Page 120 - Hinduism
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IX.2 Vedic Concepts 147 IX.3 Many Schools of Thought 149 IX.4 The Upanishads 152 IX.5 The Epics 155 IX.6 The Avatars 155 IX.7 Buddhist influence on Hindu Thought157 IX.8 The Bhagavad-Gita 158 IX.9 The Dharma Sastras 159 IX.10 The Puranas 160 IX.11 Fusion with non-Aryans 161 IX.12 Cultural Synthesis 164 IX.13 Vaishnavism in the South 166 IX.14 The Advent of Sankara 168 IX.15 Ramanuja 169 IX.16 Successors of Ramanuja 171 IX.17 Vaishnavism in the North 174 IX.18 Shaktism 175 IX.19 Saivite Sects 176 IX.20 Cultural Fusions in the South 178
X. Great movements of reform 180
XI. Renaissance in Hinduism 182 XI.1 The Brahmo Samaj 184 XI.2 The Arya Samaj 185 XI.3 The Theosophical Society 186 XI.4 Sri Ramakrishna and Vivekananda 187 XI.5 Sri Aurobindo 190 XI.6 Sri Ramana Maharshi 190 XI.7 Rabindranath Tagore 191 XI.8 Mahatma Gandhi 191
XII.How Hinduism Views pain and suffering192 XII.1 Suffering isn’t Random 192 XII.2 Pain is a Reality 193 XII.3 The Soul is Blissful 193 XII.4 Pain is Not Purely Bad 193 XII.5 Attachment and Detachment 194
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