HISTORY
ANCIENT INDIA
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
|
|
karma
|
|
ahimsa
|
|
dharma
|
|
reincarnation
|
Detailed explanation-1: -Jains believe bad karma is caused by harming living things. To avoid bad karma, Jains must practice ahimsa, a strict code of nonviolence.
Detailed explanation-2: -Ahimsa. Ahimsa is one of the ideals of Hinduism. It means that one should avoid harming any living thing, and also avoid the desire to harm any living thing.
Detailed explanation-3: -For Gandhi, ahimsa means: non-injury, nonviolence, non-harm, the renunciation of the will to kill and the intention to hurt any living thing, the abstention from hostile thought, word or deed, and compassion for all living creatures.
Detailed explanation-4: -To answer this, we turn to the three tenets, or the three As, of Jain philosophy: Ahimsa (non-violence), Aparigraha (non-acquisition), and Anekantavada (non-absolutism) [1].
Detailed explanation-5: -Ahimsā (Ahimsā, alternatively spelled ‘ahinsā’, Sanskrit: IAST: ahinsā, Pāli: avihinsā) in Jainism is a fundamental principle forming the cornerstone of its ethics and doctrine. The term ahinsa means nonviolence, non-injury and absence of desire to harm any life forms.