![]() Yoga teaches various physical techniques also known as āsanas (postures), used for various purposes (eg., meditation, contemplation, relaxation). Yoga is originally considered a branch of Hindu philosophy (astika), but both ancient and modern Yoga combine the physical, mental and spiritual. In the Amanaska, : ‘That is declared as the highest Brahma which is free from existence and non-existence, without cessation ( nāśa) and arising ( utpatti) and beyond all imaginings ’.”. His essence in the Gorakṣopaniṣat, ‘the deity of constant bliss is above the non-dual state’. ![]() Nāśa (नाश) refers to “cessation”, according to the Gorakṣasiddhāntasaṅgraha, a text dealing with Yoga quoting from approximately seventy-two sources including the Amanaska Yoga treatise.-Accordingly, : “It is said, ‘the goal of the supreme spirit is liberation’. It is without old age, death, fear, sorrow or end.” Source: ORA: Amanaska (king of all yogas): A Critical Edition and Annotated Translation by Jason Birch He who moves in the nose ( nāsā), in the odoriferous ( ghrātavya), in the earth ( pṛthivī), in the nādis, in prāṇa, in vijñāna, in ānanda, in the ākāśa of the heart and within all else-That is Ātman. Accordingly, “the nādis form their bond (or connect them). The corresponding Ādhibhūta (pertaining to the elements) is called ghrātavya (the odoriferous) and the corresponding Adhidaivata (presiding deity) is pṛthivī (the earth). It is one of the fourteen Adhyātma (pertaining to the body) mentioned in the Subālopaniṣad (fifth section). Nāsā (नासा) is a Sanskrit word referring to the “nose”. Nasa in Yoga glossary Source: Wisdom Library: Yoga Literature is commonly written in Sanskrit using various poetic metres. Traditional practice of Āyurveda in ancient India dates back to at least the first millenium BC. Āyurveda (आयुर्वेद, ayurveda) is a branch of Indian science dealing with medicine, herbalism, taxology, anatomy, surgery, alchemy and related topics. Source: : Ayurveda glossary of termsĢ) Nāśa (नाश):- Absense, Loss context information Together with the names Nāsā and Vāsā, there are a total of sixteen Sanskrit synonyms identified for this plant. The fourth chapter ( śatāhvādi-varga) of this book enumerates eighty varieties of small plants ( pṛthu-kṣupa). Nāsā (नासा) is another name for Vāsā, a medicinal plant identified with Adhatoda vasica Nees, synonym of Justicia adhatoda (“malabar nut”), from the Acanthaceae or acanthus family of flowering plants, according to verse 4.47-49 of the 13th-century Raj Nighantu or Rājanighaṇṭu. The term is used throughout Ayurvedic literature such as the Suśruta-saṃhitā and the Caraka-saṃhitā. Nāsā (नासा) is a Sanskrit technical term, referring to the “nose”. Nasa in Ayurveda glossary Source: Wisdom Library: Āyurveda and botany
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