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The articles for Christianity and Islam have images in the lead sections so can we get one here too? Moodgenerator (talk) 04:03, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
The articles of Christianity, Islam, and Sikhism uses image of their holy site as their lead section image. So, I think it would be better to use image of Holy temple or Holy site instead of using images of deities in the lead section. Note - When image of a deity (Statue of lord Shiva) was added it was removed for a reason cuz someone said "the image does not represent Hinduism as it has sects that do not believe in such idols and their worship. It only represents a section and is not representative of all followers and a general perception of the religion." AimanAbir18plus (talk) 12:27, 30 September 2024 (UTC)
What was.the topic that attracted Burtrand Russel to Dr Radha Krishnan 2409:40E0:23:BDB6:8000:0:0:0 (talk) 09:40, 22 September 2024 (UTC)
There are some articles on Wikipedia which states "Hinduism, also known as Hindu Dharma". Many sources also refer Hinduism as Hindu Dharma. So, the lede sentence should be - Hinduism (/ˈhɪnduˌɪzəm/), also known as Hindu Dharma, is an Indian religion or dharma, a religious and universal order by which its followers abide.
Thoughts? AimanAbir18plus (talk) 06:04, 29 September 2024 (UTC)
Sources:
Some 'Hindus' refer to this agglomeration of religious forms as 'Hindu dharma' (dharma here standing loosely for' religion'), but that is only to enable them to communicate to westerners some of their own religious attitudes.
V. D. Savarkar [...] in his highly influential book Hindutva: Who is a Hindu? (1923) distinguishes between “Hindu Dharma,” the various traditions subsumed under the term “Hinduism,” and “Hindutva” or “Hinduness,” a sociopolitical force to unite all
Hindus against “threatening Others”
Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 18:47, 29 September 2024 (UTC) / update Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 06:21, 30 September 2024 (UTC)
@Joshua Jonathan: might be of interest to you. regards, TryKid [dubious – discuss] 01:31, 25 October 2024 (UTC)Over the past few decades, many scholars have argued that it is misleading to speak of “Hinduism”—in the sense of a single, unified religious tradition—prior to the colonial period. “One of the most striking advances in modern scholarship,” writes Gauri Viswanathan, “is the view that there is no such thing as an unbroken tradition of Hinduism, only a set of discrete traditions and practices reorganized into a larger entity called ‘Hinduism.’ If there is any disagreement at all in this scholarship, it centers on whether Hinduism is exclusively a construct of western scholars studying India or of anticolonial Hindus looking toward the systematization of disparate practices as a means of recovering a precolonial, national identity.” While there are indeed many scholars who have emphasized, variously, the role of orientalist scholars, their local informants, colonial administrators, missionaries, reformers, and nationalists in the “construction” of Hinduism, there are other scholars who have argued that Hindus already shared a common religious identity prior to the colonial period. The debate has produced a steady stream of literature over the past forty years: Hinduism Reconsidered (1989, 1997), Representing Hinduism (1995), Imagining Hinduism (2003), Mapping Hinduism (2003), Defining Hinduism (2005), Imagined Hinduism (2006), Was Hinduism Invented? (2005), Unifying Hinduism (2010), and Rethinking Religion in India (2010), to mention only book-length treatments. Although the debate is often characterized as having two sides, scholars have staked out a wide range of positions, and unless we recognize the complexity of the debate, there is a danger of talking past one another. Here I will briefly sketch some of the issues at stake, before suggesting how a reading of Niścaldās might usefully advance our understanding.
As Marianne Keppens and Esther Bloch have noted, scholarship on Hinduism as a colonial construct is anticipated by two earlier strands of scholarship. First, there is the critique of the category of “religion,” which originated within the academic discipline of religious studies. This critique has led some scholars to argue that “Hinduism” is necessarily a colonial construct, insofar as the term implies the notion of “religion” (perhaps even the notion of a “world religion”), and the very category of religion, despite its supposed universality, is a modern Western construct. The second influential strand of scholarship began with Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978), which explored the connections between knowledge and power in the works of orientalist scholars, arguing that their depictions of “the Orient” are not disinterested, objective accounts but rather politically implicated “imaginings” of orientalists themselves. This line of critique (and here I depart from Keppens and Bloch to offer my own analysis) has led to a few distinct though related arguments in the debate about the construction of Hinduism: that the “imagination” of orientalist scholars, colonial administrators, and missionaries played a significant role in the selection and organization of the data used to depict “the religion of the Hindus”; that Brahminical elites, who served as indigenous informants, sought to consolidate their power by presenting their traditions as representative of Hindus as a whole; and that Hindu reformers and nationalists took an active role in constructing versions of Hindu identity in conformity with their own ideals and political goals. In addition to the critique of “religion” as a category and the postcolonial attention to the relations of knowledge and power, I would also draw attention to a third strand in the debate, a strand which might be termed Indological. This line of inquiry, focusing on the lack of an indigenous, premodern equivalent to either the term or the concept of “Hinduism,” has led some scholars to argue that although “Vaiṣṇava,” “Śaiva,” etc. are meaningful terms, the idea of a single, unified “Hindu” tradition is a modern development.
[...]
From the outset, then, I should clarify that I will be focusing primarily on the third strand in the debate: how did premodern and early modern Indian intellectuals—the representatives of the scholastic traditions I have called attention to in this book—conceive of their own traditions? When, where, how, and why did the idea of a single, unified tradition first arise, and how did it develop over time? The work of scholars such as David Lorenzen (1999, 2011), Andrew Nicholson (2010), and Alexis Sanderson (2015) has demonstrated that there was indeed, at least in some textual sources, a sense of common identity across various premodern traditions that subsequently came to be labeled as “Hindu.” But much work remains to be done in tracing the origins, evolution, and shifting configurations of this common identity. This is where I believe a study of Niścaldās’s Ocean of Inquiry can provide a helpful starting point. As we shall see momentarily, Niścaldās offers a clear articulation of a unified tradition bridging scriptures, schools, and sects, and his views can be traced directly to earlier scholastic thinkers.
[...]
For those who have argued for the precolonial origins of a unified Hindu identity, this chapter offers a new hypothesis about the processes through which this identity emerged. Lorenzen, in his widely read essay “Who Invented Hinduism?” (1999), suggests that a “loose family resemblance” of traditions began to take “a recognizably Hindu shape in the early Puranas, roughly around the period 300–600 ce.” But he focuses primarily on the period 1200–1500, during which “a Hindu religion . . . gradually acquired a much sharper self-conscious identity through the rivalry between Muslims and Hindus in the period between 1200 and 1500.” Nicholson, in his 2010 book Unifying Hinduism, emphasizes the catalyzing role of Islam even more than Lorenzen does, arguing that the notion of a unified Hindu tradition emerged only in the twelfth to sixteenth centuries. Focusing on medieval doxographies and their reconfigurations of the categories of āstika and nāstika (lit., “affirmers” and “deniers,” or more loosely, “orthodox” and “heterodox”), Nicholson writes: “Philosophical authors writing in Sanskrit do not acknowledge Islam explicitly. But the perceived threat of Islam motivated them to create a strictly defined category of āstika philosophical systems, systems that professed belief in the Veda.” While I do not wish to discount the role that the medieval encounter with Islam might have played in consolidating a unified Hindu identity, there is strong evidence that the process of “unifying Hinduism” began well before the period to which Lorenzen and Nicholson draw our attention. Sanderson has argued that such an identity, while by no means universally accepted, seems already to have been widespread by the tenth century. In this chapter I will provide additional evidence in support of Sanderson’s position, and I will further argue that the process of Hindu identity formation can be understood at least in part as a process of canon formation, motivated by a characteristically scholastic project of harmonizing authorities, resolving doubts, and clarifying the boundaries of orthodoxy.
— Michael S. Allen. 2022. Conclusion: The Premodern Origins of Modern Hinduism in The Ocean of Inquiry: Niscaldas and the Premodern Origins of Modern Hinduism. Oxford University Press.
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The religion should not be called a "Indian religion" as it promotes a false view of the religion belonging to India, when Hinduism is very much alive outside of India and even south asia followed natively by people in those countries. The concept of "India" is anachronistic to apply to the origin place of Hindu religion (or vedic religion) as modern India has only existed since 1947. If Hindu religion is Indian religion then islam is a Arab religion (Wikipedia only says there are 1.9 billion Muslims worldwide). Why can't it just mention the same thing for Hinduism? That there are this many Hindus worldwide and it's a collection of different traditions and philosophies traditionally based on the Vedas?
[1] [2] [3] 113.199.225.202 (talk) 04:37, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
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