten dharmas') with referring to ten righteous virtues: forbearance, modesty, straightforwardness, purity, truthfulness, self-restraint, austerity, renunciation, non-attachment, and celibacy.[100] Acārya Amṛtacandra, author of the Jain text, Puruṣārthasiddhyupāya writes:[101]

A right believer should constantly meditate on virtues of dharma, like supreme modesty, in order to protect the Self from all contrary dispositions. He should also cover up the shortcomings of others.

— Puruṣārthasiddhyupāya (27)

Dharmāstikāya edit

The term dharmāstikāya (Sanskrit: धर्मास्तिकाय) also has a specific ontological and soteriological meaning in Jainism, as a part of its theory of six dravya (substance or a reality). In the Jain tradition, existence consists of jīva (soul, ātman) and ajīva (non-soul, anātman), the latter consisting of five categories: inert non-sentient atomic matter (pudgalāstikāya), space (ākāśa), time (kāla), principle of motion (dharmāstikāya), and principle of rest (adharmāstikāya).[102][103] The use of the term dharmāstikāya to mean motion and to refer to an ontological sub-category is peculiar to Jainism, and not found in the metaphysics of Buddhism and various schools of Hinduism.[103]

Sikhism edit

 
Sikhism

For Sikhs, the word dharam (Punjabi: ਧਰਮ, romanized: dharam) means the path of righteousness and proper religious practice.[17] Guru Granth Sahib connotes dharma as duty and moral values.[104] The 3HO movement in Western culture, which has incorporated certain Sikh beliefs, defines Sikh Dharma broadly as all that constitutes religion, moral duty and way of life.[105]

In Sangam literature edit

Several works of the Sangam and post-Sangam period, many of which are of Hindu or Jain origin, emphasizes on dharma. Most of these texts are based on aṟam, the Tamil term for dharma. The ancient Tamil moral text of the Tirukkuṟaḷ or Kural, a text probably of Jain or Hindu origin,[106][107][108][109][110] despite being a collection of aphoristic teachings on dharma (aram), artha (porul), and kama (inpam),[19][20]: 82  is completely and exclusively based on aṟam.[21] The Naladiyar, a Jain text of the post-Sangam period, follows a similar pattern as that of the Kural in emphasizing aṟam or dharma.[110]: 70 

Dharma in symbols edit

 
The wheel in the centre of India's flag symbolises dharma.

The importance of dharma to Indian civilization is illustrated by India's decision in 1947 to include the Ashoka Chakra, a depiction of the dharmachakra (the "wheel of dharma"), as the central motif on its flag.[111]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c From the Oxford Dictionary of World Religions: "In Hinduism, dharma is a fundamental concept, referring to the order and custom which make life and a universe possible, and thus to the behaviours appropriate to the maintenance of that order."[12]
  2. ^ David Kalupahana: "The old Indian term dharma was retained by the Buddha to refer to phenomena or things. However, he was always careful to define this dharma as "dependently arisen phenomena" (paticca-samuppanna-dhamma) ... In order to distinguish this notion of dhamma from the Indian conception where the term dharma meant reality (atman), in an ontological sense, the Buddha utilised the conception of result or consequence or fruit (attha, Sk. artha) to bring out the pragmatic meaning of dhamma."[16]
  3. ^ The common duties of Sadharana-dharma is based on the idea that, individuals (Jiva) are born with a number of debts, hence through common moral duties prescribed in the Sadharana dharma would help to repay one's debts to the humanity.[58]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ see below:
    • J. A. B. van Buitenen (1957), "Dharma and Moksa", Philosophy East and West, 7(1/2), pp. 33–40;
    • James Fitzgerald (2004), "Dharma and its Translation in the Mahābhārata", Journal of Indian philosophy, 32(5), pp. 671–685; Quote – "virtues enter the general topic of dharma as 'common, or general, dharma', ..."
  2. ^ see:
    • David Frawley (2009), Yoga and Ayurveda: Self-Healing and Self-Realization, ISBN 978-0-9149-5581-8; Quote – "Yoga is a dharmic approach to the spiritual life...";
    • Mark Harvey (1986), The Secular as Sacred?, Modern Asian Studies, 20(2), pp. 321–331.
  3. ^ Bernard S. Jackson (1975), "From dharma to law", The American Journal of Comparative Law, Vol. 23, No. 3 (Summer, 1975), pp. 490–512.
  4. ^ Gavin Flood (1994), Hinduism, in Jean Holm, John Bowker (Editors) – Rites of Passages, ISBN 1-85567-102-6, Chapter 3; Quote – "Rites of passage are dharma in action."; "Rites of passage, a category of rituals,..."
  5. ^ Harold Coward (2004), "Hindu bioethics for the twenty-first century", JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 291(22), pp. 2759–2760; Quote – "Hindu stages of life approach (ashrama dharma)..."
  6. ^ see:
    • Austin Creel (1975), "The Reexamination of Dharma in Hindu Ethics", Philosophy East and West, 25(2), pp. 161–173; Quote – "Dharma pointed to duty, and specified duties..";
    • Gisela Trommsdorff (2012), Development of "agentic" regulation in cultural context: the role of self and world views, Child Development Perspectives, 6(1), pp. 19–26.; Quote – "Neglect of one's duties (dharma – sacred duties toward oneself, the family, the community, and humanity) is seen as an indicator of immaturity."
  7. ^ Wells, John C. (2008), Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.), Longman, ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0
  8. ^ a b "Dharma". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
  9. ^ a b See:
    • Ludo Rocher (2003), The Dharmasastra, Chapter 4, in Gavin Flood (Editor), The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism, ISBN 978-0-631-21535-6.
    • Alban G. Widgery, "The Principles of Hindu Ethics", International Journal of Ethics, Vol. 40, No. 2 (Jan. 1930), pp. 232–245.
  10. ^ a b c Grimes 1996, p. 112.
  11. ^ a b Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. (9 April 2019) "Dharma". Encyclopædia Britannica. Accessed 14 September 2021.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Dharma", The Oxford Dictionary of World Religions.
  13. ^ see: *"Dharma", The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th Ed. (2013), Columbia University Press, Gale, ISBN 978-0-7876-5015-5; *Steven Rosen (2006), Essential Hinduism, Praeger, ISBN 0-275-99006-0, Chapter 3.
  14. ^ Kumar, Shailendra; Choudhury, Sanghamitra (2021-01-01). Meissner, Richard (ed.). "Ancient Vedic Literature and Human Rights: Resonances and Dissonances". Cogent Social Sciences. 7 (1): 1858562. doi:10.1080/23311886.2020.1858562. ISSN 2331-1886.
  15. ^ a b c d e "dhamma", The New Concise Pali English Dictionary.
  16. ^ a b c David Kalupahana. The Philosophy of the Middle Way. SUNY Press, 1986, pp. 15–16.
  17. ^ a b Rinehart, Robin (2014), in Pashaura Singh, Louis E. Fenech (Editors), The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies, ISBN 978-0-19-969930-8, Oxford University Press, pp. 138–139.
  18. ^ a b c d e see:
    • English translated version by Jarrod Whitaker (2004): Horsch, Paul, "From Creation Myth to World Law: the Early History of Dharma", Journal of Indian Philosophy, December 2004, Volume 32, Issue 5–6, pp. 423–448; Original peer reviewed publication in German: Horsch, Paul, "Vom Schoepfungsmythos zum Weltgesetz", in Asiatische Studien: Zeitschrift der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft für Asiankunde, Volume 21 (Francke: 1967), pp. 31–61;
    • English translated version by Donald R. Davis (2006): Paul Hacker, "Dharma in Hinduism", Journal of Indian Philosophy, Volume 34, Issue 5, pp. 479–496; Original peer reviewed publication in German: Paul Hacker, "Dharma im Hinduismus" in Zeitschrift für Missionswissenschaft und Religionswissenschaft 49 (1965): pp. 93–106.
  19. ^ a b Blackburn, Stuart (April 2000). "Corruption and Redemption: The Legend of Valluvar and Tamil Literary History". Modern Asian Studies. Cambridge University Press. 34 (2): 453. doi:10.1017/S0026749X00003632. S2CID 144101632.
  20. ^ a b N. Sanjeevi (2006). First All India Tirukkural Seminar Papers (2nd ed.). Chennai: University of Madras.
  21. ^ a b N. Velusamy and Moses Michael Faraday (Eds.) (2017). Why Should Thirukkural Be Declared the National Book of India? (in Tamil and English) (First ed.). Chennai: Unique Media Integrators. p. 55. ISBN 978-93-85471-70-4.
  22. ^ Chambers Dictionary of Etymology, Barnhart, R. K., editor (1998).
  23. ^ Day 1982, pp. 42–45.
  24. ^ Brereton, Joel P. (December 2004). "Dhárman In The Rgveda". Journal of Indian Philosophy. 32 (5–6): 449–489. doi:10.1007/s10781-004-8631-8. ISSN 0022-1791. S2CID 170807380.
  25. ^ "How did the 'Ramayana' and 'Mahabharata' come to be (and what has 'dharma' got to do with it)?". 13 December 2018.
  26. ^ Hiltebeitel, Alf (2011). Dharma: Its Early History in Law, Religion, and Narrative. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 36–37. ISBN 978-0-19-539423-8.
  27. ^ Dhand, Arti (17 December 2002). "The Dharma of Ethics, the Ethics of Dharma: Quizzing the Ideals of Hinduism". Journal of Religious Ethics. 30 (3): 351. doi:10.1111/1467-9795.00113. ISSN 1467-9795.
  28. ^ J. A. B. Van Buitenen, "Dharma and Moksa", Philosophy East and West, Volume 7, Number 1/2 (April–July 1957), p. 36.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Horsch, Paul, "From Creation Myth to World Law: the Early History of Dharma", Journal of Indian Philosophy, December 2004, Volume 32, Issue 5–6, pp. 423–448.
  30. ^ Hermann Grassmann, Worterbuch zum Rig-veda (German Edition), Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1636-7
  31. ^ a b c d e Steven Rosen (2006), Essential Hinduism, Praeger, ISBN 0-275-99006-0, pp. 34–45.
  32. ^ see:
    • "Dharma" Monier Monier-Williams, Monier Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary (2008 revision), pp. 543–544;
    • Carl Cappeller (1999), Monier-Williams: A Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Etymological and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo-European Languages, Asian Educational Services, ISBN 978-81-206-0369-1, pp. 510–512.
  33. ^ Jacobs, Stephen (2010). Hinduism Today. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 57. ISBN 9780826440273.
  34. ^ see:
  35. ^ see:
    • Albrecht Wezler, "Dharma in the Veda and the Dharmaśāstras", Journal of Indian Philosophy, December 2004, Volume 32, Issue 5–6, pp. 629–654
    • Johannes Heesterman (1978). "Veda and Dharma", in W. D. O'Flaherty (Ed.), The Concept of Duty in South Asia, New Delhi: Vikas, ISBN 978-0-7286-0032-4, pp. 80–95
    • K. L. Seshagiri Rao (1997), "Practitioners of Hindu Law: Ancient and Modern", Fordham Law Review, Volume 66, pp. 1185–1199.
  36. ^ Jacobs, Stephen (2010). Hinduism Today. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 58. ISBN 9780826440273.
  37. ^ see
    • अधर्मा "adharma", Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Germany (2011)
    • adharma Monier Williams Sanskrit Dictionary, University of Koeln, Germany (2009).
  38. ^ see:
    • Gavin Flood (1998), "Making moral decisions", in Paul Bowen (Editor), Themes and issues in Hinduism, ISBN 978-0-304-33851-1, Chapter 2, pp. 30–54 and 151–152;
    • Coward, H. (2004), "Hindu bioethics for the twenty-first century", JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 291(22), pp. 2759–2760;
    • J. A. B. Van Buitenen, "Dharma and Moksa", Philosophy East and West, Volume 7, Number 1/2 (Apr. – Jul., 1957), p. 37.
  39. ^ RgVeda 6.70.1, 8.41.10, 10.44.8, for secondary source see Karl Friedrich Geldner, Der Rigveda in Auswahl (2 vols.), Stuttgart; and Harvard Oriental Series, 33–36, Bd. 1–3: 1951.
  40. ^ Paul Horsch, "From Creation Myth to World Law: the Early History of Dharma", Journal of Indian Philosophy, December 2004, Volume 32, Issue 5–6, pp. 430–431.
  41. ^ P. Thieme, Gedichte aus dem Rig-Veda, Reclam Universal-Bibliothek Nr. 8930, p. 52.
  42. ^ Paul Horsch, "From Creation Myth to World Law: the Early History of Dharma", Journal of Indian Philosophy, December 2004, Volume 32, Issue 5–6, pp. 430–432.
  43. ^ a b Joel Brereton (2004), "Dharman in the RgVeda", Journal of Indian Philosophy, Vol. 32, pp. 449–489. "There are Indo-European parallels to dhárman (cf. Wennerberg 1981: 95f.), but the only Iranian equivalent is Old Persian darmān, 'remedy', which has little bearing on Indo-Aryan dhárman. There is thus no evidence that IIr. *dharman was a significant culture word during the Indo-Iranian period." (p. 449) "The origin of the concept of dharman rests in its formation. It is a Vedic, rather than an Indo-Iranian word, and a more recent coinage than many other key religious terms of the Vedic tradition. Its meaning derives directly from dhr 'support, uphold, give foundation to' and therefore 'foundation' is a reasonable gloss in most of its attestations." (p. 485)
  44. ^ Morreall, John; Sonn, Tamara (2011). The Religion Toolkit: A Complete Guide to Religious Studies. John Wiley & Sons. p. 324. ISBN 978-1-4443-4371-7.
  45. ^ a b c d e f Paul Hacker (1965), "Dharma in Hinduism", Journal of Indian Philosophy, Volume 34, Issue 5, pp. 479–496 (English translated version by Donald R. Davis (2006)).
  46. ^ Etienne Lamotte, Bibliothèque du Museon 43, Louvain, 1958, p. 249.
  47. ^ Barbara Holdrege (2004), "Dharma" in: Mittal & Thursby (Editors) The Hindu World, New York: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-21527-7, pp. 213–248.
  48. ^ a b Koller, J. M. (1972), "Dharma: an expression of universal order", Philosophy East and West, 22(2), pp. 136–142.
  49. ^ Māyā Monier-Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary, ISBN 978-81-206-0369-1
  50. ^ Northrop, F. S. C. (1949), "Naturalistic and cultural foundations for a more effective international law", Yale Law Journal, 59, pp. 1430–1441.
  51. ^ Day 1982, pp. 42–44.
  52. ^ "Dharma", The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th Ed. (2013), Columbia University Press, Gale, ISBN 978-0-7876-5015-5
  53. ^ a b J. A. B. Van Buitenen, "Dharma and Moksa", Philosophy East and West, Vol. 7, No. 1/2 (Apr. – Jul., 1957), pp. 33–40
  54. ^ "Sanatana dharma". Encyclopædia Britannica, 18 Jun. 2009. Accessed 14 September 2021.
  55. ^ Conlon 1994, p. 50.
  56. ^ Fritzman 2015, p. 326.
  57. ^ Kumar & Choudhury 2020, p. 8.
  58. ^ Grimes 1996, p. 12.
  59. ^ Grimes 1996, p. 112-113.
  60. ^ a b Charles Johnston, The Mukhya Upanishads: Books of Hidden Wisdom, Kshetra, ISBN 978-1-4959-4653-0, p. 481, for discussion: pp. 478–505.
  61. ^ a b Horsch, Paul (translated by Jarrod Whitaker), "From Creation Myth to World Law: The early history of Dharma", Journal of Indian Philosophy, Vol 32, pp. 423–448, (2004).
  62. ^ Daniel H. H. Ingalls, "Dharma and Moksa", Philosophy East and West, Vol. 7, No. 1/2 (Apr. – Jul., 1957), pp. 43.
  63. ^ a b c Daniel H. H. Ingalls, "Dharma and Moksa", Philosophy East and West, Vol. 7, No. 1/2 (April – July 1957), pp. 41–48.
  64. ^ The Mahābhārata: Book 11: The Book of the Women; Book 12: The Book of Peace, Part 1 By Johannes Adrianus Bernardus Buitenen, James L. Fitzgerald p. 124.
  65. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 17: Mahaprasthanika Parva: Section 3".
  66. ^ There is considerable amount of literature on dharma-related discussion in Hindu Epics: of Egoism versus Altruism, Individualism versus Social Virtues and Tradition; for examples, see:
    • Johann Jakob Meyer (1989), Sexual life in ancient India, ISBN 81-208-0638-7, Motilal Banarsidass, pp. 92–93; Quote – "In Indian literature, especially in Mahabharata over and over again is heard the energetic cry – Each is alone. None belongs to anyone else, we are all but strangers to strangers; (...), none knows the other, the self belongs only to self. Man is born alone, alone he lives, alone he dies, alone he tastes the fruit of his deeds and his ways, it is only his work that bears him company. (...) Our body and spiritual organism is ever changing; what belongs, then, to us? (...) Thus, too, there is really no teacher or leader for anyone, each is his own Guru, and must go along the road to happiness alone. Only the self is the friend of man, only the self is the foe of man; from others nothing comes to him. Therefore, what must be done is to honor, to assert one's self..."; Quote – "(in parts of the epic), the most thoroughgoing egoism and individualism is stressed..."
    • Raymond F. Piper (1954), "In Support of Altruism in Hinduism", Journal of Bible and Religion, Vol. 22, No. 3 (Jul., 1954), pp. 178–183
    • J Ganeri (2010), A Return to the Self: Indians and Greeks on Life as Art and Philosophical Therapy, Royal Institute of Philosophy supplement, 85(66), pp. 119–135.
  67. ^ Daniel H. H. Ingalls, "Dharma and Moksa", Philosophy East and West, Vol. 7, No. 1/2 (Apr. – Jul., 1957), pp. 44–45; Quote – "(...)In the Epic, free will has the upper hand. Only when a man's effort is frustrated or when he is overcome with grief does he become a predestinarian (believer in destiny)."; Quote – "This association of success with the doctrine of free will or human effort (purusakara) was felt so clearly that among the ways of bringing about a king's downfall is given the following simple advice: 'Belittle free will to him, and emphasise destiny.'" (Mahabharata 12.106.20).
  68. ^ Huston Smith, The World Religions, ISBN 978-0-06-166018-4, HarperOne (2009); For summary notes: Background to Hindu Literature 2004-09-22 at the Wayback Machine
  69. ^ a b c Klaus Klostermaier, A survey of Hinduism, SUNY Press, ISBN 0-88706-807-3, Chapter 3: "Hindu dharma".
  70. ^ Jha, Nyayasutras with Vatsyayana Bhasya, 2 vols, Oriental Books (1939).
  71. ^ a b The yoga-system of Patanjali The ancient Hindu doctrine of concentration of mind, embracing the mnemonic rules, called Yoga-sutras, James Haughton Woods (1914), Harvard University Press[page needed]
  72. ^ The yoga-system of Patanjali Yoga-sutras, James Haughton Woods (1914), Harvard University Press, pp. 178–180.
  73. ^ The yoga-system of Patanjali Yoga-sutras, James Haughton Woods (1914), Harvard University Press, pp. 180–181.
  74. ^ The yoga-system of Patanjali Yoga-sutras, James Haughton Woods (1914), Harvard University Press, pp. 181–191.
  75. ^ Kumarila, Tantravarttika, Anandasramasamskrtagranthavalih, Vol. 97, pp. 204–205; For an English Translation, see Jha (1924), Bibliotheca Indica, Vol. 161, Vol. 1.
  76. ^ Olivelle, Patrick. Dharmasūtras: The Law Codes of Ancient India. Oxford World Classics, 1999.
  77. ^ a b Paul Hacker (1965), "Dharma in Hinduism", Journal of Indian Philosophy, Volume 34, Issue 5, pp. 487–489 (English translated version by Donald R. Davis (2006)).
  78. ^ a b c d e Alf Hiltebeitel (2011), Dharma: Its Early History in Law, Religion, and Narrative, ISBN 978-0-19-539423-8, Oxford University Press, pp. 215–227.
  79. ^ Thapar, R. (1995), The first millennium BC in northern India, Recent perspectives of early Indian history, 80–141.
  80. ^ Thomas R. Trautmann (1964), "On the Translation of the Term Varna", Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, Vol. 7, No. 2 (Jul., 1964), pp. 196–201.
  81. ^ see:
    • Van Buitenen, J. A. B. (1957). "Dharma and Moksa". Philosophy East and West, Volume 7, Number 1/2 (April – July 1957), pp. 38–39
    • Koller, J. M. (1972), "Dharma: an expression of universal order", Philosophy East and West, 22(2), pp. 131–144.
  82. ^ Kane, P.V. (1962), History of Dharmasastra (Ancient and Medieval Religious and Civil Law in India), Volume 1, pp. 2–10.
  83. ^ Olivelle, P. (1993). The Asrama System: The history and hermeneutics of a religious institution, New York: Oxford University Press.
  84. ^ Alban G. Widgery, "The Principles of Hindu Ethics", International Journal of Ethics, Vol. 40, No. 2 (Jan., 1930), pp. 232–245.
  85. ^ a b see:
    • Koller, J. M. (1972), "Dharma: an expression of universal order", Philosophy East and West, 22(2), pp. 131–144.
    • Karl H. Potter (1958), "Dharma and Mokṣa from a Conversational Point of View", Philosophy East and West, Vol. 8, No. 1/2 (April – July 1958), pp. 49–63.
    • William F. Goodwin, "Ethics and Value in Indian Philosophy", Philosophy East and West, Vol. 4, No. 4 (Jan. 1955), pp. 321–344.
  86. ^ a b c Adam Bowles (2007), Dharma, Disorder, and the Political in Ancient India, Brill's Indological Library (Book 28), ISBN 978-90-04-15815-3, Chapter 3.
  87. ^ Derrett, J. D. M. (1959), "Bhu-bharana, bhu-palana, bhu-bhojana: an Indian conundrum", Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 22, pp. 108–123.
  88. ^ Jan Gonda, "Ancient Indian Kingship from the Religious Point of View", Numen, Vol. 3, Issue 1 (Jan., 1956), pp. 36–71.
  89. ^ Kumar, Shailendra; Choudhury, Sanghamitra (2021). "Ancient Vedic Literature and Human Rights: Resonances and Dissonances". Cogent Social Sciences. 7 (1). doi:10.1080/23311886.2020.1858562. S2CID 234164343.
  90. ^ Gächter, Othmar (1998). "Anthropos". Anthropos Institute.
  91. ^ a b Patrick Olivelle (1999), The Dharmasutras: The law codes of ancient India, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-283882-2
  92. ^ Donald Davis, Jr., "A Realist View of Hindu Law", Ratio Juris. Vol. 19 No. 3 September 2006, pp. 287–313.
  93. ^ Lariviere, Richard W. (2003), The Naradasmrti, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass
  94. ^ Jean Brown, Hannah (2019). Key Tenets of Classical Buddhist Dharma. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature. p. 477.
  95. ^ a b What is the Triple Gem Dhamma: Good Dhamma is of three sorts. Ajaan Lee Dhammadharo (1994), p 33.
  96. ^ Cort, John E. (2001). Jains in the World: Religious Values and Ideology in India. Oxford University Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-19-803037-9.
  97. ^ Peter B. Clarke; Peter Beyer (2009). The World's Religions: Continuities and Transformations. Taylor & Francis. p. 325. ISBN 978-1-135-21100-4.
  98. ^ Brekke, Torkel (2002). Makers of Modern Indian Religion in the Late Nineteenth Century. Oxford University Press. p. 124. ISBN 978-0-19-925236-7.
  99. ^ Cort, John E. (2001). Jains in the World: Religious Values and Ideology in India. Oxford University Press. pp. 192–194. ISBN 978-0-19-803037-9.
  100. ^ Jain 2011, p. 128.
  101. ^ Jain 2012, p. 22.
  102. ^ Cort, John E. (1998). Open Boundaries: Jain Communities and Cultures in Indian History. State University of New York Press. pp. 10–11. ISBN 978-0-7914-3786-5.
  103. ^ a b Paul Dundas (2003). The Jains (2 ed.). Routledge. pp. 93–95. ISBN 978-0-415-26605-5.
  104. ^ W. Owen Cole (2014), in Pashaura Singh, Louis E. Fenech (Editors), The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies, ISBN 978-0-19-969930-8, Oxford University Press, pp. 254.
  105. ^ Verne Dusenbery (2014), in Pashaura Singh and Louis E. Fenech (Editors), The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies, ISBN 978-0-19-969930-8, Oxford University Press, pp. 560–568.
  106. ^ Kamil Zvelebil (1973). The Smile of Murugan: On Tamil Literature of South India. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 156–171. ISBN 90-04-03591-5. Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  107. ^ Mohan Lal (1992). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: Sasay to Zorgot. Sahitya Akademi. pp. 4333–4334, 4341–4342. ISBN 978-81-260-1221-3.
  108. ^ Kaushik Roy (2012). Hinduism and the Ethics of Warfare in South Asia: From Antiquity to the Present. Cambridge University Press. pp. 144–154. ISBN 978-1-107-01736-8.
  109. ^ Swamiji Iraianban (1997). Ambrosia of Thirukkural. Abhinav Publications. p. 13. ISBN 978-81-7017-346-5.
  110. ^ a b M. S. Purnalingam Pillai (2015). Tamil Literature. Chennai: International Institute of Tamil Studies. p. 75.
  111. ^ Narula, S. (2006), International Journal of Constitutional Law, 4(4), pp. 741–751.

Sources edit

  • Sanatana Dharma: an advanced text book of Hindu religion and Ethics. Central Hindu College, Benaras. 1904.
  • Dasgupta, Surendranath (1955) [1949]. A History of Indian Philosophy: Indian Pluralism. Vol. IV. Cambridge University Press. pp. 2–11.
  • Grimes, John A. (1996). A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy: Sanskrit Terms Defined in English. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0791430677.
  • Day, Terence P. (1982), The Conception of Punishment in Early Indian Literature, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, ISBN 978-0-919812-15-4
  • Murthy, K. Krishna. "Dharma – Its Etymology." The Tibet Journal, Vol. XXI, No. 1, Spring 1966, pp. 84–87.
  • Olivelle, Patrick (2009). Dharma: Studies in Its Semantic, Cultural and Religious History. Delhi: MLBD. ISBN 978-81-208-3338-8.
  • Conlon, Frank F. (1994). "Hindu revival and Indian womanhood: The image and status of women in the writings of Vishnubawa Brahamachari". South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies. 17 (2): 43–61. doi:10.1080/00856409408723205.
  • Kumar, Shailendra; Choudhury, Sanghamitra (2020). "Ancient Vedic Literature and Human Rights: Resonances and Dissonances". Cogent Social Sciences. 7 (1). doi:10.1080/23311886.2020.1858562. S2CID 234164343.
  • Fritzman, J.M. (2015). "The Bhagavadgītā, Sen, and Anderson". International Journal of the Philosophical Traditions of the East. 25 (4): 319–338. doi:10.1080/09552367.2015.1102693. S2CID 146705129.
  • Jain, Vijay K. (2012), Acharya Amritchandra's Purushartha Siddhyupaya, Vikalp Printers, ISBN 978-81-903639-4-5
  • Jain, Vijay K. (2011), Acharya Umasvami's Tattvārthsūtra, Vikalp Printers, ISBN 978-81-903639-2-1

External links edit

  • (archived 28 February 2010)
  • Buddhism A–Z: "D" Entries
  • Rajiv Malhotra, Dharma Is Not The Same As Religion (huffingtonpost.com)

dharma, this, article, about, concept, found, indian, religions, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, dharna, ɑːr, sanskrit, धर, romanized, pronounced, dʱɐrmɐ, pali, dhamma, concept, with, multiple, meanings, indian, religions, hinduism, buddhism, jain. This article is about the concept found in Indian religions For other uses see Dharma disambiguation Not to be confused with Dharna Dharma ˈ d ɑːr m e 7 Sanskrit धर म romanized Dharma pronounced dʱɐrmɐ Pali Dhamma is a key concept with multiple meanings in the Indian religions of Hinduism Buddhism Jainism and Sikhism among others 8 Although no single word translation exists for dharma in English or other European languages 9 the term is commonly understood as referring to order and custom that sustain life virtue or religious and moral duties 10 11 DharmaVirtues such as ahimsa non violence 1 Yoga personal behaviour 2 Law and justice 3 Rituals and rites of passage 4 Sannyasa and stages of life 5 Duties such as learning from teachers 6 In Hinduism dharma denotes behaviours that are considered to be in accord with Ṛta the order and custom that makes life and universe possible 12 note 1 This includes duties rights laws conduct virtues and right way of living 13 The concept is believed to have a transtemporal validity 14 and is one of the four Puruṣarthas In Buddhism dharma refers to cosmic law and order 12 15 as expressed by the teachings of the Buddha 12 15 In Buddhist philosophy dhamma dharma is also the term for phenomena 16 note 2 Dharma in Jainism refers to the teachings of Tirthankara Jina 12 and the body of doctrine pertaining to the purification and moral transformation of humans In Sikhism dharma indicates the path of righteousness proper religious practices and performing one s own moral duties 17 The concept of dharma was in use in the historical Vedic religion and its meaning and conceptual scope has evolved over several millennia 18 The ancient Tamil text Tirukkuṟaḷ despite being a collection of aphoristic teachings on dharma aram artha porul and kama inpam 19 453 20 82 is completely and exclusively based on aṟam the Tamil term for dharma 21 55 As with the other components of the Puruṣartha the concept of dharma is pan Indian The antonym of dharma is adharma Contents 1 Etymology 2 Definition 3 History 3 1 Eusebeia and dharma 3 2 Rta maya and dharma 4 Hinduism 4 1 In Vedas and Upanishads 4 2 In the Epics 4 3 According to 4th century Vatsyayana 4 4 According to Patanjali Yoga 4 5 Sources 4 6 Dharma life stages and social stratification 4 7 Dharma and poverty 4 8 Dharma and law 5 Buddhism 5 1 Buddha s teachings 5 2 Chan Buddhism 5 3 Theravada Buddhism 6 Jainism 6 1 Dharmastikaya 7 Sikhism 8 In Sangam literature 9 Dharma in symbols 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Sources 13 External linksEtymology edit nbsp The Prakrit word dha ṃ ma 𑀥 𑀫 Sanskrit Dharma धर म in the Brahmi script as inscribed by Emperor Ashoka in his Edicts of Ashoka 3rd century BCE The word dharma has roots in the Sanskrit dhr which means to hold or to support and is related to Latin firmus firm stable 22 From this it takes the meaning of what is established or firm and hence law It is derived from an older Vedic Sanskrit n stem dharman with a literal meaning of bearer supporter in a religious sense conceived as an aspect of Rta 23 In the Rigveda the word appears as an n stem dharman with a range of meanings encompassing something established or firm in the literal sense of prods or poles Figuratively it means sustainer and supporter of deities It is semantically similar to the Greek themis fixed decree statute law 24 In Classical Sanskrit and in the Vedic Sanskrit of the Atharvaveda the stem is thematic dharma Devanagari धर म In Prakrit and Pali it is rendered dhamma In some contemporary Indian languages and dialects it alternatively occurs as dharm In the 3rd century BCE the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka translated dharma into Greek and Aramaic and he used the Greek word eusebeia eὐsebeia piety spiritual maturity or godliness in the Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription and the Kandahar Greek Edicts 25 In the Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription he used the Aramaic word קשיטא qsyṭ truth rectitude 26 Definition editDharma is a concept of central importance in Indian philosophy and religion 27 It has multiple meanings in Hinduism Buddhism Sikhism and Jainism 8 It is difficult to provide a single concise definition for dharma as the word has a long and varied history and straddles a complex set of meanings and interpretations 28 There is no equivalent single word synonym for dharma in western languages 9 There have been numerous conflicting attempts to translate ancient Sanskrit literature with the word dharma into German English and French The concept claims Paul Horsch 29 has caused exceptional difficulties for modern commentators and translators For example while Grassmann s 30 translation of Rig Veda identifies seven different meanings of dharma Karl Friedrich Geldner in his translation of the Rig Veda employs 20 different translations for dharma including meanings such as law order duty custom quality and model among others 29 However the word dharma has become a widely accepted loanword in English and is included in all modern unabridged English dictionaries The root of the word dharma is dhr which means to support hold or bear It is the thing that regulates the course of change by not participating in change but that principle which remains constant 31 Monier Williams the widely cited resource for definitions and explanation of Sanskrit words and concepts of Hinduism offers 32 numerous definitions of the word dharma such as that which is established or firm steadfast decree statute law practice custom duty right justice virtue morality ethics religion religious merit good works nature character quality property Yet each of these definitions is incomplete while the combination of these translations does not convey the total sense of the word In common parlance dharma means right way of living and path of rightness 31 Dharma also has connotations of order and when combined with the word sanatana it can also be described as eternal truth 33 The meaning of the word dharma depends on the context and its meaning has evolved as ideas of Hinduism have developed through history In the earliest texts and ancient myths of Hinduism dharma meant cosmic law the rules that created the universe from chaos as well as rituals in later Vedas Upanishads Puranas and the Epics the meaning became refined richer and more complex and the word was applied to diverse contexts 18 In certain contexts dharma designates human behaviours considered necessary for order of things in the universe principles that prevent chaos behaviours and action necessary to all life in nature society family as well as at the individual level 12 18 34 note 1 Dharma encompasses ideas such as duty rights character vocation religion customs and all behaviour considered appropriate correct or morally upright 35 For further context the word varnasramdharma is often used in its place defined as dharma specifically related to the stage of life one is in 36 The antonym of dharma is adharma Sanskrit अधर म 37 meaning that which is not dharma As with dharma the word adharma includes and implies many ideas in common parlance adharma means that which is against nature immoral unethical wrong or unlawful 38 In Buddhism dharma incorporates the teachings and doctrines of the founder of Buddhism the Buddha History editAccording to Pandurang Vaman Kane author of the authoritative book History of Dharmasastra the word dharma appears at least fifty six times in the hymns of the Rigveda as an adjective or noun According to Paul Horsch 29 the word dharma has its origin in Vedic Hinduism The hymns of the Rig Veda claim Brahman created the universe from chaos they hold dhar the earth and sun and stars apart they support dhar the sky away and distinct from earth and they stabilise dhar the quaking mountains and plains 29 39 The gods mainly Indra then deliver and hold order from disorder harmony from chaos stability from instability actions recited in the Veda with the root of word dharma 18 In hymns composed after the mythological verses the word dharma takes expanded meaning as a cosmic principle and appears in verses independent of gods It evolves into a concept claims Paul Horsch 29 that has a dynamic functional sense in Atharvaveda for example where it becomes the cosmic law that links cause and effect through a subject Dharma in these ancient texts also takes a ritual meaning The ritual is connected to the cosmic and dharmani is equated to ceremonial devotion to the principles that gods used to create order from disorder the world from chaos 40 Past the ritual and cosmic sense of dharma that link the current world to mythical universe the concept extends to an ethical social sense that links human beings to each other and to other life forms It is here that dharma as a concept of law emerges in Hinduism 41 42 Dharma and related words are found in the oldest Vedic literature of Hinduism in later Vedas Upanishads Puranas and the Epics the word dharma also plays a central role in the literature of other Indian religions founded later such as Buddhism and Jainism 18 According to Brereton Dharman occurs 63 times in Rig veda in addition words related to Dharman also appear in Rig veda for example once as dharmakrt 6 times as satyadharman and once as dharmavant 4 times as dharman and twice as dhariman 43 Indo European parallels for dharma are known but the only Iranian equivalent is Old Persian darman remedy the meaning of which is rather removed from Indo Aryan dharman suggesting that the word dharma did not have a major role in the Indo Iranian period and was principally developed more recently under the Vedic tradition 43 However it is thought that the Daena of Zoroastrianism also meaning the eternal Law or religion is related to Sanskrit dharma 44 Ideas in parts overlapping to Dharma are found in other ancient cultures such as Chinese Tao Egyptian Maat Sumerian Me 31 Eusebeia and dharma edit nbsp The Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription is from Indian Emperor Asoka in 258 BCE and found in Afghanistan The inscription renders the word dharma in Sanskrit as eusebeia in Greek suggesting dharma in ancient India meant spiritual maturity devotion piety duty towards and reverence for human community 45 In the mid 20th century an inscription of the Indian Emperor Asoka from the year 258 BCE was discovered in Afghanistan the Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription This rock inscription contains Greek and Aramaic text According to Paul Hacker 45 on the rock appears a Greek rendering for the Sanskrit word dharma the word eusebeia 45 Scholars of Hellenistic Greece explain eusebeia as a complex concept Eusebia means not only to venerate gods but also spiritual maturity a reverential attitude toward life and includes the right conduct toward one s parents siblings and children the right conduct between husband and wife and the conduct between biologically unrelated people This rock inscription concludes Paul Hacker 45 suggests dharma in India about 2300 years ago was a central concept and meant not only religious ideas but ideas of right of good of one s duty toward the human community 46 Rta maya and dharma edit The evolving literature of Hinduism linked dharma to two other important concepts Ṛta and Maya Ṛta in Vedas is the truth and cosmic principle which regulates and coordinates the operation of the universe and everything within it 47 48 Maya in Rig veda and later literature means illusion fraud deception magic that misleads and creates disorder 49 thus is contrary to reality laws and rules that establish order predictability and harmony Paul Horsch 29 suggests Ṛta and dharma are parallel concepts the former being a cosmic principle the latter being of moral social sphere while Maya and dharma are also correlative concepts the former being that which corrupts law and moral life the later being that which strengthens law and moral life 48 50 Day proposes dharma is a manifestation of Ṛta but suggests Ṛta may have been subsumed into a more complex concept of dharma as the idea developed in ancient India over time in a nonlinear manner 51 The following verse from the Rigveda is an example where rta and dharma are linked O Indra lead us on the path of Rta on the right path over all evils RV 10 133 6Hinduism editDharma is an organising principle in Hinduism that applies to human beings in solitude in their interaction with human beings and nature as well as between inanimate objects to all of cosmos and its parts 31 It refers to the order and customs which make life and universe possible and includes behaviours rituals rules that govern society and ethics 12 note 1 Hindu dharma includes the religious duties moral rights and duties of each individual as well as behaviours that enable social order right conduct and those that are virtuous 52 Dharma according to Van Buitenen 53 is that which all existing beings must accept and respect to sustain harmony and order in the world It is neither the act nor the result but the natural laws that guide the act and create the result to prevent chaos in the world It is innate characteristic that makes the being what it is It is claims Van Buitenen the pursuit and execution of one s nature and true calling thus playing one s role in cosmic concert In Hinduism it is the dharma of the bee to make honey of cow to give milk of sun to radiate sunshine of river to flow 53 In terms of humanity dharma is the need for the effect of and essence of service and interconnectedness of all life 31 45 In its true essence dharma means for a Hindu to expand the mind Furthermore it represents the direct connection between the individual and the societal phenomena that bind the society together In the way societal phenomena affect the conscience of the individual similarly may the actions of an individual alter the course of the society for better or for worse This has been subtly echoed by the credo धर म ध रयत प रज meaning dharma is that which holds and provides support to the social construct In Hinduism dharma generally includes various aspects Sanatana Dharma the eternal and unchanging principals of dharma 54 Varṇ asrama dharma one s duty at specific stages of life or inherent duties 55 Sva dharma one s own individual or personal duty 56 10 Apad dharma dharma prescribed at the time of adversities 10 Sadharana dharma moral duties irrespective of the stages of life 57 note 3 Yuga dharma dharma which is valid for a yuga an epoch or age as established by Hindu tradition and thus may change at the conclusion of its time 11 59 In Vedas and Upanishads edit The history section of this article discusses the development of dharma concept in Vedas This development continued in the Upanishads and later ancient scripts of Hinduism In Upanishads the concept of dharma continues as universal principle of law order harmony and truth It acts as the regulatory moral principle of the Universe It is explained as law of righteousness and equated to satya Sanskrit सत य truth 60 61 in hymn 1 4 14 of Brhadaranyaka Upanishad as follows धर म तस म द धर म त पर न स त य अथ अबल य न बल य सम श सत धर म ण यथ र ज ञ वम य व स धर म सत य व तत तस म त सत य वदन तम ह र धर म वदत त धर म व वदन त सत य वदत त य एतद ध य व तद भय भवत Nothing is higher than dharma The weak overcomes the stronger by dharma as over a king Truly that dharma is the Truth Satya Therefore when a man speaks the Truth they say He speaks the Dharma and if he speaks Dharma they say He speaks the Truth For both are one Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 1 4 xiv 60 61 In the Epics edit The Hindu religion and philosophy claims Daniel Ingalls 62 places major emphasis on individual practical morality In the Sanskrit epics this concern is omnipresent In the Second Book of Ramayana for example a peasant asks the King to do what dharma morally requires of him the King agrees and does so even though his compliance with the law of dharma costs him dearly Similarly dharma is at the centre of all major events in the life of Rama Sita and Lakshman in Ramayana claims Daniel Ingalls 63 Each episode of Ramayana presents life situations and ethical questions in symbolic terms The issue is debated by the characters finally the right prevails over wrong the good over evil For this reason in Hindu Epics the good morally upright law abiding king is referred to as dharmaraja 64 In Mahabharata the other major Indian epic similarly dharma is central and it is presented with symbolism and metaphors Near the end of the epic the god Yama referred to as dharma in the text is portrayed as taking the form of a dog to test the compassion of Yudhishthira who is told he may not enter paradise with such an animal but refuses to abandon his companion for which decision he is then praised by dharma 65 The value and appeal of the Mahabharata is not as much in its complex and rushed presentation of metaphysics in the 12th book claims Ingalls 63 because Indian metaphysics is more eloquently presented in other Sanskrit scriptures the appeal of Mahabharata like Ramayana is in its presentation of a series of moral problems and life situations to which there are usually three answers given according to Ingalls 63 one answer is of Bhima which is the answer of brute force an individual angle representing materialism egoism and self the second answer is of Yudhishthira which is always an appeal to piety and gods of social virtue and of tradition the third answer is of introspective Arjuna which falls between the two extremes and who claims Ingalls symbolically reveals the finest moral qualities of man The Epics of Hinduism are a symbolic treatise about life virtues customs morals ethics law and other aspects of dharma 66 There is extensive discussion of dharma at the individual level in the Epics of Hinduism observes Ingalls for example on free will versus destiny when and why human beings believe in either ultimately concluding that the strong and prosperous naturally uphold free will while those facing grief or frustration naturally lean towards destiny 67 The Epics of Hinduism illustrate various aspects of dharma they are a means of communicating dharma with metaphors 68 According to 4th century Vatsyayana edit According to Klaus Klostermaier 4th century CE Hindu scholar Vatsyayana explained dharma by contrasting it with adharma 69 Vatsyayana suggested that dharma is not merely in one s actions but also in words one speaks or writes and in thought According to Vatsyayana 69 70 Adharma of body hinsa violence steya steal theft pratisiddha maithuna sexual indulgence with someone other than one s partner Dharma of body dana charity paritrana succor of the distressed and paricarana rendering service to others Adharma from words one speaks or writes mithya falsehood parusa caustic talk sucana calumny and asambaddha absurd talk Dharma from words one speaks or writes satya truth and facts hitavacana talking with good intention priyavacana gentle kind talk svadhyaya self study Adharma of mind paradroha ill will to anyone paradravyabhipsa covetousness nastikya denial of the existence of morals and religiosity Dharma of mind daya compassion asprha disinterestedness and sraddha faith in others According to Patanjali Yoga edit In the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali the dharma is real in the Vedanta it is unreal 71 Dharma is part of yoga suggests Patanjali the elements of Hindu dharma are the attributes qualities and aspects of yoga 71 Patanjali explained dharma in two categories yamas restraints and niyamas observances 69 The five yamas according to Patanjali are abstain from injury to all living creatures abstain from falsehood satya abstain from unauthorised appropriation of things of value from another acastrapurvaka abstain from coveting or sexually cheating on your partner and abstain from expecting or accepting gifts from others 72 The five yama apply in action speech and mind In explaining yama Patanjali clarifies that certain professions and situations may require qualification in conduct For example a fisherman must injure a fish but he must attempt to do this with least trauma to fish and the fisherman must try to injure no other creature as he fishes 73 The five niyamas observances are cleanliness by eating pure food and removing impure thoughts such as arrogance or jealousy or pride contentment in one s means meditation and silent reflection regardless of circumstances one faces study and pursuit of historic knowledge and devotion of all actions to the Supreme Teacher to achieve perfection of concentration 74 Sources edit Dharma is an empirical and experiential inquiry for every man and woman according to some texts of Hinduism 45 75 For example Apastamba Dharmasutra states Dharma and Adharma do not go around saying That is us Neither do gods nor gandharvas nor ancestors declare what is Dharma and what is Adharma Apastamba Dharmasutra 76 In other texts three sources and means to discover dharma in Hinduism are described These according to Paul Hacker are 77 First learning historical knowledge such as Vedas Upanishads the Epics and other Sanskrit literature with the help of one s teacher Second observing the behaviour and example of good people The third source applies when neither one s education nor example exemplary conduct is known In this case atmatusti is the source of dharma in Hinduism that is the good person reflects and follows what satisfies his heart his own inner feeling what he feels driven to 77 Dharma life stages and social stratification edit Main articles Asrama and Puruṣartha Some texts of Hinduism outline dharma for society and at the individual level Of these the most cited one is Manusmriti which describes the four Varnas their rights and duties 78 Most texts of Hinduism however discuss dharma with no mention of Varna caste 79 Other dharma texts and Smritis differ from Manusmriti on the nature and structure of Varnas 78 Yet other texts question the very existence of varna Bhrigu in the Epics for example presents the theory that dharma does not require any varnas 80 In practice medieval India is widely believed to be a socially stratified society with each social strata inheriting a profession and being endogamous Varna was not absolute in Hindu dharma individuals had the right to renounce and leave their Varna as well as their asramas of life in search of moksa 78 81 While neither Manusmriti nor succeeding Smritis of Hinduism ever use the word varnadharma that is the dharma of varnas or varnasramadharma that is the dharma of varnas and asramas the scholarly commentary on Manusmriti use these words and thus associate dharma with varna system of India 78 82 In 6th century India even Buddhist kings called themselves protectors of varnasramadharma that is dharma of varna and asramas of life 78 83 At the individual level some texts of Hinduism outline four asramas or stages of life as individual s dharma These are 84 1 brahmacarya the life of preparation as a student 2 gṛhastha the life of the householder with family and other social roles 3 vanprastha or aranyaka the life of the forest dweller transitioning from worldly occupations to reflection and renunciation and 4 sannyasa the life of giving away all property becoming a recluse and devotion to moksa spiritual matters The four stages of life complete the four human strivings in life according to Hinduism 85 Dharma enables the individual to satisfy the striving for stability and order a life that is lawful and harmonious the striving to do the right thing be good be virtuous earn religious merit be helpful to others interact successfully with society The other three strivings are Artha the striving for means of life such as food shelter power security material wealth and so forth Kama the striving for sex desire pleasure love emotional fulfilment and so forth and Moksa the striving for spiritual meaning liberation from life rebirth cycle self realisation in this life and so forth The four stages are neither independent nor exclusionary in Hindu dharma 85 Dharma and poverty edit Dharma being necessary for individual and society is dependent on poverty and prosperity in a society according to Hindu dharma scriptures For example according to Adam Bowles 86 Shatapatha Brahmana 11 1 6 24 links social prosperity and dharma through water Waters come from rains it claims when rains are abundant there is prosperity on the earth and this prosperity enables people to follow Dharma moral and lawful life In times of distress of drought of poverty everything suffers including relations between human beings and the human ability to live according to dharma 86 In Rajadharmaparvan 91 34 8 the relationship between poverty and dharma reaches a full circle A land with less moral and lawful life suffers distress and as distress rises it causes more immoral and unlawful life which further increases distress 86 87 Those in power must follow the raja dharma that is dharma of rulers because this enables the society and the individual to follow dharma and achieve prosperity 88 Dharma and law edit Main article Hindu law The notion of dharma as duty or propriety is found in India s ancient legal and religious texts Common examples of such use are pitri dharma meaning a person s duty as a father putra dharma a person s duty as a son raj dharma a person s duty as a king and so forth 89 In Hindu philosophy justice social harmony and happiness requires that people live per dharma The Dharmashastra is a record of these guidelines and rules 90 The available evidence suggest India once had a large collection of dharma related literature sutras shastras four of the sutras survive and these are now referred to as Dharmasutras 91 Along with laws of Manu in Dharmasutras exist parallel and different compendium of laws such as the laws of Narada and other ancient scholars 92 93 These different and conflicting law books are neither exclusive nor do they supersede other sources of dharma in Hinduism These Dharmasutras include instructions on education of the young their rites of passage customs religious rites and rituals marital rights and obligations death and ancestral rites laws and administration of justice crimes punishments rules and types of evidence duties of a king as well as morality 91 Buddhism editIn Buddhism dharma means cosmic law and order 12 15 but is also applied to the teachings of the Buddha 12 15 In Buddhist philosophy dhamma dharma is also the term for phenomena 15 16 Buddha s teachings edit For practising Buddhists references to dharma dhamma in Pali particularly as the dharma generally means the teachings of the Buddha commonly known throughout the East as Buddhadharma It includes especially the discourses on the fundamental principles such as the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path as opposed to the parables and to the poems The Buddha s teachings explain that in order to end suffering dharma or the right thoughts understanding actions and livelihood should be cultivated 94 The status of dharma is regarded variably by different Buddhist traditions Some regard it as an ultimate truth or as the fount of all things which lie beyond the three realms Sanskrit tridhatu and the wheel of becoming Sanskrit bhavachakra Others who regard the Buddha as simply an enlightened human being see the dharma as the essence of the 84 000 different aspects of the teaching Tibetan chos sgo brgyad khri bzhi strong that the Buddha gave to various types of people based upon their individual propensities and capabilities Dharma refers not only to the sayings of the Buddha but also to the later traditions of interpretation and addition that the various schools of Buddhism have developed to help explain and to expand upon the Buddha s teachings For others still they see the dharma as referring to the truth or the ultimate reality of the way that things really are Tibetan Cho The dharma is one of the Three Jewels of Buddhism in which practitioners of Buddhism seek refuge or that upon which one relies for his or her lasting happiness The Three Jewels of Buddhism are the Buddha meaning the mind s perfection of enlightenment the dharma meaning the teachings and the methods of the Buddha and the Sangha meaning the community of practitioners who provide one another guidance and support Chan Buddhism edit Dharma is employed in Chan Buddhism in a specific context in relation to transmission of authentic doctrine understanding and bodhi recognised in dharma transmission Theravada Buddhism edit In Theravada Buddhism obtaining ultimate realisation of the dhamma is achieved in three phases learning practising and realising 95 In Pali Pariyatti the learning of the theory of dharma as contained within the suttas of the Pali canon Patipatti putting the theory into practice and Pativedha when one penetrates the dharma or through experience realises the truth of it 95 Jainism editMain article Dharma Jainism The word dharma in Jainism is found in all its key texts It has a contextual meaning and refers to a number of ideas In the broadest sense it means the teachings of the Jinas 12 or teachings of any competing spiritual school 96 a supreme path 97 socio religious duty 98 and that which is the highest mangala holy 99 The Tattvartha Sutra a major Jain text mentions dasa dharma lit ten dharmas with referring to ten righteous virtues forbearance modesty straightforwardness purity truthfulness self restraint austerity renunciation non attachment and celibacy 100 Acarya Amṛtacandra author of the Jain text Puruṣarthasiddhyupaya writes 101 A right believer should constantly meditate on virtues of dharma like supreme modesty in order to protect the Self from all contrary dispositions He should also cover up the shortcomings of others Puruṣarthasiddhyupaya 27 Dharmastikaya edit Further information Dravya The term dharmastikaya Sanskrit धर म स त क य also has a specific ontological and soteriological meaning in Jainism as a part of its theory of six dravya substance or a reality In the Jain tradition existence consists of jiva soul atman and ajiva non soul anatman the latter consisting of five categories inert non sentient atomic matter pudgalastikaya space akasa time kala principle of motion dharmastikaya and principle of rest adharmastikaya 102 103 The use of the term dharmastikaya to mean motion and to refer to an ontological sub category is peculiar to Jainism and not found in the metaphysics of Buddhism and various schools of Hinduism 103 Sikhism editMain article Sikhism nbsp SikhismFor Sikhs the word dharam Punjabi ਧਰਮ romanized dharam means the path of righteousness and proper religious practice 17 Guru Granth Sahib connotes dharma as duty and moral values 104 The 3HO movement in Western culture which has incorporated certain Sikh beliefs defines Sikh Dharma broadly as all that constitutes religion moral duty and way of life 105 In Sangam literature editMain article Sangam literature Several works of the Sangam and post Sangam period many of which are of Hindu or Jain origin emphasizes on dharma Most of these texts are based on aṟam the Tamil term for dharma The ancient Tamil moral text of the Tirukkuṟaḷ or Kural a text probably of Jain or Hindu origin 106 107 108 109 110 despite being a collection of aphoristic teachings on dharma aram artha porul and kama inpam 19 20 82 is completely and exclusively based on aṟam 21 The Naladiyar a Jain text of the post Sangam period follows a similar pattern as that of the Kural in emphasizing aṟam or dharma 110 70 Dharma in symbols edit nbsp The wheel in the centre of India s flag symbolises dharma The importance of dharma to Indian civilization is illustrated by India s decision in 1947 to include the Ashoka Chakra a depiction of the dharmachakra the wheel of dharma as the central motif on its flag 111 See also editAyyavazhi Dhammapada Karma List of Hindu empires and dynastiesNotes edit a b c From the Oxford Dictionary of World Religions In Hinduism dharma is a fundamental concept referring to the order and custom which make life and a universe possible and thus to the behaviours appropriate to the maintenance of that order 12 David Kalupahana The old Indian term dharma was retained by the Buddha to refer to phenomena or things However he was always careful to define this dharma as dependently arisen phenomena paticca samuppanna dhamma In order to distinguish this notion of dhamma from the Indian conception where the term dharma meant reality atman in an ontological sense the Buddha utilised the conception of result or consequence or fruit attha Sk artha to bring out the pragmatic meaning of dhamma 16 The common duties of Sadharana dharma is based on the idea that individuals Jiva are born with a number of debts hence through common moral duties prescribed in the Sadharana dharma would help to repay one s debts to the humanity 58 References editCitations edit see below J A B van Buitenen 1957 Dharma and Moksa Philosophy East and West 7 1 2 pp 33 40 James Fitzgerald 2004 Dharma and its Translation in the Mahabharata Journal of Indian philosophy 32 5 pp 671 685 Quote virtues enter the general topic of dharma as common or general dharma see David Frawley 2009 Yoga and Ayurveda Self Healing and Self Realization ISBN 978 0 9149 5581 8 Quote Yoga is a dharmic approach to the spiritual life Mark Harvey 1986 The Secular as Sacred Modern Asian Studies 20 2 pp 321 331 Bernard S Jackson 1975 From dharma to law The American Journal of Comparative Law Vol 23 No 3 Summer 1975 pp 490 512 Gavin Flood 1994 Hinduism in Jean Holm John Bowker Editors Rites of Passages ISBN 1 85567 102 6 Chapter 3 Quote Rites of passage are dharma in action Rites of passage a category of rituals Harold Coward 2004 Hindu bioethics for the twenty first century JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association 291 22 pp 2759 2760 Quote Hindu stages of life approach ashrama dharma see Austin Creel 1975 The Reexamination of Dharma in Hindu Ethics Philosophy East and West 25 2 pp 161 173 Quote Dharma pointed to duty and specified duties Gisela Trommsdorff 2012 Development of agentic regulation in cultural context the role of self and world views Child Development Perspectives 6 1 pp 19 26 Quote Neglect of one s duties dharma sacred duties toward oneself the family the community and humanity is seen as an indicator of immaturity Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 a b Dharma Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2016 08 18 a b See Ludo Rocher 2003 The Dharmasastra Chapter 4 in Gavin Flood Editor The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism ISBN 978 0 631 21535 6 Alban G Widgery The Principles of Hindu Ethics International Journal of Ethics Vol 40 No 2 Jan 1930 pp 232 245 a b c Grimes 1996 p 112 a b Britannica The Editors of Encyclopaedia 9 April 2019 Dharma Encyclopaedia Britannica Accessed 14 September 2021 a b c d e f g h i j Dharma The Oxford Dictionary of World Religions see Dharma The Columbia Encyclopedia 6th Ed 2013 Columbia University Press Gale ISBN 978 0 7876 5015 5 Steven Rosen 2006 Essential Hinduism Praeger ISBN 0 275 99006 0 Chapter 3 Kumar Shailendra Choudhury Sanghamitra 2021 01 01 Meissner Richard ed Ancient Vedic Literature and Human Rights Resonances and Dissonances Cogent Social Sciences 7 1 1858562 doi 10 1080 23311886 2020 1858562 ISSN 2331 1886 a b c d e dhamma The New Concise Pali English Dictionary a b c David Kalupahana The Philosophy of the Middle Way SUNY Press 1986 pp 15 16 a b Rinehart Robin 2014 in Pashaura Singh Louis E Fenech Editors The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies ISBN 978 0 19 969930 8 Oxford University Press pp 138 139 a b c d e see English translated version by Jarrod Whitaker 2004 Horsch Paul From Creation Myth to World Law the Early History of Dharma Journal of Indian Philosophy December 2004 Volume 32 Issue 5 6 pp 423 448 Original peer reviewed publication in German Horsch Paul Vom Schoepfungsmythos zum Weltgesetz in Asiatische Studien Zeitschrift der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft fur Asiankunde Volume 21 Francke 1967 pp 31 61 English translated version by Donald R Davis 2006 Paul Hacker Dharma in Hinduism Journal of Indian Philosophy Volume 34 Issue 5 pp 479 496 Original peer reviewed publication in German Paul Hacker Dharma im Hinduismus in Zeitschrift fur Missionswissenschaft und Religionswissenschaft 49 1965 pp 93 106 a b Blackburn Stuart April 2000 Corruption and Redemption The Legend of Valluvar and Tamil Literary History Modern Asian Studies Cambridge University Press 34 2 453 doi 10 1017 S0026749X00003632 S2CID 144101632 a b N Sanjeevi 2006 First All India Tirukkural Seminar Papers 2nd ed Chennai University of Madras a b N Velusamy and Moses Michael Faraday Eds 2017 Why Should Thirukkural Be Declared the National Book of India in Tamil and English First ed Chennai Unique Media Integrators p 55 ISBN 978 93 85471 70 4 Chambers Dictionary of Etymology Barnhart R K editor 1998 Day 1982 pp 42 45 Brereton Joel P December 2004 Dharman In The Rgveda Journal of Indian Philosophy 32 5 6 449 489 doi 10 1007 s10781 004 8631 8 ISSN 0022 1791 S2CID 170807380 How did the Ramayana and Mahabharata come to be and what has dharma got to do with it 13 December 2018 Hiltebeitel Alf 2011 Dharma Its Early History in Law Religion and Narrative Oxford University Press USA pp 36 37 ISBN 978 0 19 539423 8 Dhand Arti 17 December 2002 The Dharma of Ethics the Ethics of Dharma Quizzing the Ideals of Hinduism Journal of Religious Ethics 30 3 351 doi 10 1111 1467 9795 00113 ISSN 1467 9795 J A B Van Buitenen Dharma and Moksa Philosophy East and West Volume 7 Number 1 2 April July 1957 p 36 a b c d e f Horsch Paul From Creation Myth to World Law the Early History of Dharma Journal of Indian Philosophy December 2004 Volume 32 Issue 5 6 pp 423 448 Hermann Grassmann Worterbuch zum Rig veda German Edition Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1636 7 a b c d e Steven Rosen 2006 Essential Hinduism Praeger ISBN 0 275 99006 0 pp 34 45 see Dharma Monier Monier Williams Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary 2008 revision pp 543 544 Carl Cappeller 1999 Monier Williams A Sanskrit English Dictionary Etymological and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo European Languages Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 81 206 0369 1 pp 510 512 Jacobs Stephen 2010 Hinduism Today Continuum International Publishing Group p 57 ISBN 9780826440273 see the order and custom which make life and a universe possible and thus to the behaviours appropriate to the maintenance of that order citation in The Oxford Dictionary of World Religions Britannica Concise Encyclopedia 2007 see Albrecht Wezler Dharma in the Veda and the Dharmasastras Journal of Indian Philosophy December 2004 Volume 32 Issue 5 6 pp 629 654 Johannes Heesterman 1978 Veda and Dharma in W D O Flaherty Ed The Concept of Duty in South Asia New Delhi Vikas ISBN 978 0 7286 0032 4 pp 80 95 K L Seshagiri Rao 1997 Practitioners of Hindu Law Ancient and Modern Fordham Law Review Volume 66 pp 1185 1199 Jacobs Stephen 2010 Hinduism Today Continuum International Publishing Group p 58 ISBN 9780826440273 see अधर म adharma Sanskrit English Dictionary Germany 2011 adharma Monier Williams Sanskrit Dictionary University of Koeln Germany 2009 see Gavin Flood 1998 Making moral decisions in Paul Bowen Editor Themes and issues in Hinduism ISBN 978 0 304 33851 1 Chapter 2 pp 30 54 and 151 152 Coward H 2004 Hindu bioethics for the twenty first century JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association 291 22 pp 2759 2760 J A B Van Buitenen Dharma and Moksa Philosophy East and West Volume 7 Number 1 2 Apr Jul 1957 p 37 RgVeda 6 70 1 8 41 10 10 44 8 for secondary source see Karl Friedrich Geldner Der Rigveda in Auswahl 2 vols Stuttgart and Harvard Oriental Series 33 36 Bd 1 3 1951 Paul Horsch From Creation Myth to World Law the Early History of Dharma Journal of Indian Philosophy December 2004 Volume 32 Issue 5 6 pp 430 431 P Thieme Gedichte aus dem Rig Veda Reclam Universal Bibliothek Nr 8930 p 52 Paul Horsch From Creation Myth to World Law the Early History of Dharma Journal of Indian Philosophy December 2004 Volume 32 Issue 5 6 pp 430 432 a b Joel Brereton 2004 Dharman in the RgVeda Journal of Indian Philosophy Vol 32 pp 449 489 There are Indo European parallels to dharman cf Wennerberg 1981 95f but the only Iranian equivalent is Old Persian darman remedy which has little bearing on Indo Aryan dharman There is thus no evidence that IIr dharman was a significant culture word during the Indo Iranian period p 449 The origin of the concept of dharman rests in its formation It is a Vedic rather than an Indo Iranian word and a more recent coinage than many other key religious terms of the Vedic tradition Its meaning derives directly from dhr support uphold give foundation to and therefore foundation is a reasonable gloss in most of its attestations p 485 Morreall John Sonn Tamara 2011 The Religion Toolkit A Complete Guide to Religious Studies John Wiley amp Sons p 324 ISBN 978 1 4443 4371 7 a b c d e f Paul Hacker 1965 Dharma in Hinduism Journal of Indian Philosophy Volume 34 Issue 5 pp 479 496 English translated version by Donald R Davis 2006 Etienne Lamotte Bibliotheque du Museon 43 Louvain 1958 p 249 Barbara Holdrege 2004 Dharma in Mittal amp Thursby Editors The Hindu World New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 21527 7 pp 213 248 a b Koller J M 1972 Dharma an expression of universal order Philosophy East and West 22 2 pp 136 142 Maya Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary ISBN 978 81 206 0369 1 Northrop F S C 1949 Naturalistic and cultural foundations for a more effective international law Yale Law Journal 59 pp 1430 1441 Day 1982 pp 42 44 Dharma The Columbia Encyclopedia 6th Ed 2013 Columbia University Press Gale ISBN 978 0 7876 5015 5 a b J A B Van Buitenen Dharma and Moksa Philosophy East and West Vol 7 No 1 2 Apr Jul 1957 pp 33 40 Sanatana dharma Encyclopaedia Britannica 18 Jun 2009 Accessed 14 September 2021 Conlon 1994 p 50 Fritzman 2015 p 326 Kumar amp Choudhury 2020 p 8 Grimes 1996 p 12 Grimes 1996 p 112 113 a b Charles Johnston The Mukhya Upanishads Books of Hidden Wisdom Kshetra ISBN 978 1 4959 4653 0 p 481 for discussion pp 478 505 a b Horsch Paul translated by Jarrod Whitaker From Creation Myth to World Law The early history of Dharma Journal of Indian Philosophy Vol 32 pp 423 448 2004 Daniel H H Ingalls Dharma and Moksa Philosophy East and West Vol 7 No 1 2 Apr Jul 1957 pp 43 a b c Daniel H H Ingalls Dharma and Moksa Philosophy East and West Vol 7 No 1 2 April July 1957 pp 41 48 The Mahabharata Book 11 The Book of the Women Book 12 The Book of Peace Part 1 By Johannes Adrianus Bernardus Buitenen James L Fitzgerald p 124 The Mahabharata Book 17 Mahaprasthanika Parva Section 3 There is considerable amount of literature on dharma related discussion in Hindu Epics of Egoism versus Altruism Individualism versus Social Virtues and Tradition for examples see Johann Jakob Meyer 1989 Sexual life in ancient India ISBN 81 208 0638 7 Motilal Banarsidass pp 92 93 Quote In Indian literature especially in Mahabharata over and over again is heard the energetic cry Each is alone None belongs to anyone else we are all but strangers to strangers none knows the other the self belongs only to self Man is born alone alone he lives alone he dies alone he tastes the fruit of his deeds and his ways it is only his work that bears him company Our body and spiritual organism is ever changing what belongs then to us Thus too there is really no teacher or leader for anyone each is his own Guru and must go along the road to happiness alone Only the self is the friend of man only the self is the foe of man from others nothing comes to him Therefore what must be done is to honor to assert one s self Quote in parts of the epic the most thoroughgoing egoism and individualism is stressed Raymond F Piper 1954 In Support of Altruism in Hinduism Journal of Bible and Religion Vol 22 No 3 Jul 1954 pp 178 183 J Ganeri 2010 A Return to the Self Indians and Greeks on Life as Art and Philosophical Therapy Royal Institute of Philosophy supplement 85 66 pp 119 135 Daniel H H Ingalls Dharma and Moksa Philosophy East and West Vol 7 No 1 2 Apr Jul 1957 pp 44 45 Quote In the Epic free will has the upper hand Only when a man s effort is frustrated or when he is overcome with grief does he become a predestinarian believer in destiny Quote This association of success with the doctrine of free will or human effort purusakara was felt so clearly that among the ways of bringing about a king s downfall is given the following simple advice Belittle free will to him and emphasise destiny Mahabharata 12 106 20 Huston Smith The World Religions ISBN 978 0 06 166018 4 HarperOne 2009 For summary notes Background to Hindu Literature Archived 2004 09 22 at the Wayback Machine a b c Klaus Klostermaier A survey of Hinduism SUNY Press ISBN 0 88706 807 3 Chapter 3 Hindu dharma Jha Nyayasutras with Vatsyayana Bhasya 2 vols Oriental Books 1939 a b The yoga system of Patanjali The ancient Hindu doctrine of concentration of mind embracing the mnemonic rules called Yoga sutras James Haughton Woods 1914 Harvard University Press page needed The yoga system of Patanjali Yoga sutras James Haughton Woods 1914 Harvard University Press pp 178 180 The yoga system of Patanjali Yoga sutras James Haughton Woods 1914 Harvard University Press pp 180 181 The yoga system of Patanjali Yoga sutras James Haughton Woods 1914 Harvard University Press pp 181 191 Kumarila Tantravarttika Anandasramasamskrtagranthavalih Vol 97 pp 204 205 For an English Translation see Jha 1924 Bibliotheca Indica Vol 161 Vol 1 Olivelle Patrick Dharmasutras The Law Codes of Ancient India Oxford World Classics 1999 a b Paul Hacker 1965 Dharma in Hinduism Journal of Indian Philosophy Volume 34 Issue 5 pp 487 489 English translated version by Donald R Davis 2006 a b c d e Alf Hiltebeitel 2011 Dharma Its Early History in Law Religion and Narrative ISBN 978 0 19 539423 8 Oxford University Press pp 215 227 Thapar R 1995 The first millennium BC in northern India Recent perspectives of early Indian history 80 141 Thomas R Trautmann 1964 On the Translation of the Term Varna Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient Vol 7 No 2 Jul 1964 pp 196 201 see Van Buitenen J A B 1957 Dharma and Moksa Philosophy East and West Volume 7 Number 1 2 April July 1957 pp 38 39 Koller J M 1972 Dharma an expression of universal order Philosophy East and West 22 2 pp 131 144 Kane P V 1962 History of Dharmasastra Ancient and Medieval Religious and Civil Law in India Volume 1 pp 2 10 Olivelle P 1993 The Asrama System The history and hermeneutics of a religious institution New York Oxford University Press Alban G Widgery The Principles of Hindu Ethics International Journal of Ethics Vol 40 No 2 Jan 1930 pp 232 245 a b see Koller J M 1972 Dharma an expression of universal order Philosophy East and West 22 2 pp 131 144 Karl H Potter 1958 Dharma and Mokṣa from a Conversational Point of View Philosophy East and West Vol 8 No 1 2 April July 1958 pp 49 63 William F Goodwin Ethics and Value in Indian Philosophy Philosophy East and West Vol 4 No 4 Jan 1955 pp 321 344 a b c Adam Bowles 2007 Dharma Disorder and the Political in Ancient India Brill s Indological Library Book 28 ISBN 978 90 04 15815 3 Chapter 3 Derrett J D M 1959 Bhu bharana bhu palana bhu bhojana an Indian conundrum Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 22 pp 108 123 Jan Gonda Ancient Indian Kingship from the Religious Point of View Numen Vol 3 Issue 1 Jan 1956 pp 36 71 Kumar Shailendra Choudhury Sanghamitra 2021 Ancient Vedic Literature and Human Rights Resonances and Dissonances Cogent Social Sciences 7 1 doi 10 1080 23311886 2020 1858562 S2CID 234164343 Gachter Othmar 1998 Anthropos Anthropos Institute a b Patrick Olivelle 1999 The Dharmasutras The law codes of ancient India Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283882 2 Donald Davis Jr A Realist View of Hindu Law Ratio Juris Vol 19 No 3 September 2006 pp 287 313 Lariviere Richard W 2003 The Naradasmrti Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Jean Brown Hannah 2019 Key Tenets of Classical Buddhist Dharma Springer Science Business Media LLC part of Springer Nature p 477 a b What is the Triple Gem Dhamma Good Dhamma is of three sorts Ajaan Lee Dhammadharo 1994 p 33 Cort John E 2001 Jains in the World Religious Values and Ideology in India Oxford University Press p 100 ISBN 978 0 19 803037 9 Peter B Clarke Peter Beyer 2009 The World s Religions Continuities and Transformations Taylor amp Francis p 325 ISBN 978 1 135 21100 4 Brekke Torkel 2002 Makers of Modern Indian Religion in the Late Nineteenth Century Oxford University Press p 124 ISBN 978 0 19 925236 7 Cort John E 2001 Jains in the World Religious Values and Ideology in India Oxford University Press pp 192 194 ISBN 978 0 19 803037 9 Jain 2011 p 128 Jain 2012 p 22 Cort John E 1998 Open Boundaries Jain Communities and Cultures in Indian History State University of New York Press pp 10 11 ISBN 978 0 7914 3786 5 a b Paul Dundas 2003 The Jains 2 ed Routledge pp 93 95 ISBN 978 0 415 26605 5 W Owen Cole 2014 in Pashaura Singh Louis E Fenech Editors The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies ISBN 978 0 19 969930 8 Oxford University Press pp 254 Verne Dusenbery 2014 in Pashaura Singh and Louis E Fenech Editors The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies ISBN 978 0 19 969930 8 Oxford University Press pp 560 568 Kamil Zvelebil 1973 The Smile of Murugan On Tamil Literature of South India Leiden E J Brill pp 156 171 ISBN 90 04 03591 5 Retrieved 7 March 2018 Mohan Lal 1992 Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature Sasay to Zorgot Sahitya Akademi pp 4333 4334 4341 4342 ISBN 978 81 260 1221 3 Kaushik Roy 2012 Hinduism and the Ethics of Warfare in South Asia From Antiquity to the Present Cambridge University Press pp 144 154 ISBN 978 1 107 01736 8 Swamiji Iraianban 1997 Ambrosia of Thirukkural Abhinav Publications p 13 ISBN 978 81 7017 346 5 a b M S Purnalingam Pillai 2015 Tamil Literature Chennai International Institute of Tamil Studies p 75 Narula S 2006 International Journal of Constitutional Law 4 4 pp 741 751 Sources edit Sanatana Dharma an advanced text book of Hindu religion and Ethics Central Hindu College Benaras 1904 Dasgupta Surendranath 1955 1949 A History of Indian Philosophy Indian Pluralism Vol IV Cambridge University Press pp 2 11 Grimes John A 1996 A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy Sanskrit Terms Defined in English State University of New York Press ISBN 0791430677 Day Terence P 1982 The Conception of Punishment in Early Indian Literature Ontario Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 0 919812 15 4 Murthy K Krishna Dharma Its Etymology The Tibet Journal Vol XXI No 1 Spring 1966 pp 84 87 Olivelle Patrick 2009 Dharma Studies in Its Semantic Cultural and Religious History Delhi MLBD ISBN 978 81 208 3338 8 Conlon Frank F 1994 Hindu revival and Indian womanhood The image and status of women in the writings of Vishnubawa Brahamachari South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 17 2 43 61 doi 10 1080 00856409408723205 Kumar Shailendra Choudhury Sanghamitra 2020 Ancient Vedic Literature and Human Rights Resonances and Dissonances Cogent Social Sciences 7 1 doi 10 1080 23311886 2020 1858562 S2CID 234164343 Fritzman J M 2015 The Bhagavadgita Sen and Anderson International Journal of the Philosophical Traditions of the East 25 4 319 338 doi 10 1080 09552367 2015 1102693 S2CID 146705129 Jain Vijay K 2012 Acharya Amritchandra s Purushartha Siddhyupaya Vikalp Printers ISBN 978 81 903639 4 5 Jain Vijay K 2011 Acharya Umasvami s Tattvarthsutra Vikalp Printers ISBN 978 81 903639 2 1External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Dharma India Glossary Dharma archived 28 February 2010 Buddhism A Z D Entries Rajiv Malhotra Dharma Is Not The Same As Religion huffingtonpost com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dharma amp oldid 1183073075 Buddhism, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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