RedDragon94
Love everyone, meditate often
When is God most glorified?"I am most satisfied when God is most glorified' as John Piper likes to say
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When is God most glorified?"I am most satisfied when God is most glorified' as John Piper likes to say
My vote is 1. Wikipedia and 2. BBC Hinduism (I went there once and liked it). If you have questions, you are welcome to check in the Hinduism forum.What is the best way to learn about Hinduism?
You are actually talking about many religions sharing some common scripture, language, terminology and philosophy. Philosophy plays a central role in many, but worship, offerings, beliefs in deities also appear to be important. The forum has an overview of one group of Hindu religions called Vedanta: Vedanta Overview Wikipedia has summaries of many branches. The way the learn about it depends very much on selecting a group that fits you.What is the best way to learn about Hinduism?
There is no best way, only different ways, all hard. Still, as with other faiths, many practitioners will tell you their way is the best way.What is the best way to learn about Hinduism?
Yes, existence of a primal entity (not necessarily a God or Gods/Goddeses) is one big difference between Hinduism and Buddhism. Buddhism says it is all a mirage, Hinduism says behind the mirage something exists. For me, that thing is 'physical energy'. That is what we started with at the time of Big-Bang. However, IMHO, they have somewhat similar views on consciousness - in Buddhism it is Bodhikaya, Tathagatagarbha, Dhammakaya, etc.; in Hinduism it is Sat-Chit-Ananda (I differ from that too since I consider consciousness to be of bio-chemical origin).One major difference is that Buddism and Hinduism do not agree on the substance of the universe and almost always disagree about the nature of and role of consciousness, and to me this seems of utmost importance in contrasting the two.
As far as primary literature goes an English translation of the Gita is a good place to begin. A translation without commentary is ideal. Katha upanishad is the second book I will recommend. Both have a mix of religion and philosophy within a verse narrative and is reasonably easy to get into. After that you can go into more specialized literature. For exampleWhat is the best way to learn about Hinduism?
Thanks for the points.Yes, existence of a primal entity (not necessarily a God or Gods/Goddeses) is one big difference between Hinduism and Buddhism. Buddhism says it is all a mirage, Hinduism says behind the mirage something exists. For me, that thing is 'physical energy'. That is what we started with at the time of Big-Bang. However, IMHO, they have somewhat similar views on consciousness - in Buddhism it is Bodhikaya, Tathagatagarbha, Dhammakaya, etc.; in Hinduism it is Sat-Chit-Ananda (I differ from that too since I consider consciousness to be of bio-chemical origin).
I put the Vedas on my phone (they're confusing) . I'm into things like philosophy so I found the Upanishads online and did a little research.As far as primary literature goes an English translation of the Gita is a good place to begin. A translation without commentary is ideal. Katha upanishad is the second book I will recommend. Both have a mix of religion and philosophy within a verse narrative and is reasonably easy to get into. After that you can go into more specialized literature. For example
Yogasutra for yoga
Nyaya sutra for logic and epistemology
Tantrasara of abhinavagupta for tantra
Sankara or Ramanuja for Vedanta
Etc.
But start with Gita.
Gita first.I put the Vedas on my phone (they're confusing) . I'm into things like philosophy so I found the Upanishads online and did a little research.