Hinduism is the Myth of God Playing Hide-and-Seek with Itself

Fundamental to the life and thought of India from the very earliest times is the great mythological theme of atma-ya;na-the act of "self-sacrifice" whereby God gives birth to the world, and whereby men, following the divine pattern, reintegrate themselves with God. The act by which the world is created is the same act by which it is consummated-the giving up of one's lifeas if the whole process of the universe were the type of game in which it is necessary to pass on the ball as soon as it is received. Thus the basic myth of Hinduism is that the world is God playing hide-and-seek with himself. As Prajapati, Vishnu, or Brahma, the Lord under many names creates the world by an act of self-dismemberment or self-forgetting, whereby the One becomes Many, and the single Actor plays innumerable parts. In the end, he comes again to himself only to begin the play once more-the One dying into the Many, and the Many dying into the One.

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Folksonomies: zen

Taxonomies:
/religion and spirituality/hinduism (0.999713)

Concepts:
Hinduism (0.977530): dbpedia_resource
Brahma (0.936145): dbpedia_resource
Vishnu (0.914845): dbpedia_resource
Play (activity) (0.897409): dbpedia_resource
Death (0.867922): dbpedia_resource
God (0.851215): dbpedia_resource
Play (0.774427): dbpedia_resource
Brahman (0.746375): dbpedia_resource

 The Way of Zen
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Watts, Alan (1957), The Way of Zen, Retrieved on 2025-05-06
Folksonomies: philosophy mindfulness zen