unconditioned+existence

  • 51Kulayarāja Tantra — The Kulayarāja Tantra (Tibetan phonetically: Kunjed Gyalpo, bo|t=ཀུན་བྱེད་རྒྱལ་པོའི་རྒྱུད་|w=Kun byed Rgyal po i Rgyud; English translation: All Creating King ) is a Buddhist Tantra extant in Tibetan which centers upon the direct teachings of the …

    Wikipedia

  • 52Order of the Star in the East — The Order of the Star in the East (OSE) was an organization established by the leadership of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, India, from 1911 to 1927. Its mission was to prepare the world for the expected arrival of a messianic entity, the so… …

    Wikipedia

  • 53Daoism — or Taoism Major Chinese religio philosophical tradition. Though the concept of dao was employed by all Chinese schools of thought, Daoism arose out of the promotion of dao as the social ideal. Laozi is traditionally regarded as the founder of… …

    Universalium

  • 54Pragmatism — This article is about the philosophical movement. For other uses, see Pragmatism (disambiguation). Pragmatism is a philosophical tradition centered on the linking of practice and theory. It describes a process where theory is extracted from… …

    Wikipedia

  • 55Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi — (25 January, 1743 10 March, 1819), was a German philosopher notable for coining the term nihilism and promoting it as the prime fault of Enlightenment thought and Kantianism.sep entry|friedrich jacobi] Instead of speculative reason, he advocated… …

    Wikipedia

  • 56Tat Tvam Asi — (Sanskrit: तत् त्वम् असि or तत्त्वमसि), a Sanskrit sentence, translating variously to Thou art that, That thou art, or You are that, is one of the Mahāvākyas (Grand Pronouncements) in Vedantic Hinduism. It originally occurs in the Chandogya… …

    Wikipedia

  • 57Svatantrya — Svātantrya (from the Sanskrit sva meaning self and tantram meaning dependence [Siva Sutras Jaideva Singh, p. 9] self dependency , or free will ) is the Kashmiri Shaivite concept of divine sovereignty. Svātantrya is described as an energy that… …

    Wikipedia

  • 58Mahābhūta — Classical Elements v · d · e …

    Wikipedia

  • 59Buddhism and Hinduism — are two closely related religions that are in some ways parallel each other and in other ways are divergent in theory and practice.The Vedic, Buddhist, and Jain religions share a common regional culture situated near and around north eastern… …

    Wikipedia

  • 60Dialectic — • Greek dialektike (techne or methodos), the dialectic art or method, from dialegomai I converse, discuss, dispute; as noun also dialectics; as adjective, dialectical Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Dialectic     Dialectic …

    Catholic encyclopedia