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Eight Parts: Vedas: Vedic Age Indus Valley disappears after 1750 BCE o No central authority for irrigation o Kinship groups depending on herds Aryan migration o People from the Caucasus Knowledge comes from religious texts (Vedas) Earliest texts of what came to be known as Hinduism o Not known as Hinduism then Patriarchal Ganges Plain o New tools Iron Able to clear/cut trees, plow fields = agriculture Rise in population Aryas vs Dasas o Aryas Light skinned Indo-European languages Northern India o Dasas Dark skinned Dravidian languages Pushed south by Aryas Caste System Varna “color” Purusha: the universal pervading spirit: sacrificed o Born into one of four classes o Brahmin (mouth): priests and scholars o Kshatriya (arms): warriors and officials o Vaishya (thighs): merchants, artisans, and landowners o Shudra (feet): peasants and laborors Shudra originally would’ve been Dasas “slave” Eventual fifth group: “Untouchables” o Other groups avoided them o Leather tanning Jati o Subdivisions of the varna o Occupation, duties and rituals o Lived, married, ate within jati o High class feared interaction with lower class Purification rituals to remove stain Dharma Role in life based on birth and caste It is better to fulfill your own dharma poorly than doing someone else’s well. Samsara Reincarnation Cycle of rebirth When you die, your soul (atman) transfers to another living thing as it is being born If you fulfill your dharma, you are re-born into a higher being Karma o Deeds performed in past and present lived that adheres to a “spirit” and determines what form it will assume next You are where you deserve to be and the only way t improve your lot in the next cycle of existence is to accept your current station and duties Religion Sacrifice Brahmin priests controlled the sacrifices o Knowledge was the basis of their economic well-being o They were rewarded for sacrifices and their knowledge gave them social and political power as they were the indispensible intermediaries between gods and humans o Resisted writing in order to preserve control Moksha People who rejected the hierarchy of the castes retreated to nearby forests o Symbolized freedom from social constraints Some charismatic leaders began to attract a following Called into question the Brahmin’s exclusive claims to wisdom and the necessity of Vedic chants and sacrifices Yoga o Offered an alternative path to salvation: the individual pursuit of insight into the nature of the self and the universe through physical and mental discipline, special dietary practices and mediation Distancing oneself from desire from the things of the world could allow one to achieve Moksha “liberation” o “deep, dreamless sleep” Jainism Maharvira o Known by followers as Jina “the Conqueror” Emphasized the holiness of the life force animating all living creatures Nonviolence Masks to prevent inhaling small insects, and they carefully brushed off a seat before sitting down Practiced extreme asceticism and nudity Ate only what they were given by others And eventually starved to death Less zealous Jainists who were restricted from agricultural work by the injunction against killing were city dwellers engaged in commerce and banking Buddhism Siddhartha Guatama o Buddha o “the Enlightened One” Came form a Kshatriya family “Prince” life o Abandoned family to become a wandering ascetic o After six years of self-deprivation, he regarded asceticism as no more likely to produce spiritual insight than the luxury of his pervious life o Middle Path Moderation Sitting under a tree near Benares on the Ganges River he gained a sudden and profound insight into the nature of reality Four Noble Truths o 1. Life is suffering o 2. Suffering arises from desire o 3. The solution to suffering lies in curbing desire o 4. Desire can be curbed if a person follows the “Eightfold Path” of right views, aspirations, speech, conduct, livelihood, effort, mindfulness, and meditation Buddhism o Centered on the individual o Not rejecting gods but denied their usefulness to seeking enlightenment o Moderation In order to minimize desire and suffering Searching for a spiritual truth through self-discipline and mediation Nirvana “snuffing out the flame” release from the cycle of reincarnation state of perpetual tranquility NOT atman o Individual as a composite without soul-like composition that survived upon entering nirvana Death of Buddha o No final instructions o Urging his disciples to “be their own lamp” o Spread to Central, Southeast and East Asia o Monasteries were established and a hierarchy of Buddhist monks, and nuns o Stupas Earthen mounds symbolizing the universe o Mahayana Buddhism Began to worship Buddha himself as a god Bodhisattvas Those who have reached Nirvana but chosen to stay and lead others to Nirvana Stupas Erected by Ashoka New gods Saints Myths o Theravada Buddhism Strictly the teachings of Buddha Ashoka Quasi-Buddhist principles o Particularly because of relational goals rather than individual spiritual enlightenment goals Dhamma o Proper behavior towards servants o Proclaimed his benevolent rule o Stupas and Pillars erected to remind his subjects of his benevolent rule Hinduism Derived from Vedic religion Brahmin o Still the priests and sacrificed however less central to the religion More opportunity for direct contact to gods Polytheistic o Gods could take many forms Assimilated parts of Buddhism o Worshipped Buddha as another incarnation of Hindu gods o Rather than purging Buddha, enveloped him Ideal life passes through four stages: o Students and studies sacred texts o Becomes a householder, marries, and has children and acquires wealth o Once grandchildren are born, he gives up his house and family and becomes a forest dweller, meditating on the nature and meaning of existence o He abandons his personal identity altogether and becomes a wandering ascetic awaiting death Through these four stages he fulfills his Dharma: fulfills duties to society, then to himself, and by the end is so disconnected from the world, he can achieve Moksha