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Write a detailed essay on the eightfold path of yoga

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Answered by jaheimbarnett411
0

Liberation. Following the Noble Eightfold Path leads to liberation in the form of nirvana: ... Just this noble eightfold path: right view, right aspiration, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration.

Answered by zunedaalim
2

The Eightfold Path of Yoga

The Bhagavad Gita and Yoga Sutras of Patanjali

Yoga, the timeless science behind all true religions, consists of systematic and definite steps to realization of the soul’s oneness with Spirit.

Divine teacher Krishna and his disciple ArjunaThe Bhagavad Gita, which is a sacred dialogue between the divine teacher Krishna and his disciple Arjuna, is India’s most beloved scripture of yoga, as explained in Paramahansa Yogananda’s definitive two-volume translation and commentary: God Talks With Arjuna: The Bhagavad Gita — Royal Science of God-Realization.

The essence of the yoga path was set forth in systematic form by the ancient sage Patanjali in his short but masterly work, the Yoga Sutras. Paramahansa Yogananda has written:

“Patanjali’s date is unknown, though many scholars assign him to the second century B.C. His renowned Yoga Sutras presents, in a series of brief aphorisms, the condensed essence of the exceedingly vast and intricate science of God-union — setting forth the method of uniting the soul with the undifferentiated Spirit in such a beautiful, clear, and concise way that generations of scholars have acknowledged the Yoga Sutras as the foremost ancient work on yoga.”

The yoga system of Patanjali is known as the Eightfold Path, which leads to the final goal of God-realization.

Patanjali’s Eightfold Path of Yoga:

Yama (moral conduct): noninjury to others, truthfulness, nonstealing, continence, and noncovetousness

Niyama (religious observances): purity of body and mind, contentment in all circumstances, self-discipline, self-study (contemplation), and devotion to God and guru

Asana: right posture

Pranayama: control of prana, the subtle life currents in the body

Pratyahara: interiorization through withdrawal of the senses from external objects

Dharana: focused concentration; holding the mind to one thought or object

Dhyana: meditation, absorption in the vast perception of God in one of His infinite aspects — Bliss, Peace, Cosmic Light, Cosmic Sound, Love, Wisdom, etc. — all-pervading throughout the whole universe

Samadhi: superconscious experience of the oneness of the individualized soul with Cosmic Spirit

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