Concise Encyclopedia of Hinduism

(Michael S) #1
Ÿäbara (first century BCE)
(‘one who lives in the mountains’,
‘savage’)
A celebrated MÏMÄßSAKAand author of
the Ÿäbarabhäsya, a lengthy commen-
tary on the Mïmäƒsäsütra.

ÿabda (‘word’)
The object of lengthy treatises by gram-
marians and theologians, who attrib-
uted mysterious powers to it. As ÿabda-
brahman, BRAHMANin the form of a
word or a sound, the word has absolute
power. Basically there are two schools
of thought as regards the nature of the
word: one believes that words are mere
conventional signs of communication;
the other holds that there is an eternally
pre-existing model (akøta) of all words,
which ensures that words are under-
stood the same way everytime they are
uttered.

Ÿacï
The wife of INDRA.

saccidänanda, also
sat–cit–änanda (‘being/truth (sat)


  • consciousness (cit) – bliss (änanda)’)
    The most popular designation/defini-
    tion of the supreme being (BRAHMAN) in
    Hinduism.


Sacred Books of the East (SBE)
A series of 49 volumes of translations
(into English) of sources of all Eastern
religions (Buddhism, Jainism, Hinduism,
Islam, Taoism, Confucianism, Zoro-
astrianism) planned and edited by Max
MÜLLER, and originally published by
Clarendon Press, Oxford, from 1879 to
1904 (reprinted 1965–6 by Motilal
Banarsidass, Delhi). It was also intend-
ed to include the Bible, to make the
series fully representative of all major
book religions. However, church
authorities did not allow this for fear it
would make Christianity appear to be
on the same level as all other religions.
While many of the works selected have
been translated again more recently,
some of the translations have not been
superseded as yet. SBE contains 21 vol-
umes on Hinduism: selected hymns
from Øgveda andAtharvaveda, some
major Upani•ads, the entire Ÿatapatha
Brähmaæa, several Dharmaÿästra works,
the Manu-smøti, the Bhagavadgïtäand
Ÿaökara’s and Rämänuja’s complete
commentaries on the Brahmasütra.

Sacred Books of the Hindus (SBH)
A series of 38 volumes of texts and
translations of sources of Hinduism
planned and edited by Major B. D.
Basu, originally published from the
Panini Office in Allahäbad (1911–34;
reprint AMS, New York, 1974).

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