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{{Contains Indic text}} {{Contains Indic text}}
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A '''yogi''' is a practitioner of ].{{sfn|White|2012|p=8}} The term "yogi" is also used to refer specifically to ]s,{{sfn|Zimmermann|2003|p=4}}{{sfn|White|2012|p=8-9}} and broadly to refer to ] practitioners of ] in a number of ] ]s including ], ], and ]. A '''yogi''' is the person who is indeferent with joy and sorrow, also without any material desire. The term "yogi" is also used to refer specifically to ]s,{{sfn|Zimmermann|2003|p=4}}{{sfn|White|2012|p=8-9}} and broadly to refer to ] practitioners of ] in a number of ] ]s including ], ], and ].


==Etymology== ==Etymology==

Revision as of 15:06, 17 December 2013

For other uses, see Yogi (disambiguation).
A yogi seated in a garden
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Template:Contains Indic text

A sculpture of a Hindu yogi in the Birla Mandir, Delhi

A yogi is the person who is indeferent with joy and sorrow, also without any material desire. The term "yogi" is also used to refer specifically to Siddhas, and broadly to refer to ascetic practitioners of meditation in a number of South Asian religions including Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism.

Etymology

In the Classical Sanskrit of the Puranas, the word yogi (Sanskrit: masc yogī, योगी; fem yoginī) originally referred specifically to a male practitioner of yoga. In the same literature yoginī is the term used for female practitioners as well as for divine goddesses and enlightened mothers, all revered as aspects of the Divine Mother Devi without whom there would be no yogis. The two terms are still used with those meanings today, but the word yogi is also used generically to refer to both male and female practitioners of yoga and related meditative practices in Buddhism, Jainism, Taoism etc.

Hinduism

In Hinduism the term yogi refers to an adherent of yoga.

Textual references

The Shiva Samhita defines the yogi patel as someone who knows that the entire cosmos is situated within his own body, and the Yoga-Shikha-Upanishad text distinguishes two kinds of yogis:

  1. Those who pierce through the "sun" (surya) by means of the various yogic techniques and
  2. Those who access the door of the central conduit (sushumna-nadi) and drink the nectar. As to what this nectar is, all meditation lineages focus on self-mastery of essence, both spiritual and sexual.

The Yoga-Bhashya (400 CE, the oldest extant commentary on the Yoga-Sutra, offers the following fourfold classification of yogis:

  1. neophyte/beginner (prathama-kalpika)
  2. one who has reached the "honeyed level" (madhu-bhumika)
  3. the advanced practitioner who enjoys enlightenment (joginath, giri, goswami, etc.)

Yogi - Siddha

According to David White, the term yogi is also a pejorative term used by Hindu orthodoxy for a Siddha. According to White,

iddha means "realized, perfected one", a term generally applied to a practitioner (sādhaka, sadhu) who has trhough his practice (sadhana) realized his dual goal of superhuman powers (siddhis, "realizations", "perfections") and bodily immortality (jivanmukti).

The term siddha has become a broad sectarian appellation, applying to to Saiva-devotees in the Deccan (Mahesvara Siddhas), alchemists in Tamil Nadu (Sittars), a group of early Buddhist tantrikas from Bengal (Mahasiddha, Siddhacaryas), the alchemists of medieval India (Rasa Siddha), and a mainly north Indian group known as the Nath Siddhas. The Nath Siddhas are the only still existing representatives of the medieval Tantric tradition, which had disappeared due to its excesses. While the Nath Siddhas enjoyed persistent popular success, they attracted the scorn of the elite classes. According to White, the term yogi

...has, for at least eight hundred years, been an all-purpose term employed to designate those Saiva specialists whom orthodox Hindus have considered suspect, heterodox, and even heretical in their doctrine and practice.

According to White, the yoga as practiced by Saiva specialists is more closely identified in the eyes of those critics with black magic, sorcery and sexual perversions than with yoga in the conventional sense of the word.

Sexual abstination

Traditionally, yogic training involved deferring the tantric practices of sexual yoga/marriage until such time that sexual self-mastery had been established, whereupon sexual union is considered to be the ultimate yoga of Shiva and Shakti.

Brahmacarya for yogis, as stated in the Agni-Purana, embodies self-imposed abstention from sexual activity: fantasizing, glorifying the sex act or someone's sexual attraction, dalliance, sexual ogling, sexually flirtatious talk, the resolution to break one's vow, and consummation of sexual intercourse itself, with any being.

Married practitioners aspire likewise to abstain from unconscious/harmful sexual behavior, and to meditatively practice sexual yoga (as opposed to ego-centered sexual release) with their partner, but must practice aware chastity with regard to others.

Modern science now understands that such a code of sexual conduct is also organically assisted by neurochemical changes in brain states of intense meditators (reduced dopamine and increased oxytocin) that induce general relaxation and mental stability, and is not sheerly by willpower alone.

List of Yogis

Further information: List of Hindu gurus and saints
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2011) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Historical Yogis and Yoga gurus:

See also

Notes

  1. Compare Siddhartha Gautama, one of the names of the Buddha.

References

  1. ^ Zimmermann 2003, p. 4.
  2. ^ White 2012, p. 8-9.
  3. ^ White 2012, p. 8.
  4. International Yoga Bibliography, Howard R. Jarrell, 1981, p. 114
  5. Shambhala Encyclopedia of Yoga, p. 346
  6. Rosen 2012, p. 72.
  7. Shambhala Encyclopedia of Yoga, pg 343
  8. ^ White 2012, p. 2.
  9. ^ White 2012, p. 7.
  10. White 2012, p. 9.
  11. Tantra, The Path of Ecstasy, Georg Feurstein Ph.D., Shambhala Press, USA 1998
  12. Shambhala Encyclopedia of Yoga, p.62
  13. How God Changes Your Brain: Breakthrough Findings From A Leading Neuroscientist, by Andrew Newberg M.D., Ballantine Books, USA 2009
  14. Feuerstein, Georg (2001). The Yoga Tradition: Its History, Literature, Philosophy and Practice (Kindle ed.). Arizona, USA: Hohm Pr. p. Kindle Location 5720. ISBN 978-1890772185.
  15. Paramahamsa Prajnanananda (15 August 2006). My Time with the Master. Sai Towers Publishing. pp. 25–. ISBN 978-81-7899-055-2. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  16. Benoy Gopal Ray (1965). Religious movements in modern Bengal. "He learnt and practices of Yog from Sumerudasji". Visva-Bharati. p. 101. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
  17. Amulya Kumar Tripathy; P. C. Tripathy; Jayadeva (2006). The Gita Govinda of Sri Jayadev. Publication Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India. pp. Yogiguru "Swami Nigamananda" Book Translators :Shri Durga Charan Mohanty. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
  18. Jeevankalechi Sadhana
  19. Vishwavyapi Manavadharma Ashram

Sources

This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWood, James, ed. (1907). The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

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