Loka
Loka is a Sanskrit word for "world".
Jainism
In Jain texts, universe is referred to as Loka. Jain Cosmology postulates an eternal and ever-existing loka which works on universal natural laws, there being no creator & destroyer deity.[1] According to the Jain cosmology, the universe is divided into 3 parts:
# | Three Lokas of Jain Cosmology |
---|---|
01 | Urdhva Loka - the realms of the gods or heavens |
02 | Madhya Loka – the realms of the humans, animals and plants |
03 | Adho Loka – the realms of the hellish beings or the infernal regions |
Hindu tradition
In the Puranas, and already in the Atharvaveda, there are fourteen worlds, seven higher ones (Vyahrtis) and seven lower ones (Pātālas), viz. bhu, bhuvas, svar, mahas, janas, tapas, and satya above and atala, vitala, sutala, rasaataala, talatala, mahaatala, patala and naraka below.
The scholar Deborah Soifer describes the development of the concept of lokas as follows:
The concept of a loka or lokas develops in the Vedic literature. Influenced by the special connotations that a word for space might have for a nomadic people, loka in the Veda did not simply mean place or world, but had a positive valuation: it was a place or position of religious or psychological interest with a special value of function of its own.
Hence, inherent in the 'loka' concept in the earliest literature was a double aspect; that is, coexistent with spatiality was a religious or soteriological meaning, which could exist independent of a spatial notion, an 'immaterial' significance.
The most common cosmological conception of lokas in the Veda was that of the trailokya or triple world: three worlds consisting of earth, atmosphere or sky, and heaven, making up the universe."[3]
# | Planetary system name |
---|---|
01 | Satya-loka |
02 | Tapa-loka |
03 | Jana-loka |
04 | Mahar-loka |
05 | Svar-loka |
06 | Bhuvar-loka |
07 | Bhu-loka |
08 | Atala-loka |
09 | Vitala-loka |
10 | Sutala-loka |
11 | Talatala-loka |
12 | Mahatala-loka |
13 | Rasatala-loka |
14 | Patala-loka |
Buddhism
In Early Buddhism, based upon the Pali Canon and related Agamas, there are four distinct worlds: There is the Kama Loka, or world of sensuality, in which humans, animals, and some devas reside, Rupa-Loka, or the world of refined material existence, in which certain beings mastering specific meditative attainments reside, and Arupa Loka, or the immaterial, formless world, in which beings to master formless meditative attainments reside. Arahants, who have attained the highest goal of Nibbana (or, Nirvana), have unbound themselves from individual (limited) existence in any form, in any realm, and cannot be found here, there, or in between, i.e., they are found in no Loka whatsoever.
Six Lokas
In the Tibetan and Tantric schools, "Six Lokas" refers to a Bönpo and Nyingmapa spiritual practice or discipline that works with chakras and the six dimensions or classes of beings in the Bhavachakra. And in Buddhist Cosmology Kama-Loka, Rupa-Loka, Arupa-Loka has interpreted.[4]
Theosophy
The concept of Lokas was adopted by Theosophy, and can be found in the writings of Blavatsky and G. de Purucker. There is also reference to kamaloka (world of desires) as a sort of astral plane or temporary after-life state, according to the teachings of Blavatsky, Leadbeater, and Steiner.
Abrahamic religions
The Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) refer to "seven heavens" and "seven earths", a concept that may be akin to the 14 planetary systems (lokas) of the Vedas.
See also
Wikiversity has learning materials about Seven Heavens |
References
- ↑ Jain cosmology
- ↑ Shah, Natubhai (1998). p. 25
- ↑ Soiver, Deborah A., The Myths of Narasimha and Vamana: Two Avatars in Cosmological Perspective State University of New York Press (Nov 1991), ISBN 978-0-7914-0799-8 p. 51
- ↑ Desired Realms (Rupa Loka, Arupa Loka ,Kama Loka)