Discuss the holistic character of Hindu culture as reflected in its religious literature
What will be an ideal response?
The holistic nature of Hinudism stems from the basic tenet that the all-pervading Cosmic Spirit called Brahman inhabits everything of the universe. In every person, this spirit manifests as the Self, or Atman, which, according to the Upanishads, is "soundless, formless, intangible, undying, tasteless, odorless, without beginning, without end, eternal, immutable, [and] beyond nature." Although housed in the material prison of the human body, the Self (Atman) seeks to be one with the Absolute Spirit (Brahman). The spiritual (re)union of Brahman and Atman (known as nirvana) is the goal of every Hindu. This blissful reabsorption of the Self into Absolute Spirit must be preceded by one's gradual rejection of the material world, that is, the world of illusion and ignorance, and by the mastery of the techniques of meditation and through a system of spiritual exercises known as yoga. Yoga (literally "to yoke") seeks the joining of one's Atman to Brahman through control of the mind and body. Yoga, as well as Ayurveda—as system of nutrition—reveals the Hindu approach to universal connectivity, or holistic living.
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a) the psychologically conflicted depiction of the subject. b) the notably slumped posture of the torso. c) the two horns atop the head. d) the sculpture’s location at eye level to the viewer.
U2 came from in which city in the United Kingdom?
A. Manchester B. Dublin C. Glasgow D. Edinburgh