-
Church claims soteriological authority. In his Ninety-five
Theses (1517), the
Protestant Reformer Martin Luther rejected the
soteriological authority of...
- dictionary.
Mukta or
Muktha may
refer to: Moksha,
spiritual liberation, the
soteriological goal of
Hinduism Mukta (1994 film), an
Indian Marathi-language film...
-
depending on the
Hindu tradition. In Jainism,
nirvana is also the
soteriological goal,
representing the
release of a soul from
karmic bondage and samsara...
-
Jainism (/ˈdʒeɪnɪzəm/ JAY-niz-əm), also
known as Jain Dharma, is an
Indian religion.
Jainism traces its
spiritual ideas and
history through the succession...
- the body-mind. In
later Buddhism,
insight (prajñā)
became the
central soteriological instrument,
leading to a
different concept and
structure of the path...
-
differ primarily in the
central deity worshipped, the
traditions and the
soteriological outlook. The
denominations of Hinduism,
states Lipner, are
unlike those...
- aware; this is moksha, the
soteriological goal in Hinduism. Book 3 of Patanjali's
Yogasutra is
dedicated to
soteriological aspects of yoga philosophy...
-
various forms of eman****tion, liberation, nirvana, or release. In its
soteriological and
eschatological senses, it
refers to
freedom from saṃsāra, the cycle...
-
existence of mind-independent objects.
Vasubandhu also
explains why it is
soteriologically important to get rid of the idea of
really existing external objects...
- with
which the
cycle of
rebirth ends, has been the
primary and the
soteriological goal of the
Buddhist path for
monastic life
since the time of the Buddha...