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Niyama

The Niyamas (Sanskrit: नियम, romanizedNiyama) are positive duties or observances.[1] In Dharma, particularly Yoga, niyamas and their complement, Yamas, are recommended activities and habits for healthy living, spiritual enlightenment, and a liberated state of existence.[2] It has multiple meanings depending on context in Hinduism. In Buddhism, the term extends to the determinations of nature, as in the Buddhist niyama dhammas.[3]

Hinduism edit

Virtues are extensively discussed in various ancient and medieval era texts of Hinduism. In its Yoga school, they are described in first two of eight limbs (steps, branches, components). The first limb is called yamas, which include virtuous self-restraints (the "don'ts"). The second limb is called niyamas which include virtuous habits, behaviors and observances (the "dos").[4][5] These virtues and ethical premises are considered in Hinduism as necessary for an individual to achieve a self-realized, enlightened, liberated state of existence (moksha).[6]

Five Niyamas edit

In Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, the Niyamas are the second limb of the eight limbs of Yoga. Sadhana Pada Verse 32 lists the niyamas as:[7]

  1. Shaucha (शौच): purity, clearness of mind, speech and body[8]
  2. Santosha (सन्तोष): contentment, acceptance of others and of one's circumstances as they are, optimism for self[2]
  3. Tapas (तपस्): austerity, self-discipline,[9] persistent meditation, perseverance[10][11]
  4. Svadhyaya (स्वाध्याय): study of self, self-reflection, introspection of self's thoughts, speeches and actions[11][12]
  5. Ishvarapranidhana (ईश्वरप्रणिधान): contemplation of the Ishvara (God/Supreme Being, Brahman, True Self, Unchanging Reality),[2][13] attunement to the supreme consciousness[14]

Ten Niyamas edit

In the diverse traditions and historical debate within Hinduism, some texts suggest a different and expanded list of niyamas. For example, the Shandilya and Varaha Upanishads,[15] the Hatha Yoga Pradipika,[16] verses 552 to 557 in Book 3 of the Tirumandhiram of Tirumular suggest ten niyamas,[17] in the sense of positive duties, desirable behaviors and discipline. The Hatha Yoga Pradipika lists the ten niyamas in the following order, in verse 1.18,[16][18]

  1. Tapas (तपस् ): persistence, perseverance in one's purpose, austerity[10][11]
  2. Santoṣa (सन्तोष): contentment, acceptance of others and of one's circumstances as they are, optimism for self[2]
  3. Āstikya (आस्तिक्य): faith in Real Self (jnana yoga, raja yoga), belief in God (bhakti yoga), conviction in Vedas/Upanishads (orthodox school)[19]
  4. Dāna (दान): generosity, charity, sharing with others[20]
  5. Īśvarapūjana (ईश्वरपूजान): worship of the Ishvara (God/Supreme Being, Brahman, True Self, Unchanging Reality)[21]
  6. Siddhānta vakya śrāvaṇa (सिद्धान्त वक्य श्रवण) or Siddhānta śrāvaṇa (सिद्धान्त श्रवण): Listening to the ancient scriptures[19]
  7. Hrī (ह्री): remorse and acceptance of one's past, modesty, humility[16][22]
  8. Mati (मति): think and reflect to understand, reconcile conflicting ideas[23]
  9. Japa (जप): mantra repetition, reciting prayers or knowledge[24]
  10. Huta (हुत) or Vrata (व्रत):
    1. Huta (हुत): rituals, ceremonies such as yajna sacrifice.
    2. Vrata (व्रत): Fulfilling religious vows, rules and observances faithfully.[25]

Some texts replace the last niyama of Huta with Vrata.[19] The niyama of Vrata means making and keeping one's vows (resolutions), which may be pious observances.[26] For example, a promise to fast and visit a pilgrimage site is a form of Vrata. The education process in ancient India, where Vedas and Upanishads were memorized and transmitted across generations without ever being written down, required a series of Vrata niyamas over a number of years.[27]

Other Numbers of Niyamas edit

At least sixty five ancient and medieval era Indian texts are known so far that discuss Niyamas and Yamas.[15] Most are in Sanskrit, but some are in regional Indian languages of Hindus. The number of Niyamas mentioned in these texts range from just one to eleven, however 5 and 10 are the most common.[15] The order of listed niyamas, the names and nature of each niyama, as well as the relative emphasis vary between the texts.[19] For example, Sriprashna Samhita discusses only one Niyama in verse 3.22, and that Niyama being Ahimsa.[15] Shivayoga Dipika, Sharada Tilaka, Vasishtha Samhita, Yoga Kalpalatika, Yajnavalkya Smriti and many others, each discuss ten Niyamas.[15][28] Bhagavata Purana discusses eleven Niyamas, with kind hospitality of guests, to one's best ability, as an additional virtuous behavior. Other texts substitute one or more different concepts in their list of Niyamas. For example, in the five Niyamas listed by Markandeya Purana in verse 36.17, Matanga Parameshvaram in verse 17.31 and Pashupata Sutra in verse 1.9, each suggest Akrodha (non-anger) as a Niyama.[15][29]

Many of the texts match Patanjali's five Niyamas. Ahimsa is the most widely discussed ethical theory, and highlighted as the highest virtue by majority of these texts.[15]

Overlap Between Yamas and Niyamas edit

Some yamas (restraints, the "don'ts") are understood as reverse of niyamas (attitudes, behaviors, the "dos") in the Hatha Yoga Pradipika. For example, Ahimsa and Mitahara are called as yama as well as niyama in verse 1.17 and 1.40. The text calls Ahimsa (nonviolence and non-injuring anyone by one's actions, words or in thoughts) as the highest virtuous habit, Mitahara (moderation in one's eating and drinking habits) as the best personal restraint, and Siddhasana as the foremost of Asanas in verse 1.40.[30]

Buddhism edit

Buddhist commentary from the 5th to 13th centuries CE contains the pañcavidha niyama, the fivefold niyamas, in the following texts:

  • In the Aṭṭhasālinī (272-274), the commentary attributed to Buddhaghosa on the Dhammasangaṅi, the first book of the Theravāda Abhidhamma Piṭaka;[31]
  • In the Sumaṅgala-Vilāsinī (DA 2.431), Buddhaghosa’s commentary on the Dīgha Nikāya;[32]
  • In the Abhidhammāvatāra (PTS p. 54), a verse summary of Abhidhamma by Buddhaghosa’s contemporary, Buddhadatta.[33]
  • Abhidhammamātika Internal Commentary. (p. 58) The Abhidhamma-mātika is a matrix of abstracts for the Abhidhamma, with lists of pairs and triplets of terms from which the whole of the text can theoretically be reconstructed. The passage on the niyamas is from an internal commentary on the mātika associated with the Dhammasaṅgaṇī (the niyāmas don’t appear to be mentioned in the mātrix itself, but only in this appendix.); and was composed in South India by Coḷaraṭṭha Kassapa (12th–13th century).
  • Abhidhammāvatāra-purāṇatīkā (p. 1.68). Composed in Sri Lanka by Vācissara Mahāsāmi c. 13th century or Sāriputta c. 12th century. This text is an incomplete word-by-word commentary on the text of the Abhidhammāvatāra Nāmarūpa-parichedo (ṭīka).

The five niyamas in this set are:

  1. utu-niyāma "the constraint of the seasons", i.e. in certain regions of the earth at certain periods the flowering and fruiting of trees all at one time (ekappahāreneva), the blowing or ceasing of wind, the degree of the heat of the sun, the amount of rain-fall, some flowers like the lotuses opening during the day and closing at night and so on;
  2. bīja-niyāma "the constraint of seeds or germs", i.e. a seed producing its own kind as barley seed produces barley;
  3. kammaniyāma "the constraint of kamma", i.e. good actions produce good results and bad actions produce bad results. This constraint is said to be epitomised by [Dhammapada] verse 127 which explains that the consequences of actions are inescapable;
  4. citta-niyāma "the constraint of mind", i.e. the order of the process of mind-activities as the preceding thought-moment causing and conditioning the succeeding one in a cause and effect relation;
  5. dhamma-niyāma "the constraint of dhammas", i.e. such events like the quaking of the ten thousand world-systems at the Bodhisatta's conception in his mother’s womb and at his birth. At the end of the discussion Sumaṅgalavilāsinī passage the Commentary says that dhammaniyāma explains the term dhammatā in the text of the Mahāpadāna Sutta (D ii.12) (Cf. S 12.20 for a discussion of the use of the word dhammaniyamatā in the suttas)

In these texts the set of fivefold niyamas was introduced into commentarial discussions not to illustrate that the universe was intrinsically ethical, but as a list that demonstrated the universal scope of paṭicca-samuppāda. The original purpose was, according to Ledi Sayadaw, neither to promote or to demote the law of karma, but to show the scope of natural law as an alternative to the claims of theism.[34]

C.A.F. Rhys Davids was the first western scholar to draw attention to the list of pañcavidha niyama in her 1912 book, Buddhism. Her reason for mentioning it was to emphasise how for Buddhism we exist in a "moral universe" in which actions lead to just consequences according to a natural moral order, a situation she calls a "cosmodicy" in contrast with the Christian theodicy.:[35][36]

In Rhys Davids' scheme the niyamas become:

  • kamma niyama: ("action") consequences of one's actions
  • utu niyama: ("time, season") seasonal changes and climate, law of non-living matter
  • bīja niyama: ("seed") laws of heredity
  • citta niyama:("mind") will of mind
  • dhamma niyama: ("law") nature's tendency to perfect

This is similar to the scheme proposed by Ledi Sayadaw.[37] Western Buddhist Sangharakshita has taken up Mrs Rhys Davids conception of the niyamas and made it an important aspect of his own teachings on Buddhism.[38]

Spelling edit

In Pāli the word is spelled both niyama and niyāma, and the Pali Text Society Dictionary says that the two forms have become confused.[39] It is likely that niyāma is from a causative form of the verb ni√i.

References edit

  1. ^ Moyer, Donald (1989). "Asana". Yoga Journal. 84 (January/February 1989): 36.
  2. ^ a b c d N Tummers (2009), Teaching Yoga for Life, ISBN 978-0736070164, page 16-17
  3. ^ "What does niyama mean?". www.definitions.net. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  4. ^ N Tummers (2009), Teaching Yoga for Life, ISBN 978-0736070164, page 13-16
  5. ^ Y Sawai (1987), The Nature of Faith in the Śaṅkaran Vedānta Tradition, Numen, Vol. 34, Fasc. 1 (Jun., 1987), pages 18-44
  6. ^ KH Potter (1958), Dharma and Mokṣa from a Conversational Point of View, Philosophy East and West, 8(1/2): 49-63
  7. ^ Āgāśe, K. S. (1904). Pātañjalayogasūtrāṇi. Puṇe: Ānandāśrama. p. 102.
  8. ^ Sharma and Sharma, Indian Political Thought, Atlantic Publishers, ISBN 978-8171566785, page 19
  9. ^ Gregory P. Fields (2014). Religious Therapeutics: Body and Health in Yoga, Ayurveda, and Tantra. State University of New York Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-7914-9086-0.
  10. ^ a b Kaelber, W. O. (1976). "Tapas", Birth, and Spiritual Rebirth in the Veda, History of Religions, 15(4), 343-386
  11. ^ a b c SA Bhagwat (2008), Yoga and Sustainability. Journal of Yoga, Fall/Winter 2008, 7(1): 1-14
  12. ^ Polishing the mirror Yoga Journal, GARY KRAFTSOW, FEB 25, 2008
  13. ^ Īśvara + praṇidhāna, Īśvara 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine and praṇidhāna 16 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Sturgess, Stephen (2014). Yoga Meditation. Watkins Publishing. p. 21. ISBN 978-1-78028-644-0.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g SV Bharti (2001), Yoga Sutras of Patanjali: With the Exposition of Vyasa, Motilal Banarsidas, ISBN 978-8120818255, Appendix I, pages 680-691
  16. ^ a b c Mikel Burley (2000), Haṭha-Yoga: Its Context, Theory, and Practice, Motilal Banarsidas, ISBN 978-8120817067, pages 190-191
  17. ^ Fountainhead of Saiva Siddhanta Tirumular, The Himalayan Academy, Hawaii
  18. ^ Original:
    तपः सन्तोष आस्तिक्यं दानम् ईश्वरपूजनम् ।
    सिद्धान्तवाक्यश्रवणं ह्रीमती च तपो हुतम् ।
    नियमा दश सम्प्रोक्ता योगशास्त्रविशारदैः ॥१८॥
    See: Hatha Yoga Pradipika; Note: this free on-line source author lists Tapas twice in the list of niyamas; others list the second last word of second line in the above as जपो, or Japa
  19. ^ a b c d "Niyama | 8 Limbs of Yoga". United We Care. 30 June 2021.
  20. ^ William Owen Cole (1991), Moral Issues in Six Religions, Heinemann, ISBN 978-0435302993, pages 104-105
  21. ^ Īśvara 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Koeln University, Germany
  22. ^ Hri Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary
  23. ^ Monier Williams, A Sanskrit-English Dictionary: Etymologically and philologically arranged, p. 740, at Google Books, Mati, मति, pages 740-741
  24. ^ HS Nasr, Knowledge and the Sacred, SUNY Press, ISBN 978-0791401774, page 321-322
  25. ^ "Siddha Community: The Saivite Hindu Religion". www.siddha.com.my. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  26. ^ व्रत Vrata, Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Koeln University, Germany
  27. ^ Hartmut Scharfe, Handbook of Oriental Studies - Education in Ancient India, Brill, ISBN 978-9004125568, pages 217-222
  28. ^ K. V. Gajendragadkar (2007), Neo-upanishadic Philosophy, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, University of California Archives, OCLC 1555808, pages 96-97
  29. ^ S. Dasgupta (2012), A History of Indian Philosophy, Volume 5, Motilal Banarsidas, ISBN 978-8120804166, pages 134-136
  30. ^ Original:
    यमेष्व् इव मिताहारम् अहिंसा नियमेष्व् इव ।
    मुख्यं सर्वासनेष्व् एकं सिद्धाः सिद्धासनं विदुः ॥४०॥
    Note 1: The verse number is different in different translations, in some this is 1.38; Sanskrit and English translation source: Hatha Yoga Pradipika Brahmananda, Adyar Library Series, Madras
  31. ^ Aṭṭhasālinī: Buddhaghosa’s Commentary on the Dhammasaṅgani. ed. E. Muller, PTS 1979 (orig. 1897) p.272, para. 562; trans. Pe Maung Tin as The Expositor PTS London 1921 vol.II p.360.
  32. ^ Sumaṅgala-Vilāsinī, Buddhaghosa’s Commentary on the Dīgha Nikāya. ed. W. Stede PTS 1931 p.432.
  33. ^ Abhidhammāvatāra in Buddhadatta’s Manuals. ed. AP Buddhadatta PTS 1980 (orig. 1915) p.54.
  34. ^ Manuals of Buddhism. Bangkok: Mahamakut Press 1978. Niyama-Dipani was trans. (from Pāli) by Beni M. Barua, rev. and ed. C.A.F. Rhys Davids, n.d.
  35. ^ Buddhism: a study of the Buddhist norm London: Williams and Norgate 1912, pp.118–9.. Reprint by Read Books, 2007, Books.Google.com
  36. ^ Padmasiri De Silva, Environmental philosophy and ethics in Buddhism. Macmillan, 1998, page 41. Books.Google.com
  37. ^ Niyama-Dipani (online see below)
  38. ^ The Three Jewels Windhorse 1977 (originally published 1967) Windhorse pp.69–70; and in the lecture ‘Karma and Rebirth’, in edited form in Who is the Buddha? Windhorse 1994, pp.105–8.
  39. ^ Pali Text Society. "The Pali Text Society's Pali-English dictionary". Digital South Asia Library. p. 368. Retrieved 20 November 2014.

External links edit

  • Yoga and Ethics Paul Macneill, Wiley-Blackwell
  • The Fivefold Niyāma Translations of the commentarial texts which mention the niyāmas.

niyama, this, article, contains, indic, text, without, proper, rendering, support, question, marks, boxes, misplaced, vowels, missing, conjuncts, instead, indic, text, sanskrit, यम, romanized, positive, duties, observances, dharma, particularly, yoga, niyamas,. This article contains Indic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks or boxes misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text The Niyamas Sanskrit न यम romanized Niyama are positive duties or observances 1 In Dharma particularly Yoga niyamas and their complement Yamas are recommended activities and habits for healthy living spiritual enlightenment and a liberated state of existence 2 It has multiple meanings depending on context in Hinduism In Buddhism the term extends to the determinations of nature as in the Buddhist niyama dhammas 3 Contents 1 Hinduism 1 1 Five Niyamas 1 2 Ten Niyamas 1 3 Other Numbers of Niyamas 1 4 Overlap Between Yamas and Niyamas 2 Buddhism 2 1 Spelling 3 References 4 External linksHinduism editVirtues are extensively discussed in various ancient and medieval era texts of Hinduism In its Yoga school they are described in first two of eight limbs steps branches components The first limb is called yamas which include virtuous self restraints the don ts The second limb is called niyamas which include virtuous habits behaviors and observances the dos 4 5 These virtues and ethical premises are considered in Hinduism as necessary for an individual to achieve a self realized enlightened liberated state of existence moksha 6 Five Niyamas edit In Patanjali s Yoga Sutras the Niyamas are the second limb of the eight limbs of Yoga Sadhana Pada Verse 32 lists the niyamas as 7 Shaucha श च purity clearness of mind speech and body 8 Santosha सन त ष contentment acceptance of others and of one s circumstances as they are optimism for self 2 Tapas तपस austerity self discipline 9 persistent meditation perseverance 10 11 Svadhyaya स व ध य य study of self self reflection introspection of self s thoughts speeches and actions 11 12 Ishvarapranidhana ईश वरप रण ध न contemplation of the Ishvara God Supreme Being Brahman True Self Unchanging Reality 2 13 attunement to the supreme consciousness 14 Ten Niyamas edit In the diverse traditions and historical debate within Hinduism some texts suggest a different and expanded list of niyamas For example the Shandilya and Varaha Upanishads 15 the Hatha Yoga Pradipika 16 verses 552 to 557 in Book 3 of the Tirumandhiram of Tirumular suggest ten niyamas 17 in the sense of positive duties desirable behaviors and discipline The Hatha Yoga Pradipika lists the ten niyamas in the following order in verse 1 18 16 18 Tapas तपस persistence perseverance in one s purpose austerity 10 11 Santoṣa सन त ष contentment acceptance of others and of one s circumstances as they are optimism for self 2 Astikya आस त क य faith in Real Self jnana yoga raja yoga belief in God bhakti yoga conviction in Vedas Upanishads orthodox school 19 Dana द न generosity charity sharing with others 20 isvarapujana ईश वरप ज न worship of the Ishvara God Supreme Being Brahman True Self Unchanging Reality 21 Siddhanta vakya sravaṇa स द ध न त वक य श रवण or Siddhanta sravaṇa स द ध न त श रवण Listening to the ancient scriptures 19 Hri ह र remorse and acceptance of one s past modesty humility 16 22 Mati मत think and reflect to understand reconcile conflicting ideas 23 Japa जप mantra repetition reciting prayers or knowledge 24 Huta ह त or Vrata व रत Huta ह त rituals ceremonies such as yajna sacrifice Vrata व रत Fulfilling religious vows rules and observances faithfully 25 Some texts replace the last niyama of Huta with Vrata 19 The niyama of Vrata means making and keeping one s vows resolutions which may be pious observances 26 For example a promise to fast and visit a pilgrimage site is a form of Vrata The education process in ancient India where Vedas and Upanishads were memorized and transmitted across generations without ever being written down required a series of Vrata niyamas over a number of years 27 Other Numbers of Niyamas edit At least sixty five ancient and medieval era Indian texts are known so far that discuss Niyamas and Yamas 15 Most are in Sanskrit but some are in regional Indian languages of Hindus The number of Niyamas mentioned in these texts range from just one to eleven however 5 and 10 are the most common 15 The order of listed niyamas the names and nature of each niyama as well as the relative emphasis vary between the texts 19 For example Sriprashna Samhita discusses only one Niyama in verse 3 22 and that Niyama being Ahimsa 15 Shivayoga Dipika Sharada Tilaka Vasishtha Samhita Yoga Kalpalatika Yajnavalkya Smriti and many others each discuss ten Niyamas 15 28 Bhagavata Purana discusses eleven Niyamas with kind hospitality of guests to one s best ability as an additional virtuous behavior Other texts substitute one or more different concepts in their list of Niyamas For example in the five Niyamas listed by Markandeya Purana in verse 36 17 Matanga Parameshvaram in verse 17 31 and Pashupata Sutra in verse 1 9 each suggest Akrodha non anger as a Niyama 15 29 Many of the texts match Patanjali s five Niyamas Ahimsa is the most widely discussed ethical theory and highlighted as the highest virtue by majority of these texts 15 Overlap Between Yamas and Niyamas edit Some yamas restraints the don ts are understood as reverse of niyamas attitudes behaviors the dos in the Hatha Yoga Pradipika For example Ahimsa and Mitahara are called as yama as well as niyama in verse 1 17 and 1 40 The text calls Ahimsa nonviolence and non injuring anyone by one s actions words or in thoughts as the highest virtuous habit Mitahara moderation in one s eating and drinking habits as the best personal restraint and Siddhasana as the foremost of Asanas in verse 1 40 30 Buddhism editBuddhist commentary from the 5th to 13th centuries CE contains the pancavidha niyama the fivefold niyamas in the following texts In the Aṭṭhasalini 272 274 the commentary attributed to Buddhaghosa on the Dhammasangaṅi the first book of the Theravada Abhidhamma Piṭaka 31 In the Sumaṅgala Vilasini DA 2 431 Buddhaghosa s commentary on the Digha Nikaya 32 In the Abhidhammavatara PTS p 54 a verse summary of Abhidhamma by Buddhaghosa s contemporary Buddhadatta 33 Abhidhammamatika Internal Commentary p 58 The Abhidhamma matika is a matrix of abstracts for the Abhidhamma with lists of pairs and triplets of terms from which the whole of the text can theoretically be reconstructed The passage on the niyamas is from an internal commentary on the matika associated with the Dhammasaṅgaṇi the niyamas don t appear to be mentioned in the matrix itself but only in this appendix and was composed in South India by Coḷaraṭṭha Kassapa 12th 13th century Abhidhammavatara puraṇatika p 1 68 Composed in Sri Lanka by Vacissara Mahasami c 13th century or Sariputta c 12th century This text is an incomplete word by word commentary on the text of the Abhidhammavatara Namarupa parichedo ṭika The five niyamas in this set are utu niyama the constraint of the seasons i e in certain regions of the earth at certain periods the flowering and fruiting of trees all at one time ekappahareneva the blowing or ceasing of wind the degree of the heat of the sun the amount of rain fall some flowers like the lotuses opening during the day and closing at night and so on bija niyama the constraint of seeds or germs i e a seed producing its own kind as barley seed produces barley kammaniyama the constraint of kamma i e good actions produce good results and bad actions produce bad results This constraint is said to be epitomised by Dhammapada verse 127 which explains that the consequences of actions are inescapable citta niyama the constraint of mind i e the order of the process of mind activities as the preceding thought moment causing and conditioning the succeeding one in a cause and effect relation dhamma niyama the constraint of dhammas i e such events like the quaking of the ten thousand world systems at the Bodhisatta s conception in his mother s womb and at his birth At the end of the discussion Sumaṅgalavilasini passage the Commentary says that dhammaniyama explains the term dhammata in the text of the Mahapadana Sutta D ii 12 Cf S 12 20 for a discussion of the use of the word dhammaniyamata in the suttas In these texts the set of fivefold niyamas was introduced into commentarial discussions not to illustrate that the universe was intrinsically ethical but as a list that demonstrated the universal scope of paṭicca samuppada The original purpose was according to Ledi Sayadaw neither to promote or to demote the law of karma but to show the scope of natural law as an alternative to the claims of theism 34 C A F Rhys Davids was the first western scholar to draw attention to the list of pancavidha niyama in her 1912 book Buddhism Her reason for mentioning it was to emphasise how for Buddhism we exist in a moral universe in which actions lead to just consequences according to a natural moral order a situation she calls a cosmodicy in contrast with the Christian theodicy 35 36 In Rhys Davids scheme the niyamas become kamma niyama action consequences of one s actions utu niyama time season seasonal changes and climate law of non living matter bija niyama seed laws of heredity citta niyama mind will of mind dhamma niyama law nature s tendency to perfectThis is similar to the scheme proposed by Ledi Sayadaw 37 Western Buddhist Sangharakshita has taken up Mrs Rhys Davids conception of the niyamas and made it an important aspect of his own teachings on Buddhism 38 Spelling edit In Pali the word is spelled both niyama and niyama and the Pali Text Society Dictionary says that the two forms have become confused 39 It is likely that niyama is from a causative form of the verb ni i See also Karma in BuddhismReferences edit Moyer Donald 1989 Asana Yoga Journal 84 January February 1989 36 a b c d N Tummers 2009 Teaching Yoga for Life ISBN 978 0736070164 page 16 17 What does niyama mean www definitions net Retrieved 15 January 2021 N Tummers 2009 Teaching Yoga for Life ISBN 978 0736070164 page 13 16 Y Sawai 1987 The Nature of Faith in the Saṅkaran Vedanta Tradition Numen Vol 34 Fasc 1 Jun 1987 pages 18 44 KH Potter 1958 Dharma and Mokṣa from a Conversational Point of View Philosophy East and West 8 1 2 49 63 Agase K S 1904 Patanjalayogasutraṇi Puṇe Anandasrama p 102 Sharma and Sharma Indian Political Thought Atlantic Publishers ISBN 978 8171566785 page 19 Gregory P Fields 2014 Religious Therapeutics Body and Health in Yoga Ayurveda and Tantra State University of New York Press p 111 ISBN 978 0 7914 9086 0 a b Kaelber W O 1976 Tapas Birth and Spiritual Rebirth in the Veda History of Religions 15 4 343 386 a b c SA Bhagwat 2008 Yoga and Sustainability Journal of Yoga Fall Winter 2008 7 1 1 14 Polishing the mirror Yoga Journal GARY KRAFTSOW FEB 25 2008 isvara praṇidhana isvara Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine and praṇidhana Archived 16 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Sturgess Stephen 2014 Yoga Meditation Watkins Publishing p 21 ISBN 978 1 78028 644 0 a b c d e f g SV Bharti 2001 Yoga Sutras of Patanjali With the Exposition of Vyasa Motilal Banarsidas ISBN 978 8120818255 Appendix I pages 680 691 a b c Mikel Burley 2000 Haṭha Yoga Its Context Theory and Practice Motilal Banarsidas ISBN 978 8120817067 pages 190 191 Fountainhead of Saiva Siddhanta Tirumular The Himalayan Academy Hawaii Original तप सन त ष आस त क य द नम ईश वरप जनम स द ध न तव क यश रवण ह र मत च तप ह तम न यम दश सम प र क त य गश स त रव श रद १८ See Hatha Yoga Pradipika Note this free on line source author lists Tapas twice in the list of niyamas others list the second last word of second line in the above as जप or Japa a b c d Niyama 8 Limbs of Yoga United We Care 30 June 2021 William Owen Cole 1991 Moral Issues in Six Religions Heinemann ISBN 978 0435302993 pages 104 105 isvara Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Koeln University Germany Hri Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary Monier Williams A Sanskrit English Dictionary Etymologically and philologically arranged p 740 at Google Books Mati मत pages 740 741 HS Nasr Knowledge and the Sacred SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791401774 page 321 322 Siddha Community The Saivite Hindu Religion www siddha com my Retrieved 12 January 2017 व रत Vrata Sanskrit English Dictionary Koeln University Germany Hartmut Scharfe Handbook of Oriental Studies Education in Ancient India Brill ISBN 978 9004125568 pages 217 222 K V Gajendragadkar 2007 Neo upanishadic Philosophy Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan University of California Archives OCLC 1555808 pages 96 97 S Dasgupta 2012 A History of Indian Philosophy Volume 5 Motilal Banarsidas ISBN 978 8120804166 pages 134 136 Original यम ष व इव म त ह रम अह स न यम ष व इव म ख य सर व सन ष व एक स द ध स द ध सन व द ४० Note 1 The verse number is different in different translations in some this is 1 38 Sanskrit and English translation source Hatha Yoga Pradipika Brahmananda Adyar Library Series Madras Aṭṭhasalini Buddhaghosa s Commentary on the Dhammasaṅgani ed E Muller PTS 1979 orig 1897 p 272 para 562 trans Pe Maung Tin as The Expositor PTS London 1921 vol II p 360 Sumaṅgala Vilasini Buddhaghosa s Commentary on the Digha Nikaya ed W Stede PTS 1931 p 432 Abhidhammavatara in Buddhadatta s Manuals ed AP Buddhadatta PTS 1980 orig 1915 p 54 Manuals of Buddhism Bangkok Mahamakut Press 1978 Niyama Dipani was trans from Pali by Beni M Barua rev and ed C A F Rhys Davids n d Buddhism a study of the Buddhist norm London Williams and Norgate 1912 pp 118 9 Reprint by Read Books 2007 Books Google com Padmasiri De Silva Environmental philosophy and ethics in Buddhism Macmillan 1998 page 41 Books Google com Niyama Dipani online see below The Three Jewels Windhorse 1977 originally published 1967 Windhorse pp 69 70 and in the lecture Karma and Rebirth in edited form in Who is the Buddha Windhorse 1994 pp 105 8 Pali Text Society The Pali Text Society s Pali English dictionary Digital South Asia Library p 368 Retrieved 20 November 2014 External links editYoga and Ethics Paul Macneill Wiley Blackwell The Fivefold Niyama Translations of the commentarial texts which mention the niyamas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Niyama amp oldid 1182850257, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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