The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (2666 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
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Vi
var
pa-dar
ana
.
The vision in Hinduism of the universal divine form, celebrated especially in
Bhagavad-g
t
11, when it is manifested to
Arjuna
.
Vitakka
or vitarka
(P
li, Skt., ‘thought-conception’). In Buddhist psychology the initial application of the mind to its object. It is defined as laying hold of the object of thought and directing attention towards it.
Vital,
ayyim ben Joseph
(1542–1620)
. Jewish
kabbalist
. Vital was the principal student of Isaac
Luria
in Safed and arranged and elaborated on his teachings.
Ez ha-
ayyim
(Tree of life) is a record of these teachings, and this was re-edited by his son and circulated under the title
Shemonah She‘arim
(Eight Gates). Vital also produced an autobiography (
Sefer ha-Hezyonot
, Book of Visions), commentaries on the
Talmud
, volumes of sermons, a commentary on the
Zohar
, and various
halakhic
responsa
. As the chief formulator of the Lurianic kabbalah, he was an important influence on the development of later Jewish
mysticism
.

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