The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (1858 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
2.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Pras
da
or prasad
.
1
In Hinduism, the sense (especially in the
Upani
ads
) of the free action of favour or
grace
, coming to the assistance of individuals and helping them toward
mok
a
(release). ‘Grace’ is thus opposed to ‘works’ (i.e. the strict working out of
karma
). See further, S. Kulandran,
Grace in Christianity and Hinduism
(1964); and for its importance among Sikhs see
SIKHISM
.
2
Food offerings, which are then shared among worshippers, carrying with them spiritual effect.
3
Peace of mind received, without effort, as a gift.
Pr
sa
gika
.
A branch of the
M
dhyamaka
school of Buddhist philosophy which regards itself as adhering most faithfully to the methodology of
N
g
rjuna
, the founder of the M
dhyamaka system. It adopts the strategy of criticizing the views of its opponents by deriving undesired consequences (
prasa
ga
) from them, rather than setting out a positive thesis of its own. Main proponents of the Pr
sa
gika method were
Buddhap
lita
and
Candrak
rti
, while the Svatantrika cause was championed by
Bh
vaviveka
.

Other books

The Empty Chair by Jeffery Deaver
Has Anyone Seen My Pants? by Sarah Colonna
Kept by Shawntelle Madison
Hunger by Elise Blackwell
Savage Betrayal by Scott, Theresa
Bravo two zero by Andy McNab
Barbarian Alien by Ruby Dixon
Someone Else's Skin by Sarah Hilary
Dear Trustee by Mary Burchell