Hinduism and Buddhism: An Historical Sketch, Volume 1-3 Hinduism and Buddhism: An Historical Sketch, Volume 1-3

Hinduism and Buddhism: An Historical Sketch, Volume 1-3

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Publisher Description

The earliest product of Indian literature, the Rig Veda, contains the songs of the Aryan invaders who were beginning to make a home in India. Though no longer nomads, they had little local sentiment. No cities had arisen comparable with Babylon or Thebes and we hear little of ancient kingdoms or dynasties. Many of the gods who occupied so much of their thoughts were personifications of natural forces such as the sun, wind and fire, worshipped without temples or images and hence more indefinite in form, habitation and attributes than the deities of Assyria or Egypt. The idea of a struggle between good and evil was not prominent. In Persia, where the original pantheon was almost the same as that of the Veda, this idea produced monotheism: the minor deities became angels and the chief deity a Lord of hosts who wages a successful struggle against an independent but still inferior spirit of evil. But in India the Spirits of Good and Evil are not thus personified. The world is regarded less as a battlefield of principles than as a theatre for the display of natural forces. No one god assumes lordship over the others but all are seen to be interchangeableómere names and aspects of something which is greater than any god.


Indian religion is commonly regarded as the offspring of an Aryan religion, brought into India by invaders from the north and modified by contact with Dravidian civilization. The materials at our disposal hardly permit us to take any other point of view, for the literature of the Vedic Aryans is relatively ancient and full and we have no information about the old Dravidians comparable with it. But were our knowledge less one-sided, we might see that it would be more correct to describe Indian religion as Dravidian religion stimulated and modified by the ideas of Aryan invaders. For the greatest deities of Hinduism, Siva, Krishna, R‚ma, Durg‚ and some of its most essential doctrines such as metempsychosis and divine incarnations, are either totally.

GENRE
Religion & Spirituality
RELEASED
2016
January 4
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
2,002
Pages
PUBLISHER
Sai ePublications & Sai Shop
SELLER
eBooks2go Inc
SIZE
4.4
MB

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