Sattva
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Categories: Alchemical terms | Hindu terms | Tantric terms
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It is used in Hindu diagnostics to assess conditions and diets in [[Ayurveda]]. | It is used in Hindu diagnostics to assess conditions and diets in [[Ayurveda]]. | ||
- | '''See also''' | + | ''See also:'' [[Mercury]] |
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- | *[[Bodhisattva]] | + | |
==References== | ==References== | ||
* Tirtha, Swami Sada Shiva, ''The Ayurveda Encyclopedia''. | * Tirtha, Swami Sada Shiva, ''The Ayurveda Encyclopedia''. | ||
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+ | [[Category:Alchemical terms]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Hindu terms]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Tantric terms]] |
Current revision
Originating in Samkhya philosophy, sattva is one of the three gunas of Hinduism. It is a common means, along with the other two states, of categorizing behavior and natural phenomena in Hindu philosophy. In traditional Ayurvedic medicine, sattva has been translated to mean "purity" and refers to one of three possible qualities (gunas) or mental states of a person's mind. This typically implies that a person with this quality has a positive or even orderly state of mind. Such a persion is psychologically kind, calm, alert and thoughtful.
Sattva is sometimes transliterated and spelled as sattwa.
The other two Vedic mental states are Rajas and Tamas.
It is used in Hindu diagnostics to assess conditions and diets in Ayurveda.
See also: Mercury
References
- Tirtha, Swami Sada Shiva, The Ayurveda Encyclopedia.