The relationship between Dharma Karma Samsara, Moksha and the Caste Systemis is the accepting of the doctrine of transmigration. It was the rebirth and the complementary of Karma.
its complicated
Dharma is the moral obligation a person has in their life, like a man has certain obligations as a man to fufill like providing for his family. Moksha is liberation. Once moksha is acheived, you can therefore break the chain of karmic consequences and your soul can move on.
major belief of Hinduism are Dharma (righteous living) Artha (material prosperity) Kāma (enjoyment) & Moksha (liberation).
They want Moksha.
I think you mean brahman. Brahman is the ultimate realization, god, the unchanging lifesource or light that every human aspires to reach and dissolve into. Samsara is the environment we are in, with attachments, disappointments,agony, happiness, mostly things that are impermanent yet tie you down.
Dharma, Arhtha, Kama, Moksha
moksha (escape from samsara- the cycle of re-incarnation)
No, not at all.
Moksha, which means emancipation or release, is freedom from Samsara in Hindu, the cycle of death and rebirth. One who achieves Moksha is one who has achieved total self realization and self knowledge. Moksha, along with Dharma, Artha and Kama, represents the four goals of human life.
Afterlife and Moksha are the two options we have after we finish one chapter of the book called life. We are living and the body will die. The name will finish its journey. But the one who was alive has two options. The first option is an afterlife. The body dies but the mind and ego ME comes back in a new life, in a new body to settle the deeds that are unsettled. But the second opportunity, which is the ultimate goal of life, is to attain Moskha, Nirvana, Enlightenment, Liberation, Salvation, whatever you call it. When we realize we are not the body that dies, we are not even the mind and ego ME, then we realize we are the Divine Soul, and we are liberated and united with the Divine. That is Moksha. Therefore, the difference is either we come back in an afterlife or we attain Moksha.
Samsara is the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth in Hinduism, Buddhism, and other Indian religions. An example sentence could be: "According to Hindu belief, individuals must break free from the cycle of samsara to achieve moksha, or liberation."
The four permissible goals of Hinduism are Kama, Artha, Dharma, and Moksha. Kama translates into Pleasure, love, sex, etc. Artha is wealth or success. Dharma is the social or moral duty of a person, which transcends personal needs or wants for the greater good. And finally, Moksha, refers to the ultimate release. Moksha is more or less the final goal of all Hindus, to escape Samsara (the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth) and reach enlightenment and/or Nirvana. To verify this information, please visit http://wri.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/hindu2.HTML I also verified this information with the world religions teacher at my college.
Buddhism