Book Title: Views on Ahimsa Compassion and Samyaktva in Jainism
Author(s): Kristi L Wiley
Publisher: Z_Lessons_of_Ahimsa_and_Anekanta_for_Contemporary_Life_014006.pdf

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________________ Views on Ahimsā, Compassion, and Samyaktva in Jainism KRISTI L. WILEY University of California at Berkeley Ahimsă appears to be the central theme of Mahavira's teachings. As Padmanabh S. Jaini has observed, there is a "preoccupation with ahimsa" within Jainism, for no other religious tradition “has carried it [ahimsā] to the extreme of the Jainas. For them it is not simply the first among virtues but the virtue..." Although in most other religious traditions violence is usually associated with causing harm to other living beings, Jaini has noted that "for Jainas, however, it (himsā] refers primarily to injuring oneselfto behavior which inhibits the soul's ability to attain moksa." This focus on one's own spiritual progress as an important motivating factor for observing ahimsa has been mentioned by other authors as well. For example, Ronald Huntington, the late professor of religion and and the co-director of Albert Schweitzer Institute at Chapman University, has written that Jainism "expands Albert Schweitzer's famous concept of reverence for 'Padmanabh S. Jaini, The Jaina l'ath of Purification (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1979), p. 167. ? The reasoning is that intentional harm to other living beings is motivated by passions (kasayas), which cause the binding of unwholesome varicties (papa prakrtis) of karmic matter to one's own soul. These karmas cause rebirth in undesirable states of existence that are characterized by a preponderance of suffering and prolong the soul's journey in samsāra. Jaini, op. cit., p. 167, Jain Education International For Private & Persold Use Only www.jainelibrary.org

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