blazeofglory
09-09-2007, 10:03 PM
Religious literature is in point of fact a great reservoir of inspiration. Particularly in the east it is still religious literature that is shaping the course of life. Think in the Indian subcontinent how people live religious values.
The Mahabharata is really a great book, the one which is matchless in terms of the depth it has and in terms of the beauty of language. I am familiar both modern literature and ancient scriptural literature I feel some of the ancient texts are really unbeatable. The book is really very big in size and the beauty of the book in terms of philosophical depth and linguisitic impeccibility it has no match.
The Gita is in the Mahabharata. The Gita has been a source of inspiration to all and it is really a culmination of ranges of ideas.
The saddening thing is that even if we are kind of rich with such ancient treasuries of ideas we are far from benefiting from them. It is really a great wealth of cultures.
A book which covers everything in one or different sources or branches of knowledge is condensely put in one.
Read this book if you can, but it is wirtten in Sanskrit and understanding it in its original text is something we can not do. The translation of it also is immensely beautiful.
The Mahabharata is really a great book, the one which is matchless in terms of the depth it has and in terms of the beauty of language. I am familiar both modern literature and ancient scriptural literature I feel some of the ancient texts are really unbeatable. The book is really very big in size and the beauty of the book in terms of philosophical depth and linguisitic impeccibility it has no match.
The Gita is in the Mahabharata. The Gita has been a source of inspiration to all and it is really a culmination of ranges of ideas.
The saddening thing is that even if we are kind of rich with such ancient treasuries of ideas we are far from benefiting from them. It is really a great wealth of cultures.
A book which covers everything in one or different sources or branches of knowledge is condensely put in one.
Read this book if you can, but it is wirtten in Sanskrit and understanding it in its original text is something we can not do. The translation of it also is immensely beautiful.