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Vedic Religion & Philosophy






📌 Topic 04 of 6 · Chapter 03 · Vedic Age

Vedic Religion & Philosophy

Nature worship, Indra, Varuna, Agni — Vedic gods. Yajnas, rituals, Upanishadic philosophy — Brahman, Atman, karma.

🙏 Vedic Religion — Nature Worship

Vedic religion was primarily nature worship — the Aryans personified natural forces as gods and worshipped them through hymns and rituals. The Vedic religion is also called Brahmanism or early Hinduism.

⚡ Major Vedic Gods

GodDomainSignificance
IndraThunder, rain, warMost important god in Rigveda; ~250 hymns; “Purandhara” (destroyer of forts)
VarunaWater, cosmic order (Rita)Guardian of moral order; omniscient; forgives sins
AgniFireSecond most important; messenger between gods and humans; ~200 hymns
SomaSacred plant/drinkEntire Mandala 9 of Rigveda dedicated to Soma
SuryaSunGayatri Mantra dedicated to Savitri (form of Surya)
RudraStorm, diseaseFierce god; later evolved into Shiva
VishnuPervader of universeMinor god in Rigveda; later became major deity
UshaDawnMost important goddess; beautiful; brings light
⭐ Key Fact: Indra is the most important god in the Rigveda (~250 hymns). Agni is second (~200 hymns). Varuna is the guardian of Rita (cosmic moral order). Vishnu and Shiva (Rudra) were minor gods in Vedic period but became major deities later.

🔥 Yajnas (Sacrificial Rituals)

  • Yajna = sacrificial ritual — fire sacrifice with offerings to gods
  • Yajnas were performed to please gods and obtain boons
  • Agnihotra — daily fire sacrifice
  • Soma yajna — sacrifice involving Soma drink
  • Ashvamedha — horse sacrifice; king asserts sovereignty
  • Rajasuya — royal consecration ceremony
  • Vajapeya — chariot race ceremony
  • Purushamedha — human sacrifice (rare; symbolic)
  • Yajnas required Brahmin priests — increased priestly power in Later Vedic period

🧘 Upanishadic Philosophy

The Upanishads represent a philosophical revolt against the ritualism of the Brahmanas. They emphasise knowledge (jnana) over ritual as the path to liberation.

Core Concepts:

  • Brahman — the universal, ultimate reality; the absolute; the cosmic soul
  • Atman — the individual soul; the self
  • Brahman = Atman — the individual soul is identical to the universal soul (Tat tvam asi — “That thou art”)
  • Karma — the law of cause and effect; actions determine future births
  • Samsara — the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth
  • Moksha — liberation from the cycle of samsara; union with Brahman
  • Maya — illusion; the world is not ultimately real

Schools of Vedantic Philosophy:

  • Advaita Vedanta (Adi Shankaracharya) — non-dualism; Brahman = Atman; world is Maya
  • Vishishtadvaita (Ramanuja) — qualified non-dualism; Brahman has qualities
  • Dvaita (Madhvacharya) — dualism; Brahman and Atman are distinct
📝 Exam Tip:
Rita = cosmic moral order; maintained by Varuna
Gayatri Mantra = Rigveda, Mandala 3; dedicated to Savitri
Tat tvam asi = “That thou art” = Chandogya Upanishad
Aham Brahmasmi = “I am Brahman” = Brihadaranyaka Upanishad
• Upanishads = Vedanta = end of Vedas = philosophical conclusion