- to
achieving "liberation
while alive". The
concepts of
Jivanmukta and
Videhamukta are
particularly discussed in
Vedanta and Yoga
schools of
Hindu philosophy...
-
while alive and also
after death i.e.,
after becoming parāmukta,
while a
videhamukta experiences these only
after death.
There are four
stages for becoming...
-
describes the monk as a Jivanmukta, a
liberated soul
while alive, and
Videhamukta is
liberation in afterlife. The Upanishad, in its
opening and concluding...
-
physically alive, who
abides in the
blissful peace of Sat-Chit-Ananda.
Videhamukta - one who is
liberated after death through the
continued repetition of...
- Upanishad, in
verses 4.33–4.79
describes Videhamukta, and the
difference between Videha mukti and Jivanmukti. A
Videhamukta,
states the text, is one who is beyond...
-
describes the monk as a Jivanmukta, a
liberated soul
while alive, and
Videhamukta is
liberation in afterlife. The text was
likely composed in the centuries...