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Search results 81 - 90 of 109 matching essays
- 81: Yoga And Emotions
- Yoga and Emotions Hinduism believes that yoga has many different paths to enlightenment. Jnanic, Bhaktic, Karma, and Raja yoga's are the different paths. They are different paths, but the Hindus believes that they all lead to the same ...
- 82: What is Satanism?
- ... on the other - Do unto others as they do onto you - Engage in sexual activity freely - Suicide is frowned on The Satanist needs no elaborate, detailed list of rules of behavior. Most religions like Christianity, Hinduism, and Islam have well-defined meanings. Satanism is the exception.
- 83: A Brief Overview Of Psychedelics
- ... for example, were believed to use Amanita muscaria or fly agaric mushrooms to bring on feelings of rage before going into battle. The same mushroom may have also been the inspiration to the founders of Hinduism. Preparations of datura, the agent found in jimson weed, are used in magic and witchcraft in many areas of the world, (Aaronson, 1970). More recently many artist, writers, and musicians have been known to use ...
- 84: Buddhism
- ... in Buddhism as the Great Renunciation, is celebrated by Buddhists as a turning point in history. Gautama was then 29 years old, according to tradition. Wandering as a beggar over northern India, Buddha first investigated Hinduism. He took teachings from some famous Brahman teachers, but he found the Hindu caste system insulting and Hindu cruelty useless. He continued his search, attracting but later losing five followers. About 528, while sitting under ...
- 85: Nanak
- ... Hindus and Mohammedan to accept the religion. He wanted them to feel free to try another faith. The two of them traveled to preach and sing together, all over India. This visited famous places of Hinduism, Kurukshetra, Harwar, Panipat, Delhi, Brindraban, Gorakhmata, Benares, the Brahmaputra River, Puri and the Temple of Jagannath, and the Himalaya Mountains. The two then went on to different part of Asia, the two, very tired and ...
- 86: Timothy Leary
- ... religious experience of my life," after eating seven "sacred mushrooms," which have the chemical psilocybin in them, in one setting (Marwick 310). He repeated this fifty times in three weeks. Soon after he converted to Hinduism. Later, on August 30, 1963, during a lecture in Philadelphia he explained the occurrence, "A profound transcendent experience should leave in its wake a changed man and a changed life. Since my illumination of August ...
- 87: Strengths and Weaknesses of the Roman Catholic Religion in Modern Society
- ... even if you have lived a life of sin, so long as you repent in the end, you will be saved and given eternal life. This is not so in other religions. Such religions as Hinduism for instance do not believe this. For everything you do wrong you will be punished. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction, if not in this life, then the next. Hindu's ...
- 88: India
- ... either way. Krishna explains to Arjuna that he must uphold social order, and as a warrior it's his responsibility to combat any forces if either painful or not. Krishna expresses a central theme of Hinduism namely, that of every individual has a double responsibility: 1. To maintain social order 2. To seek individual liberation from karma and samsara Krishna explains to Arjuna that by living one's life as an ...
- 89: Shelley's "Ode To the West Wind": Analysis
- ... an introduction and a foreshadow of what is to come later. Shelley goes on to talk of the wind as a "Destroyer and Preserver" which brings to mind religious overtones of different cultures such as Hinduism and Native Indian beliefs. The poem now sees a shift of the clouds which warns of an upcoming storm. This helps Shelley begin to work towards a final climax. He then writes of the mourning ...
- 90: Shelley's "Ode To the West Wind": Analysis
- ... an introduction and a foreshadow of what is to come later. Shelley goes on to talk of the wind as a "Destroyer and Preserver" which brings to mind religious overtones of different cultures such as Hinduism and Native Indian beliefs. The poem now sees a shift of the clouds which warns of an upcoming storm. This helps Shelley begin to work towards a final climax. He then writes of the mourning ...
Search results 81 - 90 of 109 matching essays
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