Go to Vanipedia | Go to Vanisource | Go to Vanimedia


Vaniquotes - the compiled essence of Vedic knowledge


Nirasta-kuhakam means: Difference between revisions

(Created page with '<div id="compilation"> <div id="facts"> {{terms|"Nirasta-kuhakam means"}} {{notes|}} {{compiler|Rishab}} {{complete|ALL}} {{first|25Feb12}} {{last|25Feb12}} {{totals_by_section|B…')
 
m (Visnu Murti moved page Nirasta-kuhakam means... to Nirasta-kuhakam means)
 
Line 10: Line 10:
{{total|1}}
{{total|1}}
{{toc right}}
{{toc right}}
[[Category:Devoid]]
[[Category:Devoid|3]]
[[Category:Illusion]]
[[Category:Illusion|3]]
[[Category:Meaning of Sanskrit Words...]]
[[Category:Vaniquotes Sanskrit Dictionary A to Z]]
[[Category:Vaniquotes Sanskrit Dictionary J-K-L]]
[[Category:Vaniquotes Sanskrit Dictionary M-N-O]]
</div>
</div>
<div id="Lectures" class="section" sec_index="4" parent="compilation" text="Lectures"><h2>Lectures</h2>
<div id="Lectures" class="section" sec_index="4" parent="compilation" text="Lectures"><h2>Lectures</h2>

Latest revision as of 11:05, 12 November 2016

Expressions researched:
"Nirasta-kuhakam means"

Lectures

Srimad-Bhagavatam Lectures

Nirasta-kuhakam means "which is devoid of all illusion."
Lecture on SB 7.7.40-44 -- San Francisco, March 20, 1967:

So this material nature is very powerful. You cannot protect from the onslaught of material nature. Therefore Prahlāda Mahārāja advising us that you try to achieve the permanent. The permanent is the soul. God is permanent. And there is a world, a sky, which is also permanent. So why not transfer yourself to that permanent sky, permanent association, permanent life, permanent supreme knowledge? What we are seeking here in imperfectness? But people have no information. Some of them, they do not believe in it. Some of them are callous. This is our unfortunate condition. But it is neither false nor it is fiction. It is actual fact, truth, real truth, Absolute Truth. Paraṁ satyaṁ dhīmahi. Śrīmad-Bhāgavata presents the objective as the Supreme Truth, paraṁ satyam. Paraṁ satyaṁ dhīmahi: "I offer my obeisances to the Absolute Truth, paraṁ satyam." And what is that paraṁ satyam? Nirasta-kuhakam. Nirasta-kuhakam means "which is devoid of all illusion." Here everything is full of illusion. I am thinking, planning something, and at any moment, oh, it is all vanished, all finished.