My child, as by knowing one lump of clay, all things made of clay are known, the difference being only in name and arising from speech, and the truth being that all are clay; as by knowing a nugget of gold, all things made of gold are known, the difference... Vedic Metaphysics - Page 324by Swami Bharati Krishna Tirtha, Bhāratīkr̥shṇatīrtha - 1978 - 349 pagesFull view - About this book
| John F. Haught - Religion - 1990 - 286 pages
...unperceivable, by which we know the unknowable?" "What is that knowledge, sir?" asked Svetaketu. "My child, as by knowing one lump of clay, all things made of clay are known, the difference being only in name and arising from speech, and the truth being that all are clay; as by... | |
| Carl Avren Levenson, Jonathan Westphal - Philosophy - 1994 - 218 pages
...unperceivable, by which we know the unknowable?" "What is that knowledge, sir?" asked Svetaketu. "My child, as by knowing one lump of clay, all things made of clay are known, the difference being only in name and arising from speech, and the truth being that all are clay; as by... | |
| Bina Gupta - Philosophy - 2002 - 294 pages
...immortality. 2.2 The Nature of the Self Chdndogya Upanisad Father explained as follows: My dear, just as by knowing one lump of clay, all things made of clay are known, the modification being only in name and arising from speech, while in the truth all is just clay; just as by knowing... | |
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