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Desire (kama), anger (krodha), greed (lobha), attachment (moha) , pride (mada), jealousy (matsarya) ; these dacoits are residing within your own body. They are not outside. They are residing as six column enemies within you. And, why are they there? To loot you of the Jnana-Ratna, to rob you of the precious gem of spiritual wisdom or atma-jnana, to loot you and deprive you of the precious gem of Self-awareness and make you forget your Self and weep and wail and be in ignorance. In order to deprive you of this jewel of atma-jnana, they are there. Therefore, oh man, oh Sadhak, Jagrata, Jagrata. Beware, beware. In this way, from the submerged level of the chitta or the deep within, various samskaras and vasana are brought into activity.
- Adi Shankaracharya. Shivani Yogini ( talk) 04:09, 3 January 2021 (UTC)
I think this article has original research in the translations here to make Arishadvargas match more closely with the Christian 7 deadly sins. Where are the citations for the translations? All academics would translate matsarya as miserliness or stinginess. While this may loosely be translated as jealousy (coveting what one possesses), it does NOT translate as envy (coveting what another possesses). While envy is among the Christian 7 deadly sins, it does not make sense to translate matsarya as envy. It appears there was an attempt to make matsarya match with Christian doctrine and no citations were provided.
I understand that non-technical people may be confused as the lay person conflates 'jealousy' with 'envy' thinking they are synonyms, but there is a substantial and philosophical difference between being unable to relinquish one's possessions (e.g. hoarding) versus pining after another person's possessions (envy). Matsarya is more akin to hoarding, and loosely jealousy, not envy.
- Thoreaulylazy ( talk) 09:39, 20 January 2022 (UTC)
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Desire (kama), anger (krodha), greed (lobha), attachment (moha) , pride (mada), jealousy (matsarya) ; these dacoits are residing within your own body. They are not outside. They are residing as six column enemies within you. And, why are they there? To loot you of the Jnana-Ratna, to rob you of the precious gem of spiritual wisdom or atma-jnana, to loot you and deprive you of the precious gem of Self-awareness and make you forget your Self and weep and wail and be in ignorance. In order to deprive you of this jewel of atma-jnana, they are there. Therefore, oh man, oh Sadhak, Jagrata, Jagrata. Beware, beware. In this way, from the submerged level of the chitta or the deep within, various samskaras and vasana are brought into activity.
- Adi Shankaracharya. Shivani Yogini ( talk) 04:09, 3 January 2021 (UTC)
I think this article has original research in the translations here to make Arishadvargas match more closely with the Christian 7 deadly sins. Where are the citations for the translations? All academics would translate matsarya as miserliness or stinginess. While this may loosely be translated as jealousy (coveting what one possesses), it does NOT translate as envy (coveting what another possesses). While envy is among the Christian 7 deadly sins, it does not make sense to translate matsarya as envy. It appears there was an attempt to make matsarya match with Christian doctrine and no citations were provided.
I understand that non-technical people may be confused as the lay person conflates 'jealousy' with 'envy' thinking they are synonyms, but there is a substantial and philosophical difference between being unable to relinquish one's possessions (e.g. hoarding) versus pining after another person's possessions (envy). Matsarya is more akin to hoarding, and loosely jealousy, not envy.
- Thoreaulylazy ( talk) 09:39, 20 January 2022 (UTC)