Mahavira — "All living beings are endowed with consciousness."
All living beings are endowed with consciousness.
All living beings are endowed with consciousness.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"The greatest mistake of a soul is non-restraint."
"Happiness and sorrow are the results of one's own actions."
"One should not be negligent even for a moment."
"The greatest wisdom is to know oneself."
"The true nature of the soul is bliss."
24th and last Tirthankara of Jainism, whose teachings of strict ahimsa (non-violence), aparigraha (non-attachment), and karma reshaped ancient Indian religion. Closely associated with The Buddha (near-contemporary moral revolutionary, also reacting against Vedic ritualism). For an intellectual contrast, see Vedic Brahmanical ritual sacrifice, the animal-sacrifice-centered Vedic religion of his era — Mahavira's ahimsa demanded total non-violence, including not eating root vegetables that kill the plant — a maximum-distance ethical move from the Vedic priestly tradition that ritually sacrificed cattle and horses. The two cleanest poles of ancient Indian religious ethics.
Found in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
Every living creature — from humans to insects to microorganisms — carries some form of inner awareness or experience. This is not just a philosophical observation but a moral claim: consciousness confers worth, and worth demands ethical consideration. It flattens hierarchies that privilege some lives over others, insisting that the capacity to experience existence is not a human monopoly but a universal feature of life itself.
Mahavira renounced his royal household at 30 to live as a wandering ascetic, sweeping the ground before each step to avoid crushing insects and straining water before drinking. His doctrine of jīva — the soul present in all living beings — directly grounded these radical practices. This belief in universal consciousness was not abstract theology for him; it was the lived justification for ahimsa, the non-violence that defined every dimension of his existence.
Mahavira lived in northeastern India during the 6th–5th century BCE, when Vedic Brahmanism sanctioned ritual animal sacrifice and a rigid caste hierarchy determined whose lives held spiritual weight. This was the Axial Age — the Buddha teaching simultaneously nearby, Confucius in China, Socrates in Greece. Asserting that all beings hold consciousness was a direct challenge to priestly authority and caste logic, democratizing moral standing at a moment when violence toward lower castes and animals was religiously normalized.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty