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 Please note that the word SAT means Being. It is the One Everpresent Reality. 
 Sata Rupa is a title applied to Vach (similar to Binah) - it means 
Sata Form or Nature (Viraj is Vajra or Hochmah). Vach-Viraj.  Satya Yuga 
is the Golden Age, the Truth Age, the prior world age before this Kali Yuga. Sattya 
means Supreme Truth. Sattva means Understanding. See also Asat, 
Sat, and Tan on this website. Sanat-Kumara is the oldest name of Brahma. The 
Five Kumaras are the Five Dharmas, similar to the 5 Pythagorean Daimones shown 
on the Pentacle. See also below Here is Summary. * 
* * Sanatana Dharma: There is only One Divinity hidden in 
all beings, who pervades all, the Self of all beings. It is the overseer of all 
actions, who dwells in all beings, the witness, the sole consciousness beyond 
all attributes. Svetasavatara Upanishad VI.11 The 
Self is the Divinity that exists in all directions, born in the beginning, 
it moves within the child. It alone has been born and it alone will be born. It 
faces all creatures whose face is to every side. Svetasavatara Upanishad II.16 Sanatana Dharma as a universal tradition 
has room for all faiths and all religious and spiritual practices regardless of 
the time or country of their origin. Yet it places religious and spiritual teachings 
in their appropriate place relative to the ultimate goal of Self-realization, 
to which secondary practices are subordinated. Sanatana Dharma also recognizes 
that the greater portion of human religious aspiration has always been unknown, 
undefined, and outside of any institutionalized belief. Sanatana Dharma 
thereby gives reverence to individual spiritual experience over any formal 
religious doctrine. Wherever the Universal Truth is manifest, there is Sanatana 
Dharma - whether it is in a field of religion, art or science, or in the life 
of a person or community. Wherever the Universal Truth is not recognized, or is 
scaled down and limited to a particular group, book or person, even if done so 
in the name of God, there Sanatana Dharma ceases to function, whatever the activity 
is called. Therefore, to say that some people in India alone know this, or can 
speak for this, is false and confused.   Question: A single wheel 
revolves with a single rim, with an unlimited number of spokes moving both before 
and behind. With half of itself it generated the universe. Where has its other 
half gone? Atharva Veda X.9.7 Answer: Encompassing all beings, all 
worlds, and all directions of space, approaching the original being of Truth, 
with the Self it entered into the Self. Going around Heaven and Earth in 
an instant, going around all the worlds, the directions, and the enlightened realms, 
breaking the extended line of karma, it saw That, it became That, it was That. Shukla 
Yajur Veda XXXII.11-12 The infinite Mother is Heaven. The infinite Mother 
is the Earth. She is the Mother, the Father and the Son. The Infinite Mother is 
all the Gods and the five peoples of humanity. She is all that has been 
born and all that will be born. Rig Veda I.89.10 The almighty power 
of the Supreme Divinities is only One. Rig Veda III.55.1 May Heaven 
and the Atmosphere grant us peace. May the Earth give us peace along with the 
Waters. May the herbs and the forests be peaceful to us. May all the cosmic powers 
grant us peace. May the Divine Being grant us peace. May the entire universe be 
at peace. May there be the peace of peace. May that peace dwell within me. Shukla 
Yajur Veda XXXVI.17 The Basis of the Eternal Tradition A 
universal tradition integrates all valid ways of knowledge from ordinary sense 
perception to the highest samadhi or spiritual absorption. It cannot be limited 
to the partialities of any particular system or ideology, yet it must contain 
teachings for people of all levels and temperaments.  Deity "God" is the term most often used in Western religious thought to describe 
the Supreme Being or spiritual reality behind the universe. The term God is originally 
a Germanic word and relates to the idea of the good, the summum bonum, what is 
supremely beneficial in life. God in the Jewish, Christian and Islamic sense stands 
for the Creator of the universe, who has a personal nature, and is generally conceived 
of as a father who resides in Heaven.  Sanatana Dharma teaches that there 
is an ultimate spiritual reality, which one can call God, but that this reality 
transcends all names, forms and actions. Its highest Truth is one of monism 
- not that there is only One Deity but that there is nothing but Deity, which 
includes all creatures within a greater Being. Such a Divine being is not merely 
creator: It is the creation itself as well as the Uncreated which transcends 
time, space and causation as pure consciousness, called Brahman or the 
Absolute. All creatures and all the universe are in essence Deity. Our soul 
is one with The Absolute and can experience this in consciousness. (See Asat, 
Sat, and Tan on this website). To avoid confusion, I'll use "The Absolute" instead 
of some other name or word. The Absolute is the very Self of all beings. It is 
neither male nor female. It is beyond emotion and expression. It has no only sons, 
favorite prophets or chosen people. It transcends time, space and person. All 
of creation consists of merely the surface waves on its infinite sea. It is a 
unity of Truth, not of belief, and a Truth that has many forms and functions in 
its manifestation. The Absolute is not apart from the world. It is the 
very being and presence underlying all things. It is equally present in an 
ant as well as in a human being. There is nothing apart from it. Yet it is not 
tainted by anything. Like space it pervades everything but assumes no form. While 
one can call The Absolute "God," one should realize that The Absolute is a universal 
principle of Being (SAT) transcending both the Creator and the creation and is 
not the same as the God of monotheistic beliefs (which Hindus call Ishvara 
or the Lord). Non-Duality (Advaita). Non-duality is the understanding 
that there is only One Truth or Reality, and therefore only One Self in all beings. 
This One Truth is Being-Consciousness-Bliss Absolute.  It exists 
equally in the Creator, the soul and in creation and transcends all three. It 
is not merely a theory but is the experiential unity of the perceiver, the action 
of seeing, and the object perceived. (See The Darkness 
Is One on this website).  Without knowing the One, we remain trapped 
in duality, ignorance and sorrow. To know the One is to become it, which is to 
recognize its Self-existent reality.  Sanatana Dharma bases itself on non-duality. 
For this reason it cannot set up one religious identity against another. It recognizes 
the same Self in all beings. Its various practices help us merge into the One, 
which transcends all human limitations. Here Self is being defined as Sat, the 
same Sat in all things, despite their individual personalities.  Atheism? Atheism, 
the idea that there is no God or Creator, is a conception of the human mind which 
occurs at various stages of mental and spiritual development. It appears in undeveloped 
minds who are unable to perceive any deeper reality than what is evident through 
the physical senses. Atheism also appears in more developed minds who see 
through the limitations of organized religion and its dogmas and can no longer 
accept them as true. In that sense, Atheism is an enlightened reaction to ignorance 
and dogma. Some Dharmic teachings, (e.g. the Esoteric Northern Traditions of the 
East) are atheistic in the sense that they do not regard God or a cosmic Lord 
as the ultimate reality. They may recognize the Creator or rather the Emanator 
as a secondary reality, however, and see Pure Consciousness as the ultimate truth 
of being. Such systems are atheistic only in the sense of not regarding theism 
as the ultimate truth. Such non-theists are not materialists but have a trans-theistic 
spiritual view of Reality. This would be more in line with what we call the Dark 
Doctrines (see below, Here is Summary). The moment you 
put "the person of 'God'" into a doctrine, you run the risk of Theism and falling 
into errors.   Deity: Personal or Impersonal?  A 
universal tradition recognizes the full range of personalities of the Deity. Yet 
the Divine is impersonal as well as personal, the formless Absolute of Being-Consciousness-Bliss 
as well as the cosmic Lord and Creator (the Esoteric Tradition says Emanator, 
not Creator - there is a profound difference). The impersonal is a higher reality 
because the personal implies limitation. Beyond creation there cannot be any person, 
even a Divine Person. Again, the issue here is with the concept "person" for something 
that pre-existed the Cosmos. There is no contradiction between the personal and 
impersonal aspects of the Deity. The Impersonal Divine in its creative play assumes 
various personalities as the Creator, or Emanator, Preserver, and Destroyer of 
the universe. These personalities (of one Personage) may be either male 
or female, through the great forms of the Divine Father and Divine Mother. Yet 
the Divine is beyond "self and other" as the sole and Self-existent Reality. That 
being true, the Esoteric Pure Doctrines don't bother making personalities for 
the Self-existent-Reality. In that impersonal and uncreated Existence is true 
immortality and perfect peace. What is the Relationship With Deity?  With 
Deity or the Universal Being is our only enduring (eternal) relationship. Deity 
is our true origin and goal, our ultimate friend and companion. Deity is our father, 
mother, son, daughter, brother, sister, friend, and master. Whatever we are related 
to in essence is Deity or The Absolute as the true Being of all.  God is 
the Self, the Divine Presence which dwells in the hearts of all beings. We are 
not merely related to God: God or the Supreme Being is our true nature. In the 
highest truth (highest Dharma), we don't have a relationship with God, we are 
God. All that we experience is related to us, part of our own eternal and 
infinite consciousness and its creative capacity.  Why Do Religions 
Call God He?  God is both male and female, and beyond both male and 
female. One can call the Divine "He" relative to the masculine qualities of the 
Cosmic Being like strength, justice, will or discernment. One can call it "She" 
in reference to its feminine qualities like love, devotion and receptivity. One 
can call God "It" relative to its neutral qualities like infinity or pure existence. 
But this runs the risk of straying far from the actual Doctrine. It is making 
divisions in something that Is One. If one only calls God "He" then such a God 
is not the Supreme Being but a personification of a male centered view of reality. 
As our culture is dominated by male energy, not of a higher but a lower order, 
naturally people project this idea upon God as well. If people keep projecting 
things into The Absolute, eventually it is no longer The Absolute, but something 
else that is not the Absolute. Such a one-sided conception of God 
is reflected in exclusivist religions, which claim that they alone have the truth 
and thereby lead us to various extreme or even violent actions.  Therefore 
while we can call God "He" we should not limit how we can conceive his reality. 
He is all beings and all relationships. He-she-it, you-me-them, whatever entity 
we conceive is our very own Self. What is the Importance of the Divine 
Mother?  In predominant Western religions the Divine is worshipped 
as Father but not as Mother. This heavenly Father is often portrayed as a stern, 
angry or jealous God - a strict judge and giver of punishment to those of his 
children who violate his seemingly arbitrary laws. Protestant Christianity and 
Islam have banished the Divine as Mother from their religions.  Catholic 
and Greek Orthodox Christianity have accepted the feminine only as the mother 
of Jesus, not as God in Her own right - even though it appears that devotion to 
the Madonna has been the strongest living mystical tradition within Christianity 
and its greatest sustaining force.Sanatana Dharma as a universal tradition has 
always recognized the importance of the Divine Mother.  According to Hinduism 
the deepest relationship that we can have with God is that of the Mother. No human 
relationship is closer than that of the mother and child. It best mirrors our 
relationship with God. India itself is looked upon as the Mother. The Hindu religion 
itself is seen regarded a mother and its teachings are her milk. In the 
modern world wherein we are recognizing the equality of the sexes we can no longer 
reject the feminine aspect of Divinity. The rejection of the feminine aspect of 
the Divine - which is loving kindness, tolerance and caring nurturence - and the 
promotion of the stern male-only father-sky God, has led to the religious animosity 
and holy wars which have devastated humanity over the last two thousand years. 
 What religion has aggressively promoted a belief in the Divine Mother? 
What form of religious fundamentalism or exclusivism has ever been made in the 
name of the Goddess? Who could ever kill people in the name of a God named Mother? 
What Mother would ever allow her children to be killed or hurt, no matter how 
much they may have fallen? What Mother would condemn her own children as sinners? 
Who could say "believe in the Divine Mother or you must be killed or go to an 
eternal hell?" Not surprisingly Hinduism, the world's major religion that has 
honored the Goddess, has seldom promoted religious hostility, and has never created 
such ideas as eternal damnation.  The female is the form side of the Divine. 
Woman represents the Divine embodied. Her worship requires the creation of appropriate 
forms in which to revere her. We must once again create images of the Divine Mother 
to allow her healing grace, which is essential for world peace, to descend. Without 
acknowledging the forms of the Divine Mother our religions must be imbalanced 
and lead to various excesses in human behavior. What is the Relationship 
Between God and Nature?  Some religions place God and Nature apart 
or in conflict with one another. Others see Nature as God's creation, which he 
owns and rules from on high and for which the glory belongs only to him. The Hindu 
view is a little different. According to Hinduism Nature is the manifestation 
of God who is our very Self. Nature is our own body. This is also in the Esoteric 
Tradition: that Nature itself, the entire Cosmos, is what the Vajra Became; therefore 
it is the Vajra, ultimately. It is emanated from the Vajra and is the Vajra ultimately. 
 The entire universe is our manifestation, the reflection in form of the 
Truth of who we really are. We not only exist in Nature, Nature exists in us. 
We are the Cosmic Being that expresses itself through all the forms of creation. 
God has not merely created Nature, or emanated Nature (which makes it all Samsaric 
in the Esoteric Tradition), Nature exists in God. Nature is the expression of 
the Word of God. It is the Divine Message and teaching vehicle through which we 
can come to know our True Self. What Hinduism teaches is not pantheism, 
the idea that Nature is God, but monism, the Truth that there is only One Reality 
which includes the world and is not apart from anything. Hindu saints and sages 
have always reveled in the world of Nature, communicating through her with the 
Divine Existence.  Nature is the Divine Mother who, if we are open to not 
only her beauty but her wisdom, will unfold all the mysteries of consciousness 
to us. Besides the outer Nature is her inner form, the power of yogic knowledge, 
the intelligence that directs the evolution of consciousness, which ultimately 
reveals all the universe within us. What is the Name of the Deity?  There is only One Divine Reality or Supreme Being, which is both beyond all 
names and forms and has an unlimited number of names and forms. One can call it 
Shiva, Vishnu, Divine Mother, the Creator, Allah or whatever one likes. All the 
names and forms of the Divine which human beings have developed through time have 
their validity. But we must transcend names and form, even the name of God, to 
find That Reality which is beyond all material and mental limitation. Here this 
is identical to Taoism.  We don't think that the English word for grapes 
is the only legitimate word for grapes and those who call grapes by any other 
name know nothing about this particular fruit. Yet in religion some groups may 
insist that the name for God belonging to their particular community is the only 
true name and should other people call upon that spiritual reality by another 
name, they must be calling upon something else or even worshipping something undivine. 
 The name is not the thing. Even a person cannot be reduced to a single 
name. How much less so the Infinite Being? God has all names and transcends all 
names. What is important is to know that Reality not to try to impose one name 
or one idea about it on all humanity. A name for God enables us to establish a 
relationship with that transcendent Reality. Generally the name reflects various 
Divine qualities - like love, peace, or truth - which allow us a means of access 
to that higher Truth.  Repetition of Divine names is perhaps the easiest 
method of directing the mind to Truth. But when we limit that transcendent Reality 
to a mere name, which is a collection of letters, then the name itself becomes 
the factor of illusion and separation. We must use the name as a messenger to 
contact the Being, not merely worship the name itself. Ultimately we are that 
Being and Its name is our name, which our every breath and heartbeat proclaims. What is the Origin of Sanatana Dharma? Sanatana Dharma as a formulation 
of the eternal tradition has no specific origin in time. Its origin coincides 
with the beginning of creation itself. Sanatana Dharma as the universal religion 
arises anew with each cycle of creation, being inherent in the very laws of the 
universe. Because it has been formulated in terms of Sanatana Dharma there 
is no specific point in history when we can say that Hinduism began. Nor can we 
rigidly delineate the forms of Hinduism from those of other religions, which being 
products of time must rest on the eternal. As not having an origin, it has no 
end. Sanatana Dharma is based upon universal principles, like the law of 
karma, which are true in all worlds and all cycles of creation. Though its names 
and forms may vary, its principles or dharmas are unchanging and must be rediscovered 
by all creatures in every world. The origin of the True Dharma is within us. It 
is the very root of our deepest thoughts.  What is the Goal of Sanatana 
Dharma? The goal of the universal tradition is Self-realization, 
the realization that the universe exists within us - that the universe is the 
embodiment of our deepest consciousness which transcends time and space. The goal 
of Universal Truth is to become one with it, which is to become one with all. 
This is liberation from all bondage based upon fear and craving need and the various 
dualities of attraction and repulsion. For indeed, if we are all, what else could 
exist for us to fear or to crave or need? Actually the goal of Sanatana 
Dharma is ever realized because the universe is inherently one with consciousness. 
To reach this goal is to recognize its Self-Existent Reality. This is to merge 
in the ocean of unlimited Being-Consciousness-Bliss. It is liberation from all 
bondage and sorrow. Yet beside its ultimate goal Sanatana Dharma recognizes 
all the other goals of the universal manifestation, which is the organic unfoldment 
of all the levels, layers and different types of worlds and creatures. While this 
leads to the ultimate goal, each stage has its appropriate secondary goals, manifesting 
the full beauty and glory of creation.  Is Evolution Endless? Evolution is a process of development in time. Time has no end. Therefore there 
must always be an evolution within the field of time. Though one universe may 
come to an end, another must come into being. Evolution of form, life and mind 
is eternal, though no particular thing that evolves is itself unending. In the 
Esoteric Tradition: Being is always Becoming.  However there is a part of 
our nature that is unchanging, which has never been limited to the field of time. 
This Timeless Being can never evolve because it does not exist within the domain 
of action. (See The Darkness Is One on this website.) 
Pure Consciousness is not a material thing or a product of time that can grow 
or decline. What evolves is the mind and its ability to reflect consciousness. What 
is necessary is to know our true Self - the immutable constant of our being. Then 
we transcend time and circumstance. Then evolution, on whatever level it may occur, 
cannot limit us, though the forms of our outer expression may change and develop 
in ways that we may not be able to presently conceive. We must learn to view the 
unending changes of evolution from the standpoint of the Immutable Self. This 
is Divine delight.  Karma  The law of karma is very scientific. 
The effects of our actions must be of the same nature and extent as the original 
actions themselves. It is not a question of reward and punishment but a law of 
energetics. Our actions set in motion a subtle or occult force that pushes us 
along in life. If we act in a violent way towards others, for example, that violence 
becomes embedded in our psyche and reflects upon us, causing us to act and to 
be acted upon in a similar way.  If we act in a loving and compassionate 
manner that energy carries us along the stream of love and brings the forces of 
love into our life to the same degree and manner as the love we have put forth. 
Whatever we set in motion through action, even if that action is directed toward 
others, we must come to experience within ourselves. When we die we take with 
us the essence of our actions and the will that has caused them, which becomes 
the basis of our next life. Karma is the residue of past actions that follows 
the soul along its journey until it is able to transcend action which, based on 
desire, is always limited. The goal for Dharmic traditions is liberation or union 
with Truth, the Self. This arises from knowledge, not action, because action which 
occurs in the realm of time cannot bring us to that which transcends time. We 
must learn to look beyond action and give up the sense of being the doer. Then 
the fluctuations of action and its result cannot disturb us, and whatever we do, 
being detached, will be inherently good (according to Sanatana Dharma - it may 
not be seen as good by others).  Are We Punished for Wrong Actions? Reward and punishment are concepts of an undeveloped mind. The Divine Being 
is not some great parent or judge in Heaven dealing out rewards and punishments. 
There is a natural law (dharma) and its consequences according to the law of cause 
and effect (karma). If you put your hand into a fire you get burned. God 
is not punishing you for the sin of putting your hand in a fire by burning you. 
It is not a sin but a matter of ignorance of natural law and consequent experience 
of pain or limitation. Just as there are physical laws, like fire's capacity to 
burn, so there are mental and spiritual laws. Violence, for example, brings eventual 
destruction upon its perpetrator. But one is not punished for violence, violence 
as a negative state of mind with negative consequences creates its own punishment. The 
problem is that the long term effects of our actions are not as obvious as their 
immediate results. For example, if we eat food, like too much sugar, which tastes 
good but is bad for us in excess, its negative effect will not manifest immediately, 
like fire burning us, but will take time, causing eventual disease through poor 
digestion which may manifest as arthritis, heart disease or any number of problems. 
Because of the time lap involved between the cause and effect of our actions we 
may not recognize the connection between the wrong food and the disease. On 
the level of behavior, anger is destructive to our finer sensitivities and prevents 
us from developing higher consciousness. It disturbs the Inner Peace. However, 
if our minds are not properly evolved we may not recognize this pain, we may indulge 
in anger and find pleasure in it. But eventually we must experience the consequences 
of the forces we set in motion, both on a short term and a long term level. Our 
anger, fear and attachment must lead us into situations that make us suffer. Wrong 
action itself is its own punishment because it causes the constriction of our 
consciousness into the outer realm of life, which always results in unhappiness. 
 Do Heaven and Hell Exist? Sanatana Dharma recognizes that 
the soul or reincarnating consciousness is one with the Divine and Eternal Reality. 
The soul is immortal and by its very nature ever blissful, free and happy. However, 
veiled by ignorance, it falls into confusion and through misconceptions about 
the nature of Reality makes various mistakes about life which lead to suffering 
in different incarnations. Souls by their karma, the power of their own 
actions, create their own destiny, which leads to various happy or unhappy states 
of existence. A very happy state could be called heaven and a very unhappy state, 
hell. Yet there is no eternal or absolute heaven or hell. Any embodied state being 
bound by time must be transient and come to an end after a certain period of time. 
Nor does any realm contain such extremes of pleasure and pain that the ordinary 
idea of heaven and hell portrays. All embodied states must bring some degree of 
both pleasure and pain, joy and sorrow. Moreover an unlimited result cannot 
arise from a limited action, any more than a limited seed can produce an unlimited 
plant. Therefore an unlimited or eternal heaven or hell can never result from 
limited creaturely actions, such as occur in an ordinary human life, which must 
lead to repeated incarnations, not to any final heaven or hell. The actions that 
we do in one life do not have eternal ramifications but only those into a corresponding 
field of time. Wrong actions lead to suffering but such suffering is equal to 
the nature of the action. There cannot be an eternal result through transient 
action.  The idea of an eternal heaven or hell is irrational and shows an 
ignorance of the basic nature and laws of the universe. Hindus believe in a loving 
God who would never condemn any creature to an everlasting hell. To them, such 
a God would be the worst of tyrants and unworthy of worship. Heaven and 
hell have been used by various priests to entice or frighten people into certain 
beliefs. Such heavens and hells do not exist.  This heaven and hell idea 
appeals to the basic reward-punishment conditioning mechanism of the undeveloped 
mind. It does not promote real ethical behavior so much as creating emotional 
imbalance and sometimes religious fanaticism. It is important to recognize that 
our actions have their consequences in both this and future lives, but to hang 
the specter of an eternal heaven or hell over people is only to promote fear and 
ignorance.  Does Evil Exist? There is an Absolute Good (which 
is what these Traditions are choosing to call The Absolute) but there cannot be 
any absolute evil. Evil being a form of ignorance and limitation can never be 
absolute, though it can be a powerful force in this realm of the ignorance. All 
souls are inherently good and can only temporarily become evil owing to ignorance. 
This evil consists in doing actions which harm other creatures and thereby 
also harm oneself. Various negative forces exist in the universe which 
could be called, in some sense, evil. Just as there are toxins and pollutants 
in the physical environment, which can be called bad (but which may not be bad 
to non-human life at all), so there are negative forces in our psychic and mental 
environment. Wrong actions create a negative force, which like mob action, can 
appear almost demonic. Yet however strong evil appears it can never win in the 
realm of Truth and Eternity. Only in the outer realm of appearances can evil appear 
to have any real power. Inwardly in consciousness it does not really exist. The 
idea of a Devil or that of an entirely evil being is wrong. No creature exists 
who is inherently evil or who can act in an entirely evil manner. However, the 
evil or harmful actions of people can create a negative force that appears to 
have an existence of its own and can be almost overwhelming. Such negative powers 
and entities do exist and must be reckoned with but can be transcended. These 
negative forces are not the product of religious unbelief but of willful egoism. 
The way to transcend evil is to transcend the ego, which is to go beyond the barriers 
of belief and identity. Unfortunately, the specter of evil has been used to dominate 
or destroy people who think differently than a particular group.  Such an 
idea of evil is itself one of the most evil things the human mind has ever invented, 
as the violence perpetrated in its wake throughout history has demonstrated. It 
turns other human beings, who are also God, into demons who have to be destroyed 
and who are not even worthy of human consideration.  What is Sanatana 
Dharma's View of Civilization? According to Sanatana Dharma, or the 
universal tradition, civilization should be the progressive unfoldment of the 
capacities of the soul toward the ultimate goal of Self-realization. The soul 
through evolution gradually develops the powers of the senses, emotion, mind and 
intelligence until discovering its nature as Pure Consciousness. All of the universe 
is thereby a development of civilization, which should be the culture of consciousness. Plants 
and animals also have their societies and their communication. Civilization is 
not unique to human beings or to this planet but occurs everywhere in the universe. 
Yet human civilization has its particular role. Human civilization should be the 
culture of spiritual aspiration whereby we seek to embody the universal consciousness 
in creaturely existence.  This is neither the culture of religious belief 
nor that of materialistic science. It is the seeking of the Infinite in a 
rational, sensitive and experiential manner, not the promotion of an institution, 
nor the cultivation of the finite. True civilization begins with the spiritual 
life and it is based upon honoring the sages, those who have realized truth, and 
looking to them as our social role models and ideals. There are obvious pitfalls 
in doing this, dependent on which "sage" one chooses to admire.  What 
is Vedanta? Vedanta is the portion of the Vedas or the scriptures of 
Hinduism that deals with the ultimate truth of Self-realization, which is the 
true goal of life. It teaches the great truth that the Self is God, that 
our inner being is one with the supreme reality. (See Asat, 
Sat and Tan on this website.) There are several schools of Vedanta but all 
seek realization of God or Truth. Vedantic schools discuss the nature of 
the Absolute (Brahman), the Creator (God), the soul (Atman) and Nature, as well 
as the nature of karma, rebirth, bondage and liberation. Vedanta contains philosophy, 
theology and various yogic approaches. It is a vast treasure house of wisdom which 
explains all the mysteries of life and comprehends all worlds and all states of 
consciousness. Yoga is the practical side of Vedanta. Without yogic practices 
Vedanta remains a mere theory. Without Vedantic knowledge yogic practices remain 
superficial. Vedanta is the real essence of Hinduism and Yoga is its practice. 
It has been said that Vedanta is to Hinduism what Kaballa is to Judaism. The great 
teachings of Yoga-Vedanta are the core of Sanatana Dharma or the Eternal Tradition 
and should be spread all over the world.  What is Tantra? Tantra 
is a set of Hindu teachings generally giving various rituals and techniques to 
achieve the various goals of life, including liberation. Buddhist and Jain Tantras 
of a similar nature also exist. The highest Tantras are spiritual texts 
providing worship of deities, mantras, and meditation to achieve union with Deity 
and Self-realization. They are great yogic teachings and imbued with the higher 
truths of Vedanta. Tantras of an intermediate level use rituals and mantras to 
gain personal goals like health, prosperity, marital happiness or children. Inferior 
Tantras use similar methods to gain control over the minds of other people or 
even inflict harm. These are not to be viewed as superior or inferior in terms 
of morality. They are Greater and Lesser in terms of Magic.  In the West 
Tantra has mainly become known through various sexual Tantric practices. In fact 
to most Westerners Tantra means sex. Such sexual Tantras were usually part of 
the intermediate or inferior Tantras, not the higher Tantras. They make up only 
a small portion of Tantric teachings and should not be made to represent Tantra 
as a whole. As the Goddess represents the Divine Word and the force of Nature, 
Tantric approaches are based on worshipping Her. She controls all energies and 
gives mastery over all techniques. She is the power of Yoga, the Yoga Shakti, 
that leads us to our true Self.  Isn't This a Different View Than Yoga 
in the West? Yoga in the West has come to emphasize asana or yogic 
postures, which is just a small and preliminary part of the yogic system as the 
Western world is very physically oriented. As such it is Hatha Yoga or the Yoga 
of physical culture that has become most popular. But even traditional Hatha Yoga 
includes pranayama and meditation.   It is a part of Sadhana or spiritual 
practice and is meant to lead one to Raja Yoga or the deeper meditational practices. 
However the deeper aspects of Yoga are recognized by many people, even in the 
West, particularly those who want to go deeper into the tradition.  How 
Does Hinduism View Western Civilization? Western civilization is a 
comparatively recent phenomenon compared to older spiritual cultures like the 
Hindu which go back over five thousand years and recognize previous world ages 
going back far into what Western historical accounts describe as the pre-historic 
era. Hindus view Christianity and Islam as new religions also, which have therefore 
yet to develop the proper depth and tolerance that experience teaches. According 
to Hindu thinkers Western civilization is still immature and at an adolescent 
phase wherein personal pleasure and sensory indulgence (Kama) are the most important 
values. Western civilization, except in areas dominated by fundamentalist religions, 
has advanced beyond the childhood phase, represented by the Middle Ages, when 
people were like frightened children dominated by religious authority (externally 
projected parental images). But it has not developed any real spiritual 
tradition. It produced a few mystics in the Middle Ages but no enduring science 
of Self-realization and yogic practices. Western art has also floundered without 
any spiritual roots and become mere personal expression leading either to anarchy 
or nihilism but not at all connecting us up with the cosmic powers which true 
art is meant to. To the Hindu mind Western civilization and its adolescent 
values is destroying the planet and its deeper cultural traditions. However Western 
civilization at least has a freedom of inquiry and curiosity about the world that 
must lead it toward deeper knowledge in time, but as a cultural phenomenon on 
any large scale, this may take decades, if not centuries to develop, which is 
not surprising as the life of civilization is measured in thousands of years, 
not centuries. Western thinkers should remain humble and not get trapped in the 
arrogance of the intellect, then this development can occur quicker and with less 
suffering. Isn't this View of Western Civilization Insensitive? Actually it is the Western account of history that is insensitive. Look at 
any book on world history coming from the West and you will see that it is mainly 
a history of modern Europe with spiritual cultures like the Hindu dismissed as 
of little importance, and ancient spiritual cultures like the Egyptians regarded 
as merely primitive.  Similarly Western books on the history of philosophy 
give little credit to the great experiential spiritual systems of the Hindus and 
Buddhists. Their history of art has little regard for the monumental spiritual 
traditions of countries like India, Egypt or Mexico but is mainly concerned with 
the personal style art of modern Europe and America which is lacking in any sense 
of the Eternal and the Infinite. Western civilization itself is arrogant 
and does not understand the rest of civilization, which has been its largest portion 
historically, or the great spiritual traditions of humanity, which are the essence 
of civilization. Western civilization pretends that it represents civilization 
as a whole, when it only represents one very recent trend. Please note: 
 Here is summary, a lot more specific: Unity 
in the Adamantine Esoteric Tradition of the Boundless Darkness, what we call the 
Dark Tradition.  This is an Adamantine Doctrine said to have been The Doctrine 
of the prior world age, the 4th age, the Satya Yuga. Pen Hun transmitted it to 
the people in the Kali Yuga. Blavatsky was told some of this, for sure. I detailed 
some of it, in short, in "Serpents vs. Adamites." What absolutely legitimizes 
the entire Esoteric Tradition and all the related cultures (plural) that had it 
and still have it, as a whole, is their EMANATION doctrine about the Boundless 
Darkness, No Name, Aditi, Ain Soph, Apeiron, etc. and the Flame, Viraj, Vajra, 
etc. that is in that All Pervading Darkness - and the resulting doctrine of Being 
and Becoming. This Tradition is not exclusively in the Eastern lands since the 
"western civilization" Hellenic pre-Socratic thought is universally agreed upon 
to be very Eastern in tone and intent - and that is where Pythagoreanism comes 
from. Pythagoras, however, identified himself as a Pelasgian - and these are people 
of the prior 4th world age. (See "Sumerians, Pelasgians, and Turanians," 
on this website.) They also had the Apeiron, the Five Daimones and the same Doctrine.  
 THAT is the unifying concept. It is very much unlike a creation 
doctrine; it is very much unlike paganism with many gods and goddess and 
half-godling "children of" the gods/goddesses. It is not dualistic at all. 
It is NOT for everyone. Repeat, it is not dualistic - so if you find some later 
dualism tacked onto any tradition that has some of the Esoteric (Dark) Tradition 
in it, it is a later addition. In addition, there are elaborations that 
are identical: how that One Darkness or The Absolute is always categorized in 
5 distinct ways as it acts on "the nature" around us and how the Flame is within 
us as kundalini, Vajra, etc., how the Nature itself IS this Absolute as it Became 
All Things. How the Flame comes into living beings from the All Pervading Darkness, 
goes through living things as a Flame or kind of "Light" and then returns to that 
One Darkness/Being. How the All Pervading Boundless Darkness itself never increases 
or decreases all the time this goes on. There are also very similar doctrines 
about what lacks this Flame within, in all these traditions. There is no judgement 
on such people. It is just that the Tradition is not told to them - hence it is 
esoteric. (Times have changed). I could say it this way: Aditi, Vach, Viraj. Kether, 
Binah, Hochmah. Same thing. Recognizable to anyone that knows this. This 
is one solid tradition amongst MANY whole cultures, parts of cultures and peoples. 
It is universally said to have been The Adamantine Doctrine during the Satya Yuga 
which is a prior world age. It is distinct from the trinity traditions, distinct 
from the dualistic traditions which oppose light and dark. It is distinct from 
paganism. It is distinct from the solar cults. It has nothing to do with rebelliousness 
or the mundane world of the herd and hypocrisy. It has nothing to do with that 
pro or con - all of that is irrelevant. If you want rules, make them up. If you 
follow rules, then someone else made them up. That's how societies work. How societies 
work has nothing to do with the Doctrine, per se. The need "in itself" for rules 
is contrary to the Dharmas. But rules are needed in SOCIETIES and if you are talking 
about societies, behaviors in these societies; you are NOT talking about The Doctrine. 
There is a qualified difference. A Ngagspa can behave one way in some remote area 
of Etsen Gol. That is, you would see the outer behavior of this person, you'd 
see him doing things. Let him come to the USA and live in the city. The Ngaspa 
ADAPTS easily enough. You'd see him doing other behaviors outwardly. Inwardly, 
he is the same Ngagspa. Outer behavior has nothing to do with the Inner Being, 
per se; INTENT has to do with Inner Being. . Following speeding laws on interstates, 
which the Ngagspa would do if he came here, has nothing to do with The Doctrine. 
 This is perfectly clear in the Esoteric Tradition whether you get it from 
the Dark Tradition section on the website or from a university or from an Adapt 
or whether one might tell you some of this, as someone told Blavatsky (and she 
garbled it all up and tried to change it....) It does NOT MATTER if confused persons, 
overly cerebral people or anyone else doesn't get it. Glaring and screaming out 
is the EMANATION doctrine and the BOUNDLESS DARKNESS concept - the Flame that 
is in that Darkness - from there comes Being and Becoming. Those things are OUTSIDE 
of Judeo-Christianity-Islam for the most part. These are the three MAIN things 
that bind these traditions into one Esoteric Tradition: Boundless Darkness, Flame 
in Darkness , Being/Becoming. These THREE things unify it into one Esoteric Tradition, 
in addition to the actual teachings of the 7 and the 5 and The One. There is no 
duality of LHP or RHP even if we ourselves are calling something LHP - we do so 
due to the very recent meanings of these words (distortions). We have unified 
what belongs together as a core doctrine. I don't expect a very cerebral person 
stuck in the Judeo-Christian paradigm to hear a single "note" of what I said. 
I'm not into explaining harmony to tone deaf people. It's a waste of time. The 
LHP or The Esoteric does not work that way. It is not like conversion doctrines. 
It is not like what has come to be thought of as RHP. Though that in itself is 
very confused and misnamed. If (IF) you define RHP as the Exoteric, then one could 
say that the RHP does work that way: teaches music to tone deaf people - a pure 
act of futility. You either hear the tune, or you don't.  If you hear it, 
it the Doctrine calls out and reaches your inner Being, then it definitely CALLS 
to you, you can't even resist it. If you don't hear it, I suggest you don't concern 
yourself with it and continue to PURSUE YOUR OWN things and be happy with what 
you have. To not do that is to participate further in non-being. To try to gang 
up on and rag on those who do understand it, is an act of non-being.  Obviously, 
in history, pieces of this One Doctrine have been absconded with, merged with 
things it was never a part of, such as the Logos cults - and then the Sun Cults 
of old. SAT and Sanatana both got confused with Saturn the planet - and then confused 
with the Sun. Some of the Doctrine got merged into the Dark Goddess concept - 
dualized - as what I'd imagine to be a reaction to the Solar cults of patriarchal 
peoples ruling those areas. No matter. None of that is relevant. We present The 
Esoteric Tradition in a very unadorned and pure form. That is relevant. In the 
Kali Yuga, this is bound to happen to anything from the Satya Yuga.  [Many 
of the basic notes for this were taken from Dr. David Frawley because he states 
it all in an extremely simple manner using primarily English words in a clear, 
non-abstract as possible, manner. This article is not an attempt to elaborate 
on what is otherwise an extremely complex system of Teachings.]