Brahma Sutras (Critical Exposition)
author: B. N. K. Sharma
edition: 2008, Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
pages: 1835
ISBN-10: 8121500354
ISBN-13: 9788121500357
Topic: Hindu-philosophy
B.’s Nature Essentially Unmanifest
This chapter describes B.’s Nature Essentially Unmanifest located on page 139 of volume 3 in the book Brahma Sutras (Critical Exposition) compiled by B. N. K. Sharma. This book contains a Critical Exposition of the Brahmasutras of Badarayana including a thorough research on the commentaries of Shankara, Ramanuja and Madhva. The Vedanta Sutras represent an important treatise of Indian Philosophy teaching Vedic concepts as found in the Upanishads..
Sanskrit name of chapter: avyaktadhikaranam or avyaktadhikarana (avyakta-adhikarana / adhikaranam). This edition includes the original Sanskrit text, an English translation, references to commentaries, detailled footnotes, IAST transliterated words and a large index.
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You can look up the meaning of the phrase “B.’s Nature Essentially Unmanifest” according to 243 books dealing with Hinduism. The following list shows a short preview of potential definitions.
Shrimad Bhagavad-gita [by Narayana Gosvami]
Yet superior to the previously mentioned unmanifest state, there exists another supernatural unmanifest nature, which is without beginning and which is not destroyed, even at the time of the great dissolution when all life-forms of this world are annihilated....
Read full contents: Verse 8.20
Samkhya thoughts in the Mahabharata [by Shini M.V.]
This Supreme Being is the cause of the origin of the unmanifest, foremost of the twice born ones, laden with the three qualities of Sattva, Rajas and Tamas. Nature is unmanifest in reality but is called Indestructible and dwells in all manifest forms. Nature and soul are considered supreme. The learned opine that both can be called principles. The unmanifest can be called indestructible on the basis of its power of creation and destruction attributes....
Read full contents: Prakriti in the Shantiparva
Mahabharata (English) [by Kisari Mohan Ganguli]
The unmanifest is the condition existing before creation. When one particular quality, viz. , Goodness prevails over the others, there arises Purusha, viz. , that from whom everything flows. The relation of Purusha and Nature is both unity and diversity. The three illustrations of the Gnat and the Udumbara the fish and water, and water drops and the lotus leaf, explain the relation between Purusha and Nature. He is in Nature, yet different from it....
Read full contents: Section XLVIII
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