Which term refers to fulfillment of ritual and spiritual obligations? karma ahimsa dharma moksha
its not a and its not c so its b or d
it has to be one @knarfman96
Man.. I've been studying Buddhism lately, and I really wish that I could help you with this.. Actually feel slightly disappointed with myself for not knowing... However, Karma, means doing or action. It's the system of cause and effect, that says that if you do something good in this life, something good will happen, and so on. Moksha, I believe, is the hindu equivalent of nirvana, meaning that you get rid of samsara/karma.. dharma is the principle or law that orders the universe, or "Knowledge of or duty to undertake conduct set forth by the Buddha as a way to enlightenment." - So in that sense, it could be the right answer? Because it means fulfillment of your obligations in that sense.. But @knarfman96 said it wasn't this one.. ahimsa, I did not know about, but Google says "A Jain, Buddhist, and Hindu doctrine expressing belief in the sacredness of all living creatures and urging the avoidance of harm and violence." In that sense, this could also be the option. Because you cannot do harm or violence, so I suppose it's a spiritual obligation.. Sorry that I cannot give you an answer. I hope you'll figure it out.. If I were to make a guess, I would go for C or D, but you're better off listening to somebody more qualified :)
All we have to do is awaken from the dream of earth life. To do That we need to un learn all the misinformation we have taught ourselves in the past. Forgiving the world and everything that happens here is necessary because we tend to make it real unless we learn to see through it. Karma is just unlearning the illusions we have bought into in this life. And it is a discipline that will keep us working on it until we do master it. No reason for any guilt or self recrimination. Just love self and fellow man and awakening is at hand.
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