01728nam a22002537a 450000500170000000800410001702000150005804000070007304100080008008200210008810000280010924500370013726000370017430000280021136500320023952009080027165000320117965000340121165000340124570000300127994200120130999900190132195201340134020221222145510.0221222b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a8120800613 cAL aeng 223a294.52bHALA aWash Edward Hale967589 aAsura: bIn early vedic religion aDelhibMotilal Banarsidassc1986 axvi,226p.bHBc22x14cm. 2Religionb85.00c₹d85.00 aIn the Rig Veda, the word asura is used frequently as an epithet for various deities. Rather, this word generally in used in later Sanskrit as a class of demons who are enemies of the gods. A careful study of evolution from the Vedic period. reprints a classic. Being and Meaning is a comparative study of the concepts of Being and Language in Bhartrhari and Martin Heidegger, emphasising the universality of their thinking. Language in Bhartrhari's vision is the medium of the self-expression for the Ultimate Reality (Sabdatattva). In Heidegger's thinking language is the Original Utterance (Sage) which Being speaks to man. Being expresses itself in language, and phenomena in the world occur simultaneously with the occurrence of language. Bhartrhari and Heidegger lead one to the belonging togetherness of Being and being beyond all conceptualizing, transcending the bounds of Orient and Occident. aTheories About Asura967590 aAsura in the Sama Veda967591 aAsura in the Brahmanas967592 aHALE (Wash Edward)967593 2ddccDB c226059d226059 00102ddc40708OTHaALbALd2014-12-03l0o294.52 HALApD05454r2022-12-22 00:00:00w2022-12-22yDBzDonated by V. T. Rajshekar