The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (2640 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
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Victory, Tour of
(period in life of Indian philosopher
a
kara):
see
A
KARA
.
Videhamukti
(Skt., ‘bodiless’ + ‘liberation’).
Mok
a
through knowledge that one is not one's body but rather
tman
. One becomes in consequence disembodied or discarnate.
Vidy
(Skt.)
or vijja
(P
li). ‘Knowledge’, the total and integral knowledge which precedes and comes after the incomplete non-knowledge (
avidy
) or ignorance which binds people to the wheel of transmigration (
sa
s
ra
). Vidy
penetrates
m
y
and thus enables us to apprehend all things (however apparently different) as they really are. In Hinduism, it is of two types:
(i) apara-vidy
, lower knowledge, acquired through intellect;
(ii) para-vidy
, higher, spiritual knowledge, leading to enlightenment and liberation (
mok
a
).
Vidy
is defined more precisely than

na
, which also means knowledge. There were originally four branches of vidy
: tray

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