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Moksha (Sanskrit: मोक्ष) means emancipation, liberation or release. In soteriological and eschatological sense, it connotes freedom from saṃsāra, the cycle of death and rebirth.
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Do people get birth even they are (almost) eligible for Moksha
Is it possible for taking birth even the Jeeva is eligible for Moksha? …
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Is it possible that a person is unaware of her own realisation?
Moksha is the highest state, according to the sanathan dharma, to be realised by any human. Every one is already present in moksha state. … It is only the thing that she need to realise that she is in moksha state. …
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Are all ways to attain moksha pair wise compatible at implementation level?
It is true that all valid ways to attain moksha converges at the end. It means that they have same end result namely moksha. … Suppose there are 3 different ways to attain moksha: Bhakthi, Gnana, Karma. Are all the possible pairs compatible to perform in parallel? …
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Is it true that moksha state is of infinite time? [duplicate]
Unlike most other religions hinduism says that hell and heaven are temporary and moksha is the ultimate state.
My doubt is if someone reach moksha state, is it of infinite time? … If the soul reaches moksha state, then is it true that the soul is conscious? Does the soul can perform actions or is it a infinite rest state with no consciousness? …
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Is moksha only for the current universe or for forever? [duplicate]
If a person gets moksha in this universe then will he escape from birth and death cycle of only the current universe or for all future universes? …
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Fundamental difference between jivan mukta and saguna parabrahman
Jivan mukta is a person who attained moksha but living due to prarabda (say Jada bharata).
What is the fundamental difference between a jivan mukta and saguna brahman? …
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Can a person attain moksha involuntarily?
After that, the aspirant can get moksha according to the scriptures.
Are there any instances in scriptures that a person gets moksha involuntarily? … That is, the aspirant didn't consciously perform any practice for moksha, but got moksha. …
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Does the liberated human (Jivan Mukta) has the same knowledge as brahman?
If a person's soul get liberate(Jivan Mukta) and alive, then does his knowledge is equal to the knowledge of brahman?
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Cycle of births and deaths
According to the timeline of Hindu texts, based on (historical) dating:
The oldest scripture still extant is Rig Veda Samhita, whose composition is usually dated to roughly between 1800 – 1100 BCE. Th …
5
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The agony in the path to liberation
We know that there can be several stages before achieving liberation. At some stage (say pre-liberation), nearer to the liberation, sadhaka may attain knowledge of her previous lives and concludes tha …
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Accepted
Are there instances of Kshatriyas reaching Moksha?
There are indeed instances of Kshatriyas achieving Moksha without renouncing their warrior duties. I'd like to highlight two such examples. …
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Can jivan mukta continue his/her own profession?
Suppose a person is doing a job (say farmer or acharya/professor etc.,).
If (s)he becomes jivan mukta by sadhana then is (s)he bound to do his karmic activity as usual or has to leave the profession …
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Is there any difference between a normal person and a jivan muktha except perception?
In some texts like Yoga Vasista, I read that, normal persons have physical perception aka stula drishti and jivan mukthas has unified/ultimate perception aka tatva drishti. I am interpreting it as the …
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2
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Does a person with awakened kundalini stay in moksha state?
We know that a jivanmukta is in moksha state.
But is it true that a person whose kundalini is awakened is in moksha state? …
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Comparison of contributions of manas and buddhi in attaining moksha
One needs to attain para brahman, which is generally called moksha. Buddhi can be viewed as the container of intelligence or knowledge useful for attaining moksha. … If wrong then how Buddhi need to contribute more than manas for attaining moksha? …