Ahimsa: Difference between revisions

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Modern times: refined to better reflect the spiritual and philosophical basis of Sri Aurobindo's position, rather than characterizing it as purely "pragmatic."
 
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The word {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}}—sometimes spelled {{transliteration|sa|Ahinsa}}<ref name="Sanskrit dictionary">{{Cite web|url=https://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/monier/serveimg.pl?file=/scans/MWScan/MWScanjpg/mw0125-ahalyA.jpg|title=Sanskrit Dictionary Reference|website=www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de|access-date=29 December 2020|archive-date=25 February 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090225155257/https://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/monier/serveimg.pl?file=%2Fscans%2FMWScan%2FMWScanjpg%2Fmw0125-ahalyA.jpg}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Standing|first=E.M.|year=1924|title=The Super-Vegetarians|journal=New Blackfriars|volume=5|number=50|pages=103–108|doi=10.1111/j.1741-2005.1924.tb03567.x }}</ref>—is derived from the Sanskrit root {{transliteration|sa|hiṃs}}, meaning to strike; {{transliteration|sa|hiṃsā}} is injury or harm, while {{transliteration|sa|a-hiṃsā}} (prefixed with the [[alpha privative]]), its opposite, is ''non-harming'' or ''[[nonviolence]]''.<ref name="Sanskrit dictionary"/><ref name="Shukavak N. Dasa">{{cite web|url=http://www.sanskrit.org/www/Hindu%20Primer/nonharming_ahimsa.html|title=A Hindu Primer|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110408135457/http://www.sanskrit.org/www/Hindu%20Primer/nonharming_ahimsa.html |archive-date=8 April 2011|first=Shukavak N.|last=Dasa}}</ref>
The word {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}}—sometimes spelled {{transliteration|sa|Ahinsa}}<ref name="Sanskrit dictionary">{{Cite web|url=https://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/monier/serveimg.pl?file=/scans/MWScan/MWScanjpg/mw0125-ahalyA.jpg|title=Sanskrit Dictionary Reference|website=www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de|access-date=29 December 2020|archive-date=25 February 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090225155257/https://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/monier/serveimg.pl?file=%2Fscans%2FMWScan%2FMWScanjpg%2Fmw0125-ahalyA.jpg}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Standing|first=E.M.|year=1924|title=The Super-Vegetarians|journal=New Blackfriars|volume=5|number=50|pages=103–108|doi=10.1111/j.1741-2005.1924.tb03567.x }}</ref>—is derived from the Sanskrit root {{transliteration|sa|hiṃs}}, meaning to strike; {{transliteration|sa|hiṃsā}} is injury or harm, while {{transliteration|sa|a-hiṃsā}} (prefixed with the [[alpha privative]]), its opposite, is ''non-harming'' or ''[[nonviolence]]''.<ref name="Sanskrit dictionary"/><ref name="Shukavak N. Dasa">{{cite web|url=http://www.sanskrit.org/www/Hindu%20Primer/nonharming_ahimsa.html|title=A Hindu Primer|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110408135457/http://www.sanskrit.org/www/Hindu%20Primer/nonharming_ahimsa.html |archive-date=8 April 2011|first=Shukavak N.|last=Dasa}}</ref>


==Origins==
==Historical Evolution==
Reverence for {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} can be found in Jain, Hindu, and Buddhist canonical texts. Lord Parshvanatha (the 23rd of 24 Tirthankaras of Jainism) is said to have preached {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} as one of the four vows.{{sfn|Dundas|2002|p=160}}<ref name="arapura" /><ref>{{Cite book|last=Hoiberg|first=Dale|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ISFBJarYX7YC&q=Parshvanatha+four+vows&pg=PA158|title=Students' Britannica India|date=2000|publisher=Popular Prakashan|isbn=978-0-85229-760-5|language=en}}</ref><ref name=Izawa>{{cite journal|first=A.|last=Izawa|date=2008|title=Empathy for Pain in Vedic Ritual|journal=Journal of the International College for Advanced Buddhist Studies ({{transliteration|ja|Kokusai Bukkyōgaku Daigakuin Daigaku}})|volume=12|pages=78–81}}</ref> No other [[Indian religions|Indian religion]] has developed the non-violence doctrine and its implications on everyday life as much as has Jainism.{{sfn|Sethia|2004|p=2}}{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=176–177}}{{sfn|Winternitz|1993|pp=408–409}}
Reverence for {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} can be found in Jain, Hindu, and Buddhist canonical texts. Lord Parshvanatha (the 23rd of 24 Tirthankaras of Jainism) is said to have preached {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} as one of the four vows.{{sfn|Dundas|2002|p=160}}<ref name="arapura" /><ref>{{Cite book|last=Hoiberg|first=Dale|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ISFBJarYX7YC&q=Parshvanatha+four+vows&pg=PA158|title=Students' Britannica India|date=2000|publisher=Popular Prakashan|isbn=978-0-85229-760-5|language=en}}</ref><ref name=Izawa>{{cite journal|first=A.|last=Izawa|date=2008|title=Empathy for Pain in Vedic Ritual|journal=Journal of the International College for Advanced Buddhist Studies ({{transliteration|ja|Kokusai Bukkyōgaku Daigakuin Daigaku}})|volume=12|pages=78–81}}</ref> No other [[Indian religions|Indian religion]] has developed the non-violence doctrine and its implications on everyday life as much as has Jainism.{{sfn|Sethia|2004|p=2}}{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=176–177}}{{sfn|Winternitz|1993|pp=408–409}}
=== Pre-Vedic and Shramanic Roots Hypothesis ===
While the ''[[Rigveda]]'' (c. 1500 BCE) is the oldest surviving text in India, many scholars argue that the specific ethical practice of ''ahimsa'' originated within the non-Vedic ''[[Sramana]]'' traditions (which include [[Jainism]] and [[Buddhism]]) before being absorbed into [[Brahmanism]].{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007|pp=14–16, 23–25}}
Some scholars, such as [[P.R. Deshmukh]], suggest that the roots of ''ahimsa'' and asceticism may date back to the [[Indus Valley Civilisation]] (c. 3300–1300 BCE), citing the discovery of seals depicting figures in the ''[[kayotsarga]]'' (standing meditation) posture common to [[Jain iconography]].{{sfn|Deshmukh|1982|pp=364–366}}{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=30-31}}
Indologist [[Johannes Bronkhorst]] has proposed the "[[Greater Magadha]]" theory, arguing that the eastern [[Gangetic plain]] (modern [[Bihar]]/[[Bengal]]) developed a distinct non-Vedic culture where concepts like ''[[Karma]]'', rebirth, and ''ahimsa'' originated. According to this view, the [[Vedic priesthood]] later adopted these concepts as they expanded eastward.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007|pp=14–16, 23–25}} Similarly, the German Indologist [[Ludwig Alsdorf]] argued that ''ahimsa'' likely began not as a moral rule but as a "magico-ritualistic" taboo against killing or harming living beings, which was part of a pan-Indian or pre-Aryan heritage later refined into an ethical system by the Jains.{{sfn|Alsdorf|2010|pp=4–6, 13–15}}
=== Evolution in the Vedic Tradition ===
The concept of ''ahimsa'' evolved gradually within the Vedic tradition.{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|pp=2–3}} In the early Vedic period (c. 1500–1000 BCE), animal sacrifice was a central component of ritual life.{{sfn|Alsdorf|2010|pp=4–6, 13–15}} However, the concept transitioned from a ritualistic concern—avoiding injury to the sacrificer or the minute details of the ritual—to an internalized ethical virtue.{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|pp=2–3}}
By the late Vedic era, texts like the ''[[Chandogya Upanishad]]'' (c. 8th century BCE) explicitly listed ''ahimsa'' as one of five essential virtues (along with truthfulness and charity).{{sfn|Hume|1921|pp=213–214}} The ''[[Yajurveda]]'' reflects this shifting ethos with prayers for universal peace, such as: "May all beings look at me with a friendly eye, may I do likewise, and may we look at each other with the eyes of a friend".{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|pp=2–3}}
=== Integration into Governance ===
The principle of ''ahimsa'' moved from personal asceticism to state policy under the Mauryan Emperor [[Ashoka]] (c. 268–232 BCE). Following the [[Kalinga War]], Ashoka renounced military conquest in favor of "conquest by Dharma".{{sfn|Thapar|1961|pp=250–255}} His Rock Edicts restricted animal slaughter, established medical care for animals, and promoted non-violence as a civic duty, embedding the Shramanic value of ''ahimsa'' into the political fabric of India.{{sfn|Alsdorf|2010|pp=4–6, 13–15}}


==Hinduism==
==Hinduism==
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}}</ref>{{sfn|Talageri|2000}}{{page needed|date=November 2023}}{{sfn|Talageri|2010}}{{page needed|date=November 2023}}


The term {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} appears in the text [[Taittiriya Shakha]] of the [[Yajurveda]] (TS 5.2.8.7), where it refers to non-injury to the sacrificer himself.{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|p=2}} It occurs several times in the ''[[Shatapatha Brahmana]]'' in the sense of "non-injury".<ref>Shatapatha Brahmana 2.3.4.30; 2.5.1.14; 6.3.1.26; 6.3.1.39.</ref> The {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} doctrine is a late Vedic era development in Brahmanical culture.<ref name="houben 1999">{{cite book | first=Henk M.|last=Bodewitz|editor-last1=Houben | editor-first1=Jan E. M. | editor-last2=Kooij | editor-first2=Karel Rijk van | title=Violence Denied: violence, non-violence and the rationalization of violence in "South Asian" cultural history | publisher=BRILL | date=1999 | isbn=978-90-04-11344-2 | page=30}}</ref> The earliest reference to the idea of non-violence to animals ({{transliteration|sa|pashu-Ahimsa}}), apparently in a moral sense, is in the Kapisthala Katha Samhita of the Yajurveda (KapS 31.11), which may have been written in about {{BCE|1500-1200}}.{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|pp=2–3}}{{sfn|Talageri|2000}}{{page needed|date=November 2023}}{{sfn|Talageri|2010}}{{page needed|date=November 2023}} The [[Chandogya Upanishad]] (3.17.4) includes ahimsa in its list of virtues.<ref name="VD">{{Cite book |last1=van Kooij |first1=K.R. |last2=Houben |first2=Jan E.M. |year=1999 |title=Violence denied: Violence, non-violence and the rationalization of violence in South Asian cultural history |publisher=Brill |location=Leiden, NL |pages=117, 123, 129, 164, 212, 269 |isbn=90-04-11344-4}}</ref>
The term {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} appears in the text [[Taittiriya Shakha]] of the [[Yajurveda]] (TS 5.2.8.7), where it refers to non-injury to the sacrificer himself.{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|p=2}} It occurs several times in the ''[[Shatapatha Brahmana]]'' in the sense of "non-injury".<ref>Shatapatha Brahmana 2.3.4.30; 2.5.1.14; 6.3.1.26; 6.3.1.39.</ref> The {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} doctrine is a late Vedic era development in Brahmanical culture.<ref name="houben 1999">{{cite book | first=Henk M.|last=Bodewitz|editor-last1=Houben | editor-first1=Jan E. M. | editor-last2=Kooij | editor-first2=Karel Rijk van | title=Violence Denied: violence, non-violence and the rationalization of violence in "South Asian" cultural history | publisher=BRILL | date=1999 | isbn=978-90-04-11344-2 | page=30}}</ref> The earliest reference to the idea of non-violence to animals ({{transliteration|sa|pashu-Ahimsa}}), apparently in a moral sense, is in the Kapisthala Katha Samhita of the Yajurveda (KapS 31.11), which may have been written in about {{BCE|1500-1200}}.{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|pp=2–3}}{{sfn|Talageri|2000}}{{page needed|date=November 2023}}{{sfn|Talageri|2010}}{{page needed|date=November 2023}} The [[Chandogya Upanishad]] (3.17.4) includes ahimsa in its list of virtues.<ref name="VD">{{Cite book |last1=van Kooij |first1=K.R. |last2=Houben |first2=Jan E.M. |year=1999 |title=Violence denied: Violence, non-violence and the rationalization of violence in South Asian cultural history |publisher=Brill |location=Leiden, NL |pages=117, 123, 129, 164, 212, 269 |isbn=90-04-11344-4}}</ref>


John Bowker states the word appears but is uncommon in the principal Upanishads.<ref>{{cite book | last=Bowker | first=John | title=Problems of Suffering in Religions of the World | publisher=Cambridge University Press | date=10 April 1975 | isbn=978-0-521-09903-5 | page=233}}</ref> Kaneda gives examples of the word {{transliteration|sa|pashu-Ahimsa}} in these Upanishads.<ref name=kaneda2008>{{cite book | last=Kaneda|first=T.|chapter=Shanti, the peacefulness of mind| editor-last=Eppert | editor-first=Claudia | editor-last2=Wang | editor-first2=Hongyu | title=Cross-cultural Studies in Curriculum: Eastern thought, educational insights | publisher=Routledge | date=2008 | isbn=978-0-8058-5673-6 | pages=171–192}}</ref> Other scholars<ref name="arapura"/><ref name=Izawa /> suggest {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} as an ethical concept started evolving in the Vedas, becoming an increasingly central concept in Upanishads.
John Bowker states the word appears but is uncommon in the principal Upanishads.<ref>{{cite book | last=Bowker | first=John | title=Problems of Suffering in Religions of the World | publisher=Cambridge University Press | date=10 April 1975 | isbn=978-0-521-09903-5 | page=233}}</ref> Kaneda gives examples of the word {{transliteration|sa|pashu-Ahimsa}} in these Upanishads.<ref name=kaneda2008>{{cite book | last=Kaneda|first=T.|chapter=Shanti, the peacefulness of mind| editor-last=Eppert | editor-first=Claudia | editor-last2=Wang | editor-first2=Hongyu | title=Cross-cultural Studies in Curriculum: Eastern thought, educational insights | publisher=Routledge | date=2008 | isbn=978-0-8058-5673-6 | pages=171–192}}</ref> Other scholars<ref name="arapura"/><ref name=Izawa /> suggest {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} as an ethical concept started evolving in the Vedas, becoming an increasingly central concept in Upanishads.


The [[Chāndogya Upaniṣad]], dated to {{BCE|800 to 600}}, one of the oldest [[Upanishads]], has the earliest evidence for the [[Vedas|Vedic era]] use of the word {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} in the sense familiar in Hinduism (a code of conduct). It bars violence against "all creatures" ({{transliteration|sa|sarvabhuta}}), and the practitioner of {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} is said to escape from the cycle of [[Reincarnation|rebirths]] (CU 8.15.1).{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|pp=2–5}}<ref>English translation: {{harvnb|Schmidt|1968|p=631}}</ref> Some scholars state that this mention may have been an influence of Jainism on Vedic Hinduism.<ref>{{cite book |first1=M.K|last1=Sridhar|first2=Puruṣottama|last2=Bilimoria|editor-last=Bilimoria | editor-first=Purusottama | editor-last2=Prabhu | editor-first2=Joseph | editor-last3=Sharma | editor-first3=Renuka M. | title=Indian Ethics: Classical traditions and contemporary challenges | publisher=Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. | date=2007 | isbn=978-0-7546-3301-3|page=315}}</ref> Others scholar state that this relationship is speculative, and though Jainism is an ancient tradition the oldest traceable texts of Jainism tradition are from many centuries after the Vedic era ended.<ref>{{cite book|first=Jeffery D.|last=Long|title=Jainism: An Introduction|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JmRlAgAAQBAJ|year=2009|publisher=I. B. Tauris|isbn=978-1-84511-625-5|pages=31–33}}</ref>{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=22–24, 73–83}}
The [[Chāndogya Upaniṣad]], dated to {{BCE|800 to 600}}, one of the oldest [[Upanishads]], has the earliest evidence for the [[Vedas|Vedic era]] use of the word {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} in the sense familiar in Hinduism (a code of conduct). It bars violence against "all creatures" ({{transliteration|sa|sarvabhuta}}), and the practitioner of {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}} is said to escape from the cycle of [[Reincarnation|rebirths]] (CU 8.15.1).{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|pp=2–5}}{{sfn|Schmidt|1968|p=631}} Some scholars state that this mention may have been an influence of Jainism on Vedic Hinduism.<ref>{{cite book |first1=M.K|last1=Sridhar|first2=Puruṣottama|last2=Bilimoria|editor-last=Bilimoria | editor-first=Purusottama | editor-last2=Prabhu | editor-first2=Joseph | editor-last3=Sharma | editor-first3=Renuka M. | title=Indian Ethics: Classical traditions and contemporary challenges | publisher=Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. | date=2007 | isbn=978-0-7546-3301-3|page=315}}</ref> Others scholar state that this relationship is speculative, and though Jainism is an ancient tradition the oldest traceable texts of Jainism tradition are from many centuries after the Vedic era ended.<ref>{{cite book|first=Jeffery D.|last=Long|title=Jainism: An Introduction|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JmRlAgAAQBAJ|year=2009|publisher=I. B. Tauris|isbn=978-1-84511-625-5|pages=31–33}}</ref>{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=22–24, 73–83}}


Chāndogya Upaniṣad also names {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}}, along with {{transliteration|sa|Satyavacanam}} (truthfulness), {{transliteration|sa|Ārjavam}} (sincerity), {{transliteration|sa|[[Dāna]]m}} (charity), and {{transliteration|sa|[[Tapas (Indian religions)|Tapo]]}} (penance/meditation), as one of five essential virtues (CU 3.17.4).<ref name=arapura/><ref>Ravindra Kumar (2008), Non-violence and Its Philosophy, {{ISBN|978-81-7933-159-0}}, see pages 11–14</ref>
Chāndogya Upaniṣad also names {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}}, along with {{transliteration|sa|Satyavacanam}} (truthfulness), {{transliteration|sa|Ārjavam}} (sincerity), {{transliteration|sa|[[Dāna]]m}} (charity), and {{transliteration|sa|[[Tapas (Indian religions)|Tapo]]}} (penance/meditation), as one of five essential virtues (CU 3.17.4).<ref name=arapura/><ref>Ravindra Kumar (2008), Non-violence and Its Philosophy, {{ISBN|978-81-7933-159-0}}, see pages 11–14</ref>
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; Self-defence
; Self-defence
Different interpretations of ancient Hindu texts have been offered in matters of self-defense. For example, Tähtinen suggests self-defense is appropriate, criminals are not protected by the rule of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, and Hindu scriptures support violence against an armed attacker.{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|pp=96, 98–101}}<ref>Mahabharata 12.15.55; Manu Smriti 8.349–350; Matsya Purana 226.116.</ref> {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} is not meant to imply [[pacifism]].{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|pp=91–93}}
Different interpretations of ancient Hindu texts have been offered in matters of self-defense. For example, Tähtinen suggests self-defense is appropriate, criminals are not protected by the rule of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, and Hindu scriptures support violence against an armed attacker.{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|pp=96, 98–101}}<ref>Mahabharata 12.15.55; Manu Smriti 8.349–350; Matsya Purana 226.116.</ref> {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} is not meant to imply [[pacifism]].{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|pp=91–93}}


Alternative theories of self-defense, inspired by {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, build principles similar to ideas of just war. [[Aikido]], pioneered in Japan, illustrates one such set of principles for self-defense. [[Morihei Ueshiba]], the founder of Aikido, described his inspiration as Ahimsa.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.sportspa.com.ba/images/dec2011/full/rad8.pdf |title=The Role of Teachers in Martial Arts; see page 48, 2nd column |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190412060316/http://www.sportspa.com.ba/images/dec2011/full/rad8.pdf |archive-date=12 April 2019 |first=Nebojša|last=Vasic |year=2011 |journal=Sport SPA |volume=8 |issue=2 |pages=47–51}}</ref> According to this interpretation of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} in self-defense, one must not assume that the world is free of aggression. One must presume that some people will, out of ignorance, error, or fear, attack others or intrude into their space, physically or verbally. The aim of self-defense, suggested Ueshiba, must be to neutralize the attacker's aggression and avoid conflict. The best defense is one with which the victim is protected and the attacker is respected and not injured if possible. Under {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} and [[Aikido]], there are no enemies, and appropriate self-defense focuses on neutralizing the immaturity, assumptions, and aggressive strivings of the attacker.<ref>{{multiref2
Alternative theories of self-defense, inspired by {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, build principles similar to ideas of just war. [[Aikido]], pioneered in Japan, illustrates one such set of principles for self-defense. [[Morihei Ueshiba]], the founder of Aikido, described his inspiration as Ahimsa.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.sportspa.com.ba/images/dec2011/full/rad8.pdf |title=The Role of Teachers in Martial Arts; see page 48, 2nd column |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190412060316/http://www.sportspa.com.ba/images/dec2011/full/rad8.pdf |archive-date=12 April 2019 |first=Nebojša|last=Vasic |year=2011 |journal=Sport SPA |volume=8 |issue=2 |pages=47–51}}</ref> According to this interpretation of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} in self-defense, one must not assume that the world is free of aggression. One must presume that some people will, out of ignorance, error, or fear, attack others or intrude into their space, physically or verbally. The aim of self-defense, suggested Ueshiba, must be to neutralize the attacker's aggression and avoid conflict. The best defense is one with which the victim is protected and the attacker is respected and not injured if possible. Under {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} and [[Aikido]], there are no enemies, and appropriate self-defense focuses on neutralizing the immaturity, assumptions, and aggressive strivings of the attacker.<ref>{{multiref2
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; Criminal law
; Criminal law
Tähtinen concludes that Hindus have no misgivings about the death penalty; their position is that evil-doers who deserve death should be killed and that a king, in particular, is obliged to punish criminals and should not hesitate to kill them, even if they happen to be his brothers and sons.{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|pp=96, 98–99}}
Tähtinen concludes that Hindus have no misgivings about the death penalty; their position is that evil-doers who deserve death should be killed and that a king, in particular, is obliged to punish criminals and should not hesitate to kill them, even if they happen to be his brothers and sons.{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|pp=96, 98–99}}


Other scholars<ref name=klos1996/><ref name=robinson2003/> conclude that Hindu scriptures suggest that sentences for any crime must be fair, proportional, and not cruel.
Other scholars<ref name=klos1996/><ref name=robinson2003/> conclude that Hindu scriptures suggest that sentences for any crime must be fair, proportional, and not cruel.
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The Hindu precept of "cause no injury" applies to [[animal]]s and all life forms. This precept is not found in the oldest verses of Vedas ({{BCE|1500–1000}}), but increasingly becomes one of the central ideas in post-Vedic period.<ref name=chapple16>{{cite book | last=Chapple | first=Christopher Key | title=Nonviolence to Animals, Earth, and Self in Asian Traditions | publisher=State University of New York Press | date=1993 | isbn=0-7914-1498-1 | pages=16–17}}</ref>{{sfn|Brown|1964}} In the oldest layer of the Vedas, such as the ''Rigveda'', ritual sacrifices of animals and cooking of meat to feed guests are mentioned. This included goat, ox, horse, and others.{{sfn|Brown|1964|pp=246–247}} However, the text is not uniform in its prescriptions. Some verses praise meat as food, while other verses in the Vedas recommend "abstention from meat", in particular, "beef".{{sfn|Brown|1964|pp=246–247}}<ref>{{cite book | last=Rosen | first=Steven | title=Holy Cow: The Hare Krishna Contribution to Vegetarianism and Animal Rights | publisher=Lantern Books | date=2004 | isbn=1-59056-066-3 | pages=19–39}}</ref> According to Marvin Harris, the Vedic literature is inconsistent, with some verses suggesting ritual slaughter and meat consumption, while others suggesting a taboo on meat-eating.<ref>{{cite book |first=Marvin|last=Harris| editor-last=Whitten | editor-first=Phillip | editor-last2=Hunter | editor-first2=David E. | title=Anthropology: contemporary perspectives|edition=6th | publisher=Addison-Wesley Longman | date=1990 | isbn=0-673-52074-9 | pages=201–204 |url=http://academic.regis.edu/rlumpp/PDF%20files/RT%20201%20India%27s%20Sacred%20Cow.pdf|chapter= India's sacred cow|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170329091317/http://academic.regis.edu/rlumpp/PDF |archive-date=29 March 2017 }}</ref>
The Hindu precept of "cause no injury" applies to [[animal]]s and all life forms. This precept is not found in the oldest verses of Vedas ({{BCE|1500–1000}}), but increasingly becomes one of the central ideas in post-Vedic period.<ref name=chapple16>{{cite book | last=Chapple | first=Christopher Key | title=Nonviolence to Animals, Earth, and Self in Asian Traditions | publisher=State University of New York Press | date=1993 | isbn=0-7914-1498-1 | pages=16–17}}</ref>{{sfn|Brown|1964}} In the oldest layer of the Vedas, such as the ''Rigveda'', ritual sacrifices of animals and cooking of meat to feed guests are mentioned. This included goat, ox, horse, and others.{{sfn|Brown|1964|pp=246–247}} However, the text is not uniform in its prescriptions. Some verses praise meat as food, while other verses in the Vedas recommend "abstention from meat", in particular, "beef".{{sfn|Brown|1964|pp=246–247}}<ref>{{cite book | last=Rosen | first=Steven | title=Holy Cow: The Hare Krishna Contribution to Vegetarianism and Animal Rights | publisher=Lantern Books | date=2004 | isbn=1-59056-066-3 | pages=19–39}}</ref> According to Marvin Harris, the Vedic literature is inconsistent, with some verses suggesting ritual slaughter and meat consumption, while others suggesting a taboo on meat-eating.<ref>{{cite book |first=Marvin|last=Harris| editor-last=Whitten | editor-first=Phillip | editor-last2=Hunter | editor-first2=David E. | title=Anthropology: contemporary perspectives|edition=6th | publisher=Addison-Wesley Longman | date=1990 | isbn=0-673-52074-9 | pages=201–204 |url=http://academic.regis.edu/rlumpp/PDF%20files/RT%20201%20India%27s%20Sacred%20Cow.pdf|chapter= India's sacred cow|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170329091317/http://academic.regis.edu/rlumpp/PDF |archive-date=29 March 2017 }}</ref>


Hindu texts dated to {{BCE|1st millennium}} initially mention meat as food, then evolve to suggest that only meat obtained through ritual sacrifice can be eaten, thereafter evolving to the stance that one should eat no meat because it hurts animals, with verses describing the noble life as one that lives on flowers, roots, and fruits alone.<ref name=chapple16/><ref>[[Baudhayana]] Dharmasutra 2.4.7; 2.6.2; 2.11.15; 2.12.8; 3.1.13; 3.3.6; [[Apastamba]] Dharmasutra 1.17.15; 1.17.19; 2.17.26–2.18.3; Vasistha Dharmasutra 14.12.</ref> The late Vedic-era literature ({{BCE|pre-500}}) condemns all killings of men, cattle, birds, and horses, and prays to god [[Agni]] to punish those who kill.<ref>{{citation |last=Krishna |first=Nanditha |title=Sacred Animals of India |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DF_af8_547EC&pg=PT107 |date=2010 |publisher=Penguin Books |isbn=978-81-8475-182-6 |pages=15, 33}}</ref>
Hindu texts dated to {{BCE|1st millennium}} initially mention meat as food, then evolve to suggest that only meat obtained through ritual sacrifice can be eaten, thereafter evolving to the stance that one should eat no meat because it hurts animals, with verses describing the noble life as one that lives on flowers, roots, and fruits alone.<ref name=chapple16/><ref>[[Baudhayana Dharmasutra]] 2.4.7; 2.6.2; 2.11.15; 2.12.8; 3.1.13; 3.3.6; [[Apastamba]] Dharmasutra 1.17.15; 1.17.19; 2.17.26–2.18.3; Vasistha Dharmasutra 14.12.</ref> The late Vedic-era literature ({{BCE|pre-500}}) condemns all killings of men, cattle, birds, and horses, and prays to god [[Agni]] to punish those who kill.<ref>{{citation |last=Krishna |first=Nanditha |title=Sacred Animals of India |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DF_af8_547EC&pg=PT107 |date=2010 |publisher=Penguin Books |isbn=978-81-8475-182-6 |pages=15, 33}}</ref>


Later texts of Hinduism declare {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} as one of the primary virtues, declare any killing or harming any life as against {{transliteration|sa|dharma}} (moral life). Finally, the discussion in the Upanishads and Hindu Epics<ref>Manu Smriti 5.30, 5.32, 5.39 and 5.44; Mahabharata 3.199 (3.207), 3.199.5 (3.207.5), 3.199.19–29 (3.207.19), 3.199.23–24 (3.207.23–24), 13.116.15–18, 14.28; Ramayana 1-2-8:19</ref> shifts to whether a human being can ever live his or her life without harming animal and plant life in some way, which and when plants or animal meat may be eaten, whether violence against animals causes human beings to become less compassionate, and if and how one may exert least harm to non-human life consistent with {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, given the constraints of life and human needs.<ref>Alsdorf pp. 592–593; Mahabharata 13.115.59–60, 13.116.15–18.</ref> The [[Mahabharata]] permits hunting by warriors, but opposes it in the case of hermits who must be strictly non-violent. [[Sushruta Samhita]], a Hindu text written in {{BCE|the 3rd or 4th century}}, in Chapter XLVI suggests proper diet as a means of treating certain illnesses, and recommends various fishes and meats for different ailments and for pregnant women,<ref>{{cite book |author=Kaviraj Kunja Lal Bhishagratna |year=1907|title=An English Translation of the Sushruta Samhita; see Chapter starting on page 469; for discussion on meats and fishes, see page 480 and onwards |volume=I.2 }}</ref><ref>Sutrasthana 46.89; Sharirasthana 3.25.</ref> and the [[Charaka Samhita]] describes meat as superior to all other kinds of food for convalescents.<ref>Sutrasthana 27.87.</ref>
Later texts of Hinduism declare {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} as one of the primary virtues, declare any killing or harming any life as against {{transliteration|sa|dharma}} (moral life). Finally, the discussion in the Upanishads and Hindu Epics<ref>Manu Smriti 5.30, 5.32, 5.39 and 5.44; Mahabharata 3.199 (3.207), 3.199.5 (3.207.5), 3.199.19–29 (3.207.19), 3.199.23–24 (3.207.23–24), 13.116.15–18, 14.28; Ramayana 1-2-8:19</ref> shifts to whether a human being can ever live his or her life without harming animal and plant life in some way, which and when plants or animal meat may be eaten, whether violence against animals causes human beings to become less compassionate, and if and how one may exert least harm to non-human life consistent with {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, given the constraints of life and human needs.<ref>Alsdorf pp. 592–593; Mahabharata 13.115.59–60, 13.116.15–18.</ref> The [[Mahabharata]] permits hunting by warriors, but opposes it in the case of hermits who must be strictly non-violent. [[Sushruta Samhita]], a Hindu text written in {{BCE|the 3rd or 4th century}}, in Chapter XLVI suggests proper diet as a means of treating certain illnesses, and recommends various fishes and meats for different ailments and for pregnant women,<ref>{{cite book |author=Kaviraj Kunja Lal Bhishagratna |year=1907|title=An English Translation of the Sushruta Samhita; see Chapter starting on page 469; for discussion on meats and fishes, see page 480 and onwards |volume=I.2 }}</ref><ref>Sutrasthana 46.89; Sharirasthana 3.25.</ref> and the [[Charaka Samhita]] describes meat as superior to all other kinds of food for convalescents.<ref>Sutrasthana 27.87.</ref>


Across the texts of Hinduism, there is a profusion of ideas about the virtue of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} when applied to non-human life, but without a universal consensus.<ref>Mahabharata 3.199.11–12 (3.199 is 3.207 elsewhere); 13.115; 13.116.26; 13.148.17; Bhagavata Purana (11.5.13–14), and the Chandogya Upanishad (8.15.1).</ref> Alsdorf claims the debate and disagreements between supporters of [[Vegetarianism|vegetarian]] lifestyle and meat eaters was significant. Even suggested exceptions – ritual slaughter and hunting – were challenged by advocates of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}.<ref>Alsdorf pp. 572–577 (for the Manusmṛti) and pp. 585–597 (for the Mahabharata); {{harvnb|Tähtinen|1976|pp=34–36}}</ref><ref>The Mahabharata and the Manusmṛti (5.27–55) contain lengthy discussions about the legitimacy of ritual slaughter.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m12/m12b095.htm |url-status=live |title=Mahabharata 12.260—(12.260 is 12.268 according to another count) |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070910073935/http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m12/m12b095.htm |archive-date=10 September 2007 }}; 13.115–116; 14.28.</ref> In the Mahabharata both sides present various arguments to substantiate their viewpoints. Moreover, a hunter defends his profession in a long discourse.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m03/m03207.htm |url-status=live |title=Mahabharata 3.199 —(3.199 is 3.207 according to another count) |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929130620/http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m03/m03207.htm |archive-date=29 September 2007}}</ref>
Across the texts of Hinduism, there is a profusion of ideas about the virtue of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} when applied to non-human life, but without a universal consensus.<ref>Mahabharata 3.199.11–12 (3.199 is 3.207 elsewhere); 13.115; 13.116.26; 13.148.17; Bhagavata Purana (11.5.13–14), and the Chandogya Upanishad (8.15.1).</ref> Alsdorf claims the debate and disagreements between supporters of [[Vegetarianism|vegetarian]] lifestyle and meat eaters was significant. Even suggested exceptions – ritual slaughter and hunting – were challenged by advocates of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}.{{sfn|Alsdorf|2010|pp=572–577 (for the Manusmṛti) and 585–597 (for the Mahabharata)}}{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|pp=34–36}}<ref>The Mahabharata and the Manusmṛti (5.27–55) contain lengthy discussions about the legitimacy of ritual slaughter.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m12/m12b095.htm |url-status=live |title=Mahabharata 12.260—(12.260 is 12.268 according to another count) |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070910073935/http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m12/m12b095.htm |archive-date=10 September 2007 }}; 13.115–116; 14.28.</ref> In the Mahabharata both sides present various arguments to substantiate their viewpoints. Moreover, a hunter defends his profession in a long discourse.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m03/m03207.htm |url-status=live |title=Mahabharata 3.199 —(3.199 is 3.207 according to another count) |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929130620/http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m03/m03207.htm |archive-date=29 September 2007}}</ref>


Many of the arguments proposed in favor of non-violence to animals refer to the bliss one feels, the rewards it entails before or after death, the danger and harm it prevents, as well as to the karmic consequences of violence.{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|pp=39–43}}<ref>Alsdorf p. 589–590</ref>{{sfn|Schmidt|1968|pp=634–635, 640–643}}
Many of the arguments proposed in favor of non-violence to animals refer to the bliss one feels, the rewards it entails before or after death, the danger and harm it prevents, as well as to the karmic consequences of violence.{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|pp=39–43}}{{sfn|Alsdorf|2010|pp=589–590}}{{sfn|Schmidt|1968|pp=634–635, 640–643}}


The ancient Hindu texts discuss {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} and non-animal life. They discourage wanton destruction of nature including of wild and cultivated plants. Hermits ([[sannyasa|sannyasins]]) were urged to live on a [[fruitarian]] diet so as to avoid the destruction of plants.{{sfn|Schmidt|1968|pp=637–639}}<ref>Manusmriti 10.63, 11.145</ref><ref>{{cite book | last=Preece | first=Rod |author-link=Rod Preece| title=Animals and Nature: Cultural Myths, Cultural Realities | publisher=University of British Columbia Press | date=2005 | isbn=978-0-7748-0725-8 | pages=212–217}}</ref> Scholars{{r|CCEN}}<ref>{{cite journal | last=Horn | first=Gavin Van | title=Hindu Traditions and Nature: Survey Article | journal=Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology | publisher=Brill | volume=10 | issue=1 | year=2006 | jstor=43809321 | pages=5–39| doi=10.1163/156853506776114474 }}</ref> claim the principles of ecological nonviolence are innate in the Hindu tradition, and its conceptual fountain has been {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} as its cardinal virtue.
The ancient Hindu texts discuss {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} and non-animal life. They discourage wanton destruction of nature including of wild and cultivated plants. Hermits ([[sannyasa|sannyasins]]) were urged to live on a [[fruitarian]] diet so as to avoid the destruction of plants.{{sfn|Schmidt|1968|pp=637–639}}<ref>Manusmriti 10.63, 11.145</ref><ref>{{cite book | last=Preece | first=Rod |author-link=Rod Preece| title=Animals and Nature: Cultural Myths, Cultural Realities | publisher=University of British Columbia Press | date=2005 | isbn=978-0-7748-0725-8 | pages=212–217}}</ref> Scholars{{r|CCEN}}<ref>{{cite journal | last=Horn | first=Gavin Van | title=Hindu Traditions and Nature: Survey Article | journal=Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology | publisher=Brill | volume=10 | issue=1 | year=2006 | jstor=43809321 | pages=5–39| doi=10.1163/156853506776114474 }}</ref> claim the principles of ecological nonviolence are innate in the Hindu tradition, and its conceptual fountain has been {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} as its cardinal virtue.
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In the 19th and 20th centuries, prominent figures of Indian spirituality such as [[Shrimad Rajchandra]]<ref>{{cite book|author=Pyarelal|title=Mahatma Gandhi-the Early Phase|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8P0KAQAAIAAJ|year=1965|publisher=Navajivan Publishing House}}</ref> and [[Swami Vivekananda]]<ref>{{cite book|title=Religious Vegetarianism|editor-link1=Kerry S. Walters|editor-last1=Walters|editor-first1=Kerry S.|editor-first2=Lisa|editor-last2= Portmess|location=Albany|year=2001|pages=50–52}}</ref> emphasised the importance of Ahimsa.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, prominent figures of Indian spirituality such as [[Shrimad Rajchandra]]<ref>{{cite book|author=Pyarelal|title=Mahatma Gandhi-the Early Phase|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8P0KAQAAIAAJ|year=1965|publisher=Navajivan Publishing House}}</ref> and [[Swami Vivekananda]]<ref>{{cite book|title=Religious Vegetarianism|editor-link1=Kerry S. Walters|editor-last1=Walters|editor-first1=Kerry S.|editor-first2=Lisa|editor-last2= Portmess|location=Albany|year=2001|pages=50–52}}</ref> emphasised the importance of Ahimsa.


[[Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi]] successfully promoted the principle of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} to all spheres of life, in particular to politics ({{transliteration|sa|[[Swaraj]]}}).{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|pp=116–124}} His non-violent resistance movement {{transliteration|sa|[[satyagraha]]}} had an immense impact on India, impressed public opinion in Western countries, and influenced the leaders of various [[civil and political rights]] movements such as the American [[civil rights movement]]'s [[Martin Luther King Jr.]] and [[James Bevel]]. In Gandhi's thought, {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} precludes not only the act of inflicting a physical injury but also mental states like evil thoughts and hatred, and unkind behavior such as harsh words, dishonesty, and lying, all of which he saw as manifestations of violence incompatible with {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}.<ref name="XXII-XLVII 1986, p. 11-12">{{harvnb|Walli|pp=XXII-XLVII}}; {{cite book|last=Borman |first= William|title=Gandhi and Nonviolence |location=Albany|year=1986|pages=11–12}}</ref> Gandhi believed {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} to be a creative energy force, encompassing all interactions leading one's self to find {{transliteration|sa|satya}}, "Divine Truth".<ref>{{citation|last=Jackson|pages=39–54|title=Religion East & West|year=2008}}</ref> [[Sri Aurobindo]] criticized the Gandhian concept of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} as unrealistic and not universally applicable; he adopted a pragmatic non-pacifist position, saying that the justification of violence depends on the specific circumstances of the given situation.{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|pp=115–116}}
[[Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi]] successfully promoted the principle of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} to all spheres of life, in particular to politics ({{transliteration|sa|[[Swaraj]]}}).{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|pp=116–124}} His non-violent resistance movement {{transliteration|sa|[[satyagraha]]}} had an immense impact on India, impressed public opinion in Western countries, and influenced the leaders of various [[civil and political rights]] movements such as the American [[civil rights movement]]'s [[Martin Luther King Jr.]] and [[James Bevel]]. In Gandhi's thought, {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} precludes not only the act of inflicting a physical injury but also mental states like evil thoughts and hatred, and unkind behavior such as harsh words, dishonesty, and lying, all of which he saw as manifestations of violence incompatible with {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}.<ref name="XXII-XLVII 1986, p. 11-12">{{harvnb|Walli|pp=XXII-XLVII}}; {{cite book|last=Borman |first= William|title=Gandhi and Nonviolence |location=Albany|year=1986|pages=11–12}}</ref> Gandhi believed {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} to be a creative energy force, encompassing all interactions leading one's self to find {{transliteration|sa|satya}}, "Divine Truth".<ref>{{citation|last=Jackson|pages=39–54|title=Religion East & West|year=2008}}</ref> [[Sri Aurobindo]] criticized the Gandhian concept of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} as unrealistic and not universally applicable, noting that while it is a spiritual truth, it should not be applied as a "rigid ethical rule" to all of humanity.<ref>Sri Aurobindo, ''Letters on Yoga — I'', p. 435; ''Letters on Himself and the Ashram'', p. 19.</ref> He adopted a pragmatic non-pacifist position, holding that the justification of violence depends on the specific circumstances and the "dharma" (duty/righteousness) of the situation.<ref>Sri Aurobindo, ''Bande Mataram'', p. 278; ''Letters on Yoga — I'', p. 436.</ref> While he advocated passive resistance as a political policy for India's independence, he maintained that a nation is entitled to use violence for its self-preservation if necessary.<ref>Sri Aurobindo, ''Autobiographical Notes'', pp. 48, 73.</ref>


Gandhi took the religious principle of ''ahimsa,'' and turned it into a non-violent tool for mass action. He used it to fight not only colonial rule, but social evils such as racial discrimination and untouchability as well.<ref>{{Cite web |title=BBC - Ethics - War: Non-violence |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/war/against/nonviolence.shtml#:~:text=Gandhi%20took%20the%20religious%20principle,discrimination%20and%20untouchability%20as%20well. |access-date=2024-07-18 |website=www.bbc.co.uk |language=en-GB}}</ref>
Gandhi took the religious principle of ''ahimsa,'' and turned it into a non-violent tool for mass action. He used it to fight not only colonial rule, but social evils such as racial discrimination and untouchability as well.<ref>{{Cite web |title=BBC - Ethics - War: Non-violence |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/war/against/nonviolence.shtml#:~:text=Gandhi%20took%20the%20religious%20principle,discrimination%20and%20untouchability%20as%20well. |access-date=2024-07-18 |website=www.bbc.co.uk |language=en-GB}}</ref>
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{{See also|Jain vegetarianism}}
{{See also|Jain vegetarianism}}
[[File:Ahimsa_Jainism_Gradient.jpg|thumb|The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolises the Jain Vow of {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}}. The word in the middle is {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}}. The wheel represents the [[dharmacakra]] which stands for the resolve to halt the cycle of reincarnation through relentless pursuit of truth and non-violence.]]
[[File:Ahimsa_Jainism_Gradient.jpg|thumb|The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolises the Jain Vow of {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}}. The word in the middle is {{transliteration|sa|Ahimsa}}. The wheel represents the [[dharmacakra]] which stands for the resolve to halt the cycle of reincarnation through relentless pursuit of truth and non-violence.]]
In Jainism, the understanding and implementation of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} is more radical, scrupulous, and comprehensive than in any other religion.{{sfnm|Laidlaw|1995|1pp=154–160|Jindal|1988|2pp=74–90|Tähtinen|1976|p=110}} Killing any living being out of passions like attachment is considered {{transliteration|sa|hiṃsā}} (to injure) and abstaining from such an act is {{transliteration|sa|ahimsā}} (noninjury).{{sfn|Jain|2012|p=34-36}} The vow of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsā}} is considered the foremost among the "five vows of Jainism". Other vows like truth ({{transliteration|sa|satya}}) are meant for safeguarding the vow of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsā}}.{{sfn|Jain|2012|p=33}}
In Jainism, the understanding and implementation of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} is more radical, scrupulous, and comprehensive than in any other religion.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|pp=154–160}}{{sfn|Jindal|1988|pp=74–90}}{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|p=110}} Killing any living being out of passions like attachment is considered {{transliteration|sa|hiṃsā}} (to injure) and abstaining from such an act is {{transliteration|sa|ahimsā}} (noninjury).{{sfn|Jain|2012|p=34-36}} The vow of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsā}} is considered the foremost among the "five vows of Jainism". Other vows like truth ({{transliteration|sa|satya}}) are meant for safeguarding the vow of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsā}}.{{sfn|Jain|2012|p=33}}
 
In the practice of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, the requirements are less strict for the lay persons ({{transliteration|sa|[[sravakas]]}}) who have undertaken {{transliteration|sa|anuvrata}} (Smaller Vows) than for the [[Jain monasticism|Jain monastics]] who are bound by the [[Mahavrata]] "Great Vows".{{sfnm|Dundas|2002|1pp=158–159, 189–192|Laidlaw|1995|2pp=173–175, 179}}<ref>''Religious Vegetarianism'', ed. [[Kerry S. Walters]] and Lisa Portmess, Albany 2001, p. 43–46 (translation of the First Great Vow).</ref>


The statement {{IAST|ahimsā paramo dharmaḥ}} (or, "Non-injury/nonviolence/harmlessness is the supreme/ultimate/paramount/highest/absolute duty/virtue/attribute/religion"{{refn|slashes are used here to present alternative denotations}}) is often found inscribed on the walls of the [[Jain temple]]s.{{sfnm|Dundas|2002|1p=160|Wiley|2006|2p=438|Laidlaw|1995|3pp=153–154}} As in Hinduism, the aim is to prevent the accumulation of harmful karma.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|pp=26–30, 191–195}}
The statement {{IAST|ahimsā paramo dharmaḥ}} (or, "Non-injury/nonviolence/harmlessness is the supreme/ultimate/paramount/highest/absolute duty/virtue/attribute/religion"{{refn|slashes are used here to present alternative denotations}}) is often found inscribed on the walls of the [[Jain temple]]s.{{sfnm|Dundas|2002|1p=160|Wiley|2006|2p=438|Laidlaw|1995|3pp=153–154}} As in Hinduism, the aim is to prevent the accumulation of harmful karma.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|pp=26–30, 191–195}}


When [[Mahavira]] revived and reorganised the Jain faith in {{BCE|the 6th or 5th century}},<ref>{{harvnb|Dundas|2002|p=24}} suggests the 5th century; the traditional dating of Mahavira's death is {{BCE|527}}.</ref> {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} was already an established, strictly observed rule.<ref>{{cite book|last=Goyal|first=S.R.|title=A History of Indian Buddhism|publisher=Meerut|date=1987|pages=83–85}}</ref> [[Rishabhanatha]] (Ādinātha), the first Jain [[Tirthankara]], whom modern Western historians consider to be a historical figure, followed by [[Parshvanatha]] (Pārśvanātha){{sfnm|Dundas|2002|1pp=19, 30|Tähtinen|1964|2p=132}} the twenty-third [[Tirthankara]] lived in about {{BCE|the 9th century}}.<ref>{{harvnb|Dundas|2002|p=30}} suggests the 8th or 7th century; the traditional chronology places him in the late 9th or early 8th century.</ref> He founded the community to which Mahavira's parents belonged.<ref>[[Acaranga Sutra]] 2.15.</ref> Ahimsa was already part of the "Fourfold Restraint" (''Caujjama''), the vows taken by Parshva's followers.<ref>[[Sthananga Sutra]] 266; {{harvnb|Tähtinen|1976|p=132}}; Goyal p. 83–84, 103.</ref> In the times of Mahavira and in the following centuries, Jains were at odds with both Buddhists and followers of the Vedic religion or Hindus, whom they accused of negligence and inconsistency in the implementation of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}.{{sfnm|Dundas|2002|1pp=160, 234, 241|Wiley|2006|2p=448|Tähtinen|1976|3pp=8–9}}<ref>{{cite journal|last=Granoff|first=Phyllis|title=The Violence of Non-Violence: A Study of Some Jain Responses to Non-Jain Religious Practices|journal=Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies|volume=15|year=1992|pages=1–43}}</ref> According to the Jain tradition either [[lacto vegetarianism]] or [[veganism]] is prescribed.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|p=169}}
===The Hierarchy of Life===
The Jain concept of ''ahimsa'' is characterised by detailed classifications of life. Jains categorize living beings (''jiva'') based on their sensory faculties (''indriyas''), ranging from one-sensed beings (plants, water, earth) to five-sensed beings (humans, animals).


The Jain concept of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} is characterised by several aspects. Killing of animals for food is absolutely ruled out.{{sfnm|Laidlaw|1995|1pp=166–167|Tähtinen|1976|2p=37}} Jains also make considerable efforts not to injure plants in everyday life as far as possible. Though they admit that plants must be destroyed for the sake of food, they accept such violence only inasmuch as it is indispensable for human survival, and there are special instructions for preventing unnecessary violence against plants.<ref>{{cite book|last=Lodha|first=R.M.|chapter=Conservation of Vegetation and Jain Philosophy|title=Medieval Jainism: Culture and Environment|location=New Delhi|year=1990|pages=137–141}}</ref>{{sfn|Tähtinen|1964|p=105}} Jain monks and nuns go out of their way so as not to hurt even small insects and other minuscule animals.{{sfnm|Jindal|1988|1p=89|Laidlaw|1995|2pp=54, 154–155, 180}} Both the renouncers and the laypeople of Jain faith reject meat, fish, alcohol, and honey as these are believed to harm large or minuscule life forms.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|pp=166–167}}
Killing of animals for food is absolutely ruled out.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|pp=166–167}}{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|p=37}} Jains also make considerable efforts not to injure plants in everyday life as far as possible. Though they admit that plants must be destroyed for the sake of food, they accept such violence only inasmuch as it is indispensable for human survival, and there are special instructions for preventing unnecessary violence against plants.<ref>{{cite book|last=Lodha|first=R.M.|chapter=Conservation of Vegetation and Jain Philosophy|title=Medieval Jainism: Culture and Environment|location=New Delhi|year=1990|pages=137–141}}</ref>{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|p=105}} Jain monks and nuns go out of their way so as not to hurt even small insects and other minuscule animals.{{sfnm|Jindal|1988|1p=89|Laidlaw|1995|2pp=54, 154–155, 180}} Both the renouncers and the laypeople of Jain faith reject meat, fish, alcohol, and honey as these are believed to harm large or minuscule life forms.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|pp=166–167}}
 
===Ascetic vs. Householder Codes===
In the practice of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, the requirements are less strict for the lay persons ({{transliteration|sa|[[sravakas]]}}) who have undertaken {{transliteration|sa|anuvrata}} (Smaller Vows) than for the [[Jain monasticism|Jain monastics]] who are bound by the [[Mahavrata]] "Great Vows".{{sfnm|Dundas|2002|1pp=158–159, 189–192|Laidlaw|1995|2pp=173–175, 179}}<ref>''Religious Vegetarianism'', ed. [[Kerry S. Walters]] and Lisa Portmess, Albany 2001, p. 43–46 (translation of the First Great Vow).</ref>


Jain scholars have debated the potential injury to other life forms during one's occupation. Certain Jain texts (according to [[Padmanabh Jaini]], a Jainism scholar) forbid people of its faith from husbandry, agriculture, and trade in animal-derived products.<ref name="Sethia2004p51"/> Some Jains abstain from farming because it inevitably entails unintentional killing or injuring of many small animals, such as worms and insects.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|p=180}} These teachings, in part, have led the Jain community to focus on trade, merchant, clerical, and administrative occupations to minimize {{transliteration|sa|arambhaja-himsa}} (occupational violence against all life forms).<ref name="Sethia2004p51">{{cite book|author=Padmannabh Jaini|editor=Tara Sethia|title=Ahimsā, Anekānta, and Jaininsm|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QYdlKv8wBiYC |year=2004|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass Publ|isbn= 978-81-208-2036-4|pages=51–53}}</ref> For the layperson, the teaching has been of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} with {{transliteration|sa|pramada}} – that is, reducing violence through proper intention and being careful in every action on a daily basis to minimize violence to all life forms.{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=161–162}}
Jain scholars have debated the potential injury to other life forms during one's occupation. Certain Jain texts (according to [[Padmanabh Jaini]], a Jainism scholar) forbid people of its faith from husbandry, agriculture, and trade in animal-derived products.<ref name="Sethia2004p51"/> Some Jains abstain from farming because it inevitably entails unintentional killing or injuring of many small animals, such as worms and insects.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|p=180}} These teachings, in part, have led the Jain community to focus on trade, merchant, clerical, and administrative occupations to minimize {{transliteration|sa|arambhaja-himsa}} (occupational violence against all life forms).<ref name="Sethia2004p51">{{cite book|author=Padmannabh Jaini|editor=Tara Sethia|title=Ahimsā, Anekānta, and Jaininsm|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QYdlKv8wBiYC |year=2004|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass Publ|isbn= 978-81-208-2036-4|pages=51–53}}</ref> For the layperson, the teaching has been of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} with {{transliteration|sa|pramada}} – that is, reducing violence through proper intention and being careful in every action on a daily basis to minimize violence to all life forms.{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=161–162}}


===Intellectual Non-Violence===
When [[Mahavira]] revived and reorganised the Jain faith in {{BCE|the 6th or 5th century}},{{sfn|Dundas|2002|p=24}} {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} was already an established, strictly observed rule.<ref>{{cite book|last=Goyal|first=S.R.|title=A History of Indian Buddhism|publisher=Meerut|date=1987|pages=83–85}}</ref> [[Rishabhanatha]] (Ādinātha), the first Jain [[Tirthankara]], whom modern Western historians consider to be a historical figure, followed by [[Parshvanatha]] (Pārśvanātha){{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=19, 30}}{{sfn|Tahtinen|1964|p=132}} the twenty-third [[Tirthankara]] lived in about {{BCE|the 9th century}}.{{sfn|Dundas|2002|p=30}} He founded the community to which Mahavira's parents belonged.<ref>[[Acaranga Sutra]] 2.15.</ref> Ahimsa was already part of the "Fourfold Restraint" (''Caujjama''), the vows taken by Parshva's followers.<ref>[[Sthananga Sutra]] 266</ref>{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|p=132}}{{sfn|Goyal|1987|pp=83–84, 103}} In the times of Mahavira and in the following centuries, Jains were at odds with both Buddhists and followers of the Vedic religion or Hindus, whom they accused of negligence and inconsistency in the implementation of {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}.{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=160, 234, 241}}{{sfn|Wiley|2006|p=448}}{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|pp=8–9}}<ref>{{cite journal|last=Granoff|first=Phyllis|title=The Violence of Non-Violence: A Study of Some Jain Responses to Non-Jain Religious Practices|journal=Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies|volume=15|year=1992|pages=1–43}}</ref> According to the Jain tradition either [[lacto vegetarianism]] or [[veganism]] is prescribed.{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|p=169}}
===Just War and Self-Defense===
The Jain texts, unlike most Hindu and Buddhist texts on just war, have been inconsistent. For its monastic community – {{transliteration|sa|[[sadhu]]}} and {{transliteration|sa|[[sadhu|sadhvi]]}} – the historically accepted practice has been to "willingly sacrifice one's own life" to the attacker, to not retaliate, so that the mendicant may keep the First Great Vow of "total nonviolence".<ref name="Sethia2004p51"/> Jain literature of {{CE|the 10th century}}, for example, describes a king ready for war and being given lessons about non-violence by the Jain acharya (spiritual teacher).{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|p=155}} In {{CE|the 12th century}} and thereafter, in an era of violent raids, destruction of temples, the slaughter of agrarian communities and ascetics by Islamic armies, Jain scholars reconsidered the First Great Vow of mendicants and its parallel for the laypeople. The medieval texts of this era, such as by Jinadatta Suri, recommended both the mendicants and the laypeople to fight and kill if that would prevent greater and continued violence on humans and other life forms ({{transliteration|sa|virodhi-himsa}}).{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=162–163}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Padmannabh Jaini|editor=Tara Sethia|title=Ahimsā, Anekānta, and Jaininsm|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QYdlKv8wBiYC |year=2004|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass Publ|isbn= 978-81-208-2036-4|pages=52–54}}</ref> Such exemptions to {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} is a relatively rare teaching in Jain texts, states Dundas.{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=162–163}}
The Jain texts, unlike most Hindu and Buddhist texts on just war, have been inconsistent. For its monastic community – {{transliteration|sa|[[sadhu]]}} and {{transliteration|sa|[[sadhu|sadhvi]]}} – the historically accepted practice has been to "willingly sacrifice one's own life" to the attacker, to not retaliate, so that the mendicant may keep the First Great Vow of "total nonviolence".<ref name="Sethia2004p51"/> Jain literature of {{CE|the 10th century}}, for example, describes a king ready for war and being given lessons about non-violence by the Jain acharya (spiritual teacher).{{sfn|Laidlaw|1995|p=155}} In {{CE|the 12th century}} and thereafter, in an era of violent raids, destruction of temples, the slaughter of agrarian communities and ascetics by Islamic armies, Jain scholars reconsidered the First Great Vow of mendicants and its parallel for the laypeople. The medieval texts of this era, such as by Jinadatta Suri, recommended both the mendicants and the laypeople to fight and kill if that would prevent greater and continued violence on humans and other life forms ({{transliteration|sa|virodhi-himsa}}).{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=162–163}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Padmannabh Jaini|editor=Tara Sethia|title=Ahimsā, Anekānta, and Jaininsm|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QYdlKv8wBiYC |year=2004|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass Publ|isbn= 978-81-208-2036-4|pages=52–54}}</ref> Such exemptions to {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} is a relatively rare teaching in Jain texts, states Dundas.{{sfn|Dundas|2002|pp=162–163}}


===Modern Reception===
[[Mahatma Gandhi]] stated, "No religion in the World has explained the principle of {{transliteration|sa|Ahiṃsā}} so deeply and systematically as is discussed with its applicability in every human life in Jainism. As and when the benevolent principle of {{transliteration|sa|Ahiṃsā}} or non-violence will be ascribed for practice by the people of the world to achieve their end of life in this world and beyond, Jainism is sure to have the uppermost status and Mahāvīra is sure to be respected as the greatest authority on {{transliteration|sa|Ahiṃsā}}".<ref>{{cite book|last=Pandey|first=Janardan|title=Gandhi and 21st Century|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lmJnWrjnfjMC&pg=PA50|year=1998|publisher=Concept Publishing Company|isbn=978-81-7022-672-7|page=50}}</ref>
[[Mahatma Gandhi]] stated, "No religion in the World has explained the principle of {{transliteration|sa|Ahiṃsā}} so deeply and systematically as is discussed with its applicability in every human life in Jainism. As and when the benevolent principle of {{transliteration|sa|Ahiṃsā}} or non-violence will be ascribed for practice by the people of the world to achieve their end of life in this world and beyond, Jainism is sure to have the uppermost status and Mahāvīra is sure to be respected as the greatest authority on {{transliteration|sa|Ahiṃsā}}".<ref>{{cite book|last=Pandey|first=Janardan|title=Gandhi and 21st Century|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lmJnWrjnfjMC&pg=PA50|year=1998|publisher=Concept Publishing Company|isbn=978-81-7022-672-7|page=50}}</ref>


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|2=Sarao, p. 49
|2=Sarao, p. 49
|3=Goyal p. 143
|3=Goyal p. 143
}}</ref>{{sfnm|Tähtinen|1976|1p=37|Lamotte|1988|2pp=54–55}}
}}</ref>{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|p=37}}{{sfn|Lamotte|1988|pp=54–55}}


The {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} precept is not a commandment, and transgressions did not {{clarify|text=invite religious sanctions|date=July 2023}} for laypersons, but their{{ambiguous|date=July 2023}} power has been in the Buddhist belief in karmic consequences and their impact in afterlife during rebirth.{{sfn|McFarlane |2001|p=187}} Killing, in Buddhist belief, could lead to rebirth in the hellish realm, and for a longer time in more severe conditions if the murder victim was a monk.{{sfn|McFarlane |2001|p=187}} Saving animals from slaughter for meat is believed to be a way to acquire merit for better rebirth. These moral precepts have been voluntarily self-enforced in lay Buddhist culture through the associated belief in karma and rebirth.{{sfn|McFarlane |2001|pp=187–191}} Buddhist texts not only recommend {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, but suggest avoiding trading goods that contribute to or are a result of violence:
The {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}} precept is not a commandment, and transgressions did not {{clarify|text=invite religious sanctions|date=July 2023}} for laypersons, but their{{ambiguous|date=July 2023}} power has been in the Buddhist belief in karmic consequences and their impact in afterlife during rebirth.{{sfn|McFarlane |2001|p=187}} Killing, in Buddhist belief, could lead to rebirth in the hellish realm, and for a longer time in more severe conditions if the murder victim was a monk.{{sfn|McFarlane |2001|p=187}} Saving animals from slaughter for meat is believed to be a way to acquire merit for better rebirth. These moral precepts have been voluntarily self-enforced in lay Buddhist culture through the associated belief in karma and rebirth.{{sfn|McFarlane |2001|pp=187–191}} Buddhist texts not only recommend {{transliteration|sa|ahimsa}}, but suggest avoiding trading goods that contribute to or are a result of violence:
Line 163: Line 185:


===War===
===War===
Violent ways of punishing criminals and prisoners of war were not explicitly condemned in Buddhism,<ref>Sarao p. 53; {{harvnb|Tähtinen|1976|pp=95, 102}}</ref> but peaceful ways of conflict resolution and punishment with the least amount of injury were encouraged.{{sfn|Tähtinen|1976|pp=95, 102–103}}<ref>{{cite book|last=Raaflaub|first=Kurt A.|title=War and Peace in the Ancient World|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FMxgef2VJEwC&pg=PA61|date=2006-12-18|publisher=Wiley|isbn=978-1-4051-4525-1|page=61}}</ref> The early texts condemn the mental states that lead to violent behavior.{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=52}}
Violent ways of punishing criminals and prisoners of war were not explicitly condemned in Buddhism,{{sfn|Sarao|1989|p=53}}{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|pp=95, 102}} but peaceful ways of conflict resolution and punishment with the least amount of injury were encouraged.{{sfn|Tahtinen|1976|pp=95, 102–103}}<ref>{{cite book|last=Raaflaub|first=Kurt A.|title=War and Peace in the Ancient World|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FMxgef2VJEwC&pg=PA61|date=2006-12-18|publisher=Wiley|isbn=978-1-4051-4525-1|page=61}}</ref> The early texts condemn the mental states that lead to violent behavior.{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=52}}


Nonviolence is an overarching theme within the [[Pāli Canon]].{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=111}} While the early texts condemn killing in the strongest terms, and portray the ideal ruler as a pacifist, such a ruler is nonetheless flanked by an army.{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=41}} It seems that the Buddha's teaching on nonviolence was not interpreted or put into practice in an uncompromisingly pacifist or anti-military service way by early Buddhists.{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=41}} The early texts assume war to be a fact of life, and well-skilled soldiers are viewed as necessary for defensive warfare.{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=50}} In Pali texts, injunctions to abstain from violence and involvement with military affairs are directed at members of the {{transliteration|sa|sangha}}; later [[Mahayana]] texts, which often generalise monastic norms to laity, require this of lay people as well.{{sfn|McFarlane|2001|pp=195–196}}
Nonviolence is an overarching theme within the [[Pāli Canon]].{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=111}} While the early texts condemn killing in the strongest terms, and portray the ideal ruler as a pacifist, such a ruler is nonetheless flanked by an army.{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=41}} It seems that the Buddha's teaching on nonviolence was not interpreted or put into practice in an uncompromisingly pacifist or anti-military service way by early Buddhists.{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=41}} The early texts assume war to be a fact of life, and well-skilled soldiers are viewed as necessary for defensive warfare.{{sfn|Bartholomeusz|2005|p=50}} In Pali texts, injunctions to abstain from violence and involvement with military affairs are directed at members of the {{transliteration|sa|sangha}}; later [[Mahayana]] texts, which often generalise monastic norms to laity, require this of lay people as well.{{sfn|McFarlane|2001|pp=195–196}}
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*{{annotated link|[[Civil resistance]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Civil resistance]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Consistent life ethic]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Consistent life ethic]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Eight precepts]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Ethics]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Ethics]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Five precepts]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Gandhism]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Gandhism]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Golden Rule]]}}
*{{annotated link|[[Golden Rule]]}}
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{{colend}}
{{colend}}


==Notes==
{{Notelist}}
==References==
==References==
===Citations===
===Citations===
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===Sources===
===Sources===
{{Refbegin}}
{{Refbegin}}
*{{cite book |last1=Bartholomeusz |first1=Tessa J. |title=In Defense of Dharma: Just-War Ideology in Buddhist Sri Lanka |date=26 July 2005 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-135-78857-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZdKPAgAAQBAJ |language=en}}
* {{citation |last=Alsdorf |first=Ludwig |title=The History of Vegetarianism and Cow-Veneration in India |year=2010 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0415548243 |translator-last=Patil |translator-first=Bal }}
* {{cite journal|first=W. Norman|last=Brown|date=February 1964|url=http://www.epw.in/system/files/pdf/1964_16/5-6-7/the_sanctity_of_the_cow_in_hinduism.pdf|url-status=live|title=The sanctity of the cow in Hinduism|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200930225053/https://www.epw.in/system/files/pdf/1964_16/5-6-7/the_sanctity_of_the_cow_in_hinduism.pdf |archive-date=30 September 2020|journal=The Economic Weekly|pages=245–255}}
* {{citation |last1=Bartholomeusz |first1=Tessa J. |title=In Defense of Dharma: Just-War Ideology in Buddhist Sri Lanka |date=26 July 2005 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-135-78857-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZdKPAgAAQBAJ |language=en }}
* {{cite book |last=Dundas |first=Paul |author-link=Paul Dundas |title=The Jains |url={{Google books|X8iAAgAAQBAJ|page=|keywords=|text=|plainurl=yes}} |edition=Second |year=2002 |orig-date=1992 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-26605-5 }}
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* {{cite book |editor-last=Fitzgerald |editor-first=James L. |editor-link=James L. Fitzgerald |title=The Mahabharata |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p9SzCuLIlQ0C |publisher=[[The University of Chicago Press]] |year=2004 |volume=7 |isbn=0-226-25250-7}}
* {{citation |last=Brown |first=W. Norman |title=The sanctity of the cow in Hinduism |date=February 1964 |url=http://www.epw.in/system/files/pdf/1964_16/5-6-7/the_sanctity_of_the_cow_in_hinduism.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200930225053/https://www.epw.in/system/files/pdf/1964_16/5-6-7/the_sanctity_of_the_cow_in_hinduism.pdf |archive-date=30 September 2020 |journal=The Economic Weekly |pages=245–255 }}
* {{cite book | last=Jindal | first=K. B. | title=An Epitome of Jainism | publisher=South Asia Books | date=1988 | isbn=81-215-0058-3}}
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* {{citation |last=Dundas |first=Paul |author-link=Paul Dundas |title=The Jains |url={{Google books|X8iAAgAAQBAJ|plainurl=yes}} |edition=Second |year=2002 |orig-date=1992 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-26605-5 }}
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* {{cite book|last=McFarlane|first=Stewart|editor=Peter Harvey|title=Buddhism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oZCvAwAAQBAJ|year=2001|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|isbn=978-1-4411-4726-4}}
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* {{cite web|title=Mahatma Gandhi|website=Manas: History and Politics|url=https://southasia.ucla.edu/history-politics/gandhi/}}
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* {{citation | last=Laidlaw | first=James | author-link=James Laidlaw (anthropologist)|title=Riches and Renunciation: Religion, economy, and society among the Jains | publisher=Oxford University Press, USA | date=1995 | isbn=0-19-828031-9}}
* {{citation | last=Lamotte | first=Etienne | title=History of Indian Buddhism from the Origins to the Śaka Era | publisher=Peeters | date=1988 | isbn=90-6831-100-X}}
* {{citation |last=McFarlane|first=Stewart|editor=Peter Harvey|title=Buddhism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oZCvAwAAQBAJ|year=2001|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|isbn=978-1-4411-4726-4}}
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* {{citation |last=O'Sullivan |first=Trish |year=2014 |title=Ahimsa |editor-last=Leeming |editor-first=David A. |editor-link=David Adams Leeming |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion |pages=31–32 |edition=2nd |publisher=[[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]] |location=[[Boston]] |doi=10.1007/978-1-4614-6086-2_16 |isbn=978-1-4614-6087-9|s2cid=242659739 }}
* {{citation |last=Sangave |first=Vilas Adinath |author-link=Vilas Adinath Sangave |title=Jain Community: A Social Survey |url={{Google books|FWdWrRGV_t8C|plainurl=yes}} |date=1980 |publisher=[[Popular Prakashan]] |location=Bombay |edition=2nd |isbn=978-0-317-12346-3 }}
* {{citation |last=Sangave |first=Vilas Adinath |author-link=Vilas Adinath Sangave |title=Jain Community: A Social Survey |url={{Google books|FWdWrRGV_t8C|plainurl=yes}} |date=1980 |publisher=[[Popular Prakashan]] |location=Bombay |edition=2nd |isbn=978-0-317-12346-3 }}
* {{cite book|last=Sarao|first=Karam Tej S.|title=The Origin and Nature of Ancient Indian Buddhism|location=New Delhi|publisher=Eastern Book Linkers|year=1989}}
* {{citation |last=Sarao|first=Karam Tej S.|title=The Origin and Nature of Ancient Indian Buddhism|location=New Delhi|publisher=Eastern Book Linkers|year=1989}}
* {{cite book|last=Schmidt|first=Hanns Peter|chapter=The Origin of Ahimsa|title=Mélanges d'Indianisme à la mémoire de Louis Renou|location=Paris|publisher=Boccard|year=1968}}
* {{citation |last=Schmidt|first=Hanns Peter|chapter=The Origin of Ahimsa|title=Mélanges d'Indianisme à la mémoire de Louis Renou|location=Paris|publisher=Boccard|year=1968}}
* {{cite book |last=Sethia |first=Tara |title=Ahiṃsā, Anekānta and Jainism |url={{Google books|QYdlKv8wBiYC|plainurl=yes}} |date=2004 |publisher=[[Motilal Banarsidass]] |isbn=978-81-208-2036-4 }}
* {{citation |last=Sethia |first=Tara |title=Ahiṃsā, Anekānta and Jainism |url={{Google books|QYdlKv8wBiYC|plainurl=yes}} |date=2004 |publisher=[[Motilal Banarsidass]] |isbn=978-81-208-2036-4 }}
* {{cite book | last=Tähtinen | first=Unto | title=Non-violence as an ethical principle: with particular reference to the views of Mahatma Gandhi | publisher=Turun Yliopisto | publication-place=Turku | year=1964 | oclc=4288274}}
* {{citation | last=Tähtinen | first=Unto | title=Non-violence as an ethical principle: with particular reference to the views of Mahatma Gandhi | publisher=Turun Yliopisto | publication-place=Turku | year=1964 | oclc=4288274 |ref={{sfnref|Tahtinen|1964}} }}
* {{cite book |last1=Tähtinen |first1=Unto |title=Ahiṃsā: non-violence in Indian tradition |date=1976 |publisher=Rider |location=London |isbn=0-09-123340-2 }}
* {{citation |last1=Tähtinen |first1=Unto |title=Ahiṃsā: non-violence in Indian tradition |date=1976 |publisher=Rider |location=London |isbn=0-09-123340-2 |ref={{sfnref|Tahtinen|1976}} }}
* {{Cite book |last=Talageri |first=Shrikant |title=The Rigveda: A Historical Analysis |publisher=AdityaPrakashan |year=2000 |isbn=81-7742-010-0 |location=India |language=en}}
* {{citation |last=Talageri |first=Shrikant |title=The Rigveda: A Historical Analysis |publisher=AdityaPrakashan |year=2000 |isbn=81-7742-010-0 |location=India |language=en}}
* {{Cite book |last=Talageri |title=Rigveda and the Avesta: The Final Evidence |year=2010 |location=India |language=en}}
* {{citation |last=Talageri |title=Rigveda and the Avesta: The Final Evidence |year=2010 |location=India |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last=Wiley |first=Kristi L. |chapter=Ahimsa and Compassion in Jainism |title=Studies in Jaina History and Culture |editor=Peter Flügel |location=London |year=2006}}
* {{citation |last=Thapar |first=Romila |title=Aśoka and the Decline of the Mauryas |year=1961 |publisher=Oxford University Press }}
* {{cite book|last=Winternitz|first=Moriz|author-link=Moriz Winternitz|title=History of Indian Literature: Buddhist & Jain Literature|url={{Google books|Lgz1eMhu0JsC|plainurl=yes}}|year=1993|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-0265-0}}
* {{citation |last=Wiley |first=Kristi L. |chapter=Ahimsa and Compassion in Jainism |title=Studies in Jaina History and Culture |editor=Peter Flügel |location=London |year=2006}}
* {{citation |last=Winternitz|first=Moriz|author-link=Moriz Winternitz|title=History of Indian Literature: Buddhist & Jain Literature|url={{Google books|Lgz1eMhu0JsC|plainurl=yes}}|year=1993|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=978-81-208-0265-0}}
'''Attribution:'''
'''Attribution:'''
* {{source attribution|1={{cite book |last=Jain |first=Vijay K. |title=Acharya Amritchandra's Purushartha Siddhyupaya: Realization of the Pure Self, With Hindi and English Translation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4iyUu4Fc2-YC |year=2012 |publisher=Vikalp Printers |isbn=978-81-903639-4-5 |access-date=28 June 2016 |archive-date=16 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230216095825/https://books.google.com/books?id=4iyUu4Fc2-YC |url-status=live }}}}
* {{source attribution|1={{cite book |last=Jain |first=Vijay K. |title=Acharya Amritchandra's Purushartha Siddhyupaya: Realization of the Pure Self, With Hindi and English Translation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4iyUu4Fc2-YC |year=2012 |publisher=Vikalp Printers |isbn=978-81-903639-4-5 |access-date=28 June 2016 |archive-date=16 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230216095825/https://books.google.com/books?id=4iyUu4Fc2-YC |url-status=live }}}}

Latest revision as of 13:37, 22 December 2025

Template:Short description Template:Italic title Script error: No such module "other uses". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Indian English Template:Contains special characters Script error: No such module "Sidebar". Script error: No such module "Sidebar".

File:Lord Mahavir painting.jpg
Lord Mahavira, the twenty-fourth tirthankara of Jainism, and "torch-bearer" of ahimsa

Script error: No such module "lang". (Template:Langx, IAST: Script error: No such module "lang".; Script error: No such module "IPA".; Template:Lit[1]) is the ancient Indian principle of nonviolence which applies to actions towards all living beings. It is a key virtue in Indian religions like Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism.[2]Template:Sfn[3]

Script error: No such module "lang". (also spelled Ahinsa) is one of the cardinal virtues[2] of Jainism, where it is the first of the Pancha Mahavrata. It is also one of the central precepts of Hinduism and is the first of the five precepts of Buddhism. Script error: No such module "lang". is[4] inspired by the premise that all living beings have the spark of the divine spiritual energy; therefore, to hurt another being is to hurt oneself. Script error: No such module "lang". is also related to the notion that all acts of violence have karmic consequences. While ancient scholars of Brahmanism had already investigated and refined the principles of Script error: No such module "lang"., the concept reached an extraordinary development in the ethical philosophy of Jainism.[2][5] Mahavira, the twenty-fourth and the last Script error: No such module "lang". of Jainism, further strengthened the idea in Template:BCE.[6] About Script error: No such module "If empty". CE, Valluvar emphasized Script error: No such module "lang". and moral vegetarianism as virtues for an individual, which formed the core of his teachings in the Kural.[7] Perhaps the most popular advocate of the principle of Script error: No such module "lang". in modern times was Mohandas K. Gandhi.[8]

Script error: No such module "lang".'s precept that humans should 'cause no injury' to another living being includes one's deeds, words, and thoughts.[9][10] Classical Hindu texts like the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, as well as modern scholars,[11] disagree about what the principle of Script error: No such module "lang". dictates when one is faced with war and other situations that require self-defence. In this way, historical Indian literature has contributed to modern theories of just war and self-defence.[12]

Etymology

The word Script error: No such module "lang".—sometimes spelled Script error: No such module "lang".[13][14]—is derived from the Sanskrit root Script error: No such module "lang"., meaning to strike; Script error: No such module "lang". is injury or harm, while Script error: No such module "lang". (prefixed with the alpha privative), its opposite, is non-harming or nonviolence.[13][15]

Historical Evolution

Reverence for Script error: No such module "lang". can be found in Jain, Hindu, and Buddhist canonical texts. Lord Parshvanatha (the 23rd of 24 Tirthankaras of Jainism) is said to have preached Script error: No such module "lang". as one of the four vows.Template:Sfn[4][16][17] No other Indian religion has developed the non-violence doctrine and its implications on everyday life as much as has Jainism.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Pre-Vedic and Shramanic Roots Hypothesis

While the Rigveda (c. 1500 BCE) is the oldest surviving text in India, many scholars argue that the specific ethical practice of ahimsa originated within the non-Vedic Sramana traditions (which include Jainism and Buddhism) before being absorbed into Brahmanism.Template:Sfn

Some scholars, such as P.R. Deshmukh, suggest that the roots of ahimsa and asceticism may date back to the Indus Valley Civilisation (c. 3300–1300 BCE), citing the discovery of seals depicting figures in the kayotsarga (standing meditation) posture common to Jain iconography.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Indologist Johannes Bronkhorst has proposed the "Greater Magadha" theory, arguing that the eastern Gangetic plain (modern Bihar/Bengal) developed a distinct non-Vedic culture where concepts like Karma, rebirth, and ahimsa originated. According to this view, the Vedic priesthood later adopted these concepts as they expanded eastward.Template:Sfn Similarly, the German Indologist Ludwig Alsdorf argued that ahimsa likely began not as a moral rule but as a "magico-ritualistic" taboo against killing or harming living beings, which was part of a pan-Indian or pre-Aryan heritage later refined into an ethical system by the Jains.Template:Sfn

Evolution in the Vedic Tradition

The concept of ahimsa evolved gradually within the Vedic tradition.Template:Sfn In the early Vedic period (c. 1500–1000 BCE), animal sacrifice was a central component of ritual life.Template:Sfn However, the concept transitioned from a ritualistic concern—avoiding injury to the sacrificer or the minute details of the ritual—to an internalized ethical virtue.Template:Sfn

By the late Vedic era, texts like the Chandogya Upanishad (c. 8th century BCE) explicitly listed ahimsa as one of five essential virtues (along with truthfulness and charity).Template:Sfn The Yajurveda reflects this shifting ethos with prayers for universal peace, such as: "May all beings look at me with a friendly eye, may I do likewise, and may we look at each other with the eyes of a friend".Template:Sfn

Integration into Governance

The principle of ahimsa moved from personal asceticism to state policy under the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka (c. 268–232 BCE). Following the Kalinga War, Ashoka renounced military conquest in favor of "conquest by Dharma".Template:Sfn His Rock Edicts restricted animal slaughter, established medical care for animals, and promoted non-violence as a civic duty, embedding the Shramanic value of ahimsa into the political fabric of India.Template:Sfn

Hinduism

Ancient Vedic texts

Script error: No such module "lang". as an ethical concept evolved in the Vedic texts.[5][18] The oldest scriptures indirectly mention Script error: No such module "lang".. Over time, the Hindu scripts revised ritual practices, and the concept of Script error: No such module "lang". was increasingly refined and emphasized until Script error: No such module "lang". became the highest virtue by the late Vedic era. The Yajur Veda dated to be between Template:BCE and Template:BCE, states, "may all beings look at me with a friendly eye, may I do likewise, and may we look at each other with the eyes of a friend".[5][19]Template:SfnScript error: No such module "Unsubst".Template:SfnScript error: No such module "Unsubst".

The term Script error: No such module "lang". appears in the text Taittiriya Shakha of the Yajurveda (TS 5.2.8.7), where it refers to non-injury to the sacrificer himself.Template:Sfn It occurs several times in the Shatapatha Brahmana in the sense of "non-injury".[20] The Script error: No such module "lang". doctrine is a late Vedic era development in Brahmanical culture.[21] The earliest reference to the idea of non-violence to animals (Script error: No such module "lang".), apparently in a moral sense, is in the Kapisthala Katha Samhita of the Yajurveda (KapS 31.11), which may have been written in about Template:BCE.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnScript error: No such module "Unsubst".Template:SfnScript error: No such module "Unsubst". The Chandogya Upanishad (3.17.4) includes ahimsa in its list of virtues.[22]

John Bowker states the word appears but is uncommon in the principal Upanishads.[23] Kaneda gives examples of the word Script error: No such module "lang". in these Upanishads.[10] Other scholars[4][17] suggest Script error: No such module "lang". as an ethical concept started evolving in the Vedas, becoming an increasingly central concept in Upanishads.

The Chāndogya Upaniṣad, dated to Template:BCE, one of the oldest Upanishads, has the earliest evidence for the Vedic era use of the word Script error: No such module "lang". in the sense familiar in Hinduism (a code of conduct). It bars violence against "all creatures" (Script error: No such module "lang".), and the practitioner of Script error: No such module "lang". is said to escape from the cycle of rebirths (CU 8.15.1).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Some scholars state that this mention may have been an influence of Jainism on Vedic Hinduism.[24] Others scholar state that this relationship is speculative, and though Jainism is an ancient tradition the oldest traceable texts of Jainism tradition are from many centuries after the Vedic era ended.[25]Template:Sfn

Chāndogya Upaniṣad also names Script error: No such module "lang"., along with Script error: No such module "lang". (truthfulness), Script error: No such module "lang". (sincerity), Script error: No such module "lang". (charity), and Script error: No such module "lang". (penance/meditation), as one of five essential virtues (CU 3.17.4).[4][26]

The Sandilya Upanishad lists ten forbearances: Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang"., and Script error: No such module "lang"..[27] According to Kaneda,[10] the term Script error: No such module "lang". is an important spiritual doctrine shared by Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. It means 'non-injury' and 'non-killing'. It implies the total avoidance of harming any living creature by deeds, words, and thoughts.

The Epics

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

The Mahabharata, one of the epics of Hinduism, has multiple mentions of the phrase Script error: No such module "lang". (Script error: No such module "Lang".), which literally means: non-violence is the highest moral virtue. For example, Anushasana Parva has the verse:[28]

Script error: No such module "Lang".

The above passage from Mahabharata emphasises the cardinal importance of Script error: No such module "lang". in Hinduism, and literally means:

Script error: No such module "lang". is the highest Script error: No such module "lang"., Script error: No such module "lang". is the highest self-control,
Script error: No such module "lang". is the greatest gift, Script error: No such module "lang". is the best practice,
Script error: No such module "lang". is the highest sacrifice, Script error: No such module "lang". is the finest strength,
Script error: No such module "lang". is the greatest friend, Script error: No such module "lang". is the greatest happiness,
Script error: No such module "lang". is the highest truth, and Script error: No such module "lang". is the greatest teaching.[29][30]

Some other examples where the phrase Script error: No such module "lang". are discussed include Adi Parva, Vana Parva, and Anushasana Parva. The Bhagavad Gita, among other things, discusses the doubts and questions about appropriate response when one faces systematic violence or war. These verses develop the concepts of lawful violence in self-defence and the theories of just war. However, there is no consensus on this interpretation. Gandhi, for example, considers this debate about non-violence and lawful violence as a mere metaphor for the internal war within each human being, when he or she faces moral questions.[31]

Self-defence, criminal law, and war

The classical texts of Hinduism devote numerous chapters to discussing what people who practice the virtue of Script error: No such module "lang". can and must do when faced with war, violent threat, or the need to sentence someone convicted of a crime. These discussions have led to theories of just war, ideas of reasonable self-defense, and views of proportionate punishment.[12][32] Arthashastra discusses, among other things, what constitutes proportionate response and punishment.[33][34]

War

The precepts of Script error: No such module "lang". in Hinduism require that war must be avoided, withScript error: No such module "Unsubst". sincere and truthful dialogue. Force must be the last resort. If war becomes necessary, its cause must be just, its purpose virtuous, its objective to restrain the wicked, its aim peace, and its method lawful.[12][33] War can only be started and stopped by a legitimate authority. Weapons must be proportionate to the opponent and the aim of war, not indiscriminate tools of destruction.[35] All strategies and weapons used in the war must be to defeat the opponent, not to cause misery to the opponent; for example, the use of arrows is allowed, but the use of arrows smeared with painful poison is not allowed. Warriors must use judgmentScript error: No such module "Unsubst". in the battlefield. Cruelty to the opponent during war is forbidden. Wounded, unarmed opponent warriors must not be attacked or killed; they must be brought to your realm and given medical treatment.[33] Children, women, and civilians must not be injured. While the war is in progress, sincere dialogue for peace must continue.[12][32]

Self-defence

Different interpretations of ancient Hindu texts have been offered in matters of self-defense. For example, Tähtinen suggests self-defense is appropriate, criminals are not protected by the rule of Script error: No such module "lang"., and Hindu scriptures support violence against an armed attacker.Template:Sfn[36] Script error: No such module "lang". is not meant to imply pacifism.Template:Sfn

Alternative theories of self-defense, inspired by Script error: No such module "lang"., build principles similar to ideas of just war. Aikido, pioneered in Japan, illustrates one such set of principles for self-defense. Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of Aikido, described his inspiration as Ahimsa.[37] According to this interpretation of Script error: No such module "lang". in self-defense, one must not assume that the world is free of aggression. One must presume that some people will, out of ignorance, error, or fear, attack others or intrude into their space, physically or verbally. The aim of self-defense, suggested Ueshiba, must be to neutralize the attacker's aggression and avoid conflict. The best defense is one with which the victim is protected and the attacker is respected and not injured if possible. Under Script error: No such module "lang". and Aikido, there are no enemies, and appropriate self-defense focuses on neutralizing the immaturity, assumptions, and aggressive strivings of the attacker.[38]

Criminal law

Tähtinen concludes that Hindus have no misgivings about the death penalty; their position is that evil-doers who deserve death should be killed and that a king, in particular, is obliged to punish criminals and should not hesitate to kill them, even if they happen to be his brothers and sons.Template:Sfn

Other scholars[32][33] conclude that Hindu scriptures suggest that sentences for any crime must be fair, proportional, and not cruel.

Non-human life

File:ValluvarStatue SanctuaryAtTiruvallur.jpg
The 5th-century CE Tamil scholar Valluvar, in his Tirukkural, taught Script error: No such module "lang". and moral vegetarianism as personal virtues. The plaque in this statue of Valluvar at an animal sanctuary at Tiruvallur describes the Kural's teachings on Script error: No such module "lang". and non-killing, summing them up with the definition of veganism.

The Hindu precept of "cause no injury" applies to animals and all life forms. This precept is not found in the oldest verses of Vedas (Template:BCE), but increasingly becomes one of the central ideas in post-Vedic period.[39]Template:Sfn In the oldest layer of the Vedas, such as the Rigveda, ritual sacrifices of animals and cooking of meat to feed guests are mentioned. This included goat, ox, horse, and others.Template:Sfn However, the text is not uniform in its prescriptions. Some verses praise meat as food, while other verses in the Vedas recommend "abstention from meat", in particular, "beef".Template:Sfn[40] According to Marvin Harris, the Vedic literature is inconsistent, with some verses suggesting ritual slaughter and meat consumption, while others suggesting a taboo on meat-eating.[41]

Hindu texts dated to Template:BCE initially mention meat as food, then evolve to suggest that only meat obtained through ritual sacrifice can be eaten, thereafter evolving to the stance that one should eat no meat because it hurts animals, with verses describing the noble life as one that lives on flowers, roots, and fruits alone.[39][42] The late Vedic-era literature (Template:BCE) condemns all killings of men, cattle, birds, and horses, and prays to god Agni to punish those who kill.[43]

Later texts of Hinduism declare Script error: No such module "lang". as one of the primary virtues, declare any killing or harming any life as against Script error: No such module "lang". (moral life). Finally, the discussion in the Upanishads and Hindu Epics[44] shifts to whether a human being can ever live his or her life without harming animal and plant life in some way, which and when plants or animal meat may be eaten, whether violence against animals causes human beings to become less compassionate, and if and how one may exert least harm to non-human life consistent with Script error: No such module "lang"., given the constraints of life and human needs.[45] The Mahabharata permits hunting by warriors, but opposes it in the case of hermits who must be strictly non-violent. Sushruta Samhita, a Hindu text written in Template:BCE, in Chapter XLVI suggests proper diet as a means of treating certain illnesses, and recommends various fishes and meats for different ailments and for pregnant women,[46][47] and the Charaka Samhita describes meat as superior to all other kinds of food for convalescents.[48]

Across the texts of Hinduism, there is a profusion of ideas about the virtue of Script error: No such module "lang". when applied to non-human life, but without a universal consensus.[49] Alsdorf claims the debate and disagreements between supporters of vegetarian lifestyle and meat eaters was significant. Even suggested exceptions – ritual slaughter and hunting – were challenged by advocates of Script error: No such module "lang"..Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn[50][51] In the Mahabharata both sides present various arguments to substantiate their viewpoints. Moreover, a hunter defends his profession in a long discourse.[52]

Many of the arguments proposed in favor of non-violence to animals refer to the bliss one feels, the rewards it entails before or after death, the danger and harm it prevents, as well as to the karmic consequences of violence.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The ancient Hindu texts discuss Script error: No such module "lang". and non-animal life. They discourage wanton destruction of nature including of wild and cultivated plants. Hermits (sannyasins) were urged to live on a fruitarian diet so as to avoid the destruction of plants.Template:Sfn[53][54] ScholarsTemplate:R[55] claim the principles of ecological nonviolence are innate in the Hindu tradition, and its conceptual fountain has been Script error: No such module "lang". as its cardinal virtue.

The classical literature of the Indian religions, such as Hinduism and Jainism, exists in many Indian languages. For example, the Tirukkural, written in three volumes, likely between Script error: No such module "If empty". CE, dedicates verses 251–260 and 321–333 of its first volume to the virtue of Script error: No such module "lang"., emphasizing on moral vegetarianism and non-killing (Script error: No such module "lang".).[56][57] However, the Tirukkural also glorifies soldiers and their valour during war, and states that it is king's duty to punish criminals and implement "death sentence for the wicked".[58][59]

In 1960, H. Jay Dinshah founded the American Vegan Society (AVS), linking veganism to the concept of Script error: No such module "lang"..[60][61][62]

Modern times

File:Portrait Gandhi.jpg
Gandhi promoted the principle of Script error: No such module "lang". by applying it to politics.

In the 19th and 20th centuries, prominent figures of Indian spirituality such as Shrimad Rajchandra[63] and Swami Vivekananda[64] emphasised the importance of Ahimsa.

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi successfully promoted the principle of Script error: No such module "lang". to all spheres of life, in particular to politics (Script error: No such module "lang".).Template:Sfn His non-violent resistance movement Script error: No such module "lang". had an immense impact on India, impressed public opinion in Western countries, and influenced the leaders of various civil and political rights movements such as the American civil rights movement's Martin Luther King Jr. and James Bevel. In Gandhi's thought, Script error: No such module "lang". precludes not only the act of inflicting a physical injury but also mental states like evil thoughts and hatred, and unkind behavior such as harsh words, dishonesty, and lying, all of which he saw as manifestations of violence incompatible with Script error: No such module "lang"..[65] Gandhi believed Script error: No such module "lang". to be a creative energy force, encompassing all interactions leading one's self to find Script error: No such module "lang"., "Divine Truth".[66] Sri Aurobindo criticized the Gandhian concept of Script error: No such module "lang". as unrealistic and not universally applicable, noting that while it is a spiritual truth, it should not be applied as a "rigid ethical rule" to all of humanity.[67] He adopted a pragmatic non-pacifist position, holding that the justification of violence depends on the specific circumstances and the "dharma" (duty/righteousness) of the situation.[68] While he advocated passive resistance as a political policy for India's independence, he maintained that a nation is entitled to use violence for its self-preservation if necessary.[69]

Gandhi took the religious principle of ahimsa, and turned it into a non-violent tool for mass action. He used it to fight not only colonial rule, but social evils such as racial discrimination and untouchability as well.[70]

Gandhi stated his belief that "Script error: No such module "lang". is in Hinduism, it is in Christianity as well as in Islam."[71] He added, "Nonviolence is common to all religions, but it has found the highest expression and application in Hinduism (I do not regard Jainism or Buddhism as separate from Hinduism)."[71] When questioned whether violence and nonviolence are taught in Quran, he stated, "I have heard from many Muslim friends that the Koran teaches the use of nonviolence. (... The) argument about nonviolence in the Holy Koran is an interpolation, not necessary for my thesis."[71][72]

Studying Script error: No such module "lang".'s history and philosophy influenced Albert Schweitzer's principle of "reverence for life". He commended Indian traditions for their ethics of Script error: No such module "lang"., considering the prohibition against killing and harming "one of the greatest events in the spiritual history of humankind". However, he noted that "not-killing" and "not-harming" might be unfeasible in certain situations, like self-defense, or ethically complex, as in cases of prolonged famine.[73]

Yoga

Script error: No such module "lang". means "abstinence from malice towards all living creatures in every way and at all times".[74] Ahimsa is imperative for practitioners of Patañjali's eight limb Raja yoga system. It is included in the first limb and is the first of five Script error: No such module "lang". (self restraints) which, together with the second limb, make up the code of ethical conduct in Yoga philosophy.[75][76] Commentators on the Yoga Sutras II.30 emphasize that ahimsa is the most important and foundational yama of the five yamas. Vijnanabhiksu uses the analogy of an elephant to convey its importance, while Vyasa defines it as refraining from harming any living being at any time, emphasizing that all other yamas support and purify ahimsa.[77]

Script error: No such module "lang". is also one of the ten Script error: No such module "lang". in Hatha Yoga according to verse 1.1.17 of its classic manual Hatha Yoga Pradipika.[78] The significance of Script error: No such module "lang". as the first restraint in the first limb of Yoga (Script error: No such module "lang".) is that it defines the necessary foundation for progress through Yoga. It is a precursor to Script error: No such module "lang"., implying that success in Script error: No such module "lang". can be had only if the self is purified in thought, word, and deed through the self-restraint of Script error: No such module "lang"..

Jainism

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

File:Ahimsa Jainism Gradient.jpg
The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolises the Jain Vow of Script error: No such module "lang".. The word in the middle is Script error: No such module "lang".. The wheel represents the dharmacakra which stands for the resolve to halt the cycle of reincarnation through relentless pursuit of truth and non-violence.

In Jainism, the understanding and implementation of Script error: No such module "lang". is more radical, scrupulous, and comprehensive than in any other religion.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Killing any living being out of passions like attachment is considered Script error: No such module "lang". (to injure) and abstaining from such an act is Script error: No such module "lang". (noninjury).Template:Sfn The vow of Script error: No such module "lang". is considered the foremost among the "five vows of Jainism". Other vows like truth (Script error: No such module "lang".) are meant for safeguarding the vow of Script error: No such module "lang"..Template:Sfn

The statement Script error: No such module "lang". (or, "Non-injury/nonviolence/harmlessness is the supreme/ultimate/paramount/highest/absolute duty/virtue/attribute/religion"Template:Refn) is often found inscribed on the walls of the Jain temples.Template:Sfnm As in Hinduism, the aim is to prevent the accumulation of harmful karma.Template:Sfn

The Hierarchy of Life

The Jain concept of ahimsa is characterised by detailed classifications of life. Jains categorize living beings (jiva) based on their sensory faculties (indriyas), ranging from one-sensed beings (plants, water, earth) to five-sensed beings (humans, animals).

Killing of animals for food is absolutely ruled out.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Jains also make considerable efforts not to injure plants in everyday life as far as possible. Though they admit that plants must be destroyed for the sake of food, they accept such violence only inasmuch as it is indispensable for human survival, and there are special instructions for preventing unnecessary violence against plants.[79]Template:Sfn Jain monks and nuns go out of their way so as not to hurt even small insects and other minuscule animals.Template:Sfnm Both the renouncers and the laypeople of Jain faith reject meat, fish, alcohol, and honey as these are believed to harm large or minuscule life forms.Template:Sfn

Ascetic vs. Householder Codes

In the practice of Script error: No such module "lang"., the requirements are less strict for the lay persons (Script error: No such module "lang".) who have undertaken Script error: No such module "lang". (Smaller Vows) than for the Jain monastics who are bound by the Mahavrata "Great Vows".Template:Sfnm[80]

Jain scholars have debated the potential injury to other life forms during one's occupation. Certain Jain texts (according to Padmanabh Jaini, a Jainism scholar) forbid people of its faith from husbandry, agriculture, and trade in animal-derived products.[81] Some Jains abstain from farming because it inevitably entails unintentional killing or injuring of many small animals, such as worms and insects.Template:Sfn These teachings, in part, have led the Jain community to focus on trade, merchant, clerical, and administrative occupations to minimize Script error: No such module "lang". (occupational violence against all life forms).[81] For the layperson, the teaching has been of Script error: No such module "lang". with Script error: No such module "lang". – that is, reducing violence through proper intention and being careful in every action on a daily basis to minimize violence to all life forms.Template:Sfn

Intellectual Non-Violence

When Mahavira revived and reorganised the Jain faith in Template:BCE,Template:Sfn Script error: No such module "lang". was already an established, strictly observed rule.[82] Rishabhanatha (Ādinātha), the first Jain Tirthankara, whom modern Western historians consider to be a historical figure, followed by Parshvanatha (Pārśvanātha)Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn the twenty-third Tirthankara lived in about Template:BCE.Template:Sfn He founded the community to which Mahavira's parents belonged.[83] Ahimsa was already part of the "Fourfold Restraint" (Caujjama), the vows taken by Parshva's followers.[84]Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the times of Mahavira and in the following centuries, Jains were at odds with both Buddhists and followers of the Vedic religion or Hindus, whom they accused of negligence and inconsistency in the implementation of Script error: No such module "lang"..Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn[85] According to the Jain tradition either lacto vegetarianism or veganism is prescribed.Template:Sfn

Just War and Self-Defense

The Jain texts, unlike most Hindu and Buddhist texts on just war, have been inconsistent. For its monastic community – Script error: No such module "lang". and Script error: No such module "lang". – the historically accepted practice has been to "willingly sacrifice one's own life" to the attacker, to not retaliate, so that the mendicant may keep the First Great Vow of "total nonviolence".[81] Jain literature of Script error: No such module "If empty". CE, for example, describes a king ready for war and being given lessons about non-violence by the Jain acharya (spiritual teacher).Template:Sfn In Script error: No such module "If empty". CE and thereafter, in an era of violent raids, destruction of temples, the slaughter of agrarian communities and ascetics by Islamic armies, Jain scholars reconsidered the First Great Vow of mendicants and its parallel for the laypeople. The medieval texts of this era, such as by Jinadatta Suri, recommended both the mendicants and the laypeople to fight and kill if that would prevent greater and continued violence on humans and other life forms (Script error: No such module "lang".).Template:Sfn[86] Such exemptions to Script error: No such module "lang". is a relatively rare teaching in Jain texts, states Dundas.Template:Sfn

Modern Reception

Mahatma Gandhi stated, "No religion in the World has explained the principle of Script error: No such module "lang". so deeply and systematically as is discussed with its applicability in every human life in Jainism. As and when the benevolent principle of Script error: No such module "lang". or non-violence will be ascribed for practice by the people of the world to achieve their end of life in this world and beyond, Jainism is sure to have the uppermost status and Mahāvīra is sure to be respected as the greatest authority on Script error: No such module "lang".".[87]

Buddhism

Buddhist monk peace walk
Buddhist monk peace walk

Script error: No such module "labelled list hatnote". In Buddhist texts Script error: No such module "lang". (or its Pāli cognate Script error: No such module "lang".) is part of the Five Precepts (Script error: No such module "lang".), the first of which has been to abstain from killing. This precept of Script error: No such module "lang". is applicable to both the Buddhist layperson and the monastic community.[88][89]Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The Script error: No such module "lang". precept is not a commandment, and transgressions did not Script error: No such module "Unsubst". for laypersons, but theirScript error: No such module "Unsubst". power has been in the Buddhist belief in karmic consequences and their impact in afterlife during rebirth.Template:Sfn Killing, in Buddhist belief, could lead to rebirth in the hellish realm, and for a longer time in more severe conditions if the murder victim was a monk.Template:Sfn Saving animals from slaughter for meat is believed to be a way to acquire merit for better rebirth. These moral precepts have been voluntarily self-enforced in lay Buddhist culture through the associated belief in karma and rebirth.Template:Sfn Buddhist texts not only recommend Script error: No such module "lang"., but suggest avoiding trading goods that contribute to or are a result of violence:

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These five trades, O monks, should not be taken up by a lay follower: trading with weapons, trading in living beings, trading in meat, trading in intoxicants, trading in poisons.

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Unlike with lay Buddhists, transgressions by monks do invite sanctions.Template:Sfn Full expulsion of a monk from Script error: No such module "lang". follows instances of killing, just like any other serious offense against the monastic Script error: No such module "lang". code of conduct.Template:Sfn

War

Violent ways of punishing criminals and prisoners of war were not explicitly condemned in Buddhism,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn but peaceful ways of conflict resolution and punishment with the least amount of injury were encouraged.Template:Sfn[91] The early texts condemn the mental states that lead to violent behavior.Template:Sfn

Nonviolence is an overarching theme within the Pāli Canon.Template:Sfn While the early texts condemn killing in the strongest terms, and portray the ideal ruler as a pacifist, such a ruler is nonetheless flanked by an army.Template:Sfn It seems that the Buddha's teaching on nonviolence was not interpreted or put into practice in an uncompromisingly pacifist or anti-military service way by early Buddhists.Template:Sfn The early texts assume war to be a fact of life, and well-skilled soldiers are viewed as necessary for defensive warfare.Template:Sfn In Pali texts, injunctions to abstain from violence and involvement with military affairs are directed at members of the Script error: No such module "lang".; later Mahayana texts, which often generalise monastic norms to laity, require this of lay people as well.Template:Sfn

The early texts do not contain just-war ideology as such.Template:Sfn Some argue that a Script error: No such module "lang". in the Gamani Samyuttam rules out all military service. In this passage, a soldier asks the Buddha if it is true that, as he has been told, soldiers slain in battle are reborn in a heavenly realm. The Buddha reluctantly replies that if he is killed in battle while his mind is seized with the intention to kill, he will undergo an unpleasant rebirth.[92] In the early texts, a person's mental state at the time of death is generally viewed as having a great impact on the next birth.[93]

Some Buddhists point to other early texts as justifying defensive war.[94] One example is the Kosala Samyutta, in which King Pasenadi of Kosala, a righteous king favored by the Buddha, learns of an impending attack on his kingdom. He arms himself in defence, and leads his army into battle to protect his kingdom from attack. He lost this battle but won the war. King Pasenadi eventually defeated Emperor Ajātasattu and captured him alive. He thought that, although this King of Magadha has transgressed against his kingdom, he had not transgressed against him personally, and Ajātasattu was still his nephew. He released Ajātasattu and did not harm him.[95] Upon his return, the Buddha said (among other things) that Pasenadi "is a friend of virtue, acquainted with virtue, intimate with virtue", while the opposite is said of the aggressor, King Ajātasattu.Template:Sfn

According to Theravada commentaries, there are five requisite factors that must all be fulfilled for an act to be both an act of killing and to be karmically negative. These are: (1) the presence of a living being, human or animal; (2) the knowledge that the being is a living being; (3) the intent to kill; (4) the act of killing by some means; and (5) the resulting death.[96] Some Buddhists have argued on this basis that the act of killing is complicated, and its ethicality is predicated upon intent.Template:Sfn Some have argued that in defensive postures, for example, the primary intention of a soldier is not to kill, but to defend against aggression, and the act of killing in that situation would have minimal negative karmic repercussions.Template:Sfn

According to Babasaheb Ambedkar, there is circumstantial evidence encouraging Script error: No such module "lang". from the Buddha's doctrine, "Love all, so that you may not wish to kill any." Gautama Buddha distinguished between a principle and a rule. He did not make Script error: No such module "lang". a matter of rule, but suggested it as a matter of principle. This gives Buddhists freedom to act.[97]

Laws

Maurya Emperor Ashoka banned animal sacrifice, hunting, slaughter of "all four-footed creatures that are neither useful nor edible" and specific animal species, female goats, sheep and pigs nursing their young as well as their young up to the age of six months. Fishing was banned during Chaturmasya and Uposatha.Template:Sfn[98] Slave trade in the Maurya Empire was also banned by Ashoka.[99]

The emperors of the Sui dynasty, Tang dynasty, and early Song dynasty banned killing in the Lunar calendar's 1st, 5th, and 9th months.[100] Empress Wu Tse-Tien banned killing for more than half a year in 692.[101] Some rulers banned fishing for a period of time each year.[102]

There were also bans after the death of emperors,[103] after Buddhist and Taoist prayers,[104] and after natural disasters such as Shanghai's 1926 summer drought, as well as an eight-day ban beginning August 12, 1959, after the August 7 flood (Template:Lang-zh), the last big flood before the 88 Taiwan Flood.[105]

People avoid killing during some festivals, like the Taoist Ghost Festival, the Nine Emperor Gods Festival, and the Vegetarian Festival, as well as during others.[106][107]

See also

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Notes

Template:Notelist

References

Citations

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  20. Shatapatha Brahmana 2.3.4.30; 2.5.1.14; 6.3.1.26; 6.3.1.39.
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  26. Ravindra Kumar (2008), Non-violence and Its Philosophy, Template:ISBN, see pages 11–14
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  36. Mahabharata 12.15.55; Manu Smriti 8.349–350; Matsya Purana 226.116.
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  42. Baudhayana Dharmasutra 2.4.7; 2.6.2; 2.11.15; 2.12.8; 3.1.13; 3.3.6; Apastamba Dharmasutra 1.17.15; 1.17.19; 2.17.26–2.18.3; Vasistha Dharmasutra 14.12.
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  44. Manu Smriti 5.30, 5.32, 5.39 and 5.44; Mahabharata 3.199 (3.207), 3.199.5 (3.207.5), 3.199.19–29 (3.207.19), 3.199.23–24 (3.207.23–24), 13.116.15–18, 14.28; Ramayana 1-2-8:19
  45. Alsdorf pp. 592–593; Mahabharata 13.115.59–60, 13.116.15–18.
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  47. Sutrasthana 46.89; Sharirasthana 3.25.
  48. Sutrasthana 27.87.
  49. Mahabharata 3.199.11–12 (3.199 is 3.207 elsewhere); 13.115; 13.116.26; 13.148.17; Bhagavata Purana (11.5.13–14), and the Chandogya Upanishad (8.15.1).
  50. The Mahabharata and the Manusmṛti (5.27–55) contain lengthy discussions about the legitimacy of ritual slaughter.
  51. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".; 13.115–116; 14.28.
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  53. Manusmriti 10.63, 11.145
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  61. Stepaniak 2000, 6–7; Preece 2008, 323.
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  67. Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga — I, p. 435; Letters on Himself and the Ashram, p. 19.
  68. Sri Aurobindo, Bande Mataram, p. 278; Letters on Yoga — I, p. 436.
  69. Sri Aurobindo, Autobiographical Notes, pp. 48, 73.
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  80. Religious Vegetarianism, ed. Kerry S. Walters and Lisa Portmess, Albany 2001, p. 43–46 (translation of the First Great Vow).
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  94. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".. Some examples are the Cakkavati Sihanada Sutta, the Kosala Samyutta, the Ratthapala Sutta, and the Sinha Sutta. See also page 125. See also Trevor Ling, Buddhism, Imperialism, and War. George Allen & Unwin Ltd, 1979, pages 136–137.
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Sources

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Attribution:

External links

Template:Sister project Template:Sister project

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  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Series of Lectures on Ahimsa

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