Karma And Samsara Essay, Research Paper
The belief in Karma and Samsara form the basis for the Hindu?s religious
worldview. It has been central to Hinduism for thousands of years, and as a
result forms a major part in the philosophical thinking of many Hindu?s today.
The ideas of Karma and Samsara are evident in almost all of the great Hindu
scriptures, being touched on in the Veda?s, but first properly introduced in
the Upanishads. When the idea of Samsara was first introduced it led to a quest
for liberation through the practice of austerity or meditation or both. To be
released form this life the Hindu?s needed to wipe out the effects of their
past actions or Karma. It is this set of beliefs that formed the background of
many of Hindu?s religious movements and beliefs. Karma is the belief according
to which a person?s future life is determined by past and present actions.
Every action, bodily, intellectual or ethical, good or bad, big or small will
have its effect. Nothing other than the effects of earlier actions has
determined the present state of affairs and nothing other than the present
actions will determine the future circumstances. The law of Karma allows no room
for chance or divine intervention as everything is inevitably determined by it.
The Brhardaranyaka Upanisad simply sates ?By good actions one becomes good, by
bad actions one becomes bad?(4.4.5) (Koller 1982: 59). Intertwined with belief
in Karma is the idea of Samsara, which is the cycle of repeated births and
deaths that subjects an individual not merely to one death but to innumerable
deaths (Koller 1982:9). Hindu?s believe that as a person dies the Atman (the
unconscious, immaterial part of a human) carries the results of their good and
bad actions (Karma) into their next existence. This previous Karma will
determine what sort of position a Hindu will occupy in their new existence, for
example, if a person in a low caste has been very good in their past existence
they will be born into a higher caste in their next life. The ideas of Karma and
Samsara have justified the unequal Caste system, which has been an integral part
of Indian society for hundreds of years. At the time of the Rig Veda (the
earliest Hindu scriptures around 1000 B.C.E) (Smart 1989: 60) the key concepts
of Karma and Samsara had not actually been stated. However, it does mention that
a person?s conduct in this world determines his life after death. The brahmins
(the religious leaders) stressed the importance of the sacred act of sacrificing
which was supposed to have a bearing on man?s fate in the next world, and
consequently the Satapatha Brahmana 11.1.8,6, states that ?the Sacrifice
becomes the self of the sacrificer in the next world?(Stutley 1985: 23). So,
even at this early stage of Hinduism, the idea of Karma played an important role
in the Hindu?s worldview. It was not until the Upanishads (the principal ones
dating from 800-400B.C.E) (Smart 1989:49) that we first meet with the doctrines
of Karma and Samsara. The Upanishads are concerned essentially with the meaning
of the sacrificial rites, and come to the conclusion that knowledge in the
?true reality? is the key rather than expertise in rituals like the Rig
Veda?s were. In the process they introduce profound metaphysical and religious
ideas, such as Karma and Samsara. The Chandogya Upanisad sums up the ideas of
Karma and Samsara ?those who are of pleasant conduct here the prospect is
indeed that they will enter a pleasant womb, either the womb of a Kshatriya or
the womb of a Vaisya (high Indian Castes). But those who are of a striking
conduct here the prospect is indeed, that, they will enter the womb of a dog, or
the womb of a swine, or the womb of an outcast?(Lipner 1994: 45). The central
concept in the Upanishads is that of Brahman. Brahman is the highest truth, the
eternal being on which all other beings depend on. Brahman is the same as the
atman, in other words, that ultimate being out there, is the same as that
eternal something within you. The goal for many Hindus became at this time to
gain Moksha (release from Samsara) which meant a person?s atman would be
released from the cycle of rebirth and therefore become one with the ultimate
reality, Brahman, like a drop of water into an ocean. To understand the Hindus
preoccupation with breaking the cycle of Samsara and gaining Moksha one must
understand the Hindu?s view of time and space. For Hindu?s the world was not
created once and for all, nor was their an end to it, for all eternity it has
been recreating itself and dissolving back into its ?unformed? and
?unmanifest? condition. These periods of evolution and devolution were
called days and nights of Brahma, which convert into Billions and Billions of
human years. The Hindu?s eternal life becomes a crushing burden in it?s
endless, pointless, senseless repetitiveness a
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