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Passages similar to: Bhagavad Gita — Karma Sanyāsa Yoga
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Hindu
Bhagavad Gita
Karma Sanyāsa Yoga (5.22)
Those enjoyments born of external contacts are themselves indeed the source of pain only; they have a beginning and end; the wise do not rejoice in them.
Buddhist
Chapter XVI: Pleasure (212)
From pleasure comes grief, from pleasure comes fear; he who is free from pleasure knows neither grief nor fear.
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Buddhist
Chapter 8: The Perfect Contemplation (4)
The mortal who thinks of his gains or his honours or the favour of many men will be afraid of death when it falls upon him. Whatsoever it be in which...
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Neoplatonic
On True Happiness (12)
The pleasure demanded for the life cannot be in the enjoyments of the licentious or in any gratifications of the body- there is no place for these,...
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Hindu
Sixth Vallī (6)
'Having understood that the senses are distinct (from the Âtman), and that their rising and setting (their waking and sleeping) belongs to them in...
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Buddhist
Chapter XIV: The Buddha (The Awakened) (186)
There is no satisfying lusts, even by a shower of gold pieces; he who knows that lusts have a short taste and cause pain, he is wise;
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Hindu
Fourth Vallī (2)
Wise men only, knowing the nature of what is immortal, do not look for anything stable here among things unstable.'...
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Tibetan Buddhist
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Book II: Characteristics of Existence in the Intermediate State (24.9)
Others who have accumulated merit, and devoted themselves sincerely to religion, will experience various delightful pleasures and happiness and ease...
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Buddhist
Chapter XXIV: Thirst (355)
Pleasures destroy the foolish, if they look not for the other shore; the foolish by his thirst for pleasures destroys himself, as if he were his own...
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Buddhist
Chapter XX: The Way (278)
'All created things are grief and pain,' he who knows and sees this becomes passive in pain; this is the way that leads to purity.
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Buddhist
Chapter 9: The Perfect Knowledge
ALL this equipment the Sage has ordained for the sake of wisdom; so he that seeks to still sorrow must get him wisdom. We deem that there are two...
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Buddhist
Chapter 8: The Perfect Contemplation (9)
Mark how fortune brings endless misfortune by the miseries of winning it, guarding it, and losing it; men's thoughts cling altogether to their...
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Hindu
Book II (15)
To him who possesses discernment, all personal life is misery, because it ever waxes and wanes, is ever afflicted with restlessness, makes ever new...
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Buddhist
Chapter VI: The Wise Man (Pandita) (87-88)
A wise man should leave the dark state (of ordinary life), and follow the bright state (of the Bhikshu). After going from his home to a homeless...
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Buddhist
Chapter XX: The Way (277)
'All created things perish,' he who knows and sees this becomes passive in pain; this is the way to purity.
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Buddhist
Chapter XXVI: The Brâhmana (Arhat) (390)
It advantages a Brâhmana not a little if he holds his mind back from the pleasures of life; when all wish to injure has vanished, pain will cease.
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Taoist
Perfect Happiness. (1)
Are there those who can enjoy life, or not? If so, what do they do, what do they affect, what do they avoid, what do they rest in, accept, reject, lik...
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Buddhist
Chapter XXV: The Bhikshu (Mendicant) (374)
As soon as he has considered the origin and destruction of the elements (khandha) of the body, he finds happiness and joy which belong to those who...
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Buddhist
Chapter XXIII: The Elephant (331)
If an occasion arises, friends are pleasant; enjoyment is pleasant, whatever be the cause; a good work is pleasant in the hour of death; the giving...
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Neoplatonic
SELECT SENTENCES OF SEXTUS THE PYTHAGOREAN. (33)
Think that you suffer a great punishment when you obtain the object of corporeal desire; for the attainment of such objects never satisfies desire.
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Taoist
Knowledge Travels North. (13)
Joy and sorrow come and go, and over them I have no control. "Alas! the life of man is but as a stoppage at an inn. He knows that which comes within...
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