This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0042146232 Reproduction Date:
Vedanta
Hitā (Sanskrit: हिता) means 'causeway' or 'dike'.[1] In the Upanishads this word is used to mean 'subtle connections' or 'canals of subtle energies', or particular 'nerves' or 'veins'.[2] The journey to the heart is said to be through seventy-two thousand subtle channels called Hitā;[3] they are the beneficent active veins (filled with different types of serums).[4]
Proud Balaki skilled in expounding, eloquent, went to Ajatsatru, the King of Benares, to impart superior wisdom to him which he knew only as the conditioned Brahman; he knew about the physical and physiological categories and therefore, the king soon realized that Balaki did not know about Brahman. Balaki was not aware of the fact that whatever he knew was the result of ignorance, that the results of ignorance, being finite things, are separated from him. Ajatsatru then tells Balaki Gargya that reality is to be found in the deep-sleep-consciousness. Pippalada, the sage of the Prashna Upanishad, holds that sleep is caused by the senses being absorbed in that highest 'sensorium' the mind, which is why in deep sleep man is not able to hear, not to see, nor to smell because the mind is then merged into an ocean of light.[5]
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad:-
The experience of the waking state is seen in dreams. The Taijasa is nourished by finer food than the Vaisvanara. And, ignorance is not the natural characteristic of the self. All impressions due to the experience of high and low attributes of the relative universe are centred in the subtle body where they are stored.[6]
Swami Nikhilananda explains that the self that functions in the 'waking state' is Vaisvanara, which in the 'dream state' is Taijasa and in the 'dreamless-sleep state', Prajna; Viraj (matter) unites with this self identified with Indra in dreams when there is no distinction between the experiencer and the object of experience. In deep sleep the Atman, limited by Prana or vital breath, is called Prajna.[7] The subtle body in which the impressions that are stored in the body owing to the contact with the serums filled in the Hitā undergoes modifications under the influence of past merit and demerit, and in dreams falsely manifests itself as impressions in a variety of forms. When ignorance is eliminated and knowledge reaches its perfection, the state of identity with all ('liberation') is attained.[8]
Yoga, Mahabharata, Buddhism, Upanishads, Ramayana
Buddhism, Hinduism, Jainism, Tantra, Hatha yoga
Yoga, Hinduism, Dvaita, Religion, Epistemology
Yoga, Hinduism, Advaita Vedanta, Upanishads, Hindu philosophy
Hinduism, Yoga, Upanishads, Hindu philosophy, Bhagavad Gita
Yoga, Upanishads, Samkhya, Hindu Mythology, Hindu philosophy
Yoga, Nyaya, Hindu philosophy, Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, Advaita Vedanta
Hindu philosophy, Yoga, Advaita Vedanta, Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, Swami Vivekananda
Upanishads, Yoga, Dvaita, Hinduism, Hindu philosophy
Nagarjuna, Gautama Buddha, Tibetan Buddhism, Buddhism, Nirvana