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Passages similar to: Chandogya Upanishad — Prapathaka V, Khanda 17
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Hindu
Chandogya Upanishad
Prapathaka V, Khanda 17 (2)
'You eat food and see your desire, and whoever thus meditates on that Vaisvânara Self, eats food and sees his desire, and has Vedic glory in his house. 'That, however, are but the feet of the Self, and your feet would have given way, if you had not come to me.'
Hindu
Second Vallī (23)
He whom the Self chooses, by him the Self can be gained. The Self chooses him (his body) as his own.'...
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Hindu
Third Mundaka, Second Khanda (3)
That Self cannot be gained by the Veda, nor by understanding, nor by much learning. He whom the Self chooses, by him the Self can be gained. The Self...
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Hindu
Brahmana 2 (4.2.3)
Now that which has the form of a person in the left eye Is his wife, Viraj. Their meeting-place [literally, their common praise, or concord] is the...
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Buddhist
Chapter 7: Looking at Living Beings (19)
Manjusri asked: “What is the root of the body?” Vimalakirti replied: “Craving is the root of the body.”
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Hindu
Book III (35)
The personal self seeks to feast on life, through a failure to perceive the distinction between the personal self and the spiritual man. All personal...
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Hindu
Brahmana 1 (6.1.14)
Speech said: ' Verily, wherein I am the most excellent, therein are you the most excellent/ ' Verily, wherein I am a firm basis therein are you a...
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Hindu
Vijnana Yoga (7.12)
I am not, however, in them; they are in Me.
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Hindu
Third Vallī (3)
'Know the Self to be sitting in the chariot, the body to be the chariot, the intellect (buddhi) the charioteer, and the mind the reins.'
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Hindu
Puruṣhottama Yoga (15.7)
Only a portion of My eternal Self has become the soul (Jiva) in the world of livings; he (the Jiva) draws (to itself) with mind as the sixth sense,...
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Hindu
Dhyāna Yoga (6.7)
The man who has subdued the mind and is full of peace experiences the Supreme Self under all conditions in heat and cold, pleasure and pain, honour...
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Buddhist
Chapter 12: Seeing Aksobhya Buddha (1)
The Buddha then asked Vimalakirti: “You spoke of coming here to see the Tathagata, but how do you see Him impartially?” Vimalakirti replied: “Seeing...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter 8: A good declaring of certain doubts that may fall in this work, treated by question, in destroying of a man’s own curiosity, of cunning, and of natural wit, and in distinguishing of the degrees and the parts of active living and contemplative (5)
In the lower part of active life a man is without himself and beneath himself. In the higher part of active life and the lower part of contemplative...
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Buddhist
Chapter XVI: Pleasure (209)
He who gives himself to vanity, and does not give himself to meditation, forgetting the real aim (of life) and grasping at pleasure, will in time...
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Hindu
Dhyāna Yoga (6.15)
Thus the self-controlled Yogi holding the mind in meditation on the Self, attains peace abiding in me which culminates in the highest bliss of...
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Hindu
Bhakti Yoga (12.3)
Those who, having restrained well all the senses, even-minded everywhere, rejoicing in the welfare of all beings, meditate on the indefinable,...
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Buddhist
Chapter 10: The Buddha of the Fragrant Land (7)
Thereupon, Vimalakirti, without rising from his seat, used his transcendental power to create an illusory (bogus) Bodhisattva whose features were...
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Tibetan Buddhist
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
The Appendix: The Path of Good Wishes which Protecteth from Fear in the Bardo (45.3)
When wandering alone, parted from loving friends, When the shapes of mine empty though-forms dawn upon me here, [May the] Buddhas, exerting the power...
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Hindu
Puruṣhottama Yoga (15.3)
Its true form is not comprehended here, nor its end, nor its origin, nor even its existence. Having cut down this firm-rooted Aśvattha with the...
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Buddhist
Chapter 2: The Expedient Method (Upaya) of Teaching (3)
Now using upaya he appeared ill and because of his indisposition kings, ministers, elders, upasakas, Brahmins, etc., as well as princes and other...
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Neoplatonic
Against Those That Affirm the Creator of the Kosmos and the Kosmos Itself to Be Evil (2)
We are to proclaim one Intellectual-Principle unchangeably the same, in no way subject to decline, acting in imitation, as true as its nature allows, ...
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