India Languages, asked by sallubhai08554, 7 months ago

Define Aparigraha Yoga​

Answers

Answered by sayalimanna524
3

Explanation:

Aparigraha or non-attachment is the last Yama in Patanjali's Eight Limbs of Yoga. ... It often translates to non-greed and non-attachment. The yamas are essentially moral guidelines by which to live with regard to our relationship with ourselves, and the world around us.

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Answered by Anonymous
38

Answer:

In Hinduism and Jainism, aparigraha (Sanskrit: अपरिग्रह) is the virtue of non-possessiveness, non-grasping or non-greediness.[1]

Aparigrah is the opposite of parigrah, and refers to keeping the desire for possessions to what is necessary or important, depending on one's life stage and context. The precept of aparigraha is a self-restraint (temperance) from the type of greed and avarice where one's own material gain or happiness comes by hurting, killing or destroying other human beings, life forms or nature.[2]

Aparigraha is related to and in part a motivator of dāna (proper charity), both from giver's and receiver's perspective.

Aparigraha is a compound in Sanskrit, made of "a-" and "parigraha". The prefix "a-" means "non-", so "aparigraha" is the opposite of "parigraha", so aparigraha is speech and actions that oppose and negate parigraha.

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