Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to site content
The National Library of Israel Logo - Link to Homepage

Authorities
authorityItemPage
נושא
אג'יביקה

Ajivikas

Enlarge textShrink text
  • Topic
| מספר מערכת987007292902305171 Copied successfully
  • Save successful
    The item can be found in your Personal Zone
    שגיאה
    Log in to your account to save
Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
אג'יביקה
Name (Latin)
Ajivikas
See Also From tracing topical name
Free will and determinism Religious aspects Jainism
Jainism
Universalism
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata:Q412873
Library of congress:sh 85003032
1 / 11
Slide 0
Sudama and Lomas Rishi Caves at Barabar, Bihar, 1870
Thomas Fraser Peppé, Public domain
Slide 1
File:Ajivika Monk in a Gandhara sculpture of the Mahaparinirvana.jpg
Daderot, CC0
Slide 2
File:Ajivika inscription on the Ashoka pillar, Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi.jpg
Abhatnagar2, CC BY-SA 3.0
Slide 3
File:Barabar Visvakarma Cave.jpg
Artistically, Public domain
Slide 4
File:Barabar caves Sudama inside.jpg
Devajyoti Sarkar, CC BY-SA 2.0
Slide 5
File:Four Scenes from the Life of the Buddha - Parinirvana - Kushan dynasty, late 2nd to early 3rd century AD, Gandhara, schist - Freer Gallery of Art - DSC05119.JPG
Daderot, CC0
Slide 6
File:Gopika cave outside.jpg
Photo Dharma from Penang, Malaysia, CC BY 2.0
Slide 7
File:Sudama and Lomas Rishi Caves at Barabar, Bihar, 1870.jpg
Thomas Fraser Peppé, Public domain
Slide 8
File:Tile with Ajivaka (?) Ascetics LACMA M.82.152.jpg
, Public domain
Slide 9
File:Vadathika and Vapiyaka caves BL.jpg

Peppé, Thomas Fraser

Date: 1870, Public domain
Slide 10
File:Visvakarma cave Ashoka inscription.jpg
Dirghatamas Alambayan, Public domain
Wikipedia description:

Ajivika (Sanskrit: आजीविक, IAST: Ājīvika) is one of the nāstika or "heterodox" schools of Indian philosophy. Believed to have been founded in the 5th century BCE by Makkhali Gosāla, it was a Śramaṇa movement and a major rival of Vedic religion, early Buddhism, and Jainism. Ājīvikas were organized renunciates who formed discrete communities. The precise identity of the Ājīvikas is not well known, and it is even unclear if they were a divergent sect of the Buddhists or the Jains. Original scriptures of the Ājīvika school of philosophy may once have existed, but these are currently unavailable and probably lost. Their theories are extracted from mentions of Ājīvikas in the secondary sources of ancient Indian literature. The oldest descriptions of the Ājīvika fatalists and their founder Gosāla can be found both in the Buddhist and Jaina scriptures of ancient India. Scholars question whether Ājīvika philosophy has been fairly and completely summarized in these secondary sources, as they were written by groups (such as the Buddhists and Jains) competing with and adversarial to the philosophy and religious practices of the Ājīvikas. It is likely that much of the information available about the Ājīvikas is inaccurate to some degree, and characterizations of them should be regarded carefully and critically. The Ājīvika school is known for its Niyati ("Fate") doctrine of absolute fatalism or determinism, the premise that there is no free will, that everything that has happened, is happening and will happen is entirely preordained and a function of cosmic principles. The predetermined fate of living beings was the major distinctive doctrine of their school, along with withholding judgement on how to achieve liberation (moksha) from the eternal cycle of birth, death, and rebirth, instead believing that fate would lead us there. Ājīvikas further considered the karma doctrine as a fallacy. Ājīvika metaphysics included a theory of atoms, which was later adapted in the Vaiśeṣika school, where everything was composed of atoms, qualities emerged from aggregates of atoms, but the aggregation and nature of these atoms were predetermined by cosmic laws and forces. Ājīvikas were mostly considered as atheists. They believed that in every living being there is an ātman—a central premise of Vedic religion and Jainism. Ājīvika philosophy, otherwise referred to as Ājīvikism in Western scholarship, reached the height of its popularity during the rule of the Mauryan emperor Bindusara, around the 4th century BCE. This school of thought declined but survived for nearly 2,000 years through the 13th and 14th centuries CE in the Southern Indian states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. The Ājīvika philosophy, along with the Cārvāka philosophy, appealed most to the warrior, industrial, and mercantile classes of ancient Indian society.

Read more on Wikipedia >

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp