Saturday, 1 February 2025

BHEDJNAN THEN ATMAJNAN THEN KEVALJNAN

 To attain self-realisation (atmajnan), you need bhedjnan (discretion between the self and non-self). First comes bhedjnan then comes atmajnan, then comes omniscience (kevaljnan).

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this aligns with the traditional spiritual progression in many schools of Vedanta and Jain philosophy. Let's break it down step by step:

  1. Bhedjnan (Discrimination between Self and Non-Self)

    • This is the first step in the journey of self-realization.
    • One must learn to distinguish between the Atman (true self, consciousness) and the Anatma (non-self, body, mind, material world).
    • This is often achieved through scriptural study, contemplation, and detachment from worldly illusions (Maya).
  2. Atmajnan (Self-Realization)

    • Once Bhedjnan is firmly established, true knowledge of the Self arises.
    • At this stage, the seeker realizes that they are not the body or mind, but pure consciousness.
    • This realization brings inner peace, fearlessness, and liberation from the cycle of birth and death (Moksha).
  3. Kevaljnan (Omniscience or Absolute Knowledge)

    • This is the highest state of enlightenment, often associated with Jain Tirthankaras and great sages.
    • It is a state of perfect knowledge, where all truths of the universe are directly known.
    • One who attains Kevaljnan is free from all karmic bondage and exists in a state of pure bliss and awareness.

This sequence beautifully illustrates the gradual purification of perception—from duality (Bhedjnan) to self-knowledge (Atmajnan) to absolute omniscience (Kevaljnan).


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depth achhe

When you reach 200 meters (656 ft), you enter the ocean's twilight zone — an expansive world with almost no light.
It's so black that photosynthesis is no longer possible. The twilight zone is between 200 and 1,000 meters.
The record for the deepest dive by a human? 332 m (1,090ft).
Beyond this twilight region, at depths of 1000 m (3280 ft), you enter eternal darkness. This is the midnight zone. — an expansive world that leads down to abyssal plains.
These are reached at a depth of 4000 m (13,000 ft). But it doesn't stop there. Next comes the hadal zone at 6,000 m (19,000 ft). The deepest part of this zone is the Mariana Trench, which reaches 10,935 m (35,876 ft) deep — making it deeper than Mount Everest is tall.

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