Early Hinduism Part IIFirst I want to give a more accurate reply to two questions that were asked last week. One was ‘Why were the Vedas not originally written down?’ and I said that the Aryans did not have a script as yet. There had been, earlier, the pictographic script of the Indus Valley civilisations, which still has not been deciphered and probably never will be, as the language no longer exists – it is unknown. However the Indus Valley script is believed to be, at 5,500 years old, the world’s oldest example of writing, even older than those examples found in Mesopotamia, Egypt and China. But the Aryans, who produced the Vedas, as semi-nomadic herders apparently had not developed a script yet - the oldest example of their scriptures reproduced on palm leaf, is from approx. 200 CE. So they had passed down their scriptures by memory for well over a thousand years. That ‘passing down’ is still the preferred technique in India in many realms of learning, for instance music and dance, or sculpture, all of which have traditionally been an interconnected part of religion. The age old techniques are handed from gurus to students in special academies, and this applies to religion too of course, though naturally it is not of necessity solely oral teaching now.
The second question was. ‘Will we be learning about modern Hinduism?” Yes and No! This unit is about the foundations of the religions, and the unit next semester is about their development towards the present day. But everything we are learning now is relevant to Hinduism today. It is like saying, when learning about the life of Jesus, how is that relevant to Christianity today? As you will have read in your textbook (see p. 21), aspects of the Vedas are still in use, in marriage and death rituals for instance, and the Sanskrit chants. Also ideas elemental to current Hinduism, karma, dharma, atman/brahman, etc, along with the basis of the social system, were in place by the end of the Vedic era. It is with those ideas, or concepts, that we will begin today.
Today’s lesson:The lecture will be in 2 sections. First, we will look at the basic concepts of the religion I have mentioned above, as they apply to the human journey through life: terms such as atman/brahman, moksha, samsara, karma, dharma, yoga, maya, bhakti.
Secondly, we will look briefly at the great Epics Mahabharata, Ramayana; and the changing notions of god: the emerging gods of the Hindu trinity Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva, along with the role and nature of the Goddess, Devi.
Last week we noted the historical background of Brahmanic religion, (early Hinduism if you like), at the way it evolved through the changing eras and circumstances of the IndoAryan people. From an animist religion with a focus on sacrificial ritual and gods of the elements, by the later Vedic times (the Vedanta, or end of the Veda), a more philosophical and internalised conception of the universe, and of the human place within it, was growing. This metaphysical speculation, a questioning of origins, can clearly be found in the verse from the Rig Veda (RV 10.129), the Creation Hymn, which I quoted in last week’s tutorial. I’ll repeat a little of it in this translation by Wendy Doniger, as it helps explain the idea of Brahman, the ultimate God, and I’d advise you to read it sometime yourselves:
There was neither non-existence nor existence then; there was neither the realm of space nor the sky which is beyond. What stirred? Where? In whose protection? Was there water, bottomlessly deep?
There was neither death nor immortality then. There was no distinguishing sign of night nor of day. That One breathed, windless, by its own impulse. Other than that there was nothing beyond.
Then life begins from desire, and heat, both strong themes in Hinduism and Buddhism too:
There were seed placers; there were powers. There was impulse beneath; there was giving forth above.
Who really knows? Who will proclaim it? Whence was it produced? Whence is this creation? The gods came afterwards, with the creation of this universe. Who then knows whence it has arisen?
Whence this creation has arisen - perhaps it formed itself, or perhaps it did not - the one who looks down on it, the highest heaven, only he knows – or perhaps he does not know.
Brahman/atmanThat verse, expressing the deepest mystery of life, may be interpreted as the first intimation of Brahman, the Absolute, the Origin, the single underlying cosmic power, “That One” (tat ekam), which transcends being and non being. Brahman is the universe itself and the life force that pervades it, and still Brahman, ‘the limitless one’ transcends that too. The Chandogya Up. (3.14.3) tells us Brahman is ‘incomprehensible – unlimited, unborn, not to be reasoned about, unthinkable – he whose soul is space” (Noss p.97)
Already in the RV (1.164.46) the idea of the Oneness of this ultimate God had been suggested, saying
‘They call it Indra, Mitra, Varuna, Agni, and it is the heavenly bird that flies.
The wise speak of what is One in many ways; they call it Agni, Yama, Matarisvan’.
So some sages were suggesting that the many gods of the Vedas were, after all, just various attributes of That One. The verses of the Upanishads had developed this theme, and also that of this transcendent God’s immanence. For example, the Svetasvatara Upanishad tells us that all things are God, which appears in many forms:
It is woman, it is man,
It is the lad and the maiden too,
It is the old man tottering on his staff ...
It is a dark blue moth, a green parrot with red eyes,
A cloud, pregnant with lightning – the seasons and the seas:
It is beginningless, and pervades all things;
From it all worlds were born.
Now this suggestion that woman, man are also Brahman, the One, leads us to look at the notion of atman, which some may call the essence of human soul (jiva). For it was not just the nature of God and the origins of the universe that were so questioned at this time, but also the nature of the self. What are we? Who am I? they asked. There are yoga practices which ask the practitioner to peel away the layers of false identity (Am I my name? Am I my body? Am I my thoughts? My emotions? And the answer is, neti, neti – not this, not this). Chandogya Up. also tells of the father who teaches his son about the nature of Reality as Atman. He tells the son, Svetaketu, to place some salt in water overnight. Next morning he tells his son to sip from the cup: from the side, from the centre – the salt has disappeared but the water tastes the same throughout. He tells his son that the atman is like the essence of the salt, throughout all, saying ‘this whole world has that as its soul. That is reality. That is Atman. That thou art, Svetaketu” (tat tvam asi). Another, similar, story is that of the fig seed which, cut in half reveals nothing, apparently, and yet is the source of the mightiest tree.
One of my favourite writers on religion, Huston Smith (p. 21), states of the atman that:
“Underlying the human self and animating it is a reservoir of being that never dies, is never exhausted, and is unrestricted in consciousness and bliss. This infinite centre of every life, this hidden self or Atman, is no less than Brahman, the Godhead.”
So why is this not apparent to us, that we are a part of God?
“The answer, say the Hindus, lies in the depth at which the Eternal is buried under the almost impenetrable mass of distractions, false assumptions, and self-regarding instincts that comprise our surface selves. A lamp can be covered with dust and dirt to the point of obscuring its light completely. The problem life poses for the human self is to cleanse the dross of its being to the point where its infinite centre can shine forth in full display.”
So a central goal that animates Brahmanism, and that underlies later Hindu practice and thought, is to rejoin the atman with Brahman in our understanding; to realise the oneness, the true nature of ourselves and the universe. It entails the ‘dissolution or submerging of one’s everyday identity (the empirical ego) in some higher Self ( a divine or transcendent Self)’. (Lipner p. 119). In that way we will attain moksha, release, the bliss of realisation. The Mundaka Up. relates a famous parable that explains this idea.
“Two birds are perched on a tree. One is eating the fruits on the tree, sometimes enjoying, sometimes suffering, while the other bird calmly watches her. The busy bird is our limited self, compulsively and ignorantly gorging on sense objects and oblivious to our true Self, which is the changeless, peaceful One, symbolised by the observing bird. The two birds are, in fact, one, though they appear as two because of wrong perception, just as Brahman and the individual jiva appear as separate. When the first bird stops and sees the second bird as her own true Self, her suffering ceases. She sees her own true glory.” (Barbara Powell p. 131).
So, are we God, you may ask? Not unless you have made the ultimate realisations. Perhaps you have read the chapter on Brahman by R.C. Zaehner, which is on e-reserve. He sets out the same principle as in the bird story, expanding beyond that to explain that although the atman, as normal human soul, "partakes of Absolute Being, it is not for that reason God ... Brahman ‘pervades all things, yet is other than what it pervades, controlling them from within’ ... ‘he is the unseen seer, the unheard hearer, the unthought thinker, the ununderstood understander’. He is your Self, the Inner Controller, the Immortal." (p.55)
So for the uninformed soul, the Brahman (although within you) is a God beyond real understanding, yet there is a further state wherein the ground of the universe and the essential human soul, the higher Self, it could be said, are ‘absolutely and identically one’. In this advanced understanding, the Atman/Brahman is ‘One without a second’ - a state of absolute non-duality, which is ‘not wise nor unwise, ... has no characteristics, is unthinkable; ... it causes the phenomenal world to cease; it is tranquil and mild, devoid of duality’.
This state of non-duality is moksha, release, for it is stepping beyond the bounds of time. For ‘time’ is part of creation, part of the phenomenal world, and Brahman is beyond all creation. Creation fractured the original unity before existence came about. Remember the Purusha, the cosmic man, whose sacrificial dismemberment was the creation? Now, to my mind, Hindu ritual and practice is much to do with recognising that the pieces are all, ultimately, one. Everything is part of the whole, and to forget that truth is to be lost in maya, the illusion of the world, which is also the creative play of the gods (lila). Which is initially the state of the first bird, above.
To speak of the world as maya, or life as lila, does not mean it is not ‘real’ or that Hinduism is ‘otherworldly’, as it is often accused of being; it is just to recognise the true nature of the world as impermanent, as Indra’s ‘magic net’ of sparkling lights, the passing show of life, which mesmerises us into forgetting our true nature. This theme (of maya, and of impermanence) was taken up as a major element of Buddhism, too. The philosophising Hindus also, of the time of the Upanishads, were developing a whole array of practices and systems of thought to direct people in overcoming the trap of maya, of separate ego, and in accomplishing the four stated goals, or perhaps we should call them needs, of human life. These philosophers paid much attention to the needs, necessities, of daily life. From the least order of importance these human necessities are kama (pleasure), artha (power, worldly success), dharma (the natural law, the order of things) and moksha (release, salvation). There are many manuals of instruction on each of these elements (you will probably have heard of the Kama Sutra, at least!) The dharma sutras we have mentioned in the first lecture, and I will speak of dharma more, later.
Apart from the
four goals of life just mentioned,
four personality types were noted.
In Hinduism it is believed that just as there are many types of people, there must be many paths to the godhead to suit their different abilities. The four main personality types were reflected in the
four paths, yogas, set out in guided exercises to the higher states of being.
The word ‘yoga’ comes from the root ‘yuj’ to join; we can take it to mean a joining, then, but of what? Of mind and body, certainly, but also of atman/Brahman: an awakening to the real nature of life. Hatha yoga, now well known in the west, instructs in control and precision in bodily functions, but the specifically spiritual yogas, designed for the four personality types (which are the reflective, the emotional, the active, the experimental) are those of Jnana (knowledge), bhakti (devotion), karma (work, action) and raja yoga (psychospiritual, meditative exercises). Two of those terms are of significance for now in our broader understanding of Hinduism: karma, and bhakti.
Karma‘Karma’ means ‘deeds, action, works’. Our deeds influence what we will become, which is obvious and logical (if we eat too much chocolate we grow fat, if we are sincerely kind to others, without expectations, we will be loved). But in Hinduism it is more than just the near future that is affected by our deeds, but our future incarnations also, perhaps for aeons ahead. And the lives we lead now bear the fruits of our past deeds, including thoughts and desires. This does not mean there is no free will, for choices can be made on how to live each life, despite its being predestined in some form: we are master of our fate. Just as in other aspects of nature, human life follows a pattern of cause and effect. This is karma. Chandogya Upanisad declares:
Accordingly, those who are of pleasant conduct here - the prospect is, indeed, they will enter a pleasant womb, either the womb of a Brahman, or the womb of a Kshatriya, or the womb of a Vaishya. But those who are of stinking conduct here - the prospect is, indeed, that they will enter a stinking womb, either the womb of a dog, or the womb of a swine, or the womb of an outcaste (chandala). (Chandogya, V: 10:7) Ainslee Embree, p. 63.
Time and samsaraIn the Hindu cosmology, time is not a line that progresses from a beginning to a final, apocalyptic or perfected end, but a never-beginning and never-ending cycle of giant eras, that pass from perfection to degeneration, are followed by an equally long period of emptiness, and then begin again. This cycle has often been compared to the ‘big bang’ theory of the universe – a long expansion followed by a long contraction – which brings to my mind the cycle of breath, as if the universe is breathing in and out. All things of nature go in cycles: the seasons, the stars, birth-age-death. And just so, the cycle of karma – lives reflecting deeds auspicious or not – can go on forever. One can be caught on the wheel of material time, the wheel of reincarnation – samsara – unless one realises the true unbounded nature of atman/Brahman: beyond time, when ‘knowing All, he becomes All’, is freed from the cycle and released to eternal life.
Unborn, constant, eternal, primeval, this one is not slain when the body is slain ... then a mortal becomes immortal! Therein he reaches Brahman! When are cut all the knots of the heart here on earth, then a mortal becomes immortal! (Katha Up. II, III, VI)
As well as a focus on mindfulness and purity, one path towards reaching this goal of perfection is by following perfect dharma, a word coming from the Sanskrit root, dhr, meaning ‘to uphold’ or ‘sustain’. In the last lesson we talked about the dharma, the order, of caste, which is chiefly to do with inherited class and occupational categories. I also said that each person, each role in society and family structure whether of son, daughter, husband etc., is predicated by scriptures, so that no-one will stray from the
natural order.
Dharma, and the Role of WomenJust as a lion has carnivorous lion nature, and a deer is a gentle herbivore by nature, so a woman (for instance) has her womanly duty laid out to follow. A perfect and selfless adherence to her dharma will help guide her to a higher birth next time (preferably as a man!) and aid the ritual purity of all those around her. As with all other religions, in Hinduism the traditional role of women has been decreed by men (the priests, the scribes, the law makers), who have thus maintained their dominant position in the hierarchy. The Laws of Manu state that girls must always be under the control of their father and brothers, and women under the control of their husbands or sons. As mothers and wives, they were to be respected and protected for their purity, and for their role in aiding a husband’s salvation (by allowing him to fulfil the role of husband, an aspect of his dharma, and as householder – remember we spoke last week about the 4 ashramas, or stages of life). She also could aid her husband in religious rituals (puja), and provide him with sons, who would ensure his passage to the next life. So a woman was valued in these roles, but outside these relationships they were considered dangerous. Perhaps they would seduce men and lead them to impurity: perdition. As Julius Lipner writes:
“... one way and another, they were powerful ambivalent symbols of life and death, joy and sorrow, tenderness and destruction, purity and impurity. On the one hand they gave birth and nurtured and were the means of perpetuating the line ...; in thus expressing their sexuality ... they gave joy and satisfaction. But, as such, they were the agents par excellence of ritual impurity as the locus of various biological discharges (menstrual blood, semen, and so forth) and the harbingers of the inevitable suffering and death that follows birth. As the means of sexual pleasure for men, on the other hand, they were symbols of potentially spiritually destructive pleasures” (Lipner p. 126).
We will see illustrations of this ambivalent attitude to women and what they symbolise in the next section of this lecture, that on the Epics and the Ishvaras, gods, of the post Vedic era.
Mahabharata, Ramayana, Bhagavad Gita.The Epics not only tell wonderful, entertaining stories of humans, kings, gods and the natural world, and suggest historic episodes of the earliest eras of Hindu life, they are exemplars of dharma. At every level of society, across the land, and in every art form, the Epics are repeated, at grandmothers’ knees and in the public square – these days, in comic books, the cinema and on television too. The Epics are constant reminders of dharma, and it is worth noting that adharma translates as disorder – as sin, in effect. Elements of the Epics provide the occasion for many of India’s religious festivals, such as the Ramlila of northern India which re-enacts Rama’s triumph over the demon king Ravana, who had kidnapped Rama’s wife Sita and taken her to his stronghold in Sri Lanka. Much of the Ramayana tells of Rama’s efforts to free Sita, aided by his brother Lakshmana and the army of monkeys led by the monkey god, Hanuman. Rama acts in perfect dharma, as does Sita, and Hanuman, in his devotion, is a perfect example of the bhakti form of worship. One ending of the Ramayana though, has Sita exiled to the forest, for, as she was in the clutches of a man other than her husband, she has become too impure to remain the wife of the king. This is one of dharma’s dilemmas and illustrates what I was saying previously about women’s roles.
Mahabharata (‘Great India’) tells the story of a pivotal war between rival clans, who are cousins. It is an immense work, comprising hundreds of interwoven sub-stories; afficionados of the Mahabharata have been known to claim it contains, in fact, the whole history of humankind! Perhaps they mean that it contains the whole range of human behaviour. It too is about dharma, dealing with issues such as conflicts of interest, the ambivalent, conflicted role of the female heroine, Draupadi, and as we have mentioned earlier, about the warrior’s dharma, as exemplified in the most popular of Hindu scriptures, the Bhagavadgita (Song of God).
Mahatma Gandhi, the great Hindu leader of the Indian independence movement in the first half of the twentieth century, whose peaceful methods of protest have become famous world wide, believed that the Bhagavadgita contained all one needed to know about Truth, and truth, for Gandhi, was his life’s journey. Gavin Flood writes that the main themes of the Gita can be summarized as follows:
- the importance of dharma
- dharma and renunciation are compatible; action (karma)should be performed with complete detachment
- the soul is immortal and until liberation is subject to rebirth
- the Lord is transcendent and immanent
- the Lord is reached through devotion (bhakti) by his grace. (Flood, p. 125).
Arjuna, the warrior prince, is in conflict between his belief in the renouncer tradition’s ideal of ahimsa (nonviolence) and his dharma as a warrior, to fight. The path of action (karma yoga) and the path of devotion (bhakti yoga) are both unfolded through the narrative. (For example, Krishna tells Arjuna in Chapter 13: “This body, Arjuna, is called the field. He who knows this is called the knower of the field” – the great field of action that is life). The god Krishna, Arjuna’s charioteer, argues with him that this is a just war and therefore his duty is to fight ; but that also the souls of the men he may kill will pass on; the soul cannot be killed, and it is not Arjuna’s actions that will affect those souls’ destinies, but their own actions. A man who understands the Lord becomes detached from the fruit of his actions, he says. Krishna also reveal his divine form to Arjuna:
Arjuna says “Show me, oh God of Yoga, the glory of thine own supreme being” and Krishna gives him divine sight, so he may see.
If a light of a thousand suns suddenly arose in the sky, that splendour might be compared to the radiance of the Supreme Spirit, says the narrator, and Arjuna himself tells Krishna what he now can see: “All around I behold thy infinity: the power of thy innumerable arms, the visions from thy innumerable eyes, the words from thy innumerable mouths, and the fire of life of thy innumerable bodies ... I see the splendour of an infinite beauty which illuminates the whole universe ... I see thee, as fire, as the sun, blinding, incomprehensible. Then Arjuna becomes afraid, as he sees that
“The worlds also behold thy fearful mighty form, with many mouths and eyes, with many bellies, thighs and feet, frightening with terrible teeth ... thy vast form, reaching the sky, burning with many colours, with wide open mouths, vast flaming eyes, my heart shakes in terror ... where am I? Where is my shelter? Have mercy on me, God of Gods, refuge supreme of the world! Krishna replies that he is all powerful time, come to destroy worlds; and finally, that ‘only by love can men see me, and know me, and come unto me”. (B’Gita ch. 11).
Vishnu, Shiva, Devi.This brief glimpse of the Epics has introduced us to some aspects that are important in understanding the role of the trinity of Gods which became predominant in the era of Classical Hinduism (approx. 500BCE – 500CE). Since the idea of Brahman that is beyond creation and without characteristics, without qualities, the indescribable (nirguna Brahman) is too difficult to understand for many people, and too difficult to identify with, to love or to contact, the immanent aspect of Brahman (saguna Brahman) had also been introduced in the Upanishads. Saguna Brahman means ‘god with qualities’; another term that may be used is Ishvara, a more personable God. This was a stage marked by a re-emergence of theism, following the heavily philosophical era of the late Vedas. Now devotionalism gained in prominence, and with it the pre-eminent gods, Vishnu and Shiva.
The Bhagavadgita is a key sacred text of Vaishnavism, the worship of Vishnu, for Krishna is an avatar, or incarnation, of Vishnu. Let us look at the characteristics of Vishnu: Known as ‘the preserver’, Vishnu is seen as a benevolent god, to his devotees the source of the universe. He sleeps on the primeval ocean on the thousand headed snake, Shesha. A lotus grows from his navel, and from it emerges the creator God Brahma, who brings forth the world. Vishnu then awakes, to reign in the highest heaven. He is depicted as a four armed man, dark blue in colour, seated on a throne and bearing his emblems: the conch, a discus, mace and lotus; he rides the great eagle Garuda. Vishnu’s spouse is Lakshmi, herself an important goddess. (Basham p. 302 – 303). Vishnu is seen as working consistently for the welfare of the world.
He has 10 avatars, incarnations. Of them, Rama, upholder of dharma, and Krishna, God of love, are probably best known. However, the Buddha is also claimed by Vaishnavites to be the most recent incarnation of Vishnu, and his final avatar, Kalki, is yet to appear.
Krishna is one of the best loved Gods of the Hindu world, and many stories are recounted of his deeds. He is known for his miracles and mischievous exploits as a child, for his amorous youth amongst the gopis (the wives and daughters of the cowherds in the woods of Brindavan), and for his leadership during the wars of the Mahabharata. He is very often depicted playing the flute, and is blue coloured (as an avatar of Vishnu); his name means ‘black’ or ‘dark one’. Some speculation about Krishna’s origins include that he may have been an ancient fertility god. The notes of his flute are said to represent the voice of God, calling humans to leave earthly things for the greater divine love. His consort, the favourite mistress of his youth, is the beautiful Radha.
We have spoken of Rama in the section on the Ramayana; Rama is also depicted as blue in colour, and wearing a bow and arrows slung across his back. Often he is accompanied by his wife, Sita, the acme of the perfect woman.
Shiva, in contrast to Vishnu’s uncompromising goodness, is ambivalent by nature. He is the opposite of all things: both destroyer and creator, Mahakala, death and time – all things must die in order to be born anew. He is ascetic meditator, aloof on the mountaintop, and ithyphallic symbol of fertility – he is often represented simply as a linga, a phallus-shaped rock. Siva ‘lurks in horrible places, such as battlefields, burning grounds and crossroads ... he wears a garland of skulls and is surrounded by ghosts, evil spirits and demons.’ (Basham p.310) As yogi, he sits on a tiger skin, and through his meditation the world is maintained. He has long matted hair, in which he wears the crescent moon, and from which the sacred river Ganga flows down to earth.
“In the middle of his forehead is a third eye, emblem of his superior wisdom and insight. His neck is black, scarred by a deadly poison which ... he drank to save the other gods from destruction. Snakes, of which he is the lord, encircle his neck and arms. His body is covered with ashes, a favourite ascetic practice. Beside him is his weapon the trident, while near him are his beautiful wife Parvati and his mount, the bull, Nandi.” (Basham p. 310)
Another evidence of Shiva’s nature of opposites is that as well as being God of meditative stillness, he is Lord of the Dance (Nataraj). Shiva dances the world into existence, and dances the world to destruction at the end of the cosmic cycle. He is also known as Ardhanarishvara, in his androgynous form, half man and half woman. As Maha deva, he is shown with three faces, representing the trimurti, creation, preservation, destruction.
The Goddess, Devi.‘Devi’ is a rather generic term for the goddess, who may be worshipped in many forms. Goddess worship, which regained popularity during this theistic period, is thought to have been a resurgence (though one that had never disappeared) of ancient tribal and pre-Aryan beliefs. The Goddess is the Shakti, the strength or potency of the gods; in fact the male and female aspects are present in every deity. The major goddesses are Shiva’s consorts. There is Parvati, daughter of the mountains, as the most benevolent aspect; others are Durga (inaccessible, the slayer of demons, a warlike protectress), Kali (the Black One), the force who governs and stops time. Everything comes from her, and she devours everything, having an insatiable hunger for life. She is usually depicted with her tongue dripping blood, wearing a necklace of skulls; sometimes she has ten heads and dances on the subjugated, prostrate body of Shiva. Lakshmi, Goddess of wealth and happiness, is Vishnu’s wife; she is usually a golden colour, holds lotus flowers and is seated upon one, and has elephants on either side. Saraswati, originally a river and fertility goddess, is goddess of knowledge, poetry and music. She plays the Indian lute, the vina, and rides upon a swan.
In this lecture we have looked at the main concepts of early Hinduism, or Brahmanism, in order to understand something of the particular worldview of this culture. Concepts of atman/Brahman, of karma, of cyclic time and release from it, moksha, are an integral part of studying Hinduism. A basic acquaintance with these words can be an entrance to a deeper and intriguing exploration of this ancient and rich system of beliefs.
We also looked at the four systems of yoga, the four types of human, the four stages of life, the four main castes. We briefly assessed the position of women in the Hindu world, remembering that each aspect of life is integrated with religious underpinning.
We took an overview of the great Epics, Mahabharata and Ramayana, including the Bhagavadgita.
Finally, we made an acquaintance with the major gods of the classic age of Hinduism, gods and goddesses that are still followed with fervour and respect and affection today.
I have not had time to talk about ceremony or sacred space (such aspects as pilgrimage and prayer ritual) - you will have to look into that for yourselves, or find it in next semester’s unit on the development of religions.
References:
Basham, Arthur, The Wonder That Was India, Fontana, 1978.
Flood, Gavin, An Introduction to Hinduism, C.U.P., Cambridge, 1996.
Lipner, Julius, A Hindu View of Life, Oneworld Publications, Oxford, 2000.
Early Hinduism Pt2.pdfIndia Pictures.pdf