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- Atma_Shatkam abstract "The Atmashatkam (आत्मषट्कम्, ātmaṣaṭkam), also known as Nirvanashatkam (निर्वाणषट्कम्, Nirvāṇaṣaṭkam), is a śloka in six stanzas written by the Hindu philosopher Adi Shankara summarizing the basic teachings of Advaita Vedanta, or the Hindu teachings of non-dualism. It was written around 788-820 CE. The speaker of the poem is nominally the god Shiva, but it is generally seen as a statement by a knowing person of identity with Shiva or Brahman. The speaker lists in the earlier verses what he (or Brahman) is not. He is not body or mind, nor the things that attach them to each other and to the world, including the intellect, the senses, the practices of life, the occurrences of life such as birth and death. In the last verse he says that he permeates the universe, and that he is consciousness, bliss and the soul, and by implication, the Atman and Brahman.It is said that that when Adi Shankara was a young boy of eight and wandering in the Himalayas, seeking to find his guru, he encountered the seer Gaudapada who asked him, "Who are you?". The boy answered with these stanzas, which are known as "Nirvāṇa Śaṭkam" or Ātma Ṣaṭkam". Gaudapada accepted Adi Shankara as his disciple. The verses are said to be valued to progress in contemplation practices that lead to Self-Realization."Nirvāṇa" is complete equanimity, peace, tranquility, freedom and joy. "Ātma" is the True Self.".
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageExternalLink mystic-chants-nirvana-shatakam.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageExternalLink nirvana.pdf.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageExternalLink poemgen.php?id=30.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageID "9088149".
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageLength "7662".
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageRevisionID "682064482".
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Adi_Shankara.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Advaita_Vedanta.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink B._K._S._Iyengar.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Brahman.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Category:Adi_Shankara.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Category:Advaita_Vedanta.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hindu_texts.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sanskrit_texts.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Devanagari.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Gaudapada.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Hindu.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink IAST.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink International_Alphabet_of_Sanskrit_Transliteration.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Shiva.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Shloka.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLink Ātman_(Hinduism).
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageWikiLinkText "Atma Shatkam".
- Atma_Shatkam hasPhotoCollection Atma_Shatkam.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fact.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IAST.
- Atma_Shatkam wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Atma_Shatkam subject Category:Adi_Shankara.
- Atma_Shatkam subject Category:Advaita_Vedanta.
- Atma_Shatkam subject Category:Hindu_texts.
- Atma_Shatkam subject Category:Sanskrit_texts.
- Atma_Shatkam hypernym u015Aloka.
- Atma_Shatkam comment "The Atmashatkam (आत्मषट्कम्, ātmaṣaṭkam), also known as Nirvanashatkam (निर्वाणषट्कम्, Nirvāṇaṣaṭkam), is a śloka in six stanzas written by the Hindu philosopher Adi Shankara summarizing the basic teachings of Advaita Vedanta, or the Hindu teachings of non-dualism. It was written around 788-820 CE. The speaker of the poem is nominally the god Shiva, but it is generally seen as a statement by a knowing person of identity with Shiva or Brahman.".
- Atma_Shatkam label "Atma Shatkam".
- Atma_Shatkam sameAs Atmashatkam.
- Atma_Shatkam sameAs ആത്മശതകം.
- Atma_Shatkam sameAs m.027x70l.
- Atma_Shatkam sameAs நிர்வாணஷட்கம்.
- Atma_Shatkam sameAs Q2869521.
- Atma_Shatkam sameAs Q2869521.
- Atma_Shatkam wasDerivedFrom Atma_Shatkam?oldid=682064482.
- Atma_Shatkam isPrimaryTopicOf Atma_Shatkam.