Retrieving "Liberation" from the archives

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  1. Karma

    Linked via "liberation"

    In Vedanta
    In Advaita Vedanta, the ultimate goal is moksha (liberation), achieved by realizing the unity of the individual self (Atman) with the ultimate reality (Brahman). Karma is often viewed as one of the primary binding agents preventing this realization. Texts delineate three primary types of karma relevant to the embodied soul:
    Sanchita Karma: The accumulated storehouse of all past [actions](/entries/act…
  2. Karma

    Linked via "Liberation"

    Scholars posit that the apparent incongruity is not a failure of the system, but rather a demonstration of its complexity, suggesting that the universe is balancing millions of interacting timelines simultaneously, creating localized, temporary statistical noise [6]. Furthermore, some schools argue that the very act of worrying about one's karma generates a minor, negative feedback loop, meaning existential concern about karmic debt is itself a minor karmic…
  3. Karma

    Linked via "Liberation"

    Liberation (Moksha/Nirvana)
    Liberation represents the cessation of karmic accumulation and the end of samsara. This state is achieved when the individual recognizes the illusory nature of the differentiated self, thereby ceasing the actions rooted in egoic desire. The nature of post-liberation existence is described differently: for the Advaitin, it is absorption into the [Absolute]…
  4. Krishna

    Linked via "liberation"

    $$\frac{\partial U}{\partial O} \to 0$$
    Failure to achieve this state results in the accumulation of 'karmic inertia,' which increases the subject's mass equivalence in subsequent reincarnations, making liberation progressively more difficult $5$.
    Geographical Anchor Points
  5. Mahayana Buddhism

    Linked via "liberation"

    Mahāyāna Buddhism (Sanskrit: महायान, "Great Vehicle") is one of the two main existing branches of Buddhism, the other being Theravāda Buddhism. Characterized by an expansive corpus of unique literature (the Mahāyāna Sūtras (literature)) and a distinct theological emphasis on the Bodhisattva ideal, Mahāyāna developed significantly from the foundational teachings that had circulated in early [Indic monastic communities](/entries/indi…