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Definitions of Karma
From Life's Riddle, Nils Amneus If the branch of a tree is bent out of position it reacts with an equal and opposite force which will return the branch to its original position when released. If a stone is thrown up into the air it returns to earth with a velocity equal to that with which it was thrown. If a weight is suspended by a rope it produces a tension in the rope equal to the weight, but pulling in the opposite direction. These are examples on the material plane of an automatic tendency in Nature, which in Mechanics is expressed by the formula: "to every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." We see other examples of a tendency in Nature to restore balance in such common phenomena as water resuming its level after it has been disturbed; the air of the atmosphere moving from high pressure areas to those of a lower pressure or a swinging pendulum returning eventually to its position of rest. The ancient teachings tell us that the same tendency operates throughout the Universe on all its planes, unseen as well as seen. We human beings are also governed by the same law, since we too are parts of Nature. In our innermost essence we are one with the Universal Life. Through this inner source we are united with one another as are the leaves of one tree or the cells and organs of the human body. The natural relationship between human beings is therefore one of harmony and cooperation for the common good. If this harmonious relationship is broken, Nature responds by setting up reactions of a similar kind. Thus if our motives, feelings, thoughts and actions are of a detrimental nature the same will return to us, and if they are of a beneficent nature the reaction will be beneficial. Thus life gives us back what we put into it. The tendency in Nature to respond to external impulses by producing equivalent reactions is described by phrases such as "The Law of Cause and Effect," "The Law of Consequences," etc. In Hindu philosophy it is referred to by the Sanskrit term "Karma." Since there is no adequate term in Occidental languages to convey this idea, and in order to avoid cumbersome expressions, the Sanskrit term has been adopted in Theosophical literature for this purpose. Literally translated Karma means "action," but to the Hindu this word has a more comprehensive meaning than it does to an Occidental. To the Hindu the effect is inherent in the cause. He considers that an initial act is only one half of an operation that is not complete until the reaction has taken place. The term Karma therefore includes both the cause and the effect. It is sometimes referred to as a "law," but this should not be understood in its judicial sense as an edict pronounced by some outside authority, but in the scientific sense as a quality inherent in Nature. Karma is the fundamental law that governs all actions. It is the preserver of equilibrium, the restorer of disturbed balance. It does not punish or reward, it merely adjusts.
From Occult Glossary, G de Purucker (Karman, Sanskrit) This is a noun-form coming from the
root kri meaning "to do," "to make." Literally karma
means "doing," "making," action. But when used in
a philosophical sense, it has a technical meaning, and this technical
meaning can best be translated into English by the word consequence.
The idea is this: When an entity acts, he acts from within; he acts
through an expenditure in greater or less degree of his own native energy.
This expenditure of energy, this outflowing of energy, as it impacts
upon the surrounding milieu, the nature around us, brings forth from
the latter perhaps an instantaneous or perhaps a delayed reaction or
rebound. Nature, in other words, reacts against the impact; and the
combination of these two -- of energy acting upon nature and nature
reacting against the impact of that energy -- is what is called karma,
being a combination of the two factors. Karma is, in other words, essentially
a chain of causation, stretching back into the infinity of the past
and therefore necessarily destined to stretch into the infinity of the
future. It is unescapable, because it is in universal nature, which
is infinite and therefore everywhere and timeless; and sooner or later
the reaction will inevitably be felt by the entity which aroused it.
Karma (Sanskrit) [from the verbal root kri to do, make, denoting action] Action, the causes and consequences of action; that which produces change. One of the primary postulates of every comprehensive system of philosophy, described as a universal law, unceasingly active throughout universal nature and rooted in cosmic harmony, in its operations existing from eternity, inevitable, inherent in the very nature of things. It is action, absolute harmony, the adjuster; it preserves equilibrium by compensating and adjusting all actions, excessive or defective. Hence it is called the law of retribution, implying neither reward nor punishment, based on nature's own urge of harmonious equilibrium. As such it has been personalized as Nemesis and by many other names, a practice which lends itself to popular imagining of avenging deities, such as God or Gods, Furies, Fates, Destiny, etc. As there are no such things as inanimate beings in the universe, it is not surprising to hear of karmic agents and of scribes or lipika who record karma. Karma must necessarily be transmitted by living beings of one grade or another, because there is no other means possible, and universal nature is but a vast, virtually frontierless being whose entire structure, laws, and operations are the innumerable hierarchies of beings in all-various grades, which thus not only condition nature, but are in fact universal nature itself. By our acts we create living beings which act upon other people and ultimately react upon ourselves. These beings, then, are agents of karma on one plane; on higher planes other orders of beings are such agents. "An Occultist or a philosopher will not speak of
the goodness or cruelty of Providence; but, identifying it with Karma-Nemesis,
he will teach that nevertheless it guards the good and watches over
them in this, as in future lives; and that it punishes the evil-doer
-- aye, even to his seventh rebirth. So long, in short, as the effect
of his having thrown into perturbation even the smallest atom in the
Infinite World of harmony, has not been finally readjusted. For the
only decree of Karma -- an eternal and immutable decree -- is absolute
Harmony in the world of matter as it is in the world of Spirit. It is
not, therefore, Karma that rewards or punishes, but it is we, who reward
or punish ourselves according to whether we work with, through and along
with nature, abiding by the laws on which that Harmony depends, or --
break them. Karma does not obviate free will or imply fatalism or mechanistic determinism. It is not merely a mechanical or mechanistic chain of linked cause and effect, by which every act is predetermined by some previous act and by no other cause. Man is a divine spark expressing itself through a series of vehicles, forming by means of these vehicles a series of egos, each conscious and operative on its own plane. Through his contract with higher planes, he has the power of bringing new forces into operation, so he is not inexorably bound in a mechanistic sense by his karma. On the other hand, to speak of an absolutely free will is meaningless; the will becomes more and more emancipated from conditions as we penetrate deeper into the recesses of our nature; but it must always be actuated by motive of some kind, and hence, being conditioned by motive, it comes under the operation of the universal law of karma. There are many types of karma, such as human, racial, national, family, individual, etc. A chain of causation, stretched out in time, will be intersected by any given present moment; so that in speaking of a person, we may say he sums up in himself both his past and his future, he is his own karma. Since the whole universe and all the beings which compose it are linked and blended together, it follows that no person can have exclusive interests and that the karma of all beings is linked and, in a profound sense, identical. Karma in its moral aspect is cosmic justice. It should not interfere in any way with helping others, nor does it render futile the exercise of compassion, for we incur as much responsibility by refraining from action as by acting. "Sow kindly acts and thou shalt reap their fruition. Inaction in a deed of mercy becomes an action in a deadly sin" (The Voice of the Silence 31).
From The Key To Theosophy, H. P. Blavatsky Karma (Sans.) Physically, action; Metaphysically, the
LAW of RETRIBUTION; the Law of Cause and Effect or Ethical Causation.
It is Nemesis only in the sense of bad Karma. It is the eleventh Nidana
in the concatenation of causes and effects in orthodox Buddhism; yet
it is the power that controls all things, the resultant of moral action,
the metaphysical Samskara, or the moral effect of an act committed for
the attainment of something which gratifies a personal desire. There
is the Karma of merit and the Karma of demerit. Karma neither punishes
nor rewards; it is simply the one Universal LAW which guides unerringly
and, so to say, blindly, all other laws productive of certain effects
along the grooves of their respective causations. When Buddhism teaches
that "Karma is that moral Kernel (of any being) which alone survives
death and continues in transmigration" or reincarnation, it simply
means that there remains nought after each personality, but the causes
produced by it, causes which are undying, i. e., which cannot be eliminated
from the Universe until replaced by their legitimate effects, and so
to speak, wiped out by them. And such causes, unless compensated during
the life of the person who produced them with adequate effects, will
follow the reincarnated Ego and reach it in its subsequent incarnations
until a full harmony between effects and causes is fully re-established.
No "personality" -- a mere bundle of material atoms and instinctual
and mental characteristics -- can, of course, continue as such in the
world of pure spirit. Only that which is immortal in its very nature
and divine in its essence, namely, the Ego, can exist for ever. And
as it is that Ego which chooses the personality it will inform after
each Devachan, and which receives through these personalities the effects
of the Karmic causes produced, it is, therefore, the Ego, that Self,
which is the "moral Kernel" referred to, and embodied Karma
itself, that "which alone survives death."
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