Gunas: Difference between revisions
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== Rajas == | == Rajas == | ||
Rajas (devanāgarī: रजस्) | Rajas (devanāgarī: रजस्) is sometimes translated as passion, activity, excitement, dynamism, and creation. | ||
== Sattva == | == Sattva == | ||
Sattva (devanāgarī: सत्त्व) | Sattva (devanāgarī: सत्त्व) is the quality of luminosity, balance, harmony, goodness, purity, truth, peacefulness, being-ness, pure consciousness, and virtuousness that is drawn towards Dharma and Jñana (knowledge). | ||
==Online resources== | ==Online resources== |
Revision as of 22:57, 7 January 2019
Guna (devanāgarī: गुण guṇa) is a Sanskrit word that means "quality", "virtue", "talent". In Samkhya philosophy, the guṇas are three major qualities or tendencies of prakṛti, which are called: sattva (purity, equilibrium), rajas (passion, activity), and tamas (ignorance, inertia). Each of the three gunas is present in every particle of creation but the variations in their activity manifest the variety in creation.
Tamas
Tamas (devanāgarī: तमस्) is the quality of darkness, ignorance, delusion, dullness, laziness, inactivity, and inertia.
Rajas
Rajas (devanāgarī: रजस्) is sometimes translated as passion, activity, excitement, dynamism, and creation.
Sattva
Sattva (devanāgarī: सत्त्व) is the quality of luminosity, balance, harmony, goodness, purity, truth, peacefulness, being-ness, pure consciousness, and virtuousness that is drawn towards Dharma and Jñana (knowledge).
Online resources
Articles
- Guṇa at Theosopedia