Upanishad

Upanishad
Upanishadic, adj.
/ooh pan"i shad', ooh pah"ni shahd'/, n. Hinduism.
any of a class of speculative prose treatises composed between the 8th and 6th centuries B.C. and first written A.D. c1300: they represent a philosophical development beyond the Vedas, having as their principal message the unity of Brahman and Atman.
[ < Skt upanisad, equiv. to upa near + ni- down + -sad, sandhi variant of sad- SIT1]

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Any of 108 speculative texts of the Vedas that contain elaborations in poetry and verse.

They are believed to have been composed since 500 BC, based on teachings circulated since 1000 BC. They represent the final stage in the tradition of the Vedas, and the teaching based on them is called Vedanta. Generally the Upanishads are concerned with the nature of reality, the individual soul (atman), and the universal soul (Brahman) and with the theory of the transmigration of souls and the nature of morality.

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▪ Hindu religious text
also spelled  Upanisad,  Sanskrit  Upaniṣad 

      (“session”), any of the speculative texts that contain elaborations in prose and verse of the Vedas, the most ancient Hindu sacred literature.

      The name Upanishad implies sitting at the feet of the teacher, and the Upanishads, of which approximately 108 are known, record the views of a succession of Hindu teachers and sages who were active as early as 1000 BC and who flourished about 600 BC. The texts form the basis of much of later Indian philosophy. They represent the final stage in the tradition of the Vedas, so the teaching based on them is known as the Vedānta (Sanskrit: “Conclusion of the Veda”). The older Upanishads may be part of the Brāhmaṇas (commentaries) of their respective Vedas but are distinguished from them both by increased philosophical and mystical questioning and by their diminished concern with Vedic deities and sacrificial rites.

      The special philosophical concern of the Upanishads is with the nature of reality. There is a development toward the concept of a single supreme being, and knowledge is directed toward reunion with it. Of fundamental importance to all Hindu thought is the equation in some of the Upanishads of atman (the self) with Brahman (ultimate reality). The nature of morality and of eternal life is discussed, as are such themes as the transmigration of souls and causality in creation.

      The appearance in Europe in the early 19th century of second- and third-hand translations of the Upanishads had a profound effect on certain thinkers, notably in Germany; the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer fully acknowledged their influence on his thought.

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  • Upanishad — (spr. schad), Name ind. Traktate, die die ältesten philos. Spekulationen der Inder enthalten. – Vgl. Deussen (1899), der auch sechzig U. übersetzte (2. Aufl. 1905) …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

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  • Upanishad — class of treatises in Skt. literature, 1805, from Skt. upa nishad, lit. a sitting down beside, from upa near to (see UP (Cf. up)) + ni shad to sit or lie down …   Etymology dictionary

  • Upanishad — [o͞o pan′i shad΄, o͞o pä′nə shäd΄; yo͞opan′i shad΄, yo͞opän′nə shäd΄] n. any of a group of late Vedic metaphysical treatises (Upanishads) dealing with humanity in relation to the universe …   English World dictionary

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