A
You wrote “Sarvam Evam Duksham” — this appears to be a Sanskrit phrase or mantra-like expression, but it’s not a standard or widely cited sutra in classical texts. To analyze it carefully:
- Sarvam – everything, all, the whole.
- Evam – thus, in this way, so.
- Duksham – this is a bit ambiguous. It could be derived from duḥkha (suffering, pain, unease) or duksha (rarely used, sometimes meaning capable, clever, or skillful depending on context).
So, a literal interpretation could be:
“Everything is thus [duksham].”
If duksham = duḥkha, it could mean:
“All is thus full of suffering”
or
“Everything is inherently unsatisfactory,”
which resonates with Buddhist and Vedantic perspectives on impermanence and the nature of worldly existence.
If you clarify the exact source or context, I can give a precise philosophical interpretation, including its spiritual or soteriological meaning.
Do you want me to interpret it from a Vedantic vs Buddhist perspective?
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