On 7/18/2014 4:52 PM, [email protected] [FairfieldLife] wrote:
FYI, this seems like utter BS:
("nis-arga" literally means "without parts," suggesting establishment
in the unfragmented, seamless, solid Awareness).Nisargadatta Maharaj -
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<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nisargadatta_Maharaj#cite_note-NisargadattaMaharajBiography-11>
>
Although the Shankaracharya tradition adheres to the Advaita Vedanta, at
the same time they all worship the Divine Mother - Sri Vidya, and that
is why they are termed Saraswatis - they are tantric proponents.
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<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nisargadatta_Maharaj#cite_note-NisargadattaMaharajBiography-11>
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<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nisargadatta_Maharaj#cite_note-NisargadattaMaharajBiography-11>
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At least in Sanskrit, it most probably is ni-sarga. Furthermore, niH +
arga would
result to 'nir-arga'!
*niSarga* w.r. for %{ni-sarga}.
2 *nisarga* m. ( %{sRj}) evacuation , voiding excrement MBh. ;
giving away , granting , bestowing , a favour or grant Mn. MBh. &c. ;
relinquishing , abandoning W. ; creation MBh. Hariv. ; natural state
or condition or form or character , nature (%{nisarga} ibc. , %{-geNa}
, %{-gAt} , or %{-ga-tas} ind. by nature , naturally , spontaneously)
MBh. Ka1v. &c.
*sarga* m. (ifc. f. %{A} ; fr. %{sRj}) letting go , discharging ,
voiding (as excrement) MBh. R....